12 The Pontiac Pro»* Wednesday, May 28, 1969 Hudson, Anne Baxter. 10:35 ( 56) Reason and Read WEDNESDAY R—Rerun, C—Color WEDNESDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C ~ On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C—Black Heritage 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsrnan (4) C—TV High School 6:45 (7) C — Batfink 7:00 (4) C — Today ' (7) C — Morning Show 7:30 (2) ,C—News, Weather. Sports 7:50 (9) Warm-Up 7:55 (9) C -- Morgan’s Merry-CiO-Round 8:00 (2) R ~ Captain Kangaroo (9) C — Bozo 8:30 (7) R C — Movie: “One Desire’* (1955) Rock Natalie Wood. 8:45 (56) R—Human tions Rela- 9:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) C ~ Ludden’s Gallery ^ — Jerry Van Dyke, Bill Lear and Barbara Anderson guest (9) Ontario Schools 9:15 (56) Science Is Discovery 9:30 (2) R C — B e V e r 1 y Hillbillies (56) Listen and Say 9:50 (56) All Aboard for Reading 10:00 (2) R — Andy Griffith (4) C — Personality (9) Ontario Schools 10:10 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 10:25 (4) C — News (9) C — Preview Promotion 10:30 (2) C-Merv Griffin (4) C—Hollywood Squares (7) C — Galloping Gourmet (9) Friendly Giant 10:45 (9) Chez.Helene 10:55 (56) Spanish 1 11:00 (4) C—It Takes Two (7) R — Bewitched (9) Mr. Dressup (50) C—Jack LaLanne 11:20 (56J Misterogers 11:25 (4) C - Carol Duvall (9) C — News 11:30 (4) C — Concentration (7) C—Funny You Should Ask (9) Take Thirty (50) C — Kimba 11:50 (56) PYiendly Giant 11:55 (7) Children's Doctor WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (J) C—Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) C—Bonnie Prudden (50) C ^ Alvin 12:05 (56) Americans Africa From 12:25 (2) C Fashions - As the World 12:30 (2) C Turns (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal (9) R—Real McCoys (50) R — Movie: “Deep Valley” (1947) Ida Lupino, Dane Clark, Wayne Morris 12:45 (56) C — Spanish I 12:55 (4) C - News 1:00 (2) C—Divorce Court (4) C“Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (9) C — Movie: “The Secret of Blood Island” (1965) Jack Hedley, Barbara Shelley 1:05 (56) Art Lesson 1:25 (56) Science Is Discovery 1:30 (2) C—Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7.) C — Dating Game 2:00 C—Secret Storm (4) C ~ Another World (7) C-^General Hospital (50) C—American West (56) Reason and Read 2:15 (56) American History 2:30 (2) C-Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C~One Life to Live (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R—Dennis the Menace (50) R — Topper (56) Medical Education 3:25 (4) C — News 3:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Hidden Faces (7) C—Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe 150) C—Captain Detroit (56) Memo^ to Teachers 4:00 (2) C—Love of Life (4) C •— Steve Allen (7) R C — Movie: “23 Paces to Baker Street” (1956) Van Johnson, Vera Miles (9) C — Bozo (56) That’s Life — “Turn Yourself On” 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas^ ALUMINUM PATIO lO' 20' INSTALLED Anne Bancroft^ in « role that won her an Academy Award mfminationn «nf/ James Mason star in the movie Pumpkin Eater,"* Weiinesday at 9 p.m. on Channel 7. , V ,,, t • Carport • Recreation Area • Always Cool • Never Rusts • Easy Terms CAU 33S-264# CENTER CONSTRUCTION 16861 Livernois, Detroit ALUMINUM SIDINQ «299 • Alcoa • Reynolds 22x24x1 t Complotoly Installed In Business 26 Tecirji The Pontiac Press Wednesday, May 28, 196 (50) R—Little Rascals (56) TV Kindergarten (62) R—Star Performance 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Glacier — Waterton Lakes — Canadian Rockies’' (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters (56) Misterogers (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:30 (9) R C -F Troop (50) R C — Superman (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) Sing Hi ~ Sing Lo WEDNESDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News. Weather, Sports (9)„ R C — I Spy — Robinson and Scott must rescue a kidnaped girl from the Communists. (50) R C — Flintstones (56) What’s New (62) R — Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C — News — Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — News — Reynolds, Smith (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) TV High School (62) H — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C — New^, Weather, Sports (9) R C — Movie; “Best of Enemies" (1962) Satire on., the pointlessness of war as seen by two men on opposite sides: David Niven, Michael Wilding (50) R — 1 Love Lucy (56) C — Spectrum — Nobel chemist Dr. Harold Clayton Urey speaks about science and education. (62) R “ I Led Three Lives 7:30 (2) R C — (Ren Campbell — Guests include Jim Nabors and Bobbie Gentry. (4) RC — Virginian —Young girl’s scheme to turn aside a persistent admirer causes confusion. (7) R C — Here Come the Brides — Clancey’s ship brings in young son of one of the brides, who is disturbed that his mother plans to marry Rev. Gaddings. (50) R - Hazel -(56) C — Book Beat — John Hunt (“A World Full of Animal s") is interviewed, (62) R — Ann Sothern 8;00 (50) C—Pay Cards (56) Your Dollar’s Worth — The “ romance and reality of packaged tours is examined. (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 8:30 (2) R C — Good Guys Rufus falls in love with a pretty waitress, and Bert tries to break up the romance, (7) C — King Family (9) C — (Special) Dominion Drama Festival — Highlights of 1969 festival awards (50) C — Password (62) R — Movie; “Riot in Juvenile Pri.son" (1959) Psychiatrist tries t o r e habilitate imprisoned j u V e n i 1 e s . Dorothy Provine, Scott Marlowe 9:00 (2)^R C — Beverly Hillbillies — Jethro goes Roman to court Maria, the beautiful Italian cook. (4) <’ — (Special) On Stage — “The Skirts of Happy Chance" — War hero and poor girl politician differ on how to administer funds in a small citv. William Shatner and Elizabeth Ashley star in comedy-drama (7) R C — Movie; “The Pumpkin Eater" (1964:) Dramatic story of a troubled marriage. James Mason, Anne Bancroft, Peter Finch (56) Standpoint (50) R — Perry Mason .9:30 (2) R C--Green Acres' — Kimball learns that an agricultural student i s being sent to observe his work and fears' he is going to lose his job. 19) (' — Film Makers (56) R — PBL - “Law, and Order’’ 9:55 (62) Greatest Headlines 10:00 (2) RC — Hawaii Fivc-0 — McGarrett infiltrates | an international syndicate, U f' i. j as a 13 by posing safecracker. (4) R C — Outsider — While tracking down a missing witness in^ a^ murder trial, Ross is the' unwitting accomplice to another homicide. (9) (5()) C — News, Weather; Sports (62) R — Movie; “Moment of Indiscretion" (1958) Murderer has a perfect alibi, which is believed by Scotland Yard, despite an eyewitness. Ronald Howard, Lana Morris 10:30 (9) C — What’s My Line? (50) R—Alfred Hitchcock 11:00 ’(2) (4) (7) C — News. Weather. Sports (9) R — Movie; “Heavens Above" (British, 1963) A quiet, do wn-to-earth reverend is appointed to a parish in a snooty n e i g h b orhood. Peter Sellers. Ian Carmichael (50) R C — Movie; “One for the Book" (1947) Naive, girl finds herself WEDNESDAY sharing a n apartment with a handsome young soldier on leave. Ronald Reagan, Eve Arden. Eleanor Parker. 11:30 (4) C - Johnny Carson (7) C - Joey Bishop 11:35 (2) R - Movie ; “Nightfall" (1957) Artist is chased by robbers for their stolen loot. Aldo Ray 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:00 (4 )Beal the Champ (7) R — Texan 1:30 (2) R—Movie: “Juve- nile Jungle" (1958) Teenage beach party turns into violence and crime. Corey Allen 2:45 (2) C—News. Weather (4) (7) C — News. Weather 2:50 (2) TV Chapel Hair That Mother Nature Can't Improve. A MAJOR BREAKTHROUGH So very much like the real things even you will forget its not your own. liP Now you can comb your hair anyway, anytime. No longer must each hair know its place, in fact, the more the wind blows the more natural it looks. Never before possible, but now you sleep, ploy, and work in your new hair because it never conies off. Mister (p\s 5883 Dixie Hwy. Independence Commons Shopping Ctr. CALL 623-1348 The Wiiather THE / Home Edition PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 19H9 VOL. 127 - NO. 9.5 ★ ★ ★ UN,TESTREsVmTE%^TT,ONAL 56 PAGES IQc No More Vietnams, Rogers Is Stressing TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Secretary of State William P. Rogers, is spreading the ■ word across Asia that ihe U.S. government is cutting its involvement abroad and intends to have no more Vietnams. While he has also given assurances that treaty commitments will be kept, Rogers has begun detaching the United States from the conflicts of Asia and promoting a substitute policy of regional self-reliance. It is a big swing away from the WILLIAM P. ROGERS War Cost Close to $100 Billion ' WASHINGTON ^AP) - Vietnam is fast becoming a hundred-billion-dollar war. Government figures show the 1970 defense budget will add $25.4 billion to officially admitted expenses dating back to 1965, raising the price of the conflict to $108.2 billion. * * ★ Hidden or indirect costs probably add hundreds of millions to the real expense of the war, although the scope of these items is sometimes difficult to assess because of official secrecy. For example, the American government is doling out millions in economic assistance to reinforce such Vietnam border countries as Thailand and Laos which could sway the balance of power in the area. LUMPED TOGETHER The Pentagon budget lumps admitted Vietnam war costs under a category en- , titled “Estimated Special Support for/ Southeast Asia Operations.” The Southeast Asia category ( however, fully reflect some othe^ war-related expenses such as construction of the Thai-owned airfield neai^Sattahip, Thailand, which the United States built in 1965 to handle KC135 tankers and B52 bombers flying mission^nto Uadis and South Vietnam. This base cost well over $150 million. / ★ A ★ The general financial bookkeeping for , the war back to fiscal 1965, which began in mid-1964, reads this way: In 1&65-^103 million; 1966, $6,094 billiph; 196^, $20,557 billion; 1968, $26,839 billion; 4969, $29,192 billion; and, pro-d fdr fiscal 1970, $25.4 billion. /■’ , * * *■ The U.S. cost for fighting the 37-month Korean War was about $18 billion. The American cost for World War II ran ■ about $250,000 million a day. policies which led the Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson administrations step by step into the Vietnam war. Rogers, winding up his first foreign venture in personal diplomacy, will report to President Nixon this weekend that the initial steps in disinvolvement have, on the whole, been met with enthusiastic approval by the leaders he has talked to. ' RELAXED STYLE Associates credit much of his success to Rogers’ style of personal diplomacy — easy, relaxed, and low-keyed, the manner of the highly successful corporation lawyer confidently wM-king over problems with his clients. The chief danger is that with his friendly deskside manner, the secretary may have given the impression of more support than he intended to foreign leaders seeking sympathy fop their special causes. ★ ★ ★ President Yahya Khan of Pakistan said Rogers was sympathetic to his request that the United States resume the sale of tanks, artillery, planes and other arms to his country. Rogers thought he was being diplomatically noncommittal. Rogers did try to get some of Asia’s quarreling countries together. He is ■trying to set up talks between Pakistan and India on Kashmir. He urged Pakistan and Afghanistan to try to resolve their long dispute over the Pathan tribesmen along their border. * ★ * Rogers told Foreign Minister Thanat Kohman that he understood Thailand’s talk about getting on better terms with Red China. The United States would like to do the same thing, he said, but the Chinese are not interested. Asian leaders, who tend to be formally polite, haven’t seen a diplomat quite like Rogers before. Although they evidently liked him, they will watch closely now to see what action the United States takes. By this, they can measure the extent of his influence with President Nixon. YORTY AND WIFE PRIOR TO VICTORY—Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles and his wife, Betts, arrive at their polling place to vote in yesterday’s municipal election in which the mayor turned back City Councilman Thomas Bradley’s bid to AP Wirtphote become Los Angeles’ first Negro mayor. With all but six precincts in, Yorty had 447,0.30 votes to Bradley’s 392,379. Almost 80 per cent of t^ voters cast ballots. (Story, page A-2.) Postal-Reform Route Is Rocky Hof Dog Data Garnered WASHINGTON (AP) - Should chicken meat be allowed in hot dogs without saying so in large letters on the package? Consumer and industry reaction to that question was mixed, the Agriculture Department said yesterday, announcing the end of a 45-day period to collect comment on the proposal. A new regulation would allow up to 15 per cent poultry meat in federally inspected sausages, hot dogs and bologna without a large-letter label. Poultry ingredients in excess of 15 per cent would still require a large label. s hot, WASHINGTON (ff) - President Nixon’s urgent postal reform legislation was given special delivery to Capitol Hill but its trip through Congress may be slower than a footsore mailman. Potential opposition from bulk mailers and postal unions—the politicians’ version of snow and rain and heat and gloom of night—may stay Nixon’s bill from swift completion of its appointed rounds. * * ★ The mailers and the unions, who fear the lo.ss of gains they fought for in Related Story, Page A-2 Congress, pose the greatest opposition to the reform plan. “The unions are going to bhve to be convinced that the situation under the new arrangement will be as good or better than what they now have,” Rep. Morris K. Udall said. Postmaster General Winton M. Blount, however^ struck a hopeful note on the union dliposition. “Wiiile they haven’t formally endonsed H (the reform plan), we did hqve very imitful discussions,” Blount said. House Speaker John W. McCormack called the porposal to conVert the Post Office Department Met/a government owned, self-sustaining" corporation “a subject for long-range consideration.” House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan conceded the administration faces “a selling job on postal employes and the Congress.” ‘OUTLOOK DIM’ Udall, D-Ariz., a high-ranking member of the House Post Office and Civil Service Committee and a supporter of the President’s plan, admitted “the outlook is dim this year.” ★ * * ■ Sen. Ralph Yarborough, D - T e x . , sec-ond-ranking Democrat on the Senate Post Office Committee, has announced his opposition to the postal corporation plan. Senate Minority Leader Everett M. Dirksen said to expect opposition from rank-and-file GOP officials who resent losing postal patronage. President Nixon wants these changes for the Post Office, with its more than 700,000 employes, $7-billion budget a year, and annual mail load of 80 billion pieces: • Control by a nine-man, appointed , board of directors to replace the present Cabinet-rank postmaster general. ★ ★ ★ • Settlement of union wage and benefit requests by the board rather than by Congress. • Nonpolitical appointment of all officers and employes. • Total responsibility for all financing, including new authority to borrow for capital improvements up to $10 billion. • Rate setting and mail classification by a commission of experts subject to review by the board and veto by Congress. SMOKE VICTIMS—Police administer oxygen at Penn Station In Newark to passengers who suffered .smoke inhalation when a Penn Cl^entral commuter train caught fire in a tunnel under the Hudson River last night. 6ne man was killed when the train lurched backward after he stepped off it. Al)out 200 others were forced to walk a half-mile in the darkness on a tunnel catwalk to the New Jersey end. (Story, page B-14.) Misadventures in Paradise Springtime Sizzle Is Due to Continue The temperature In downtown Pontiac rose 18 degrees between 6 and 10 a m. today, accelerating the warming trend begun Monday. The skies continue cloudy with highs expected between 84 and 89; lows between 60 and 64. Tomorrow’s thermometer will continue to climb with highs ranging from 86 to 90. A chance of thundershowers is indicated. ★ ★ * Cooling is expected late in the day wh^n warm winds, currently varying from 10 to 20 miles per hour, will tack to the northwest at about the same rate. Friday’s outlook is mostly fair and a little cooler. The overnight low was 66. By 2 p.m. the temperature had climbed to"88. HONOLULU (UPD — Dale Kuhns of San Carlos, Calif., won’t forget the 60lh annual convention of Rotary International in Honolulu. Sunday when Kuhns .was riding in a rented car his swim trunks and his pants flew out. The pants, with $170 and his hotel keys in the pockets, were found by four youngsters who returned them to Kuhns. ★ ★ ★ Early Monday thieves broke into Kuhns’ hotel room and took $200 in cash, including the $170 that had been in his pants. Kuhns later went surfing and hurt his back. That night, he and his wife went to a luau. Food ran out befpre Kuhns and his wife were served. College-Degree Plan for Troy Suspend Judge, Asks Sen. Kuhn LANSING (UPI) - State Sen. George W. Kuhn, R-West Bloomfield Township, yesterday asked Gov. William G, MHliken to recommend suspension of a state appeals judge involved in a Mafia tipster’s allegations of bribery and political payoff. Kuhn urged the action against Judge S. Jerome Bronson, former Oakland County prosecutor, in a letter to the governor. * * * « He suggested the suspension remain in effect until the allegations involving Bronson are “satisfactorily investigated and adjudicated.” The senator added: “In my judgment, suspension or relieving of the judicial functions of any judge under such circumstances is necessary, not only to protect the dignity of the court but the integrity of the entire judicial system in this state as well.” NO COMMENT There was no immediate comment from the governor on Kuhn’s letter. A citizens’ petition calling for a grartd jury investigation of Brqn.son was filed with the Oakland County Circuit Court last March 24. Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley and the State Police are studying the matter. Kuhn and Sen. Robert J. Huber, R-Troy, have continually criticized Kelley’s handling of the investigation ever since admitted Mafia moneyman Peter Lazaros of 2410 Dalesford, Troy, started talking last fall. Lazaros, a Greek Immigrant, alleges that high-ranking elected officials in Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties accepted from Mafia sources in return for political favors. Bronson, 39, elected to the appellate court last November, has refused comment on the allegations. Bell-Annex Parking Issue Bounced to City Planners By ED BLUNDEN The City Commission played hot potato and tossed the questiMhi of downtown parking to the planning commission last night. The planners will be asked to determine if a city ordinance has been violated in the case of parking for the $12.5-million addition “to the Bell Telephone Co. facility at Mill and East Huron. ■ A charge that parking requirements have been ignored was levied for the second straight week by Jerome Mulligan, an attorney for the Communication Workers^iLAmerica (CWAJ, * * ★ Last night he charged the city was taking advantage of a “void” in its own ordinance to issue a building permit to Bell although the firm has not announced any plans to provide additional parking. The expansion is expected to result in hiring 200 additional employes. To get a site for the annex, Bell traded land with the city, taking a former parking lot and giving a new one. Both pieces of land are about the same size, leaving the city with the same parking space with possibly 200 additional cars to Worry about. Mulligan pointed out. A college degree without leaving the local high school is the goal of a program to debut this fall in the Trqy School District. Troy school administrators and representatives of Oakland Community College and Wayne State University yesterday unveiled'cooperative plans for a complete kindergarten through masters degree opportunity exclusively within the Troy school system. ★ ★ . *\ A student who ^aduates Irom Troy High School presently may complete his freshman and sophomore collegiate years right at the high school via OCC extension classes. Now he'will be able to complete his junior and senior years through the new WSU program. In education and business programs, the student could even earn his master of arts degree at the high school with a minimum of downtown campus time. The latter visits would bemecessary only for selected courses. FOR RETURNING STUDENTS The new program and WSU’s entrance into Troy’s college education picture is designed for the .student who has been away from school for .several years — the hou.sewife, bu.sine.ss or working man. Also available, under an already e.stablished program, the adult can finish his high school education prior to entering the new college program. OCC adopted its program at 'lYoy three years ago. primarily with leisure and practical cour.ses. Donald (1. Butcher, coordinator of adult education and community service (Continued on Page A 4, Cql. 1) Holiday Brings Many Closings All city, county and state offices, public service agencies, and banks, savings and loan offices in Pontiac will close over the three-day Memorial Day weekend, starting Friday. Most area stores will be closed on Friday only, in observance of the holiday. * ★ Regular holiday .schedules will be observed F'riday by the post office, including limited pick-ups and no regular delivery services beyond ; p e c i a 1 delivery. The post office will be open Saturday as usual. All operations except routine maintenance will bd* shut down at Pontiac Motor Division, GMC Truck and Coach Division and the Fisher Body plant oyer the weekend. , f/" * * ★ F'irst Federal Savings and Loan A.ssociation of Oakland, Community Na-, tional Bank and Pontiac State Bank have adjusted .schedules to remain open tomorrow until 6 p.m. Capitol Savings and Loan Association will keep regular hours tomorrow, closing Friday. The Birmingham - Bloomfield tlank, which also will be closed over the weekend, plans to extend business hours until 8 p.m. tomorrow. The City Commission didn’t answer Mulligan’s charges or questions concerning the ordinance—which he brandished as he spoke. Instead, it voted to Related Story, Page A-5 send the issue to the planning commission, which had drafted the ordinance. Two city commissioners, T. Warren Fowler Sr.; District 1, and F. Jack Douglas, District 4, expressed dismay that no representative of the Bell company had been present. The firm had been informed of the agenda item. Other commissioners have commented that the CWA effort is aimed at getting free parking for Bell employes. Many of the employes park in an allday temporary lot at the south end of Mill at a charge of 25 cents per day. Mulligan said the employes, especially women, object to having to walk the three blocks to work, especially at night. ‘NO CLEAR REQUIREMENT’ City Attorney Shirwin Birnkrant reported that the present ordinance “does not clearly and specifically make any requirement for additional off-street parking to be provided” in the case of the Bell facility He said the planning commission should also study revising the ordinance. In Today's Press Brandon Township .Supervisor job keeps rural visionarv on the go — PAGE A-4. Saigon F ear of coalition government has hi.storical basis — PAGE B-L5. Space Gains Program defenders point out many benefits — PAGE A-10. ...........A-4 It DR. HARVEY BURDICK Ponliac Ctnlrtl Hjoh School S Thufsl. P.M. OCH Aud. I SoloitI tnd C«(i^rti)cl(y^\ Area News . Astrology Bridge Crossword Puzzle Comics F'ditorials ..... F'ood Section Markets Obituaries Sports Theaters TV and Radio Programs Vietnam War News Wilson. Earl Women's Pages D-15 B-12 D-6 B-13 D-l-D-5 C-5 n-15 B-I4 C-5 B-l-B-3 a Band Conctrl, ■ A-a j.ir'.: THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 28. 1969 Yorty Defeats Black Candidate to Win 3rd Term 1X)S ANGELES (UPI) Mayor Sam Yorty won reelection to a third term to-' day, fuming back City \ Councilman 'Hiomas Bradley’s bid to become Los Angeles’"first Negro mayor. ' Unofficial returns at 3 a.m. from all but six Of the cHy’s 2,890 precincts gave Yorty 53.25 per cedt Of the vote to 46.74 for Bradley. The tally was Yorty 447,030, Bradley 392,379. mayoral primary less than two months It was a powerful comeback for Yorty, who got only 26 per cent of the vote to 42 per cent of the Vote'for Bradley in the Yorty campaigned in the face of public qpinioiv polls that up to ihe end fortyast a Bradley victory by margins ranging from 5 to 15 per cent. City Clerk Ilex Layton estimated that close to , 80 pec. cent of the 1,127,224 registered voters- had cast ballots in a record-smashing turnout. It was the greatest vote* for a municipal election in Los Angeles history. The previous high was 66 per cent in the primary election of the same mayoral race April 1. Los,Angeles voters gave their verdict after a bruising campaign in which Bradlty’s ijace was a major factor. Yorty \tyged voters to ‘‘kepp Lps ’ Angeles the way we want it.” He predicted mass resignations from the largely white police department if BradlOy — a retired police lieutenant — captured the mayor’s office. boards have been ousted on charges ranging from bribery to criminal conflict of interest. x \ Bradley, the Texas-born son of a pullman car porter, trained his fire on alleged corruption during Yorty’s second four-year term in City Hall. Five of Yorty’s appointees to city Bradley emphasized his comihitmenli to impartial law enforcement. Bradley needed white votes to win. Negroes comprise only 17 per cent of the voters in Los Angeles, a far lower percentage than Qeveland and Gary, Ind., which have elected black mayors. , ActuJdly Bradley got considerable help' from Democratic professionals and organize labor. He wgs endorsed by powerful Democratic Ass^mblyan Jess Unruh and by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts. Officially, the election was nonpartisan, and neither candidate’s name carried a party label on the ballot. Yorty, 59, was a Democrat whosp maverick political behavior has offended party leaders in the past. He supported Richard Nixon for president against John F. Kennedy in 1960, and tried to unseat former Goiv. Edmund G. Brown in the Democratic primary in 1966. Birmingham Area Post Is Filled Qh Bloomfield Twp. Board Try to Cut Troops in Europe Slated WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Denoocratic leader Mike Mansfield says he soon will revive his resolution seeking substantial reduction of U.S. troop strength in Europe — a measure shunted aside last summer by the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. Mansfield’s proposal has the support of Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., chairnian of the subcommittee on security agreements and commitments abroad, as well as of Sen. J. W. Fulbright who opposed the original resolution last year. Fulbright, the Arkansas Democrat who heads the foreign relations committee, said he is especially aroused at the State Department’s rejection of appeals to put a proposed new military agreement with Spain into treaty form. Fulbright said the administration should cut the number of bases in Europe and reduce its troop commitment there — the position advocated by Mansfield in a separate interview. Peace Respite for Reds-Thieu ‘CLOSED CHAPTER’ Mansfield said the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, w h i t h crystallized Senate objections to his pullback resolution, “appears to be a closed chapter now.” Mansfield said that, before seeking Senate action, he is awaiting a Defense Department survey of the possibility of eliminating some-of-the 2,700 American bases around the world — 429 of them classified as major. SEOUL (UPI) — President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam said today the Communists would use a peace in Vietnam as a respite to rest their soldiers for taking up the fight again. Thieu spoke to the Korean Military Academy as part of a visit to South Korea on a swing that will take him to Taiwan before his June 8 conference with President Nixon on Midway Island. The original resolution was introduced Aug. 31, 1966, and cosponsored by 12 other senators. It was opposed by President Johnson, Senate Republican leader uEverett M. Dirksen and a bipartisan grouping of senators. OBJECTED TO PLAN “It is because of our progress and our strength in the face of the weakening enemy that we are hopeful about the chances for peace,” he said. “We should, however, always remain vigilant because the Communists are unlikely to accept and respect a long-lasting peace. “The Communists have made no secret of their . ultimate aims of world domination,” he said. “A ‘peace’ they conclude is often only a respite in order for them to renew aggression later under conditions more advantageous to them.” Fulbright said then he objected to Mansfield’s plan to take the 1966 resolution directly to the floor without hearings by his committee. Now Fulbright says Spanish and other European bases are not as vital to American or Western European security in an era of rockets and missiles. Thieu’s contention that the Communists would only be biding their time even if peace came may have explained much of the Saigon government’s reluctance to grant extensive concessions at the Paris peace talks. “Nobody in the military wants to give up these bases or reduce our troop commitments. These are pleasant assignments with swimming pools, PXs and all the trimmings of easy living,” Fulbright said in an interview yesterday. As a starter on troop cutbacks, Mansfield proposed, the Nixon administration set a fixed date — possibly 1972 — for a change in the status of Okinawa, which the Japanese want to reclaim. He conceded that freedom of American action on Okinawa, which has been used as a basing point for B52 attacks on Vietnam and as a port of call for U.S. nuclear submarines, must be preserved at least until after the Vietnam war is ended. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy and wanner today and tonight. Highs 84 to 87; lows 60 to 64. Little change Thursday but with chance of thundershowers, highs 86 to 90, turning cooler late Thursday. Friday’s outlook is mostly fair and not as warm. Winds are from the south to southwest at 10 to 18 miles today and tonight, shifting to northwesterly 10 to 20 miles late Thursday. Precipitation probability will increase from 10 per cent today to 20 tonight, 30 Thursday. Today In Pontine Tuoodoy In Ponlloe „ . (as rccofdod dovmlown) HIghost lomporoturo 74 :vV jail Ex-Postal Official Indicted BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — John Gnau of 3894 Peabody has been appointed a trustee on the Township Board to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Robert Sinclair i n January. The term expires in January. in Baltimore Bribery Case Gnau was previously on the Township Zoning Board. He is vice president of Alexander Hamilton Insurance Co. in Livonia. The Township Board has rezoned 18 40 acre lots off Telegraph in the northern part of the township from light manufacturing to small business. WASHINGTON (AP) — A former top-level Post Office Department official was indicted by a federal grand jury today on charges of bribery, corruption and conflict of interest. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell said Joseph P. Doherty was accused in a nine-count indicUnent returned by a special grand jury in Baltimore. 1968 after resigning from the Post CKfice Department and, in the new position, used his influence in the p<)stal system on behalf of the Baltimore builder. The property is located to the rear of existing business properties in the area just south of Orchard fjake Road. AP Wlrtphoti ACTOR DEAD AT 42 — Actor Jeffrey Hunter died yesterday after brain surgery for a head injury. He was 42. A coroner’s report after an autopsy said the death was caused by “blunt force trauma compatible with a fall.” He was found unconscious in his Van Nuys, Calif., home Monday with a swollen right eye. The actor was best known for his role as Jesus Christ in the 1960 movie, “King of Kings.” Doherty served as executive assistant to the assistant postmaster general in charge of the bureau of facilities under the administration of former President Lynd(xi B. Johnson. The indictment charged Doherty with seeking and agreeing to accept a $20,000 bribe from Dominic Kracci Sr., a Baltimore builder, and the Piracci Construction Co. of Baltimore. Each of the eight counts of bribery and corruption in the indictment carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison and a $20,000 fine. If convicted on the conflict of interest count, Doherty could get a $5,000 fine and a one-year sentence. The indictment said Doherty agreed to accept the $20,000 “on or about” March 15, 1968, in Baltimore. At that time, he was still a postal official. BUILDING CONTRACT The indictment said Doherty, in return TOP ADVISER In his post office job, Doherty was the top adviser to the assistant postmaster genei'al on matters relating to n#w construction. Construction is expected to begin immediately on a street-paving project in Meadowlake Subdivision. Nearly a mile of roadway along Valley Spring, Crestway and Whysall streets will be paved in the special assessment project. Total project cost is $118,770. About $84,600 has been raised by a bonding issue which is to be repaid by the residents of the three streets involved in the project. The remaining money will be paid by the township ($22,293) and the Oakland County Road Commission ($11,877). for the money and a promise of future employment, agreed to use his influence to help Piracci obtain a contract to build a new main post office in Baltimore and lease other postal facilities in Maryland. The indictment also alleged that Doherty went to work for Piracci in June He also served as the principal contact with Congress, top government officials and the business community on post office programs for acquiring new facilities, modernization of old structures and other programs relating to capital appropriations. The construction contract was awarded to O’Connor-LaLonde Contractors of Warren. Completion is expected by July 30. All roads will be kept open to local traffic throughout the construction period. Heated Debates in Legislature Over Spending BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Five Cran-brook School faculty members have received sumiher study grants. instructors John Geoghegan 382,000 Autos Recalled by Ford LANSING ( A P ) — T h e Legislature became embroiled today in heated debates over allocations of state funds and means of raising new revenues for the coming fiscal year. In the Senate, Republicans recessed to consider an amendment that would require a resolution to transfer state funds while the Legislature was in session. DETROIT W — Ford Motor Co. recalled 382,000 standard-sized 19 6 9 Fords and Mercury Cougars yesterday for insp^tion and possible replacement of hood latches which the firm said could fly open when the cars are in motion. Inspection and replacement were to be carried out at no cost to the buyers of the vehicles. ^ •Ford said that some of the latches have been produced with insufficient clearance between parts. A spokesman said the condition could cause the main latch to bind, interfering with complete closing. The firm said no accidents are known to have occurred as a result of the defect. Altojgether, the company said, it is looking for 250,000 defective l^itdhes and William Moran, wdio started course this year on film production, will study communications at the State University of Iowa and the University of Michigan, respectively. Ijitdh which were manufactured by a supplier. 'Wayne State University. William May About 354,000 of the cars were sold in the will enroll in a program of black studies U. S., 26,000 in Canada and 2,300 in over* and Douglas Shepard will study biologi- seas markets. cal sciences. Richard Huesing will study advanced mathematics at Ohio State University. Two Cranbrook masters will study at Sen. Robert Vanderlaan, R-Grand Rapids, argued that the Legislature could legally be in session but not physically present in Lansing to take action. If the amendment were approved, he said,* it could effectively halt the emergency transfer of funds. Nursing Home May Be Sold The debate occurred as the upper chamber reviewed a $27.4 million appropriation bill for the Department of Corrections. The amount represents an increase of $1.9 million over the department’s budget for the current fiscal year. HIDDEN TAX HIKE The House, meanwhile, debated additional commercial taxes buried in a $22-million appropriation for regulatory agencies under the departments of commerce, labor and licensing and regulation. Specified taxes could raise additional revenues an estimated $20 million, legislators said. Included in the tax measures were: • An additional one cent per gallon tax on aviation fuel. • A $5 fee for private fleet trucks. • A one per cent levy on annual revenues for railroad operations within the state. Beverly Enterprises of California, an organization owning and operating some 6,000 to 8,000 beds in nursing homes across the nation, has offered to buy Seminole Hills Nursing Home, 532 Orchard Lake. When and if the acquisition is completed, Cooley and Associates, owners of Semihole Hills Management, Inc., will make an announcement, said Basil F. Boyce, Seminole executive vice president. Seminole Hills owns and operates six care facilities, containing 713 beds, throughout the state. There are 231 beds in the Pontiac nursing home, established in 1963. t, Boyce said Beverly Enterprises, which includes extended care facilities and subacute hospitals in its western-based chain, has signified the Intent of continuing to operate the Pontiac facility along its present lines. Should the sale be completed, as announced by the California company at its annual meeting, the Seminole purchase would represent Beverly’s ■ first acquisition in Michigan. Little bike. Letti {an. the only thing missing IS YOU! The Honda Mini-Trail The Mini-Troil takes every hill and dale like a champ. Great camping companion. Featuras fold-down handlebars (slips easily in car trunk, plane or boat). Excellent street lighting includes headlight, taillight and stoplight. Spark-arrestor muffler approved by USDA Forest Setvice. Big, knobby tires. OHC 4-stroke engine, automatic cjutch, 3-speed transmission. See this little bike and ifV nlee-little price. CAoted Frideiyf Memorial Day 350 AYEN6ER with 42 HORSEPOWER • ELECTRONIC IQNITION • ANTI-FOUL SPARK PLUQS • TOP SPEED of IIS MPH • QOT IT? QET IT! at ANDERSil ROBBINS SPORT CYCLE NATIONAL WEATHER-Showers are due tonight on the Pacific Northwest Coast, the southern Plains states, the Gulf Coast of Texas, most of Florida, and thd northern New England states. It will be cooler in the north-central portion of the nation and New England^. ■ t \ \ , : . ' ' \a"l 2211 Auburn Road Near Croeke Road Phono I82-4B8T lU • PntTON aUlCK SERVICE 1645 S. TELEGRAPH in PONTIAC • FE 3-7102 OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY, 9 'TIL 8; SATURDAY 'TIL 5 HONDA • DUCATI • TRIUMPH • MATCHLESS NORTON • MONTESA • BSA • MOTO GUZZI MOSTMOOELS \ //./ h"\. *' I-' ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEf)NESDAY, MAY 28. 1969 A——8 Lqps Troops, Reds Still Battling for Plain VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) Laotian government troops and ^onuiiunist forces were reported still battling today for. consol of the Plaine des Jarres in northeastern L^os. Military sources said that government forces had with-.drawn from the strat^c town of Xieng Khouang but that the Communist Pathet Lao and North Vietnamese troops had failed to take it because heavy bombing by U.S. and Laotian planes. 30 miles from the North Vietnamese border. Government ctmtrol of _____ arW could seriously interfere With the movement of North Vietnamese troops and supplies along the Ho Ghi Minh trail to South Vietnam. Laotian army troops reportedly pulled out of Xieng Khouang on Saturday, after occupying it fw a month, because they “The town has been flattened,” a senior officer said. “Xiang Khouang is a no-man’s-land.” The Plaine des Jarres is a barren plateau of strategic value because main east-west and north-south highways meet on it. Xieng Khouang is on the southeastern edge of the plain, ous engagements in Laos more than two years. LOSSES NOT DISCLOSED Government losses have not beeii disclosed. But army headquarters in Vientiane claims more than 500 North Vietnamese have been killed so far, niainly in air strikes. The strikes have been carried out by Laotian T28s, reportedly sidered further occupation futile. The population of 15,000 has fled to nearby tovms in government-controlled areas. Fighting c 5 fw control of several strategic hills 15 miles west of Xieng Khouang. Sources said Phou Ke, the most important of the hills, had changed hands several times since the current wave of fighting began. Ihe b^tle for the Plaine des-Jarres has developed in the past month into dhe of the most seri- joined by U.S. B52s and F105s from Thailand. L/. S. Testing VW WASHINGTON (AP) - The National Highway Safety Bureau is conducting tests toj determine whether the 1969 Volkswagen meets federal safety standards, according to Sen. Vance Hartke. Hartke already has said if the cars do not meet current standards, he the requirements upgraded. TOe United ^States has consistently denied tha^ its planeS are bombing in Laos, but Prime Minister Souvanna Pfiouma has publicly acknowledged at least twice that U.S. bombing is taking place. Government sources said lore ^ than 1,000 Pathet Lao troops have defected to the government since the fighting began. Most of the defections resulted from daily air strikes which have disrupted the supply of food and ammunition to the Communist forces, the sources There is going to be a REVOLUTION SOON HOWARD DELL'S BALDWIN PHARMACY 219 Baldwin Ave. SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St. OPEN TOMORROW 1, 9 AM. UNTIL 9 P.M. ^ ^mpare the features and price! front handbrake on Jsoys' 20" hi-rise sportsbike charge it at Simms AA99 Model 42 bicycle with front handbrakes; safety coaster brake. Chrome fenders, white sidewall tires, chrome rims, chrome chainguard, hi-ri; plus kickstand. »handlebar and saddle CHARGE IT at SIMMS ^ Use Your Midwest Bank Card or our 30 day same as cash plan SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX EDUCATIONAL EVOLUTIONISTS - Explaining the Troy School District’s unique three-step educational program are (from left), Clyde LeTart of the Michigan Department of Education; Dr. Ben Jordan, assistant dean of urban extension, Wayne State University; Walter Fightmaster, executive di- rector of community services, Oakland Community College; and Boyd Larson, acting superintendent of Troy Schools. With the entrance of WSU into Troy’s evening school programs, Troy now^has complete kindergarten-through-college educational opportunity. Troy Has College Program (Continued From Page One) programs of the Michigan Department of Education, noted that Troy was the. state’s pioneer in the three-step program and declared that his department supports all attempts of the effort that “will reduce unnecessary duplication and provide expanded services to a larger segment of the adult population.’’ Ben Jordan of WSU, that some 200 students are anticipated per quarter. Bid Opening Set on State Road Work Projects “Of the 6.32 students now enrolled in the community college program in Trey, 88 per cent are in transfer programs and will be seeking the junior and senior level courses now to be offered,” stated Boyd R. Larson, acting superintendent of Troy Schools. Clyde LeTart, of the Michigan Department of Education, said that the only .somewhat similar program in Michigan is the Ironwood (northern Michigan) School District in cooperation with Northern Michigan University. . Bids on State llighway Department projects, including an estimated $490,000 in improvements on Oakland County roads and another $160,000 in Lapeer County, are to be opened next Wednesday. / The bid opening covers an estitnated $20.4 million in projects in 28 counties, according to State Highway Department officials. The state expects to spend $130,000 on widening Telegraph Road in fi ont of the Miracle Mile Shopping Center. Completion is scheduled for Oct. 31. Widening to five lanes on twivtenths of a mile of Huron (M39) from West Wide Track to West of State Street in downtown Pontiac is planned, at a cost of $100,000. Completion is set for Oct. 4. Construction of a pedestrian bridge and approaches on Stephenson Highway (1-75) at Garfield and Morhou.se Avenues in Hazel Park is scheduled at an estimated $160,000. Completion is due Dec. 15. In I.^peer County, the state intends to pave 5.7 miles af Otter Lake Road w-est of the M24 -- M90 intersection north of Lapeer, Cost is estimated at $160,000 with completion due Nov. 15. SLMILAR PROGRAM That would mean, according to Dr. “Nowhere in the state do we know of a coojierative program among a public school, a community college and a university,” LeTart said. Students for the WSU college segment will be able to register for classes at Troy High School by mail. Farmington Schools Plan 'Satellite' Hot-Lunch Setup FARMINGTON - Students will be eating prepackaged lunches — much like meals served on airlines — when a new lunch program begins in 11 schools next fall. The “satellite” lunch program, approved by the school board this week, has been in operation on an experimental basis at Larkshire Elementary school since spring vacation and at Middle Belt Elementary school since April. ' lunch-size portions and refrigerated in a central kitchen at Larkshire. The containers are then trucked to the satellite schools where the hot portions, individually wrapped in foil, are placed in quick-heating oven. DISTRICT ADVANTAGE “These are not frozen TV dinners,’’ emphasized William C. Prisk, Farmington Schools’ busine.ss manager. The food is prepared into prepackaged “This method has a distinct advantage because we can apportion properly so that the last child through the lunch line gets just as much to eat as the first child, and the food is just ^s hot,” Prisk explained. “We can serve any number of children much faster than we can by using traditional methods of cooking,” he added. Councilman in Wolverine Lake Gets 'Citizen of the Year' Honors The hot food tray is placed on top of the cold tray, each individually wrapped, with coverings that adhere to each other. The milk catron is placed on top of both. Prisk explained that the child can then go directly to a table without fear of losing anything. Should the lunch fall, it is covered so it won’t spill. WOLVERINE LAKE — A. D. Baize, councilman and part-time acting village president, was honored as “Citizen of the Year" by Ford Motor Co.'s Plymouth Area Community Relations Committee last night. A quality standards technician at the Sheldon Road plant in Plymouth, Baize, 14,33 Shankinf received the Town Crier Bell, Ford’s highest award for community service Baize has been a councilman for four years and has served as acting mayor during the mayor’s exchange program during Michigan week for the past two years. He has also served as chairman of the village’s recreation committee and chairman of its employe relations committee. He is active iii the YMCA Indian Guides, a program for boys, and as a Republican party precinct worker. THROWS IT ALL AWAY Rochester OKs 4-Year Lease ROCHESTER - The city will lake a four-year lease on a parking lot owned by Potere Funeral Home, on Walnut Street between Third and Fourth, for $1 per year. Under the agreement, the city will resurface and the lot and will assume taxes on the property. The council recently directed the mayor and clerk to sign a lease agreement with the funeral home. According to City Manager Bill Sinclair the city most likely will erect parking meters on the lot. In other recent business, the citv amended its downtown an>a zoning ordinance governing gas stations. Ciider the amendment, gas stations may not be constructed within 500 feet of each other. Tlie amendment, said Sinclair, is an ef fort to halt further such developments in the downtown section. Business District Renewal Plan to Be Aired in Oxford (;UEST SPEAKER—Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley will be the featured speaker at West Bloomfield High School’s 8 p.m. commencement ceremonies June 11. He will discuss the causes contributing to i drrent campus cri.ses acro.ss the nation and will discuss the responsibilities of pollege students. a^HE JPONTIAC PRESS ^VE1)NESDAY, MAY 28, 1969 A—4 Brandon Supervisdrs Job Keeps Rural Visionary Busy By NED ADAMSON ' BRANDON TOWNSHIP - Norman Kapson, the supervisor of this un-prosperous township in north central Oakland County, is a scrambler. He is progress-minded. You might even call him a rural visionary. But Brandon Township has Its problems. It is essentially a poor township comprising hard-pressed farmers, migrant Appalachian whites who commute to the auto plants in Flint and Pontiac or work small farms, and disenchanted city dwellers who have fled to the country to slow down. Much of the land is rolling, scenic and undeveloped. It probably will be one of the last rural bastions in Oakland County to surrender to the steadily encroaching urban sprawl. HIS OWN BUSINESS When finished, the child ju.st nests one tray in the other, adds the plastic silverware and throws it all away. The program offers an annual $7,000 savings, Prisk said. The initial post for the equipment will be $29,000. FULL TIME JOB Kapson has found that the part-time job that pays $6,000 per year is, in essence, a full-time job. He shuttles The co.st for next year’s satellite program will be $37,922. Avon Man Gets New Porke-Davis Position OXFORD -r Citizens affected by the proposed $4-million urban renewal project in Oxford central business district will have a chance to air their views and ask questions of village officials and representatives of the federal department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The Village Council last night set the meeting ftn- 7:30 p.m.'June H at the village hall. Repre.sentatives of HUD’s Chicago office will be present to review Oxford's application for urban renewal. JCs to Serve Coffee to Holiday Motorists In other business last night, the council agreiHl to go beyond painting the village water lower (east of Washington Street near W. Burdick), allocating $831 for welding repairs and $294 for materials. between the township office and his business quarters daily. Evenings will find him assessing property, arbitrating family squabbles, soothing testy shotgun-armed farmers who don’t like trespassers, enforcing junk car ordinances and tending to numerous other duties continguous with rural life. Kapson grew up in the ethnic I^lray section of Detroit and his city ways stand out in Ortonville. He likes natty clothes, and drives about town in a lumbering late model steel-gray Cadillac. Said an observer, “Norman looks like the local bookie — but he seems to im- press almost everyone with his hustle. He will always listen to a problem and will usutlly do something about it — fast.” , Despite his tough exterior, Kapson comes off genial and friendly. He radiates confidence-plus concerning his small stable business and his position as the township’s government boss. Richard W. Wilcox, Kapson’s jlredecessor, summed up Kapson “as the sort of man who is willing to work hard at anything he does. He has really dug in at his new job. He is tough in an argument, but is always willing to understand the other side of the story.” POOR TAX BASE The community, virtually absent of industry, has a poor tax base. Tlie school district that serves the area is the poorest in Oakland County in terms of operational millage. Poor soil conditions and the existence of only one major thoroughfare running through the township (M15) make it difficult to attract the industry that would give the tax base a lift. The population is growing, slowly but methodically. In 1967, 30 new houses were constructed. More than 100 went up in 1968. About 32 new houses were under construction as of April 30. Land is being purchased for* two proposed large apartment projects. Said Kapson, “We want to grow — if we stay at the status quo, we’re in real trouble.” INDUSTRIAL PARK “One reason we have no industry in the township is that we haven’t given it any breaks. We hope to set up an in-du-strial park in the near future.” The Transportation and Land Use Study (TALUS) report points to the Brandon area as one of the few areas in Southeastern Michigan that will preserve its rural image during, the next 20 years. Kapson isn't particularly looking for a boom-type growth, but he does feel the township needs to strengthen its shaky tax base. Some of the speculative land buying that contributes to spiraling land reassessments already has hit the township, and many of the local property owner's were hit with sharply increased tax bills this year. Pontiac Prni Photo Norman Kapson—Digging In At New Job Kapson came to the township in 1%2. An automotive design engineer, he set Clarksfon, Utica Men in New Posts uj^his business m a red barn at the rear of rambling white frame, house with green shutters on Mill Street in Ortort-ville, threw up a tree house for the kids and built a fishing pond at the back of ..his property. After many years of hard commuting, working in Detroit, he is an established country dweller. “It was. tough at first. I didn’t think I would make it out here for a couple of years. L missed the city, particularly the night life—but now, well, it’s home.” “I will have to admit I got into local politics out of purely selfish reasons. When first approached for the supervisor’s job, I wasn’t interested. But then I figured I could do as good a job as anyone, so I grabbed it.” West Bloomfield Schools Announce Summer Program COOK BLUMENAU WEST BLOOMFIELD XOWNSHIP -A comprehensive summer program is being offered this year in the school district. Developmental reading and developmental math will be offered at all elementary schools. Programs on science, art drama, children’s literature, field trips and recreational programs will also be offered at various elementary schools. TROY — Sperry Rand Corp.’s Vickers Division has announced three appointments in its corporate personnel departmfflt. The three are Frank F. Blumenau, 6564 Amy, Clarkston, to director of salaried personnel; Russell J. Cook, 4200 Sandy Creek, Utica, to manager of salary administration; and Frank R. Mclsaac, Detroit, to manager o f employment and training. Academic courses in math, English, social studies science and French and a basketball clinic for grades 6-8 will be held at Abbott Junior High. West Bloomfield High School is offering algebra, American government, American history, developmental reading, English, math, sociology, study skills, typewriting and possibly art and instrumental music. Local principals or West Bloomfield High School can be contacted fpr further information. AVON TOWNSHIP — Parke-Davis & Co. has announced the appointment of Robert J. Clegg, 368 Nesbit, as pharmaceutical product manager in the U.S. Marketing Division. Clegg, 44, joined Parke-Davis in 1954 as a sales representative after two years in retail pharmacy. In 1956, he was promoted to field manager and supervised sales in the Grand Rapids and Detroit areas. LAPEER — The Jaycees here will provide free coffee and soft drinks to tired Memorial weekend motorists,in an effort to “Bring ‘Em Back Alive.” The coffee br^ak center will open at 1 p.m. Sunday at Arnold Sales & Service Inc., 498 S. Main, .snuth'of M2I. the coffee center will close tl'hen the traffic rush ends. Thinking of a hearing aid? I Zenith has 50 years of electronic experience in case you haven't heani You can’t buy a finar instrument than , Zenith. 18 different modeis. From one so tiny it fits in your ear...to one for JtriS* IMwstrFteow ZmSS ItadU). TV. MS Csfw^ IV AUTHOtnaO ZENITH DEAIEX Pontiao Mall Optical & Hearing Aid Cantor 682.1113 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 28^ 1969 KITCHEN and BATHROOM REMODELING FREE ESTIMATES BATHROOMS PlumbiiiK, electric, tile, custom vanities, medicine cabinets. KITCHENS Formica cabinets in decorator colors, birch cabinets in all styles.^ At Low at NO MONEY all styles.. ns Mo. FREE PLANNING Gail 682-6800 FULL SIZE MODELS ON DISPLAY AT LIFE BATHROOM & KITCHEN CO. DAY OR NIOHT 111 Fontlae Mall OHieo Bldf., Facing Elizabeth Lake Rd. Div. of LHa Bid|. Mon., Tues., Wed. and Sat. 1l-5:M-*Thurs., Fri. 12-S 7122 W.1 Mila Rd. - 2MU Ford Rd. - Call Dl 142M Pontiac’s finances are in reasonably good shape, thanks i to, the city income, tax, a report the City Commission indicated last night. The tax garnered some |2.5 million in‘ 1968 after being imposed Jan. 1. Receipts to the city come in quarter years, so only three quarters were received last year. PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT The City of Pontiac and Capitol Wrecking Co., Inc. agreed at the last minute to permit us to remain in our present building through the month of June ... This extension of time was given us because our new building in Bloomfield Hills is not completed. We will continue to operate in Downtown Pontiac with Removal Sole Prices until we leave the latter part of June. Income Tax Big Boost to Finonces Director of Finance, Edward Gallagher, projected that some $4.1 million will be collected this year, about 40 per cent of the city’s entire budget. Collections are very close to predictions made when the tax Bidders are to be checked for civil rights compliance and financial capability, it was indicated. ’The commission also: • Directed the public works department to petition .the Oakland County Drain Commission for construction of the North Central Storm Relief Sewer which will start near Joslyn and Tennyson and extend to the Clinton River. This extensive project is meant to replace 30-year-old systems said inadequate fcx* the area and to remedy flooding. Asked for bids to be submitted on several street jobs by Closed Memorial Day, May 30 .and Saturday, May 31 LEWIS FURNITURE CO. DESIGNERS OF RESIDENTIAL AND BUSINESS INTERIORS S. Saginaw St. at Orchard Lak* Avo. — Pontiac, Michigan — 335-8174 began. Gallagher pointed the average amount paid by a resident is $48.93 yearly, termed high in comparison with, other cities. PROPERTY TAX DROP After the income tax went into, effect, the city dropped its property tax from 10 to 7 mills. This saved property taxpayers some $1.4 million. However, with the additional Income tax revenue, the city treasury is about $2.7 million ahead on the exchange. June 16 at a total esfunated cost of $160,000. Work to be done this year under the proposed contract is: (?urb gutter and paving on Y p s i 1 a n t i, Basswood, Price and Carlisle; paving on Cherry Hill, Simmons, Beaudette Park Drive, Oakhill Cemetery Drive, and corner,of Baldwin and Walton; pavement reconstruction Balboa and Granada; and recapping on Edison. Held second reading on adopted amendments to the Building Code. • Denied approval of a construction job for water mains on Stirling from Walton to Northfield and[ bn. Stirling fromjin the area of Malkim School — Northfield to Collier, Extensive Joslyn, Walton and Collier objections were raised at a' streets — and a proposed water public hearing. The Cityjmain on Emiry from Hollister Department of Public Works to CourtWright. also recommended the project! • Approved ■ appointments: be delayed urftil at least 1973.- |Vernon Page of 199 Rockv^ll to name of a new five-year-term on the Diston between the Clipton River and Bagley to Gillespie. R^oipmended to t y Road Commission t County lload Commission that construction projects on county roads in the city under study include V o o r h e 1 s from Telegraph to James K, Collier, and Opdyke. Referred to the city Housing Commission and ElBeft Wilmot of 74 Iroquois to the Pontiac Area Planning Council with Rev. Carl Price of 58 Franklin Boulevard as alternate. * Resolved congratulations to former track star Hayes Jones and his parents on the honor bestowed on Jones who was in- engineer requests for sidewalks ducted into the Michigan Sports -----------------^------------Hall of Fame Monday. Justice Talks of Court Situation WASHINGTON (AP) - Justice Potter Stewart says the presence of Abe Fortas on the Supreme Court was one of the major reasons that he took him- Gallagher said that, in order to get the additional revenue by property tax methods, the city would have to add nine mills to the existing seven. In other finance matters, Gallagher reported the city’ equalized value was placed at $461,438,000, compared to $446,998,000 last year, a rise of about 3.3 per cent. BEING REVISED Gallagher also pointed out city’s budget is in the firocess of revision due to increased costs in the wage contracts agreed to by the city with its four employe unions. In other business last night, the commission delayed approval of a contract for a new fire station at West South Boulevard between Motor and Bagley. Low bidder was R. Hanson Construction Co., 2111 Orchard Lake, West Bloomfield Township. the court at the time he called on Priesident Nixon. Fortas resigned from court May 15 under criticism for his relationship with Louis E. Wolfson, now serving a jail term for violating securities laws. Stewart’s interview Tuesday i with the Washington Post indi-| Last week Nixon nominated cated he might not have with-iWarren E. Burger, an appeals drawn if Fortas had resigned court judge, to succeed Earl from the court earlier than he i Warren as chief justice. Stewart said he visited the self out of the running for chief justice a month ago. The justice said he did not spell out for the President his concern that it might compound problems to promote from within the court ranks because For- But Stewart emphasized that he had no regrets and he could never be sure what he would have done if Fortas had been off President last month to caution him against a promotion within the court’s own ranks because it historically had not worked out well. Lost Sweeper Found at Last LOS ANGELES (AP) - The $13,000 street sweeper that vanished in November 1967 has in me court ranKS oecause rui- tas-once a candidate for chief "P ^ ^u- justice himself-was still on the ^ ^ vice presl- -j I T j o T t. of Angeles Board President Lyndon B. Johnson public works, said Tuesday wait untd offered the chief jus- bright-orange machine was tice last year, but this was with- jbrough its serial num- drawn when a filibuster was b^^ after , Aurora requested a threatened in the Senate. ^he man- * ★ * jufacturer notified Lbs Angeles Stewart, asked why he didn’tithat its sweeper had been found, wait until ofefred the chief jus- Weber said “I think” the 9V2-tice post before rejecting it, ton machine will be returned smiled and said: “Much harder after some unanswered ques-then.” 'tions are cleared up. Ten firms bid on tho job, with Hanson’s low at $229,400, about $25,000 above expectations. Eight year old whiskeys vs. four, five, and six year old whiskeys. The straight whiskeys blendecTin Schenley Reserve are older. And older whiskey tastes more mature. Smoother. It costs more to make. So compare the age. Compare the price. And if you’re paying Schenley Reserve prices for something younger, don’t think that they’re charging too much. Maybe we’re just charging too little. Schenley Reserve. It costs more to make. Costs us. Not you. $^B2 $285 ♦Blended WhiskeySi 6596 Grain Neutral Spirits ♦ 86 Pfoof © Schenley Your special introduction to orange NiP This introductory offer is your invitation to try Orange Nip, the delicious frozen concentrate front Florida. Up to now, there just wasn’t enough to go around. Made from selOcted tree-ripened oranges in the protected groves of Ben Hill Griffin, Jr., in Frostproof, Florida, then slightly sweetened and with added Vitamin C, Orange Nip has won friends in city after city. Now Ben Hill Griffin, Jr. has acquired mord acres of orange groves, so Orange Nip is bare, and each 12 oz. can makes 48 ounces of guaranteed enjoyment (or yoor money back, and that's a promise). In your freezer case today. Orange Nip, Not a synthetic Made frofli the real thin; FLORIDA'S FINEST JUICE ORANOES iQrsCo.,N.Y.C. Wl'll pi) m 35$ CASH Send two easy-open strips from Orange Nip to Ben Hill Griffin, Jr., P. 0. Box 127, Frostproof, Florida with your name and address and he’ll send you 350 — just about the cost of your first can. Sorry, just one to a family. This offer ends July 15,1969. Florida's famous Sunshihe Tree f't'l THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, MTchlgan 4805$ 48 West Huron Street juaUM M. liTOiuti Tnuum and Tlntncd Offlctr WEDNESDAY, |tfAY 28, 1969 John A. Riii» Secretary and Adycrtirtnd Director We Cheer Apollo 10 Unlike most dress rehearsals, that of Apollo lO’s epic eight-day space voyage to the edge of the moon was a brilliant success. In final preparation for Apollo ll’s mission of landing'two men on the pjoon sometime in July, Apollo IQ, after orbiting the moon for 2V2 days, put two of its three-man crew—-Air Force Col. Thomas P. Stafford (captain of the spacecraft) and Navy Cmdr. Eugene A. Cernan within nine miles of the lunar objective. While they observed it at close range for eight hours. Navy Cmdr. John W. Young stayed behind in Apollo’s command capsule to mind the store. AU phases of the expedition went off with utmost precision, as the landing vehicle simulated maneuvers that will enable Apollo 11 to accomplish its historic mission. This long-awaited climax to America’s program of space exploration will give dramatic reality to the once fanciful expression of human remoteness, “The nian on the moon.” Progress of the Nation’s space program from the first unmanned Explorer satellites through the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo series has been marked by fantastic achievement and operational expertness. Mainly all objectives of the complicated missions have been accomplished, as each succeeding one brought nearer the ultimate goal. Credit for Apollo lO’s spectacular exploratory feat, with its pinpoint splashdown in the Pacific Monday noon within 500 miles of Pago Pago, would cover a wide range of- Government agencies, scientists, manufacturers, technicians and, of course, the intrepid astronauts who flew the spacecraft. We congratulate all on the unceasing dedication that has given the United States its preeminence in the realm 6f celestial discovery. Fired Teacher Regains Job Marlynn Marcks was reinstated to teaching status Tuesday, but only after a painful experience that reflects discreditably on Highland Park school authorities. The 33-year-old teacher was originally discharged by the school board for having informed police that one of her students had reported witnessing the shooting of a Detroit policeman on March 29 during disorder that centered at the New Bethel Baptist phurch. Because of public clamor against her summary dismissal. Miss Marcks was subsequently offered a nonteaching job. Re- fusing it on advice of her attorney, she won complete vindication by a court order issued by Wayne County Circuit Judge Thomas J. Foley directing that she be returned to classroom duty. Although the statement of the student which caused all the ruckus was later repudiated. Miss Marcks nonetheless did her duty as a conscientious citizen by informing proper authorities of it. That she should have been punished for so doing is unthinkable, particularly at a time when good citizenship seems to be in short supply. Monkey to Ape Spaceman Remember Enos the Astronaut? If you do, you qualify either as an expert in space history or as an animal lover, first-class. Enos was a chimpanzee and the first “American” to be sent into earth orbit and returned, way back in November 1961. Our primate friends are still playing an important role in space e.x-ploration. A little 15-pound pigtail monkey is scheduled to go into a 30-day orbit on June 18. ★ ' * ★ ★ ■ It will be the first time a high form of life will be" studied continuously in a state of welght-le.ssness for such a long period. The knowledge is essential for the planning of permanent, manned space platforms. The tiny creature will be wedged inside a spherical Biosaltellite amid a mess of instruments and other equipment and will be wired from head to toe. Surgically implanted electrodes will telemeter information on such things as brain temperature and muscle response. He won’t be able to blink an eye without it being recorded on earth. ★ ★ ★ About the only diversion the monkey will have will be pushing buttons in two behavioral tasks. If he pushes the right buttons, he’ll be rewarded with food pellets. Here's a salute to the simian space hero. A human being put through the same ordeal would go ape. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Double View iXinpnra Falh Gmette) If yn\i have friends or ae-fiuaintances who are planninR in rome lo Niagara Kails for a visit this summer, drop them a note and tell them they are in for a special treat They will see the famous eataracts in a way that never has been possible before. ITiey’!! .see the great HorSesho* Falls rushing over the precipice in all Us majesty — ItA rainbow shining through the mist and its constant roar sounding in full cadence. Just like It's always been. * * -k Also, they'll see the American Falls silent and hone dry - its water diverted over the Horseshoe by a cof-' fer dam and its rapids and crest c:^pospd to fvi' the first tirhie ever.'^ The diversion — to last several months —- will enable army engineers to study ways of halting erosion and removing unsightly rock plies. You might say that It will be two great sights for the price of one. Or as they say ' on the cocktail circuit, “with water’’ and “on the rocks.” ★ ★ is The leason you ought to tell your friends about this is to correct a report, gaining some circulation, that the dewatering of the American cataract will somehow detract from I tie view which tourists will get. Here on the scene, we know that just the opposite will be true. Smut ' Theinaily Oklahoman ■ President Nixon has pro-po.sed a triple attack on smut ■sent through the mails and otherwii^e distributed lo unwilling recipienls. An age limit governing addressees would be the first requirement. Advertising matter appealing to prurient interest and the delivery of material to which the addressee objects also would be barred. ★ * ★ Considering the volume of such material, this idea no doubt will evoke a favorable reaction from decent citizens. There have been 140,000 protests sent the post office department since 1904 asking that delivery of such mail be prohibited. * ★ ★ • In contrast to easlier rulings by the supreme court, where the standard of decency was based on “contemporary morgs” in municipalities and states, recent decisions have cast doubt on Just what is permissible and what is not. The Piesident can send directives to the post office department. He can transmit legislative recommendations to Congres.s. But he can’t end the flow of .smut with the .sort of rulings made by the high court recently. ★ ★ ★ The pendulutn swings slowly, but it does swing. It ap-peWs now that this, and (ilher areas, may get a different lobk if the court membership itself changes, as It could do within the next two years with four prospective vacancies. Voice/of the People:, Beauty of Area Roadside Is Ruined bu Dumping Recently I walked down Martin Road, a shbrt road between Oakley Park and Richardson. T^is used to be a beautiful rOad with big trees overhanging the road. Now it is nothing but a public dump littered with furniture, old appliances, bathroom fixtures, bags of leaves and garbage. There is not a sign saying not to dump anything. ★ ik ★ Is there a dump where people in this area can take junk? There should be signs posted and anyone found dumping on the roadside should be fined. Can this road be cleaned up? MRS. DONALD MOVINSKI 145 ETHEL CT., WALLED LAKE Now We'll See How The Delivery Is! David Lawrence Says: Mail Service Stirring Complaints WASHINGTON - MaU delivery Is getting worse and worse throughout the United States. Whether packages or airmail letters are being sent, the delays are startling. Last week this correspondent respondent received a letter from Sar-asota, Fla., that took 11 LAWRENCE days to be delivered, and another letter from Boston, Mass., delivered 10 days after mailing. These are not rare Instances. People all over the country are complaining about the mails. President Nixon has announced that he agrees with President Johnson that the recommendation made by a national commission, proposing the establishment of an independent corporation to handle the mails, should be adopted. Mr. Nixon declares that, Without such a system, Congress either will have to raise postage rates or the taxpayers will have to bear the burden of paying deficits. fW greater than at present, when they are running at a billion dollars a year. BIG DEFICIT In the last 10 years, the deficits have amounted to more than 88 billion, and Mr. Nixon says it will be twice that much if the past practices of the Post Office Department are continued. l^at is not generally realized is that the Post Office Department today handles a n unprecedented volume of mail — approximately 84 billion pieces annually — which is almost as much as. the postage systems of all the other countries in the world combined. * ★ ★ More capital Is needed so as to take advantage of machines available to handle ■and process the mail. The Post Office Department has not invested enough capital to do its job. Postmaster Gen. W i n t 0 n Blount, who whs formerly the head of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, pointed 0 u t recently that there is no need for large post office buildings in the center of cities. He said they could be better placed on the outskirts where there Is access to highways, airlines and trains, while small branch post offices would be located inside the dtles. FREQUENTLY DELAYED Even the mail within cities is frequently delayed. Blount said in an interview recently: “You hear people in our big cities talking /about mail taking three or lour days to get across tovm when it can cross the country in a day or so.” The Post Office Department Is frequently confronted with c 0 m p 1 a ints, particularly because of the damage suffered when important business mail Is delayed. ★ ★ ★ While there has been much discussion in the last two years about a government-owned but Independent corporation to operate the mails, members of Congress are reluctant to do much about it. They want to keep control of the post office because they feel it benefits them politically. Many postmasters owe their jobs to members of Congress whom they have usually helped In their campaigns. But the real opponents are to be found in the postal unions. Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz., says that the proposal “will never pass as long as postal unions are opposed to it.” ★ ★ ★ He suggests that their fears about “being thrown to the wolves” must be calmed. ★ ★ ★ It could be, of course, that If Congress blocks the plan, protests will be noted in the congressional campaign of 1970. For there are plenty of persons who have been annoyed by the delays in the delivery of mail, and many members of Congress of both parties may be surprised at the votes against them if something isn’t done to improve the operations of the post offices .throughout the United States. Bob Considine Says: Wounded Veteran Tells of GIs' Burden in Viet CONSIDINE Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Charles ’Thornton of at S. Roselawn; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Oro D. Brown of .14 Thorpe; golden wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. R,^ A. Becker of Fort Pierce, Fla.; 51st wedding anniversary. Mr. hhd Mrs. Arthur Bemdt of 571 E. Mansfield; 56th wedding anniversary. ' '\ NEW YORK - Meet Capt. Max Cleland, UJS. Army (Ret.), formerly with the First Air Cavalry, Vietnam. Looks likie Gordon MacRae and has a mas-ter’s degree in American studies from Emory College, Atlanta. He also has both legs and his right arm off. And the Silver Star. He Is 26, and alternately cheerful and puzzled; “I’m lucky. I could’ve been killed,” he said. ★ * ★ “F'cllows over there carry a lot of burdens,” the wonderful guy said in his articulate manner. “One of the burdens i.s the burden of dissent. The dissent back home, that is. The fellow in the field has no such choice as dissent. He doesn’t have the privilege to dis.sent. He’s there, and that’s that. “But the fact that others have the right to dissent, and do, back home, is a psychological weight on him. He’s not antidissent, mind you. Just puzzled. He wondera why w'e, all can’t think allka on a thing like Vietnam, one way or the other. VOLUNTEERED FOR VIET “I volunteered to go to Vielnam. 1 had a .soft job as a general’s aide hack here but I couldn’t escape m y conscience. I think I see things a little more clearly now. “Apparently we’re now going to have' a token withdrawal, just a,s we once had a token buildup. But that won't pleasa everybody over there. * '' it ' ' ' ' "We could send between 50,000 and 100,000 guys home right now and not really weaken our punch. But if I were still there I wouldn’t like to see it. One of those guys sent home might somehow have saved my life. “It’s all bound up in politics. There are battles that are waged to make a political point. Sometimes they don’t even make the point. ‘CHANGED OUTLOOK’ “Fighting for a hill on the Laotian border or Cambodian border doesn't change the war. But the big Tet offensive of last year did. It changed our whole outlook on the war. “It had the same effect on American public opinion as the loss of Dien Bien Phu had on the French people. It started the ‘IjCt’s get out’ crusades that have been taken up bv so many of the Left and Right.” * ★ * He’s not bitter, really. ‘Tm not a paraplegic,” he said, waving his lone wing for emphasis. “True, it’s tough without knees. Nobody at the Veterans hospital In Washington, where they’re fitting me with some legs, can assure me that I’ll make It. But I’m going to fool them. I’m going to make it. "And when I do I’m going to write a book — a study of what happened In this country and in Vietnam between President Johnson’s State of the Union message in .January 1968, and his abdication .speech on March 31.” * * it He thinks Vietnam will end with a draw, but that It won’f be quite as good a draw as Korea. “The Seventh Fleet caq’t surround ttiree-fourths of Vietnam," he explained pointedly. Suggest Shoppers Boycott High Priced Meat How much higher will meat prices climb before grocery shoppers of Oakland County rebel? I suggest we boycott meats that are ridiculously high priced. When a chain store has a meat sale but doesn’t keep an adequate supply throughout the sale, complain to the meat manager. Shop around for lower prices. By boycotting all high priced meats, the watered down ground beef some stores siell will have to improve. DONNA ‘Appreciate Firemen Who Assisted Wife’ I appreciate the firemen who came to my house recently and saved my wife when she suffered a severe attack of ma. I believe f owe her life to them. HOWARD ADAMS 485 CENTRAL Gives Opinion on Statement of ‘Reparation’ The statement of “reparation" made by certain leaders In the black community to predominately white Churches is one of the most racial and prejudiced I have heard of read. If the statement had asked for land, clothing, training and housing for all poor, regardless of race or nationality, from our wealthy Christian churches, I would find It a Just cause for the Christian world to follttw. JULIA JACKSON 1075 FEATHERSTONE Suggest Parents Learn More About Program For parents contemplating sending their junior high boys and girls to the program that promises to examine and understand the “nitty-gritty" of the contemporary scene at the Quest 69 program which will be offered at Birmingham’s Covington Junior High for 12-15-year-olds this summer, I suggest you first obtain a copy of the Hearings on Sensitivity Training, read for yourself both sides of this controversial issue and thep decide whether you think this is appropriate for your children. HELEN V. BAILEY 5172 DRIFTWOOD, MILFORD ‘Inconvenienced by Phones Not Working’ Our whole area had phones out of order for one and a half days this past weekend. With all the geniuses at Michigan Bell Telephone, can’t they devise something so that the phone does not ring as though no one is at home? MARGARET STEPHANIAN BIRMINGHAM Has Suggestions to Ease Housing Shortage The ADC could help eliminate the problem of having to house families in ipotels by raising the amount allotted for rent. Property owners could help by including utilities In their high rent demands. They could also have a little .more compassion for large families, and not refuse to rent to them on that basis alone. it lit it Now that ADC recipients are trying to buy homes, a iot of substandard houses are for sale that do ndt meet the strict housing code undA- which an AUU recipient can buy. Some of these houses could be used by needy families on a rental basis. HOMELESS AND UNHAPPY Answers Recent Comment on Sex Education To the 12th grader who said“Don’t be suiprised If students practice sex education In the halls," I won’t be surprised If he practices it In the halls. LINDA KILMAN 130 E. PRINCETON Question and Answer What is the ratio of policemen to people In Waterford as compared to Pontiac? CURIOUS REPLY Waterford has a population of about 65,000 with 27 officers, making the ratio about .4 officers per 1,000 persons., Pontiac has 146 officers and approximately 90,000 population, for a ratio of 1.6 per 1,000 persons. Population figures are estimates until next year’s census report is completed. Question and Answer My brother is principal of a missionaries’ children’s school in Indonesia. He needs 16 mm. sound films for use in the education program. Do you know of anyone who would donate "|ilms to the school? Any type of travelogue, educational or even cartoons would be welcomed. My brother is John Hazlett, Sentani Air Strip, Sentani, West Irian, Indonesia. MRS. DEAN ROWE DRAYTON PLAINS REPLY Call Margaret Scott at Pontiac School Board Audio Visual Department, 338-9151, ext. 285. She will make an appointment to show you a list of free and inexpensive sources for films. In the meantime, fbe’ll continue to check out ether possibilities and let you know what we find. Smiles The man with a finger on the buying public’s pulse has his other hand reaching for its wallet. ★ '' ★ ★ '' Another nice thing about your newspaper; You don’t have to turn the volume down when the rest of the family Is in bed. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1969 m', '' y. f A—T Gourity Communities May Pay 30% of River Work By JEIaN SAILS Oakland County communities may be called on to contribute as much as 30 per cent of the as-yet-unknown cost-of widenini and dredging the Clinton Riy& through Macomb County. / And the benepts mi}4 be noticed by the dverag^county resident, but County/d r a i n commissioner Danlrf Barry knows notice woul0)e taken if the benefits wer^ provided. The projerf, as Barry describes iC would require, about $5.^f million to widen, deepen and straighten the Clinton fron/ the outlet of the Red Run I^in Jn the southern portion of the county to the Market St^t bridge in Mount Clemens. ™e figure quoted does not Wclude the cost of acquiring some 800 acrqs of land necessary for the project. COSTS FOR PROJECT Costs are to be borne by Macomb, Oakland, Lapeer and St. Clair counties on a “benefit received — contribution made” basis, according to Barry. The only benefit for Oakland, Lapeer and St. Clair counties will be a place to empty storm waters, Barry notes, but for Macomb it means alleviation of recurring flood conditions. Oakland was also required to contribute when the Clinton River spillway was constructed nearly 20 years ago, and it was the percentage figured at that time that Barry ascribes to the pending project. Drains are big b u s 1 n e s s , particularly in the last 10 years, since legislation has been upheld which allows governmental unit to spread the costs of construction across the unit as a whole. $65 MILLION IN PROJECTS Barry estimated the county Is, DANIEL BARRY Police Think Car Hit Boy Deliberately currOTtly engaged in drain prqjects for 1969 and 1970 to the cost of $65 million. There are 45 separate systems involved. He While getting rid of sewage is will probably be asked next | $550 million would be needed to i much pollution in ordinary r^onth for permission to pro-1 separate them. j drain water as there hot .ttifi drain commissioner’s problem, Barry does expect to get Involved in projects design- estimated a total of 320 existing i ed to free drain water from drain systems in the county, | pollution. some of them dating back to the ★ ★ ★ Civil War, and many of themj The drain commissioner said simply open ditches. j the Cohnty Board of Supervisors ceed with surveys which might I Whether separation is the j sewage. What the eventual provide solutions to pollution j ultimate an.swer is also a big [answer will be, he doe.sn’t problems in the south end of the I question in Barry’s mind. . Iknow. county. I Apart from the excessive | He does say, however, that There Barry noted storm and! cost, he notes that pollution ex-1 the answer must be. in ac-sanitary sewers are in-|perts are coming to' th ejcordance with the communities’ terconnected and ,ap estimated j realization that there is as I ability to pay. And even then, the commissioner notes, a really big rain can make even the best system inefficient. (Atfvertijement) Don't Negloet Slippfaif FALSETEETH bo falM teeth (trop, eUp or leobhie when vou talk, eat, bugh or naeoaf I annoyed and embarraaaeit __-acid > powder to sprln- iMc on yuiu- platea, keepe falae teeth more flrmly set. Olves confident feeling At sectulty and added comfort, --------------------------- A goodly portion of a drain commissioner’s reputation rests on the weather man, Barry might agree. ■t FASTEETH at all dnlfe eountera. RENT, SEL]^., TRADE - - - iJSE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I GIBRALTAR (UPI) - While 12-year-old Jeffrey Polishak lies in University Hospital in Ann Arbor with two broken legs, police in this downriver Detroit suburb are hunting for the hit-and-run driver they think de-1 liberately struck the boy. The youth was bicycling to! baseball practice from his Rockwood home Monday afternoon when a speeding car veered off the road, struck Jeffrey and dragged him under its body for more than 50 feet. /VIOIVTGOAAER 7\RD The driver, belfeved to be a teen-ager, then aped away with one witness in pursuit until he finally evaded him in residoitlal section. A friend of| Jeffrey’s managed t6 jump from his bike and wasn’t injured. “1 would suspect we’re dealing with some teen-agers who panicked,” said Gibraltar Police Chief Tim Ford. “I’m just guessing, but they may . have just wanted to ‘skin’ the ^ kids. The way they kept on going would Indicate they knew, they struck one of them.” The car was described as a two-door, blue-green 1963 to 19661 Chevrolet or possibly Plymouth | which should have red paint alll over the front from Jeffrey’s smashed bicycle. ACCUTRON (By Bulova) Snlet and Service—3 Fac-tory-Trained Repairmen Guaranteed 1-coat HOUSE PAINT J 99 Gollon euARANm REG. 8.99 OUARANTII mi paint b o»oranl«.g EASY TO APPLY ACRYLIC LATEX SSSSH Get one-coat coverage on any painted sur- according^lo*li b el^d^rec- faces with no priming! Applies easily even 'Jxci.d'dOo'T* ceed 450 sq. ft. per gallcm. If this point fails in damp, humid weather. In white and colors. OIL BASE PAINT SAVES TIME paratraS'ndprwii! Saves time, labor and the cost of a second furnish-enough paint coat! Use on exterior wood or metal. Easy your Aptlon, will refund the cofflplet* purchase complaf* pur^ot* price. to brush, roll or spray on. White, colors. pn... Save ^3 on our fmest 1-coat latex flat paint 54*^^^ Gallon Guaranteed to give one-coat coverage! Paint clings to brush or roller, glides onto surfaces easily, dries in 30 minutes to a soft, matte finish. In 21 decorator colors. Save ^3! Wards finest one-coat latex enamel 599 Odlon REG. 8.99 Scrubbable enamel with latex easel A single coat covers any colpr and dries in just 30-minutes! Clean up with soapy water. Select from 21 beautiful colors. No paint smell! Save $5! Wards f AIrbss sprayer 34” Reg. 19.99 Heat - tempered aluminium with C-channel side rails. Lightweight, REG. 19.99 • Deep, flat steps for comfort and safety • Hydro-locked rung joints can't loosen • Easy-sliding extension locks in tightly Carefully constructed for many years of dependable service. Sturdy, ylon't twist out of shape. Eisy to carry. R^G. 24.99, 20' LADDER WITH ROPE, PULLEY 19.99 REG. 29.99, 24' LADDER WITH RO^E, PULLEY 24.99 . Siihju td 1 Pontiac Mall SATURDAY 9:^0 TO ^ P.M. SI M)V\ 12 NOON TO fi P.M. • 682-4940 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WBDKESDAY, MAY 28, 1«W Hal Dreams the Impossible Dream and... ByHALBOYI.E NEW YORK - The wonderful thing about life is that it always leaves you something to look forward Whether yoU; have achieved V little, I ' » jwhether you; Jare young, mid-: jfdIe-aged orl elderly, there! always remain; sights you haven’t seen and things you haven’t done. There is no such; person as a man or woman who| has everything. The world always has some' added experience in prospect, | an old ambition unachieved, a' fresh quest that beckons. i BOYLE SELL IT BACK Sell Manhattan Island back to the Indians for a keg of whisky and a $24 mortgage. Solve the poverty problem by giving everyone in America his own private key to Ft. Knox. Become the leading guru of Keokuk. Talk a besieged gunman into surrendering by telling him that’s what his dear old mother would want him to do—if she weren’t in jail herself for shoplifting. ' Meet a teen-ager who was allergic to pizza pies, French fried potatoes, and the telephone. Buy the Eiffel Tower for Howard Hughes and move it to Las Vegas. Paint the Empire State Build-: Ing with psychedelic designs. | CAVE AT MIAMI | Build a 1,000-room cave on I Miami Beach for hermijts^ who| prefer to live underground. j Carve the head of Benedict Arnold on the Mt. Rushmore memorial, so tourists could i have something to criticize as! well as praise. I Help a fainting robin into itsj nest again. Get Greta Garbo to put a welcome mat before her front door. Create a sex-free movie that children could take their parents to without having to worry | about the old folks’ blushing. ‘ Turn every girl In the world j red-haired—so there’d be one! for every man. GIVE IT BACK | Give athlete’s foot back to the athletes. Pass a law requiring that all ashtrays be at least eight inches square and six inches deep. i Invent windows made of lay-i ers of plastic. Then a man, wouldn’t have to wash them—he i could just peel them clean. Discover something more to, hope about today in modern youth, the “hope of tomorrow." Perfect a lie detector machine that would work on political candidates as well as criminals. Extend the present oil depletion allowances to millions of taxpayers who find their pocket-books are depleting even faster than the average oil well. SILENT TEI^VISION Offer ear-throbbing mankind j the boon of the century—a new| form of entertainment called si-i lent television. Even the horses In the horse operas would run! on padded hooves. For breezy holiday week-ending and o carefree summer.. shop during our Pre-Holiday Sole for everything you need I Here’s one man’s list of things i he may still get around to doing one of these days; j Set an income tax form to mu-{ sic and ask Congress to make iti the national anthem. Sail the Atlantic in a paper; yacht made from varnished copies of the Sunday New York Times. SALE^y SALE Boys’ sport or sweatshirts 5.99-6.99 day-time dresses |97 497 $$ cotton skirts in newest styles Men’s short sleeve knee-length pj’s Permanent press polyester/cotton sport shirts In^ solids, checks, 3.99 3.22 stripes. 8-18. Shrink controlled Ko-del®poiyester/cotton sweatshirts in solids with contrast panel. S-AA-L. Sleeveless cotton canvas stripe culotte dresses. 8-16. Plus hundreds of summer dresses in cool, colorful styles and fabrics. Sizes 12 to 20, UKi to 24/a. Stock upl Choice of latest pant skirts, CU' lottes, suspender skirts wrap cu' lottes and sash trims. Easy-core, stay - neat 100% cotton. 8 to 16. 3.99 value! Sanforized combed cotton pajamas. Contrast stripes or solids, also prints. AAen's sizes A-B-C-D. Just say "Charge it." Ladies’ regular $7 nylon ensembles Girls’ reg. 1.29 gowns, baby dolls 5.88 94« Save on our feminine hylon ensembles in either shift or mini length. Gown, coat have loce embroidery and appliques. S-AA-L. She'll love these easy-care summer-weight cotton print gowns. Choose several in frilly gown or baby doll styles. Sizes 4 to 14. Ponderosa pine clear furniture 15•^ 32 47 Each piece is sturdily constructed of ponderosa pine with wood set-in bocks and drawer bottoms. Sanded satin smooth. 2.29-3.29 washable tiers and swags H • 15 **' ttert Reg. 22.99 Welsh stroller-sleeper 17.88 Exciting Spanish wood home accessory assortment Colorful tier curtoins In ruffled ond tailored styles. Washable. Deluxe stroller can be used as sleeper. Thickly padded seat and back plus padded play tray. Folds flat for storage. In blue. Bring th* drama of Spanish Wood pl9C9s Into your homel Included are candleholders, ash trays, jewel boxes, candelabras and more. 991 99 Regularly $5 cotton slacks STAR STALLED - Actress Patty Duke gives out with some Invective as she is stalled in traffic In a scene from an upcoming movie. Unlit\ed poplin, zip front. 4 colors. Sizes 8 to 18.t 3.99 2.88 3.99. 5.99 White vinyl window shades 32x80" vinyl folding doors 84 < 2.44 Cotton fwlllj, stitched crease. Blk.,navy, brn„ white. lOto 18^ OPEN 10 A.M^TO 9 P.M. (Sat. 9:30-9) Drayton open Sunday‘'Noon to 6 p.m. (Dowhltwn doitt 7'um., IFtd. at 6 pjnJ Washable cot-toh> rayon pile In many colors. Nice gifts. Useollthe year round I Marty YOwon” colon. 72x90’’ size. Charge Itl Queer) size, 21x31" extra firm. Cotton ■ cover, Sovel 36’’x6' shades with wooden spring tension rollers. Sovel White 01 beige^ Track, glides and hardware included. Sovel DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAII^S .it- THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1969 SALE SALE Indoor-outdoor room-size rugs 188 24 New Fiberglas print draperies 788 S0«84 pair 8!4xll/4-ft. indoor-outdoor rugs made from polypropylene fiber. Will not spot or stain, resists mildew. Serged on all four sides. Ideal for kitchen, patio or porch. French provincial "look-of-wool" print draperies of Fiberglas® glass. Wash, no Iron. Green, gold. 100k84.......13.88pr. 180x84 .....S1.88pr. Swag vatanea 3.38 oa. Ti# backs.......1.48 pr. Wid# width II# backs......3.48 pr. ®Reg. T.M. Owens-Corning ^Famous Blazon play gym set for a^mmer of fun 199 ■eatures 2K*" steel tubing frame with 10'5" top “ il- oar, 7'6" legs. 4-passenger lawn swing, 2 cool vent-seat swings, 8' airglide slide. Charge it, savel 12-ft. semi-V bottom regularly 149.95 aluminum boat 139 Sturdy, yet easily portable V-bottom boat has built-in seats, polystyrene flotation chambers for extra safety, ^w, stern and oar-locks are of die-cast aluminum. Won't rust or corrode. 13-ft. aluminum boat..................159.00 6,25 per month New Salutation spread by Cannon Muskin 15’x48” new Capri pool 6.99. 199?’ 8.25 per mo. Washable, little or no ironing needed. Crisply textured plaids in red, blue or brown. Save big I Bunk ill* 8.48 Draparlat... 8.88 pr. Fgptures durable 6" pool ledge, guage liner, 6" uprights and blue tile design. Great fun. 18x48 ...279.98 34x48 ...379.99 '‘C 19.96 Kodak 124 Instamatic kit |6«4 Includes Instamatic camera complete with flashcube, Bbt-teries, colorful and handsome carrying case. Takes crisp snapshots. Hurry in now and savel Men’s, women’s Trojan luggage Lightweight. Women's in blue, green, melon. Men's in grey. O nit* .. . 7.44 M»n i companion .8.44 Pullman 9.44 Mon • 2-fuilor,.. 13.44 Pullman ,10.44 Train cos*.............8.44 Carefree Tampons from Modess' 99< Regular or super. [Box of 40. Buy now lOnd Charge it. Eeg. 58P Get Set '12-oz. hair spray Limit 2 per customer at , low price. 29’ Reg. 29( Renuzit spot remover Limit 2 per customer. Hur- ry in now. Regularly 77C 100 paper plates 53* 9” paper plates for picnic funi Rag. 83« 38-pc. plaillc toblowaro ... 47* Rag. 33* 250-cl. napkint...........27* Rag. 57* hot-cold cupt, 50-ct.......43* COUPON SPECIAL Famous Kodak film 10% 1/.88 45-pc. 14.99 7-pc. Choice of 30" uRB oval Traveler (Unnerware cookware set swivel stools ^teel pool toothbrush 12.99 12.77 12.77. 279” 12.88 Sorvic* tor 8. "Waterleat" Padded itool 18x12x4' By Broxodent. Molomin* by Prolon. Lovely avi^cado aluminum cookware, ' or stool with padded seat, back. Colors. Side dyecks. . Bakitd enam- lOyM Wton. 3.99 Tuitir d4,oe.. siM O.IM cologiw, 1.00 patterns. Savel Teflon II tiniah. el finish. WIMtoni eel., 3.00 Regular 14.99 camp lantern 13.99 14.99 aluminum | cooler chest ■ " 15.99 12.88 I With two mantles. Burns any gasoline. Powerful. Savel Regular 16.99. Provides 4-5 hours continuous cooking. Big 7-gallon capacity, leak- \ probf, lightweight. Savel j For Kodak In-I stomotic movie I cameras. Block I and wh\jte and I color film. i OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. UTED FORGED STEEL Has V^-inch square drive with special push-button release. No more pulling and prying to get a tight or greasy socket off the wrench jnst press the button, and socket is released. Professional fpiality with smooth short stroke. Hardware Deportmant ,12-point sockets in your choice of 13 sizes . . . from 7/16 through IVi-inch. All are forged from “supertuff’ alloy sleeL Reg. 89c-1.59. Crallsman Wrench Assortment Includes open-end, box-end or combination style in a wide variety of sizes... for most any job. Regular 99o-1.89 . . . save 22c-1.12! Craftsmajn Nut and Screwdriyers Assortment includes stubby, slotted, Phillips and screwholding screwdrivers and nut drivers. Regular from 99c to 1.69. Save 22c-92c. -..77‘ SCARS, aoCStCK AND CO. Downtown Pontiac • Plione FE 5-4171 REMODELING ROOM? NOW you can borrow up to *5,000... take up to 7 years to pay on low, low FHA TERMS Under Government Regulations, •5,000 Home Improvement loans are available at low government controlled interest r£|tes. i 1 333-7071 First Federal Savings of Oakland i 761 W. Huron Street 16 E. Lawrence St., Pontiac FE 2-9147 407 Main Street, Rpehest^ 651-5460 4416 Dixie Highway, Drayton OR 4-0327 1102 West Maple Rd., Walled Lake MA 4-4534 351 N. Main Street, Milford MU 5-1555 5799 Ortonville Rd., Clarkston 625-2631 471 S. Broadway, Lake Orion 693*6228 5040 Highland Rd., Waterford 673-1278 7110 Cooley Lk. Rd., Union Lake 363-7163 636 East Boulevard, North 338-6486 ^v THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1969 SPECIAL SAVINGS ON DRESS SHIRTS Take on the summer winds in a cool and comfortable short sleeve dress shirt; here in permanent-press Dacron/cotton with regular collar; in whites and solid shades_4.39 or 3/12.50 SPECIAL SAVINGS ON SPORT COATS Summer sport coats in Dacron/ wools. Dacron/wool hopsacks and lightweight all-worsteds. Two-buttons, three-buttons and shaped models; many patterns and shades............39.10 SPECIAL SAVINGS ON SUMMER SLACKS Dacron-and-worsted bengalina weave summer slacks in two smart models: traditional belt loops orbeltlesswestern pocket; in several shades, good size range. . .12.95 SPECIAL SAVINGS ON BAN-LON KNITS For those free and easy days, free and easy Ban-Lon knits. Here :shortSleeve full-fashioned versions in mock-turtle and regular collar styles; several solid shades.. .. 5.79 PERMANENT-PRESS WALKING SHORTS in traditional belt-loop styles. Cotton/ polyester blends in plaids, tattersalls and solids; several shades to choose from........................................'..........................5.79 ANKLET AND OVER-THE-CALF HOSE in nylons end blends ; anklet at 99^, over-the- calf at................................................ ...............1.99 SILK AND SILK-BLEND NECKWEAR luxurious neckwear now specially priced at only.............................................................1.99 ind 2.99 ASSORTED SHORT SLEEVE PAJAMAS in knee length summer versions now specially priced at only.................................................3.99 .SPECIALLY PRICED UNDERWEAR boxer shorts at 3/4.19, tee-shirts at 3/4.99, and athletic'stjirts at................................'.................3/3.99 FAMOUS MAILER SHOES cool and comfortable woven leather shoes—slip-ons in black, lace-ons in black or brown............................ .....16.99 FAMOUS MAKER GOLF SHOES now very specially priced at.... .534 FOR BOYS AND STUPENTS PERMANENT-PRESS WALKING SHORTS in plaids, checks anJ solids: regulars and slims, sizes 8-12...........................'..........................2.99 PREP WALKING SHORTS permanent-press Ivy belt-loop style; in plaids, checks and solids, 27-30 waist............................................... ,3.49 SHORT SLEEVE BAN-LON SHIRTS in both mopk-turtle and regular collar styles: solid shades, sizes 8-20...........................................\.. .3.60 PURE COTTON T-NECK SHIRTS short sleeve versions in white only; sizes 14-20. .1.99 ZIP-FRONT NYLON JACKETS, with hidden hodd and contrasting stripes down front;.boys' sizes 6 to 20.............................................8.47 NYLON BASEBALL JACKETS rugged nylon snap-front jackets; sizes 6 to 20 — 5.97, SPECIAL SELUNG OFDACRON/WOOL TROPICAL SUITS IN REGULAR AND NATURAL SHOULDER STYLES The summer blend most men like most —Dacron-and-wool—in the two most favored styles, priced for extra^spedal savings this weekend ! For the traditionalist: three-button natural-shoulder Charter Club models. For the forward-thinking: two- and three-button models from our Montclair collection. All in cool, crisp, wrinkle-resistant Dacron-vvool in lightweight tropical weaves. Choose from a fine selection of solids, stripes, neat patterns and plaids, in an excellent range . of proportioned sizes. No charge for alterations. OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY TO 5i30; MONDAY THURSDAY & SATURDAY TO 9 PJW. TELEGRAPH at ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS A—12 THE ;I»0NT1AC PRESS, MtEDNESDAYI MAY 28. 1969 \ AND SUN BASICS Hudson’s Notions has fun things to make living easy this holiday weekend and all summer long. Things to wear, to brighten the patio—even new and efficient insect removers. Shop, look, enjoy . . in Hudson’s Notions, Downtown 1, and branches — or order by, phone—223-5100. lUasIa-Dasala Cattan Tany Eiuambla by Bany A. Tisjel'fringcd shetl-shiii swing! short ind sweet (round kitchen, pool or patio. Zips up the back, comes in S (8-10), M (12-U), L(16-IR). In Multicolor prints . $8 B. The Top Knot shapes itself to your fancy with a Velcro tape fastener under chin or at nape .....3.S0 C. Prawstring tote is a trusty traveler with its waterproof plastic lining, over the shoulder styling......$4 D. Ranle-Da/rle Bubble .Scuffs are fully lined with indoor-outdoor non-skid soles. S(4-5 P), M(6-7'/t), l,(8-9'/t) 2.SO Downtown Detroit Northland Center mi Mm Totally Pratly Bwlm Capa by Blolnoat E. Bloinort's Duo Boaoh Bay inflatei to becoina ■ E. Starlight FoimUne, i froth of sheer white nylon pillow after you've removed your beech things. $2 ruffles................................... M E. Kloinoct’s Bhipmala Totaa come in bright, T. Romantic Mood, Sava Wave* cap, nylon and lace, summery colors in durable cotton fabric. Has four many colors..............................$5 convenient outer pockets . .............$3 Q. Petal Helmet, Sava Wave* cap in two-tone color M.Ayua Qaoosi* Iwiiii Band made of chamois with combinations............................ $c a Velcro fastener. Keeps your hair dry in the pool H. Corn Rowers, Foamline cap; white with flowers . . $3 shower under’your swim cap......3.95 J. Romantic Brim, nylon, lace ruffles with daisy chain. v .Sava Wave* feature ....................$7 Eastland Center 'Westland Center Pontiac Mall Oakland Mall ; V , E.Cliaiif aabla Ffkn flhuMn — called Chameleons because ibey have S sets of interchangeable lenses in varying colors. Fashion keyed to daytime and evening activities, the complete Chameleon set . . $10 0. Mghtyolt* liuMOl Eipbl, a powerful killer of ants, flies, roaches, fleas, wasps, spiders, silverfish, moths and mosquitoes. A lamp you can live with, it has no D.D.T. and is safe for humans and animals. Just plug it in. Mid use only one—it needs no replacing, ever..........2.98 Tsyo-day supply of Mightyeite Crystals . . .,. > . 25* H TU 3D S Solid green side reverses to green and white stripe. Use them either way, they're reinforced, weatherproof, have anug-fit clastic binding for excellent fit. Pd Chaise Cover.....................4.50 Q. Chair Cover........... 3.50 E. Glider Cover.• • • • ... ,8.. Grill Cover, rectangulat, 56x18".3.50 T. Round Grill Cover, 24" diameter. $3 V. Power Mower Cover . . . . $3 OIST’S PGH Auxiliary Installs Officers Highlighting Tuesday’s annual lunch-, eon, ot the Women’s Auxiliary to the Pontiac General Hospital was the installation of officers. The event t,ook place in Pine Lake Country Club. Installed by Mrs. Lee Hill were Mrs. Merrell Petrie, president; Mrs. Robert Stogdill, Mrs. Edward Eickmeir and Mrs. Richard Jorgensen, vice presidents; Mrs. A. L. MacAfiams and Mrs. Violet McCoy, secretaries; Mrs. P'red McGuire, treasurer and Mrs. Maxwell Doerr, controller. Mrs. .Clark Adams was chairman of the day. Mrs. Maxwell Shadley shared the limelight with members of her committee, Mesdames: James Clarkson, Warren Newton, John Guenther, Arnold Brown and Charles Galloway. Treat Friend I to Ease Pain on Anniversary By EIJZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute Give Blessings to Pair; May Biggest Loser Win Hear Mrs. Post: My friend’s anniversary is coming up shortly but her husband passed away a month ago. Does one just completely drop anniversaries now that she is alone and in a sense, there is no more marriage? — Ruth Dear Ruth: It is extremely painful to most widows and widowers to receive the same sort of remembrance they did Pontiac ProM Photoi Members and guests of the Women’s Auxiliary to the Pontiac General Hospital couldn’t have asked for a pleasanter day than Tuesday when the group had its annual luncheon meeting in Pine Lake Country Club. Chairman Mrs. Fred McGuire of Burnley Drive, West Bloomfield Township (left) takes a moment’s break with speaker for the day, Mrs. John Shada of Ferndale. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My wife took a secretarial job with an insurance company just to keep herself busy as the kids are grown and gone. Suddenly she announces that she and a man she works with are going on a weight losing con- character NEVER — but NEVER repeats ugly rumors. And if I were you. I’d remain silent. test. Old, New Jazz Programs Planned on Campus of OU The one who loses the most weight in an days has to, treat the other one to a steak dinner ih the best restaurant in town. (Just the two of them.) I tru.st my wife, but I don’t like the idea of her going out to dinner with another man. He’s married, too, but I understand his wife is all for it as .she'll do anything to get him to lose weight. Should I go along with this “contest” DEAR ABBY: You were right in advising that mother not to dwell on the fact that her 13-year-old daughter refused to lend her mother her “good white kid gloves" for a special evening out. will never forget the hurt look on her face when I told her no. She didn’t say a word. She just turned around and left without it. When I saw her through the window wearing her shabby old coat, I could have bitten my tongue off. when their partners were alive. A more considerate way of remembering the occasion is to ask your friend to your home, or to take her out to dinner, to afford her some diversion and keep her from becoming depressed on that special day. I was about that age When 1 refused to let my mother wear my “good ” jacket. I She never mentioned it, nor did she ever “punish” me, but it has been 10 years, and my own conscience has punished me plenty. STILL SORRY CRITICISM Expect Action Two of the entertainment world’s most outstanding musical groups. The Preservation Hall Jazz Band and Young-Holt, Unlimited, will bring a weekend of great old and new jazz to Oakland University's Baldwin Pavilion on June 13 and 14. At 8:30 p.m. on June 13, The Preservation Hail JaZz Band will return to Meadow Brook for one performance only after its triumphant appearance here last June* This peerless group of five perfornners has its roots in the world-famous music of the Negro marching funeral bands that walked the streets of New Orleans and gave the world the first sound of whom are over 60, have been playing in New Orleans’ French.,Quarter and the surrounding parishes for over 40 years and are among the few living talented negro jazzmen who originated the pre-Dixieland New Orleans style. The music they play has scarcely changed since the turn of the century. It is plain, unadorned, footstomping original jazz. r not? JEALOUS DEAR JEALOUS: It sounds like a fun kind of contest with a healthy objective. Give them your blessings and may the biggest loser win. Abortion Bills Remain Pending The five members of the Band, all of Granny Proves Rocking Chair Days Numbered NEW YORK (UPI) — She’s a grandma wjth the traditional rocking chair. But she’s also a grandma who wears false eyelashes, the latest in makeup, and models clothes. She, at 42, is the “National Glamour Grandmother of the Ye^r.” “Grandma” in this case is the gorgeous looking green-eyed blonde with two children, Barbara, 25, and Robert, 13, and two grandchildren. Barbara, Mrs. Paul Daon of Cincinnati, Ohio has Jeffrey, 5, and David, two months. The name of this glamour grandmother: Mrs. Robert (Kathy Elizabeth) Rothacker, of Cincinnati. On June 14 at 8:30 p.m., Young-Holt, Unlimited will offer a unique new sound, “happy jazz.” Originally two-thirds of the famed Ramsey Lewis Trio, Red Holt and Eldee Young have formed this exciting new trio with Hysear Don Walker. Their recent best-sejling single and album entitled “Wack, Wack,” gave the music world a sampling of a fresh and exciting “IN” sound of today. Their latest single success, “Ain’t There Something That Money Can’t Buy,” which is included in their new album, created an additional demand for more of their infectious, swinging music. As a result of their growing popularity, night-club, concert and television appearances have become a steady part of their routine. Tickets for the Preservation Hall Jazz Band and the Young-Holt, Unlimited concerts at Meadow Brook will be available at the Meadow Brook Theatre and at all Hudson and Grinnell stores. DEAR ABBY: Recently. I overheard my teen-age son telling a friend that the two teen-age daughters of a good friend of mine were having sexual relations with the two sons of a womah who is a mutual friend of both the mother of the girls and myself. When I asked my son how he came by this information, he said the two boys had been bragging about it at school. My son asked me not to tell anyone but I have not, as yet, agreed, I told him I would have to think about it. LANSING (JFI — Proponents of abortion law reform are working behind the scenes, trying to pin down the 20 Senate votes they’ll need to win a second attempt to order debate on the emotion-charged issue. Sens. Gilbert Bursley, R-Ann Arbor, and John McCauley, D-Wyandotte, say they expect action late this week that could take their reform proposals off the table and put them in line for a vote. because the apparent defeat served to mobilise backers throughout the stale. “I’ve had many phone calls from people who think the bills are in trouble,” Bursley said. “And some of them have started telephone campaigns, urging ‘yes’ votes for us.” The Michigan Catholic Conference, major opponent of liberalized abortion laws, still is working against the bills. Dear Mrs. Post: I am enclosing a picture of my daughier and her hu.sband nn their wedding day. Our daughter is slightly taller than her hu.sband. I have had a great deal of criticism that she should not have worn high heels. Actually they were very low but narrow. She looked taller than him because of the heels, hair-do, and veil. But I cannot understand why that is so important. They are so very happy together. Why do people get so petty about things like this? -- Ruby Abby, I have never believed in interfering in the lives of my friends but I wonder if I would be a true friend to the two mothers if I just keep quiet. By speaking out, I could either b e instrumental in helping all concerned avoid a tragedy, or 1 could lose two friends. Consequently, I have decided to ask your advice and then follow it. Of course, I do not know that the boys’ boasts are even true, but I do know that the boys and girls have been dating. CONCERNED PARENT DEAR CONCERNED: Now would be a good time to tell your son that a man of Bursley’s bill would allow termination of pregnancy if: • There is significant risk that the physical or mental health of the mother would be seriously impaired. • The pregnancy resulted from rape or incest. • There is significant risk that the child would be born with serious physical or mental defect. * ' i Wedding 5 Information Dear Ruby: Your friends had no business criticizing your daughter. What she wor# was entirely her business, and furthermore, the slight difference in height was totally unimportant. A slender heel is far more flattering and graceful to someone who is a little bit heavy than “flats.” I was delighted to see, in the picture you sent me, that yoUr daughier held herself proudly, looked her prettiest, and most of all, the couple looked so happy. FAMILY TREE McCauley’s proposal — far more sweeping would remove criminal penalties for abortions performed in licensed and accredited hospitals by licensed and accredited doctors. Area Folks Are Making Tracks Across State, Country, Continent Moves last week to order debate on the Bursley bill failed by two votes, 18-13. Nineteen senators voted against taking the McCauley bill from the table, while only 13 approved the motion. Bursley and McCauley said they were not discouraged by the votes, however. ' Planning your wedding? We want to help you. , ! Beginning June 9, we must have I information about your wedding in m our office five days in advance of the ceremony. Information blanks are available in the women’s de-. partment, or the material may be printed clearly on any large sheet of paper. c Pictures will still be accepted up ’ to three days after the ceremony, - but Ihe information must be in our hands ahead of time. Dear Mrs. Post: With the birth of our son, a question of great importance has arisen. My mother and father have been divorced for 12 years. During this time I have seen hini only twice. My father has .never remarried, but my mother has. The relationship with my stepf^^lB^has been friendly. What would be ^jj^correct name to enter on our family tree, as my baby’s grandfather — my real father, or my stepfather? -- Brenda Dear Brenda: A family tree follows a bloodline and when the line is interrupted that branch stops. Therefore, it is your father’s name — not your stepfather’s — that must be entered as the baby’s grandfather. THINK YOUNG “If you think young, you stay young,” said Mrs. Rothacker, who was selected from a field of 5,000 candidates in what its sponsors call the first national search for glamour grandmothers to kill off the stereotyped image of the inactive woman, gray-haired, rocking and knitting, Mrs. Rothacker got the rocking chair as a present from friends when the pageant sponsors announced she was “It.” Each burned her name into the chair as one memento of the selection. By SHIRLEY GRAY Mr. and Mrs. George Altmansberger of Bloomfield Hills have just spent a week in Norrwich, Conn. Daughter and son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. Mark (Karen) Graves have lived there for a year now, ever since Mark separated from the service. Karen lived in this area before her marriage, and in fact, was graduated from Birmingham High. She went on to MSU, where she met, and eventually, married. Mark. The especially nice part of the visit was seeing Karen’s two youngsters, the only two Altmansberger grandchildren. The finals were held at Horizon City, near El Paso, Tex., and when Mrs. Rothacker returned to Cincinnati friends also had erected a 70 foot sign in her front yard with flashing lights saying,, “Welcome Home, Grandma.” Evangelist and Mrs. Billy Graham have announced in Asheville, N.C. the engagement '‘of their daughter, Huth Bell) to Ted Dienert of Rydal, Pa. She is a sophomore at Gordon College in Massachusetts. Dienert is employed in Philadelphia. No wedr ding date has been set. Another Bloomfield Hills couple planning to make an out-of-state jaunt soon are the Bruce A. Allens. However, they’re not sure just when. Daughter Linda wll be graduated from Indiana University early in June. Before that, maybe over the Memorial Day weekend, comes the chore of moving Linda, and four years’ accumulation of miscellany, back home. Mr. and Mrs. Edson W. Ivey of Birmingham went to a family dinner party in Lansing Saturday which turned out to be an engagement announcement. Hosts Mr. and Mrs. 'e f n e s t W Schaberg revealed that their daughter, Lynsie, will marry Bertram J. Miller Jr. of Scarsdale, N. Y. on August 10. Mrs. Betty Chapman of Beach Road in Birmingham says her adventuresome daughter. Caprice, a Seaholm junior, has decided to put a little fun in her life this summer — she's going to Africa on safari. The trip is scheduled for the last half of June. Caprice, never one to do things by halves, is studying Swahili i« her spare moments. 1 Taking a turn around the Pontiac Society of /Artist.s 21st annual exhibit are two award winners, Mrs. Joseph S. McAndrew (left) of Keego Harbor and Mrs. Russel P. Foukes of Orchard Lake. Mrs. McAndrew drew honors in the drawing and graph- ics category ond, Mrs. Foukes was the first member , to receive the Grumbacher aivard. The exhibit will be displayed through June 1. Gallery hours are from 1-4 p.m. daily except Friday. ' A, B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1962 LANEBRiANT three great looks at one price! Red bandana print cotton pantshift to wear on it* own or under the blue cotton denim jumper! The jumper goes great with your own favorite tops, tool special sizes 16% to 32ya and 36 to 52 our open air import in leather Cool footing for sun weatherl Fully lined, raised heel T-strap sandal in white with blue/red/yellow trim; bone or black leather with matching patent. medium (B,C) 7 to 11 wide (D, E) SVa to 11 x-wide (EE-EEE) 5 to 11 Order by mail or phone 682-7500. Add 40c for . delivery plus 20c for C.O.D.'s and 4% tax SEW SIMPIE By Eunice Farmer j Dear Mrs. Farmer: The other day I made a terrible mistake and put my buttonholes on the wrong side of my dress. I haven’t I enough material left to recut the front and wonder if you have I any idea how I may cover up niy mistake.—Mrs. M. A. W. ; > Dear Mrs. M. A. W.; JFirst, I suggest you measure the fronts and see if you can't just whip the complet:ed buttonholes together, sew the button over this and remake them bn the correct side. The success of this would depend on whether the lap at the center front would cover the old buttonhole. ★ w .★ If this doesn’t work, you may be able to add a decorative strip of contrasting grosgrain ribbon, embroidered banding, heavy lace or whatever letting it extend past the fr NOT AT DOWNTOWN STORE 4 Days-Solids,Prinfs Cool, No-Iron Blouse Sole! Nylon Georgette Head Scarves 4 Days-Girls' 7-14 Stretch Nylon Jamaica Sets For Misses... sleeveless polyester/cotton blouses. Italian, lapel, club or Bermuda collar. 32-38. vSpecial!Buy now! Sleeveless or short sleeye strijTC tops, choice of collars, Solid color Jamaica shorts. This sale only! Girls' Regular 1.67 Nylon Tops, S-M-L.........1.33 Sunglasses - the Wrap-Arounds! 47< "'Sun-Sotional" Shades Of Italy 96< Cotton Short And Vest Sets Reg. 1.37 Reg. 1.12 88< Reg. 57^ ea. 27x27", Women’s headband Styles and colors, for Boys’2-pc. sets in dash- sunn/summer prints. style. Chiccolors. women! Optical hinges, ing colors. Sizes 2-4. Cotton Terry Knits den’s- mock turtle style 177 hirts, cool colors. S-XL. oys'1.94 Sizes 8-16.. 1.37 *2.54 No-Iron Walk Shorts r Men’s solid or print ivy style shorts. Sizes 30-42. 2.58 Boys’8-18 Slims, Regs.1.78 Reg. 2.97 4 Days—Reg. 28< ea. White and Colors Acetate Tricot Panties Women can stock up now on lovely panty briefs wdth elastic waist, legs. 5-8. This sale only! 4 Days—Reg. 1.97/ For Teens, Women Summer Fashion Sneakers Yellow, blue, green, pink white, black. Washable canvas tops. 5-10. 4 Days—Reg. 68^ Yard! Crease-Resistant Transitional Fabrics Casual and dressy fabrics in dots, stripes, exciting prints, 36/45", 2-10 yd.pcs. Save! 4 Days—Reg. 1.19! Sturdy White Vinyl Translucent Shade 4 Days—Reg. 33< Lb.* Fresh Flavor! Delicious Jelly Candies Sate now! 36"x6’ window shade wdth roller cuts out sun glare. Special!Like Charge Ir!_ Spice drops, orange slices, spearmint leaves, fruit jellies. *net u’t. Healthy, Growing Geraniums In Bud and Bloom Brightly beautiful geranium plants in 4" pots for patio, window box, outdoors.This Weekend! 2^38<^ Large, Life-Like Decorative Floral Bushes Like It? Charge It! 137 Jjg Each Tj’hcy’re so viln.mt yet detxl no care! Colortul peonies ;Uul ger.mmnis. Like It? Charge It! 2 for 5,00 5x4x4 Webs Alum. Folding Chair Keg.2.76/Green/white ^ polypropylene webbing. 1.78 Poly Foam Pad .. 1.44 i Alum. Folding Chai Rc'g. ‘>.^4.' ‘'-Position ad just- i luent. "'2" long.Green white, t i 2.84 Poly Foam Choise fad,2.44 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC "CHARGBir At All KRESGE Stores “S'" \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1969 Portuguese Battle Guerrillas in Thick Mozambique Jungles MUEDA, Mozambipue (A The operating theater in the •mall military hospital looks grim. Oxyg&a cylinders •tacked in the corner. Equipment lacks the usual polish. The once cream walls of the small or vehicles to evacuate them if of Mozambique where South Af- they are wounded. This is one of thr6e costly little wars Portugal is fitting against nationalists in its African territories The Others are in Angola and Portuguese Guin- square room are green with ga, both on the west coast of Af-mold. rica. Like the allies in Vietnam, ‘ We can’t get rid of it,” says, Portuguese forces are fighting the surgeon with a shrug. ‘‘Once an elusive opponent in condi-the rainy season is over we’ll be tjons favoring guerrilla warfare, able to scrub the walls clean; prelimo guerrillas operate in and paint them.” Ismail bands and never press home an attack. Groups of 20 to The Portuguese hospital is at this military out^st in the far north of Mozambique where African nationalist guerrillas are trying to overthrow a rule which began in the early 16th century. STEAMY JUNGLES 30 mine roads and tracks and strike from ambush. They melt away into the bush before the Portuguese can launch an effective counterattack. TIES DOWN ARMY rican and Rhodesian tourists flock. CENTiLUl^ HQ Gen. Antonio dos Santos directs operations from headquarters in the central city of Nam-i pula. ^ His chief of staff. Brig. Pinto Bessa, said Frelimo has been virtually wiped out, for the present, in Tete and is being steadily pushed back in Niassa. The main fighting, where “the situation is stable,” Is in Cabo Delgado. Delgado operate largely through the “ethnic bridgehead” offered by the Makonde tribe, which spreads across the Rovuma River into both Mozambique and Tanzania. The fierce Makondes, feared by other tribes in the area, make up a large proportion of Frelimo forces. Using Mtwara In Tanzania as a supply port, guqrriUas embark from there and from a big camp, at Nachingwea to infiltrate Cabo Delgado. Like other African nationalist Union, Czechoslovakia, East movements, Frelimo is backed by Communists, notably ‘Cbipeae, who arm , train and supply them. Portuguese frequently display captured weap- ons made in China, the Soviet on foot. Germany and Yugoslavia. Unid)le to use vehicles because they would be quickly spotted from the air, the Frelimo guerrillas move every^ere The Portuguese are cautiously optimistic that they will be able to win back from Frelimo the 100,000 to 130,000 Africans estimated to be actively si^porting the guerrillas. Mueda is nestled on the edge of a small 3,000-foot plateau. Supplies, with roads near impassable during the rainy son, are flown in by Nord Atlas aircraft. Single-engine Domiers relay them to smaller settle. ; The Frelimo tactics are not Fighting between Portuguese wrest the Initiative forces and the Mozambique Lib- Portuguese, but the------^ cration Front, known os Freli-ij,gj.3ggj^gjjj jjgg down an army ments. mo, is hardly a war in the con- whites The commanding officer, Lt. ventional sense. It is a series of Col. Nuno Frazao, is a short, inconclusiyes skirmishes. Most- Casualty rates, according to smiling man who carries a Portuguese communiques, aver-swagger stick' carved from lighting IS in steamy unglOja Portuguese and 100ebony wood and bearing he country where^ supply trucks,^ head of a Makonde tribal chief. * UNPLEASANT OUTPOST country wiicie ““'-■‘‘’itn.prrilla.! ki can take three days to cover 40 miles over roads and tracks torn by torrential rains. For the Portuguese soldiers, it Is an irritating, nerve-wracking war against a hit-and-run enemy seldom seen in undergrowth or thick grass that grows eight feet high. For Frelimo guerrillas, based across the Rovuma River In neighboring Tanzania, it is an uphill struggle. It’s bad enough for the Portuguese troops, but the guerrillas don’t have helicopters, light aircraft There are three war zones: In His battalion occupies one of the Tete district, where the the most unpleasant major out-planned giant Cabora Bassa posts in Portuguese Africa, but dam is to harness the waters of he and his officers can still en-the Zambesi; in the northwes- joy bfandy with coffee after din-tern corner of the territory, in ner. Niassa district; and in the Periodically, perhaps once a northeastern corner, in the Ca- year, Frelimo attacks Mueda it-bo Delgado district. self. They are remote areas, far; from the main towns and cities! Frelimo guerrillas in Cabo; Fighting in Viet Takes Lives of 31 Americans WASHINGTON (AP)-Thirty-one servicemen killed in action in Vietnam have been named by the Defense Department. They include 7 from the Midwest: ARMY ILLINOIS-5p«. 4 Harry W. Kerksina, MkPhiGAN—Spec 4 Brian R. MrNrw, Southgate; etc. Thomai A. Whitby, MINNESOTA Spec 5 David NEBRASKA etc Lynn .1 " MARINE CORPS MICHIOAN—Pfc. John L Run. WISCONSIN-Sgt. Changed from missing to dead: ARMY INDIANA—Pvt. flruCQ A, Gourlay. Missing in action: ARMY 1*1 LI. Bruc» C. Bwsor. 1 Pedue, Spnc. 4 Carl w 1 C. Ward, Pfc. Changed from missing to cap- ■ tured or interned: MARINE CORPS Pic. J AIR FORCE wai. Joseph S. Abbott Jr. Died not as a resuit of hostile action: ARMY MICHIGAN—Pfc. Kllchell t. Oibbt, MISSOURI-Sgt. Jamei A. Webster Groves. MARINB CORPS MISSOURI—CpI. James A Independence. OHIO-Cpi. Dana L. Miller, Crime Studies Set YPSIL.ANTI (API - Graduate studies in the area of crime, delinquency and correction will bp offered at Eastern Michigan University this fall. The program is to lead to a Ma.ster of Alls degree offered by the Department of Sociology. o OAAEGA C?/d You c< in count on Oitiaga Seomaster tima o» automatically a> sunrisaand tuntat. Just your evarydoy wrist movamant*, and tha forca of gravity, power this marvelous miniatura of automation. Wear onal Count on it! Square Saomostar In 14K gold, $175. > Saomostar DaVilla with data-telling dial in stainless steal, $135. Other Seqmqslars from $95 REDMOlW’S Jeiveiry 81 S VGINAW, I’OM'IAC lr,r in lUar of Store Wc Will He ClosptI .SaUirdiiy, May .HI si oZe’... sandals from Spain Make a new man out of The Old Man And youll holler "ole" too, when you see these finely constructed ALL LEATHER sandals. Just the thing for fun In the sun, lightweight, comfortable and ready for a trial run. Available in Misses 11 - 3 in medium widths. Tan or white. Tha price? An incredible five dollars. When you see it, you won't believe it. Hurry, follow the footprints to Stapp's. Other »tyle», aiseg anti rolom tivniitthlr. Stapp’s Use Father’s Day as an excuse. Tell him you bought him a gift because people all over are buying their Dads gifts. -He doesn't have to know he’s the object of a plan. A plan to break down some conservative, conservative ways. To bring hiirn to 1969. A wild wide tie might do it Or maybe something else. Talk to us. We’ll show you all the great new things men are wearing these days. We can help you make a new man out of The Old Man. We do it every day. where the experts work 931 W. Huron St. Pontiac for evofiing hours Phone 681-2121 Three of our stores are open evenings 'til 9; Tel-Twelve Mall (Telegraph and 12 Mile in Southfield), Tech-Plaza Center (12 Mile and Van Dyke in Warren), and Tel Huron Center (Telegraph and Huron in Pontiac). Our downtovyn Pontiac store is open Friday evenings 'til 9. Look around. Maybe Dad will let you borrow his Osmun’s or Security Chargecard, or his Michigan or Midwest Bankard. He’s a pretty nice guy, you know. Osmun’s 7\ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1969 B-7 Sons of Japan Keep Rising, Thanks to Western Diets ^ ^***®*^ *"** heavier! The average American stands ahort atory of growth and an Eastern story of Western influence. The Japanese, mainly because of Western-type diets begun dut;ing allied occupation after World War II, are growing taller and heavier.) By FRANqsfe ICHIGAYA TOKYO {JPi — Average Japanese bigger than average Americans? It could happen some day, says one Japanese scientist. Meanwhile, Japanese children are outgrowing their school in their dlesks, and houses rtiay have tolmeasurements,’ each year, apparently becausei5-feet-9% inches, about 3.9 inswitch from traditional taller than the average A ministry survey showed the| The school lunches are served tics showed, the average Japa-i average height of 11-year-old at primary schools throughout nese took 380 grams of carbohy. Japanese. * Nagamlne said the dietary change as well as the sharp rise in Japanese living standards undoubtedly have contributed to the remafkable physical growth in postwar Japan. I The impressive physical , . changes are particularly It may be in the not so dis- remarkable in younger genera-tant future the Japanese would ^ions. possibly surpass the Americans^_' __ __________ ■ physical OUTGROW FURNITURE said Japanese dishes based on rice tO| Western-type diets composed of more fat and dairy products. A Japanese nutrition specialist said: “The difference of height between an average American and Japanese will be gradually reduced.” ‘COULD PASS YANKS’ this country. They began withi*^*’®^,® ^ *®®® powdered milk, flour and^®^^ ® canned foods released by the al-| * ★ ★ lied occupation forces to save: The carbohydrate intake Is a the hungry children in defeated barometer of rice and wheat Japan from malnutrition. I consumption, they said. ^ ★ ★ I Dr, Nagamine said, “If this The school lunch menu still is [trend continues, as is expected, based on bread and milk—and the scale used for the constriic-no rice. tion of houses will have to be re- ------o- ________ ••• ..v.,6..v No nationwide survey on nu- Doorways and ceilings 4.95 inches during the same trition conducted by the Minis-"''** *'^''® **® ''ovised. Door- period. try of Health and Welfare has and ceilings will have to boys has increased by 4.6 inches over the past 68 years. ★ -k k ' Girls of the same age had an increase of 5.4 inches. During the 1900-1%8 period, the 11-year-old boys gained 13.6 pounds and the girls 18.9 pounds in weight, the survey said. For 14-year-old boys the average increase in height was ‘chankonabe,” a boiled mixtureishoyu-of meat or fish with vegetable have [and mjso-rsoybean paste—orjlife. -soybeaif .sauce. Many health troubles later in In primary and junior high NOTABLE PERIOD shown the We.sternization of *>® *^"*** *’*6*’®''. **1®" *’®*o>’® ” remodeled with higher ceil-jShinkichi Nagamine of the Na- schools, children have out^own officials said the growth rate-IT^^ Japanese standard noo onH [tional Institute of Nutrition, run **'®*'' desks and chairs, officials ^ygs especially bigger in the last ings and doorways. / j The Japanese are growing!Welfare. rJunior Editors Quiz < DAYS (by the Ministry of Health and at the Ministry of Education two decades, during which most DAILY CALCIUM Draft Chief QUESTION: How did the days of the week get their names? ANSWER: No one can say what particular person named the days. These names came into u.se in ancient times when many gods were worshipped. The days got their names because each one became sacred to some particular god or goddess. The Anglo-Saxon word monandaeg meant moon’s day, so Mmday was natiied for the goddess of the moon. Tuesday was Tyr’s day, Tyr being the god of war in ancient Norway. Wednesday was sacred to Odin or Woden, ruler over Valhalla. His two ravens few around the world every day and brou^t him the news (too bad he didn’t have this newspaper). Odin’s famous ion Thor, god of thunder and lightning, gave his name to Thor’s day, or Thursday. Frigga, Odin’s wife, gave us Frigga’s day, Friday. She was so wise she knew everything. Saturday comes from the Roman god Saturn, god of harvest. The Romans had a gay festival called a Saturnalia. Among the old European peoples Sunday meant the day of the sun. The sun was always popular in ancient mythology. (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is .selected for a prize.) To Curb Riot Situations A similar revision of specifi-_ _ cations for furniture and cloth- “ reported, and the ministry had orthr7e7rivSs"7‘wodd The statistics'showed the av-^ - to revise standards f o r war II had been ameliorated orlerage Japanese had taken 49.9 "'a""*®®*'"’®''®- classroom furniture. ;eliminated completely. [milligrams of calcium a day in ILL EFFECTS I “Today,” they said, “it is 1966, compared with only two Dr. Nagamine said there have common for 14- or 15-year-old jniilligrams in 1949. Calcium Is been some ill effects from the 'children to be taller than their'an important nutrient for hu- dietary changes. 'parents.” iman bones. j|g gases of once widely ★ ★ ★ This clearly indicates that the prevalent diseases such as beri- Annin^f Armv officials said rice is called a J®P^"®®® ^''® drinking more her! and tuberculosis have I »11/ staple food for 1.8 billion people **'®" *'"’®® dropped sharply in number, but ’ f \ / / I in’Asia, but in Japan more peo-years ago, officials said, those of heart disease and arte- I of VolUntQQrS pie are eaung or drinking such ★ ★ ★ riosclerosis have increased. foods as bread, butter, corn The figures also showed that * * * WACHfNPTnM n’PT^ flakes, eggs, meat and milk. the daily per capita intake of Jafjan’s traditional sumo ! WASHlNtiTON ILPI) — aninial protein was 29,3 grams wrestlers, who eat specilically ,Selective Service D i r e c t o r every Japanese home *n 1966, 15.3 grams more than in lo become gigantic, are taller |Lewis B. Hershey oPPnsM breakfast 1949, and that of fat increased and much heavier than the av- jFresident Nixons proposal tor today,” they staled. by 23.9 grams during the same erage Japanese-or American, an ®’*'''“*""*®®'‘,'^’'"’y ^“®® cchoOLIUNCHSYSTKM period. Their average height is about he says it won’t work and ,t SCHOOL LUNCH SYSTEM i ^ said animal protein ® ^®®* a"'* t*'®*® ave^^g® weight isn’t the American way. The tendency for younger g The 75-year-old lieutenant Japanese to prefer no-rice diets ★ * * general, charged with inducting could be attributed partly to a ’ “ j The sumo wrestlers eat espe- the willing as well as thejschool lunch system adopted in BAROMETER cially heavy diets composed of unwilling, indicated the;1947. On the other hand, the statis-large amounts of rice and American fighting man tradi- --------------—--------------------------------------------------------------------------- tionally has been a volunteer] * fighting for his n a t i 0 n ’ s freedom, not tor cash rewards. ' “I do have misgivings, as old men do, of having a person go into something for no other reason than to get money,” [Hershey said in previously secret congressional testimony made public ye.slerday. Testifying before a Hou.se Appropriations subcommittee iFeb. 17, Hershey explained why jhe didn't think scrapping the Idraft in favor or a professional army of volunteers would suc-iceed. ! EXPERIENCE ‘NOT GOOD’ “The experience, ever since' 1939, on recruiting, has not been too good,” Hershey told his questioners. “Since 1940 I have a schedule that shows the' influence on recruiting. You can figure that about 60 days in ad-| vance of induction, when the call goes out, if it is a big call,! then you will get an up in recruiting. If it is a little call, that is when recruiting slows < down.” I Shortly after he as.sumed of-! flee Jan. 20, Nixon took steps to' fulfill a campaign pledge that would work for an allvolunteer army once the war in Vietnam ended. Somebody oughta build a monument to theTigers, -H- From one beer lover to another, thanks Champs. We love you. And we’ve decided to show it in the best way we know. With a special display of non-returnable six- and eight-packs of Stroh’s fire-brewed beer. So all you Tigers fans and friends can toast your favorite team by picking up a few. Not so much out of respect as out of love. Stroh’s...from one beer lover to another. Rumor Control Unit Operating He also pointed out