ByBOBWISLER Harninbee, Inc. efforts to iniUate new housing in the Pontiac’s southwest section apparently are succeeding beyond expectations. Last night officials of the all-Negro nonprofit corporation, the firm’s consultants and planners, and the Pontiac coordinator of the Metropolitan Detroit Citizens Development Authority (MDCDA) outlined a timetable which calls for: • Construction of (11.5 million wortft of new housing and commercial facilities and rehabilitation of 48 sin|(le-family re^dences in the next year. ^ • Construction of nearly 1,800 new living units in the next five years at a total mortgage price of (31 million. William Hawkins, the MDCDA coordinator, speaking at an informal meeting of the city commission last night, said MDCDA and the fledgling Negro corporation are ready to roli on the first three of a planned 10-project program. The three phases call for: • Construction of 80 apartment-type units and 40,000 square feet of commercial or neighborhood service facilities seven-acre site bounded by Howard McNeill, Warner, Ihston and the Clinton River. • Construction of 172 units — a mix-ttn^ of some form of public bousing and relatively expensive condiminium units 1- on a 17-acre site now containing the Crystal Beach liousing project. • Construction of 200 new houses and rehabilitation of 48 existing ones in an area bounded roughly by Fisher, Frank- lin Road, Fildew and the Pontiac Municipal Gk>lf Course. NEW METHOD Hawkins said that with utilization of a comparatively new method of housing construction the new units can be completed next year. The program outlined by Hawkins is ambitious, he said. He concluded, however, that the total program can be completed with the help of the city and federal government within five yem '. J Once c(»npleted, he said. It will be for ^ j the rest of the country an outstanding ex- " *1 ample of civic and. city cooperation., Hawkins said federal tods will have .4. to be used to complete the project, but, ' '^',4 he said, the first three phrases can ha (Continued on Page A-2, Cd, () Apoiio 7 Grew Forgets Colds in Second TV Bit SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON (AP) -The Apollo 7 astronauts, all battling colds, today performed a celestial acrobatic show and took television viewers on a high-spirited twir of their high-flying spaceship. “String the great acrobats of outer space,” radioed ComhMihder WaU^^ Ikhirra Jr. as the second live episode of the Wally, Walt and Donn show began at 9:29 a.m. CDT. With the transmission quality about as good as it was during the crew’s first live telecast Monday, Schirra and his copilots, Donn F. Eisele and Walter Cunningham first held up a sign welcoming people to “The Lovely Apollo Room High Atop Everything.” One of the other astronauts held the 4Vi-pound camera at the end of its 12-foot cord as Schirra took viewers on a tour of their spaceship interior during the eight-minute show. He showed Apollo 7’s guidance and navigation station, food storage compartment, crew station for optical alignment of the guidance system and main console. EXERCISE MACHINE Cunningham demonstrated how Apollo 7’s exercise machine is used, an elastic device to keep muscles loose. Schirra floated up from the lower equipment bay, and let a pencil float also. Anoflier show has been scheduled for Wednesday about the same time, as Apollo 7 speeds over the United States within range of the two television receiving stations at Corpus Christi, Tex., and Merritt Island, Fla., near Cape Kennedy. Harriet Eisele, the astronaut’s wife, was in mission control to watch today’s telecast along with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry D. Hamiiton of Gnadenhut-ten, Ohio. Earlier, ground controllers told the pilots their television ratings on the first show Monday “were pretty high.” Flash TOKYO (AP) — Communist China’s. President Uu Shao-Chi has been stripped of all of his official functions in the party, Peking radio reported yesterday. It's Indian Summer Today, Tomorrow '.f ‘ f 0NTIAG PRES! MICHIGAN* TU^SBAy, OCTOBEK^H^ 1968 . AP WIrtphoto SOFT-PEDALING A CIRCUS — Steve MePeak plans to ride this 13-foot unicycle 2,200 miles from Chicago to Las Vegas to promote a circus in the Nevada town. He’s shown on the Windy City’s busy Michigan Avenue as he started the dxip yesterday. A companion follows him with a ladder truck so he can get up and ddwn. Steve plans to cover 80 miles a day — unless he runs into a low Little Change Made in County Budget By ED BLUNDEN Two committees of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors took a second look at the proposed (25.8-million county budget for 1969 yesterday and after about an hour’s discussion decided it was okay. The only change was a proposed Slicing of Road Commission pay and functions. The budget, largest ever, contains sharp pay increases for almost all employes. Raises range from about 8 to 20 per cent and average about 11 per cent. Salaries are the largest expenditure called for, (11.7 million. Of this about (1.1 million represents wage in- Indiaii summer will linger at least another day with skies mostly sunny through tomorrow. There’^ ¥ chance oi showers late tomorrow afternoon or night. . . V Temperatures will continue warm with the high near 80. The low is expected to be in the 60s tonight. Thursday’s outlook is mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and turning cooler late in the day. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 5, tonight 10, tomorrow 20. A mild 61 was the low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. By 2 p.m. the mercury reached 80. The budget came under fire at the yearly public hearing, the only one NEW PROPOSAL Torches Tonight to Light UFPath six-year terms, after apMintment by the board of supervisors. 0^ comes up for apMint Ofte.c( reappointment every two years. The Pontiac Area United^Fund drive for (1,130,000 begins at 9 tonight with a dual torchlighting ceremony at Pontiac Mall and City ISD. A special section detailing where the UF dollar goes is in today’s Pontiac Press. The money is divided between 55 health, welfare, youth and research agencies. Campaign Chairman Alger V. Conner will conduct the countdown for the dual torchlighting via a Red Cross radio. Conner will be at the formal ball for more than 200 campaign workers. The 8:30 event at the Holiday Inn is sponsored by McCullough Realty, Inc. Children will form a circle at City Hall, pass the hand torch around once and then give it to Ralph Norvell, chairman of the commercial division, who will light the large torch. The supervisors discussed eliminating the Road Commission as it now exists. The announced objective was to make the body a part-time advisory group. Allowing the supervisors to put the commissioners on the low salary scale was seen as a step toward altering the nature of the commission. If the salary scale is approved by the entire board of supervisors, it would be up to the new board to make the changes. NEW BOARD DUPUCATE CjEREMONY A similar ceremony will take place at Pontiac Mall where Mrs. Jack Ross, chairinan of the commumty division, will touch off the gas torch. The torches, made by Consumers Power Co., will remam lighted as symbols of hope until the campaign goal is reached. The campaign runs through Nov. 8. The goal breakdown for each division is: coimnunity,^ (26,476; commercial, (294,274; manufacturing, (40,780; General Motors, (745,800; Brandon Township, (2,654; and special ^ts, (20,106. «v«ry Wt^sdiy. Mtnv'i. Wt^s - NO. 2I« ★ * ★ ' -h one-man, one-vote in county ment under redistricting. morning session yesterday, the and means committee heard a representing mothers receiving Dependent Children (ADC). ’Ihe asked for a (60 yearly addition to te allowances to provide for more g. 'fhey also demanded the use of inty clothing store at 1 Lafayette :iac be discontinued. Diver Has 'Winning' Twist ie protesters picketed and slept-in at thefsocial services building at the County Ce|()ter for a three-week period which led last week. ways and means comniittee to hear their complaints and at conclusion of the hearing, instigation of the clothing store was [•dered. lit was pointed out the clothing store, ich serves other county agencies, has kn in operation for 38 years. “Perhaps is time to reevaluate our policy,” said David Levinson, chairman of the com-mit^e. * By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press MEXICO CITY - Micki King, Pontiac diver competing in the 19th World Olympiad, h^s the “twist” which can enable her to win the world’s most coveted title among women divers. The expert who makes this statement is University of Michigan diving coach Dick Kimball, who coached the U S. divers in the 1964 Olympics at Tokyo. TOP DIVER “Micki is without doubt one of the best woman divers in the world,” said Kimball, who is in Mexico City at poolside daily coaching the former Pontiac Central girl who is now a lieutenant in the Air Force. “I think Micki can win the gold ipedal,” adds Kimball, "but whether she does or not, she will have to be considered as one of the top three divers ever in this country.” Kimball points out that Lt. King has performed dives that no woman would ever think of doing years bpek or even now. Preliminary ^ving competition begins Thursday for women and the finals are slated for Friday evening. “She is diving beauUfully,” said Kimball during practice this week.” I can usually tell by the way jshe is doing her hurdles and the reverses. The reverse one-and-half is a key dive for her. She is a little weak on it, but even so she is doing it as well as anyone here, lliere’s no woman diver in the world who can match Micki on the twist,” says Kimball. “This is where she can win.” GOOD UNDER PRESSURE “Micki is strong and she does l(|er best under pressure. If she is ahead in the preliminaries or even close to the lead she will win it,” says Kimball, “because she saves her best for the final three dives which is where the poults are * won. ” The reverse one-and-half with a two- (Continued on Page A-2* CoL 4) A—2 :: THE PONTIAC PEfeSS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER U, 1968 VP Challenges Nixon to Shun Wallace Deal Birmingham News City OKs Bids on 3 Trucks, By United Press Intenuttonal Hubert H. Humphrey says George Wallace is willing to bargain his electoral votes to the “highest bidder” but insists “I am not bidding.” He challenged Richard M. Nixon to make the _same statement. Wallace’s electoral votes to. the GOP candidate. ' Nixon, aides denied it, (^rging the vice president with “trick campaign gimmickry/’ THOMAS E. WILSON EDWARD A. KAEGI Nixon himself has had nothing to say about charges from the Humphrey camp that Wallace and Nixon have held secret talks on the possibility of giving Mated Stories, Page A-3 Two Bloomfield Hills Execs Given New Posts at GM Two Bloomfield Hills men have been appointed to new positions at General Motors Corp. Thomas E. Wilson of 246 Guilford has iMen named executive in charge, Real Estate Activities for GM. He replaces Edward A. Kaegi of 569 Rudgate, who has been assigned to special activities on RESPONSIBLE FOR RETOOLING the staff of Joseph E. ^frey, vice e of the GM mar president in charge of the GM manufacturing staff. Kaegi retires Jan. 1, 1969. Both assignments become effective Nov. 1, Wilson is now administrative assistant to the general manager of the GMC Truck and Coach Division. He joined the division In 1942 as supervisor of labor relations. Court Will Hear Death-Row Plea WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court has agreed to hear a death-row appeal that could result in further limits on capital punishment. Hie court, which ruled last term that jurors cannot be excluded from capital punishment cases for opposing the death penalty in principle, agreed yesterday to hear the appeal of a man sentenced to die for armed robbery. Junta in Panama The convict7 ®lward Boykin Jr., pleaded guilty to holding up five Mobile, Ala., stores. He contends his death sentence is “cruel and unusual punishment” in violation of the Constitution’s Sth Amendment. Hie court turned down another attack on the death penalty. Hiat one was lodged by Thomas A.* Alvarez, facing death for the murder of a Lincoln, Neb., housewife. Hiis suggests the court may go part of the way limiting the death penalty. Among a score of cases accepted for argument was the first direct attack on the power of military courts to try servicemen for crimes committed off-post and off-duty. The Weather Sun itti Tuwdav at 6:54 p.m. Sun rins wmnMday «t 7:46 a.n Moon left Tuesday at 3:31 p.m. Mon rites Wednesday at 13:te a Monday tn (at recorded i HIghdtt temperature Lowest temperature . Mean temperature Weather; Sunny, pei Dewntewn Temperaturet 77 61 Fort Worth 17 77 .3 64 Jacksonville . _________ 73 59 Kansas City t Houghton Lk. 76 60 Los Angelas " ------- " '* "laml Beac «7 63 Miami Beach 13 75 ) 64 New Orleans 15 67 Muskegon 71 64 New York 70 59 76 57 Omaha Route for 1-696 Is Announced ’ Humphrey/in his first news conference in three weeks, said Wallace has said he would not allow the election to be tiirowh into the House of Re|»resentatlves but would decide in the event of a split election which of the other two candidates to back. look like “Nixon is keeping his options open fw an electoral college deal with the third-party candidate.” , , It was O’Brien w^io charged that secret negotiations were being held, saying “It would seem they , . . lie at the root of Nixon’s refusal...” Ip other p(ditical developments: • Nixon, confident of his lead, was reportedly considering members for an economic team to turn campaign promises on urban problems into a legislative program* \ Leaf-Loader BIRMINGHAM ^ Bids totaling f7,67i from Mike Savoie Oievrolet for a halfton pickup truck, and three one-ton dump trucks for the Department of Public Works, were accepted last night by City Commission. ' Contract for a leaf loader was awarded to Greg Ware Equipment Co, for its low bid of 13,000. OPTIONS OPEN? He was named head of the division’s personnel department in 1944, production manager in 1951 and general manufacturing manager in 1953. He assumed his current position in 1967. (Continued From Page One) From that point it curves north to the Humphrey’s Campaign manager, Lawrence F. O’Brien, said earlier Monday that Nixon’s refusal to debate Humphrey on national television made it • Wallace, in Fresno, charged his rivals for the presidency offer only “c(Mnplicated solutions to simple prol^ lems.” ' • Humphrey has received the support of two southern newspapers: the Atlanta journal, largest newspaper in Georgia, and the Louisville, Ky., Courier^oumal. Wilson was responsible for the retooling of the division’s engine line nr 1959 and 1960 and was responsible for modification of the engine production line to accommodate the four-cycje ' diesel engine program in 1963-64. Kaegi joined the Delco-Remy Division in 1926. He served as engineer, process department until 1928 and assistant head of process engineering before being assigned as assistant factory superintendent in 1932. In 1938, while superintendent of the carburetor plant, Kaegi was selected as works manager by the Delco-Radio Division’s plant at Kokomo, Ind. In 1953 Kaegi was named general manager of the Detroit Transmission Division and in 1956 was appointed general manager of the Brown-Lipe-Chapin EHvision. He assumed his current position in 1962.. --------- south side of Eleven Mile Road and continues west pn that alignment between the city of Lathrup Village and Southfield to approximately a half-mile west of Evergreen Road, where it dips slightly to the south to join the previously established 1-696 right 6f way at^hser Road. The Highway Department’s originally recommended route was that chosen through Huntington Woods and Oak Park and Lathrup and Southfield. Micki's Twist Victory Key The commission approved a request, from the Birmingham Women’s Club to take over Clizbe Allen Park on Maple opposite Southfield. 'The city will work with the club in developing the park into a wUdllfc sanctuary. The commission will also ask the Detroit, office of the Army Corps of Engineers to study the possibility of eliminating spring flood problems on the Rouge River. (Continued From Page One) and-a-half twist is tlie dive she saves till last. This is the dive that moved her from eighth to second in the trials. for practice, she would have walked off with all the major titles,” Kimball said. - BIRMINGHAM—Mrs. Karl R. Kocher of the Birmingham Humane Society has issued a notice to all area dog owners to piard their dogs, especially now during hunting season. Roughly, the arbitration panel’s route swings west from Ten Mile in the vicinity of Woiodward Avenue for two miles and thoi swings northward gradually to Eleven Mile Road, at Lahser. Black Students Win SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) - A dozen members of the Black Students Union, who seized a classroom building at the Universityr eC California campus here, withdrew when amnesty and all but one of their eight demands were promised. “After she did this dive, the otiier competitors chrove adjournment, leaders gave up Monday and voted anyway to end the srasion. This vfes possible because no one in either the House or Senate raised the question of a quorum. Senate Democratic leader M i k e Mansfield of Montana, pronounced this valedictory: “This has been a good Congress, not a great Congress, not a poor Congress.” SIGNIFICANT LAWS It's Time to Enter Jr. Miss Pageant Cooperation Asked in City Applications for the Pontiac Area Junior Miss Pageant are now available. The pageant Is Nov. 9. Bag Your Leaves for Pickup The pageant, sponsored by the Pontiac Area Jaycees, is open to high school seniors between the ages of 16 and 19. Judging is based on scholastic ability, poise, appearance, physical fitness, and creative and performing arts. Pontiac Jaycees are currently showing the 1968 America’s Junior Miss film in high schools. NATIONAL WEATHER — There will be showers in the northern and central Rockies tonight with some snow in the higher elevations. Showers and thundershowers are predicted in the southern Rockies and there will be scattered showers in the north^n Great Lakes region, the Pacific Northwest and southern Florida. It win be cooler in the Rockies. Applications are now being accepted and forms can be obtained at LaVergnes Huron Street Salon, 1062 W. Huron, Waterford Towqship. City refuse crews will pick up fallen leaves which are collected into containers or plastic bags. But leaves that are raked from lawn areas into the street will only slow down all refuse collections, Gordon R. Matthews, superintendent of the Department of Public Works’ operations division, said. Matthews said the city needs cooperation of residents in ordpr to carry out an efficient and economical leaf pickup program. He said leaves put into containers or bags and placed at-the curb will be collected by refuse crews on the regularly scheduled pickup day. suitable for this purpose are available at local stores,” he said. Matthews said if residents want to dispose of the excess leaves they can take them to the city’s sanitary landfill site on West Kfennett east of Oakland. The site is open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 10 a,m. to 2 p.m. Sunday. Matthews said city ordinance prohibits burning of leaves in the streets. He also cautioned motorists abhut driving through any piled leaves left in the ?treet. He said it is the habit of small children to burrow into these piles. SWEEPERS COMING The 90th passed much significant legislation including a civil rights bill with a broad open-housing provision, anticrime and .gun control measia-es, a big increase in Social Security benefits, a temporary lb per cent income tax hike, an omnibus housing bill containing new ways to help poor families buy homes, a “truth-in-lending” measure, and several important c(xi8ervation bills. But it also handed President J(*ns(Mi some major defeats, including its historic blocking of his nomination of Abe Fortas to be chief justice of the United States. ' BAGS SUITABLE “Large, inexpensive plastic bags Street sweepers will follow pickup crews to give streets a final cleaning before winter, he said. It also failed to act on key Johnson requests such as ratification of the nuclear nonproliferation treaty. Johnson said last week he might call foe Senate back after the Nov. S election to try to win approval of the nonproliferation treaty. A band of House Democrats abandoned efforts yesterday to keep their branch in session indeflnitely to try to fwce the Senate to act on a bill which would permit televised debates between the three ieading presidential contenders. Rep. James G. O’Hara, D-Mich., said he was convinced it would be futile to prolong the s< '6 THg PONTIAC PBESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 199S QUALITY REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE HEARINBAIDS MIAMI, Pla. (AP) - lUchird M. Nixon called Monday tor “an action program of re^Ustic di-menaion” in Latin America. The Johnson administration, Nixon said in a has “clearly shown its unwillingness and inability to give our neigh- tive aid which they deserve.’* PONTIAOMALLOimOAL A HEMINB AID OBITER ’the statement was issued from a borrowed beach house at Key Biscayne where Nixon has U2-1US "Living Sound^ HEARINQ AID DEALER^ AMAZING HEW iMBa DURAdELi: ■•■asiaa alkmjnb ■Arremra They Last a Lot Longer SAN DIEGO, Calif. (API -HecUers attempted to drown out George C. Wallace Monday night and the American Inde-poident party presidentical candidate reacted with a display df i Rn niffFOGRAPHY, HASHUGNTSl .T0yS,eMKSNI0 MallorY All Sins on Sole SIMMSiE 9t N. SiglMrar Nixon Urges 'Realistic' Latin Program been vacationhig and holding campaign strategy sessions. Nixon uigM that a crash program be launched to comidele a planned- highway system through the interior of the South American continent. A goal should be completion within five years, he said, and aU available resources shoidd be marshaled to meet the deadlfaie. “Of course, this would not solve all the {Koblems immedl- ‘But the opeiiing of the heartland of South America will have an immense effect economically and will open more doors to development for our neighbors.” The Republican presidential indidate, moving into the home stretdi of his campaign, scheduled public appearances today In four states. Nixon was set for rallies in N.C„ and Knoxville, Tenn. Then, ftaially, he will get an after-dark airport welcome at Kansas City, whoe three more speeches are on tap for Wednesday. Nixon, at least during the final two weeks before electionr is expected to ccnoentrate exclu-si^ on personal appearances in the seven states with the most votos: New York, Pmm- sylvania, Ohio, Afichigan, Bli-n mbliog., index..................f-9® 740. Anthology Of American Verse. Edited by Oscar Williams. More than 500 poems by over 100 poets, representing the Golden Age of American Poetry. Arranged alj^ebetically according to poets names, thus, the poets of yesterday and today are presented side by side for pure enjoyment. 658 pp...............2-98 741. The Players by Tex Maule. The great football pros and how they play! Personal interviews, color and black-and-white photos of the experts, the 1000 men —640 on 16 NFL teams, 860 on AFL teams—who are the best football players in the world. Place yourself on the line of scrimmage, with this 238 pp. book. 8.98 742. The IndianalShs 800 by Jack C. Fox. A pictorial history of the greatest spectacle in automobile racing. A complete recording of every race since 1911. including the 1967 race. Trace the careers of the famous drivers. Read the story of the development of the Indian^ohs Motor Speedway..................B-98 713. Modern French Culina^ lUt. By Henri-Paul Pellaprat. The “ultimate French cookbook adapted from the mas-terwork of one of the 20th century s greatest chefs. Introduction by Michael FHeld. 1,162 pp., 422 Ulus., 284 in color, 2,080 recipes, glossary, index..9.98 714. The Commonsense Of Wine. By Andre Simon. The dean of wine connoisseurs spells out the basics for beginners. A bibulous delighU* Introduction by Andre Maurois. 192 pp., index.......... 1.98 718. The Gastronomy Of France. By Raymond Oliver. This lavishly illustrated book covers the history of French cuisine and dining from the days of Louis XIV to the present. 320 pp., 16 color plates, 150 black-and-white plates, 8J^' x 9%’. .................................6.98 716. Gods, Mon, And Wine. By William Younger. Wine and its place m society through the ages is depleted in a book of striking beauty. 562 pp., 15 color plates, 150 black-and-white plates, 81^' x lOM'-.............................. 6.98 717. Cheese And Cheese Cookery. By T. A. Layton. An iilformative history of cheeses—including their origins and varieties—and many cheese recipes. 2S6 pp., 16 color plates, line drawings, diagrams, indexes, 7>^'X 10'..............,8.98 718. Rico, Spice And Bitter Oranges: Mediterranean Foods and Festivals. By Lila Perl. A gourmet tour of the Mediterranean that will bring forth the ol6s and bravissimos from the lucky pwple you feed. Illustrated by Stanislao Dino Rigo-lo. 272 pp......................2.98 719. The Language Of Ballet: An Informal Dictionary. By Thalia Mara.* An illustrated handbook that translates beautifully the vocabulary and technique of ballet. Equally useful for tyros and aficionados. 128 pp., 60 line drawings... 1.49 720. The Ago Of Reoontuissance: Discovery, Exnloration, and Settlement, 1450-1650. By J. H. Parry. The greatot adventure in Europe’s history—its discovery of the rest of the world—brilliantly depicted and analyzed. (World Hi^ories of jCivilization) 384 pp., 64 pp. of Illus., notta, bibliog., index.... .2,98 721. A Cese Of The Giggles. Collected by William Cote. Illustrated by Tomi lingerer. The case is a slipcase containing two hardbound books; tlI6 giggles are a side-splitting collection of jokes, rhymes, • limericks, and nonsense. Each volume 64 pp., illus. Ages 5-8..........1.49 Originally prepared by the U.S. Department of Defense and edited for general use by World’s staff, these records include general salutations, and everyday expressions, days, months, seasons, time, weather, colors, numbers, and terms covering hotels, restaurants, amusements, transportation, customs, and road siws. Each album contains five to six doublesided long-playing 7-inch records, a manual, and a simple guide to pronunciation. 722. French, 723. German, 724. Hebrew, 725. Russian, 726. Italian, 727. Spanish, each............................... 728. Bait Loved Songs And Hymns. Edit^ by James arid Albert Morehead. A treasury of popular, patriotic, and folk songs, church hymns, gospel songs, spirituals and carols. Ideal for sing-a-long groups and gatherings. 416 pp.j, 2-coh^ illus. throughout, index.. ■ 729. Bravo Stravinsky. By Arnold Newman and Robert Craft. Thif illuminating photographic essay in cbfnmemo-ration of the great composer’s 85th birthday gives an intimate view of genius at work. 128 pp. of photos, 9' x 12'. .8.98 Will you pass the test for the future you wafit? Bone up with an Arco 'Test Tutor from Hudson’s and give yourself a good chance to succeed as a student, or in a new career. Pre-Holiday Sale Arco Test Tutors for • high school equivalency diploma. Increase your earning power with the two books that have helped thousands acquire a high school equivalency dipoloma that can open new pay, prestige and job opportunities. Complete course includes an intensive review of every subject on the exam, with practice questions and answers. Preliminary Practice for the High School Equivalency Diploma Test, $4. High School Equivalency Diploma Tests, $4 Arco Test Tutor for military advanca-mant. Test scores play a vital role in a military career, especially when it comes to promotions. 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Complete information on the Postal subjecH needed: address checking, following postal instructions, judgment, vocabulary, spelling, analogies, reading and numerical relations. $4 Came ia and browse in Hudson's Book Shop DOWNTOWN DETROIT Woodward Ave. and Grand River NORTHLAND CENTER 8 Mila and Northwestern EASTLAND CENTER 8 Mile and Kaliy Roads WESTLAND CENTER Warren and Wayne Roads PONTIAC MALL Telegraph and Eliubeth Lake Road OAKLAND MAa 1-75 and 14 Mila Road ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS ll liil Boroo Street Pontiac, Iflebigan 48056 *’• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1968 Bumw A. mMMUu n>WMW B. vmmm, n <<■»*«»«■>■■ •( UM aQWd PTMidwt Md Pui^iMr “ffiSB." > It. Rnenu* &5Wi.ar&.r><' City Income Tax Status Still Cloudy Twelve weeks ago, on July 23, The Press urged city officials and other involved parties to take some action to s p e e d up pending litigation cd^n-ceming Pontiac’s city income taxj Again on Aug. 23, we urged emergency action on this important issue. What has been done as of today? NOTHING. The case in question involves an appeal concerning legal tech-nicaUties related to an Oakland County Circuit Court ruling that petitions requesting a referendum on the tax were invalid and the tax could be levied without a public vote. While a decision upholding the appeal would not necessarily change that circuit court decision, it could force the case to be heard again at the circuit court level. Further, it is'' possible that extended litigation could result in the validity of refer- endum petitioris being Appealed to the high court. This pending appeal casts a shadow of doubt over the validity ,of a tax which has now been levied and collected for nearly 10 months from Pontiac residents and persons employed in Pontiac. ★ ★ ★ When the appeal was filed early this ydar, no one asked the Court of Appeals to put this matter on an emergency docket. The Pontiac City Attorney failed to intervene and ask for a quick ruling. To date, none of the parties involved have sought emergency action. The Court of Appeals reconvened last week and is now in session. Maybe, if we are lucky, the case will come up before another month or two has gone by. ★ ★ ★ . ' How long must the publlc wait? With the Nov. 5 presidential election steadily lengthening its shadow across the land, Americans are increasingly wondering which of the three candidates will be voted the privilege of White House residence for the next four years. According to the polls, Richard Ndcon is well out in front of Hubert Humphrey and George Wallace, and an odds-on favorite to be elected. But the surging strength of WaUace and his American Independent Parly could just so muddle tiie electoral college vote that neither of the contenders would gamer the 270 votes needed to elect, regardless of his total of popular votes. In that event, the election would be thrown into Congress, when the House would elect the President and the Senate the Vice President Three times — in 1824, 1876 and 1888—^the nominee who got the most popular votes failed to get elected ;and his opponent was installed as ' president Twice — in 1800 and 1824 — the House, voting along party lines, decided the election outcome, awarding the 1824 prize to the candidate who ran second in both popular and electoral votes. ★ ★ ★ Once — in the Tilden-Hayes election of 1876-*a congression-ally-created commission disregarded the popular will (as reflected in the popular vote for Samuel J. Tilden) and installed Rutherford B. Hayes as part of a deal with southerners^ to end reconstruction and pull Federal troops out of the South. The heart of the problem is the Electoral College, which has no campus and offers no course of instruction other than the recurrent lesson that the electoral %ote system should be abolished and replaced by popular election of President and Vice President. The Founding Fathers, who were amazingly farseeing about most things, surely blew it oh this one. Hundreds of efforts, so far futile, have been made through the years to repair the damage they did. ★ ★ ★ But, although it is gener^y agreed that there is something wrong with the electoral picture, few would be optimistic enough to predict its reform in the near future. Consumption of Cow Milk Drying Up, Says Source Chalk up one more victim of modern technology—^the cow. Milk sales are declining and sales ; of artificial milk products are on the 'rise. Millions of people no longer put milk or cream in their coffee; = tiiey use a vegetable substitute. The same goes for whipped dessert toppings. ★ ★ ★ Eventually, most people will drink artificial milk instead of cow-type milk, predicts “Organic Gardening.” For one thing, a cholesterol - conscious public wants to avoid the fats natural milk contains, says the magazine. Others want to avoid calories or hitherto unsuspected allergies to milk products. ★ ★ ★ Well might the poet lament: “How now, brown cow?” Less poetical but more to the point: “What now, Mr. Dairy Farmer?” ‘M’ Upset Spills 10 Grid Contestants As Michigan State kicked off to Michigan Saturday afternoon, hopes were as high as a drum major’s shako in the breasts of the 17 surviving contestants of The Press Annual Football Contest. But alas! As the clock ran out, 10 had tasted bitter defeat along with the Spartans, as the Wolverines scored an upset 28-14 victory. Although eliminated in the skirmish for the contest winner’s award of a $500 U.S. Savings Bond, the 10 may salvage a bit of predion balm in the knowledge that our own panel of four, Swamis unanimously picked State to trample the Wolverines-tdh-tch-tch. Of the dopesters, only that garrulous I gas bag, that pontifical pigskin ’ pimdit, hfajor Amos B. (for Bombast) Hoople had kaff-kaffed a win for the Maize and Blue. What’s ahead for the upcoming Saturday, you ask? Well, the contest’s as tight as a new girdle, and it can’t stretch out much longer. Seven bitter-enders remain for the Texas-Arkansas fracas. Six have put their chips— er, cast their fortunes—on the Long Homs, a loner is cheering for the Razorbacks, none has called a tie. * ★ ★ Obviously an ^Arkansas victory would end the contest pronto, with the peerless pre-dicter finding himself or herself (you’ll have to guess) in the winner’s circle, the sole owner and proprietor of a $500 bond and the title of Contest Champ for 1968. If Texas wins, however, five of her backers pick Miami in the next and seventh contest game (Oct. 26) while, again, a single soul will be heard cheering for Auburn. * ★ ★ Just how and when it will all end, nobody knows. But eud it must—any game now. Meanwhile, our advice to those entrants still in the running is to keep their fingers crossed around the clock and be careful crossing streets. The March Resumes David Lawrence Says: Will the Bouse and the Senate Elect 1968 Ticket? School Issue Stirs Fuss in Cities WASHINGTON - Demands that Negro teachers in overwhelming numbers be as-signed to schools which are attended predominantly by Negro children have raised a grave issue in many of the large cities dcross the la WHENCE country. Controversies have devel-' oped in New York, Chicago, Detroit, Washington, Philadelphia, Bostcm, Milwaukee and Cincinnati. The objection raised now is to the use of a cehtadized system of school adiniwtra-tion vrtiereby a city hall and a single school board manage the affairs of a big aty. Negro leaders argue that local school boards should be set up in vdiat is called a “decentralized” system, and that each of the district boards ■ another “first” for Wally Schirra. He’s ^ first man to hurl a veto down from outer space! He fadd his pal D^ Slayton, ground manager Of the Apollo 7 flight, he absolutely re- _______ fused to go CONSIDWE throu^ with the magical nonsense of turning the onboard TV set to show America how astronauts eat. ★ ★ ★ He and his buddies had tpo damn much to do up tiiere to be tinkering around. Besides, he said, he had sniffles. He’s all man, Schirra, and a product of f father and mother who provided the country with a few thrills and chills whoi Wally was a baby. BARNSTORMER Walter M. Schirra Sr. was a barnstormer who made a living flying a stunt plane at countiy fairs. Mrs. Schirra played t h e strwgbt-mah’s role. She stood, on tiid wing during the loc^s. How could a couple like that come up with anybody but an astronaut? A suggestion was made to Dick Nixon before he flew to Dallas last week: Why not make an informal visit to the John F. Kennedy Memorial in Dealey Plaza? The candidate weighed the proposal for a moment, then said: “H I were going to Dallas i on any other kind of mission than the one I’m now on, that would be about the first tiling I’d do. But «ith all these raporters and' cameramen following me, a visit would get out of hand. Some writers and people in general would think I was trying to make political hay out of the tragedy.” Kennedy and Nixon were better friends than their 1960 debates and cross-fire indicated. After his defeat by the pro- verbial (and perhaps actual) whisker, Nixon’s closet advisers strongly urged him to contest the validity of the^ Illinois and Texas vote-count where there were palpable irregularities. Nixon declined on the' ground that a recount would take weeks, during which the nation would be becalmed and leaderless. The selfless decision impressed the Kennedy camp. Richard Cardinal Cushing made a point of telepluming Nixon to thank Um for the manner in which he had campaiffied and had accepted defeat. The only sure bet at the Mexico City Olyn^ics is that Mexico will win the gold medal in the pistotshoot. This is partly dependent, however, on how many rebellious students will be paroled during the course of the |ames. Ifrere are 124 teams competing, including Lichtenstein’s two-man squad. The reason why only 123 participated in the opening day parade was because North Korea’s team refused to gpt in line. Seems the Olympic officials would not let them call themselves “Korean Peoples Republic.” The Games, ,as you know, always restore peace o n earth. Voice of the People: ^Like Breath 6t Fresh Air’ At the license bureau recently I obseiyed an elderly gentlen^n who had come to have ers license renewed. He was like a breath of fresh air. In these days of sloppy dress, he was neatly turned out, nmiiing and going about his business with enjoyment. ic "k k He actually asked the woman sitting next to Mm In Hie waiti^ area if she minded if he smokeo his dgar. She seemed V«U7 pleased to be accorded this small courtesy. MRS. BERT SMITH „ 19 PONTIAC BD., OXFORD Opinions Continue on Presidential Candidates As a concerned American voter, I’m greatly shocked that people can be so gt^le to be taken in with Richard Mxon for the third time around. Don’t they remember whm to was Vice President and almost started Worid War HI In J^>m? Nixon is like a p^ who argues theology but fi^ to br^ peace to anyone’s soul. Readera, can you knowingly vote for a man who has promised all your rights away before he is even in the White House? a The third party offers no threat to our Nation, but Nixon is indeed a threat and the present traui in government is* lacking in many ways. I hope the public will vote its convictions and vote to bring law, order and justice back to America. Hiis is a great Nation and the third party can nwk® it an even greater one. , KEN GOODWIN im TIENKEN CT., ROCHESTER George WaUace says people that cal others bigots are usuaUy bigots themselves. 'Hiis statement is weU proved in Thursday’s Voice of the People. I noticed everyone who criticized him and caUed him a racist lived in a lUy-wWte neightxwhood. FRANK NANCE SR. 611 CRESCENT LAKE RD. Gerald Ford is a real RepubUcan. He would do anything to help his friends win the election. I am beyond 80 years of age and lla'ra been watching the Republicans for a long time. Herbert Hoover, Eisenhower, and Richard Nix witii tto money we send? rtih NavneoM m mum dbMldMM. th« Onn b OilbwiS by lantor M M* • kiwiM In OnHnnZ, .Ohm» Udnsnfn, MMMnk UpMr m* WmMwmmt CwmHm S it $9401 n.ytw, nhn-wlwwin MleMsitJnMnwtfsInaM In Ihn UnHnd SM« SM.00 ■ ynw. All moll tuhttrinUnn^ pnynMt In mime*. Pottagn koi Imm |mM ■» 3n0 'clow nUm NnHnt, MltWsnn. Mwnbnrnf AlC REPLY The Council of Churches tells us they are working with the international. Church World Services. The two main organizations for this project are Nord Church Aid, a Scandinavian group, and Caritas, a Catholic organization. Night flights are being rnade from Sau Tome, a Spanish iskhd off the coast of Biafra. These flights are getting in an average of 70 tons of medicine and food per ■ night. The money from church donations will puy supplies for these flights. i I THE ,gQKTIAC PRESS. TUESjpAY, OCTOBER 15, 1968 Sef^^l Miners4nkH^Pait WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation,’8 lOft coal miners have a |74-day pay raise in a new contract that also provides Christmas bonuses for men who shun wildcat strikes. “This is the best contract ever .. negotiated/''said W. A, “Tony” ' Boyle, president of the United Mine Workers Union, at contract signing ceremonies Mon- i'-• r “I hope this is a sign of ' healthy new relations between coal miners and their employes/' said George Judy, who signed for the .Bituminous Coal OperatOTS Association. He called the contract "excellent. 4.- Judy said he can’t tell wheth-the wage increases — which taise base pay to $34.25 a day in the contract’s third year—will force coal price boosts. 'NO MORE WILIXIATS’ But he said increased labor costs require that miners stop wildcat strikes over local issues. Such strikes hi the 30 months of the old cmitract caused the loss tion, he said. ‘The industry can’t stand these expensive, contract-violating, local strikes, nor can the miners,” Judy said. of 427,928 man-shifts of-produc- otjfoide the Industry association, gotiations over the miners’ lung Hoyte said. i< disease^ pneumoconiosis, but Mwe than 48,000 miners start- that no pTovlsiona were _Wri^ ed striking Sept. 30 in whqt the union said was. an unauthwized walkout. Most of the rest of the miners in the industry j• DttroW arta on baMlf of homo ond con«ro»$loooi etndl- "TRIl STATU ULtCTIONS DIRUCTOR rciT. innlna moto camo too lata to got Lo- IFYOU WON’T BELIEVE YOUR MOThSmOUT QUITTING SCHOOL, ^^YOUBmE^THEW^ Read them carefully. You’ll find people who quit high school •verace $45 a week (css than people who finish. Tor the kind of job you want, get the educaUon you need. •@(D „,r,bOt.d tor th. public good in cooperation with Th. Adv.ffi.lh, CouncS and tha International Newipapar Advartiaing Exacutivaa. The Pontiac Press After Only 4 Years ... PLAZA PHARMACY has expanded to bring people of the Waterford Township area friendly," neighborhood convenience with Downtown Low Prices and Prescription Service second to none! Jerry and Joanne wish to thank the neighborhood for their loyal support, and we invite oil those who haven't been in, to meet us to bring your next prescription to us or hove your doctor coll us. EVERY DAY LOW PRICES TO ALLf! * SENIOR CITIZENS No memberships, no Cords, no prying! Pharmacy schools hove always taught pharmacists to take core of the elderly and downtrodden. Only lately has it been commercialized and used os o selling tool! (Aime In anti Shop iti Onr Plvasnnl \f»ir Snrroninlin^s: 3 Doors Down From Our Did Store The New Address Is: 3538 PONTIAC LK. RD. PLAZA PHARMACY FREE eirrs for all, drawings on merchandise Complete Set and Realistic Permanent from Earlen’s Beauty Sho,-). Have Your Clothes Cleaned on Us at Fitzpatrick’s Cleaners. THE PONTIAC PltESS^ TUESDAY. OCTOBER 15, IffdB ■ 1^^ro t3uestroriing Liberal Priorities YOUNG By WHITNEY M. YOUNG JR. Executive Director National Urban League One of the reasMis black people are questioning the sincerity of their liberal friends is the reXWsal of, many libj6rals« to place the' problems of the black man at the top of their list of priorities. Black people are busy trying to survive in an i n c r e asingly hostile society. They are concerned with the basic, gut issues of feeding their kids and finding decent homes and jobs. But the minds of white liberals and radicals are occupied with other things — Vietnam, changing university administrations, and protecting their own vested Interests. We see this attitude among frustrated liberals who say they will sit out this election — no compromises for them. They say they want to spend the next] four years reorganizing the Democratic Party, and they won’t sully themselves b jr voting for any of the major candidates. UFE OR DEATH But black voters can’t afford to be so high-minded. For the next four years could mean life or death. We’ve got to live in rotting ghettos and we have to send our kids to schools that don’t teach our kids. We can’t throw away our h a r d - w o n poDtical rights by not voting, especially in such a crucial election year. The school decentralization fight in New York is another example of the way many white people ran out on the black community #hen they thought their own interests were volved. * * * Fdr years they’ve been giving lip service, to how bad the schools are, but when the Ocean Hill-Brownsville school district reix'esenting black and Puerto Rican parents got into a hassle with the teacher’s union about the transfer of a handful teachers who weren’t sympathetic to community control, many white people put their own sympathies with unionism ahead of the needs of black kids and the black community. Campus rebels offer yet another example of the failure Of wldle radicals to communicate with black pec^le. They are quite wrilling to use issues of importance to the black community among the issues around which they organize demcHistrations and protests, but that’s primarily to attract black students to their banner. CARDS ON TABLE When the fards are really put on the table, the life and death issues of inlpwtance to black people take their place behind Vietnam, the CIA, or other concerns. Black students have shown discipline and a maturity far exceeding that of white student rebels. Last Spring, during the Columbia University “rebellion,” black students had to organize a separat demonstration of their own to protest the university’s callous attitude toward its Harlem neighbors, because the whit rebels were too occupied with issues of the war or the White professional sociologists, etc., are so hung up with the supposed pathologies of the ghetto that they spend their time running after research contracts to run down the Negrq family instead of studying the real sickness of America — racism. Black people mistrust the dilettantism of many of their white friends. 'They talk well, exhibit the right concerns, but when the real crush comes, they are nowhere to be seen. Then, when blacks organize themselves to deal with the issues of vital concern, these white “allies” complain that they’ve been left out. FULL TIME JOB ie don’t want to be e back of the bus even if the bus is r friends. We need itely, but they’ve for the duration, very time another heir fancy. Curing of racism and lity to black people job. and there is de-shbws. 22^ MoreGIs Are Listed as Killed JnVief WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department has identified 22 servicemen who were kUled in action in the Vietnam war. They included eight men from the Midwest. Killed in action: ARMY ILLINOIS — Pic. Charles Mr^ioAN — Pfc. Wayne D. Johnson, NORTH 'DAKOTA — Pfc. Larry L. Warbis. Haynes. WISCONSIN — Snec. 5 wiifreao L. Gon-ales, Milwaukee. Died of wounds: ARMY OHIO — Pfc. Larry E. Van Meter, iolumbus Grove. Changed from missing to dead —hostile: ARMY INDIANA — Spec. 4 Ward E. ----- MICHIGAN — Spec. 4 Glenn R. Law lleM. Oetrelf. WISCONSIN — Pfc. Timothy G. Aren Appleton. Missing in action : ARMY Capt. James E. Mann Returned to military control: ARMY Sgt. Buddy Wright Died not as a result of hostile action: new machine accepts all types of wastes, crushes it and compresses it into a “brick” which can be used for land fill. It can process up to 30,000 tons an hour and is designed for apartments, hotels and institutions. . John J. Quick, Saelna Wirt, Saull Ste. Merle. UMiu — lWO Thomas E. Johnsi lanton. Changed from missing to dead -nonhostile: ARMY IOWA — Spec. 4 Charles R. Sml( tock Rapids. MISSOURI — Sgt. Carl R. U: That Love May Live . . GIVE! Supp©3Pt-your Pontiac Area United Fund LUieAty Xocktail Lounge In the Heart of Downtown Pontiar 85 N. Saginaw Nixon 5 PcL lUholiEdge Likely CHICAGO (UPI) - It was in 1952 that a Democratic governor of Illionls ruminated in Springtield. ”I’m too old to cry and it hurts too much to laugh.” He was Adlai E. Stevenson and he had just lost the presidency to a Dwight D. Eisenhower landslide that carried Illinois along with it. Stevenson had a way with words and his rueful farewell to his presidential hopes that year has been remembered as a model of how to lose with class. This year, all indications are that the Illinois Democratic powers, who followed Stevenson, may do well to learn swne lessons from the old, departed master of graceful defeat. NIXON EDGE Illinois is where, Richard M. Nixon has figured, a S per cent edge in the balloting on his behalf Nov.^J will mean ^ of the Midwest ov< Hubert H. Humphrey. There are few signs to indicate, at this point, that Nixon vipll not get his 5 per cent. At the very least, that would mean 26 electroal votes for the man who may have kwt the White House in the lOinois vothig eight years ago. Illinois Democrats would be lucky if their troubles istopped there. Instead, they are struggling with a nightmare. No authoritative statewide polls have yet been publi^ied on how the vote is gol^ in Illionis. But random samplings have been taken and, to Democratic eyes, they are appalling. Downstate farmers polled have put Nixon first, Humphrey third, and George Wallace in between. At steel miH . Chicago, Humpiirey slmpeA in first, but only because Negro millhands came down solidly for the Democrats. A plurality of white steel workers checked preferred Wallace. The feat abides amon Democratic precinct captains in Chicago that many more white One such maverick is Thornhs cent of white union members Enright, a unhm painter wi» questioned in three plants far ! usually make Mayor Rirtianl J. Daley and the c^’s Dmnocratic machine purr — feel the same way. Uves in Daley’s aeigliborbood near the stockyards. He hu made two decisions: to vote for Wallace next month pnd then emigrate io Australia, w "Two years ago t would have whipped one of my kids if they had said, ’niggm*’,” Enright says. “Now I’m saying it myself. It’s the law and order thing that gets me — to have laws they don’t have to obey andwe do.” Many miles downstate, deep in that part of Illinois known ps ’Egypt,” Valgene cSould ssiys BudHhe same thingrGoukl, a eontraetor, used to be a “90 to 95 per cent Democrat.” Now he has o{fend a Wallace headquarters in his home town of Enei^ because he feels “the federal government is taking! I the country oyer ” . j Wallace. Humphrey was a dish tant second at 27.92 per cent. But when the Negro vote added ~ United Steel Workers officials estimated 30 per cent of their Chicago area membership is black — Humphrey got in front of Wallace, 45.755 per cent to 31.2S. The few polls presently available in Illinois reflect the same kind of talk. | Ihe Chicago steelworkers poll, conducted by the Chicago Sun-Times, showed 44.16 per| ENOOENIUfiEMISERy IINIIKI KMTimi Miracle plaatic DENTURITE rcfiia loose demiim* in five inio-utes. This "Qisbioa of Comfort” cates sore nimt.You cat anything. 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Participants will meet at the tennis courts to join in the march to the bonfire behind the football field, according to senior Tim McMann, chairman. __ _ ★ ★ ★ Logs, provided by the NF students, will be tossed into a heap and ignited. Counsetw Tom Eaton, the master-of-ceremonies, dieerleadc^ ami Raider graduates then take the stand to lead a pe^ rally. The bonfire will come to a close only when the wood or the spirit is exhausted. RUMOR ON QUEEN Rumor has it that Vicki Saliba will be crowned NF homecoming queen during halftime Saturday asYthe NF Raiders challenge the Franklin Patriots. John Bouza, senior class president, will direct Act I of “Cipemaland” Saturday night at 9 in tha NF gym. Music will Ije provided by the Taxi, a local group. • Silent movies are to be shown on the gym walls. AFTERNOON DRESSES , Girls should wear afternoon dresses and boys suits. Note to flower children: please reform—no corsages. Debate coach, Mrs. L. Schneider expressed the enthiisiasm generated at the debate team’s first meeting when she said, “I think we can win.” ★ ★ ★ Affirmative teams are seniors, Jeff Fishman and Steve Silverman; juniors, Steve Posen and Roger Voorheis; and sophomores, Wendy Cohn and Debbie Mordon. Negative teams consist of seniors, Tom Conlon and Bob Hite; and sophomores. Sue Hultz and Ann Smith. INTERSQUAD DEBATE Meetings will be held Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. with an intersquad debate (for the benefit of the scq>homores) scheduled for this Thursday. Clubs are engaged in constructing homecoming floats for Saturday’s parade. ★ ★ ★ German, French, Spanish and Latin Clubs invaded the World Market at the International Institute Oct., 10. American Youth Hostels scheduled a canoe trip last weekend and are planning a combined bonfire, hayride, horseback riding and dance extravaganza for sometime in November. By DONNA FURLONG Waterford-Kettering High School’s seventh annual h(«necoming will be held this ■ ■ Activities will begin Friday afternoon at the pep assembly. At that time Coach Jainea Larkin will introduce the team to tile school. The 1968 homecoming queen and king will also be? revedled. Voting will be held Friday morning. Queen candidates are Lynn Bachelor, Hazel Goodwin and Marcia Steehler. Vying for king are Harry Booker, Bob Earl and Mac Miller. ★ ★ ★ ' ' * Sophomore and Junior representatives have already been chosen. Selected by the class of 1971 were Roxanne Steehler Afro Club Born Cranbrook SYMBOLS OF SUCCESS — Debbie Daubner beats the drum, Jean Proudfoot points to one of the murals setting the mood fw the Waterford Kettering High Schiwl homecoming dance Saturday and Dennis Wooster practices what Ponliitc Prtss Plwto he hppes will be a winning stance at Friday’s game. All three are anxious to promote^ school spirit for a successful homecoming weekend. Rochester Homecoming Fairy-Tale Themes Floated By WHITNEY FIELD / In the last few years, there has been a considerable influx of black students to Cranbrook School, forming a constantly growing, but up to now a relatively non-vocal minority. This year, though, under the leadership of student Ed Perrin, they have come together to form the Afro Club, the only oiganizhtion of its kind in the spiel’s history. i * * * The club basically has two goals to fulfill. First, members, as an organized group, are trying to assert their color and realize their identity and What they represent as an integral part of the community, ★ ★ * They are also establishing a better communication among themselves and discuss personal problems and the problems of today’s society as they relate to their race. INVOLVEMENT Second, in being actively involved in all areas of school life, the students want to inform the white student of their ideas, aspirations and of the significance of their background and present situation. This information will be communicated through personal relationships, creative articles and weekly newsletters. ★ ★ ★ Over 100 sophomores, juniors and seniors from Cranbrook and Kingswood have joined the schooPs Forum. It is probably the largest group ever assembled at Cranbrook for a single extracurricular purpose. Besides the presentation of guest speakers, one of the Forum’s most important functions, is to keep studente posted on other interesting speakers in the Detroit area. ELECTION WORK For those who want to work for the Democrats or the Republicans until the election, there will be opportunities to do so on Saturdays. Interested students will also be kept infwmed of upcoming rallies and demonstrations. By MOLLY PETERSON To many, the fall semester at school would not be complete without a homecoming. Rochester Senior High School is preparing for its homectaning this weekend. Each class is participating by the making (rf a float which carries out this year’s theme—fairy taleis. FLOATS NAMED The sophomore class entitled its float, “Fee Fi Fo Fumble.” “Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Colt” is the title for the juniors’ float and “Jack Falcon the Colt-killer” was picked by the senior class. The homecoming court is complete. Sophomores chose Deb Kilbride and Kathy Upton as their representatives. Melissa Henry and Denise Marecki will represent the junior class, and Shannon Kucharek, Ad Munchiando and Linda Sloan, the seniors. ★ ★ ★ The floats are judged Friday afternoon during the traditional parade through doH^wB Rocheater. Each diKs march-. es behind its particular float and is given points for orderly marching, spirit and the percentage of the class participating. The floats are then brought back to the school to await the game on Friday evening. ★ ★ ★ The Troy Colts are opponents fw this year’s game. During the halftime' each class float and court are paraded in front of the stands and winners of the float competition are named and. the queen is crowned, ★ ★ ★ Music for the informal dance following the game will be provided by “The (Choice.” It is sponsored by the senior class. The semiformal homecoming dance will be held Saturday night from 8-11. Two bands, “The Yellow Pages” and “The Solitary Confinement” will provide the music. DECORATIVE THEME Decorations will center aroupd the theme of Never, Never Land. Tickets ($3 per couple) for the dance are available in the school cafeteria beginning tomorrow. They must be obtained before the day of the dance. The spirit week preceding homecoming is hectic as each class hurriedly finishes its float. Each day during spirit week marks a special event including class colors day, Bermuda day and spirit day. Friday, the day of the homecoming game, an assembly is held. CLASS SKITS Each class presents a skit to the student body. The skit is judged on originality, presentation and response. The winner of the skit presentation is then announced. At this assembly the various courts are also presentfed to the students of RHS. And the fight for the spirit jug is launched. The upperclass girls of RHS also get a chance to perform on the football field this week. The annual Little Rose Bowl takes place at 8 p.m. on Thursday with the junior and senior girls battling in touch and tag football. Last year the class of ’69 beat the class of and it hopes to be the victor again in this year’s game. Sunday, a Pancake Breakfast will be held at the American Legion Hall in Rochester. All proceeds will go towards the American Exchange student fund at RHS. The junior class offered students at RHS a change of pace during the week by sponsoring a “Skip Breakfast Day" The class sold doughnuts in the morning before classes and after school. The National Honor Society for the 1968-69 school year has chosen Jack Wise, president; Chris Vizena, vice president; Susan Carlisle, secretary; and Mary Olson, treasurer. and Steve Cladser. The class of 1970 chose Gail Zollner and Paul Curry. Milford High School wiU be the opponent of Kettering’s varsity football team, when it takes the field Friday at 8 p.m. FLOAT JUDGING During halftime W-K’s marching band will perform while class floats are being judged. Work has begun on the floats. They must be built on campus again this year. Floats will be judged on neatness, originality, how well each pertains to the theme, color and organization. ★ *-■ w The float plaque will be presented to the winning class president at the ball. Class presidents are Mac Miller, senior; Erika Schaeffer, junior; and Steve Clauser, sophomore. “Through The Looking Glass” is the theme for the Coronation Ball, Saturday. ROYAL CROWNING Beginning at 8 p.m. the highlight of the evening wilt be the crowning of the queen and king. Music will be provided by the Johnny Wallis 5. * * ★ Tickets for the ball are $3 per couple and are being sold during lunch and at the door. Working on homecoming as committee chairmen are Sue Barkell, decorations; Sid Graves, assembly planning; Missy McGrath, refreshments; Dan Orders, publicity; Bob Orosey, elections; Stephanie Stewart, tickets and invitations; and Sandy Whitehead, judges. OLD SHEETS NEEDED Decorations committee l,s still in need of old sheets. Anyone that has any please turn them in to the Student Council office. Plans are under way for publishing a student directory. All Student Council representatives should turn is their homeroom lists. Chairman of the directory is Chris Barger. Other members are Karen Church, John Copeman, Marilyn Craighead, Mike Haley and Mary Rexford. As its departing gift to the school, the graduating class of 1968 donated $100 for planters to divide the cafeteria and the hall. TTie plants were donated by the biology classes. SENIOR GIRLS MEET Tonight, there will be a meeting at 7 for all W-K senior girls interested in participating in the 1968 Waterford Junior Miss Pageant. The pageant is sponsored by the Waterford Jaycees. PCH Student/' Floats Compete By PURVIS HUNT JR. Once again the sophomorea. juniors and seniors at Pontiac Central, are competing for the titie of “best float,” in the iHHnecoming activities i)ct. 25. Each class presideitt called special meetings throu^KWt tiie week, to determine the individual themes and designs. * * ♦ Pontiac Central’s homecoming will end this year, with its annual dance, which will l»e held in Central’s gymnasium. Chief and princess elecdons were held yesterday, but the votes are not tabulated yet. The results will be listed next week. DEBATE SEASON Pontiac Central is busy preparing for this coming debate season. This year the topic is: Resolved: That the United States should establish a system of ' compulsory service for all citizens. (All men and women should be drafted.) Teams are formed for the first debate meet" of the season to be held Thursday at Saginaw. PCH debaters and five other schools in the Saginaw Valley will compete in four different meets through December. ★ ★ - ★ Oct. 3, the debating gr^^ was victorious. PCH’s drama this year, “Dark of the M<^n,” is a classic of rural America and a ^perennial favorite of community theaters, BASED ON BALLAD Based on the haunting ballad of “Barbara Allen,” and employing a large cast in the imaginative settings of the Smoky Mountains, it recounts the story of an elfin witch boy who one day beheld the beautiful Barbara Allen, and immediately fell in love with her. A compact is made in which he will be given human form to woo and marry her, on the condition that she remains true to him. I Additional School News | Found on Page B-2 When Barbara gives birth to a witch child, the midwives burn the baby. In the frenzy of a religious revival Barbara is led to betray ber witch boy husband in order to break the spell. She dies and he returns forever to the world of mountain witches. SHARING ROLE Pete Marinis and Rick Humpheries will share the role of John. Carol Haanes and Ann Purdey will play Barbara Allen. Sophomore Student Council represen-tatives this year are Glenn Behler, Mike Boyer, Amy Girst, Pat Larson, Drew Marshall, Nadine Mathes, Margaret Parker and Rick Vershure. * * Dolphin officers this year are Linda Hess, president; Debbie Hiteanen, vice president; Aggie Childers, treasurer; Ginny Hawkins, secretary; Rozanne McGraw, sergeant-at-arms; and Gay Norton, historian. ’ Our Lady of Mercy Students Vie in Annual Magazine Sale Drive Powder-Puff Football During Labser Fall Festival By GRETCHEN HAAS Fall Festival Week at Bloomfield Hills Lahser High School opened yesterday with scratches, bumps and bruises hs sophomore and Junior girls battled in powder puff football. . Wiimers will challenge ttie senior girls’ squad in today’s game at 2:45 p.m. ★ A ★ A Student-Union-sponsored bake sale will also follow school dismissal. Fall Festival activities will continue , Wednesday with a bonfire at 8 p.m. Classes will compete in the collection of wood for the blazei CHEERING CONTEST A student cheering contest led by varsity cheerleaders at the bonfire will be followed by the introduction of Lahser’s athletic coaching staff. Three-legged races, a tug-of-war, and a treasure hunt will be held Thursday afternoon. ★ ★ ★ Senior" class members will cast their votes to elect the Fall Festival Queen on Friday. ' .*■ * ★ Vying for the title are Barb Bammel, Karen Brock, Beth Merrill, Carol Pitt and Cec Vettrainp. PRINCESS’S NAMED Maureen Readon is junior princess and Jean Caudie is princess of the sophomore class. A pep assembly will preceed the 3:30 p.m. football game when Lahser’s Knights will clash with Dearborn An-!napolis at Bloomfield Andover High School. Halftime festivities will include the presentation of the queen, court and princesses. 1, Saturday’s semiformal dance. “Bare-' foot in the Park,” will climax the week of events. CAST CHOSEN Cast members were chosen this week for the Lahser production of “Romanoff and Juliet” to be presented Dec. 5 and 6. Taking part in the Peter Ustinov parody (rf “Romeo and Juliet” are Jim Bal-mer. Jay Bond, Debbie Brooks, Martha Freitag, Pat Hall, Gildand Hegyan and Maggie Keteyian. C^yiER PLAYERS Others are Chris Kingsley, Phil Leach, Gigi Maganus, Lisa Marshak, Nadine Penkava, Linda Priest, tfVank Reid and Marc Tirrell. Robin Dibner is student director for the play; Tom Bond; stage manager; and Curt Ostermann will manage lighting. Mrs. Jack Strait, drama instructor at Lahser, will direct. By MARY ANNE MADDEN Our Lady of Mercy students traded textbooks for magazines and sales pitches as the annual magazine drive began lYiday. All homerooms and the four classes are competing to bring in the most subscriptions. Each girl’s quota is $18. Those who sell more than this amount will be eligible for honorary club recognition and will be awarded additional prizes. Prizes include stuffed animals, clothes, gift certificates and records. Theme of the drive is spirit, according to the Student Council at a school convocation Friday. Each class will wear spirit buttons and homeroom slogans. The Stock Club has been added to the list of extracurricular activities available to students. Under the direction of Mrs. Karin Grandone, math teacher, the girls will be given an imaginary $10,(X)0 to invest. Pmtlac Pr#» Mio«« by E*»artf R BUY, BUY, BUY — Seniors at Our Lady of Mercy High School (from left) Gail Stoney and Sue LaBelle have one thing in mind — to push the current magazine drive over the top. Each stud^t is expected to sell $18 worth of magazine subscriptions. Buying and selling will be carried on at the biweekly meetings. If a student wishes to buy or sell before the meeting, she may see Mrs. Grandone or a “broker.” -f ★ ★ ★ Forming a joint Film Club for the third year are Catholic Central High School and Mercy High School. Moderators are the Rev. Robert Duggan C SC. and Sister Helen Marie R.S.M. FILMS SHOWN During the year six films will be shown including “Billy Budd,” “David and Lisa,” “When Comedy Was King,” and “Darling.” This extracurricular club, limited to juniors and seniors, will meet Sunday evenings at Cathofic Central. ★ ★ * Membership tickets will be available during lunch hours. The first two films are scheduled for Oct. 20 and Nov. 17. DISCUSSIONS SLATED After each film there will be a discussion. ' ^ Mercy’s home economics Career Club recently elected Mary Pilon, president; Katy Zeimet, vice president; Pat Steimel, secretary; and Mary Raha)ey, treasurer. ★ ★ * Sister Mary Loyola R.S.M. i s moderator. “We hope to acquaint the girls with the various fields open in a career in home economics,” said Mary Pilon. To this aim, the club will include programs by speakers from Mercy College and Oakland Community OoUege. Field trips and a spring fashion show are also planned. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1968 By LAURA GUAY Colors, excitement, and spirit invade Marian High School again as Thursday’s Field Day, approaches. Spwiswed by the Girls’ Athletic Association (GAA), this will be the sixth annual event. Banners, spirited songs, stunts and exciting field competition will characterize the afternoon. Replacing traditional class floats this year, stunts will give an opportunity for “each girl in s^ool to participate,” riaims Mts. Joesph Grant, physical education instructor. DAYS EVENTS Events for the day include hurdles, softball toow, medley relay, 50-yard do^, standing long jump and tug-o-war. As for the purpose of Field Day, “It’s a day to have a lot d fun and to bring all four classes closer together in the challenging spirit of hmest rivalry,” stated seniw Kitty Gillooly, student organiser of the events. * * * Judging banner, song, and stunt competition among classes will be members and content. ★ * * Banners and songs should convincingly demonstrate the individual class’ theme. Tradition requires that each class’ theme remain absolute top secret until th|.I)ig day arrives. Lapeer Seniors, Juniors Aiding in Car Census By SUE DE ARMOND The Lapeer City Police Departnjent asked Henry ^ritbi L^>e® Higb School principal, if 100 students would be willing to he^ the city of Lapeer in a car census. They would be paid $1.50 an hour. Friday, after school, the 100 junior and seniors met in the cafeteria to listen to Matt Dougherty, Lapeer’s chief of police, explain their jobs. ★ ★ ★ Each student was assigned a specific street comer from 4 to 6 p.m., for five days. Each pemiNi is responsible for an accurate count on the number of cars that pass the comer during the time. After the five days, every one participating will turn in their alloted sheets with the results on them, to Smith. ROAD DOLLARS The city will then be able to report to the Federal government the amount of tax dollars needed to maintain a road. Martin Hoffman is 17 years old, blueeyed and brown-haired; a typical teenager, except for one thing; he is an exchange student from Frankfurt, Germany. ★ * * ’ ' Martin’s main reason for coming to the United States is to practice English, and to learn more about the American way of life. He is currently staying with the Donald Miller family of 320 Harrison Street, Lapeer. Martin would be a junior in Germany but here he is a senior. CLASS HOURS He has a high opinion of LSH, but is having \a bit of trouble adjusting to the class hours. “In Germany,’’ he said, “we go to school six days a week for only five hours a day, but I’m sure I'll get used to it.” His hobbies are playing the violin and rowing. Martin said there were two things that he particularly liked about America. He said that be was pleased to find Americans did not always shake hands in greeting one another. He likes our more informal method of just saying “Hello.” Also he liked American girls because they seem “very spirited.” NEW MEMBERS The National Honor Society will be in-'ducting new members Nov. 14. Roundup of Acfivifies Brother Rice By STEPHEN PALMS The Pep Club at Brother Rice High School has once again shown its prowess in the Catholic League. Win or lose, ardent fans have supported Rice’s Warriors with fantastic fervor. MUce Mayn- heads the Pep Club. ★ * * Geza Szakac’s piAlicity omunittee decorates school corridors before each game, building iqi the enthusiasm and si>iritof the entire student body. 'As Coach Bill Norton has said many tintes, “a team with excellent student supped has an added advantage In any competition.” Rice students have made evidence of their support, and it has shown in the outcome the football team. EJleu Fellows, qaudia Gordon and Mike Others include: Dave LePere, Joelne Schultz and Mary Woodward. Linda Munro is the sponsor. / Sacred Heqrt By TERESA FIABCBEITI Eiev^ students were inducted into National Honor Society, Oct. 7. HMlis Gibbs, Marcia Murdodi, Mary Claire Tbeisen and Mary Tindall are the Joan CMumbo, Sue Judge, Julie Kircher, Mary Ann MacKmaie, Ann Reynolds, Mary Rkcardo and Sue 11n-dall are juniw class initiates. HANG ON TIGHT-Marian High School senior Kitty Gillooly tells Barbara Heinle (center) and Chris Mardez to get a good grip on the rope if they are to te on the winning side of the tug-o-war team. The girls are practicing for Thursday’s Field Day. Marian Unfurling Field Day Spirit of the Marian faculty. Their decisions will 1^ rased on originality, spirit, color Ciarkston ByTRUDYBEALL Last Wednesday, at the annual Student CouncU sponsored powderptaS game, the Oaikston s^or giiis crqit by their opponents, the junior girb, winning by a score of 7-6. Mary Ann Hennig led the senior girls to victory with a touchdown and extra point in the first quarter, while CoQeen Fancher made the touchdown for the juniors. ★ ★ ★ During halftime, the powderpuff iHHnecoming court was jnvsoited. Tom Grace was selected by Hie junior girls as juniw prince, while Craig Hutchins was the senior prince. Ptowderpuff king was Chris Poole. (Juill and Scroll, the honorary journalism fraternity here at Clarteton, has named its new members. NEfMEMBERS They are Steve Ashley, Mark Co wen. Country Day By JANET IVORY Margo Buterbaugh, tennis coach and former student of Bloomfield Country Day Sdiool qwke before a sdiool assembly of 75 inmates Monday, grounding 24, after the coi^vict^ refused to work in the prison fields unless some institutioi policies are changed. Supt. Victor C. Urban defend, ed the use of gunfire as a reasonable tactic under the circumstances. Gov. Winding Rockefeller called for a full investigation. 'k tt h All but one of the 24 prisoners sdio were wounded were taken to the hospital infirmary. Urban said Herman Goad, 30, of| Natchez, Miss., was struck) in the eye by birdshot and taken to a Little Rock hospital. urban said about 100 priswi-ers refused to work Monday rooming but that about 22 *nR£D nRST SHOT* He said Gary Haydis, sociate siqierintendent, fired the first shot. “Mr. Haydis told them to go back tq work,” Urban said. “He fired his shotgun in the; air warning shot, and tiiey did not move. So he firdd into them. Then they moved.” ' Two of the inmates who were wounded told newsmen that no warning shot was fired. Urban, who said he did not witness the shooting, repoi^ I that the inmates were wounded in the head, back and arms. “those who Were wounded in the head were sitting down,” be said. “The others w^e standing.” to Tucker Prison Farm to be put in isMathro, and another inmate was placed in isolation at Urban l said the wanted to outline about 10 ^iev-ances ‘T)Ut only two or three came out in the discussions.” Grand what’s-its-name railway. We’ve never heard of parking tickets. Park your car free at most Grand Trunk suburban stations. Catch the train - we rim 6 between Pontiac and Detroit in any weather. Rela^ read or nap. No parking violAtions to face - no traffic tie-ups. DSR buses meet every train at Detroit's Brush St. station. And away you go. Cail Grand Trunk about fares and scheduies. 332-8831. He said 10 of the leaders of clear,” he said. “No inmate is going to tell Mr. Haydis or I the prison board that we should run the prison this way or that.” About 1,100 convicts are currently confined qt the 21,000-acre prison farm 60 miles southeast of Little Rock. "Ibey asked that a civilian doctor, not a prison enyiloye, be the penam who gives tiiem clearance when they want to go on s^ call,” Urbi^ said, “Mr. Haydis was empowered to act in my behalf on matters where he felt competent and he granted this denuuid immediately.” “They also demanded the dismissal of some inmate supervi- I,” Urban said. “We refused to grant this ode. withovd an investigation and they reniied to work.” A * ★ The shooting was the latest in a seri^ of incidents in the Ar-kansasv prison system, which has been criticized by its qnw-nents as brutal and outmod^. AAA Study Cited by Hare Average Driver Makes Many Mistakes' LANSING (AP) — If you’re the kind of guy whi makes mistakes chances are you don’t drive very much, thhiks Secretary of State James Hare. Because if you’re an average driver, an American Automobile Association study indicates, you make about errors in each mile you travel. ★ * * That means, notes Hare, that if you drive only 10,000 miles a year, you’ll make about 25,~“ mistakes. Hare said the AAA study involved about 1„000 drivers, both youngsters and adults. LESS SURPRISING Less suriH'ising is another driver study conducted by the Michigan State Safety Commission, of which Hare is chairman. It shows that the worse a driver is, the more likely he is to have an accident. Hare says the commission studied the records of 42,453 problem drivers — those with ei^t or mwe violation points under Michigan law. ★ * ★ At the eight-point level. Hare said, a driver has a 27 per cent chance>of having an accident. At the 12-point level, at which the law allows Hare’s dq;)ar(-ment to take a motorist off the road, his accident likelihood jumps to 42 per cent. 65 per. CHANCE A driver with 17 points is jW about as likely to have an accident as not. Hare says, and one with 32 points has a 65 per cent chance—or is likely to have two accidents in every three situa-ons. Hare says his department will be able to make more detailed driver studies when it finishes feeding the records of Michi- gan’s nearly give million drivers into its new computer. One preliminary study has already been made of the records of about a million drivers whose names begin with A, B and C. That study, which covered 1966, showed the group averaged about 1.2 moving violation tickets apiece. Hare said. FIGURE TOO LOW Hare added the study showed that about one driver in three had an accident during the year —but he said that figure is too low, since police in many major cities, including Detroit, weren’t Commute La I Grand Trunk Western “We don't care If you catch our name, as long as you catch our train." leMay Not on Ballot LANSING (AP) - The choicei of retired Air Force Gen. C^tis LeMay as George Wallace’s running mate came too late to get LeMay on the Ballot Michigan, says State Eiections Director Bernard Apol. As a result, he added, the name appearing on the ballot as vice presidential candidate of Wallace’s American Independent Party will be Marvin Griffin, former governor Georgia. * ★ ★ But, said Apol, it won’t make any difference, since if Wallace should carry Michigan, the slate of electors pledged to him would not have to vote for Griffin for vice president, but could cast the state’s 21 electoral votes for LeMay or anyone else. “When the American Independent Party filed names of candidates they filed the names of Wallace and Griffin,” Apol said. “This was filed within the statutory time and we haven’t had any other filing from them of any kind since then.” The deadlmc for certifying candidates, ^pt. 4, has passed Apol noted, and it would take i court suit to replace Griffin’s name with LeMay’s now. Tues., Oct. 29, 1968. Gene Wiancko “Japan” Tues., Nov. 12, J968 Curtis Nagel “Austria” DOWNTOWN KIWAMS CLUB OF PONTIAC Presents 1968-69 Season OMjL 8;()0 P.M. NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM Stimulating ^ntertainment Tues., Feb. 18, 1969" Ralph J. Franklin “Hawaii” \ Tues., March 18, 1969 Jim Stewart “Safari” Tues., Dec. 3, 1968 Alfred NMfT “Ireland Begorrah” Tues., Jan. 14, U969 Norman Schley “Scandainavia” Tues., April 1, 1969 Don Cooper “Canadian West” GET YOm SEASON "nCKET TODAY ^ForJlnfownatioii^all^^333-7126^^^ required to report all accidents to Hare’s office in time to be included in the study. State Police statistics indicate, though, that 523,164 drivers were involved in accidents in 1966, Hare said. That, he noted, is more than 10 per cent on Michigan’s drivers. ★ “Using an average age of 27.8 years and an average of eight years of driving experience, the 10 per cent accident mean 80 per cent of the drivers had racked up an accident record in the eight-year period,” Hare said. 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CALL 338-4091 MONARK CARPETS INC. 148 N. SAGINAW ST. ALSO 1902 FENTON RD.| FLINT . . . BOTH OPEN DAILY 10-9; SAT. 10-6 CALL NOW 330-4091 ■JB^r TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15/1968 ,j. I- A DAY FOR FLAG-WAVING - Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower waves the emblem of his rank out his Walter Reed Hospital window as he celebrated his »8th birthday in Washington yesterday. Outside were the Army Band, which played a 15-minute salute j to him, and 200 well-wishers. Inside were { ■■ AF WlnpMM members of the fanuly and friends. Doctors chose the occasion to report Ike is now walking unassisted. And the former president marked the day with a statement: “The^t birthday present I could receive would be a sweeping Republican victory on Nov. 5.” Kafzenbach: Courts Made Scapegoats NEW YORK (AP) « The fl*P-mer U.S. attorney geiMral, Nl-dtolas DeB. Katseidmdi, says the nation can’t affod to let politicians make the ^prone Court the scap^oat for rising crime rates. He made reference to anticourt statements by Richard M. Nixon and George q, Wallace. ★ ' ★ ★ 'For politicians to bbaige that there is a substantial ccn-the Tl^g crime rate in our country and recent decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court is nonsense,” Kat-zenbach wrote in the currrat Crash Victim Sought by Sons : REDDING, Calif. (AP) “We won’t stop looking even if it takes a lifetime,” says Alvin Oien, Jr., of the search for his father, a 59-year-old Portland, Ore., hotel man whose singleengine plane crashed into a snow-covered mountain March 11,1967. '' Sewn monfts later the bodies of Oien’s wife, Phyllis, 45, and dau^ter, Carla, 16, were fouiul in the wreckage. A jointly written diary told how they had survived for 54 days awaiting a rescue that never ★ ' An entry five days after the crash said: “A1 left to go for help.” The diary said he was BnffAring from fractures of the right arm and several ribs. Neither Oien n(ff his body has ever turned up. ‘‘As far as I’m concerned, he’s alive until we find him,” declares Alvin, Jr., 33, an airline pilot, of Westlake, Tex. Along with his brothers Ron, 28, and Chuck, 26 both of Portland, he spends his spare dine searching the thick brush around the scene of the accident. holding BRANCHES “With a broken right arm,’ says the oldest son “you would reach out with your left arm to hold onto branches to keep fnnn gtiriing down the mountain. So we figure Dad must have taken off to the left. “We^re now concentrating on working south through the Inrush side by side, inch by inch down the slq)e for two miles. The prc^bility is he got stuck in tte first two miles.” drush at the crash scene, on a 5,9^foot peak In the Trinity MfluntaiHii 35 miles wcst (rf here, is 15 to 20 feet deep at times. Ihe senior Oien ■ “ experienced woodsman. The (Hen plane was headed to San Francisco from Portland 1 when it crashed March 11, 1967, apparently after the wings iced up. The diary’s first entry said that in addition to Oien’s injuries PhylUs had a broken left arm and Carla “a hurt back, left kidney, sore right ankle’ Katzenbach, now under# tary of statd, referred toV as “the Republican candidate,” but mentioned Watllace by me. ‘It is a cruel home,” he said, “to seek to persuade the American people that the Bill of Rights should be watered down in response to rising crime GRIME DUE TO CHANGES Katzenbach said increa^. crime was due to major social, economic and population changes-a growi^, younger peculation that is concentrated in cities and less subject to parental and other controls. “We have to be prepared to live with high rates of crime in the years ahead as our young population grows,” he said. ★ ★ ★ “We can no longer afford to let politicians seek profit from this situation or to evade difficult problems by makii^ a scapegoat of tte Supreme Court.” PoOt»»*» pin<>APPi5ovi:iJ \rro j “ 'I •*' ' ' I This Loan Plai Makes Yoa a Cash Buyer Let us approve your auto loan' for the approximate amount you'lf need BEFORE you shop for your ^ car. 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YOU’VE ONLY ONE LIFE - The numerous health and safety-oriented United Fund agencies spend thousands of dollars daily on research to find cures for di^ases and on instruction to teach the average person how to care for i physical self and how to handle commwi accidents in the home and at werk. Fruits of Research Are Used Daily Blood derivatives, cancer retardants, and the heart-lung machine — each developed by research — are used daily by members of this community. ★ ★ * 5nce, little money was allocated for studying diseases but, with each medical breakthrough, the value of men working in laboratories becomes more evident, and the allocations increase. Today thousands of dollars are spent daily in the search for cures to combat a battery of diseases. ★ * ★ Agencies hke the Michigan Cancer Foundation, the Michigan Association for Retarded Children, the Michigan Epilepsy Center, the Michigan Heart Association and the Michigan Kidney Disease Foundation are each dedicated to finding causes of and developing cures for their particular disease. • 9 THERAPY — Tina Tovar, Kenny-Michigan Rehabilitation Foundation girl, learns to take off her shoe during therapy treatment. Awareness of the meaning of safety encourages more careful living. American Red Cross officials have discovered, for example, that a housewife’s knowledge of first aid and of the potential hazards in her home, makes her perform daily chores more carefully. * -k -k • Similarly, many plants with employes trained to prevent accidents report lower accident rates than those companies who say nothing about safety to their employes. * ★ * Even most high schools Require 'first aid training by Red Crtiss trained volunteers so students will know how to cope wiith common accidents. * * * Agencies such as the Red Cross, Boy Scouts, the YMCA and the YWCA prennote various areas of safety. RESEARCHERS Dr. Lawrence Power and his assistant, Mrs. Gussie Hightower ol Wayne State University, conduct research on diabetes. The Michigan Diabetes Association conducts research and provides education, counseling services and a year-round detection program. It also sponsors a camp program for children BLOOD CHECK — A Red Cross nurse will check the blood pressure and t' when a person offers'to donate blood. The tests are part'of a comprehens Red Cross blood program which collected more than 1,000 pints of blood last ye The blood and blood derivatives were distributed to hospitals. finding CURES — The American Social Health Association researches cures for venerea] diseases, anwMig other things. Visiting Nurse Cares For Patients In Latter’s Henne SIX THE POXTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 1 j. 1968 THE POXTIAC PRESS. Tuesday, ourcyBEE ijt, i«68 THREE 75 Agencies Help the Family Your Contributions Benefit Everybody A young couple afraid their marriage is falling apart, a girl who can’t get along with her sisters, and an unwed mother: each is a case for the UF agencies primarily involved with solving family and child care problems. Each of these 15 local and statewide agencies aim for Family Service of Oakland County’s professed goal of ‘ strengthening families under'^tress.” While individual case histories ate never released, statistics show 619 area residents were helped by Family Service last year, another 304 were counseled at Catholic Social Services and 416 were given temporary assistance by the Sal^ion Army. These agencies are open to any Pontiac area citizen. The fees are geared to each client’s ability to,pay. There are several specialty agencies which often give supplemental aid to those already working with U F counselors. ★ * ★ One is Homemaker Service, a n organization which provides temporary care of children, aged, or disabled in emergency situations such as when illness or social problems threaten to disrupt the household completely. Homemaker clients are primarily referrals from other UF agencies. The Oakland County Legal Aid Society offers legal advice and representation to persons of limited finances, while the Youth Guidance Committee in Lake Orion is a voluntary citizen’s group working to prevent and combat child neglect and juvenile delinquency. Fathe/fess, Gary Now Has A Man To Look Up Af And Talk To, Thanks To Big Brother John Spaulding Of Bloomfield Township COUNSELING—Talking to a teen-ager experiencing growing pains is only one of Family Service worker Anthony G. Dew’s daily duties. Trained case workers offer counseling for individual-personal adjustment problems, marital difficulties and child-parent relationship difficulties The agency's goal is to help /prevent breakdowns, in family atmosphere. COMFORTING — Michigan Ohildren’s Aid Society worker Patricia Pell soothes a baby up for adoption. This UF agency places infants in temporary care until the natural mother can arrange to take them or pj^ce the child for adoption. The nonsectarian child welfare agency’s activities include services to unwed mothers, pre- and postnatal counseling and financial aid. The agency also places children from temporarily disrupted homes under foster care. EXERCISING—Keeping taut shapes is the real game for these YMCA members woriting out on the paddleball court. A place to exercise, to meet people and to have a good time, the YMCA ef Greater Pontiac at 131 University serves everyone. Y programs include physical education classes^ aquatics, camping, social activities and counseling. CIVILIANS’ THANK YOU—The United Service Organization clubs, found wherever U S. military personnel are stationed, offer milk shakes, a hamburger, a place for relaxing and reading a home town newspaper or a chance to use the special stateside telephone service. The clubs are supported by civilian money. YOUTH GROUP—Y Teen members Jo Marie Hobson (left) of 32 Clay and Susan Zinnermon of 106 Wall construct paper flowers to decorate a party the Y-Teen group is giving for patients at the Pontiac State Hospital. This gnMip' meets regularly at the YWCA. The YWCA offers fun—and character-buil^ng— educational and recreational programs for women of all ages. A nursery center, an international group and classes ranging from yogi to upholstering are available. The UF dollar goes to every man. ' That one hour’s pay per month you are asked to donate helps 55 health, welfare and recreation agencies form a united front in sei-ving this community. ★ ★ ★ PAUF doesn’t pretend to offer a cure-all for every paki and problem, nor does it claim to eliminate all other fund drives. However, more of your dollar supports actual services for people than in any other type of fund-raising campaign. ALL ARE WELCOME The 34 cents which goes to educational, recreational and character-building services finance activities every family can join. All children are welcome at the Boy ^outs, the Camp Fire Girls and the Boys’ Club: all groups offering friendship, constructive guidance and good times. All ages can join the Young Men’s Christian Association, the Young Women’s Christian Association, the Community Activities, Inc., the Independence Citizen’s Recreation Services Committee or the Oxford Township Services! ■Ar ★ ★ Where would 20,000 current members of these various organizations swim, play ball, relax, and meet people without these UF-sup-ported agencies. HELPERS—Urban League staffers Terrell Massey (typing) of 6036 War-rent, Holly, and Della R. Stephens of 264 Branch help process job applications passing through their office. This professionally staffed social agency at 132 Franklin Blvd. works for housing and welfare of racial minorities. Their aim is to benefit the total community by improving conditions and promoting intergroup understanding. OPEN-AIR COOKERS-Preparii r^ ibfld-BMde grill are Campfire Girls (from right) Kim and Beckey Frazer of llJiD ^arly, Sylvab Lake, and Camp aide Kathy Rapley also of 19M Beverly. Camp Fke Girl activities, oriented toward helping a girl become a mature, civi^consdous' woman, are open to girls from age 7 through high school. National offices in Oakland and Macomb Counties Long-time devotees of the. Pontiac Symphony '« concerts arrive early to get their choice of Seats. Mrs. Gerald Kirkby of Silver Sands Drive. The From left are Mrs. Roy Ward of North Telegraph first concert of the 1968-’69 season was played Road; Mrs. Allan Monroe of Cherokee Road and Monday evening at Pontiac Northern High Softool. Tell 'Roomie' You Prefer Living in a Place of Your Very Own ABBY By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I have shared an apartment with another girl for almost a year, and our lease is nearly up. My problem is that I don’t l^i^fwant to live with this ''fgirl any longer. "• She’s a good kid, but |sfie needs a babysitter. fShe is 20 years old, and |she‘*s afraid to stay [alone for one night. I home for a week-[end, and when I returned she said she was so “afraid” to be alone slie slept with the lights on. One day I failed to tell her I was going to do some errands after work, so when I got home (about two hours later) she was practically in hysterics. She was so “worried” about me, she was ready to call the police! My mother agrees that I’d be better off living alone even if I couldn’t afford such an expensive apartment. But how can I tell this girl? UP A CREEK DEAR UP: Tell her in plain English that you have decided to live alone. And don’t start making up excuses or you will have a debate on your hands. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have been having a big difference of opinion about the use of the word “BROAD,” when referring to a woman. I say it is a reflection on a woman’s character, and no nice lady would care to be call^ a “broad.” My husband says that the term is more descriptive of a woman’s figure (like a “broad expanse”) and haMioth-ing whatsoever to do with her character. Yet he admits that he would never use it around church people. Where did this word come from in connection with ladies? MRS. G. DEAR MRS. G.: Beats me. But if one of my readers out there clues me in. I’ll let you know. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: I am a 10-year-old boy, and I don’t have anybody to play with. 1 asked my mother to get a brother or even a sister, but she told me not to bother her. I told her I would be satisfied with a^ dog, but she said a dog is too much trouble. I had a rabbiUonce, but' it died. Is there some way I can get my mother to let me have a dog? LENNY DEAR LENNY: If your mother’s only objection to a dog is the “trouble,” write out an “agreement,” stating you wiirtake the dog for walks regularly, see that it’s fed, wd dp everyttog you can to relieve yowj mother of the work of owning and training a-dog. Then sign it. It’s vvorth a try. ' ★ ★ ' ★ DEAR ABBY: My 6-year-old daughter finished kindergarten, in June. A 6-year-old boy in her class called her on the phone last week. He was the first boy • ever to call her, so naturally she was excited. (So was I.) He called her nearly every day for a week. She refers to him as her “boy friend.” I thought it was cute. My husband says that by allowing the boy to call and seeming to be pleased about it I am encouraging the boy-girl relationship much too early. He says fryear-old girls shouldn’t have “boy friends,” that he sees nothing “cute” about it, and we shouldn’t allow him to call. Abby, I’m not surp what I think. I don’t want to be a mother who pushes her daughter into trying to be popular with the boys at too early an age, but I see nothing wrong with this. How do you think it ought to be handled? PERPLEXED DEAR PERPLEXED: To make a big thing out of it now, telling her she’s too young to have a “boy friend” and forbidding him to call, I think would give your daughter the idea that there is something “wrong” with a boy-girl relationship. Let it run its course. It’s natural and inevitable, though somewhat premature. He may not call her again until she’s 15. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: My husband is in the Marines and is stationed in Vietnam. Shortly after he arrived in Vietnam I gave birth to a baby boy. Abby, my baby is nearly 6 months old and my father-in-law has been over to see him only three times! I told him he was welcome to come any time. He is a widower. On Father’s day I sent my father-in-law a card and I heard nothing from him. My husband would be very hurt if he knew how his father is slighting me. What is the best thing for me to do? SLIGHTED DEAR SLIGHTED: Call your father-in-law. Maybe he isn’t well. Whatever you do, don’t write to your husband about this. If there’s anything a Marine in Vietnam doesn’t need, it’s a letter from his wife complaining about how his father is slighting her. ★ ★ ★ CONFIDENTIAL TO “ACCUSE”: Yes, it is possible for two blue-eyed parents to produce a brown-eyed child. Consult a book on heredity and the Mendeli-an Law. And tell your sister-in-law about another law. The law of common decency with which she should become more familiar. Pale it for the holidays in heavenly tinted coordinates by Koret of California. Nubby wool-cotton plaid skirt, double pocketed and single pleated rises tb herald the crisp notched collar jacket of wool flannel and the contrasting cuddly angora blend turtleneck. Beginning with a skirt of pink/blue/white or custard/ gray/ white, go pale with white, blue, pink, gray or custf^for {he jacket and angora sweater. Birmingham composer Harold Laudenslager and his wife were present Monday evening, for the performance of his "Little Suite" by the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra under conductor Felix Resnick. The composition had its first performance in 1958 and icas included in the repertoire of the touring Albert Tioton Chamber Orchestra. Laudenslager is a member of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. His wife is a music teacher at Webster School. Mrs. Michael Pierce of Newberry Street gets a program from lOth-grader Vicky Perry, whose scarlet jacket identifies her as a member of the Ushers Club of Pontiac Northern High School. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Perry of East Mansfield Street. Mrs. Pierce's husband is a percussionist with the Pontiac Symphony and a music teacher in the Huron Valley School System. Parliamentary Club Schedules Meeting The Parliamentary Study Club will hold a demonstration regular meeting Wednesday at 1:30 p m. in the YWCA.^ Mrs. Lester Dies will be leader with Mrs. Fred Goines, sponsor. On tltrTilenda are: Order of Exercises, Introduction of Business, Purpose of Motion, Formalities of Making M9tions, Steps of A Motion, Ordinary Main Motion and A^morize. Young Boarders Will Receive Proper Care By EUZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: My in-laws reside near a college and have decided to take in two 18-year-old girls as boarders. My mother-in-law is interested in obtaining a job. She would prefer to work during the night-time hours, at which time my father-in-law would be home to supervi.se the girls. * ★ ★ Would it be proper for the girls to be supervised at night by my father-in-law while my mother-in-law is working?— Mrs. B. K. ★ Dear Mrs. K.: Yes indeed! Were it only one girl, there might be some raised eyebrows in thft) neighborhood, but the fact that there are two should discourage any gossip. Your mother-in-law should feel perfectly free to work at night, knowing that her young boarders will be well chaperoned. _ MAIDEN NAME Dear Mrs.- Post: I have recently been divorced after eight and a half months of marriage. 1 requested my maiden name again, which was granted. Do I sign my name Mrs. or Miss? — Thelma ★ * ★ Dear Thelma: Take back the “Miss.” Even though you have been married, you cannot use “Mrs.” with your maiden name. Ruth Burczyk's Fiery Style Captures Symphony Audience By BERNICE ROSENTHAL The Pontiac Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Felix Resnick, opened its 15th season last night at Pontiac Northern High School auditorium with a program featuring Ruth Burczyk, pianist. Using Liszt’s monumental Piano Concerto in E. F’lat Major as her vehicle, Miss Burczyk displayed a strong, masculine control of her instrument, a fiery, powerful style, an imposing and clean technique, and a polished professionalism with the turn of a phrase. It was a carefully studied performance, carried off in the grand manner, with the many difficulties of the work easily under her strong and capable fingers, and the subtleties of the Ivric passages artistically and tastefully delineated. Her touch is mellow and mature, and her communication with her audience both charming and direct. Also featured on the program was Harold Laudenslager’s Little Suite for strings, Wood winds and piano. A contemporary work of wit, humor and verve, the suite is carefully constructed, its atonal combinations well disciplined, its rhythmic treatment bdth ingenious and delightful. The short strident overture was satirical and pruposely pompous. The slow dance which followed had interesting rhythms and effects, especially in the unusual staccato accompaniments. Quick March, the third movement, was a charming, infectious bit of whimsy Member of Beverly Hills branch. Woman’s ■National Farm and Garden Association, Mrs. William S. Dehm of Birmingham serves as a judge of entries in The Pontiac Mall Flower Show which opened Monday. She is shown weighing the merits PontUc Prt»t Photo* of a harvest table set with colorful pottery for an entry headed “Cabbages." Theme of the show is "Of Cabbages and Kings" from the “Alice in Wonderland" adventures by Lewis Carroll. ‘ Having just lost two teeth to the dentist’s forceps, 10-yepr-old Kristin Kirberg didn't feel like going Mck to school Monday, so mother (Mrs. Ronald Kirberg of Sylvan Lake) took her to The Mall to view Mom’s entry under the heading "The Sand Was Dry as Dry. Sand, driftwood, dried materials and cockleburrs in artistic arrangement earried Mrs. Kirberg a red ribbon. She is a member of the Sylvan'Lake branch, WNFGA. reminiscent of Shostakovitch's mocking style. A short chorale led into the final toccata, a more serious and somber conclusion. DIRECTION Resnick directed with skill and expertise, lending both smoothness and sprightliness to the difficult and unusual score. Tlie unifying instrument in the work is the piano, which was handled with skill, dexterity and polish by the orchestra's^staff pianist, Martha Welton. The opening and closing selections, two familiar and popular works, were the Ballet Music from Gounod’s opera, “Faust,” and Tschaikowsky’s “Marche Slav.” After a rather halting start in the violin sections, the Ballet Music was a stodgy, more or less pedestrian affair, without Mr Resnick's usual confident and creative touch. ★ * * Howevqr. tlie closing “Marche Slav” more than mad\ up for any inadequacies in the opening pUmber. Taken at a much faster tempo^ than usual, the work emerged brilliant, clear and unhackneyed In spite of slight overtoning on the part of the low brasses, the march was really a march, unsentimental, brisk and touching in its appeal, a fitting finale to concert well planned and conscientiously carried out to a rousing conclusion. Writers' Confab at OU Scheduled This Month .seventh consecutive year, the Writers’ Conference at Oakland. Universily will serve as a forum for beginning and established writers concerned with craftsmanship. # ★ * The one-day conference, set for Oct. 2fi in the University’s Oakland Center, is expected to draw a capacity crowd. Registration and a coffee hour start off the day ht 8:30 a m. A wide choice of clas.ses and workshop panels is offered with a 12:30 pm. luncheon break between. ★ ★ ★ Sponsored jointly by the University, Detroit Women Writers and“ t h e t niver.sity’s Division of C o n t i n u i n g Education, this conference has been planned b\ a committee of published authors and University staff. * ★ ★ Reservations are due in by Oct. 18. Contact the University for further Information. IT'S NEWS TO US.......... ^tvbet^ubKdity chairmen of area V^woi^ff^oupi get their notices t ' 3of meefings and medal events into '' us BEPORE, thew take place. Handling women’s news in this fashion not only k^s our presentation fresh but hdp»^to insure a better membership turnbqt and to ° create greater interest In would-be joiners for you. Won’t you help us and your club by following this suggestion? B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15> WALLPAPER msm CENTER . 1028 W. Huron SicL wm. 338-8988 Prepare Now for a Career Paramount Beauty School ENROLL TODAYI Emily BIom, Owner ZoU Jaynei, Manager Juanita Jaynea, Intlruclnr Ora Randall, Promotion 26 W. HURON ST.. PONTIAC Phone FE 4-2352 or Como In WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOATS? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD - - - TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. New By EVE THOMAS WomeB’s Medical News Service Women in the 18 to^ 34 age bracket are so healthy that accidents rank as their majqr cause of death. The stresses of adolescence past, the newly-mature woman in full bloom faces series ofvexhflarating challenges — of adulthood, of marriage, of pregnancy, of motherhood. Marching! off, head high, either to college or her first real job, the young high school graduate is apt to be a great deal more knowing than her mother was. The talk is no longer of femininity but of sexuality, with all its implications of individuai decisions to be made. “The sexual revolution’ is apparently here to stay. ★ ★ ★ However, probably most of today’s young poeple behave sexually very much the way their parents — and grandparents — did! Sexual abstinence is still the dominant mode for most es DON’T PUT IT OFF . . . TAKE IT OFF! Wherever YOU are, there is a HOLIDAY SPA near your home, near your office, each offering the nationally famous system of individually designed program that help you get in shape, sif in shape! jum lUUAT O FOR THE 1 X PRICE OF I ANY COMBINATION * MOTHER - DAUGHTER - FATHER - SON MEN! YOU, TOO, CAN LOOK and FEEL YEARS YOUNGER CALL OR DROP BY TODAY (OPEN 10 A.M. to 10 P.M.) (VISITORS WELCOME) HEALTH SPA OVER 250 Affiliated Studios Coast-to-Coast and WORLD-WIDE 3432 West Huron St. Just West of Elizabeth Lk. Rd at H.ghlond 682-5040 unmarried women and for many bachelors although there is some evidence that, on the more cqsmopbiitan and sophisticated campuses, a minority of seniors have retained their virginity. Even there, faithfulness and profound emotion are highly valued. More then ih the past, young adults associate sex with genuine affection. Far fewer young men patronize prostitutes. A young woman who prefers to retain her virginity will not automatically condem a friend who’s jumped the gun on marriage. ’ * * ★ Despite the virtually fool-proof protection offered by oral contraceptives, one out of every 15 babies born is illegitimate. The abortion rate i8 estimated at from 200,000 to 1,500,00 a year, Fwced marriages take their toll; perhaps one out of five brides is pregnant. More than 5,000,000 women too poor for private medical care want and peed advice about fdhuly planning but 87 per cent do not have access to subsidized medical care. APPEALS Different contraceptive techniques have different appeals. What one woman finds acceptable is loathsome to the next. But a technique’s reliability is used exclusively, 11 women will - ------- --------find Ihemselves pregnant; for a diaphragm adth cream the rate r^ntty gave*ttie foUowing fail- is 9; for. the intrauterine device ure rates; for every hundred women using the rhythm sys-tm, 19 win get pregnant within the year; when a condom is (only rarely prescribed for a vromen who has not borne a child) 1; for oral contraceptives, virtually none. 4xaminaHdaa by a ^_______ shodW take place two of three montts beftwe the wedding: That way, the bride^o-be can settle whatever problems she have well in advance of her wedding nii^t. Dr. Alan Guttmacher^ a fam- A buffet tailored to both masculine and feminine appetites is planned for Wednesday’s Harvest Festival luncheon at All Saints’ Episcopal Church. Mrs. Charles Crittenden, left, of Sawyer Streets, chairman, and her cochairman. « PwHac Pr«M Wiof» by Ron Unlornohrir Mrs. Bill G. Willis (right) of Percy King Drive, confer with decorations chairman, Mrs. Kenneth A. Scott of Sylvan Lake, while looking over the harvest produce which will enhance the autumn atmosphere of th€ event. Polly's Pointers Looks Neater, Cleaner Dear Polly—Mrs. D. W. asked why one must line dresser drawers. W course this is not necessary but I always do it because the drawers stay clean longer. When a drawer is lined dirt col- HAIRCUTTING for Autvmn't bow curly-cuet ond waves. Beauty Shop Biker Bldg., FE ;i-7186 PEARCE Floral Co. ‘ To Remind You We will be closed on Wednesday d phono Phone FE 2-0127 lects in the liner and can be easily discarded. Fresh paper, or whatever you choose for lining, ke^s the drawers neat and clean and can also be decorative. To me, not lining one’s dresser drawers is like not putting a cover on a mattress.—Jan POLLY’S PROBLEM I Dear Polly — I have an oversupply of linen and also some ;c(ttton and iqrlon napkins and jwould apprecbate sdme suggestions as to ways to utilize them. Some have never been used. I—Mary / Dear Polly When casseroles |are to be frozen and stored, I ;line the baking dish or pan with foil, fill with the mixture to bd frozen and press the foil firmly over the mixture to seal it gir- It’s The QB m Double Postiche With Band 100% Human Hair Stylej^O DRAYTON WIG Distributors ^ COIFFEUR PAR ANNE 4666 W. Walton Blvd., Drayton Plains One Block East of Dixie Hwy. 673-3408 RIHH 673-0712 y|||||||||| When it is solidly frozen, foil-wrapped block can be removed from the pan. Hiis saves storage space in the freezer as the “blocks” stack nicely, and pans or casserole dishes are not tied up for long periods of time. V^en ready to use the frozen casserole you can easily remove the foil apd slip the block ipto the original pan to heat. Some may only require unwrapping the foil from the top and placing the foil-wrapped block on a cookie sheet.—Sue ★ ★ ★ Dear Polly — After cleaifing the toilet bowl with your preferred cleanser, use a few drops of nicely scented dishwhshlng liquid. Stir around with' ttie brush a few times and leave the pleasantly scented §uds for awhile. You will be delisted with results.—Ella T. All Saints' First Buffet The first of what is hoped will become an annual event, the Harvest Festival buffet luncheon, will take place Wednesday at All Saints’ Episcopal Church. ★ ★ Sponsored by the Episcopal CHurch Women, the affair will combine luncheon for businessmen and shoppers with a number of booths for browz-ing. Holiday items will be for sale in the Thanksgiving and Christmas tradition. * g * Hot dishes and salads will be available along with the usual accompaniments of a meal. The best cooks in the congregation are preparing their special recipes. Kitchen service is under the direction of a trio of chairmen, Mrs. Clarence Smith, Mrs; Arnold Thingstad an^ Mrs. John Riley. The luncheon will be served between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. ous New York obstetriciaii'gyne-Gologist, recommends that yopng wotoea start taking oral contraceptives a* few months befoi% Ite wedding so any side-effects wffl have tinie io disapper. If no contraceptive is ti^, cbanc^ are two out of three that the bride will find herself pregnant within three months. HAZARDOUS MHIACLES Compared to the miracle of giving birtti to a wanted clpltl, getti^ married Is a pedestrian affair. Seldom a nii^tmare experience in these days of refined anesthetics and natural , diild-b^th, having a baby is nevertheless still a delicate matter. Out of every 100,000 births, 25 women die fnim complications. The death rate for newborns is even higher/ A recent study by University of .North Carolina doctors revealed something astonishing: the well-known post-natal blues are rosy compared to pre-natal depression. More women feel de-iwess^ and anxious in the last months of pregnancy than' do new mothers. Pregnant women also liave more trouble falling asleep. ★ ★ ★ As the children grow up, life gets easier. Unfortunately, youth’s immunity to disease lessens simultaneously. Even in the 18 to 34 bracket, cancer is the second leading cause of death after ac6idents. Breast lumps may well be merely small cysts, particularly if they appear just bef(»e menstruation and disappear after the period, but any lump should be checked out with a doctor. i So should any unusual vaginal . bleeding. It is well to realize that not all vaginal bleeding is menstruation. Capcer of the cervix is a possible cause, although it is rare in women under 35. If every woman had an annual test for uterine cancer, 32,000 deaths could be avoided each year. Day by day, a woman has less weighty concerns. “After 21, life is one long diet,” sighed a willowy young woman recently. The average woman of 5’2” weighs 127 pounds in her early 20s, 132 pounds between the ages of 25 and 35, and 143 as she nears her 45th birthday. Eternal vigilance is one answer. Another is: Let is spread. Non-Stick Coat on Utensils, Too Now non-stick finishes are being applied to the outside of kitchen utensils. In the trade, this inside-outside application is called “Hardbase” and i represents one more step toward an easier time for Mom. ★ * ★ This new coating Is tough, comes in colors, and may be applied to a variety materials — such as glass ceramics, aluminum, and cast iron. It boards heat resistance 100 degrees — and is obviously safe in very hot hr detergent suds. SOFf! VISIT . OIIR SHOWReOH And See Our Fine Collection of Eieaantly Crafted Furniture. We AI»o S|»epiali*e in Cuitom Upholeterinn “Fine Furniture end Quality Cerpetiuf Since 1924” OF WATERFORD miu(han Cnatonwr* 334.0981 Design Tips Offered for Space Illusion I To create illusions of space take a tip from trend-setting artist-designer Jack Denst. Use large-scale wall decorations. ‘The returning vacationist who has enjoyed spacious accommodations is conscious of the limits of his own home or apartment. It is especially true of travelers in Europe who become accustomed tW 10 or 12-foot ceiling heights.” ★ ★ ★ Denst suggests a single large scale floral or an important verticle stripe of florals to draw the eye to that single decoration and endow the rest of the room with an expansive air. A mural, tapestry or large painting, will also achieve this effect. He advises travelers not to overload their home with foreigrt acquisitions, but to limit collections to three basic colors. Denst restricts his own collection of art pieces to subjects executed in black, white or actual wood, thus enabling him to vary use of objects from time to time while maintaining a decorative balance. RUGS CHANGE SCENE The use of area rugs will also permit a floor level change of scene with rugs alternating to freshen the appearance. Furniture pieces of different scale, an occasional floor plant instead of a lamp fo give an outdoor , look to ttie area are other ideas suggested by Denst for gaining the illusion of more space. Tarairtij;an be removed from brass or copper by rubbing with a mixture of V^egar or lemon with a pinch of salt, then rinsing and diying. NEW KITS Arriviitg bally Kuup in touch with ut for now cloiut on Chrittmoi Proioclt to ifort in Novombor Cake Oeooratinc Supplitt Sequin* i teads for Trims CLEO’S / -gm-reimAe-raBSS>-TUESDA¥, octobke is, jneg- JhrP.- >. Area Gallery Shows Works ' of the Radells An exhibition of sculpture Lloyd Radell end paintings by ' n&aee Radel} will begin Sunday >frith an opening reception in the 'Strabismus Gallery, Rochester, 'from 3"to 7 p,m. '■ i Mrs. Radell’s pidntings have been exhibited in eight one-noan shows, including three hi New York. She is represented in over two buqj^ad^ivate collectiinis , and her woritsstang in the ' Detroit Institute OTs^Arts, the .Dearborn Museum Walter P. Chrysler Museum In Massachusetts. BAA Mrs. Radell is presently on the teaching staff of the Bloomfield Art Association. Lloyd Radell’s works have been exhibited in many local, regumal and national exhibitions and institutions and are included in imany private col-'lections in both the United States and Canada. He is chairman of the Art Depart-^ ment of Mercy College in Detroit. The husband and wife are residents of Lake Orion. ★ ★ ★ Regular Gallery hours are Tuesday Stodgh Bafi^ay from 10 a.m. to %; p.m. and Friday evenings uhtU 9. For this exhibit, u4ilcli runs through Nov. 9, the gallery will also be open Sundays from 2 to 5 p.m. Comings, Goings of Area Folks Arizona residents, the Robert Cowleys of Flagstaff were recent visitws of his mother, Mrs. Alma Cowley of Seneca Street. From Kansas City, Kansas, was daughter, Mrs. James LaCock, and her husband. Completing the family gathering were granddaughters, Carolyn Cowley and Amy Lori LaCock. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Ralph G. Der-ragon, formerly of Heitsch Street, recently departed for Phoenix, Ariz., where they will set up winter residence. The Derragons are also planning a short visit to Los Angeles, Calif. Use paper towels saturated with rubbing alcohol when cleaning windows and mirrors. Rochester residents, the Wellington Ostroms were feted Sunday at Devon Gables in honor of their 50th wedding anniversary. Hosting the couple, who was wed Oct 12, 1918, were daughters Mrs. Witliam (Dorothy) Ferguson of Rochester and Mrs. Fred D. Houghteh (Betty) of Wimberly Drive, Avon Township, and son Donald of Detroit. The Ostroms have 10 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. WOULD YOU LIKE THE OPPORTUNITY TO MODEL IN A HAlRiFASHION SHOW? Have your hair cul by m professional and styled for competition showing. Call FE 2-1424 Mr. Mountain L’S BEAUTY SHOPPE 88 Wayne Street FE 2-1424 Specialize In OROVP TOURS HIRUNGBt TRAVEL CENTER Alt Tnw Or**"**"*"”" •“'“■•wssr All Famous Ports of Call Throufiioiit Tho World 11 W. Lawrence MSU Students Wed Newlyweds, the Terry W. Ruprecfats (nee Cheryl Yvonne Smith) are making their home in East Lansing whmre thqr are students at Michigan State University. ■ ★ ★ t- The daughter Dr. and Mrs. 0. L- Smith of Acorn Road, Bloomfield Township and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rupreefat of Arlington Heights, 111., were recently united during an afternoon ceremony in Grace L))theran Church. Attendants for the rite n Becky Maxim, Lynn Laswell, Ihomas Ruprecht and James Wasmuth. . ' * *• ★ A reception at the home of the tnride’s parents followed the Brushes used to clean toilet bowls and garbage cans should be sanitized frequently. Wash them in hot soap, scald in hot rinse water and let them air-dry in the sun. Vieit Wiggs For The Finest China and Crystal. . . Or When You Want A Special Kind of Unusrual Gift For The Bride-To-Be • • • Or^ For Yourself. . . A delightful night light... This lacy Flower actually plugs into the wall and turns on . . . j SpeciaUy priced at........................3.00 11 . I ^ I Parfait set for a sweet gift.. . The set includes six jars of rich sauces, an ice cream scoop and parfait glasses..........................8.95 From our large and varied collection of Monkey Pod accessory pieces . .. All hand made . .. and no two alike... Trays and Bowls priced from.................3.00 Stainless flatware . . . “Interlude” by Lyon . . . A delicate, filigree pattern on the handles . . . This comes in a 28>pc. set... in a handsome wooden box .....................................60.00 Plus Some Open Stock ... Reduced PONTIAC MWEkT HURON STREET FrL’lU* CmmpUir FmrmUmn CMm. nyital JXJNXOR hotjtsb: Like taking a stand on checks for fall with the spiff lest little culotte suite. In Cholive, rust, or Oatmeal. ■i^26 Cable knit sweater $^6 Culotte skirt . $19 Suiter hat . $8 Likl^oting for the culotte suit in leather and tweed. In Cognac brown Donegal tweed of 75% wool and 25% nylon. Double Turtleneck Sweater Culotte Skirt . T&C IS SENSATIONAL WITH SHAG Town & Country Shoes' plush shag suede is a sensational look for fall Here is one from our new shag suede collection in hayride. squash or black with burnished qoldtone metal buckh#^' Available in Hayride or Squash Shag, Sizes 5 to 10, AAA to B. $]7 QIsol ttot iaL T^eeJuRltto., PONTIAC Telegraph at Huron Daily to A.M. to 6 P.M. Mon., Thur. and Fri. 'til 9 ROCHESTER 303 Main Strwl Daily 9 AJA to 5:30 P.M. Fridays 'til 9 P.M. & BLANKET SALE Reg. 10.99 warm comforters Winter weight. Polyes- A AS ter fill. Cotton cover. Save! O Special purchase blankets 2“ Manufacturer closeouti 5 colors. Worm, washable. Women’s 9.99 ‘Correct Step’ casuals in N-M-W-WW widths 5.99 thermal weave blanket 4** nM Thermal weave for warmth. 5 new colors. 7.84 SALE Women's fleece-linpd boots Reg. 9.99 100% waterproof square-toe New broad, square toe. black vinyl boots, vMirmly fleece lined. Sizes to 10. Regular 1.39 sheet blankets Softly nappe'd cotton. Stit- VOO ched ends. Natural; Save! i a. Cushion arch tie casual with wedge heel, cushion crepe sole. Black, white, tan leather. To lO N-M-W-WW. b. Bow trim pump with low stacked heel, cushion arch. Black, tan and doeskin. Sizes to 10 N-M-W. Save today! Reg. 12.99 mod-heel water-repellent Side zip, fleece lined square toe, out-fB^^^B^I side heel. Black, brown vinyl, to 10. JP Argus super 8 power zoom camera, case 89’* 149.95 volue! Movie camera with no-wind electric film drive, Cds electric eye. Famous Kodak instamatic camera outfit 18“ Crisp, clear snapshots! Cose, batteries, ' flashcube, color film. Save! 11.99-14.99 fisherman knit sweaters 9.88 Knit sweaters. 100% virgin wool. Fisher-mon knit natural shade. Sizes S to XL. Long wearing tufted indoor-outdoor rugs 24;88 Handsome 9x12' ruqs mode from polypropylene fibers that will not absorb water or moisture. Easy ta clean. For patio, porch or any room. Full cut, fleece bock sweat shirts of 100% cotton. White, green and blue. S-M-L-XL. Work Clothes Dept. Famous maker noiron shirts in chdice of styles, patterns, colors. Sizes 8-18. Boys’ 13.99-14.99 warm winter jackets 10“ Benchwarmer, parka or ski parkas. Choice of colors, fabrics. Sizes 6-18. Seal of Quality SHEET SALE Long wearing muslin 1.99 72x108" or twin fitted. SlilOB" or tuH titled, 2.29 42i3«" pillow catM, 2/9SC White cotton percale 2.39 72x108" or twin fitted. 81x108" or full fittad, 2.69 42x38" pillowcaaaa.2/1.38 . No-iron percale 3.09 OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (Sat. 9:30-9) Draytdfi open Sunday Noon to 6 p.m. (Ojmttown closes Tues, Wei. at 6 p.m.) Print Fiberglas 40x36” size shorty drapes 2eQO. Washqble, no-iron Owens Corning Fiberglas® glass. 40*45’' 3.00 pr. .1.4908. White vinyl window shade 841 36"x6' white textured vinyl. 4-qt. electric corn popper 2.99 Polished olum-muro. Cover mcl. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PUINS THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 1.5, 1968 4 jissX 0 OCTOBER DAYS SALE STARTS WEDNESDAY 10:00 A.M. Mink trims on suede, leather, wool, cashmere Regularly $68-$77! Suzy Wong snappy suedes and leathers. . . dr«ssy wool beauties including height-of-luxury coshmeres. . . oil crowned with giant natural minkcbllars! Singleahd double- breasted. Fall colors. All sizes. fur products labeled to show country of origin of imported fur Ladies’ reg. to 3.99 day ’n night lingerie 2.66 Slips, petticoats, pajamas, gowns, novelties in tailored, fancy styles, oss’t sizes, colors. $6-$7 acetate knit print tops or pants 4.99 TOPS: Jewel, turtle neck. S-M-L. PANTS: stitched crease,^ french waistband, 8 to 16. Lady Caroline mesh stretch panty hose $4-$5 values! Infants’ famous name giftwear 99< 1.88 1.49-1.99 if perfecti Ron resistant seamless mesh hose In the latest shades. In 3 sizes. Acrylic knit socque sets, zip-up suits, kimono blankets, oc-rylic/ocetate sleeping bags. DMSS SALE Our entire stock of regular 9.99 new fall dresses 7.77 The lotest styles of the season. Bonded acrylic knits, acetate knits, wools, rayon crepes and more. i,2,3-pc, fashions for the holidays, football gomes and porties. Jr. Petites, 5-13, 7-15, 10-20, Uy, -24Vi in the group. Special sale! Ladies’ flannel pajamas, gowns 2.00 Feminine, tailored styles in cotton flannel. Asst, colars, prints. All sizes. Your choice! Misses’ shifts or sweaters 5.99 Classic and novelty sweaters. 34 - 40. Solid and novelty jumpers. 10 to 18. Lady Caroline seamless mesh shte nylons 39< Dressy sheer or run-resistant, mesh; assorted shades. Slightly irreg. 9-11, med. Save up to 25% regular $3-$7 fall^liandbags Tots’, infants’ 1.59 corduroy crawlers Tots’, infants’ 2.29 and 2.79 knit sleepers Girls’ holiday jumper-sweater ensembles 2**. 5** 1.09 1.77 8 .b£ Dress, casual styles. Black, birchwood, mink, pheasant. In your favorite stylel Washable cotton crawlers. Zipper front, gripper crotch. S-M-L. Sizes 2 to 4. Quality cotton thermal or fleece sleepers, gro-features; vinyl sole*. 1 to 8. Belted or pleated, dyed-to-match pullover Long-sleeve turtle neck. In 7-14. Tots’, girls’ 14.99-17.99 winter coats 14S8 Wide selection of fabrics in solids, checks Sizes 7-14. $6-$7 bulky cover-up 3.99 Orion® acrylic knit. 36 to 44. Accessory depC. Big 14-oz. beer tankard 73« OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (Sit. 9:30-9) Drayton opan Sunday Noon to 6 p.m. Reg. $11 Alum., cleior bottom.l l>OWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS (Downtown closes Tues., Wed. B—14 THE PQNTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER IS, Warvey Kprman Is Gdihiiig as Fvnny^e (^IDITOR’S N) If Harvey Korman had chosen baseball for a career instead of acting *-* and had been as good at it— he would haY£ wound up as the best catcher in the business. And he would have yearned, but not too much, to have been a star pitcher. ■k -k k As it is, Korman, at 41, has achieved a success more appreciated inside the acting business than outside it — as the best and strongest support a comedian or comedienne can have in a variety show with its diverse requirements. ★ ★ * Korman backstopped Danny Kaye through four-years of that star’s weekly show and moved right over to perform the same function for Carol Burnett and her variety hour. Six-feet four ih height and a calory-counter, Korman can sing enough to gel by, fake a little dancing but becomes a giant in the sketches which is the place, these days, when the chips are dowd. He is a master of accents. STAR HELPER ‘My job is to help the star,” Korman says flatly. “Whether it was Kaye or is Carol, I’m tiiere to offer all the sup^rt I can. And, I may say, it is a joy to ^wwk with them — as it is with Lucille Ball, Dick Van Dyke, Jackie Gleason and, of course, Jack Benny. Every one of . them is a consumate actor.” Korman, although he participates in some wild com* edy, considers himself an actor who is playing comedy parts in a variety show. Other pretty funny perople have been careful to make the same distinction between being a comedian and an actor. Benny and Art Carney are among them. kk k Korman, as backst<9 man for the stars, however, slips into all sorts of different roles. On the Burnett show, he has numerous acting chores to perform depending on the whims of the ^ow’s writers, but h a^s registered solidly in sketcheff in which he plays Carols Burnett’s 'I don’t look for comedy ii the sketches,” Korman’ ex plained. “The thing an actor always looks for is the give and take with the other performers. In the case of Carol, there is plenty of it.'If I can find swnc place in the sketch that I can make a statement of some sort, Carol adores it , . . but of course, not all performers like to work that way when they are stars.”' Co-star and general utility man for “The Carol Burnett Show” thou«d» he is, Harvey still would like to reach the top of his profession. But being the N«. 2 man in a show has many advantages — financial security! .steady employment loiigevity in career and none af : the trauma involved in trying to ■; keep your own show soinehow i in the top third of the Nielsen ratings. Still, there is something, about being the second banana that makes a performer just a little bit wistful. He is, however, one funny fellow who does not dream of the day when he can play “Hamlet.” He already has d verses we have just read speak of those nations to the East of Palestine. The day is coming when the anti-Christ virill gather together on the plains of Megiddo the greatest army that has ever been assembled. His object will be to destroy the tiny nation of Israel. It’s at this time that God will intervene. That one sided battle between God and the great army of the anti-Christ ii pictured for us in Revelation, chapter 19. It is called the battle of Armageddon. ■ The church will have been raptured at least 7 vears prior, so this battle actually i^ncludes the end of the tribulation period and will be the introduction to Christ’s reign of peace and righteousness here on the earth. One might ask, what does the present conflict in Vietnam have to do with the future struggle in'the Holy Land. Let^me repeat, there are no direct references in scripture to the tiny little nation of Vietnam, but may I suggest the leaders of North Vietnam, as the leaders of China, and North Korea might well fall under the category “Kings of the East”. Another interesting observation appeared in the last issue of U.S. News and World Report. “Communist success in South Vietnam is having an impact on Arab states that are anxious for revenge against Israel for their loss of the June war. Observes one Arab leader: “The Vietcong heroism in Vietnam reveals to us Arabs the potential effectiveness of the armed straggle in Palestine.” The events of the past few months and the prospects of the coming days might well bring diseburage-inent to the hearts of Christians were it not for these prophetical words from the lips of our Saviour. Matthew 24:6 “And ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars: see that ye be not troubled; for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet”. For you who have never received (iod’s crucified, resurrected Son as your Lord and Saviour, may I urge you to open your heart by simple faith. Those who have Christ as Saviour not only have the promise of Eternal Life but the peace that He offew to us in this life. One of His final promises before going to the crojBs is found iit John 14:27 - “Peace I leave with you My peace I give unto you; not as the world giveth, give 1 unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.” If you dqn’t know this wonderful promise of peace, may I eneburage you to open your heart to Him today. He is waiting to enter upon your invitation. Hines Passes MEXICO CITY — National heroes, honored in countries around the world, arise out of the World Olympics. In,most European countries especially Russia and in other lands such as Japan, the champions of this tht greatest competitmn in the world, are often welcomed on the same level as political or military heroes. Just for qualifying in one of the teats of a track event this week in Olympic Stadium, a large contingenrcd Ja^ese visitors mobbed their entry aM esterted him to the bus going back to the Olympic village. ★ ★ * * ' The Australians in the crowd, cheered, and huddled around one of their contestants wdip qualified for the 800 meter event, and the Mexicans, about 70,000 strong, atood in standing ovation screaming “Martinez, Mexico” for Juan Martinez for finishing fourth in the gruelling 10,000 meter run. This is national pride at its height, a feeling which makes the spectator chokis, which brings goose pimples to the flesh and tears to the eyes of the competitors and their families and friends . . . it’s not just winning a medal.. And the idea of individualism which they say is the essence of the Olympics is a bunch of hunk. NATIONAL PRIDE True, it’s the individual against the world, but it’s the pride of representing your country against a 105 countries of the world which resounds in the voices of the crowd and in the heart of the competitors. The City of Pontiac has been fortunate to have had a representative in three straight Olympics now, and a bronze and gold medal to show off as result of Hayes Jones’ triumphs in 1960 and 1964. ★ ★ ★ Thursday, Pontiac will have another representative, Micki King, to challenge the greatest women divers in the world. As a l5-year-old at PwiUac Central in 1960, Miss King had the courage to make an Olympic bid in the trials and failed. She missed in 1964 but, ever more determined, she has now reached the goal she set eight years ago. GOOD CHANCE The chances of Micki winning a medal are excellent; the possibility of a gold medal are tough, but good. The encouragement Micki needs must come from her hometown, just as hometowns of all of the athletes from U.S.A. need to give their kids, when their hour of competition comes up. Micki will be nervous and she’ll be tense when she takes the 3-meter board f6r the first time Thursday evening, and the butterflies could make her float off the board should she reach the finals Friday night. Her coach, Dick Kimball, the excellent U. of Michigan ex-diver and now coach, has to be the psychologist to temper nervousness as well as her teacher. ’* * * “At 5 p.m. Thursday when the contestants take their positions, there’s nothing more I will be able to do,” said Kimball. “Eight long years of hard wor|, for Micki will reach a peak. “Pontiac should feel proud to have had a contestant in the Olympics for the third straight time, and if Micki should win a medal, possibly gold, it will be an accomplishment not too many cities in Michigan could boast about,” he said. In Pontiac, a former schoolmate of Micki’s, Bruce Norvell, himself an outstanding swimmer who has many times known the feeling of nervousness and of winning, has undertaken the task of getting the city residents behind Micki. SEARCH NOT NEEDED By unbeUevable coincidence,^hen this writer walked into Olympic Village faced with an almost impossible task of trying to locate Micki from among the 7,300 athletes, it was a shock when we almost ran head on into each other coming around the comers of a building. “I can’t believe it,” I said. “Here I am figuring at least a few hours of trying to find you and I bump into you.” Micki was equally as startled, but excited to see someone from Pontiac. I got the feeling that Micki felt alone in her greatest moment of her life. Of course I knew what Bruce Norvell and her friends in Pontiac were doing in getting a telegram crusade going to boost her morale. Of course we don’t know how the people of Pmitiac will respond to what may seem a minor, yet mighty big thing on signing-fheir name to a telegram which Micki can take to poolside with her. This is nothing to what the city of Grand Rapids has done for its Olympic ^ entry, Ron Kutschlnski. But it will do something for Micki when she takes the board and the fnibUc address says: “Micki King, from Pontiac, Michigan, U.S.A.” Jim Cracks Olympic Mark With 9.9 in 100 Meters MEDAL WINNER — Jimmy Hines of the United States (279) breaks the tape to win the 100-meter dash yesterday in Olympic Games competition in Mexico City. Second was Lennox Miller (536) of Jamaica, with CharUe Greene (right) of the United States third and Montes Casanova (207) of Cuba fourth. By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press MEXICO CITY - Bob Hayes, the speedy flanker of the Dallas Cowboys, can now look back at “what was.” The title of “the world’s fastest man” now must belong to Jim Hines, 22-year-old senior dt Texas Southern, who set the world and Olympic record with a 9.9 time in the 106-meter dash of the 19th Olympics here yeitterday. ★ ★ ★ The sweep of the 106-meter event as many figured might happen never came about. However, the United States took the gold and bronze medal in this event and the gold and silver medal in the shot put finale yesterday. Hines, who had a 9.9 clocking along with Charlie Greene on sea level time, went 10.0 flat in the semifinals earlier. The final was a thriller as Hines edged Lennox Miller of Jamaica and Greene, THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1968 Royals, Pilots Hunt Baseball Talent BOSTON (AP) — The Kansas City Royals and the Seattle Pilots, getting ready for a 1969 entry into the American League pennant race, went talent-hunting at a cost of $5,125 million each today in a generous expnnsion draft. “There is a tremendous amount of g()od young players on the unjwotected lists,” Seattle General Manager Marvin Milkes said on the eve of the Pilots’ and Royals’ raids on the league’s 10 established clubs. ★ ★ ★ “This draft will be just the start of things,” Milkes predicted. “We’ll make deals later.” Seattle won the toss of a coin flipped by AL President Joe Cronin. However, the Pilots exercised an q>tion and gave gnnsfls City the first draft choice in order to take the second and third selections. 2 Club Owners in NL Satisfied MONTREAL (AP) Buzzy Bavasi and John McHale, the National League’s newest club presidents, are much happier with the players they acquired in ♦his year’s expansion draft than they would have been with the^ptoyers they gave away eight years ^o in the original expansion draft.^ “I’m not satisfied with the price we paid,” said Bavasi, who has moved on from Los Angeles’ general fnanager to president of the new San Diego Padres. ★ * ★ Each of the new clubs paid $10 million for entry into the National League, or $333,333.33 for each of the 60 players grabbed off Monday in the first half of the two^lay, two^iountry sessions that stocked baseball’s four newest teams. McHale’s Montreal club went heavy for the veteran player while Bjivasi’s San Diego club looked to y««it^h as they selected three players fcpm each of the 10 existing clubs. OVER 30 It was not until their 19th pick — outfielder Tony Gonzalez of Philadelphia — that the Padres took thetr only player over 30 years old. By that time, the Expos had taken six. The Expos raided the Pittsburgh Pirates for three of the over-30 players, grabbing outfielder Manny Mota, first baseman Donn Clendenon and infielder Maury Wills, a former Most Valuable Player award-winner, among their first dozen picks. ★ * ★ The Padres, meanwhile, went for only two players closing in on 30, St. Louis pitcher Dave Giusti and shortstop ^ilo Versalles of Los Angeles, like Wills a former MVP winner. “We think we can do better by getting the second and third choices,” Dewey Soriano, the Pilots’ jaresident, explained. The 10 established clubs were permitted to protect only 15 players each in their far-flung organizations. That left plenty of solid players, as well as promising youngsters, available for Kansas City and Seattle. BETTER OUTLOOK Although they will pay $175,000 for each of 30 players drafted, the two new entries in the American League should fare much better than expansion clubs in past years. “There is plenty of talent available,” Harry Dalton of the Baltimore Orioles said, ‘"rhis is going to hurt all of us. Anytime an organization loses six play^ in one day it has to hurt.” Opinions differed on whether the tisfo-new clubs would go ^or veterans ory^th in the draft. Most agreed that Kansas City and Seattle would go after proven talent at the start and then lean towards promising youngsters. ★ ★ w “I don’t want to even think about it, but I guess I have to,” said Manager Mayo Smith, who still is on Qoud Nine after leading the Detroit 'Dgers to a World Series victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. “Everyone is going to lose good ballplayers.” The Tigers have been forced to expose such players as pitchers Joe Sparma and Don McMahon and infielders Ray Oyler and Tom Matchik, all of whom helped the club to the pennant. RECORD TOSS — Jay Silvester of the United States winds up for his discus qualifying throw yesterday in the Olympic Games which set a new record of 207 feet, 1% inches. The old mark was 200 feet, Kit inches, set by A1 Oerter of the United States in 1964. bgging Course Opened for Conditioning Buffs , I who were both clocked at 10.6 flat to tie the record which existed. Miller was awarded the sUver medal. Capt. Mel Pender, 30-year-old veteran of the ’64 Olympics, was among four with a 10.1 time and he finished sixth among the eight finalists. There were five runners tied at 10.0 previously as world record holders including Hines and Hayes. Hines and Greene both had pending marks of 9.9 awaiting approval , from U.S. competition. Matson, the 6-foot-6Vz strongman from Texas who shattered the Olympic shot put record Sunday on his first preliminary toss with a distance of 67 feet 1014 inches, breaking the Olympic mark of Dallas Long four years ago in Tokyo at 66-8%, didn’t match his preliminary toss. However, he and George Woods of Southern lilllnois finished 1-2 ahead of Soviet’s Eduard Gushchin. Matson’s toss was 67-4% feet while Woods shot went 66-OVi feet. David Maggard M Santa Clara took fifth place as the third U.S. entry. MISSED FINALS hi the semifinals of the 800-meter run, Ron Kutschinski of Grand Rapids faltered at the finish and missed qualifying for the finals today. Australia’s Ralph Bwjbell led the semifinalists with a 1:45.7 clocking in a sizzling race with Wilson Kiprugut of Kenya at 1:45.8 and Josef Placy of Czechoslovakia in 1:45.9. ★ ★ ★ . Tom Farrell, 24, of New York was the lone American to qualify in the event which will be decided today. Farrell took fourth in the heat with 1:46.1. Kutschinski was clocked at 1:47.3 bettering his Sunday preliminary time of 1:47.6 but it was good enough for only fifth place in his heat which was led by Germany’s Walter Adams in 1:46.4. This was an interesting heat as will be the finals with Adams going against East Germany entry Dieter Fromm. Fromm was second in the heat with 1:46.5. THREE EVENTS Today’s excitement in track will be centered on the men’s 406-meter finals, the women’s 100-meter finals and the finale of 800-meter dash for men. Three Americans took the honors in the lOOpmeter prelims for women yesterday, all tying the Olympic record at 11.2. The final today looks like a 1-2-3 sweep for the American girb with Wyomia Tyus of Tennessee State and Barbara Farrell of Los Angeles holding the current world mark of 11.1. Margaret Bailes, who also went 11.2 yesterday, could complete the sweep today. Miss Tyus is Olympic defending champion of the event, having won in Tokyo in 1964. In^at kind of physical shape would you 9*sider yourself? Excellent? Good? Poor? Blah? If you’re in the excellent group, probably occasional exercise will help you maintain that condition. It you’re in wie of the other categories, then you might be interested in a program launched this week by the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department. Starr Is Questionable GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) - (Juar-terback Bart Starr was listed Monday as a questionable starter for the Green Bay Packers in their National Football League game Sunday at Detroit with the Lions. It’s a program for mom. dad and the kids and you won’t need a lot of fancy equipment to participate in it. ★ ★ ★ It’s a jogging course, located at Hajvthorne Park on 'Walton Boulevard, and it’ll be open daily from noon until 6 p.m. Jogging — just a slow run, a comfortable pace — has caught on around the country and it’s a means for maintaining good physical condition. TWO COURSES - The Parks and Recreation Department has laid out two courses at the park — a one-half mile red course and a one mile blue course. Markers are located along the course to- keep the joggers on the right track. Sweat clothes and tennis shoes are recommended attire while using the course. WEATHER A FACTOR Operation of the course will depend on weather conditions. Wfeather permitting, an attendant will be on duty during the 12-6 hours. Lavatories will also be open during those hours. * * * Books on conditioning will be available while the attendant is on duty. In the immediate area of the jogging courses, there are shdffleboard courts, horseshoe pits, playground equipment and a picnic area. Touring Golf Pros Win Court Point WlLMING'ipN, Del. (AP) - Dissident professional golfers won a court skirmish Monday in their effort to form a tour to rival Professional Golf Association-sponsored tournaments. JOGGERS AT WORK—Watching five city runners get in some exercise at the Chief Judge Caleb M. Wright of the city’s logging course in Hawthorne Park are George Gary (left) and Hick Cain of U.S. District Cwrt set aside a temporary Pontiac’s Parks and Recreation Department. Trying the course are (from left) restraining order and freed the newly-Dick Pfeffer Bob Kent Pat May, Roger Shepler and Dave VanderVeen. The recre- formed American Professional Golfers to British Sailors Sunk by Games Protest Jury ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) - In a midnight decision after hours o f deliberation, the International Yacht Racing Jury Monday night nullified England’s victory in the first Flying Dutchman Class race of the Olympic Regatta. The decision, which came as a result of a protest by Canadian Rogers Stewart Green, threw out the first place gained by British Flying Dutchman European champion Rodney Pattison and Iain MacDonald Mason Smith. ★ ★ ★ The ruling against the Englishmen, who have been the favorites to win a gold medal in the event, arose from a port-and-starboard tacking incident at the start of the first race of the seven-race series. The disqualification raised West Germany’s Ullrich Libor and Peter Maumann to first place and Norway’s Bjorn and Odd Lofterod to second place. Australia’s Carl Ryves and Dck Sar-geant moved to third place. ’■( * * * For the two English competitors, the disqualification means they earn no points whatsoever for their first effort. Since each competing boat is allowed to “throw away” the worst of its seven races, this is obviously the one the British sailors Will choose. Laver Leading Choice NEW YORK (UPI) -N| Rod Laver of Apstraliai was the unanimous No. 1 choice^ in the current .V balloting for the Martini' and Rossi tennis player-of-the-year. Ken Roilbwall, another Australian pro, was second and Lt. Arthur Asha of Richmond, Va. moved up to third. C—2 THE PONTIAC: rRESS. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 15, 1968 ^ NBA Opens Wifh One Game By The Associated Press llie Chic9go Bulls and the New York Knlcks get a head start on the rest of the National Basketball Association teams by breaking the ice all by themselves tonight. The Los Angeles Lakers, (hi the other hand, figure they can wait until April for the champagne. bers to Philad^phia. CLOSE RACE The Lakers ai^ar to have I the Western Divisiqnxrown all to themselves, but a three-way race shapes up in the Eastern Division among Philadelphia, New York and Boston. Although Chamt)erlain-less, the 76ers still are strong enough > repeat as division champs. Jack Ramsay, in his first year as a pro coach, promises a less-stilted brand of basketball for the Philadelphia fans. Ramsay says the 76ers will shoot more from the outside and run. '^e Bulls and Knicks open the 23rd NBA season in New York and the rest of the teams all get into action by Saturday night. And white New York is a prime contender fw the Eastern Division crown this year, the Lakers appear—on paper—to be shoo-in for the NBA title. Los Angeles now has a trio of superstars—center Wilt Chamberlain, guard Jerry West and /forward Elgin Baylor. Many consider the Lakers to be the most j^werful team-in NBA history. ' . Chamberlain, who once scored 100 points in a game and pulled down 55 rebounds another time and has been voted Most Valuable Player three times in nine pro years, was acquired by Los Angeles in a 3-for-1 deal during the off-season. The Lakers shiw>ed guard Ar-RULE CHANGE chie Clark, center Darrall Im- Tourney Lures Top Golf Pros hoff and forward Jerry Chpm- The Knicks, with as good a group of young players around today, will probably give the 76ers a lot of trouble. Then there’s Boston, who usually wins it every year, anyhow—despite claims they are aging. Two expansion teams join the league—Milwaukee and Phoenix. Also, five new coaches, will be in the NBA—Ramsay with Philadelphia; Dick Motta (Chicago); Larry Costello (Milwaukee)'; George Lee (San Francisco) and John “Red” Kerr (Phoenix). One major rule change will be the books this year, allowing only one 20isecond injury timeout each half for a team. Detroit opens at Baltimore, Chicago is at Milwaukee and Cincinnati at Atlanta on Wednesday night, ^ttle plays San Diego Thursday and Boston is at Detroit, Los Angeles at LAS VEGAS Nev (AP) _ Philadelphia, Seattle at Phoenix Th^e hS’ gSs. the top,“d San Diego at San Francisco 100 of them professionals, set siege on par today in the first 18 of 36 holes of. pro-amateur competition, prelude to the $122 .m Bahara Invitationai. A purse of $22,222 will be divided between the pros. Thursday they will get down to serious business m the $100,000, 72-hole medal play tournament. The pro-am is played over two courses, the Paradise Valley Country Qub and Municipal Golf Club. Paradise, 7,142 yards long, with par 36-36—72, is the setting for the tournament prop- Scores 2 TDs to Spark Win John Cullen scored twice Sunday in leading Our Lady of Refuge of Orchard Lake to a 26-over Pontiac St. Benedict in Catholic Youth Organization football. Cullen also tossed a nhie-yard scoring strike to D | c k Mineweaser, and ,Brad Almas scored the other on a one-yard run. Beautifully Constructed 2>CAR GARAGE 50-FT. ASPHALT PAVED DRIVEWAY NO MONEY DOWN-FREE ESTIMATES 13 Years Experience (»LL US TODAY sloi!?**** 40D 9TJIA additions BATHROOMS WVO*«l4ll REMODELING AFFILIATED BUILDERS OWots m Pontiac, Flint A Fenton 7S Baldwini ClarkStOnLicgwaed General Contractors IMeUL STUDDED! SNOW TIRES I 'all'major credit cards accepted for instant credit Wl SrOOf.-AilMiDTOMI TOWM * COUHTNY ★OOODYIAR SWIURNANITKWB.F. OOODRICM [:TkYMAIUNAKIR ★UMIROYAl WIMTil wmTMa wHme *wim ovitt owowtuho IPRLlMt-tAT.M^OiDUDtlNRAr" UNITED TIRE SERVICE rtHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTED NOT QUALITY" 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC State Rurarer Slow Starter By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Poatiae Press MEXICO CITY, Mex. -Former Birmingham Seahdni student Jack Bachelor has very little to show in the way of records or hmunrs while in hi^ school. fact, even of his college days at Miami of Ohio, he says, “There’s really nothing exceptional about my track experience except that I r * 10th in the NCAA in country one year.” IN LONG RACE Today, Bachelor and Detroiter Louis Scott get their first taste of (Rympic competition when they compete in the 5,000 meter preliminaries. AP Wlraphotot THIN Am VICTIMS — While Mexican Olympic officials play down mention of ill effects caused by the high altitude in Mexico City, athletes continue to find it a problem as these two photos indicate. Above, Olajcimoke Bodunrin of Nigeria lies exhausted on the track while track attendants aid Josefa Vincent (252) of Urupay at the end of the fourth heat of the The leading UJ5. contender in the event is Bob Day, an Army private who led the 01ymi»c trials at Lake Tahoe, altiiQugh he and Bachelor were both clocked in 14:^.L KENYAN FAVORED The Kenyan, Natali Temu, who won the 10,000-meter run Sunday, i$ natiirally tiie favorite when the finals are staged Thursday. ‘I never really hit my . until after I leh Blidml,” he said, “and I just didn’t want to quit after I left college.” He obtained his masters degree this year from Florida and at the time he entered the U.S. Olympic trials be said, was miming from 80 to 85 miles 'After the trials and up to the past weekend, I think I was g(diig about lOO to 105 miles a week.” he added. utile EXPECTED 'AI guese we’re not expected, to do much in this event against the Kenyan’s and Etbioite,’ he said, “but I feel Tm $s ready as I’ll ever be because the high altitude training at Tahoe really helped. 'There are about 35 runners in the world who have faster times than we do at sea level, but I’m going to give it a real try today,” he added. WIFE ON HAND His wife, Jeanne of Dayton, is planning to be in the audience today at Olympic stadium. 400-meter qualifiy round Monday. The girls placei^ eighth .........“ ... ...'....."" ......1 by Nj‘ and seventh, res^tiveiy, in a race won by Natalia Pechmi-kina of Russia. Below, George Young of the United States rests his head on a barrier following a third-place finish in the 3,000 meter steeplechase yesterday. Sitting at rig^t is the winner, Jean-Paul Villain of France, who was timed in 9:01.2. Bachetor, wt^ is studying for his dootwate in etymology at the University of Florida, never started running at Seaholm until his senior year under coach Kermit Ambrose in 1962. Scott on the other hand collected a host of records in Detroit and state track while at Eastern Sduxtl. CTTYMARK He holds the Detroit city mile and half mile recordsrand set a state recOTd in 1963 with 4:^13.2 in the mile. A year earlier he went 4.17.4 in the state and matched his state time in the mile in the Detroit city meet. At Arizona State, he ran the mile and two mile and when he left school witii his itegree in 1966, he said, ‘T decided to lay off track f« awhile I tired and hh” I started thinking abo-;. ihe Olympics last year and was real happy about making the team in the trials,” he said. He fiiilshed third at Tahoe, but he $aid that “if the wind is dovm he could do better than he did it Tahoe.” The wind is tough for a little guy,” he added noting 1» was rally 5-7 compared to Bachelor at 6-1. Scott has plans to teach in the Detroit school system, because after the Olymidcs he says, “I’ll give up distance running.” MEXICO CITY - The basketball powers in the 19th Olympics are making themselves known, and the way they are running tip scores, the coaches in the states would call it “pouring it on.” The United States tea™ routed Soiegal, 93-36, and Uncle Sam’s quintet faces beateiL Hillipplnes, a-loser to Spain yesterday. use Captures No. 1 Rating on Gridiron' By The Associated Press Southern California rose to the top of the pack, Purdue skidded to fifth and Ohio State, Penn State and Kansas are lodged in between in a reshuffling of The Associated Press’ major college football poll. Purdue, startled by Ohio State 13-0 last weekend, fell from first place and the imbeaten Trojans followeS fleet-footed 0. J. Simpson into the vacated top spot. ^ ★ Southern Cal collected 23 of 41 first place votes and tallied 718 points to runner-up''Ohio State’s 672. a! Penn State 3 Arkansas <•. ...Syracuse .. 12. Miami. FIs. H Nebraska Louisiana State . Shakeup in State Prep Rankings By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS None of the 10 leaders in last week’s Class D Associated Press High School Football Poll of spwts writers remain in the same position this week, as upsets and big victories over the weekend forced a complete reshuffling. of the standings. However, the Class A, B, and C polls remained reliatively stable. up from fifth to third after the Tars defeated Detroit Northern 3&-12. The only change in the top five in Class B is between River-view and Mount Clemens Clin-tondale. They were fourth and third respectively last week but switched places. , Potterville, WJlich was in first last week with 130 points was upset by Webberville 19-6 and fell to fifth place. Webberville, meanwhile, entered the top ten by moving to ninth. Unionville, second last week, lost to Akron-Fairgrove 12-7 and dropped to sixth. Atlanta took over first place with 103 points, just edgi^ out Ecorse St. Francis Xavier by two points. St. Francis, sixtii last week, had an easy time defeating Anchor Bay Catholic 32- o: P(MNT TOTAL Points are given on a 10 for first, nine for second, etc., basis. Battle Creek Central and Midland continue to run 1-2 in Class A, with Detroit Denby moving Sturgis and Reed Cfty ere newcomers into the top 10, while Tiger Series Film Ready for Showing Despite a 25-13 victory over Bay 6ty All Saints, Saginaw Sts. Peter & Paul fell from fourth to sixth. DETROIT (AP)-Highlights of the Detroit Hgers World Series victory wiU soon be available to Civic groups, dubs and organizations in a 30-minute sound color film. The film available Nov. 15, comi^ vidio tape and filmed highlights. The National Bank of Detroit is picking up the tab for the film. The bank and the Detroitf Tigers office will have a limited number of these films for pub-he showing. Requests are now being taken. MICHIGAN’S FASTEST-GROWING CANADIAN Hotjol $4^ Canadian THE IMPORTED CANADIAN WHISKY WITH THE ^ 1 ROYAL TASTE - / V WHISKY ilENOED CANADIAN WHISKY-W PROOF-IMPORTED BY JAS. BAHCLAY IMWKTEIIS. DETROIT, MICHIGAN Hackett and Lansii« Gabriels dreqiped into the also rang column. Hackett lost 33-12 to Muskegon and Gabriels was betaen 12-6 by Howell. Battle Creek Springfield moved up to fifth place in Class C behind Flint Holy Redeemer, which moved £p a notch from its fifth place spot of last week. Midland (5-0) . ......... Dilrolt Danby (4-0) ..... Grand Rapids Union (5-1) . Pan*"— .. --------- ISO) 0. Ann Arbor Pk) 1. ‘ ^ AMbah srilb jwil 72)"; lT^ Nortbam (l CLASS ■ Placa Taam, RKOrd 1. Jacktm Luman Chrlstl (i I 5M“Sto)‘”’. .; A DaaSorn'ra^^ si V | ♦. Biurais (A-i) .................? amazoo Hadcatt (M)> Manomlnaa (14). pww TaanuSiSS.' 4. Flint Holy Rodaamar (5- 5. BatHo Craak Sprlnoflald 0. Saginaw Sts. Patar A Pai 7. Frankanmuth (60) .... I MT stSL (SO) “-), IWonhwa (10), Oatrolt Na i'SK'!!''.' TORTURE TYYIST — ’The face of Mexico’s Jose Pedraza (20) reflects the strdn as he tries to catch gold medal winner Vladimir Golubnichiy of Russia at the finish line yesterday in the Olympic Games’ 20,000-meter walk. Golubnichiy was timed in 1 hour, 33 minutes, 58.4 seconds. Pedraza was in at, 1:34:00.0. Third was Nickolay Smaga of the Soviet Unin*n‘*J| i.m.-S p. Men's pentathlon: .1 p.m.,. swImmlMt. ^ Yachting at^ Aeapulee; 3 p.m., lil<;S Man's volleyball: noon, Rumanla'^wi. ils*f*6a?meny**'*' * TOESpkY, OCT6BEK 15, 1968 [Cfefeni|e Sparlc5 fcnked Gridiron Teams rOAUGHEnTY aVwrtbanGoMlt Eii^Miwsmgiui atate ‘ ‘i % colkge fbotban se ttie halfway mark *B D^ica] d ‘ •'I ,- _____Jh^iuore often. The trend is starting to reverse itself to the point where one or two mistakes by a high team can lead to disas- I- fw ^dbs among several flite (ter. Two intercepted passes you can look for the de- helped unseat Purdue from its Horse Racing DRC Results MONDAY'S aeSULTS /wf . . 3J# 4.10 dh-D^ h«at for ncend Opt. fwliii (11-10) eiM lt|.M Alfe-«17io Clalmliwi 1 Mil* » X-.... Proxy Fto 25,10 11.00 5.00 Court RUT* 0.20 AOO Oh Yes — 7Hi-*2tW 2.00 -------- ------ 10.20 OJO 4.10 Rocky Suprens* C. 13.40 0.00 Aroyrt Archie 0.10 4lfr-*10t0 Cond. Tr«t; -------- ’ r5%'m Glenrick t-t.c):"' 0 Pertangt: 27.40 7.80 _____ 3.00 2.00 Twin 0 lickfts) ■is rwriw^fmi reia 9ee.zv / Afftmlaiic* M71; total haiNlIt $l24y7>| DRC Entries Windsor Entries Dees Racket Hal EUls "—*-ir aic la . anil* Tuff Janica M. Grattan _____ Forne Johnston ^llo^CIMminopi^.riai.l.: ,^^afc»G.r. High Wilt The Count Sherry Tonka Julia W Direct >0-^1200 Tret; I Mile: Picks Collette i??y«‘S. star King Old Paint A D Yates __ ___________ Ml*: Amy Adlos Argyel PatsV Brian AAohawk Irish Lucky Strike Billy Blue Mich* Lorinda's First The Hairdresser Al Kay Champ lftl-0100* Pace; I Mila: Isaac Darby ' Dark Dolns Argyel Kimberly Miles Ahead Bonnie Cash Follow Mo* The Cruiser Baroness Thsd om—*1280 Pace; 1 Mile: Msgells Tar Flame 5.fpi?n'S?r ^7l'rcWnp^2^?%/ile: Lady Bird Johnston Sonny B. RusmII Royal Eddie A Little Scotch Dean MacDuff Sir Jamie Bucky Herbert Prince Elby IMJ?" «.,5«r rtfrJlIM'cialmlno Poc^l Mile: Ronny G. Grattan Dandy Diamond Duke*l/olo ®“'2L^h?i B Adio* Bunter Amber Chief B. OLSM Runners Win 3rucb Greskowiak, T o... ilsasso and Todd Modnomski I Orchard Lake St. Mary (3-1) a 28-29 crosscountry victory sr Grosse Pointe University hool yesterday. WHITEWALLS! mVAKTI WWIIIM. Tek*i***ll*<*P8l^*I|83 aadSiwMneadeWellr* 0p*nD*H]r8Alkl*8PJ«. ^.tUILI*8l|.M- Tire Service Co. 1 90 W WALTON PONTIAC, MICH. Windsor Results n Ahead ea Chief ; SS&: (I 14.80 7.00 3.t6 8.00.W No. 1 location and has put (^o » in the driver’s seat. )uthern California, Pf«l|i ■e, Kansas, Tennessee lu^ Arkansas have every right to dispute this reasoning because each has ambitions for top re£| ognitioh nationally. But .Ohio State came up with the greatest defensive effort in ■4 the long regime of Woody Hayes. As we mentioned last week Woody and his Bw^eyes can be mighty tough when they have a whole year to prepare for you. They certainly prepared for Purdue which had av-' " points a game. I would have thought it inipossi-bly to hold the Boilermakers' TOP CHOICE This one game isn’t the end of the season but the 134) victory over Purdue means that Ohio State is now the choice to take the Big Ten cban^ionship. The schedule the rest of the way favors the Buckeyes for they do not meet' Indiana or Mimesota. And since Ohio State is loaded with fine sophomore talent it figures to become even stronger as the season wears («. the great Leroy Keyes to 19 yards in seven carries on the ground the Buckeyes also may have ended the speculation of a Rose Bowl confronta-8M tion between Keyes and South- Meanwhile, Simpson, with 12 touchdowns in four games, has gained a comfortable edge in the race for the coveted Heis-man award. His big test wUl come late in November when the Trojans face the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame. There’s kn old adage in football which) is apropo to 01|io State’s defense. Before you can win 4 football game you' must keep from losing it. I have to believe Woody Hayes«ace at Mavis Lanes i^ Holly. His 630 included a 254 that claimed high game laurels. He was the only one to reach 600. George Leo hit a 237 and Ralph Dean SPARKKPLUG - Tailback Chuck Dohner is the workhorse of Waterford Mott’s backfield. Although he hasn’t scored, the sophomore run-ner has piled up the most yardage among Cbrsair runners. 'Big Blov/ Says Giusti in Leaving St Louis 14 record and .3.19 earned itgi average. ' was a little bit shocked about the trade," he said. “Bid then I tliou^t it was a greet thing to go with the Cardinals, a great asset to me and the Cardi-Tm very diss^inted,” thefhals." Giusti and catiher Dave Ad-lesh were traded to St. Louis for catchers John Edwards and Tommy Smith. HOUSTON (AP). - What’s It like, Dave Giusti, to mdve from the last-place Houston Astros to the firsMace St. Louis Cardinals and then to the Infant San Diego Padaes in tess than a BOWLING 29-year-old right-handed pitcher sald.^ “It was a big blow.” Giusti, a native of Seneca Falls, N.Y., was acquired by San Diego from St. Louis in the National League expansion draft Monday. Only last Friday, he .was traded to the Cardinals from the Astros. * J* ‘Sure it’s unusual for them to offer a player to the draft after they just picked him up in a trade,” Giusti said. “Nobody in St. Lpuis told me this was going to happen.” Giusti and catcher Dave in 1961, a year before Houston entered the major leagues. He finished this season lyith an 11- Millan (236),'Fred Gingell (235), B. McQueen (234) and-.William Riker (232). .... Hl6H*’qAMBS^iwa French, 347; Garry Zubaltk, 2U; RIc HIGH GAMES^ND SERIES,^ Eu<-Vlck, 234—SM; Laura Chanovnfh, 204; Evelyr - - - ........—--------" RIES-______ ... Huntoon'a, »11 ...... SI»IeT!S?' lueara, 234-324- 435; Mika Floret, 232-21IL-435; Dave Moreno, 204-212-404; Pablo Rodriguez, 200.202-402. HIGH GAMES, Bill Lelst, 255; Bill Spalding, Rick Ourto, Jake Jakobau^k^^^ap^g. ---- GAME AND SERIES-Marbara Chlldrait, 230-574; Lucllla Myeri both for International Screw m .... china. SEASON HIGH TEAM SERIES-Schuman«^^^2^^^^ cella 'Ma.. ------ Dalian (112), 1SM3I; ---yi5), 44.43; Dick B>«ii« i«i, HOWE'S LANES Sunday Marry Mlxart IGH GAMES AND SERIES-Bob - 2S-2I4-4S3; Enlo Biyant, L... . U,-,,. Haltn K^y, 202-520; The pins were falling a bit better at Ctdller Lanes in Oxford. Bill Johns shot a 234-209-844, and Bruce Beardsley ap-pli^ pressure with his 236-223— 641. A 246 by Dave Sherman Jr. drew challenges from Alan Mc- HIGH SERIES-John Hoke, 212-4M; ;harlM Young, 225-404; William Pfah-art, 334^. HIGH GAMES-Bpb Turn-jull, 242; Jim Long, 237; Phil Felice, 220-134. FIRST PLACE TEAMS^owa'i nga, MldlandM^ (fled). TBnrodty Ladlei Trlat Gruinicio 513; Ej.ln^ Katich, 50 Record Run Leads Rochester to Win Keith Wattles cracked the school record in leadng Rochester (8-0) to a 16-47 crosscountry victory over Waterford yesterday. Ginna Tedlay, an exchange student from Ethiopia, set the record of 10:40 back in 1962, and Wattles lowered it to 10:36 yesterday. Trailing Watties in the scoring cdluthh were Cal McDaniei, Ed Griffis, Doug Hauk, Da^e Arnold, Bob Sanderson and Chris ‘ Vizena. MUe Knight placed fifth for Waterford. Mi'a high) tbr Oonalnn>lohn IH SBRIES-Jnimt Matsar; Sit. I TEAM OAMi^Itt'a Grlli, 141. r CONVERSION-ConnIa Trapp, 4- ID SERIE^nA ______________-J)i Aba Prlai, W 201; Payr Plaear, 233; Richard Fylltr, 232; Jack Fournlar, Slt^mt Don JoJwA, 210; Frank Jhanwo, 213. Wadnaiday DmMi .4IGH GAMES AND ley, 364-411; Chuck Presser-Erb Duo in Best-Ball Win Steve Presser of Huntington Woods and Dick Erb of I Dearborn teamed to take the Troy best-ball title Saturday at Sylvan Glen Golf Club. The two checked in with a 68, five shots ahead of Dave Mowery of Femdale and Kim Knapp of Highland Park. Pontiac golfers were third and fourth. Alex Kinder and Fred Pinkney carded a 75 while Bill Myers and Gewge Johnson came in with a 76. ‘In the back of my mind I thought perhaps the Cardinals would protect me from the expansion,” fiCNSpid. “That was one of the first things I asked. But they didn’t say ‘yes’ or ‘no’.” “Now it’s like 1962 witii the Houston Astros,” Giusti said. “I had some good years with the Astros and felt I would have seen better years wifo the Cfds dinals. I wanted to work for a champidnship ball club,” be added. rent.acar*6^ - 19i^9 Ciiii^ V CAJLItoliil* Letti^5ne. Buy-Rite Beauty and Barber Supplies k-917 Orchord LaU Av». (2 Block. Soil ol T»l«Bwpli) NEVER BEFORE Can You Beat It? Guanuitemd to go thru ice, mud and snow,,,or we pay the towfi Our fuanmtM axtindi toneip Finttone Town Country tiiM on drive wfaeeli ct poMenier 6MIS, Urn the entire lifo of the original tnad detign. Claima paid by dealer or itore isMiing th* guarantM oKtiflento. SIZE Tunuss BuenvAus TUIRLESS WHITEWALU IriHRE -2adTIBE itttME ZmITIRE 6.B0-1S •24.00 •12.00 •27.25 *13.82 41.S1 6.98-14 25.25 12.62 28.50 14.25 1-»6 7.3B-14 7.36-15 26.50 13.25 2S.75 14.87 xo» zjom 7.7B-14 7.75-15 27.75 13.87 31.00 15.50 x.ie xjh 8.26-14 8.15-16 30.75 15.37 34.00 17.00 2.36 2.38 8.55-14 8.45-15 33.75 16.87 37.00 18.50 2.56 2.64 8.85- 14 8.85- 15 37.50 18.78 40.75 20.37 2.85 2.76 Buick Skylark Custom 2-Door Sport Coupe with a High - Performance Engine, Power Steering, Power Brakes, Sonomatic Radio, and Loaded with Extras. •3095'“ ritur«4inaiM A1 Hanoute’s Chevrolet-Biiick-Opel, Inc., 209 Park Blvd., Lake Orion, Mich. MY 2-2411 0(A«- tlit$ tliO SALE mCEDI All iprices PLUS taxes and trade-in tires off your car. NO Money down - months to payi ALSO ASK US ABOUT OUlt "DtRLY BiRD" DEAL ON STEEL WHEELS BUY NOW AND SAVE-DONT MISS OUT! VUindshieid Washer Solvent Tireslone Windshield Washer Cleaner and Solvent • Good for all iraturw down zero tempera turw i to 16* below zi 'firesfotic OP«N mAnDAY ond FRIDAY TIL 9^ P.M. 146 W. Huron Pontioc • FE 3-7917 r- THK PONTIAC PKBSS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1968 rEditeri^rzi I EARTH’S POLES ^ Yank Infantryman QUESTION: Why are the North and South poles both so cold? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: Shine a flashlight, as Cathy is doing in upper left, slaitfwlse across a sheet of paper and mark the shape it makes with a pencil. You will And it to be a large oval. You will notice, too, that the light is quite faint. This is because the light is spread or diffused across the paper.^ IN THE DMZ, Vietnam (AP) - Tl» rainHMBked American in-fantiymen pushed through the southern part of the demilitarized zone with one thought in mind-kill as many Charlies possible. But as they moved through a lavge bunker complex vdiere the enemy recently made his home, many Gls expressed curiosity andreqp^ for the foe. ★ ★ ★ The area bad been heavily _ombed and shelled. Some bunkers had been caved In by explosions. Others were burned black by napalm. It was clear the enemy troq?s who were here had lived through hell before pulling back, perha^ to set up an ambush over the next ridge. There was open sympathy in saw a partial mirror image of their own life. The North YleU namese bore had been riflemen like themselves, the man at the bottom of the heap w^ nose is alternately rubbkl in the mud and choked vrith dust, but always pointed toward the next battle. LOTS TO TALK ABOUT “You know. I’ll bet old Charlie and us would have a lot to talk about if the sbootin’ would just stop,” one bearded corporal said. A few diaries tt^en frcun enemy bodies have voiced suni-lar sehtimoits. ★ ★ ★ The big Z, GI slang for the Demilitarized zone, is a place that can make strong men stronger and break the weak. It is consistently the most danger- discussed the life and fate of their enemy. The Americans the voice of a few Gls as they ous place in Vietnam, and also as. impleasant a place as troops on both sides are likely to find. Now hold die flashlti^t upright and point it directly down. Hie image oh die paper is a small, b^ankfoall. This siniatinB is like that of die sun’s rays falling tm. the earth. Because of the inclination of die earth’s axis, the sun’s light fall* slantwise across the areas of both extreme north and extreme south. This is why these areas are both cold. Sunlight falling slantwise has much less heating effect than when it is falling directly down. Toward the middle of the earth’s surface, no matter what the season, the sun shines almost directly down. Remember when the flashlight was pointed directly down, the ball of light was very bright. The heat of the sun’s rays in this positimi is also very strong, so tropical regions have a warmer climate than northern ones. (You can vain $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.) Irish Recall Vote Near DUBLIN (AP) — The Irish are reaching the point of decision in a national refermdum on an issue so long debated they call it the neverendum. Wednesday the 1.5 million electors vote yes or no on Prime Minister Jack Lynch’a demand for an end to PR — the prqwr-tional repre^m^tion system by whidi parliaifets have been chosen since Irmand won stated hood in 1920. This involves a change in die constitution, hence the referendum: The signs are that the Ir-will tell Lynch they want no change. If Lynch does fail, opposition parties will demand an immediate general election but are unlikely to grt it. The govern- ment’s five-year term ends in 1970. Until then the prime minister can; call an election whenever he wishes. STALEMATE PARLIAMENT Lynch and his Fianna Fail-Soldiers of Destiny-part*' argue that PR tends to i»-odu( stalemate parliaments and make strong government impos-^ble. The last election in 1965 ended with the Dail lower house exactly divided. In hot weather, water is short and the sun merciless. When the rains come, they are not the myiHwn cloudbursts common in the South but often last for days and leave infantrymen soaked, mud-caked and shivertog until the clouds break again. This knowledge of shared misery has caused more than one Marine and Army rifleman to speculate wi the enemy. term of respect Hie Marines, who have for years borne the brunt of the E«MZ fighting, refer to the Itorth Vietnamese as Mr. Charles' to differentiate from the homegrown Vietcong guerrillas, 6r Oiarlie. Both ei^ressions are derived from radio code for the enemy, Victor Charlie—^Vc. * ★ ★ This image has suri?ived for many despite repeated stmies of enemy atrocities including shooting wounded and iwisoners and disfiguring bodies. By some lights, there have been battlefield excesses on both sides, and many American Gls accept those of the enemy as the work of a handful of zealots or acts ordered by higher-ups. When U.S. Infantrymen dto-iBetwem waves d jets, Marfaie cuss their foes, two things often artillery spit salvo after salvo ^ dominate the converstion, a re- into enemy spect for dm enemy’s aMlity to[concentratlons. mdore hardships and his i Gunuiiujliams^'v- ing readiness to die in battle. Sr ★ ★ American troops (rften spend wedks and sometimes months in the field. Rotting clothes, festering sines, acrid drinking water scooped from muddy shellholes, the sight of dead buddies, fear these and more make life almost a nightmare. SAME MISERIES, MORE Mr. Qiaries and Charlie suffer the same miseries and many more. There are no helicopters for the wounded, no aerial ret-supply, no post exchange, date for rotation home. ★ * But given their Buddhist fatal-__im, plus the fanaticism preached by their (Jwnmunist leaders, and their peasant backgrounds, the argument can be made that the difference between civilian life and war is probably less for North Vietnamese and Vietcong infantrymen than for Americans. The government held 72 of the 144 seats. The Fine Gael party had 47, die Labor party 22 and independents 3. Lynch’s government depends on the votes of the idependents to stay in office. Some time ago a Marine company stopped for dhow during a day-lcmg operation that had*cost-it several killed and wounded. In looking for a place to rit, one rifleman found the body of a North Vietnamese soldier in a camouflaged fighting hole. They casually wondered what to do with the bodj^. ‘BURY HIM’ The company commander settled the question: “Break out your entrenching tools (shovels) and bury him. He died fighting for what he believ^. in.’’ Such charity is rare, but it happens. During the 71-day siege of Khe Sanh U.S. Marines suffered under the heaviest and most prolonged shelling of any allied mist in the war. But fear and hatred over lost buddies didn’ prevent one Marine from sairing one night, “Man, it’s sure bad in here.- But can you imagine what old Charles is going through out there?’’ ★ * ★ Out there was anywhere from 500 yards to a dozen miles where Air Force, Navy and Marine jets were carrying out the most concentrated tactical bombing campaign of any war. The Pontiac Press Advertisement of Friday, October 11, for MICHIGAN BANK showed an incorrect telephone number for their office at Square L^. Rd. andTelepraph THE CORRECT NUMBER IS 335-8157 The Pontioc Press regrets this inconvenience to Michigon Bonk and to our readers. Marriage Licenses ... **John and PameW NaBte, Okemos, Mich. Brvev E. Hanks, .Oxford and Kathleen —*T, Lakeville, Ml*h. 1J3. ,w. and Am G. Oye, 24 Mechcnlc.^ waym A. Arner, Troy and Patricia A. Monterey and -d-SSj. \ «"'w»"L.Kd Linda K. Robinson, Walled Lake. Ice C. Mafousek, Fam Richard Shattuck, Halirtian, Farmlngk Staphan D. Penney, .-r-,. — - -LorrMna S. Trimble, Lake Orion. PertT^ F. Cole Jr., Troy and Donna G. Spears, Blrmlngmm. ri. Raymond L. Bolk, mi LInwood Di and Mary E. Langley, ^ CMds Nnetsp-Eidht: Strong, sUent and in the (3as^ctta(dtion Thhethevidieel. a Magitrol TharmosUUc T(^p ^ Xovan*Wn'l'»»' Wi-o a Llft-Upani. a Colo? a Llghtad Baciward with Appllanaa Outlat Get carried away in a whole new world of luxury-car pleasures. The look is contemporary elegance. The ride is luxurious on a new, longer wheelbase. New interiors, new GM safety features, new advances in power-assisted driving pamper you at every^ turn. So drive one of our six __________ elegant Ninety-Eights today. Luxury was never so exciting! pM.mpotiinmtttgoaidiitaiyatvom'Otilstwobilctlaalas^ Olds Ninety-Eight Hotiday^upe THE PONTIAC PBESS/TUESDAY. OCTOBER 15."1968 Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas OUKor Bylsma | S^ice for Oscar Bylsma, of 53^’Orchard Lake will be 3:30 p|n. tomorrow at Sparks-Griffin FQneral Home with burial' in Watorford Center Cemeterti Wbterford Tovmship. ,3MDr. Bylsma died Saturday George S Dickerson Glen A. Ellerthorpe Seridce for former Pontiac resident George S. Dickerson, 69, of Ann Arbor will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Staffan Funeral Home, Ann Arbor, with burifil in the New Hudson Cemetery, New Hudson. Mr. Dickerson died Sunday, He was a milkman. Surviving are his wife Vanita; a son, James M. o, aarkston; a daughter, Mrs. Frank Bahan of Pontiac; two stepsons, James Scott and George Jones, both of Ann Arbor; eight grandchildren; five great-granddiildren; two-step-grandchildren; and a sister, Mrs. Florence Drummond of Pontiac. i Thomas E. Johnson ______ for Thomas Johnson, 36, d 441 Bartlett will *e 1 p.m. lliursday at Church of God, 296 W. South Blvd., with bwrial in Oak fflll Cemetery by thS Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. . ^ Mr. Johnswi died Saturday. He was a member Churdi of God and an employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division. Surviving are his father, J(to T.; a son, Erick at home; two sisters, Mrs. Willie Mae Gibstm and Mrs. Mary Ann Miyne, both of Pontiac; and'' two brothers, Joe D. and Larry, bmh of Pontiac. Mrs. Frank Allen A readvertisament for sale of $150,000 in sewer bonds was! ordered by the Waterford Township Board at its meeting night. The original ad-{ vertisment did not bring a HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP service for Mrs. Frank (Esther J.f ABen, 69, of 535 Harvey Like Road will be 2 p.m. tomcHTow at Pursley-Gilbert Fperal Hpme, Pontiac. Burial wfil be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. Allen died yesterday. Surviving are two dau^ters, Mrs. Fate Parris of Prmtiac and Mrs. (Harence Bunnell o f Waterford Township; a sm, Raymond Ferguson of Rmoulus; two sisters; and a brotiier. Charles A. Anderson HOLLY TOWNSHIP-Service fer Ouurles A. Anderson, 60, of 5195 E. Holly will be 2 p.m. ’nwAday' at Dryer Funeral Hdme, Holly. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery, Holly. Mr. Anderson, general manager of the Detroit Battery Co., Ihc. of Holly, died yesterday. Surviving are his wife, Cor-rienne; a scm, Rottidd e{ Indian-apolis, Ind.; two grandchildren and a Inother. Baby Girl Gabert KEEGO HARBOR — Service far the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gabert of 1990 WiUowbeach will be 10^30 a.m. this morning at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights, with burial in Christian MemcHdal Estates Cemetery, Avon Township. The infant died yesterday, ihirviving besides her parents are grandparents; Mr. and Mrs. Jack G^child of Avon Township and Mrs. and Mrs. Brad Gilkey of St. Louis, Mo. INDEPENDENCE T 0 W N -SHIP — Service for Glen A. Ellerthorpe, 67, of 5881 Dixie will be 2 p.m. Thursday at First Me^hodM Chinjch of Clarkston. Burial will be In Grand. Laym Cemetery, Detroit by ^mpa-Goyette Funeral Home, Clarkston. Mr. Ellerthorpe, owner of Ellerthorpe Real Estate and BocMeeping, died today. Surviving are his wife, Josie J.; two dauf^ters. Mrs. Betty Sloan of Pontiac and Mrs. George MurjAy of Detroit; a son, Billy J. of Kenne^c, Wash.; two brothers; and four grandchildren. IMLAY CITY - Service for Wesley W. Moshier. 67. 2891 S. Summers, was to be at 11 am. today at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will be in the Moshier Cemetery at Board fo Seek Bids on Sewer Bonds Again Wesley W. Moshier Mr. Moshier was a retired fieldstone mason. He died Saturday. Surviving are his wife Tressa; three sons, Ervin of Richmond, Elmer of Lapeer, and Roy of Ubly; four daughters, Mrs. Douglas Shar-ratd of Ubly, Mrs. Fred Phillips of Utica, Mrs. Jerry Schilke of Washington, Mrs. Ray Vantine Freuhauf, who was respra^-ble for the evolvement the family blacksmith ^op into the giant Freuhauf Trailer Co. was stricken in his Detroit apait-ment, the victim of an apparent heart attack. of Drayton; 21 CTandchildren; including and two sisters including Mrs. Melvin Patterson of Waterford Township. Wilbur A. Strubler TROY — \Wlbur A. 74, of 686 Troywood died yesterday. His body is at Price Funeral Home. llie bpm^ would provide a' sewer construction project in an assessment district in the areal of the streets of Marion, Elizabeth Lake, Voorheis, Col-! rain and Chadwick. The board announced the township offices will be closed Nov. 11 for Veterans’ Day. The regularly scheduled Township Board meeting has been rescheduled for Nov. 12 at 7:30 p.m. Public bearing on the township budget has been scheduled fia- Oct. 28 at 7:30 pjn. ’ Faculty Unit at OCC Elects Richard Thompson, assistant professor in counseling at the Highland Lake$ cpmpus in Waterford Township, has been elected president of ^ Oakland Community College Faculty Association for the 196 8-69 academic year. Thomspon of 4774 Halberd, (^(Hnmerce Township, is also a delegate at large fnmi IBghland Hiring-Bias Suit Dismissal Asked by Parke, Davis DETROIT (AP)-Dismissal of a Justice Department suit nharging employment discrimi-natim was requested in Federal Circuit Court Monday by Parke, Davis & Co. The civil suit, filed by Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark, alleged that the company made no effort to recruit and hire Negro clerical and professional employes the same basis as white pers(xmel. m the motion for dismissal, the company said it had placed advertis^ents in Negro newspapers, that contacts were maintained with the Urban Leagues of Detroit and Pontiac, various community action programs, predominently Negro high schools and other agencies. Of 195 pers(His hired recently, 46 represented minority grwps and 41 were Negroes, said the company. The OCC Faculty Association (OCCFA) is an Independent organizati(m recognized a s bargaining agent for the teaching, faculty, counselors, librarians, and coordinatofs. It was created following an uncontested election in March 1966. hAinor Items Face City Commission Campus presidents are Joseph Harman, assistant professor at the Learning Resources Center at the Auburn Hills campus in Pontiac Township; James Stackhouse, assistant professo* of social sciences at Highland Lakes; and Dr. Donald Starr, associate jM'ofessor of cheitaistry at the Orchard Ridge campus in Farmington Township. A vehicle designed to carry men and weapons over rough terrain is actually two vehicles joined by a flexible yoke each powered by its own engine. Former Head of Freuhauf Firm Is Dead DETROIT m — Harvey C. Freuhauf Sr., whose fo* volvement in the tran^xHlation industry reached back into' a turn-of-the-century blacksmith shop in Detroit, died Monday at the age of 74. ' CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -J(4uiny Pot, a modern-ds^ John-ny Appleseed, is» being sought by agents at the Federal Bureau of Dnig Abuse (fontrol for planting marijuana seeds in northeastern (Miio and other states. ' According to reports, the hippie planter scatters marijuana seeds in little-used pasture land and on acreage of isbandmied farms. Then he sends detailed maps of his latest plantings to fellow hippies when he stops to rest. One of four sons of the late August Freuhauf, young Harvey jdned his father in the blacksmith shop shortly after graduation froip high school and convinced the elder Freuhauf that they enter some aspect of the fledgling automobile industry. The younger Fruebauf retired as board chairman of the firm in 1953 and severed all connections before, it diversified and became knom as Fruehauf Corp. HAULING RIGS The trailer business started vrtien a Debhit 1 u mb'^^e merchant asked the Fruehaufs to design a piece of equipment that would permit him to pull a boat behind his Model T Ford. The merchant ,was so impressed with the result that he conunissimied the Fruehaufo to build a simHar rig to haul lumber.,,. The slogan “a horse can pull more than he can carry so can a motor truck,” was circulated and the father and son formally entered the trailer business in 1916. By 1918, the firm’s capital had grown from $500 to $108,000 and the Fruehaufs began to look beyond their ^.specialty of trailers for grocCTS, dairies and lumber firms. In the 1920s, the company began producing a variety of trailers for longdistance hauling. From the 1920s untU 1949, Fruehauf served as the firm’s IH-e»dent, succeeding his father. In 1949 be became chabman of the board and resigned in 1953 as a result of a dispute with his brother Roy, who had succeeded him as president. In recent years, Fruehauf managed extensive oil and cattle investments in the southwest. ■k * 4 SurvivM'S included his wife Angela, a son, two dauf^iters and four granddiildren. He Does His Planting Jn Pot tered on fertile groimd to grow.iis believed that be hides Inleled through Pennsylvania, OWo They need almost no cultivating heavily wooded avoas duriBgjsnd Indiana on horseback nuffo Bd will flourish any piacei‘foyU^t^»-, ® ^ grow. i Johnny Ap^med, whose reidjcwi^ «W>]« It is said Johnny wfll accept ^ day’s work of washing dishes or windows in order to get food! Agents say the garishly dressed hippie-he wears a black derby hat, a madras sport coat, burgundy , trousers, and gold'sandds — is about 6 feet tall, 140 pounds and has a brown Van Dyke beard with brown, shoulder-length hair. The search f(» the seed planter is being intensified because this is the time of year he replenishes his seed supply. In late August and October tee marijuana plant is^ bursting with seed. DUBBED BY AGENT Johnny Pot was given his nii-kname by an i^ent who has diased him from the timber-lands of Washington and Oregon terou^ Kansas and Idaho to Ohio. Johnny carries the seeds in a mailman’s pouch. An agent said that this is understandable because the seeds are not easily recognized. Johnny was reportedly spotted last week near Cleveland.* R He travels on foot and will accept rides only from long-distance truck drivers. He appears only during the early morning hours and near dusk. Jitenny P(A’s task of plantii^ is relatively easy. Marijuana seeds need merely to be scat- monqy. 1^ is. well known and. honored in the hippie areas of large cities. | He enthralls fellow hippies, recounting tales at nights in farm community jails on charges vagrauty. He loves to tell that never once has he been relieved of-hls supply of marijuana seeds. kaiM? Then shouldn't you see us soon? loons ore avertable up to 36 months. Toko advantage of our services-ofter ell they're for you. Call 335-9493 ^ CHIEF PONTIAC EMPLOYEES FEDERAL . CREDIT UNION mjoslynMo.>PonHse Our firm was established in Pontiac 40 years ago. The number of families we serve each year increoses and the resulting expansion of facility and staff makes it possible for us to constantly serve you better. SPARKS-jjRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME 46 Williama St. Phone FE 8-9288 CLIP AND MAIL TODAY ^ CLIP AND MAIL TODAY In just 12 weeks. H&R Bfdck, America’s Largest income Tax Service, will teach you how to prepare income tax returns . . . and how YOU can make extra money as a trained tax consultant. An ideal course for housewives, students, retired people—anyone wanting to make EXl^ MONEY. No previous experience required. Enrollment open to anyone. •rau OS MRr.TnK em. noTMsr sproiTBNi. TIES BiecK nxmpu s 2: ENROLL NOW! CUSSES START OaOBER f9TH > ^4410 Dixia Highway Drbjrfen Floiiis % 20 L Huron SU f eiilint 33442IS -------------------------------abeyttt CourM. Thi» ic • r«qu««t for information - to anrell. tta 19W Mock ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP CODE TELEmONE NUMBER tu ONV dno • avooi iivw onv dra • Pontiac city commissioners! will meet at 8 tonight to handle! a number of nynor items. I The conunission is expected > pass a resolution congratulating tee Detroit Tigers on their World Series victory and another encouraging a “yes” vote mi the state bond issue in the Nov. 5 election which would raise $335 million to fight water pollution. MONTAGNARD LONG HAIR — This Montagnard mer-cenary likes to wear his hair long. He was photographed' at the U.S. S^ial Forces camp at Katum, South Vietnam, shorth^ after helping repel an attack by a 1,000-man North Vietnamese force. Excerpts from a speech by EMIL MAZEY, UAW Secretajy-Treosurer I Looking for scapegoatsJs an old custom-especial ly during an election year. The so-called "law and order” campaign issue provides an excellent example of that THE WALLACE RECORD Wallace has even less to brag about when it comes to fighting crime. ' ' Both Richard Nixon, the Republican candidate, and George Wallace, the ultraconservative candidate, offer a seemingly simple solution. They are saying to the electorate: "Elect me President and I will end crime in the streets.” Birmingham, the largest city in Aiabama, has 12.2 murders per 100,000 population, according to the latest FBI Report, compared to a rate of 7.7 murders in Washihgton, a city Wallace holds up as an example of a First of all, street crimes are a matter for state and local autixirities, and neither Nixon nor Wallace have said just how they would or could involve the federal government to make our streets “safe." “crime-infested city.” And the national average is 5.6, less than hplf the Birmingham rate. The rate of murder for the entire state of Alabama is THE HIGHEST of any state in the nation. Alabama's rate of aggravated assaults (mu^ings, beatings, etcj is the fourth highest in the country. PROMISE VS. PERFORMANCE But having made the promise, these candidates—or their parties—leave themselves open to judgment on their past performance on this very issue. Alabama is also the state where four young girls were kUled in church by a bomb, and those who did it were never tracked down by Wallace's ‘forime fighters." The states of York, Ohfo, Michigan, alifomia and Wisconsin have Pennsylvania,.Califor Republican governors. They have also, experienced Increases in their crime rate. The city of New York is governed by a Republican mayor. It too has suffered from an increase in crime during that mayor’s tenure. This Is the state Gieorge Wallace has controlled for quite a few years. How can he now ten people'm. Midiigan and elsewhere that he has the sohftion to the problem of crime? It would be grossly unfair to blame these Republican office holders for that crime rate —just as it is unfair to blame it on the present Administration in Washington. CRIMPS CAUSES Poverty, unemployment, discrimination, poor housing, lack of medical care and inadequate educational opportunities contribute to increasing crime. Ho\|vever, crime is also increasing in the affluent sector of our society. Many youths from weli-b>do suburban families are itwofoed in more crimes than ever before. As a Senator, he. supported housing legislation to wipe out siums; he suppcMied Medicare to improve the health status of older people and to take the financial burden of Mjch bills off the backs of younger people; he supported minimum wage legislation to raise the living standards of people at the bottom of thq economic ladder; he supported . legislation to give poor children the opportunity for a decent education. NIXON, TELL YOUR FRIENDS! But if Nixon has a solution to this problem, he ought to give it to his Republican colleagues now holding office on the state and local fovel. HUMPHREY: BEST BET HUBERT HUMPHREY HAS SPONSORED AMO SUPPORTED LEGISLATION TO HELP SOLVE SOME OF THE PROBLEMS IN OUR SOCIETY THAT ARE THE ROOT CAUSES OF CRIME Vice President Hubert Humphrey knows' how to establish law and order with justice in our country. Crime will not be solved by easy answers or phqny promises.,! hope no American wlH be fooled by the easy-answer boys. This Advertisement Paid by United Auto Workers, Emil Mflgpiy, UAW^^ S^^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER IS, 1968 tn U.N, Silent on Mid east Peace Hoj^es \ NATIONS, N.Y,, (AP)^ — On i- I tals CNniaar Jarring was col-1 ^ lared Iqr * repwter. ? “Ar« you optimistic or pres-' sinUstic^ about an IsraeU-Arab peace agreement?" the r^rter asked. “NO comment,” replied the ' U.N. peace envoy. Ralph Bundle, the undersec-I retary-generbl ^ spacbtl responsibilities for the Middle East, heard about it. & MISQUOTED "Jarring must have been misquot^” Bunche said. "He would never say that 5s much.” * Since last December the : Swedish diplomat has been trying to perwade lu-ael and the Arab countries to agree to peace negotiations ip accord with a U.N. Security CouneU resolutttm of Nov. 22, IW. There has been a flurry of reports that he was about to resign and return to his diplomatic post m Moscow. These have been denied officially by spokesiqan for Secretary-General U Thant. As usual Jarring won’t talk. But if he does resign the people who know him best say he’ll do it in a formal report to Thant that Mrther efforts would be useless. NO HERMIT While Jarring is not a publicity-seeking man by any account, he isn’t a hermit, either. But he has adopted a policy of saving nothing publicly about his cur-efforts because he feels Brian Kdth "WldiSix%u Color by Dohnt. Filmod In PonivUio WEO.-UT.-SUN. at and 9: anything he might say could be misinterpreted and thus wreck HURON Rosemaiyls Baby John Cassavetes ✓:ctkeeco t mmni 5 > h »»'»Tyv • Wednetday Special. whf t is obvioudy a touchy and he undertook a peace mission to i^kistan. From 1933 to 1940 he He has been described as eo- j couraged by the public qieecUes i of Abba Eban, the Israeli fMV eign minister, and Mahmoud Riad, the Egyptian foreign minister, before the General Assembly. Both pledged continued cooperation with Jarring. ^"addition the top delegates dftl ■ India and PaldMan over Kash^ pras assistant professor of Turk- the United States and Britain are urging him to continue. Jarring is no stranger to the United Nations or the United an issue wbidh has frun-j trated. the United Nations fully as much as the Middle East. He didn’t get any place, but U.N. diplomats say that cimsidering the circumstances success was too much to hope for. UN REPRESENTATIVE The 61-year-old tall, blackhaired blue-eyed diplomat with an enigmatic smile was permanent representative of Sweden at the United , Nations from 1956-58, and ambassador to the United States in Washington from 195fr64. WhUe at the United Nations Daring Sex Movies Uncurbed by Danes By BOB TOOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer COPENHAGEN - American tourists shopping along Copenhagen’s fam^ Walking Street get a jolt when they pass the nygade -Cinema Theater. Therej in living color; are displayed; photographs us-| ually seen on' 'feelthy” posti cards. The m 0 V i Man’s Sweet-Playthings,’: is advertised "the most daring sex picture ever made” and customers are advised; “It wijl be banned in most countries . .. Play safe-see it during your stay in Copenhagen.” Those who heed the ad-mortitiwi witness the kind of sex depiction that is seen in the United States only at men’s stags. ' ___law reported to Parliament that it could find no proven link between pornography and corruption of sexual morals in general. One psychology professor told the commissim: THOM-kS Such films can be exhibited in Denmark without fear of reprisal as this country moves toward absolute freedom of expression in terms of A year ago, the Danish Parliament, with virtually no imposition, passed a law that virtually lifted all bans against written pornography. This fall the Parliament is expected to pass another bill doing away with the vestige of movie censorship. These moves are likely to be studied by other natiwis, especially the United States, where nbdi^ation of centuries-old puritanical traditions has lately been hastened by a series of preme Court decisions. Denmark has moved toward abolition of censorship after considerable study and public debate. A commission mi crimi- Cify Managers Meet in'1)etroif The 54th annual conference of the International City Managers’ Association will be held Sunday through Oct. 24 in Detroit. More than 1,000 city and county officials from throughout the country are expected to attend. , Pontiac City Manager Joseph Warren will attend the conference. Pontiac is one of more than 2,000 cities in NM-th America to operate under the council-manager form of government. He is an accompUshed linguist -French, German, English, Russian and a number of Oriental languages. While in Washington he had a Persian dog acquired while in Tehran, and he employed Persian in commanding his pet to obey. He was bom Oct. 12. 1907, , the son of a farmer, and one of his brothers still operates the family farm in Skane, the southernmost province of Sweden. The Jarrings have a home on the farm. SCHOLAR4>IPLOMAT He is a scholar-diplomat, and his wife, Agnes, a student of Slai^c affairs, is the daughter of one of Sweden’s most noted astronomers, Carl Charlier. They met while both wwked in the li-brairy at the University of Lund. They have one daughter. He is known to like his assignment in Moscow, where because of his scholastic background he has access to gatherings of Soviet scholars. hiB laaguages at the University of Lund. Thant announced his designation as the envoy on Nov. 23, 1967, and he went into action immediately. up headquarters in Nicosia, capital of Q'lpus. TRIPS TO EAST He has made frequent trips to Jerusalem, Amman, Beirut and Cairo. The Syrians have refused to talk to him, saying th^ regard themselves as still at war with Israei despite tiie U.N. cease-fire reached after the war of June 5-10,1967. While he refuses to talk with reporters, he is an avid reader of what they have to say in theta-newspapers. The press officer said in some bewilderment that he had scanned the newspapers society column,” Jarring replied. V • 12N0RTMAI INDiMlMmi ITWNILT omttiwui. j Show Starts 12:00 Nooit YOU MUST Bt 18 -HURRY. ENDS TOISDAY i| ^ OF THE SAME SENDER « PLUS and HIT <— ,,i . ■> -,-ts ‘ '‘1- . ' * Ita' THE lk)NTIAd'-miSS:fttejtt»id'Q;C^^ I fivh,V i: :y;| -. Congr-r- ' , , iiiir /r i from our tiger■ to your -f f« ki . , .*■■, ■ ■ ;'■ , ■ ■- ■, :-4- Gr-r-reat going, guys, you sure have SOME ti^rs on your team On that final out, we heard your winning roar way over here ii| Battle CreekI And since we've been taking tigers seriesly (that's a pun Tony had to pitch in) for maiiy years, we thought it'd be right neighborly to help you celebrate. Gr-r-reat-let^ celebrate In honor of tiger fans everywhere, here's a li coupon to help you make a hit^w^ your home. ‘ team.Take it to your grocer's—and roar for more Kelloggfs Sugar Frosted Flakes* cereal. And finally, Tony, the ploet roareate of Battle Creek (who is a very emotional tiger), dedicates this victory verse to the World Champs. •. and to tigers everywhere* FROSnO FLAKEr Here*s to your Tigers Long may they roar Like real champs They came back for more* (signed) of Battle Creek *R«glst.r«l Trad. Mark of Kellogg Company (01968 by Kellogg Company ^ORE coupon; WORLD SEMES SPECIAL SAVE 7< plus I far hi with this coupon on your next purchase of any family*size(10oz., ISoz., > Will rodoom thlt coupon/ —^ ... .—...ing, when forms of this of* hovo boon compilsd with by you and ..•« consumer. Any other opplicotion conttU tutoi froud. Qot ralmbursomont by moiling coupons to: OEPT. K.. P.O. Box 117;^ CLINTON. IOWA S273i. NOTE; Irtvolo proving purchase of sufficidnt stock to covOr coupons prassntod for redemption must be shown upon rsqu*«» "'■* honor redomption through signees. nnt«iH- —~-i-others whc ncles. broi l or 20ez.) package of Kellogg’s i Sugar Frosted Flakes cereal. imu.t »d by law. Only on* coupon rodomp. ir packot*. Cosh votuo: 1/20 o( U.. KCLtioaa MLCs coMVOrr, BATTLE CattK, MICHIOAN 49&t* THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1968 P)pappines$ Is Jrevor Howard's Goal By HAL BOYLE i on whiskers—and do it. BtEW Y(HUC (AP) — You “Character roles, particularly hiMte ever ineet a totally hap- i^ th«y aro loud, boisterous py man anymore, b^t ■n-evorj characters, are easy to play. Howard says ■ ' he’s one. >*I have ho L anabit^ exc^t j to be Mppy Ih a ppy enouiidi [not to need any other goal,” s a id Howard, w h o at 52 is rat^ as one of Britain’s top ac* The subtle roles are the hard ’’Saints are Very hard to play. But nobody wants to see a saint ways with saints.’* Howard has regrets that he once turned down the role of Ihwfessor Higgimt in ”My Fair Lady,” the role that earned Rex Harrisoi a mint of money on stage ahd screen. . “I’d only have ended up five years older, doing the same thing over and over,” he said cheerfully. “I dop’t like being a -gramaphone rdrord. “t have never planned life, ■ and d(m’t intend to start now. I live'from day to day. 'There is " ' no real planning in this business anyway. One thing does not lead to anofter.” S LIKE TO BE EXPLORER If he weren’t an actor, Howard would like to be an explor- cUp^dop of horses and the sound ot a trumpeting elephant—com on the cob and avocado pears-ciicket and skimg—drinking with friends-Simple, straightforward people who enjoy life.” These are his dislikes: ’’Bureaucracyrudeness — ndsy motor vehicles—Hie smell of car exhaust fUmes—food delicacies such as frog legs or sheep’s eyes—golf and tennisbeing alone—and pompous bores;” A Slender forthright man with sea green eyes, ruddy cheeks sandy-reddish hair, Howard Is allergic to stuffy people, re-fuags to endure boredom, and enji^s a iHt of larking when he isn’t working. Having completed his 48th and 50th films recently .—’’The Charge the Ught Brigade” and “The Battle of Brit- TOTALLY HAPPY^MAN, ain” he was fii merry mood {jp; g^YS - Trevw Howard, . . during a recent visit here. ^ rated one of Brit- can elephants which he feels are ”I was the original rebel,”-^he ain^s top actors, says he’s a nobler and gentler than people, remarked, “but being alone at totally happy man. “I have Here are his likes: it, I wasn’t abk-to wm Jhe bat- na ambition except to he hap- V * * > tie. So now I’ve got the name of py_happy enough not to need “Tweedy clothes—good honest just being a hell raiser. After any other goal.” crooks—Dixieland jazz- - " - — - » became No. ---------------------—— -------------- He is interested in animal conservation, particularly Afri- STOCKS ore oor stock in trade. See u$ for data and - advice on the corporate stocks we think are best suited to your investment program. For informed investint, see the spedaiists at FIRST FiR9t of Michigan Gorpohation IPMI 742 No. Woodward Birmingham • 647-1400 4- 4 ' ' SB RIISnSIElX.’S UNIQUE FM-AM RADIO COMBINATION! PEERLESS "DIPLOMAT" COMPLETE DESK SET ” A'SasiiiiiiiiiS "The Diplomot" radio desk set by Peerlew mokes on ideol gift for the executive or student in your home. Feoturing solid state radio with FM-AM reception, ond built-in telescoping FM ontenno, Sheoffer boll point pen, metol letter opener, memo pod. utility or cigarette box. In walnut finish, chrome trim. COMPUTE FOR 29 95 GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 — Open Every Evening 'til 9 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same os cash) or Budget Terms BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONT!AC PRESS WANT ADS! FJirid Flynn left, 1.’’ SON OF SHIPPER Son of a British shipper, he ^nt five years of Ws t^ildhood in Oeylon, disappointed his family when he chose to be an actor rather than a soldier. However, as a paratroop officer in World Wsur II, he won the Military Cross for gallantry. “I became ah actor because 1 couldn’t think of anything else to be except a bum or a beachcomber,” he said. “Once I was offered a job selling umbrellas in Argentina, but I didn’t think I’d be good at that, and I turned it “ Howard’s deceptive skill at his trade won him fame in such films as “Brief Encounter,” ’’The Third Man” and “Mutiny on the Bounty.” “I only do the things I want,” he said. “A man’s a Mongolian idiot to live any other way. What’s the good of stacking ,_money away if you can’t take it '"v^E'’yiour” LIFE FOR LAUGHS ‘1 beUeve life is for laughs, you’ve got laughs, you’ve got friends, jmd if you have friends you have loyalty, no matter where in the world you are— and, hell, what more dp you want.” Htoward has an airy manner toward his profession ’ lhat cloaks his own high standards of o'aftsmanship. He is repelled by toghbrow phrases and pretentious attitudes. ’’We don’t have the Method School of acting in England,” hr said. We simply read the script, let it seep in, then go put Maniage licenses * L. Hurlt, Trov and Ann L. Are-lnSy*'’w!'^Myari, 1»5 W. Fairmount ^•'''SjparBir“X’iSm"*and loh-Gl'^n7Ss?i MWdlabelt and and rv"' h!*' S?Slt^*^Farrnlnaton and r "f. ......... H.rnm«n- d Susan C. Peferson, Blrmlng- sael D. Dasher, Carey, „OhJo and i A. Baranowski, Blo^tleld HIIK. 2-t F. Foster, Rochester and Em- Are You A Slow Reader? toted publisher in Chicago «\s there is a simple tech-e of rapid reading which lid enable you to increase • reading ^ed and yet re-much more. Most people lot realize how much ihey d increase their pleast^, IMS and income by readmg »r and more accurately, xxwding to this pubUsher, I people, regardless of their ent reading skill, can use simple technique to Im-e their reading ability to a arkable degree. Whether ling stories, books, technical ter, it becwnes possible to 1 sentences at a glance and •e pages in seconds with metood. acquaint the readers of newspaper with the easy* ow ri^es for dmrelcying 'mi details intereaUag ael^-tratolng 1 in a new booiklet, “How lad Faster and Retain ’ mailed free. No obliga-lend your name, address, p code to: Reading, 835 ey. Dept. 377-010, Chl-B0614. A postcard Will do. ’89 Camaro SS Sport Coupe, plus RS equipment ■11 the kid who owns one. ■ N- Some people have a hard time communicating with Not us. We just bring on the 1969 Camaro. And tiien we tell it like it is. ’ It is: Restyled iiuude and out with a great new grille, new bumpers, new round parking lights, new instrument panel, new 2-spoke steering wheel, new stnping, and new colors including Hugger Orange, which is wild. It is: Full, of new feature# including a quieter drive-line. Bigger outlets for the Astro Ventilation. A 210-np standard V8; lock for the steering column, ignition and traiumission lever. It is: Available with a resilient body-color front bumper, new variable ratio power steering, and (get this) a little device that wasl^ your headlights when you hold the windshield washer button in. It is: Still affectionately nicknamed “The Hugger.” It is: Still wider and weightier than the rival sportster we’re too polite to name. You should drive a 1969 Camaro , at your Chevrolet dealer’s the first chance you get. Even if you’re 42. Putting you first, keeps us first. THE PONTIAC PRiBSi^. TUE&BAY, OCTOBER Ig, 1968 ■■ , ^ 4yis^^ ^ ^ 4^/ MARKETS The foUowii^ are top prices covering sales of localiy grown produce by growers and sold by them in vrtmlesale |»ckage lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau 0{f Markets as of Monday. Produce Apples, Cortland, bu.. Apples, Oellcious, Golden, b Apples, Oallcloi^ Red, bu. », s3rbS“- : Vt bu. . Watermelons bu.......... VEGETABLES Beans, Green Round, bu. Brocolll, dz. bchs................ Cabbage, Curly, bu................ Cabbege, Red, bu. ................ Cabbage, Sprouts, bo.............. Cabbage, Standard Variety, bu. . Carrots, topped, bu.................. Cauliflower, dz. .................... Celery, Pascal, dz. stalks Celery, Pascal, 2 lo 5 dz. crt. Celery, Pascal Hearts, cello pkg., Corn, Sweet, $.dz. bag gjcumber, sltcers, bu. Ill, dz. bchs............ Eggplant, bo. Gourds, pk. bskt. Horseradish, pk. bskt. Kohlrabi, dz. bchs. Trading Fairly Active Stock Mart Holds Slight Gain NEW YORK (AP) The stock market held a slight gain early this afternoon as it resumed the cautious recovery of Monday. Trading was fairly active. Gains outnumbered losses by about 200 issues on the New York Stock Exchange, but there was no vigorous leadership. Most changes were small. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .4 at )5.2, with industrials up .7, rails up .3, and utilities off .1. With auto sales for early October at a record for the period, the market had some good fundamentals behind it, and auto executives have raised then-sights on sales this year. Auto stocks were mixed, however, with Ford making up^or its reactionary performance of Monday by advancing about a point, while Chrysler and American Motors eased, and General Motors traded about unchanged. The Dow Jones industHlal average at noon was up 1.99 at 951.95. Prices advanced in fairly active trading on the Amedcan Stock Exchange. Airlift International, up a fraction, paced the list on activity. Barry Wright was boosts high among the volume leaders by a block of 93,500 shares, off % at 27. It erased the loss and posted a fractional net gain. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) - Ntv fxchange selected noon prl —A— Onlpiu, 50-lb. bag Onlonj, Green, dz. bchs. Onions, Pickling, 20.lb. bag Parsley, curly, dz. bchs. Parsley,^ Rwl,^jfz- bchs, Peppers, Cayenne, pk. b Peppers, Pimento, pk. bskt. ... Peppers, Rea Sweet, pk. bskt. . Peppers, Sweat, ■- Potatoes, 20-lb. bag Potatoes, SO-lb. bag ...................— Pumpkins, bu......................... 1.75 Squasl Squash, Buttercup, bu. Squash, Butternut, bu. Squash, Hubbard, V!>-bu Tomatoes, 14-lb. bskt. Tomatoes, Vs-bu. Turnips, dz. bch. ...... Turnips, topped, bu. . ACrSug 1.40 AmCvan 1.25 AmEIPw 1.52 AmEnka 1.30 - Home 1.30 i/ oevs oova sevs -i-- Hosp .22 200 29'/4 28S* 20'/b — AmMF< V 'V LETTUCE-SALAD 0RE»(S Celery, Cabbage, dz. Poultry and Eggs c Cp 1.60 23 47% 47',I» 47'/z - ' tnd 2.20 116 54Vb 53% 54 -t Mlllfs .20 20 10% 10% 18% - cess 1.40 18 88 07% 87% -t St Chg. y»+Vt AIrRedtn 1.50 Gen Mills .80 GenMot 2.000 GPubUt 1.60 GTelEI 1.48 Gen Tire I Genesco 1.60 Ga Pacific 1b Gerber 1.10 GettyOII .72a Gillette 1.20 Allis Chal .51 Alcoa 1.80 AMBAC .60 Amerada 3 AmAIrlin .80 41 28% 27% 28% 4 29 73 72% 73 + 24 60 59% 99% + 66 86% 85 86 4 171 30% 30 30% + 1 Can 2.20 15 50% 50% 50% + % 5 35% 351/4 351/4 - V» 220 31% 31 31% +1 87 37 36% 36% .... 4 53% 53% 53% + % 211 92% 91% 91% +ll 51 89 aaVs 88% 4- 1.- 34 38% 37% 38% 4- % ■" — -*• 85% - 29% 4- 109 85% ! 98 29% 29 95 42% 42% 54 31% 31% 84 33% 33 33% 217 105% 104% 105% 30 53% 53% 53% 4- % 4- % 4- % Goodrich l.rt Goodyr 1.50 GraceCo 1.50 GranCStI .60 Grant 1.30 GtAOiP 1.30a Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West FInl GtWnUn 1.80 GreenGnt .87 38 991 59% 43 47 46% 201 26% 25% 17 401........ 71 33 32% 32% — % 57% 57% - % GrumnAIre 1 140 24Vs 24% 24% 4- % 22 31% 30% 30% 54 83% 82% 83 GulfWIn .30b 229 4 12 23% 23% 1 1 43% 43% — % AMK Carp AMP Inc .40 Ampex Corp Anacond 250 Anken Chem Armco StI 3 Phot .06e 113 16% 16% 16% 4 % Smelt 3 5 67 67 67 ... Std 1 54 42 41% 4110 AmTfT 2.40 794 55% 54% 55% •—fob 1.90 57 34% 34 34% ■----- 26 471 46% 47 19 33% 33% 33% 25 37% 37% 37% + % 38 50 49% 50 + - 46 14% 14% 14% + .. 54 54% 54% 54% + % HawPack .20 Hoff Elactrn • ■■'^rlnn .35 HoUdylnn HeliySug 1 r 1.60 115 51 AshIdOil 1.20 AssdOG 1.20 M^son 1.60 -itl Rich 1.80 Atlas Ch .80 Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1.20 ' ■ Inc .40 15 76% 76 % -1% 58 — 1, 32 34% 34% 34% . . 94 10% 102 102% —1 28 2m 23% 23% -I- •/ 252 6% 6% / 6% + 1/ 254 46% 45%/44%-l-r/ 191 30% 29% 29% - 1/ 13 129% 129% 129% -t- V IH Cant 1.50 imp Cp Am INA Cp 1.40 IngarRand 2 inland Stt 2 InterlkSt 1.80 IBM 250 DETROIT (AP)—(USDAI- Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers Including U.S.: (Srade A [umbo 44-48; extra large 42-44; large 4(M5; medium 3446; r— ry; heavy ters 25-27; DETROIT PDULTRy DETROIT (AP)—(USDAI- Pr per pound for No. 1 live pr' “ type hens 10-21; heavy hm r broilers and fryers Whites it-xv. CHICAGO EGGS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Allarcentlle Exchange-Butter stea^; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 62%;-- 92 A 67%; 90 B 66; 89 C 60%; CaiV Budd Co ... 90 B 67%; 09 C 62. Bulova .80b is 31%; stand- Burroughs Bendix 150 BenefFIn 1.60 Banguet Beth StI 1.60 SSSc"Ss';§b 21 12% 12% 12% - % 195 32% 31% 32% + % 154 57% 56% 56% - % 31 64 61 64 -f-2% ___________ 41 31 30% 30% + % BorgWar 1.35 22 34% 34% 34% Brief ^ 1.S 23 75% 74%------- prices' undianoMU*^' pe""canr'w 'bi»^, Burl Ind" 1^ grade A wblt»«; -------------- - —— i -------O POOL1RY CHICAGO (AP)—(USOA)-Llva poultry: ■“•“'“■a buying prices unchanged to % oastars 25-26%; special M ■‘'‘-yars 20-21. Livestock ter steers 26.75^75: mixed giood' - ^ chblce''fi.O^®^^ CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA)- H( 1? J05-225 lbs butchers 1».30-to.o 2-3 1^240 lbs 18.75-19.25; 14 350400 SOW 16.7W7J0; 24 500600 lbs lljWS.) , calves none; Uiolee 1.1U- and choice 24.75-25.75. 100 lbs 25.00-26.50. 26.50-27.25; good end cl New York Stocks Jewel Co 1.40 ■-iLogan .80 les L 2.70 KayserRo .60 ■'“inacott 2 ..rMc 1.50 KImbClk 2.20 Msemere Vlll AssdOII 8. G AtlasCora wt BrazlILt^ 1, (hds.) High Law Last Ch| 2l 17% 17% 17% ... x33 23% 23% 23% -I- 1 54 37% 3715 37% -I- I iS ............... 7% 7% 7% — % 18 15 14% 15 288 8 5-16 7% 8% 67 18% 18% 18% 91 13% 13% 13% OIxilyn Corp Dynalwtm EquIfyCp .33t Fed Resrees HoemarW .82 Husky 0 .30e Hycon Mfg ! 20% 20% 20% - t 22% 22% 22% - 23 22% 22% -I- I 15% 15% l5Ve - impsr Oil 2a isram Corp Kaiser Ind McCrory wt 110 63% 63 44 52% 51% 52% 6 40% 40% 40% 52 39% 39% 39% .... 26 34% 34% 34% -I- % 6 54 53% ^ 8 »% 20% ^1 5 73% 73 73 10 54% 54% 54% < 44% 44% 44% -F 37% 36% 37 -f II -I- % + V* 58% Im 58% + % 30%* 30®’ 3^ .T % 32 73% 72% 72% + .. 44 49% 48 4Ba -f1% 47 61% 60% 61% + ____ 16 «% S'* M%T7. las 1.52 X23 29% 29% 29% + 56 33% 33% 33% -t 8 36% 36% 36% - 21 72% 72 72 .. 46 29% 291 29% .. " - 41% 42 .. Corn Pd 1.70 CorGW 2.50a Cowles M CoxBdeas .50 176 2V/k ________ 20 SOVa 50 03 55% 55V1I ■ W/2 G^re . 73% 7M 73% + < 2791i iM 27% 140V1I Y39H 140V4 2 47 47 47 45 44^/i 44% 44% ________ ......... . 22% 22% 22% ■ ■ Cont OII_ 2.80 155 73% 7^ — 6 311% 310 310 . -3% .. 171 17% + % 13 35% 35% 35% + % , 3I ItXi I 61 45% 45 4>'/4 .. 8 23% 23% 23% + I S3 28% 28% 28% .. —D— I 34 23% 23% 23% + I 8 48% 48% 48% -h 47 32% 32% 32% - 15 4 I 65% 65% 4 12 31% 31%.. 31%- Schering 1.40 6 Sclentlf Data 49 SCM Cp .60b 128 10 78% 78% 78% — % 32 18% 17% 17% — % 25 69% 69 69% 4-1% 5 35% 35% 35% 4- % 24 36% 36% 36% ... 13 126% 126 126% 4- % 1 44% 44% 44% — % 12 417% 41% 417% ... 235 35% 33 34% 4-1% ________________ 76 401/4 397% 397% Scars Ro 1.20 123 70 69% 69% Seeburg .60 110 39 38% 30% . .. SharonSt 1.50 74 so 49% SO 4 % SherwnWm 2 14 68 67% 60 4 % ...........................—• 4 % ShellTrn .66e SherwnWm 2 Signal Co la Sinclair 2.00 w IngerCo 2.40 SmIthK 1.80a 27 35 347% 35 4- 12 19% 19% 19% ... 50 68% 60% 68% — 57 15 14% 15 4- ._ 326 46% 45% 46 4- % I Nick 1 379 38 37 37% 4- % II 33% 33% 33% 232 3IIW315 315 36 35% 35% 35% 56 21% 21% 21% 4- % 89 %7/li 38% 30% 46 3S% 35% 35% 05 58% 58 58% 77 73% 72% 7] 12 88% 88 888, . „ 5 65% 65 65% 4- % 20 68% 68% 11 34% 34%........... II 32% 32% 3I% —% 27 26% 26 26 .... 14 35 347% 347,a .. 72 44% 43% 44% 4- ' ■3 119 1177% 118% 4- 1 515 377% 37% 377% 17 42% 42 42 31 331 33% 33% -L- 32 50% 50 50% — % 5 24% 24% 24% 4- % 35 69 68% 68% — % 24 17% 17% 17% 4- -1 42% 42% 42% - „ 123 G% G% 48% + % 33 93% 92% 93 .......I 80% II 12% 12% 59 46% 46% 46% x2 55% 55% 55% 4- % 19 07% 87% 07% •'* .......'.*S . 27 104% 104% tS%'$S MInnPLt 1.10 I 32% 22 22% 4- % 55 57% 56%, 56% -% 20 41 40% 41 .... 43 54% 53% 53% — % 1.60 4 32% 32 eib.2 19 30% 30% 30% 4- % High LOW UM Chg. _______ .... ... 24% 237% 24% 4 % Pubikind .75t 17 16% 16% ■' Pueb Sup .« S 45% 4S PugSPL 1.68 ...... Pullman 3.B0 x7 35% 35% 35%- = RalstonP .6 Ranco Inc Raytheon .i y. % Rexall .30b Reyn Met .90 ReynTob 2.20 RoyCCola RoyDut 1.09r 158 RyderSys .80 <1 21 24% 24 24% — % 9 357% 351 35% 4 % 39 47% 46% 46% 9 25% 25% 25Vs 08 17% 16% 17 94 43% 43% 43% . .. T :: 452 11% II 11% 4 % 35 29% 29 1 42% 42% - ' 52% 52 521 StJosLd 2. StLSanF 2 StRegP 1.- 9 50% 50 50H 12 56 55% 56 722 417% 40% 41% — % ;?% 361 36% 36% - J4 83 03 - 48 80 79% 79% - 47% 46% 467% .. 33% 33% 33% — % SouNGes 1,40 Sou Pec 1.60 South Ry 2.00 spartan Ind S^ryR .40e ^|MreD .70a StBnnd 1.40 lioncal* i!n SlOIIInd 2.10 ES?? S1evenu^.2S 36 471% 49 33% .... ... 44 27% 26% 26% 17 49% 49 49% 44 39% 39% 39% 17 40V — — 57 24 — 43% „ , 22-1% 207 441% 438 74 22% 22 MOO 39% 38% 39% 10 47 46% 46% 30 26% 26% 26% Ik -F % »k + % 302 59 58% »% + 177 79 78% 7l%- 14 63% 62% 6$ - Sun Oil 1 |unra^^1.50 I 61% 61% 597/k 59% .... .. f 75% 75% 7S1A -F % I 49% 487/b 49 ■ - 8% 8% 8% 221 30 29% 29% ^T— 6 26% 26% 26% ' 32 jU' " Texaco 2.80a TexETm 1.20 ’■“'I Sul .40 61 +1% 100% -j-1% 27% + % TrICont 2.72e TRW Inc 1 T«m Cant 1 104 om ,3? 1_______________ 24 106% 106% 106% - 6 25% 24% 24% -1 104 43% 43 43% -F 29 1774 17% 17% -F 21 41% 41% 41% - 1/4 202 451A 44% 45% -F1% 92 74% 731 74% -F % 12 15% 15% 15% -F % 25 34% 34% 34% -F % 117 35% 34% 34% —u— 120 26% 25% 25%-% 207 47% 468..... 40 22% 22 ... 93 67% 67 67%-74 43 50% 53% 58% 98 59% 5T4 — 20 13% 13% 11.. ............ 181 75% 7m 74% + % 91 40% 40% 40% -F % Un Corbldt Un Elec 1. ffe''!." UnttAIrLIn . UnItAIre 1.80 79 64% 63% 64% rPr^B-fS Unit MM 1.20 US Borox \' ute % .... ... ■■* smalt lb/ -.46 63% 62% 62% Sltiel 2.40 ih 43% 43 43% _.roPd .80 39 42 417/, 42 Uplohn 1.60 247 ^2% 51% 52% Vartan Asto 41 25% 25% 25% Vendo Co .60 IS 27% 27% 27i4 VaEtPw 1.00 66 30% 29% 30% _w—X—Y—Z— WarnLamb 1 28 54% 56% 54% 43 3IV4 30M 30«i - 10 61H t 8 40V4 4» 49V4 + % 10 33% 33H 33% ' 97 32V4 31% 32% 116 276 274 274 163 39 37% 39 +1% ___ 45 57 56% 56% - % d by The Assoefoted Press 1960 10 40% ^ »% - % 1 29% 29% 29% ......... 134 52% 51% 52% +1% 5 60% 68 66 — % 117 24 23% 23% + % DelteAir .< DenRGr 1 DetEdis \.i Det Steel llaSham 1 at steel 2.50 _________________ ,. at Tea .80 37 33% 33 33%-F 1/11 Nevada Pw I 44 21'/, 21% 21%-% Newberry .80 30 25'/, 25% 25% — % NEngEI 1.48 75%-F1% 24 14% 14% 9 TOV. 70% 48 37% 37 6 337/. 33% 59 617/4 61% .3 22% 22% 52 35% 34% 13 75% 75 ------- 12 65 641/4 64 46% -F % ElectSp 1.011 10 30 29% 30 EIPaioNO I 54 197/k 19% 19% EltraCp I.IO 7 41% 407/k 41 162 162 -1'- 5 54% 54'/4 54'-4 - ' 15 48’/S 47^ 48'i + ' 23 73Va 73'/4 73U - ' rMUler ePb' Identified In the footnotes. ^ ^ ^ > -‘-1 or extras, b—Annual rale tWand. c—Liquidating ' paid In 19.7. ______ _ __cTared or pal_ ....... year, f—Payable In ttock during 1947, estimated cash value nn ex-dIvIdend or ex.distrlbutton date, g—Paid •—------- h—Declared or paid after stock or pill UP. k—Dsclared or paid an accumulative Issue with div arrears, n—New Issue, p—Paid ,— dividend omitted,. deferred or no eetjon last year dlwbbnd t—Paid ii z—Sales In full. cld—Celled, x—Ex dividend, v—Ex -... snd and sslee. In full. x+JIs—Ex dlstrlbu-on. xr—Ex rights. xw-Wlthout i -. Jnfs. ww—With warrants, wd—When — tributed. wl—When issutd. nd—Next day delivery. vl—In bankruptcy < ----- —.....— receivership .. being reorganized under the Bankruptcy 4.4 — -..-14]— assum^ bj -------- ------- terest equalization tax. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP) - The --------------- on of the treasury Ocl. 10, 1940 compared to Ocl. 11, 1967 (in dollars): 9,029,514,223.57 Deposits fiscal yaar July 1 51,745,856,228.03 61,710,916,804.53 Withdrawals dual year 59,438,424,235.46 33,605,168,410.27 031,694,403.29 340,24«,283,053.31 Gold assets 10,367.044,249.63 13,(^,010,714.14 X-Includes 439,792478.60 debt n-‘ • ■■■ kJ to statutory Hmif. Copper Strike Is Stalemated U P. AVea Hard-Hit; No Pact Talks Seen CALUMET (AP)-A strike by the United Steelw(n'kers Union against Calumet & Heda, copper miners and refiners, enter^ its 54th day today with no indication when stdemated new contract negotiations /will get rolling again. Apinmimately 1,000 union miners and smelter workers walked out last Aug. 22, vdicn their old contract expired with Michigan's second largest copper producer, now a subsidiary of Universd Oil Products Co. Only the White Pine Coppw Co. near Ontonagon, is a larger employer in the Upper Peninsula’s Copper Count^. The tovni of 1,139 and surrounding communities . have been hard-hit eccmomicafly because of the Calumet St Hecla strike. COUNTER OFFER The company and union last Eyen Rich Can't Esco|)e -It Country Club Costs Upl ByJOHNCUNNlFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK-The facts and figures are in now and th^js’s something fri^tening about them. You just can’t hide fromj infla'tion,'itj seems, even at’ the country] club. The cost] of fun and play today is rising| steadly. True, inflation! often hits hard-j est at the pots* and those on fixed incomes, such as retirees. But the rich seem not to be that different; operating expenses of the clubs last year rose faster than income. A survey just published shows that clpb costs were at a record hiigb in the'12 months ended in Iifoy. Maintenance per hole, for example, rose to $4,329 at g(df clubs, a jump of nearly $200 [n one year. It was the 19th hole that a] pears to have kept $ome clut in the black. Bar bills brought in more than twice as much money as sports activities, shocking fact until it is remembered that the cost of m sports is included in over- year since hy Harris, Kerr, Forster St Co., an accounting firm, revealed that membership dues rose to $549 jkfan $522 a year earlier.. Food-drink bills rose to $471 per person front $463. Add in another $181 per member toe other items, such as new putters and jackets and mayte swimming pool fres and tite grand total spout per member came to more than $1,209, rea-S(Hi enough, you migljtt agree, for all tiiat grumbling at the bar. , , The survey, conducted each that in 1907 Iqr raising diies an This doesn’t suggest neiMssar-Uy that the clubs are going to i go under or that its i wBl go lw(*e. Prosperity has never been more evident at the clubs. But thpy are getting a lesson in inflation. Despite dues increases, for instance, some clubs ran no farther ahead of the bill collector than their members. After deducting all operating expenses, only $24 was left of that $1,200 for repairs and paying off the debt. av^lagd of $M, which-waa by far the biggest faicrease since the survey began. That resulted ii $32 renudning after expenses. Based on the simple the«-y that Miat worked once wiU w(wk agafr, it seems that club managers are about to raise dues again in order to Iwingtiiat $24 nearer to tiie 1967 figure. Things are Uttle better downtown at the city clubs. Membership dues and guest fees cos[ city noembers an average of $266 each, about 60,per cent more than 15 years ago. Bar and restaurant bills added another $306, and various other puT(d)ases, includiiig rooms, added $120 for a grand tcdal of $694 spent. The city clubs, however, gen-•aUy have a lot more left oyer after operating expenses. In the most recent survey fhey averaged $34 a member. Not h^, but still $14 less than in 1956 i^id well below tiie average of mioire than $40 a member in the 1960s. MISLEADING That $24 might seem distressingly low, but perhaps it’s misleading. In 1966 the average actually dropped to $10 per member. Club managers corrected met in negotiations on Sept. 27, when the union made a counter-offer, details of which are being withheld pending company acceptance or rejection. State mediators say they see no point in calling the two sides together again until the company indicates a willingness to talk about the counter-offer or the- union imlicates it is frilling to return to negotiations on the company’s initial (dfer. GM Sales Soar in lO'Day Tally Emerson Baitett, chief of employe and community relations for,>Calumet & Hecla, said^ the company’s original offer “exceeds the settlement in the primary steel industry reached by this same union and ‘Big Steel.’’ “It ranks, in fact," he said, among the most generous financial packages ever offered by any American industrial company.” OFFER ‘RIDICULOUS’ Gene Saari, 'international representative of the United Steel-w(wkers, conceded the company “made important strides,” but insisted its offer was “ridiculously low” when compare with a new contract at White Pine. Saari said the union Is “dug for a v#y vkMig stay,” if necessary to win its demands! Calumet & Hecla wage: ranged from ^.12 to $2.57% hourly before the strike. The (X)mpany proposed to boost the $2.12 rate by 55 cents to $2.67 and the " $2.57% rate by . 94% cents to $3.52 at the beginning of third year in. a threwyear contract. - hourly in a new contract that ended a long strike earlier this Preliminary Pact on Furniture §tp/e Merger Revealed Preliminary agreement for a merger between T r i a n g' Furniture and Englander Furniture has been announced by both companies. The integration of both company’s operations will commence immediately, according I the companies’ presidents. Triangle was founded in 1936 and Englander in 1932. An Englander store is located , Maple and Hunter in Birmingham. Present .plans call for complete retainment of all buying, sales, administrative and clerical staffs. TiwtOay-s ut Dlvldmtdt D«c1irid PhMI Pet 2.6 Pitney B 1.20 Pitts Steel Polaroid .32 PPG tnd 2.81 73® 68%' 48%' 48% i %i Argentina has the highest per 1 47'/. 47'A 67'/. + '/. capita income of any South m 108% lorA 107% t % American country with an M 09% 8^ average $740 annually. INITIAL w .05 STOCK Food str* . Imporlal .. Polaroid Corp .. Q 10-26 1041 .W75 Q 11-25 12-10 Q 1^^ 12-26 1967 Ford Strike Influences Rise DETROIT (AP) —U.S. automobile manufacturers listed sales gains for the first 10 days of October totaling 50.7 per cent over the same period last year, paced by record sales for the period by General Motors and Chrysler. The vast bulk of the gain, how eyer, could be attributed to a nationwide strike at Ford Motor Co. plants at this time last year. ANN ARBOR (AP) ^ An explosion'shortly before midnight Monday shattered windows and a door of the University of Michigan’s Institute of Science and Technology on the north campus at Ann Arbor. TTiere were no known injuries, although police who mov^ immediately to seal off the area said building custodians apparently had been in the area only moments before the blast. The explosion was. the second in recent weeks in Ann Arbor and the 13th in the Detroit area. The four major apto producers reported total period sales figures of 298,481 this year, conspired with 197,969 during the like po-iod last year. The company said it also offered to improve pensions, ' pital-medical coverage and insurance. In return, the company askeil among other things a productivity clause, rewording of the Ian. guage covering the scheduling of overtime and settlement of health and safety disputes by an outside aihitrator. Saari declined to disclose his union’s counter-offer pending company action on it,, but he said western copper miners won increases in wages and fringe • benefits worth 1.05 to $1.1Q year’s ^,734 when the company 'The daily sales rate for the nine selling days in the period this year aminmted to 33,1K, compared with 24,746 cars sold each day during the eight days of the Oct. 1-10 period last year, a 34 per cent boost. INCREASE FIGURES Sales for the year to date total 6,596,486, ciHnpared with 5,-868,528 during the like period last year, a 10.7 per cent increase. Chryslers sales for the KWay period totaled 42,529, 20 per cent greater than the same pe-lod last year. Chrysler’s-daily sales rate was 7 per cent greater than last year’s rate for the Oct. 1-10 period. *1110 previous high for the first tai days of October was hi 1966, when 40,-801 vehicle* were delivered. General Motors said Saturday it had sold 160,225 cars, toppinv the old Oct. 1-10 sales mark of 146,916, set in 1963. Last year’s || "4^ If GM sales for the early October period were 127,527. Ford’s early Octoi^r sales ofj^ Tech Center at U. of A4. Hit by Blast An estimated $2,060 in damage from vandalism was reported in a building at 3932 DiU, Waterf(H^ Township, according to township police. Red paint was spray^ on the walls of the buildi^, owned by Joseph Sap-pinto, a telephone was taken, polk^ said. OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS An earlier exp)Q||ion shattered the front door of an Ann Arbor —■—...........- ----- office building rented by the Department of Defense. The blast M(mday night occurred in a two-story wing of a building that houses the university’s Great Lakes ’ Research Laboratory and a hologriqihy laboratory for research in three dimensional photography. RADAR LAB THERE A radar laboratory in the wing recently was relocated there from the university’s Willow Run facility near Ypsllanti which has conducted research under Defense Depariment con-fracts. ' Police at the scene declined to discuss tee explosion, although one policeman earlier said the *mell of burned dynamite wasiW( evident. He said the explosion |y( appeared to have been caused!ill by a much larger charge; a hole|,'J three inches by nine inches was excavated in a concrete pas-‘ sageway. News in Brief Items valued at more than $450, including construction tools and materials and a compass, reported stolen yesterday from a construction site at the Lincoln Junior High School, 131 Hillside. Garage Sale: Wednesday-Thursday, 10-3, 4024 Baybrook. —Adv. Rummage-Bake Sale, ^ay, Oct. 18, 9 to 4. Pine Hill Cwi-gregational, Church, 4160 Mid-dlebelt Rd. -adv. Rummage Sale, Church of the ResurrectiiMi, Oct. 19, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Clarkston-Orion Road. —adv. Stocks of Local Interest ............-..... Intor+tealor morkttt changt throughout tin day. Pricat do not Includt ratatl markup, markdown CHIzenL Utilities ............ Delrex Chemical .. ,.......... Dlemond Cryslal .............. Kelly Services ............... Mohewk Rubber Co.............. " Centrel Airlines Units . V^Kdotte Chmicai MUTUAL FUNDS Fund ......... Dreytos* .......... Keystone Income K Keystone Growth K 14.25 15.57 10.60 lljb 13.8) 15.W ind. Rails Bill. Stocks . +.7 +.3 -1 +x 511.8 212.6 I 160.3 356.0 . 5I6.» zii.y 167.8 3"‘ . 692.6 200.8 150.2 3 672.1 * 516.9 i . 435.6 163.6 133.1 zyy.i 693.2 209.6 159.1 3^.* 613.6 159.6 136.5 292.8 50.2 362.8 (0.6 326.2 54.0 356.2 There are 29,000 registered architects in the U.S. 87,420 cars far eclipsed last!^ ' tl’ ^ ei- * was being struck by the United Auto Workers. AMERICAN MOTORS Little American Motors showed over-all KMlay sales increases of 13 per cent over a year ago: 8,307 this year compared with 7,369 last year. 6 Marine Brothers at Funeral of 7th FORT KENT, Maine (AP) Pfc. Louis I>aigle, the last of seven brothers to join the M rines and the only one to die combat, was buried Monday next to his mother in nearby Soldier Pond, where he was born and raised. His six brothers served as pall bearers at the funeral Mass for the 20-year-old Marine in this rural northern Maine community. Willie Daigle, head of tee family, and five other children also attended the service. Young Daigle was the youngest son of the 70-year-old retired potato ~ farmer. Louis died in South Vietnam near the demilitarized zone Sept. 30 after being wounded durii^ an enemy attack. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. Please explain vteat happens to tee smaller company in a merger, like Lily Tulip Cup (Owens-Illionis); Davol (International Paper); Red Owl Stores (Gamble-Skogmo); Jones laughlin Steel Ling-Temco-Vought); Agricultural Chemical (U.S. Steel). Do their profits go mostly to the larger company?—M.N. A. You offer good examples I illustrate some of tii* different merger methods used to increase sales and earnings. Merger terms and accounting practices, though, are far from simple so I can cite no general rule to cover the ultimate disposition of profits. If fully merged under a single corporate name, the smaller company may operate division of the parent company With earnings consolidated, although it may retain its original name and mangerial personnel. If publicly owned, its stock will no longer be traded because shares will have been exchanged for others of similar value in the surviving corporation. Lily Tulip Cup’s planned merger illustrates this procedure. On the other hand, Jones & Laughlin continues to trade because only 63 per cent of its stock is owned by Ling-Temco-Vought. This provides an equity in the smaller company’s earnings. Red Owl Stores is over 80 per cent owned by Gamble-Skogmo which reports Red Owl’s sales and earnings as part of its own operations. Red Owl trades as usual and is carrying out expansion moves of its own. Your two remaining illustrations — Davol Inc. and Agricultural Chemical — were purchased for cash by International Paper and U.S. Steel respectively. Profits will be consoUdatad as operatenis of each are to become a part of expanded facilities being developed by the puraebasers. Inter. Paper paid $98.5 million for Davoi’s assets which will enable IP to put into production a new line of nonw(»ven disposable hospital And health care supplies. U.S. Steel paid about $100 million to Armour to acquire one of its wholly owned subsidiaries — Armour Agricultural CKemlcal — because Big Steel Is aggressively building up its chemical business to offwt partially the inroads of foreign steelmakers^ (Copyright, 1968) '/m ‘■ - r ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER Ig. 1968 D—8 :2|' . ♦sTsta f!*”' ¥AK68 ♦jes, WEST •»BA8T 4kKJ AQ1083 VQ10862 V7 ♦ Q73 4865 4KQ1042 SOUTH (D) 4A6 H J94 4KJ10012 «83 Both vulnerablie Smth West North East 2 4 Pass Pass Pass Openln2^ead~48 aond call is a typical weak cashed dummy’s two. He has nine bi^ard points and a good sixK»nl suit. By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY The weak two bid is in almost universal use in touma-jday. The American Contract Bridge ■League has ■ruled that the |weak two bid r only be ■ with ) card hold-{ of nof less ■than six ■more than 12 points. JACOBY users reduce these limits to a maximum of This hand was played at the Mid-South Regional in Shi;eve« pcH*t and Jim Clinton, who'’sat Nortii, was tempted to go to two spades. He aqd Count were playing that,the only forcing response to a weak two bid would be two no-tninqi and Jito could expecd to play two spades. Duplitmte players always try, if possible, to get into majors or no-trump because-in lb or .2P points can mean a difference between a good score and a bad one. He didn’t fall for this temptation, and passed quietly. While plus no would be bet^ ter Hum plus 90, a two-spade call was too likely to lead to a minus score. West opened the six hearts. Count let this around to his nine. Then he of diamonds, returned to his own hand with the ace of spades, played his king and nine of diamonds and wound up with i]toe tricks for a nice, com-fcnlable pius. It wan, itt< fact, more than |tomfBaCKAI0CDUS» mats I eeacmiUDPOP Q—The bidding has hem: rest North Bast ■>Soa« lA Pass 14 Pas You, South, hold: 4AK78 4Ka»4 4A*J984 Wnhat do you do now? 11 and wiinimiim of eight and^ A-^Hid y Alexei Kojygin m Premier md Leonid Brrahnev as Party Marriage Licenses . Michael N. Hill. Walled Uk« ■-'Sg&.lS»,»N5SdM.rk,n '^wHlgT'o': “SritK Edith A. Parry, „ .•’“chX j« Ptnny $. Bradtn, Union U»a tarry A. Smlm# IIS Sfata ■« D-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1068 An all-out war in southeastern Michigan on what the Oakland county prosecutor calls *^young tou|^ and hoodlmns of outlaw motorcycle ^ngs who ixwtray counties in southeastern Midil-gan who have been Invited to V nounced this meming. Atty. Oen. . Frank J. Kelley called an urgent meeting for Monday of top law enforcement officials to develop a plan to meet, “an alarming outbreak of brutal crimes, sadistic violence and outright warfare involving certain motorcycle gangs.” * * * , “They are going to be stopped and stopped cold,” said Oakland County Prosecutor S. Je- NEW TRIAL DATE FOR SIRHAN - Sir-han Bishara Sirban (left foreground) stands with his attorney, Russell E. Parsons (right foreground) in a Los Angeles courtroom yesterday after Dec. 9 was set as the new trial date for the young Jordanian, accused of murdering New York Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. The court reset tiie trial date after Pars<»is said his cocounsel could not be ready for the scheduled date of Nov. 1. „ esIL.-.— |Peop/e in the News By The Associated Press Entertainer Dean Martin answered quickly when America’s three Apollo 7 astronauts asked by space television yesterday; “Keep those letters and Cards coming.” ■ Martin sent a tel^am via the Houston Space Center, reminding the space travelers that he weekly tells , his television audience just that. “Hey guys,” said Martin, “first, you steal my song,. ‘Houston.’ Now you steal my ‘Keep them letters and cards comteg.’ It’s 10 to one when you land you’ll start drihking. “P.S. Like all Americans I am proud you. “P.P.S. I was higher last night than you MARTIN are now.” ■ Galbraith Has Mixed Feelings About 60th Birthday “I shan’t be terribly sorry wben men begin to refer to me as old, but I’U be awfully sorry when womOn do,” says John Kenneth Galbraith. Hie author of “Tl|^ Affluent Society” and “Hk iadustdal State” spMie yesterday in New YoA City on Hie eve of Ui Mth birthday which he said he was letting *‘slty by as qniedy and as nnobtmSivety as possible.” Galbraith, a professm* econqmks at Harvard, commented: ‘Tm no fonder of the notion of age ttan anybody else. One of Hie Hiinp that has always tronbled me a bit is that life is rather shmi and yon’d- better crowd as much into it aa.possible.” GalhraiHi, a former UiR. ambassador to India, added Hie role of art criHc to Us life today with the pnbUcatiim U “Indian PahiHng: The .^Scene, Themes and Legends” which he wrote with Mahhuer Sbgh Randhawa. GALBRAITH r G^G Actor Robert Taylor Gc^ Good News on Surgery Actor Robert Taylor has' the good news: Small tumors found in his right lu^ weren’t malignant, a spokesman for St. John’s Hospital said yesterday in Santa Monica, Calif. The lung was removed because of a fungus infection. Tavlor. 58, veteran star of films and television, was listed in good condition. Judge Fines Himself $1 for Parking Violation When Des Moines, Iowa, Municipal Judge Har^ B. Gmad, observing Us 72nd birthday yesterday, received a ticket for overtime parking by meter-maid Helen Ritz, he prompHy fined Umself the minimnm $1 fee. Gmnd said be didn’t think Us cctieagnes. Judges Ray Harrison and Howard W. Brooks, would have been so easy on Um. “Harrison would have fined me glO and Brooks would’ve pnt me b jaU,” he said Jokingly. Judge Ckund, who was on an errand during a court recess, didn’t put any money in the meter at all. “I was just gobg to be bside a few minutes,” he expbbed. TV^Actor Victim of $5,365 Burglory in Honolulu Hawaii-born actor James Shigeta was the victim of a $5,365 burglary Sunday in Honolulu. Shigeta, 38, who is plaiying in television’s “Hawaii Five-0” series, told police jewelry and cash were taken from his hotel room. Shigeta, a resident of Los Angeles, returned to his native state bst month for the detective series. Exam Thursday in Gun Death A Pontiac man who was taken into custody shortly after the shooting death of another man early Saturday face preliminary examinatio Thursday mi an open murder charge. Arraigned yesterday before Municipal Judge (>cil B. McCallum was John Byrd, 25, of 92 Crawford. He w’as remanded to Oakland County Jail without bond. BYRD BOOKED Byrd was booked for Familiar Ring BURUNGTON, Iowa (AP) Nearly two months after Ralph Larsen, Jr. of Burlington lost his wedding ring while working on a turkey farm belonging to vestigation of murder at police[tiiejC^tral Soya Co., a truck-headquarters about 15 minutes load of turkeys from the farm after Thomas Johnson, 36, of was processed. 441 BarHett was killed by a In the gizzard of one of the gunshot wound in the neck dur- birds was found the missing bg an alleged argument on the ring. 100 block of Clovese. A witness told police that the victim was in a parked car when a man approached and the two began talkmg. A struggle ensued and two shots were fired, police were told. Cycle Gangs Hit War on Toughs Slai'ed rome Bronson. “They must be swept (rff the Bronson b one of ttw top taw enforcement officials from nine the meeting b Lansbg. RECEIVED REi^RT . Kelley called the meeting after receiving a report from Brwi-son on the seriousness oi the problem in southeastern Michigan and after receiving complaints from bdividual citizens and “legitimate” motorqycle organizations. Kelley and BrMison said that withb tile past nionth a soies of rapes, Udaapbgs, beatings and other attadu relating to motorcyi^ gangs had been reported. ★ ★ 'There have been comidabts Ity dtiiens d being surrounded on the highways vMe driving Hiefr cars and being threataaed or abused by phalanxes of mot.orcyle drivers,” Kelley said. ‘One disturbing sign has been tbe use of terror Ity some of these indbidnals through tiie wearing of tire chains, brass knuckles, huntii^ knives and other weapons on their Adoption Low Expert Cites Some Loopholes ANN ARBOR (AP)-A group of legal experts studying the nation’s adoption bws says that b some states a husband can ‘adopt” his wife. This means that, in theory, the wife could inherit more of the husband’s estate heir” than as a widow, they reported. Prof. William Pierce, who heads the group, said thb is only one weakness imcovered deserted the chUd. so far fa the adoption laws. Pierce says that vdiile the emphasis traditio^y has been placed on theadoj^on of a child by a husband and wife together, many statates make ^no provi-sions for adoption by a sbgle persMi, such as a spouse who legally is separated but not divorced. UNHiDRM LAW BACKER Pierce is president of the National Conference of Conunis-sipners on Uniform State Laws, l^ch promulgated a uniform revising their original act. PontiacMan's Murder Trial Starts Today The trial of a Pontiac man charged with the May 31 knife killing of a woman patient at Pontiac State Hospital began today in Oakland County Circuit Court. Edward J. Stockwell of James K, also a parent at the hospital, was arrested' a few hours Mter the mutilated body M 19-year-bld Dannelda Stewart was found by a guard b a little-used building mi the grounds. ★ ★ ★ He was ordered to stand trial oh first-degree murder\^lier this month by Circuit Judge William J. Beer after three psychiatrists testified that he is capable of assisting fa his own defense. This followed an attempt by defense attorney LeMiard Peres to have Stockwell declared a crimbal sexual psych(^th — a ^claration which would hsve cMnomitted him to a mental hospital without criminal adjudication. JE** ^ Pontiac Man Peres said he will argue that , . ^ Stockwell was insane at the. O^nvIcfGa in time the crime was committed, j III The victim was the daughter.. r#. i of J. M. Stewart of 43498 J rOttlC UeOth Bordeaux, Utica. | A Pontiac man was found Imanslaughter fic death of a 7-week-old boy. Oakland .County Circuit (^urt Judge Clark J. Adams set sentencing of Richard Anderson, 24, of 239 Oakland for Nov. 13. cited by Pierce would be to specify who may ad<^ an adult, mth one spouse not being permitted to adopt the other spouse. In cases bvolvbg mbors, tbe revised act will bdicate whose consent should be obtabed. Pierce said. But, he added, it also will maiie it possible to di^ense with the required consent if, for example, a natural parent has HIT RURAL AREAS’ Bronfan Said tbe ivoblem also bcludes outlaw motorcycle gangs riding six and (^t abreast on highways and congregate early In tbe moniing at deserted homes and factraries to pbm their weekend activities bvolvbg clubs from three or 'Many times they zero b on rural areas that have vriuntebr or very few tew enforcement officbls,” Bronson said. ‘Outlaw type, motorcycle those dedicated to tbe of violent and as part d their twisted and antisocial code,” Bronson explamed. testified that he is which they found to be defective ta several respects. The revised act. Pierce ex-plabed, will make an adoption decree b one state binding on other states and also would per-mit private placement of children. j Another example of revision JAMES M. HANNAN r I I ^ . 11 ^ I'onuac man was touna I I \ 110torrOnt 8“*^^ yesterday of mvoluntary U ■ J ■ l/V lUl I vl 11 imanslaughter b the June 9 traf- Overwhelming' ASHLAND, Wis. (UPI) - The Deputy Chief of Naval Opera- tions said Monday night “no and Anderson was returned to nuclear aggressor—even though he attenipted to pulverize the Oakland County Jail. ■He is charged in the death United States - could scape of Anthony Dyis, son of Mr. and certain destruction” from nuclear submarine fleet. Vice Admiral Francis Bloufa told persMis at the First Annual Admiral William D. Leahy FoundatiMi dinner that “this overwhelmbg nuclear power” the certata deterrent to war b the world. ★ ‘Nuclear deterrents is the shield which protects not only our national existence, but our relationship with every other nation on earth,” Bloub said. Bond of $1,000 was contbued Mrs. Terry Dye of 108 Mary Day, who died of injuries suffered when Anderson’s car collided with the Dye vehicle at Orchard Lake and South' Saginaw. Anderson was arrested at the scene on a reckless-driving charge. The hoy died about nbe hours later b Pontiac General Hospital. New President for Hospital's Advisory Unit Children Burned Igniting Gas Tank Two Waterfmd Township children suffered burns oo their faces and arms as a result M Staying with matdies yesterday, according to township police.' The children reportedly tossed a burnbg maicfa bto a car’s gas tank. They were burned by a flash of fire at 7 p.m. poUce said. Death Notices AUJE^ir. ESTHER J.; Octnb« 14, 1968; 538 HarVey Mite lie ta state at tbe taneral Road, Highland; age 69; deiir bom. rnotber \of Mrs. Fata (Catherine) Parris, Ctarenoe (EUsabMb) Bwbell abdB%ywi»»|Wff sbter orlfrs. Ntaa Ftadkner, Mrs. Casste Young and William Srlgley. Funeral seryice will be held Wednefr day, October 16 at 2 p.m. at the Purstey-Gilbert funeral Home, friterment ta Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. ^Irs. Allen will lie ta state at the taneral BYLSMA, OSCAR; October U, 1968; 532 Orchard Lake Avenue. Funeral service will be. held Wednesday at. 3:30 p.m. at Sparks-Griffin Funeral HMne. Interment ta Waterford Omter Cemtery. Mr. Bylsma will Ue b state at the funeral hrane. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.] EUJacniOBpE, glen a.* bc^ 15; 1968; 5181 Dixie Highwa/, tadependeqqe Township; age 87; beloved husband of Josb Jean Elierthorpe; dear tather .of Mrs. Betty Sloan, Mrs. Gecxge Minptar, and Billy, j. Elierthorpe; dear brotiicfa Fred and Archie Ellerthoi|ie; also survived by four grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, October 17, at 2 p.m. at the First Blethodist Church of ClarkstMi. Interment in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. EUyerthorpe will lie ta state at the Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home after 8 totaghL COLBY, DUDLEY G.; October 13, 1968; 148 South Shlr% Street; age 78; beloved husband of Carrie Colby; ' father nf Mrs. J. R. (Dawn) Fritz, Mira. H. J. (Margaret) Boat, Stanley C. and Rev. Keith B. Ctolby; also survived by 12*grbiddiildren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, October 18 at..1:30 p.m. at Sparka-Grlffln Funeral Home. Interment b pak Hffl Cemetery. Mr. Colby wiU lie b state at tiie tanwal home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) The family suggests membial confributions may be made to the Michigan Cancer Soctety. GABERT, BABY GIRL; October 14. 1968; 1990 Willowbeach, Keego Harbor; beloved Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gabeit; bdoved Infant granddaugbtcr of !Mr. and Mrs. Jack GooddiUd and Mr. and Mrs. Brad GUkey. Funeral aervifai was held this moniing at 10:30 at the Harold R. Davb Funeral Home, Autaihi Heights. Interment b Chi^s-tian Memorial E s t rte Cemetery. DICKERSON, GEORGE SINCLAIR; October 13, 1068; 43 LueUa Dijve. Ann’ Ariior (formea'ty of I^tiac); . 69; beloved husband of Vanita Dideerson; d e a father M James M. Dideerson, and Mrs. Frank Baban; dear step-fatiier of James Scott and Ceorge Jones; dear taviber of Mrs.' Florance Drummond; also survived by eight granddiildren; five great-granddiildren and two step-g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be' held Wednesday, October 16. at 2 p.m. at the Staffan Funeral Home. Interment b New Hudson Cemetery, New Hudson NOTICe OF PUBLIC HEARING by a passerby, police said. The lay advisory board of St. | Damage to the car was miiuir. Joseph Mercy Hospital has a[-------------------——' new president, James M. Han- Noricaop public hearing Treated at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital and relea^ were two sons of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Davb of 5606 wmiams Lake, Lairy, 7, and Scott B., 4. I Police said the boys,wffe| ptaylw witH “ H«3L“£S parking lot of the nwby oeSbw^iS» « uw munity Activities Buildtog, 8640 jgj-wmiains Lake, when they were «i^^ ^ DAMAGE MINOR n 1»w -me blaze was extinquished ? nan, a Birmbgham busbess'JJi^ Hannan of 344 Yarmouth was'Fim-elected president of the 15- foUBwity^dwn^ member , boards at ib meeting last night. He succeeds Robert R. Eldred, president of Community National Band of P38, C-45, 048. COMPLETE POODLE HAIRCUTS, S6, 4734W7. ___________ INY GIRL OR WOlWAN NEEDING L a friendly adviser, phone FE 35123 before S p.m. Cdhfidantlal. m^ for Individual willing r'tSl?.' ir P^r^"i?"?:idiyid^ .....----------- .UK- .Pina and AVOID GARNISHMENTS Get out Of debt with our plan Debt Consultants S14 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 8^333 I FEAAALE Beagles. Phone -------- — 44745, cr" alt Rd., W( "oftfer,'‘afternoons, nlghTs^ ’lMerna-tlonal House of Pancakes, 280 N. Hunter, Birmingham. 5644043. 'Lovnr Straits Lake area, reward. RifmirarWwJ Lake Rd. >le, good I Bedells id Square S.“"SS ■«0. '"Y-:rr re?Ss.*!ss|ryr5oh:«r^ Ford, 430 Oakland P£"tlac, Mr. Norton (Used Car Dept.) CARETAKER, FULL TIME, large apertment prolact, young, married, apartment furnished plus f APRIY .715. ftatevint, Pontiac.... COOKS For evening hours In famll) restaurant, $2.25 per hr., vacations and Insurance, and uniforms furnished, must transportation and bo thorout exp. In fast food service, "“** wow5!rD JOHNSONS Telegraph at Maple Rd. Birmingham 3 MEN PART TIME 0 week for dependable men nFir ^ Kisiii^ f>er «venln«- war n~4.4:*2!i Dressmaking, Tailoring -------- "Superior.*' . 1 4-3177 anytime.__________ FaLL special. Aluminum Guttersy ^ D R ESSMAKING^ Pajoting and f S PAINTING AND DECORATING. Free estimates. For quality work II 4730528._____________ ' QUALITY WORK ASSURED PAINT-Papering, Wall Washing. 673-2872 or 474-1»4> « Holp Wanted Mali 6 Mechanically Factory Help [ stock exchange listed Interpace Corp. Thurs., Oct......... — For Immediate Interview. GLAZER, Part or full tim«. _ perlence In plate glass, auto glass II Station le Rd., Bl II and part 1 local ref. Help Wanted Moie A MECHANIC WITH Assembly knowledge. m-*m. Inclined ? ? ? S!!UjfriTand'’;«i?’.ptSJd; plus a high school educajilon — GEO equivalent. * We offer a training position Pontiac or Detroit with nomi pay that grooms for the positlor Technical Service Representai whose top earnings are In ext of $10,000 per year. They service MATERIAL HANDLERS for Point Dept, 10 CAMPBELL, ROCHESTER .... TO WORK IN APPLIANCE Store, must be over 25 . yeere, salary and commission, call FE 4-3573 for appointment. MAN FOR warehouse, I work. Raynor Overhead Sales, 6732311. ______ ^ . ■■ » :■» PHARMACIST, FULL Og_ P«T time, exc. starting. safir^Plus bonus and eommlssto. A» ,ln person, $510 W. » Mile, CMR Parb. PORTER For ladiss spacialty thm InghafnTMr. Levin. EL7-^. ipom training (electront fro-mechanical) In ttv service ot at Itast 12 w ^'"ihw with established I Customer contact ^11 Apply In person to Personnel Director. 28 Blvd. lat John L~ Detroit, Michigan, NEED QUALIFIED NEW CAR SALESMAN with automobile experience Contact: Bill Paulson F€ 5-4101 John McAullife Ford Need Part Time Work? lur MAINTENANCE DEPT, has Night watchman duty. Downtown office Bldg. Apply Room 404 COMMUnFFy NATIONAL BANK __(Equal Optwrtunity^pteyarl Public Works FOREMAN arson at ! It Sttice. Pi___ porter, day SHIFT, HIGH WAGES, GOOD FRINGE BENEFITS. APPLY MACHUS ;"7hi“; ou^r^ SH1PPJJ4G ^AND ^ REQ POX RESTAURANT, 6 6 76 TELEGRAPH RD., BIRMINGHAM. 626-4200. Llppert, 542 W. Huron, Pontiac. NCR ,n equal, opixirtunliY employer. ION, EXPERIENCED and lubrication MECHANICALLY INCLINED man to' service electric and gas golf carts, full or part lime. Must nave own car and tools. 334-4W1 for ap-polntmant. COLLEGE STUDENT tor Sat. DETAILER, PROGRESSIVE l-AUTO RECONDITIONING m wanted for underhood claaning a painting. Interior painting a reweavIng, year round stea work, top wages, and benefits, i ply to John McAullffo Ford, <— Oakland Ave., Pontlat;, See Tom 1-A, Auburn Heights Paving - tennis courts, parking I o t s k driveways. Guaranteed, FE 5-4983, ~R 34024. Drivtn Training ASPHALT PAVING Residential and commercial No lob too small. Work guaranteed. Free estimates PONTIAC ASPHALT CO. ____________FE 44224_________ DOMINO CONST. CO. A^^lt Paving. Free Quotes. 474- Electrical Service Roafing Boot* and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER MtCORMICK ELECTRIC, residential and Commercial, Alterations, and remodeling, 24 hour »ervlc«. over 20 years In business- 3344191. EavestrougiiiHg - 50 Men WANTED WEDNESDAY 6 A.M. KELLY LABOR DIVISION 125 N. Saginaw St. REAR ENTRANCE WE PAY DAILY n Equal Opportunity Employer $200 MONTH PART TIME If |(ou consldjer ^■jfourselt^ a hard ried and want evening work, call OR 4-0520 between 44:30 p.m. DISPATCHER WANTED strong Individual needed to from 11:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. be able to handle men, have typing and ,be^,Boqd at fl( Contact Mr. Corbin, 585-1970. GENERAL SHOP HELP Dependable men needed to fill ne< |ob$ in fast growing corporatior Offering overtime, e x c e M e n "ts. Apply at Walmet Corp., r St., Pleasant Ridge (off 1 Mile Rd.) GUARD IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Part time and full time — Utica, "I. Clement and Detroit area. Top _.ilon scale paid — Blue Cross, vacation and holiday benefits. Call us collect — Bonded Guard Services. 441 E. Grand T' ^ Detroit LO 8-4150. _ Engineering Aid Young man experienced In followup or basic technical/ writing, reads prints and has mechanical ability, some college preferred. It food operation. Good Hospitalization. Vacant , and other benefits. App Big Boy Restaurs Telegraph 8, H________________ HELPER TO LEARN waste Chauffer's license. M. C. MFG. CO. 118 Indlsnwood I Orion 492-2711 n Equal Opportunity Employer INTERESTED IN A FUTURE? -.^satisfied? Looking foi challenge and Increased earnings? ck Into a permanent cr-“' I the Clark Oil Corporallo M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED ~°Free*es”473S^ 473^3 ° YOUNG AAAN - ....-TR In r T _ _ ATIONA ......ZATION, "■ CO., INC. You r Driver and Stock Boys Must be over 18, day or evenings, excellent working conditions. Apply IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Parts counter GM experienced. Apply to 210 Or----------- : H Al N B.B.D. CORP.-LICENSED Builders, painters, renovation, estimates, hours, 3333894.____________ Hemes, attics, basernanl, gar SPRINCTIELD BLDG. C home OWNERS SPECIAL. Custom knm.. Additions, cottages. . rooms, porches. k-1 BULLDOZING, Finish Grading. Backhoa. Basements. 474-2439. FE 8-1201.________________________ BULLDOZING, BACKHOE WORK, basements, grading. 4S33042. GRADING, nable, relllable, I OR 31145, or Jerry j}m:ii Carpet Cleaning Carpentry EARTH MOVER-SELF LOADING Backhoa 20' Horizontal Borira 70' long by 8" to All underground utilities _ AUL WYATT CO.__________FE 8-4107 T ROTO-TILLINGr BLACK DIRT, VIBRATED procasst loaded and delivered. 120 Opdyke near Auburn. 391-2581 or UL 2-5442. ILL SAND, DRIVE-WAY gravel, stone, top-soil, reasonable prices. Fast delivery. 4730049. FILL SAND LOADING DAILY 50 cents per yard, 450 Williams Lake Rd., Union Lake,,.MA 44335 or EM 33514. INTERLAKE SAND AND GRAVEL CO. mo., to tnoso accepreo. $625 DRIVER SALESMAN FOB area, wholesale meat < Guaranteed plus comm Must hove high school • DISH AAACHINE OPERA nights, $2 per hour. Frid Saturday off, benefits. Biff Telegraph at AAapla, 15 A JANITOR FOR apartn Must be neat, sols references. Apply 861 Detroit, 48221. snt building. • and have i KIngswood, CUSTODIAL work, 1 required, steady full lion In Birmingham i y Pontiac Press Sox C-35. MEN N.0 EXPERIENCE NEEDED $193.40 Includes expenses per 4 day week. Opportunities for higher earning after 90 days. Yearly gi-oss $7,006-$9,000. Immediate full time lobs available near your home. j Wa train you to teach driving customers'^and a'^°romplelely dual ' and* foi^ the*^ customers. -lue Cross 1 accident :ord. ’ 4. Excellent character FOR INTERVIEW PHONE: FE 8-9444 EXECUTIVE OFFICES APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. Second floor Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL _An equal opportunity employer NEEDED PRODUCTION WORKERS PONTIAC Motor Division PONTIAC, MICHIGAN An Equal Opportunity Empit NATIONAL TREE CARE Con With experienced and wltho perlence, will hire crew le timbers and experienced ( hose with no experience.” PeiS'l'-tlon, paid holidays, premium e, hospitalization Insurance, e In and ser - ''- -- nbitlous , 3844 Rochester MACHINE OPERATORS AND TRAINEES JO 4-4007. OFFICE BOYS Advertising Agency ..jrth Woodward area. Immediate openings for full time oltice boys. Fine opportunities f o r advancement. Good pay, plus frequent over time. Good driving records a requirement. Call Ml 4-1000. Personnel. An Equal Opportunity Employer 819 E. Ten Mile Rd. ROYAL OAK PRODUCTION FOREMAN Electronic or Audio backgrou required, wm train an embllle and Intelligent man. TAP TRONICS INC. 4413 Frenlea Weyet Oak___________W4.3777 PRESS OPERATOR? Men needed tor permanent otsI-llons In last growing corporation. General shop experience preferred but not necessary. We will train. Average 4S to S3 hours per week. Excellent fringe benefits Including a profit sharing program. Apply at Walmet Corp., 4 Barber St« Pleasant Ridge. (oH 10 Mile Rd.) Part-Time ~ Gas Station Lake Orion Area Mornings or Evenings Edr'^s’^Hn Russ Johnson Texaco _______99 M-24 Lake Orton_ PART TIME 21 or over, married end employed, guaranteed $50 per wk. Call Mr Lloyd at 335-$443 between 5 p.m.-7 p.m._____________________ PRESS OPERATORS OVERTIME-PROFIT SHARING PROGRESSIVE STAMPING CO. 25 NAKOTA ROYAL OAK 14 mile-coolid<3E area QUALIFIED SHOEMAKER OR young man willing to teem. Apply at Tony's Shoe Service. 4424 Telegraph, Bloomtield Plaza. Real Estate Salesmen Class forming soon for people who want to learn the Reel Ertete business end con work full lime. Class will teach basics and get you state licensed and ready to sell our new building |obs, used homes end government repossessed homes. Call Bob Davis at Valuet Really and Building Co. 334-3531. ROUTE SALESMAN Manage your own home service. corporation. Excellent f rings benefits Including a profit sharing program. Apply Walmet Corp. Barber St., Plea-— Mile RdJ It Ridoe. ( MATURE MAN for c After 3 ay Indoctrination period. Automatic pay raises ' ' company benefits. DUNN for ------------ 942-4344, 9 I ersonal Interview n Heating. I 481-0871. E SPECIALIZE II A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Family rooms, ror- -dormers, porches, . .... rooms, kitchens, bethrooms. State ^ licensed. Reas. Cell after 5 p - ^ 4824I448. Fencing A TOP QUALITY c.—............. written guarantee. Installed In 3 ft. Septic Tank Service Snow Piowing B S. K SNOW PLOWING Commercial and Residential 2 trucks, reliable service. ...........- 3335024 PLOWING, PARKING raising 'with new beams & piers. Also remodeling S< paneling, 887- HEINRICH, TUISKU, HIB6LIN, INC. We are looking for work, phases of remodeling, no Igb too ‘ o large. Specializing In ■*“8, rec. rooms, kitchen aluminum patio We do all work our-pne or night 731- Floor Sending CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW AND old floor sanding. FE 2-5788. ____ G. SNYDCR, FLOOR LAYING, sanding and finishing. FE 5-0892. ESTIMATE ON carpenfy, -lumlnum siding and trim, rec. rooms, additions, kitchens, window ■ lacement and roofing. Call 343- INTERIOR FINISH, kitchens, panel li^ 40 years experience, FE 3 MIRACLE 'MODERNIZATION': lob foo big or small, we m and do all carpenters. . Pontiac, AAlc __________ PaI^LING, PORCH enclosures and add. 4814I512. OR 37225. PORCHES, CHIMNEYS and cement 1, 335-8983. Landscopil^ i-a merion blue sod, ----------■ 42321_______ LANDSCAPING. ... .roken concret* .... walls. Free estimates. Waltman. FE 38314^. A-t MERION BLUE i-1 MERION BLUE PtAi sgo, per yard. Delivered. 482-1904. iTl^lON BLUE PEAT «Xl, per yard. Delivered. 482-1904. ___ EARTH M0VIN(3 fJNE grading, tree removal, BackhM 2?7L soil, sod, sand ASPHA PAUL WYATT CO. EXPERT SODDING, i VyiLL BUILD 2-CAR GARAGE, $( Carpeting CARPET YOUR HOME f We arrange financing. B Cement Work s, blocks, basamants el block and CEMENT WORK. Pontiac. 391-1173. • COMMEBiCIAL. [NDUSTRl^ and residential. end cement GUINN'^CONST. CO. 334-7577 or 391-2671______ l\$0SHIER- Floor Tiling r. FE 2-4090. . Carpeting EXPERT TREE TRIMMING I removal. Fully Insured. 48241514. Stumps Removed Free If we cut the tree down. Trees trimmed, topped and removed. TRfeE REMOVAL AND trimming. Call Dave. 851-2289. Reasonable Lawn^ereici^ ,L'S DEPENDABLE lawn maln-tenance^^ fertilizing. Fall COMPLETE HAULING : big. 4235143. _________ HAULING AND RUBBISH. RAILROAD TIES ^?rin?se.'«3.'" ■" TAIBOTT LUMBER s service, wood or eli....- «n|, end H.rdwere Moving, Storage Pinno Tniiing ,NO TUNING REPAIR SCHMIDT Ft Painting and Docornting -1 PAINTING WORK GU^AN. ! estimates. 482-0420. PAINTING AND ,PER HANGINf^^ guaranteed rlass work. John McFell, 4832273. PA^G A N D^DECORATING. LT4738528. NOW PLOWING, day or nig commercial reswntlal. 33841211. NOW PLOWING, CLARKSTON -1 EXPERT STUMP removal, tree trimming and rennoval, ------------- anytime, 334-9049. ADVERTISING SALESMAN Ambitious, sharp for suburban newspaper. Imr"' - --- Call MA 4G940 nl________ APPRAISER WANTED, experience preferred, will consider applica-* with college background. Conta West Bloomtield T o w n s h Assessors Office for appoinmc 482-I200._______________ A Topless Salesman $800 per Month Guaranteed. If y— meet our minimum requirements — topless earning potenti-' ’ counties. 3339418 A. D. Ho< PPLICATIONS NOW BEli cepted for ushers, full time. Apply Mfrecle Mile Drlve-ln Theater Sncy open World Famous INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE --------- REMOVAL AND TRIAAMING. Trucking PRICE TO SUIT & heavy hauling, ani trimming and r----------• A-1 LIGHT MOVING, TRASH hauled ,Tng and 5G224.______________________ light hauling, reasonable ___lobs. FE 32347.___________ LIGHT AND 'heavy TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirj, grading ai» iravel and front-end loading. FE 3 Truck Rental Trucks to Rent »k‘s_tra»s AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trailers | Pontiac Farm and | Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD FE 30441 FE 31442 Open Dally Including Sunday ENGINEERING PERSONNEL Planners, designers and draftsman for community planning . department of consulting engineering firm. Experienced In subdl-'-'— and new town master plar..... design computation, sanitary and civil engineering (disciplined). Call area code 3134733518 for interview appointment,________________ EXPERIENCED CARPENTER -helper, Pontiac area,, cell between 4 and a p.m. 349-3SS8.________ EXPERIENCED MECHANIC WITH ■ tools, salary guaranteed plus commission, also experienced drive-way salesman, apply Chuck's Standard, 24H Orchard Lake Rd. Pontla-- EDITOR Ambitious, sharp, steady or Ime. tor suburben newsp, mmedlate opening. AAA ( Ives._____________________ EXPERIENCED MILLING me. hand, steady work, overtime, paid Blue Cross end other fri..,. Briney Mfg., Co., 1145 $eb» Rd. off West M-59. ._____________n opportune. _ steady employment with excellent company paid fringe benefits In-eluding pension. VALCOMATIC PRODUCTS 2750 W. MAPLE RD. (JUST WEST OF HAGGERTY) Walled Lake An Equal Opportunity Employer Full time — g. - . . for advancement, 447-2442. LATHE, MILL AND shaper hands 3000 Orchar ---------- dies, —^ '* — •Inges. ... ___ning duties :■ Flying Service, 4730336. MAINTENANCE MAN ADVERTISING AGENCY North Woodward area, prefer experienced all around handyman to do general maintenance work for large company. Must be reliable. Days. Good pay plus liberal benefits. Call Ml*,31000. Personnel. Equal Opportunity Employer. MECHANICS Cars and Trucks, also helpers. Apply KEEGO SALES ‘ ----------- r'-chard I «k« 402-3400. s^vVe^', -__________ Keego Harbor. 482 3400. KEEGO SALES staples grocery products s 4,000 general m e r c h a catalogue ^le^ EXPERIMENTAL MECHANIC — tor development of new machinery ar-" Wiring experience reading desirable. THORESON-McCOSH 'ERIENCED MASC. ill after 5, 4931855. _______ established agency open Pontiac and suburban area. Con plate training program w 11 guaranteed Income, group ii earning potential. ----------1 call Mr. : 332-9870. . Employer. APPLICATIONS ARE NOW being taken for ushers for concession help. Apply In person alter 3 at the Pontiac Prlv3ln Theatre. ASSISTANT MANAGER FOR service station, prefer experienced men, but will train others. Sharp party will start at 1120 per week, tact Mr. Beardsley «t Be Hills Service Center, 447-2124.______________________ APPRAISER WANTED: Experience preferred. WUI consider ai»licant with college bactaround. Contact West Bloomfield Township Assess----------------------------- AUTO MECHANICS Need I heavy and 1 light i due to new addition and Inc----- volume. Each man gets 2 stalls ... ------ H wllfi all benatitc ... .... Ceascr, Hutchinson Lin coln-Mercury, 221 N. Main, Roya Oak. ment. Top pay v AUTOMOBILE PORTER needed ^d,« Best Oktsmoblle. 550 LABORERS SEE MANPOWER Man with cars also needed. report ready for work a.m. 1338 WIDE TRACK W. An Equal Opportunity Employer Light Mechanical Work Wanted full time and dependable, apply 3275 — ”-'* MANAGER N T E D responsibilities, sales and keeping experience halt --------- Excellent benefits ... elude paid vacation and holidays, hospitalization, new savings, life Insurance and pension plans CALL MR. LU(fAR, MOBILE OIL CORP., AFTER 2:30 P.M. Ml 37045 OR EVENINGS 421- Experience Salesman New and Used To-Notch Man — with best working condition, all benefits. See — Grimaldi Buick-Opel orchard Lake FE 2-9145 FULL TIME SHOE Salesmi... peny benefits, fop earnings. Mailing Shoes, 50 N. Saglnav 37378. FLOOR COVERING SALES NO Experience needed, we : . train, full time — no layoffs. The Floor Shop, 2255 Elizabeth ' MAINTENANCE < maintenance for manufacturli and assembly plant. Syncro Cori Oxford, 423258$, Mr. Dolecek. Medical Technologists Immediate opening for ASCP Registered Medical Technologists. Salary range S586 — $858 per Shift differential, for afternoon a.._ nfght duty, $.50 per hour, weekend differential $2.50 for any 8 hour shift. Outstanding fringe benefits. Apply Director of laboratories, PONTIAC GENERAL HOSPITAL. SEMINOLE AT W. H U R O r PONTIAC.___________________ METER MAINTENANCE MAN Water Meter Maintenance Man I City of Birmingham to read a repair meters. Mature young mz . high school education, married. METAL PROCESSING, PLANT re-' quires Immediate help. Apply Systematlon Inc., 25464 Novi Rd., Novi, Michigan, between 7 a.m. 3:30 p.m. A& for Russ Green. NCR EDP SALES We have an opening In both ou Pontiac and Detroit lacllllles lor men who wants to begin permanent sales career with leader In the menufacture and sal PAY DAY Every Day Work a day, a week, or longer on light unskilled factory rfhd warehouse jobs requiring no previous experience. APPLY 4 e.m,.4 p.m. EMPLOYERS Temp. Service, Inc. Qualifications: Married Have.Good.Workin Record Complete Paid Training Progreir Ask for Bill Hoppe 3332444 REAL ESTATE SALESMAN — Due to increase In ew house sales, we need more elp. Plenty ot listings avalleble to sIL It you ere not licensed and ere 'll ling to take University of Mchigan, Real Estate Course. Call ’ '°FRUSH0UR, REALTOR 674-2245 PRODUCTION HELP Permanent full time employment. Union scale and benefits. Equal Opportunity Employer. Rex Roto Corp., 1109 Decker Rd., Walled Help Wanted Male SEMIRETIRED tenanca work, t ...... , Monday through Friday, EM : following 1 reluXa*! App^ants I FREE APARTMENT In p home W. of Birmingham I change tor caretaker ser -'I- -s yard work, snow rer.._._.. repairs, local ret., give ,„,ne number in reply to Pon-Press, Box C-41, Pontiac. Michigan. tact experience Fridays, hours 6 82.8I-$3.37 per he........ . portunity employer. Apply 9:00 a.m. end-------- - Martin Street, BlrmTn't FACTORY WORK FOR iti OVER 25 t _______________482-3745. FULL TIME CLERK, 5. Salary range ,,.y*'I)etw^ .. Personnel 0 Building, 1 5 -------- Tt-.i employed, Ii confidence a 'oJe^irhVfrTv’er'i M Knabel, Personnel 7 Help Wanted Male 6Help Wanted Male working conditions, fringe j Help Wanted Male Wan________ BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS 'Vails cleaned. Reas. Satisfaction luarantaad. Inswrtd. FE 31431. WELL DRILLING - POIJ Production Workers Experience Not Necessary Fisher Body Division 500 BALDWIN AVE. PONTIAC, MICH. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Stationary Steam Engineer Requires second class license, marine license or equivalent experience. Our manufacturing plant is located in the Detroit suburbs. Please complete the following information. Mail this today and will be contacted immediately. PONTIAC PRESS BOX No. 39 Pleast fill out .tear out end mall to newspaper box NAME.................................... ADDRESS................................. CITY.............*’..................... TELEPHONE #..............<............. PLEASE CALL AT THE FOLLOWING TIME .... AI4 equal OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER ^ MICHIGAN Has immediate full time openings in Detroit and throughout the Suburban area tor: • DRIVER-SERVICEMEN • INSTALLERS • SPLICERS ' ■ • ELECTRICAL TECHNICIANS We participate in the "on-the-Job" training program, thru the GI Bill. APPLY NOW! Monday thru Friday 8:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. FOR INFORMATION CALL 393-3202 OR APPLY IN PERSON AT: ROOM S-175 - NORTHWEST OFFICE CENTER, SOUTHFIELD Southfield Rd. at 9’/2 Mile Rd. ROOM 201, LELAND yOUSE 400 BAGLEY ST., DOWNTOWN. DETROIT an equal opportunity employer D--6 Tllfe PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1968 SHORT ORDER COOK WWttd. i MrvlQi ttatlon txptr rtd. Hour* 4 p.m. to U p.m. doir jthra V’p'm s* S^s.. WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS Gas or Diesel. Liberal pay, insurance furnished, retirement and full benefits. See _______________________ ,Mr. Coe, 8 o.m. to 4:30 p.m. *^ndI Mondoy thru Friday. doy^ or light ihift. SBS-75M torj GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 Kni equal opportunity employer WATER SOFTENER SALESMAN better SERVICE STATION Mechanic, nlqhli ihift, must be over 21, and wllllnq to work drive ei needed. Should bej expert In all phases of light . automotive repair, especially t— up. Scope experience hel Hours 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. Moi thru Friday. Position starts Dammdn Co., Bloomfield Plaza, Telegrapti and Maple Rd^ 424-30^10. SERVICE STATION Standard Oil, service station salesman, 1140 per week for exp. man,! hospitalization paid. Part time, SHEET METAL STAMPING PLANT MANAGER Jst be familiar with progrei complete line, the best sd, and soft watr-Liberal draw, good lea car, desk, insurance, etc. to rlj come In for Interview. PONTIAC SOFT WATER COMPANY 34 Chambrelain Sf. _ WILL YOU WORK? WANTED" SALESMAN BAR MAID AND waltreia for days, good wages and tipa. Apply In person, Sport..O.Rama Lounge, 054 Oakland Ave. BAR AAAIDS AND « I time. 124 W. I miTBrr'm^; BEAUTICIAN, RECENT Graduate, excellent opportunity, high v----- salon. Bernard Hair Stylist, S. of M-5» - barmaids7“f BE YOUR OWN BOSS, business for yourself, as Lee Distributor. No investr franchise, lust party pi hostess i|i 9279, Tcome. Call collect Judy Po^l^i ’ An^EquaVop^i Shelton Por IS tor Progress _?0Lh«ler Rc Thompson ______ ________ Bulcke «55 Rochester Rc^ Rochester BABYSITTER, .. -......... ^ ..... until Dec. 20. ORJ^6?2 after ^ 'IbeAUTY operator^ ^UFar^^and Increase! 2456. ' ’ s'“^n*'a baby SITfERT~Llvi“rn^or~out,^2 It r.M children, call 423-1343 after 4._ benefits, baby SITTER AND light profit housekeeping, 3 to 5 days per ——'on.j ^ek, own Irans. I week only. 332- Hftjp f experienced PANTRY WOMAN for private club. Good wages r ‘ working conditions. JO 4-7 Fall Jobs for Fall Clothes American Girl rarTopR.............. aiyang-gd.*'™*'' ‘ Has temporary work '----‘-Ties — Stenos-Tyi - Dictaphona Of Stenos-Typists, Jr. i iphona Oprs. — PI itypa Oprs. — Cor Keyi-------- ~ - HIGH RATES VACATION PAY HOLIDAY PAY AND BONUSES FULL TIME CASHIER, _______ , benefits, excellent earnings. Apply — AAallIng Shoes, 50 N. Saginaw, FE N 8-7370. PHARA/lACISt, FULL OR PART -salary, plus ■n. Apply In Oak Park. FULL OR PERMANENT PART TIME SALES AND CLERICAL N POSITIONS OPEN FOR MATURE WOMEN WHO ARE BUBBLY, E N E RGETIC. --------------- P R E F E R R NECESSARY. ______ TO MISS WOODARD TEL-HURON STORE D U I STORE HOURS. ' WINKLEMAN'S S PART TIME OFFICE girl, hours " • ................. 4744W5. WO/WAN FOR DRY Ctsai dapartment, will train. P Laundry, 540 E. Talagraph. Sat Mldwast. CaUnsts, GENERAL OFFICE Bookkeeping, payroll, typing and calculation. General Contractor ot-fice, WIxom. Michigan. 424-5900. PAY DAY Every Day Small Truck BABY SITTER FROM 2 p.m. ^plr'l fi^°°Ponha^c‘'Laund'ry,^“540 BABY~sVfTgR7“M^^^ ” than wagM. FE 2-4587 befor* Iq C ASHll rIw ANTE b~ Store, einwntnwn ar*a Saglni SIDING APPLICATOR Guaranteed year round work m have experience, top wage PreferablY with own tnou. rant Mr. Black, 334-2925. ation. Blrminghan Jim *^lappIngton CHECK ROOM GIRL, e SPRAY PAINTER r paintlnij induMrlal^ tquip I. Call FE 3-7448 ai YOUNG MAN, ^FULL tlma Permanent position. Please-apply to Miss Lockman, The Pontiac Press. 48 W. Huron St., Pontiac. CASHIERING EXPERIENCE, able to type, general office work. 40 hours, good working conditions. Apply In person, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The Goof Housekeeping Shop, Si Troy plastics plant, i dustry rates, exc. fringe b openings on all shifts^ TV TECHNICIAN, experience in color preferred, top wages, paid vacation, apply In person 422 W. Huron, Sweet's Radio end Ap- pllance Inc. _______________ TREE TRIAAMER, experienced only. 2 EXPERIENCED DINING ROOM Waitresses, 1 full time, t lu—■— only. Apply Fortlnos Steak I-WMe Track and Huron,___ UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Is looking lor PROGRAMMERS With Cobol or Fortran experh to loin progressiva team wor on I.B.M. 340 with OS disc tape. ACCOUNTANT Business degree, w, Bloch. 423-0702. AAA-1 CAREER MINDED YOUNG LADY over 18 to ASSIST AAANAGER In LOCAL BRANCH OF COAST TO COAST, INTERNATIONAL CHAIN ORGANIZATION, THE RICHARDS CO., INC. YOU must be *-converse Intelligently, ceptionally neat PERSONALITY ar. ... PEARANCE a must. Learn brand Identification tachnlquas. office management procedures, sales promotions sales, ate. STARTING SALARY per mo. ,to those accepted : 12 hours of e MEDICAI^TECHNOWGIST LABORATORY TECHNOLOGIST Degree in Chemistry or Bii Chemistry. Contact University i Michigan, Personnel office 1020 l and A Bulkting, Phone 1-744-7200. WANTED: SALESMAN. House ol dinettes. Salary and commission. Full time, 334-2124,_________ ^ %ltDERS, ARC starting pay 83.15 per $3.40 par hr., wage i_________ syblaet fa quality and produrtim of work. Tima and one halt for over 40 hrs„ prasantly working S3 hrs. Work clolMs, glovet, medical Insurance and six holidays paid. No lay-off's In psst 4 yssrs. CLAWSON TANK CO. 525 East Elmwood Clawson, Mich. ..r porter i shifts. Appll Restaurs-' after 4 p.m. Big Boy WANTED RETIRED A8AN, living i social se—--........ tarn axti have owi Marx, Di WANTED — material handler ---------m area, 4934211, WANTED MANAGER TRAINEE In-terastad to learn lumbar am' hardware business, John R Lumber Co., 7240 Cooley Lake Rd. WANTED MEN FULL and part tlma to pull nails and salvagt lur—-2571 Hamlin Rd. Rochsster, Credit Mdnap-er Excellent opportunity for womsr with administrative abilltv who has had credit or office management experience. Must be capable ol supervising a large department Many employe benefits Including: insurance, profit sharing and dis count privileges. Apply In person or send complete resume — personnel manager. Montejomery Ward GRILL COOK Openings lor an experienL__ _ cook.^night shift. J3o^ ^gamings, [ vacation and holiday pay -‘ '' ‘ Work a day, a week, longer on. light unskilled foctory and warehouse jobs requiring no previous experience. TED'S ‘ WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE EMPLOYERS _________Bloomfield'Hills_______i Temp. Service, Inc. GENERAL OFFICE, RADIO dispatching, telephone, mature CLAWSON 45 South person, $2 hr.. Port time, Howai ' * South Shell Service, Telegraph GRILL COOK Teds of Pontiac Mall has an -lm mediate opening for grill cook exc. working hours, no Sun. oi halldavs, day shift, hospitalization $625 COOK WANTED, EXPERIENCED, steam table, grill and fryers, 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. Call In person Tally Ho Restaurant, 4724 Dixie Hwy._ Afftr 1 Automi.... company benaifts. BAILEY for pen Indoctrination pel CALL CLEANING L Union Lake an tion, 343-7875. ADMINISTRATIVE-SECRETARY Hills campus of Oakland Community College, excellent salary and fringa benefits. Call personnel department, Oakland ^------------ College, e, 442-4jjM ACCOUNTING CLERK Experienced In payroll, payi racalvables and billing or cot CLERK TYPIST Experienced typist tor customer order dept. Apply — - PAPER CO. ..... Rochester, AMBITIOUS WOMAN I sales work, cxparlenceo in sewing helper. 5 day week, and Incentive commission, at Singer Sewing Center, 102 SaglneW;J»7»2?^_________ ASSEMBLY LINE For _________ duplicating shift BABY SITTER WANTED, 7 call 442-9494. '■ 55£i"'TubbsI BARMAlb WANTED, 707 Bar. 352 Htlp Wanted Malt 6Heip Wanted Mala ANYONE With a pleasing telephone voice, neat appearance and willing to learn c^an earn an excellent income by making telephone calls from our downtown office. No expreience necessary as our experienced personnel train you. Age no barrier if you are oVer 18. Hurry, this won't last long. Call MISS LEE at 338-9762 . _.itlIc*MaM**^ Equal Opportunity Employer lES, all COUNTER HELP FOR SHOE rapal service. Full time. Apply at Tony' Shoe Service.________ CLEANING WOMAN 8 hours~^ day every Tuesday, FE 2-3382._ COOKS For evening and day hours i ’"aS*d tt"’wor®k?S conditions. Musr hava s o m restaurant experlenca and owi transportation. Apply In perso “"HOWARD JOHNSON'S Talagraph at Maple Rd. COOKS AND DISHWASH SI 92* W. Huron Restaurant. ______________ CHRISTMAS IS GIVING TIME in Costmetics eppea Tiber of the family. Ilty products and < great demand. Call CASHIER it faring, r< };*M'rl'T f' DISHWASHERS FROM 14 OR ( full or part time, apply I__ Grill, 575 S. Hunter Blvd., Blrm-Ingham. 444-9757. _ Dining Room Waitress Immediate opening for a waitrei in the IwautItuI Rojial ScoVs rk,^ _ifoo wiFcal WAITRESS WANTED, MILFORD. TOP WAGES paid to the right girls choose your own shift, I, " or ni. Apply In person to Fren Jack's Hamburger's, 345 N. Mi cooking. 4B9-4244. After 7, 4244)7»2. WOAAAN WITH CAR FOR delivery work, must know Pi....„„ no selling, paid dally, 34 E. Pika Office B, YOUNG LADY OVER t office, bank teller, loan salea order desk c teacher, telephone wors Call Mrs. Smith, 3SI-K ARE -;a ^ ___________ CURTAIN AND B B PSPR.E A D REAL ESTATE SALESPEOPLE WANTED Your Own Desk Your Own Phone Large Spacius Office Liberal Commission CALL JOE KIRK LAUINGER REALTY 674-0319_______674-0310 ' SALESMEN ~ men for salts petftlon wm laroa firm. Offartns draw whilt in training In company r-*" ' — .o.,5»«} firstly RAY REAL ESTATE Salespeople REAL ESTATE Beautiful Spacious OFFICE Your Own Business Cards YOUR OWN DESK YOUR OWN PHONE , LIBERAL COMMISSIONS Call Mr. Hackett HACKETT REALTY 363-7700 636-6703 363-5477 HelMWanM^ ARE YOU REALLY ........ existing? Cai! Mr. Foley, REAL ESTATE 4744I343. ) Or lust 1. YORK BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED II RH Positive S7.50 Jl RH NCg: with positive factors S7.S0 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER itlac FE 4-9*47 1342 Wide Track Dr., V Mon., Fri. 9-4 Tuea., Wed., Thurt. 10-! ARE YOU READY ter the -------- Call Mr. Foley, YORK REAL -R 44)343. Secretaries | Immediate temporary asilgnmantsl available now — Pontiac area. Call MANPOWER 332-8384 SHAMPOO GIRL, licensed. Thurs., STENOS I y assignments ■ SALAD MAKER, evening shift, Sundays or holidays. Apply ??oodvtert*an BATH, first fl ROOMS BACHELOR apartment, 51 SummlS-Xell after S:30 p.m. ROOAItS AND BATH, main floor, 2rern,t%enrnSSSl.M; — ^---It required. 335^3. ROOM, S50 DEPOSit, $35 w 473-5491,_____________________ ROOM APARTMENT compleftiy furnished. FE 4-3337._________ BACHELOR, PRIVATE, quiet and ...---------------- am apartment, clear Ind perking Included, n ir pets. FE 2-7007. ;LEAN, 2-ROOM, adults only, 72 Norton, —' *“• ' ' ceH bet, 44, COZY 2 ROOM APARTMENT, ----“ —-ulred, r- ....... ____________8 p.m. COUNTRY HOME for ............. ---“• plus deposit. 2 bedrooms, ely furnished. For further ________tIon call 402-8700._ EFFICIENCY 2-ROOM, all utilities furnished, good condition, from S50 deposit, rant $23.50 a Weak. 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. call 3343005.____ FREE APARTMENT~TiR private telephone number repairs, local ref., give - In reply to Pon- Cr4l, Pontiac, ROCHESTER, LARGE, LARGE BASEMENT APARTMENT, ‘--js, Reliable vounq man to , PRIVAm ..... person. 402?474. ^artmants. Untarnished 38 BEDROOM, S145 WITH security deposit. No children or pets. 44 Spokane. 332-4134. LOTS, A C R E A HOMES, ________ ------------- PARCELS. FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACT. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke - FE S414S Urgently need Im^iite salel Deny 'til I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 1 MILLION Dollars has been made avallab us to purchase end assume contracts, mortgages or L. . homes, lots or acreage outright. We Will give you cash for yor-equlty. Our appraiser Is awaitlr your call at 674-2236 McCullough realty 440 Highland Rd. (M-59) ML Ipen 9-9__________ 474-22: 2-BEDROOM. NEW. NEAR Mall — Carpeted. Appliances. Air and sour.? conditioned, heated. Rec. room. Adults, no pets. From $140. FE 5^585.______________ ROOMS, 2 BEDROOMS, 1st. floor. Lika new. No chlldmn. No pets. ROOMS, 1 b side, ref. an. pets, 27 N im, 1st fll A SYNDICATE you list your properly you Von Realty for a cosh sal syndicate wants property r vnii h>u> to move test or — " going through yo - *— sn appraisal. 3401 W. HURON REALTY, 442-4220 lual gal. needed. extra earnings. Part-tlr _ ......._ work contacting existing customers by phone from our office. *• tractive base telery. Full line RCA Liberal Benefits. » Call Mr. Roy RCA Sarvlce Company 4095 Highland Rd. 335-4118 An Equal Opportunity Employei a Egg a ___ ^/oodward, ________ ___ between 12 and 13 mile Rd. WANTED FIRST CLASS preparation AND BROILER COOK. DAY SHIFT, HIGH WAGES, GOOD FRINGE BENEFITS. APPLY MACHUS RED FOX RESTAURANT, 6 6 76 TELEGRAPH RD„ BIRMINGHAM. 6264M0. WO/MAN FOR housework In the .... ... , WOM To E W ^ Ieanera*7l9 W.^Huron^**' CLEAN, Clarkston area. SALES EVERYDAY If you are not making saies evei davr you may not have the rig sales ]obf our salesman make salt every day. These commission ph their (Residual) c o m m I s s I o r assure big weekly and mont earning; and provide f u t >■ r security. The miracle Is, v 1 furni ti LooKing fa telk, See f day Inn, Pontiac, / prospects iry to start? Lets ivld Stookey. • ' .:.*'«ay JOB WITH A future. Call Mr. Foley ~'~TK REAL ESTATE, OR 4-0343. with abundant lead r-.»_______ I train to earn highest com-slons with the' fastest moving i SUPER MARKET openWg Need help In meal, prodi— grocery departments. A cashiers. 1249 B a I d w je, Pontiac. Apply In person 3611 Kef ter 1 D“tHURC 4-1212 or 402-4924. c Leke Road. OR Extra smart gal Unusual opening^ « Do single girls— - ve more fun? In — ...., I, chance to tour the world. Top knowledge of medical Ben Casey terminology, ........... Shorthand Star We need e gal who can Shorthand well and is a tor typist, salary to $550 mo. Right hand gal 'or left hand boss. Plush . roundings, gray flannel boss, salary to. $100 wk. Left hand gals also accepted. Now-a swinger INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL tOOOJ/I^Hi^.^ontla^c 334-4971 WwkJWanl^al^^ 1T ANNOUNCING FOR THE first time In this area. Professional tree lance trimming. Interior, windows. Boutique, also weddings and parties. Call attar 4 p.m. 3S4-looo LIGHT HAULING AND < 0 YEARS, clbri6al I, .parMIme, ntomlngi 731-040S. rjEltlNO ALL 't county. Money In 24 hours. YORK tie TRADE FE $-7174 I S. Telegr— RAY REAL ESTATE has 7 offices to better » community. For best rei SELLING TRADING . BUYING or red estate today, call: ' RAY REAL ESTATE 689-0760 RAY REAL ESTATE 731-0500 dawn desires ___ NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 44)354 OR EVE-NINGS. FE 4-7005. WANTED. cant land a Clarkston a daricston Real Estate i S. Main,. WANTED LOTS ACREAGE HOUSES In tha Clarkston area ROOMS UTILITIES furnished $30 week. UL 2-3993.____________________ I ROOMS, UTILITIES furnished, adults only, no pets. $120 lease- security deposit, 474-1132._________ i ROOMS, private BATH, ufllltles, “reyton r ‘ -- - ---- *----- 7-m3, a ADULTS .ONLY. NEW i refrigerator furnlilted. 493-1594. 1445 South Ipapoer Road._________ k CHOICE LAKE front apartment, l-bedroom, adults, no pets, heal, boat dock • and beach inci, Elizabeth Lakeshore Apti., 537S Cooley L-*" AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS applications for .partmanfs, third building avail. Nov. 1. No child no pels. 473-5140._________ BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS Ideally situated In Bloomfleld-Blrmlngham area, luxury 1 and 2 bedroom apartments avallbale from $145 per month Including carpeting, Hotpoint elr conditioning and appliances, large family kitchens, swimming pool and large sun der*-— All utilities except electric. I children. Located on f—“■ Elwood, 402-2410. I WATERFORD, 2-bedroom d '.arge living room, dining lichen, full basement, rat. * 1-2 BEDROOMS FROM $145 14 Mila Rd. at 1-75 Madison Halghte hitar J. L. Hudson's-Seart Oakland Mall '•tcludet; deck — pool — air conditioning II utilities axeapt electricity Models Open 11 A/W4 PM 585-1125 President Madison APARTMENTS t-2 BEDROOMS FROM $145 ... .1 R between 13 and 14 Mila Madison Helghts^ear J. L. Hudi ROCHESTER MANOR Under new professldnal management, Shostek Bros, and Co. Country Hying within minutes ot the city. You will anioy the friendly atmoephera of Rochester Manor Apartments. These quality apartments featuring swimming pool, includes carpeting, heat, hot water, stove and refrigerator, plus numerous other natures. ' bedroom, $140, 2 bedrooms, $145. / Manor will convince y„ ______ ___ offer a truly remarkable value. Taka Rcchaiter Road to Parkdala, Parkdale to 812 Plate Rd. Inquire at manager's house or call 451-7772. small children welcome. t Houin, f urniihad 39 BEDROOM FURNISHED houta, 1 child welcome. MY 3-4902. after 5. BEDROOM FURNISHED OFTBIg Lake, NE of Ortenvilte, $100 month deposit. 343-3172 or BEDROOM, $105 MONTH, $100 Want Ads For Action THE PONTIAC PRESS^ TUESDAYr OCTOBER 15. 1908 JflffllHjBW ££S5S58r tsirr,”SffJ!X:s!Sgr •mi^nfli RSMfntnT. «iw monm Wit 8^11 r»«wlS§?AdutS^only“'“'^'’ SISLOOC & KENT, INC. 1-BEOROOM HOUSE NEAR i Sa„a^>sa, Don E. McDonald LICENSED BUILDER OR 3-2837 $490 DOWN ATTENTION INVESTORS ry In Waterford' TW| Block bulldin 3 BEOR06m brick on Loon 2 car garaga, family room. _ BEAUTIFUL, OLDER BUT modarn, large home, on 100' lake frontage, In Waterford, gat heat, 3275. <73. or drive-ln.____........ .. . front ranch home with 1345 so Plus full basement and extra from lot. Will sell package ... $66,500, terms. Or divide to suit. A real bargain. Call OR 4.0306. J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. 7732 Highland Rd. OR 441306 Eves. EM 3-7546 7" 1 P®OfO®ml^ flic# lOtg Walltd GAYLORD EL brick and alum, hon 166. Total 5-badrobm. 12i room. Recreafion room, rage. Extra lots avallab ^Total price. Call MY 2-* WANT TO BUILD? We have -. quality builder to price the building for you and lots and acreage available . . . will use your^lai^r ours. Call MY ^202l GAYLORD INC. 2 W. Flint St., Lake Orion MY 2-2021_________ PE Of693 HOUSE — 2 FAMILY, live In half, let other make your payment. Sand beach, good lake. Priced to tell. CALL EM 3-7700. HACKETT REALTY. HIGHLAND AREA - ANDERSON HOUSE IN ROCHESTER, 2 bedrooms, carpeting, garage, basement. Call 602-0154 after 6. middle straits lake Privileges, 7 rooms and bath ranch, partial basement, 3 children OK. PONTIAC LAKE FRONT, I. Start 3 BEDROOM brick & alum. __ . car garage, full basement, custom kitchen, I'A baths. Built on 120' lake privilege — ' $24,600 with 10 pet daw your home now — best price increases I INCOME PROPERTY, 3 family with Income of over $m per mor*“-Located close to shopping , city schools. Full price $1?,1 available on land contract. Anderson & Associates 044 Joslyn F,E 4-3536 Evenings 625-2711 or FE t-4353 COTTAGE FOR DEER hunting, r ‘ BEAUTY RITE HOMES CLEAN ROOM FOR mature gentleman in wrtilte private home. No.drinkers or smokers. Day factory wrorker preferred. 0 f f Oakland. FE 4-0112.______________ NICE, CLEAN SLEEPING rooms ,. gentleman only, no drinkers, 255 State, FE 2-3382. SLEEPING ROOM FOR man. UL 2- SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE OC-funanev, $35 per week. Maid TV, telephone. 78? S. SLEEPING ROOM FOR lady. FE 5- WOODWARD AT 11'/fi MILE, Seville ---advance, weekly, ■ — 10 e day. >1, payable d $6.fa 2 BOARD AND ROOM, privah trance. Southern cooking, gentleman. West Side. FE 8-3338. ROOM, 35-167?. HOME cooked ON-THE-LAKE Quad-Level with French Provincial styling features 3 bedroom' ' den, family room with fl. and walk-out doors, 2 full loms plus fireplace full baths er, bullt- Lm^Sfu's Home Is now ui _________________ but may be shown by appointment. Drive West on Elizabeth Lake Rd. 4 miles to Baycrest Drive, turn left to Edgelake Drive. Turn right to property. Call 674-3136 or 544- Brown WOLVERINE VILLAGE - . .. aluminum, 3 bedrooms, large kitchen, carpeting, in excellent condition, 100'x160' lot, 'k mile from beach, priced to sell at $19,900. PERFECT LOCATION - Th room tri-level with an ________ large 2-car garage, built-in oven and range, on a beautiful corner lot, can be yours for lust $24,500, on Crescent Lk. HOLLAWAY 112 Milford Rd. Highland, Mich. Reitf OWcB SpacB APPROXIMATELY 2,000 s LES BROWN REALTORS & BUILDERS 509 Elizabeth Lake Rd. (Across from Pontiac Mall) 332-0552__________________^^S BY OWNER 3-BEOROOM RANCH, large lot, new gas furnace, $17,200. Terms. Drayton Plains are» f»ii for appointment, 673-2701. BY OWNER, LOVELY Brick, ; bedroom home. In Waterford Two.. basement, 2 car 4576 or 7314400. AUBURN HEIGHTS, 2 12x16 .. loinlng office space available. 852- Great Ic____... Boot and Marine Sales 6,000 Sq. Ft. ______ Rd.e Phone R . Karnehm. 332-9203 at Shopping answering service. Connolly's National Bldg. 10 W. Huron. FE 334- R«iit BwiiiiBts PropBity 47-A 30x50' BUILDING WITH LOTS of BY OWNER ,SEYMOUR Lake front, 2 Mrooms, brick, ^slble 3, fireplaces, glassed In suW porch, 2-car garage, full basement, 628-3384. MODERN XOOO SQ. FT. — plenty of parking — low rent — 1 mile to Pontiac - high traffic Rd.-sultabla for offices — commercl — engineering — prototype woi — distributor. Call after 7 pm OPDYKE (M-24) NEAR Blvd. and 1-75. new bulldli eg- ft., tilal cel WAREHOUSE SPACE IN Walled GARAGE FOR RENT FOR storage, _car or boat, 18'. FE 5-7805. siding, storms and scree Hydronic heat, lake privik near schools, churches, shopi fa^e "a“rr“"$U500?'fc4^ appointment. _______ BY BUILD%R — WATERFORD ' area, 5 bedroom brick, 3 bedroom brick, new home, 673-5172._ Cash for Your Equity HACKETT SbIb Hoasoc 1 ALUMINUM SIDED HOME, Parma-Stone perch, corner lot. 2 bedroom, fenced yard. Lake privileges. Immediate possession. $9750, $1,000 down. Private owner. Located at 1802 Sylvan Glen, Keego COTTAGE ON LAKE OAKLAND, needs remodeling. 7“" off Sashabaw, $2( bal., land contract 45^* , By owner. Call i 2 Bedroom starter home, bi _______________.. -----a, buy out -guity for $2800.. On Cass Lake Canal. Call today. 363-7700. HACKETT REALTY. 3-BEDROOM RANCH, seml-flnlshad basement, 2'/3-cai garage, wooded fenced lot, exc. neighborhood, other extras, $21,900. Liberal terms available, OR 3- _9^^________-____________________ 3 BEDROOM RANCH, NORTH END of Pontiac. Carpeted liv'------- full bath -with ------- schools, 3 BEDROOMS, FULL aluminum siding, half lake privilege*- near i-. cash, 39l-31f6. 3 BEDROOMS TrI-level, larga family room, 1 dry room, attqched, garage, I location, $27,000, terms. --- ATTRACTIVE HOME 3 bedroom ranch large II 4-H real estate 80 ACRES — Lovely old 8-room farm house, barn, corner parcel — ■ frontage. Surveyed for 10 creels. Price $80,000 — down — land contract. 623-1400 _A«er acre parcels. $30,000 down - 5844 DIXIE HWY. After - 628-2678 , OR 3-23 ROLLING ACRES N. of Clarkston h an area of fine home*. 465' road frontage, high land with exc. view jt surrounding conuntryside, good restrictions, new buyer could divide Into 4 parcel* — $22,500 — Tenms real estate = FICE 625-5485 EVES: 625-5288 Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action aarage. andfei days? 673-3mp Evas.p 394-0213. BEAUTY RITE HOMES HUNTOON shores 8 homes remaining startlnf $25»650. Located IVs mile* non.. .. M-59 on Airport Road. Turn right Thornaby Drive. Open Mondey-Thursday, 4 p.m.' Saturday end Sunday 1 p. p.m. Call 674-3136 or 564-7773 COSWAY 3 BEDROOM COLONIAL V/3 baths, full basement, 2-car attached garage, on large corner lot, built In 1964. Only $26,900. BRICK RANCH Lovely 3-bedroom, IVz baths, finished basement, built-in stove, oven and dishwasher, fireplace n living room, 2-car garage. Only FIRST IN VALUES RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding taxea and Insurance ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-bedrqdm home GArifEAT LARGE dining AREA VILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATION! FROM ANY WORKERS. WiboW! OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROG: LEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. 29o'w.**Kenneft real^value*'realty For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 6424220 GAYLORD VACANT ID-ROOM H(3A^ total price. MY 2-2021, 300-9693. TRI-LEVEL BRICK and alumlmum, - - - 1966 totd^t S bedrooms. builder lor you, L plan or"ou?s. '^MY 'i^OOror 'i PRESTON NEW HOMK AVAILABLE NOW DESIGNED FOR HAPPY LIVING. "-u'll find charm and con—'--- IS prestige and pleetura In Ilf by Pontlac'i leading bul HOWELL Town & Country Inc. . Highland Branch Office PHONE: 313-685-1585 ----- well worth your time to these models at Westridge .. WATERFORD, left off the Dixie Hwy. at Our Lady of the Lake* Catlxilic Church, or LAKE ANGELus Lake view estates, right off Clintonville Rd. onto Coata Mesas, and FOX BAY, right off Williams Lakt Rood onto 1------------ Drive, left to Fox Bay Drive. ' discover how well they're built easy to maintain. You'll ba proud as punch to own one. Call your O'NEIL REALTY represantativa May. O'NEIL REALTY INC. HAPPY KIDS MAKE A HAPPY HOME -Your children will have a ball In this large yard, 110x285' with lilly pond back. 3 bedrooms, newly decorated 1 floor home, part basement, paneled living end dining room. Out West ***''*■ $I3,500-NO down Cl to offer In this 3 front ranch near Pontiac Lake Racrastlon area. Softly carpeted family kitchen, ample space tor ■— room, 2 car HAGSTROM, Realtor 1900 W. Huron , ML OR 64)358-Evas. Ffe 4-7005 aP-.........- costa. --- . _ - - 5TT REALTY, 363-5477. , Immeditae Possession Land contract or assume mort^a^tje bedrooms, prIvtIeMs Investors Special Jroom Capa Cod, full basemeni. Is work. $2,000 take over $2,500' ---------- ----- ownv balance. Vacant. 7 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY SALE OR LEASE OPEN 2-6 P.M. flre'plsoe, giant recreation room with patio door to rear yard, 2-car garage. Priced $35,500 -*242 White Lake Rd. CLARKSTON AREA-353-4440 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY SALE OR LEASE ' OPEN 2-6 P.M. splltlevel, Spanish Ranch, paneled family room, 2-car garage, rustic cedar siding and rock brick. $31,500 - 5236 White Lake '^‘clarkston area-353-4440 IN PONTIAC — FHA terms, 2 .baths, full price $12,000. HACKETT REALTY, 363-6703. immediate possession. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION — 2 bedroom, lake privileges, psved street. Cell HAcTkETT REALTY, EM, 3-7700. IRWIN NORTH SIDE ,3 bedroom bungalow with Vk-car garage, has carpeting and drapes Included, FHA terms. Gl TERMS 3 bedroom home with full basement, gas automatic heat, walk-out basement to nice back yard. A real nice family home with only mortgage costs down to qualltled Gl. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 298 W. Walton FE 3-7883 Singleton Realty 617 S. Paddock_________335-8116 JUST STARTING OUT? 5-room ranch, new roof, newly decorated. About $450 moves you In. Agent tor owner, OR 4-169B. LAKE OAKLAND HEIGHTS 4-bedroom --------- , _r. carpeting throughout, painted. Air condition'— refrigerator, tioning, stove and her and dryer, 2. located In very good area. In Hur Gardens. Call us on this one today. OFF OAKLAND 2 bedroom, part basement, lar,- slor^l.Tnd'.r®r"ei„'’*'l'' WATKINS LAKE storms and screens, located on aE—.- . • ^ paved street. This Is a good starter bedroom hof home, priced at $11,908. "‘w')' carpetei BEAUTIFULLY LANDSCAPED BUY — OR BUY BEFORE YOU SELL - CALL RIGHT NOW TO TRADE THE HOME YOU OWN FOR THE HOME YOU WANT! Ask tor Elam* Smith, Lao Bogart, Dave Bradley. Emery Biitlar, .Donna Gooden, Ken Hall, Bob Harrell, Oleta Howard, OIck Bryan, Leo Kampsen, Lee Karr, Bill Mountain or Eileen Moyer. Lauinger RANCH — plus 2Vs car garaga. Plus carport. Plus 20 ft. covered patio. Full price 817JOO. Terms. SMALL FARM — 3Vi acre*. Rsnch, 3 badroom. Full b a * a m^a n t. breezeway plus 2 car attached garage. Privete road. BUILDING — 3 bedroom ranches. Full basement. Aluminum siding. Excellent lake privllaget. I18,7H Including larga corner lot. WE TRADE LOT 130' frontage on Sylvan Lake access to 3 lakes, perfect place for -home, built to your specifications. Claude McGruder Realtar 3710 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 6624728 Multiple Listing Se^ica OPEN ~ ~ MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR •epair featuring large carpeted living oom, fireplace, plastered wall*. Fun Msement, new gas heat. Nice yard. Priced for test sal* at c* 3 bedroom home 6m#nt and garaga. ---------- . ..tec location, ctose to Gan. Hospital. This bom* can b* yours tor only $350 down plus cloilng costs on FHA terms or 0 down to Qualified veteran. Belter hurry. No. $15,800 on i^HA tefnns. 5 BEDROOMS WEST ___________________ aluminum sided home. Large 11x21 kitchen with bullt-lns, refrigerator.: Large carpeted living room. Fui 'eptace. Lake .....- ar.. *•* wakland Coun- ty's finest lakes. All appliances are Included No. 15-3 NEW MODEL AT WESTRIDGE daily 2-8 p.m. RANCH MODEL i MODELS SHOWN AT YOUR CONVENIENCE — CALL TODAY FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT. STRUBLE WE TRADE l(iC0ME This largo II room house was tormarly a 3-famlly otid could bi again made Into 3 apartments. If has 3 badroqm*. 5 room apar^nt up with private bath and entrance. 6 room, 3 badroom on first floor. Complete bath. Located In th* St. are*. Full price 817,588, GET STARTED In this largo 2-bodroom homo with lako prlvllogos on Oxbow Lok*. It ha* a 19* living room. IS* dlnkiq room, 14' kitchen. It also Matures new alum, siding, alum, storms, gas heat, low taxes only 1 bik., from tha grad* school. This horn* noads soma finishing touciias to put It In top shape for your family. Priced at only 811,986, term*. , REALTOR MLS 5925 Highland Rd. (M-S91 Next to Frank* Nursery 674-3175 Term*. Sale Housee UTICA AREA 3 BEDROOM RANCH located in new area. Fireplace, rec. room, I'/i car attached garage. Clean and sharp. Ready tor the discriminate buyer. *17,588 on Gl terms. Fast possession. 332-0262 I 6 W. HURON OPEN 9 TO 9 Wideman; PONTIAC GENERAL AREA ^ ily $12,91 r TODAY DRAYTON PLAINS stay it you purchase this v.. finished cottage on 1'.^ acres. Only 7 mites to Caberfae Ski siMe. " close to good fishing. Call MLS REALTOR garage, petto. All carpeting .MU u.apes. Large lot, excellent garden soil. Lake privileges. CALL TODAY. j CITY OF SYLVAN LAKE CHOICE BUILDING LOT. Good 'T a” WIDEMAN, REALTOR | 412 W. HURON ST. 3344526' EVE. CALL 335-8669 Sale .Houses FE 4-2533 FE 5-9446 After 5 P.M Sale Houses 49Sole Houses MODELS OPEN DAILY 12 to 6 P.M. DWIGHT' ST. 815,990, 3 bedroom, tu lot. Drive out M-59 tc CRESTBROOK SUB. 3 bedroom, tamlly room, 2 c paved streets, curb, gutter, -to Crescent Lake Rd., turn ■ garage, located In r OCTOBER 0DNUS FREE 12x12 patio on alt modal home* sold In October. DRAYTON WOODS 3-BEDROOM BRICK room, 2-car garage, on 2 lot*. 827,90 Phone 673-7837 AMiToai "ESTABLISHED 1930" estate, nestled a .. ... this 10 acre country , ------ ------ --------------- . ..IS Is this *y*-app*allng 6- room Dutch Colonial that I* completely aluminum sided. Beautiful 10x26 enclosed front porch, outstanding carpeted living room with beamed calling. Indirect lighting and fireplace, spacious modernized kitchen .with pass-thru breakfast bar to formal dining area, IV5 baths, first floor laundry room plus basement, 2 small barns, 2'i car garaga and ancloesd dog kennel. TEXAS SIZE and an income besidesr 26x48 frame ranch home with 3 bedrooms, •eparate dining room, ISVzxWi living room, full basement with ?as heat, and a IVa car garage. Now for the Income; a second ‘/i car garage with brick front with a 2 bedroom that renta for $92 a month. All this plus a very nice lot 16x150 with loads of fruit trees and shrubbery, land contract. 2 BEDROOM DOLL HOUSE An outstanding home on an outstanding corner lot 100x200 thef Is completely Anchor fenced and blessed with breezery brick location < FE 5-8183 WEST SIDE Four bedroom, two story older home. General Hospital TWO BEDROOM One story, part basement, gas heat. North East side, nice — Three bedroom bungalow, basement, gas heat hart-------- floors. Decorated Inside and out. Vacant. Eves. Call Mr. Castell FE 2-7273 JJicholie & Harger Co. 53V» W. Huron St._________FE 5-018 TED'S Trading 69 MODELS Are ready In Jayno Heights fc your Inspection. The latest concept In leisure living, virtually maln-tanence frae exterior, newest terlor decoration all through, models are In one of MIchIg newest most elegant subdivlsl< surrounded by 5 lakes. You get Immediate possession on si of these beautiful homes. 5 BEDROOMS AND LAKE FRONT In one package. This 5-bedroom :e front also features a fireplace. FANTASTIC Is the word for tha bargain pr on this 34>edroom, full hasomi all brick, IVi bath home with and lake privileges. . only 023,900. It has |i ly decoratad. mes, MTS or acreago ouinur..... II giva you cash tar your equity, ir appraiser Is awaiting your call. CASS UKE ■Ivllages In a quiet trail aa. This home Is a natural tar It and relaxation. All brick " th fireplaca, 2'/4 car g< FATI off of on this ai _______ „..V‘^j,rMn't‘: carpeted sunporch and garage, beautiful spot to retire. on market — ---- - - ■■■ - assistance as to a fair market price OP as to tha compllcatio you could run Into, please tael fr to contact our office anytime I , professional advice. One of o staff can be out to, your hor “Tccffi^HlEALTY NEW HOMES WITH A FLAIR - ml 0 K— h family ____ ... ________________ $19,990 plus lot? Whars yours? Call us now tar details on one of McCulloughs Beauty Craft Homes, you can small the newness, you can feel the irlde of new home ownership, you'can see the quality of our Beauty Craft Homes, Inc. TED'S CORNER FHA Loans ai^ i^arantoed loans Government. The current interest rate Is 4 per cent pies '/i per cent. The^down i»^n^t nraded Is 3 per of everything thereafter, plus closing costs. EXAMPLE: A home seillm on FHA terms at $17 would need a down payment $450. There are points Involves an FHA loan and THEY ARE i by the SELLER. The approxin closing time from the date ------ents are sinned is from s. Not all irms. Yr ______ you. Tt seller to sell oi Ir'proSects'"' McCullough realty K) Highland Rd. (M-S9) Ml len 9^__________ 744-22 CLARK OTTAWA HILLS: 6 room brie leveL built In 1959, 18 ft. living with fireplace, separate dining and nice kitchen, nice family with built-in book shelves, gas heat and air conditioning thcoughout, 2 baths, attached garage and landscaped lot. Priced at $27,5 land contract or mortgage term bungalov 20 ft. BUY, SELL OR TRADE OPEN 9-9 MLS ANNETT BRtCK TERRACES 5 rooms 0. bath each, separati basements 0, furnaces. GENERAL HOSPITAL AREA , hedrnnm home In good con painted exterior 50x150. Possession on closing. WALTON BLVD-COMM'L garage. $45,000, terms. 4% ACRES-IN CITY 10 lots near Northern High, suitable for developing, church site, etc. Frontage on 3 streets, sewer & water at property. $30,000, terms. cellenf condition, paneling, gas heal, misu Mall 8i Tel-Huron shoppini centers. Ideal home tar retirei or newly married couple. $12,000 FAMILY INCOME - .Benedict ■ate entra_____. .......-.1 basement, gas ------- One 5 room apt. completely redecoreted. ............ ...... rental of $230 HURON-TELEGRAPH AREA ----- ' ■ - ■ 1 blocks fro frontage ' ™ ...____over 24.0 of land j 33W5; ZERO DOWN Ing costs on this iw with full bos............ dacoratod. Owners agent birmingham-bloomfield ige! "ftorlm r p^e f Ing, Separate eating area Rec. room has pai... bullt-ln rofrlg. Garage. draperies, Disi_ and stove Included. $24,900. Handsome Contemporory Ranch on a high sloping privah lot. Dramatic family room witi ledgerock fireplace and 10 tt celling, bar with sink and rafrlg. planters. Indirect lighting am separate entrance. Large kitchei with bullt-ins. Separata dinini room, 3 bedrooms (master ha: dressing room). C U S T O A BUILT, AAANY EXTRAS. $53,900 SNYDER KINNEY & BENNETT BIRMINGHAM________Ml 4-7001 WILL TRADE realtors 28 E. Huron St. Office Opeiftvenings & Sunday 1-4 eiTEvenlngs & Si 338-0466 YORK .1. Terms Nice starter home. Immed possession on this 2-bedrc bungalow. For Wvate shoe TORK Fox Bay Estates Largo 3bedroorn all brick. baths, built-in range and oven. 2-car attached garage. Beautifully landscaped lot. Must be seen to be appreciated. For private showing YORK IE BUY WE TRAI R 44)343 OR 44): '13 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Pla YORK Cedar Island Lake Front Large living room with natui fireplace, snack bar, I'/i-car* tachad garage. For private she Ing call: YORK Family Income Gas heat — gas hot water. F basement. A-1 condition. Incon $230 per month. Full prii $11,900. For private showing call: YORK Howard T. KEATING LAKE FRONT Near Clarkston, closa to 1-75. Bl level ranch with a breath taking view from all picture window over looking Big Lake. 31 by 14 toot living room with lire place and fire place ^In rec room. Approximately 1 acre lot. Clarkston schools. En|oy year around peaceful living, boating, fishing and swlm-mto^-OoCall for appointment. “west BLOOMFIELD OFFICE 682-7700 SMITH TENRACEl A 2-bedroom brick terrace excellent/WesI side locdtion to TenHurSh, schooli ___________ churchos.VFeatures a full ibasement and gas he8T. Offered at $11,9" SYLVAN LAKE A sparkling 2-bedroom bun with large shade trees In the a natural fireplaca in the ..... room and full basement. This retirees or the young couple. Lake privileges ____________ along with carpeting, draperies and custom wood shutters. $22,'~ with mortgage terms. The Rolfe H. Smith Co. Sheldon B. Smitto Realtor 244 S. TelegraSt ~ ' 14 S. TelegraSh R 333-7848 Brian DUST OFF YOUR DREAMS GET READY TO LIVE In I charming lakefront ranch. This beautiful home provides the ------ tor formal entertaining, cai realjp Imagine yourself ii fireplace? You'll be dellghtec ireplace and great I Today, : THAT OPEN FEELING YOU'LL HAVE THE FEELING of spaciousness as you romp pn ' acre lot in Clarkston, situate this spacious site you'll find FHA-GI OR TRADE BRICK f e room ranch, fpll basement, pas heat, corner lot — fenced ^ ^ard.^ 2 landscape^,* paved street, a real beauty. Airport area, $29,500. COUNTRY 2 bedroom on % Acre corner — Clorksfon schools, $12,000, $2,000. UNDERWOOD- 425-2615 Res. 625-3125 Pkk'Xe w'ay ich featuring^ '3'^5 payments of $100 per mo. Call tonight—this one won't CROSS Realty & Investment Co. 674-ll*105 MLS WE BUY FE 8-7174 1702 S. Telegraph WE T(TAD¥ FE 8-7174 ________Pontiac ROYER OXFORD OFFICE 1 ACRE WITH TREES Long western rancher locatot — of Walton. 1 mile from 1-75. This desirable property features many extras. Bullt-ir - - - - - ................1, newly carpi plastered walls throughout. 1 ft. recreation room on main fl Large estate si ......... Royw's £uy of tih'e week. I_ take your present hemeFTrou're i combletely satisfied wlta, on guaranteed trade-in basis. Call < talk to one of our salesmen further details. YOUNG MARRIEDS This coxy 2-bedroom Is lust t... ’s?i;f.d.'“Vou''Tff, s"n“orthi*’ii,'s winter nights in fireplace. Carpet terms available. Move Ir brick rancher In Orion . Hardwood floors. Plastered w I'-Vcar garage. Handy tool she rear of property. 7 tots that from I street to the street at — of jiro^rly. ^Call — terms WE BUILD-TRADE PHONE; 628-2S48 ROYER REALTY. INC. ■ - • 823 S. Lapeer Rd. Income Property UNIT APARTMENT I 11 ?.. Several nil le from Metamora. ir Clarkston. Other small parcels and lots. C. A. WEBSTER, Rea! Estate Oak!and 8-2515 MY 2-2291 Industrial land In the heart of Waterford Twp. AL PAULY 4514 DIXIE, REAR ......... EVES. 473-9272 80 ACRES, 3 PONDS, SECLUDED, modern home, 15 i-''— —"------* of Pontiac. 425-5540. AUBURN HEIGHTS AREA 3 lots. 395 ft. frontage, 330 ft. de 3 choice building sites. TOM REGAN REAL ESTATE "" 'I. Opdyke EXTRA CHOICE WOODED SCENIC HOMESITES 7.42 Acres rolling land, good T boggan hill near Clarkston. 42 FOR SMILING HORSES AND HAPPY PEOPLE Plenty o( land. Yai flat or ■— parcels. wooded Estate sized open land and nice homes nearby, 87,300, $1000 down. 10 acres with almost new 40-pole near 2 X-Ways and S. Grand Blanc, $13,950, $2,000 < 20 acres, 'A mile frontage an s exciting acreage parcel, site. Plenty of seclusion. N.W. of Oxford, $405 l>— CALL COLLECT 427-2815 LOVELAND Leona Loveiand, Realtor 2100 Cass Lake Rd. 682-1235 OT with privileges a. --------- $3,500. Also semi-wood lot i high school, $3,750. Clarkston. UNDERWOOD Res. 625-3125 LAKE FRONT LOTS, lake privilege k‘ of Pontiac City Limits. $100 down -By Kate C TAVERN Walled Laka araa, axowtlbn. bulMIng wllti 3-roam imrtm^ showing axe. liKoma. Omy ‘ 815/OOt iTl TEMPLETON, Realtor 2339 ORCHARD LK. RD. 412-090 TIRE BUSINESS C. PAN6US, Realtors Call Collact_______ «7-28U “If Father doesn’t stop freiatingroe like a child, I just know I’m going to throw a tantrum! ” Lots—Acreage LOT ON AAACEDAY LAKE, 75 f< ■ Itaga by 430 ft. $15,000. C r fc 473:2451._________________________ OTTAWA DR. LOT LAKE PRIVILEGES On Upper Long Lake, nicely wooded, high Ideal homesite. $8000, $10,000, terms. Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron Sf. 338-0444 ''"''.0 Open Evenings Ji Sunday 1-4 PINE LAKE privll WALTER'S Clarkston Sci choices, 120 lleie*' yoildiiK It*? acres, air ------... .. fenced yard, N. of Clarkston 1-75 Exchanga. FLATTLEY REALTY 420 COMMERCE RD._______343-498J ROCHESTER AREA - WALTON blvd. Va mlla from Crittendoh Mditottal. 4 parcels from 100x270 to 322x500. Priced from $20,000. Zoned for offices, Clinics, restaurants or Convalescent Home. AUBURN HEIGHTS-CORNER PARCEL Zoned business with t jllding sites. privileges. OI oisirict, several W building sites. LAPEER 43 ACRES - will con-n««- 473-3488 SCENIC WOODED HOME SITE 7.42 acres. Independence Tov Busineu OpporfanHies 59 10-ACRE FARM, solid ‘ --- Kft" home, corner $18,^?'$< C. PANGUS, Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK \A-i5 40 ACRES, NORTH OF Very well constructed buildli rMnuiiia Property. This parcel Is prlc„ .. *57 MIS “II quick. For further information calf - McCullough Roolty Inc. 474-2234, Mich. PH.: 517-278-4209: CROSS REALTY And Investment co. Specializing in Income Property OR 4-3105. MLS Sale Business Property 57 ^DUD' NEW WAREHOUSE BUILbiNG ........... . miles to 1-75. 12,000 square feet, prefabricated metal buUding, 10 ft. ceiling. CLINIC OR OFFICE srge lot in Drayton Plains, 8 275', zoned for profession: irvices (doctor or dentist's o NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 1141 W. Huron FE 5-1201 after 6 P.M. FE 2-3370 OOSWAY SYLVAN VILLAGE lOO'xISO' vacant corner 1 zoned neighborhood business. WATERFORD TWP. 170 road frontage by 134, vac zoned neighborhood business. Te 481-0740 3379 Orchard La. Owner Retiring MUST SELL Ideal location for personal seryl... short order drive-fn, etc. Includes block building with 984 sq. ft. plus 122 ft. of Commercial frontage. Located near one of Waterford Twp's busiest Intersections. Age and health require sale. Full price, $19,900, $5,000 down. For In- formation call — OR 4-0304. Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" COMMERCIAL B Kent main high..., Pontiac Airport. Approximi -- “ zoned commercia' almost any typ _______ _____JIng in excellent dition. Ask for No. 14-5414-CP. , 2,140 s ; “"u-50»3-CP°' ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE -'r-taso West Huron St., Pontiac 4-35tl 945-07, Open nites 'till 9 5ale Sorinest Preparty 57 INVESTORS GROUP — Church people, a terrific place, contains 20 acras of lavel ground on paved street, close to Golf Cour“, Army Base, Shopping Canter —' expressway. We are llstenim offers, call ............ REALTY. WAGNER 66 Units Near Pontiac Mall, excel $190,000 down, ask for A !* ^loch! BARBER SHOP, SALE good deal either way. 41 482-4755.________________. ■ COLLISION SHOP l , leaving state, will i highway location near Troy. I parking. Inside and outside :e, excellent equipment. Shows outstanding profit. $10,000 down incl. rea, WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 48 distributor & : It of state for Must be ________ For Jur...,. . I call C. MIcholas, 425- ...... SLIDES ARE big business. Our slide at Cedar Point took in S2O44IO0 In 40 days. " slide In Chicago took In 835,< 20 days. We have a partnership opportunity ava-------- $7,500 cash raquirad. Phone 549- GROCERY STORE Large modern grocery store west i Pontiac. Brick buildings, 7 years oli Includes rental units,! 2 separal apartments, 2 garages, on more tha I acre of land, ,3 road frontage: Ideal location tor home and busines: COMMERCE-UNION LAKE Area, grocery store, S9,000 dow; plus^^ **‘’'12 ^ * GREENHOUSE 3820 sq. tt. of „ steel greenhousi flower showroom, walk-1 refrigerator, O'/a acres of land. BATEMAN COAAMERCIAL S. INVESTMENT 377 S. Telagraph Rd. 338-9641 Weekdays after 5, Sat. 8. Sun. - MANUFACTURING Going manufacturing busint located in Dakland County, eluding franchise license, re:^ oiitii>t. Inventories, factory equlp-t and real estate. Terms. See :all MILTDN W------- ___I Estate, 118 W. Rochester. 45I-BT41. NDW FDRMING NEW Partriedge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" A GRDWING 'C' BAR BODMI BDDMI BDDMI In a fast growing Macomb County area near Lake St. Clair. Lots of room for expansion and you'll surely need it. Dniy $23,000 down buys valuable business opportunities r estate and all. We mean It when say this bar could inaka you wealt It's a ready remedy tor money. Ifl No. 57-S195-B . ASK FDR FREE CATALDG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 334-3581 945-8759 Dpen nItes " PARTY STORE^COMMERCE Grossing ov«r $100,000. IncliKies 3 bedroom apartmont. Dther Incomi ROYER HDLLY DFFICE Attention Barbers Here's your chance to make all the profit from your labor, thh ’ man shop Is doing real well n and the potential Is even bat 14x30 building has room to oxps Price Includes barber chair, r m land contract. WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE: 634-8204 lly Branch Holly Plaza Attention Housewives used fqrnitura tor Mr. Grah* w FE 5-1501. ■xwn*.E WI. vr.,40ME DINETT-atla,^BRAND NEW. Larga and tmalCalM (rdund, dnuMaaf, tanavlar) tablaa In $•, 5- and "’%li»SFURNlTURfe 21B E. Pika ________FE 4-78S1 1 MILLION Oollara haa bean mada aviliabla us to purchase and aiauma Is contrsch, mortgages or buy nem< ■at. ar acrasga outright. Wa w 674-2236 McCullough realty Highland Rd. (AA-59) Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyka Rd. FE 5d14S _______Open Eves, 't * QUICK CASH FOR Clark Real Estate. .. FE 4-4813, Mr. Clqrk. SELL YOUR CONTRACT h Calls are coming In regularly ' Investors wishing to purchasa contracts. Soma accepting discounts. If you have a land * •- —" - leave it with gat tha top dollar Really, 402-5000. contracts, discounts. " tract to » We know v---------- for you. Call Von R LOANS $25 TO $1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. 30 E. LAWRENCE LOANS $25 to $1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER & LIVINGSTONE 40T Pdntlar SW?B^^ufIdInB FE 4-1538-9 NEED UP TO $5,000 u may be surprised how chea| KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION - $50 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service 8. Supply Co. 2417 DIXIE .. •“ - money for materials. Whet" Voss & Buckner, Inc. 209 National Bldg., Pontiac 334-3267 673-0732 l', 75 Horse boat, bri unne Buggy, 1940 Bui >rtlbl(^ r|glng mower, b • .Irade 'any Item. MY 3-2834 lany items, sell or tr*lece dlnatto sat with ------ chairs and laMa. All tar $399. Your credit Is good at Wyifian's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 7 E. HURON_____________^ lOTPOINT REFRIGERATOR, freezer, clean. $3$. 852-2159. COLOR TV SERVICE Johnson's TV, FE 1-^ 45 E. Walton near Baldwin ,, COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE -----Bargain House. FE 2-4842. ELECTRIC STOVE, 825) GAS sti $35; Refrigerator with top free 849; Wringer washer. $40. G. I ris, FE 5-2744.___________________ HOUSEHOLD ITEAASl ^EW es. Toes., Wed., Thurs., 1 Broadway, off University D KELVINATOR FOOD-A-RAMA, 4 ft. freezer, $135 or trade for l< modal. 424-2484. LEFT IN LAY-A-WAY NEW FURNITURE AT WORKINGMAN'S PRICES walnut bedroom suite, doul deesser, chest, mirror, booket _ bed, mattress and box spring. Sold for $238, balance duo 814S cash or $8.50 mo. piece dinette, 40" table end cheirs, sold tar $119, balance d' Scotchguarded zippered laple bedroom suite, double dresse chest, mirror, bookcase bad. So for $149, balance due only $98 cs: or $5 mo. I cu. tf. refrigerator, sold tor $3: balance due $142 cash or $8 montt Mspit chest of drawers only $29.88. portable TV's on $249 c< ir $12.50 mo. jt bedroom si Stereo consolette, AM-FM radio, speaker system, plays all si records, sold for $149, balanct di HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 441 EIIZ. Lako Rd. 335-9283 Dally 10 a.m.-i p.(n-. Sat - LINOLEUM RUGS, MOST SIZES, IDS., $125; misc. $20; Birdseye d dresser, $50 ea.-snge, used 334-8311. 253 MATTRESS, SAMPLE Glenwood. Furniture, 37 S NEW 30" DELUXE KENMORE PRE CHRISTMAS SALE 1949 White sewing machine. Deluxe heavy duty modal with zig-zag and button holder. Does all fancy and Rractical sewing |usf by 0 attachments needetl. "'larantee. Only $89.50 :--- ousehold Appliances, 335-9283. ^'TuRT'S APPLIANCE 484 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. 474 SAVE PLENTY TODAY On all 1948 floor^samplea ranges, refrigerators, washors and *Lltfla Joe's Bargain Hous Baldwin at Walton Blvd. FE chairs. 42B-IM 1948 ZIG-ZAG PORTABLE e"iSry,^?n"i a7.?chm.-nts: Bullt-ln controls to o v e r c a ‘ monogram, make buttonholes blind hem stitches. Full prici portable $33.40, with cabinet U or sssumo paymr-*- *■ Iree-home domo, collect. Credit Manager, 261-7912 CAPITOL S|WmG yCHINE obligation, c p.r,7ni9p.n SINGER DELUXE-PORTABLE ZIg ZL..........,------ — RepotsossOd. Pay off: $38 CASH or Payments of $5 per mo. 5 vear guarantee" UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2415 DIxIa Hwv. FE 4-0905 SEWING MACHINE _ Brand New Zig Zdg— Ml Co. ' SINGER automatic zig ^AG^ USED furniture, REASONABtE Used TV'a~in9.»|^ RADIO AND APPLIANCE, IMG". — Formica top, « 4 cnairs. con----------- chair, 343^44. size records. Remote speakers a tape monitoring facilltlos. Race storage space. Sold $299, bo let "'^3»-9283. ____ ______ OPEN entire Inventory of t Household App WAREHOUSE public, entire ---------- . — Zenith, RCA, and Phileo color TVs must be sold, evory ltr~ " counted, no reasonable .. . refused, terms, sale today i .. ................. 2414 ! Rd., between Woodward id Crooks. Water Saftaoers AUTOMATIC WATER softaner. — - -nos., will sacritica at ____ price. 444-0e43.______ REYNOLDS AUT6MATIC WATER years old. Cost -iver Excellent condition Phone 44^74^1. For Sale Mlscellaaeaat 67 BROKEN SIDE WALK, Cqna's, 9'xl2- LINOuEuM RUGS, $3.95 EA. lALLON ELECTRIC Water — —' — electric coflBe carry, $49JS. G. 2" DRAPES, 2 pairs, I alnalt width, 1 double, like new. 335r44l9. 450 CLEANED common brick, l_ __ Angelus rd. oft Glddln^. ... EVINRUDE SKEETERS and Bobcats, 8 models available, 14 h.p. to 25 h.p. snowmobile trailers, complete line of snowmobTio Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right to Hickory Ridge M. to Ddmode Rd., left and tallow signs to DAWSON"S SALES T I PS I C O LAKE. Phono 429-2179. f GAS FURNACE Average $595. las, 425-1501 or vegetablt 8-2192. tables. Larga discount on now portabto typewriters, a d d. I n g machines, flies, etc. Forbes Printing 8. office Supply, 4500 Dixie Hwy., Drayton. OR 38747 or MT BUY DAD A GIFT For Christmas Nowll Put A McCulloch Chain Saw . houg*hten Vowe^rTente^ 112 W. University Dr. 451-7010 ______Downtown Rechester BRIDES - BUY YOURT/IBBINO discount from, I. Drayton, OR 3- BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS-POLISHER8 WALLPAPER STEAMERS BLUE LUSTRE SHAMPOOBRG " FE A81M THB PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1968 •'SLr CARBAOE DISPOSAL, "ij-rfaSoft LUMUR jOW'AgrtSnB__________Fg 4^»5 gARAO^' FOR SaLe. dlimantlad wMi • ** ■««*«■«• I*"' EVERYTHING MUST GO TO MAKE ROOM FOR OUR 1969 MODELS laldwln was $|9S; ......now $395 • • ■ now iSs WurlTtar iJi’S.i. ........22 SS*. ....'M U34S; .... ..now nm -.... .... Um wa> nwsr .now ^ Gulbranam was S2»S; ....now «7»5 Starr wst 795;..... now *395 wurlltier wa. *2495 !!!!! i!:™ NancY Hart was $795; ...... as *1740; .....i ------ „ai *1740; ......I Lowray was 1,000; ..... r WAfTBR HEATER. 30 oal., gas *&.W, .marr«d.][AYw SSdrle aiMi boltM Iwatwi*. Thm ^ tarrlflc valua* In quaij^ ss!amr„a‘!?r"-” LAKE PUMPS, 1 horsepower, self- rhoinwon, 7005 AA-59 ;.*a‘"gTOon*.’- SIMPLE HUTCH, wahw book* and bookcaias, i JMEpICINE cabinets, torsa gr mTiror, aligntly marred. *3.95; laroa MlacHon of cabinets with or wmi^ light*, sliding door*. Ter- SNOWMOBILE DRASTIC SAVINGS l^kj. elec Ski Dee,, reg. tlOEL n laf^i&TWsy"* i^'stsnsfSRm. ' CRUISeOUT, INC <3 E. Walton Deity F M‘ndSie?r*' •“ *"•' Morris Music PgtmggHgt Qgy 7f CARNIVAL 1-A BLACK DIRT . & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY .........T:St PJV :a?h pSue*i§/lRY*A^Sf^^ — Dixie Hwy. OR Mgl9 FARM Equipmiii Auction, Wadnep day, Od. M at 1 p.m. Located I mile east of Drydai m Dryden Rd, to Bishop Rd. 1st plage south to «II Bishop Rd. John^aere B. TTactor, A C M PTO combine, Casa 1 row com plclter, rubbto tired wagon With metal drain box, new Holland it" Hammer MUll, assorted ladders, other farm tMls •nd good leweliV wagon. 1st N» lonai Bank, Lapeer. Clerk. AArs. Carter, Proprietrms, Hlck-t Oanaral AiKnoneer, Oxford, 1-AAA SAND AND ORAVEL, i areas delivered. «Sd5M, Wa* of a CHOICE DARK CLAY, ...... J.., topsoil, * ir refused. I until fall Frm wrlung GALLAGhTr'WJSIC CO. 10 S. TELE6RAPH FE 441566 Ws«d' 361-5937. _____________ iUflAMAOfe SALB/Antloua* galpm and misc. 3161 Wafklnslake Rd. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Ort. 15 through 19. sLate top bumpBr^pooi toWe, 211 Eileen, Bloomfield Hlll^ Off Square Lake Rd. !• Woodward. FE FG794. GEnFs ARCHERY-714 W. HURON BROWNING SUPER POSED_ * jSM" SECURITY^ I BOX IN decorator ootors „ ________ jhangeabl ___________n lock, only’*11.95 vimr *30. See to appreciate, makes « cellent gift. *5-7128 or Eve. 36. 2763. Snow blade v, with aii taehments. *65. 887-4109. SPECIAL LAWN MOWERS ’ ' \ ROTO-TILLERS RIDING LAWN MOWERS PUSH MOWERS ACCESSORIES All items to be sold at cost tPRED-SATIN PAINTS, ^ply. 2878 Orchard „e SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. iey'ais':*3g!sr4r"- *" cSri* aSangerf'anitti’'a>rdn8 elw NeST^'pTi phase elr compresioi Nwwand used steel, englet. channc .beama, pfato, pipa.^ „ . Usad matal garage di^s. Meal fo I TE(Bli--WflcliiEBry ^&:dpa“hM',.i“srs!i.^ 1 REMINGTON PUM^ *wpf« tiing. Call after 4. FE 2-2292. l I. Improve cyl. FE GUNS, 700 NEW AND USED mode and antique. Buy or trade, le away now while stock Is complei Ken's Gun Shop, 1V4 mile nortt Otlsvillo on M-15. Open 7 ds) Phone 631-2991.__________ GUNS-GUNS-GUNS One ot the largest selections scopes* lights. We do repair worR. Try before you buy on oi 'utei.g.isaLrse'' SKIDOO'S —Complot# Stock— FROM *$695 Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 4-671 nMiiw Mftri <;undavs ..................... ..4.?*i!a.^‘ 2563. Attar 5:30, 39641042., Bkk Tamer Illiieft7ciw POODLE CLIPPING TYLER'S AUaiON 76W Hlohuod Rd. (MS9> 6 rtaR^N«Hiini$S ilii Maples, dig own, your tools. 2 Shwth 3 mllos west of Commoi Village. Open Dolly. 6844I63S. ILUE SPRUCie rtasonabla. Dig yi own. OR 3-2391. ARABIAN FILLY; Arabian -----n atod colt. — OouMa D-C ‘ AMBIAN GELDING. PUREBRED, irablan galdin ’AreasTpS?! -tyiwiMHrcai^^ leirm# m^wmtun - lei^ SPECIAL FAU CLEARANCE ON ALL Suzuki, Hodako Buitaco Motorcycles « itwny mini Miaa to che MG Saiel 4667 DIxIa Hwy. Drayton 673-44*8 housa norm pit 1-75. after *;30 p.m. Beats^ccBSserifs 97 14 Ft. Gfdabout Fiberglos with JohnMm 33 HP. 1987 engine, tilt trailer, ready to go $wT FLANNERY GENTLE HUNTER TYPE AH Mare,__S ^s.^old^ “I’m sorry Janie wcm’t be able to make the scene with you tonight, Freddy, on account of one she made with her father!’’ Ilvared. 473G478 or 6734501. A POODLE HAIR CUT « 8nd I ^ples, toy stud »§™M- f p. TANDEM AXLE, 1 $400; ustd vv..t« 628-1062. WANTED HORSES l-A OACHSMUNO mjP$, AKC eSTEI HEIM KENNELS. 391-1889 Shop, 696 W. Huron, Vi Mild E. at T^r^^^-$515. OPEN SUN- BEAGLE F odod hunter, POODLES, (t) k sonable. 673-3774. ROMEO MEAT CENTER - Homa drassad maatt. A side or a slice for your table or freow. Cut and wrapped before you. GNa ut a ca“ tor price, quality and appolntmar to cut. Romeo PL 2-2941. Open FLUFFY AND 3 straight haireo variety colored kittens, father •" aristocrat, fret to good homa. i 4297. ___________________________ ■ SIAMESE KITTENS, 8 waakS, weened and trained, 451-3469. male AIREDALE puppies, —all ahots, varv raa UL ^3275. : POODLES, BROWN and sit J2-5269. _________ ' - AKC REGISTERED B R I T T A spaniel, male, good Pheasent i *4ft 42841157. CaTiaflar 6. AKC PO<)DLB PUP, black l» «>s, 3W wormed. , Champion C GEBMAN SHEPHERD^PPlS, AKC REGISTERED B GRAND OPENING (Locale ■Q.P«5-J h bay ffihftnj ar. Mm or '^aSweT Troyel Trailers________88 GOOD CAMP TRAILER 8350. FE 8- 1139 after 6.______ EL CAMINO AND Ford Ranchorp. New 1968 fiberglass covers Ir stock. Voyageur Sales. 7188 E Holly Rd., Hotly. Celt 434-9668. FREE-FREE COLOR TV WITH FIRST^I* ORDERS New* SPORT TRAILER DELUXE HARDTOP CAMPER Sleeps 8. 81495 Ellsworth Trailer Soles 6577 Dixie Hwy._____625-440 NOW ON DISPLAY Trovelmate bedrooms, I1M50. OR 3____ 55' X 12* MARLETTE, brand n never been lived In, «i-hb lot, $4995. MY 24M01. 1958 COURTLEY, 44 BY 10, sharp. 81,500. 2595 North ) Rd., Pontiac.______ merchandise. B Ray ’Greene"SalIboats Glaspar Boats Steury Boats > Grununan Canoes MIrro-Craft Boats ^olphan Pontoons ivinrude Motors *"^AT STORAGE AVAILABLE Take M-59 to W. Highland. Rli to Hickory RIdao Rd. to Dome Rd., left anidr follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES T I PS I C 0 LAKE. Phono 429-2179. __ DUCK HUNTERS SPECfAL. ■ " trailer,—*" 1945 ELCONA 35', Expando ----------- room, *2,000. 537-9544^ weokdeyt only, bet. 8-5 p.m. 1967 MOBILE HOME, bedroom, carpet* furnished and sot. located near Milford. _______________________ cnmpleteto furnjshed and 1967 BARTH ALUMINUI 10 & half ft. r- ■ pickup truck. ---------- conditioned, deluxe- Call 63 W BUSHEL. McIntosh, snd Johnathan. Fresh . Winter ----- ’ Clous 0 cldoi toes, *I.4V \3tt POI.J Pierre's Orchard Comer of Clarkstoi. And Sashabaw Road APPLES, PICK YOUR own, Rica Orchard 531 North Coats Road, Oxford. 62F3544._________________ APPLES $1 W BUSHEL, McIntosh, ilthy and Jonathans. Fresh ap-clder, Pierre's Orchards, 7812 Lake Orion! NEW PHONE, 493- I Joslyn :ONCORD GMPES AND Damson plums. 3441 E. Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion. ______________________ POTATOES, I DIG, YOU pick field run._ Bring your own « tahwrs. George L. Smith, ; Orangor Rd. Oxford. OA B-2727. Baldwin at Colgate Form Equipment 87 PICK-UP TRUCK COVERS. New, ft. end 8 ft. fiberglass, cab high stock. Voyageur Sales. 7188 Holly Rd., Holly. Cell 434-9468. PICKUP COVERS, 8 8i 10 . campers, travel fraltars. Tral -------1 available. Goodell Tral 3200 S. Rochester Rd. 8 r gravel. 685-1912, John AKC BEAGLE PUPS, tovabto pots. — hunters. Hadley, 797-4518 IHAMPION POODLES, S AKC BEAGLE PUPS, iirvlce — Beagle, ShapI 3015. 7 weeks old. AKC SILVER POODLE, 451-1550._______________________ kc BASSET PUPPIES, Champion sired. 693-1304. ' -____________ AKC TOY collies! i»S, Samoyed's also $75, 394-0278. ______________ m ALL PET SHOP, 55 Williams, FE 4- BEAUTIFUL ENGUSH H BOXER POPPIES, i Ntossajr-Fereuson 204 .Fork lift, : Loaders and backhoes. ?.ir!V»rwithlo«..r. Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD _ FE 44M41 . FE 4-1- ---Dally li COLLIE PUPPY, AKC TrI-colorfe “ ' WANTED: SUPER A ff?rtor v hydraulic and qpulpmont. 731-20 Trovol Traflin FOR .SALE^ ^S**saH a 693-3693. FRfeE, 2 MALE lf^»', Y*''?* JK2! 20' FROLIC, SELF contained, 5, clean, ■"-* — 6485 Dixie GORDON SETTER, mala, 8 AKC registered. 651-7996. GROOMING AM Breed grooming, U n c I Charlie's Pet Shop, 694 W- Huror Vi mile E. of folegroph, 332-8515. german _S_HO.EI_HA1»g° ^ 12^1^" kEESHOND^_ AkC,_ 6|NTLEMAN 674-1848. mixed puppies, cocker I Stiowmobilo SEE OUR^SELECTION SNOW PRINCE 'YUKON KING ^ M^Machlrws In sy. *695 and up Oakland Snowmobile mIsTESI, EDWARD'S POODL' "^10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 15. 1968 KmoMlUMd Cm mfNw ml Iliad Can lOd «« CHiWROLaT IMMLA Comr., CHBVY iVlPALA Moor, V8, Swna^(W*«74-iiS!V $1295 Ibnmllliad^ lOtlMan and Uaad^on 1966 Chrysler 300 Convertible itomatic, powar itaarlng, fadio, he-*-- RONEY'Y'”AUm™“^^^ "ealdwYn Ava., FE 4-4W9.__________ W«5 MONZA COUPE, 4-spaed, AV. FE )31 BaldMn IMS CORVAIR MONZA, SDOOR ------- transmission. r best offer W6S CHEVY, 4-DOOR, V-« autonMtlc, . rad^ heater, povnar, no rust, «00. 1m5 chevy Impala convertible, V8 automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, beautiful metallic aqua with white top, spotless condition. Clearance special only Sl?88 full price, lust $181 down and' $48.65 per month. One year a ranty. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD «3B Oakland Ave._____FE 5-4101 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1066 Chevy convertible, green w black top, auto., double pow radio, whitewalls, $1,405. 677 M-Lake Orion, MY 2-M41. 1066 CHEVY 55, 3J7, air, pov steering/ power brekei. extr $1495. 363^0434. brakes, radio, Crosse Points $1995 Matthews- Hargreav^s 1 Oakland Ave. cond., extras. FE 4-1350.' tions. Cs 33^4065■ Call b -1066 CHEVROLET SUPER Sport, vinyl root, power, automatic. Only $30 down with payments of $13.02. Full price $1605. Call Mr. Parks ; Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 1067 CORVETTE COUPE 427, AM$A!Tradlo)"SL7M.'1S^1 1067 CHEYROLET caprice, V-8,1 ■ automatic, $2158. OR 3-10II0. Another Fine Birmingham Trade 1967 NEW YORKER 4 door hardto black vinyl i '-terloi full ___ oning. $3695 1064 FORD OALAXIt BOO, Mack $ MAHM AftTTKIB VERTIBLE. M______ ________ Full price $1005 with payments of $0.02. Call Mr, I Parfcs credit manager at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD ._ T-BIRD, 30,000 Green with sadd„ ............ mint condition, $1500. Call 625-3671 from 5 p.m. on. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1065 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN, tion wagon, 10 passenger, . _. gjs^teerlng and brakes./$1075. loiss mustang, of: high performance, _____________ disc brakes. Ml 4-0554 after 6 p.m. 1065 FORD RANCH, wagon, radio A Matic, 1065 FORD HARDTOP, Absolutely no $ ' $805. Payments steering, Crulae-O- Parks credit manager at Ml 4-751 HAROLD TURNER FORD BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth I DODGE, VERY .1^'' . ^—_ --------------- .,^2 Dodg good tiresr $$5, '60 Rambler StatH wgn.p goc^ motor/ t$5, *62 foi^ convartiblao $165/ 4$ Mtfoiry, radio. $45. '65 Chavy 8. $109$. '65 Ford and 64 Cadillac $995.-------- CARS -^"^'dIx“e'J*FE «13T.’ 1967 Chevy Impala 2-Door H With V8, a-"- car warranty. Turquoise Finish. Only— $2045 FLANNERY d'itlorifiw, "a^FM '______________ avaTlable options. 6W-6822. - 1067 CAMABO, 327, black vinyl toiv ‘ automatic transmission, chroma, reversed, E-T, mags, 6-70 tires, shimmed, stet^ ta^ player and ' - $220l>. 33G4310. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH emilewells la Orion. Ml - —........ . power, radio and ttlOl 677 1^24, Lai ^2041. ^ _____________________ $067 CHEVY Im^la wagon, with V8, raoc# oaautlnil cai imo iug||«9« $1995 , BILL FOX CHEVROLET Rochester __________OL 1-3 1068 MALIBU HARPTOP, 8 »68 CORVETTE, SHARP, $4105. Call foOO BISCAYNE. V-S. f 1m CdAVEttE, 4M0 MILES, i condition, AM-FM radio. $170 ywr^ol^^jar down. Call Mr. Par -HAROLD TURNER FORD ciSi MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE 1000 W. Maple Ml 4-2753. 1068 CHEVELLE, SS 306^75, tot of extras, OA 8^305.______ Another Fine Birmingham Trade 1967 IMPERIAL 4 door hardtw). turbln bronza wit black vinyl roof and matching Ir (erlor. V-8 automatic, full powei Including factory air condiflonin! and tilt whael. 5 new tlras. $3595 See this auto at our now locatio at the TROY MOTOR MALL oi Maple Rd. (15 Mila) m miles eas of Woodward. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth i960 CHEVY IMPALA Sport Coupe, V-0, auto., power steering, black vinyl roof, Grinada Gold, vinyl In-terlof. 651-0742._______________________ 1968 Chevy Bel Air Wagon $2895 Matthews- Hargreaves It Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 DOC'S MOTOR MAlfr The nation's laodlngL Jeep maler DATSUN A complete line of sports cars, sedans, idekups, plus a complete service dararfmant. Motor homes, travel trailers and pickup campers. Winches and r“"*“'“"“ make vehicle. 1104 S________ Birmingham ________647-3113 1967 CHRYSLER NEW Yorker, 4- 1963 DODGE DART convertible, auto., radio, hea*— —-■ *‘ new battery, e> Evenings, 625-1863. 1965 DODGE DART, FE S-1754. tfr good, S30iL 1965^DGE $895 SPARTAN DODGE 055 Ooklend FE 6-9222 ____________¥TS2i5i“' 1966 DODGE CHARGER, po paymishts' .... ____ S1»$. Call Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7S00. HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 S. Woodward Birmingham 1966 DODGE CHARGER, Bolero Rod, wlth^lto Interior, IBM down seels, peNP steering, tachometer, center Swie, 5 new red lli------ ovals, RD, 4 barrel. This bi HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER >1 74)955 many axrras. i ownar« go ditlon. $1250. Cali 33S-4306, Van Camp Chevrolet Just Turned 21 No Down Payment Divorced Bad Credit No Credit Buy Here —Pal Here 52 Cars to Choose from as low as $5 DOWN $5 WEEKLY Van Camp Chevrolet N. Mllfopd Rd. (Nr. High School) 684-1025 1967 DODGE DART GT, V-O, >tlc, power steering, radio. Ext. 372) after 5 332-1731. I DODGE POLARA convertible, lack with Mack top, red\ vinyl ■t., loaded with extrer r, 22,000 ml., 338-7316. KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Salat and Service ixford OA S-1400 ORD; WHMmOu OuV It MARKET TlirBlva It a .... safely check. 243f Orchard Lake D ORIGINAL, 2-door M /try ^ condition. $5( er. 693^91._____________ 1950 FORD COUPE, rolled pi Interior, brand new Ford m^lnt. Beautiful condition. 673- 1959 T-BIRO, FAIR condition, $150, as Is, 330-3545.________________________ 1961 THUNDERBIRD, r',"S4-3.A. 1962 1 2-OOOR FORD, priv uns good: FE 5-2460. FORD, of $3792 later. Absolutely price $445 with __________ ____Cell Mr. Parks credit manager at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD Woodward_______Birmingham f?62 FORDT.. SAVE AUTO FE M270 whitewalls. Absolutely no $ down, full price $485, paymenta of $/ — par week. Call Mr. Parks Cre Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD D GALAXIE. 1450. 332-0279. Excellent con- m^STATlON WAGON $295 1963 FORD THUNDERBIRD. One —Her Florida car. Full powar. V mileage. $744, full price, no t m. Payments of $6.4(T VILLAGE RAMBLER I S. Woodward »____Ml 6-3900 10,000 82995. O 4-7631. HAHh CHRYSLER P RAAfWLER A Dixie Hwy. (U tltlon, ir Ml 1963 FORD SEDAN, automatic, cylinder, radio, power t*"'— great transportation. $599. HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER 81 7-0955______________Birmingham 963'A FORD, GALAXIE, fastback, automatic, 1383, afti FORD CUSTOM 500, V-0, 1965 FORD CUSTOM 2 door, 1963 Rambler and Flat, auto. good. Plenty others and few trucks. Economy Cars, 2335 Dixie. FE 4-2131. 1965 MUSTANG, 20? V^O, trans., radio & heator, elr blue, consoled, vinyl bucket exc. cond., new tires. Best over $1,000. 647-3361. FORD 1966 COUNTRY TRY wagon. 10 Power. Air. 674- Standard's Finance Plan BUY HERE-PAY HERE BANKRUPT? NEED A FRESH START? TIRED OF WALKING? WE CAN SELL ANYBODY A CAR ALL MAKES AND MODELS QUALITY USED CARS CALL AND ASK FOR MR. WYATT 6.81-0004 1966 FORD GALAXIE 500 4 '—Stop, beautiful arctic white J( top, and Inferior, Hnotlc, radio, heator, pi iring, brakes, factory elr .... thing. Back to school sals at ' $1400 full price, $110 down JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Avo._______FE 5-410. LTD, 2-door hardtop, liner, p 0 w r - Prlvety awitOd (5jo _______ NOf let oi® PUBLIC SALS , Taka notice thar 1962 OMtmobile r6'^i?r.y“’i^«}^i!l“.^1o% o'clodi In the, e.m. el. 3100 BaM^n, Pontiac, Michlgap, the prtcef'h?st S35.40 per month. One year warranty- JOHN McAULIFFE FORD I 630 Oakland Avb. FE S-4t01 1964 OLDS 90/sedan, baeutiful m* !’'&vC^MIc'*'“redto®” , power fstMrlng, 'brakes,' power windows; and 6^ay power fleet. Spotless) condition. Clearance special 6t only lioeo full pride |bsf $188 down and 044.23 per mor-One year warranty. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. 1964' OLDS CONVERTIBLE White, black top, excellent < ditlon. One executive owner, ggs^'r”°5?^'si^»:^7ja^'°' 19M OLDSMOBILE 98 >IMa^ '**,^{1!'’’ PPiP^r, y*rco"j‘li295 Suburban OId3 1964 OLDS, HOLIDAY COUPE, dynamic 00, hydrematic, power brakes, radio and healer. Good condition. $725. After 5, 635-3375. 1964 OLDS HARDTOP, pot_ rurp&iMUJslf^: “I see Phil Winslow has an alley reserved!” Another Fine Birmingham Trade 1967 VALIANT $1595 thir auto at our ne* ^e TROY MOTOR 8 le Rd. (15 Milo) 1 ml (-1966 Olds Convertible Double ''power, Red with whi vinyl top end matching Interior. $1695 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Soles Nbw and Used Cart BARGAIN? TRY THB PONTIAC RETAIL STORE FE 3-7951 1984 PONTIAC BONNEVILLt, -irdf^,^4Mnor, all powar, 8890, 464 s. Waodiwrd 1964 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, S99S. "0" down, paymenta, $8.n week. jiLy.Jg8in!!ILgg- HAROLD TURNER 4^ S. Woodward 8 TOHTI AC_^La»^l«, Ing factory elr co windows, AM-FM $2695 Suburban Olds 1966 MUSTANG, 6 166 FORD GALAXIE 500 XL, Very sharp, buckets, auto, floor shiff, radio. 624-0434.________ 1966 THUNDERBIRD LANDAU, .... power, A-). Only $39 down, weekly paymenft $15.81, Full,price $1995. Call Mr.. Parks at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 1966 MUSTANG «rn» nSXRDTOP', ___ radio, hMter. Only $39 ■$i§frar*' 1966 FORD GALAXIE conv^bla, power^staarlng. Asiu—- 1967^0R0 FALCON, . Shift, V-8, 13,425 actual $1500. DavM KMd, 673-3269. 1967 MUSTANG hardtop, rith Mack ' coition "inslSa*!^ outTcSaran special at only — $19n full prli lust S1SB dovm, and $59.16 p ^OHN'^McAUUFFriFORD macujata, best offer, a automatic, 6 cyllndar,''i heator, whitewall tires, warranty, $1699, , HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTEI ■■ 7-095S 1967 FORD SQUIRE, AIR, 1967 FORD COUNTRY Squire, elr, srij.-?"«5rs«{9rar'r as* AAt TURN 1966 Oldsmoblle 2 door hardtop, like new. Can be yours for no UJ(5kY aujo 1941 FE 4-1006.______ 967 OLDS DELTA 4 full power, air condmoni extras .taiOO. 674-2S34. 1967 OLDS TORONADO DELUXE Loaded with all extras, Includ factory air condition, electric « daws, AM-FM stereo. $AVE Suburban Olds Blrn 860 S. Woodward matching Interior, 1966 FORD GALAXIE SOO ... ............ •“I'jiwito $188 down, John' mcauliffe ford t FORD station wagon, 1 Clearance speclaly only $2500 fi price, lust 1108 down. Big trs( allowance. JOHN Mcauliffe ford Oakland Avo. 1968 FORD G A over $3100. 623-0284 Ileage, best 4 after 7 p. .. FORD Falrlana fastback » VO, automatic, raldo, heater, pov steering, 2 to select from only n480 full price. $180 do< JOHN Mcauliffe ford 630 Oakland Ave._______FE 5-4101 168 FORD XL sport coupe, beautiful sun burst gold finish, matching Interior. The finest Ford me‘— builds, V8, automatic, consc power steering, brakes. Ilka n Clearance special only $2780 ' price, lust $188 down. New < warrsmy. JOHN Mcauliffe ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1969 CLUB WAGON These Buses A' FLANNERY MOTORS, INC. . (_Fontierly Beattie- )61 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, beautiful Ice blue with beige Interior, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, power ..„ FALCON 2 door, auto DEALER__________________338-9230 1964 T-biRD, CONVERTIBLE, full ---- radio, whitewalls, likt *- SPARTAN DODGE 1964 FALCON, transmission, absolutely ' -DOOR, snycromash 'adio, heater, $685 a y m a n t s $5.2Z « Call Mr. Ml 4-7500. CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH I Parks, credit manager. Ml 4-7; 8673 D«if."(ftS°,i!)"l^rkston HAROLD TURNfR__F0RD ....... I464 S. Woodward \^ln Aoney Down I JOHN Mcauliffe .FORD 630 Oakland Ave.____FE 5-4101 1963 MERCURY HARD TOP. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 66 OLDS 91, 4 door hardtop, with II power, air mndltlonlng, — Clarkston, AAA V 1966 OLDSMO6ILE HOLIDAY COUPE 98 Power steering, power brak power seat a^pomr windows. Bob Borst Linc6ln-Mercury Sales TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1967 OLDS 98 town aodan, automatic oower steering, bri factory air conditioning, h heator, whitewalls, one owner, — ear trade $2,795. Over 75 other cars to select from. On US 10 at M-1S, Clarkston, AAA 5-S071. 18 1968 Oldsmobrles Tremendous Savings BEST OLDSMOBILE, Inc. 550 Oakland Avenue FE 2-8101 UP-UP..AND AWAY In my I960 Torino, 4-door diamond blue, black vinyl 1 V-8 engine. All power, 1 ditloning, beadresto. $2900. Fli^. 'ofTMa'piy 1968 OLDS 98 HOLIDAY‘HARDTOP power, factory air - ming, vinyl top. Transferable car warranty. $3795 Suburban Olds Birmingham 060 S. Woodward Ml payments of $4.42. C Ar^ Parks credit manner at Ml HAROLD TURNER FORD 464 5. Woodward . Birmingham >64 ME>(?D¥YHi^DTOP, full power, air condition. - *f'*'$7 44 iT'^''’* * manager at Ml 4-750. HAROLD TURNER FORD .Woodward Birmingham 194/ PLYMOUTH MERRY OLDS MO DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE 52$ N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE, —r. 625-2$$2, after 6:30 ^ * 1963 PLYMOUTH FURY 1964 PLYMOUTH, , - owner. 508-3322. - . - - . .lANSPORTATION SPEaALS Parks credit 1964 PLYMOUTH W A G 0 N,*> V automatic, power steering. 965 PLYMOUTH setlan, beautiful metelic sllvjor, blue, with m—•— Interior, awamallc, radio, spectol* onSy^'wS' full'ih down and W 339J1 p» ............ One year warranty. I JOHN Mcauliffe ford I ■ Ft 5-4101 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1965 Citallna *door ladan, auto., doubla powar, radio, T!!!Wfe.Mrg^ 1965 PLYMOUTH FURY .. passenger station wagon, V-6, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, chrome luggage ^s I olor ciHtrdtnaMd Int^r. If a looking for Ihe finest, see - ----------'-^el*ly - $l4St full price, lus and $57.49 per mdhth. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1966 FURY 111 4 door hendtop, grey with black top, automatic, ooubla powar, radio, whit— Factory air conditioning. $15 M-24, Laka Orion. MY *2041. MILOSCH CHRYSLER^LYMOUTH 065 T^pim Custom 4door $a 7^'aSSL wagon, automatic, powar brakaa. QUALITY SPECIALIH 1965 PontlTC convartibla. 421 4 spead. Amimng $750. LUCKY AUTO 196$ TEMPEST, iOM-fEMPHST" fcu8fd»r« di5> after 6;30.__ Staniiarid's Finance Plan BUY HERE-.PAY'HtRE Bankrupt? NEED A FRESH START? TIRED OF WALKING? WE CAN SEU ANYBODY A CAR ALL MAKES AND MODELS QUALITY USED CARS CALL AND ASK FOR Mr, Johnson FE. 8-4033 Mani^ at Ml 4-7500. HAl(0LD TURNER FORD 'hStSfoTo 464 S. Woodward - Blrmlngtjiin 1967 BWNEVILLE BROUGHAM, air ntama. wMowi and dw- Mi luCkyauto 1 1967 PONTIAC Catalina Sport Sidan with ve, automaflc,^ powar stoe KaV"2ora«^''' $2345 Matthews- Hargreaves 631 Oakland Ava. GO! HAUPT PONTIAC And Sava $ 1 $ aMw.'iiisS' ■ AllOETTE PONTIAC Bast e( Bjrmlnoham Ijvtlje T. 1967 Pontiac BOnntvIlle 4-Door Hardtef, ixiwer ataaring, brakes, wlSdws, . • I r,. ditloning, vinyl root, gold ex-torlor. only- $2695 FLANNERY MOTORS, INC. (Formerly Beattie Ford) ___br* 1967 Fli ! Woe x. heetar, . Special Only 111 I lust tIM ■*““ < r, SiidlfriS 'siw). i6«5o6f*rti'r^' ^OHN McAliFFrFORD r'cATALIHA. BLACK 24toi>, SSSg—13HELTON —. pontIAC-BUICK-OPEL 0» S. ROCHESTER ROAD I960 PPNTIAC ..CATALINA . sppri new. Cleercnce Sale — only S29ll lull prict |uU SIM down, new r - 'Ioh'n Mcauliffe ford 630 Oeklend Ave. FE 5-6.- 1968 PONTiAC Firebird. 8 auimatlc. 1968 PONTIAC CATALINA Wagon, 9 pasiangtr, doubla.aowar, axcallant condition. 81700, 651-3743. , Bonnolt, 363-719$ er 601-0934. 1966 PONTIAC CATALlj ?T?irJ!r8T!lfe.'?TS?f audette PONTIAC lATALlS*' coup r**'' ■TTE riAC Very clean, many options. F OW, 81495, Cftarcoal Blue. ’ PONTIAC Catalina, 4 srdlop, full power, black IP, vn paint, super lifts, 1967 FIGEBIRO. SI90O, formar flac show car. 692-0644. AUDETTE PONTIAC East of Birmingham In lha Troi 1960 BONNEVILLE 4door hardtoi hydramatic, power steering an brokts, air cond., and E-Z ay glass, extras. Ilka new, 602-4316. m m 19it" wNtlAC~VENTUWA,^ 4 ^ el. as- PONTIAC East of Birmingham In the Troy -n,. 'vILLAg" RAMBLER - 6-3900 '"'‘ViLLAGE RAMBLER MILOSCH tHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1966 Fury III 4-• McHale’s Navy - Carl Ballantine is featured. (56) R~ TV High School (62) R - Movies: 1. C -“A Star ^ Bom” (1955) Jiidy Ganand, James Mason; 2. “The Pursuers” (1961) Cyril Shaps, Francis Matthews 7:69 (2) C - Tmth o r Consequoices (4) G — News, Weather, Sports (7) C - (Special) Olympic Games. ^ Men’s track andjield, women’s track (56) A library Is 7:39 (2) C - Lapeer, -Pregnant woman’s outlaw father-in-law says nobody will stand between him and the haby. (4) C - Jerry Lewis -Flip Wilson, Nancy Ames and the Osmond Brothers (9) R — Movie: “Fwce of Arms” (1951) William Holden, Nancy Olson, Frank Love joy (50) C — Password (56) R ^ Silent Movie: “An Hour With CharUe Chaplin” - Highlights of the great comedian’s films. 8:00 (50) C-Pay Cards 8:30 (2) C - Red " ' Martha Raye First Edition _ (4) C - Juiia - Julia hopes for a quiet weekend, but... (7) C - It Takes a TWef — An international fence is peddling a sample of a new solid rocket fuel — which can be molded into practicaliy any shape. (50) R C - Hazel (56) Conversations^ in Depth 9:00 (4) C - Movie: “The R e 1 u ctant Astronaut” (1967) Apprentice janitor makes a shaky transition into space hero. Don Knotts, Arthur O’Connell, Joan Freeman (50) R — Perry Mason 9:30 (2) C - (Special) CBS Playhouse — Lloyd Bridges and Kim Hunter star in “The People Next Door,” the stoty of a family being destroyed by the generation gap, drugs and a Mack of understanding. (7) C - N,Y.F.D. - A young girl is killed in the park, but a witness who can identify the kHler won’t talk. (9) C — (Quentin Durgens — (^ent is trapped into being a guqst on a public affairs ’TV show — and he becomes a hit. 10:00 (7) C - niat’s Life -Robert Goulet and Alan King guest as the honeymooning pair contend with Gloria’s cooking and, worse, Gloria’s mother. (50) C — News, Weather, Sports 10:30 (9) Newsmagazine (50) C — Les Crane (62) Star Performance 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (62) R - Movie: “Night Train for hivemess” (English, 1959) Norman Wooland 11:30 (2) R C - Movie: “AM the Fine Young Cannibals” (1960) Robert Wagner, Natalie Wood, George Hamilton (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop — Radio Programs— WJRI760) WXYZd 270) CKLW(800) WW)(950) WCAR(1130) WPONQ 460) WJBKQ500) WHW-0*0(O^Zl tivLW. lom »n»nnon . , WPON, Nawt, Phon* Optnior WCAR, Nevn, Ron Rom NOTSTTSank O'Noll «r1S-wjR, Sports 4iS»-WWJ, Todiy ---------- WJRV"BUto!S!l*Tlm# Tr«v-' olor «:4^WJR, Uwtll Thomao. Autoacor* 7:W-WWJ, SportiU... WCAR, Na^ Rtck WWJ, RM|tTriCK lk«|lorif WJR, Reaioner Reports TsJS-WJR, Choral Cavalcade 7:5S-WJR, Sports *:0*-WJR, "*"* ii15-WJR, paign 'a I:»-WJR, rjgi8—wnrir MfiR Mutlc Till Dawn WXYZ, NOWS Jim Davis CKLW, Ffank ^odto WCAR, News, Wayne PW WIORBSOAV MORNIN* diie-WJR, Music Hall WWJ, Neva S^KtK.'SSa. -----News, Ce------ - News. Mueic I, Rod Mlllv I, News, Jerry v llilS-WJR, News, Kalaldo-WH^t^lm Zioaer IliW-WJimMM, Rwm M, Newt, R t.ivLW,'Jlin Eaw.. 11:IS-WJR, Focus liW-WjR. Ngwa, Arthur 1i|»-WVXYZ, Johnny Randall tiW--WPOM, , H. WHpCT!Ii Lyne WJ^^NeWs, ri»s CKLW, Ed Mitchell Ii1S--WjjlL|^Toinorrow'a Llv-News, Cnmklte, Lum V Ahnar TV Features T«il|^t OLYMPIC GAMES, pjn, (7)- JERRY p.m.'(4) LEWIS, 7:31 CBS PLAYHOUSE, 9:30 p.m, (2) THAT’S UFE, 10 p.m. (7) OLYMPIC GAMES, p.m. (7) V (9) R — Movie: “His Majesty O’Keefe” (1964) Burt Lancaster, Joan Rice (50) R — Movie: “Hie 1;et into the British Army; his House on 92nd Street’ (1945) Lloyd Nolan, Signe Hasso, Gene Lockhart 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News (9) Window on the World 1:30 (2) RC-Capture 2:00 (2) R-Highway Patrol ■2:30 (2) C - News, Weather WEimESDAY MORNING 5:45 (2) On the Farm Scene 5:50 (2) C-News 6:00 (2) C - Sunrise Sepnester (4) Classroom 6:30 (2) C — Gospel Singing JubUee (4) C-Ed Allen 6:45 (7) C-Bat Fink 7:00 (2) C - Woodrow the Brother Vincent wanted to get out. They switched places, and one landed in court and the other in the guardhouse. Raymond, 25, had been turned down by the army but saw his chance when Vincent, 23, went absent without leave from a unit he had just joined. Posing as Vincent, Raymcmd gave himself up and served a month’s detention for being AWOL. BigRod(Cod May Be Record DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania (AP) — Frank Armand, Dar es Salaam’s champion spear fisherman, has landed a rock cod weighing 101 pounds 5 ounces— thought the biggest rock cod landed on the East African coast using a rubber-powered gun. His fish is only 17 pounds lighter than one shot a year ago in the same area, near Mafia Isiand, on Tanzania’s southern coast, by Italian fisheilmen, who used guns with explosive heads. The biggest rock cod caught in the area weighed 232 pounds. It was caught with a baited line. But a bigger one was landed in, Tanga, on the north coast, a few years ago; it weighed 550 pounds. The fisherman used the hindquarters of a goat as bait. Rock cod estimated to weigh up to 1.000 pounds have been a along the East African coast. Woodsman (4) C-Today (7) C —.Morning Show 7:50 (9) MmYan’s Merry-Go-Round 6:69 (2) C - Captain Ka^aroo (9) C-Tales of file River 1:30 (7) R - Movie: “Young Man With Ideas” (1952) Glenn Ford, Nina Foch, Ruth Roman (9) Frioidly Giant (56) TV High School Brothers'Trade Ends in Trouble ALDERSHOT, England (AP) Raymimd Longley wanted to The imposture lasted two months until Vincent got tired of being Raymond and turned himself in. In court Monday, Raymond pleaded guility to charges of taking army pay under false pretenses. He was released on probation for 12 months. Vincent is in the guardhouse awaiting court-martial trial on charges of desertion. ‘ Levin Calls for Political Overhauling 6:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) C - Merv Griffin (4) C-Steve Allen (9) C-Bozo 9:15 (56) Science Is Discov--ery 9:30 (56) Listen and Say 9:50 (56) Spanish Lesson-10:60 (4) C—Snap Judgment (9) C — Plnocchk) 10:10 (56) pf Cabbages and Kings 10:25 (4) C - News 10:30 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies (4) C — Concentration (7) DickCavett (9) C —Wizard of Oz 10:35 (56) Reason and Read 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (2) R - Andy of Mayberry (4) C — Personality (9) Mf. Ur*ssap (50) -Mack La Lanne 11:15 (56) l^terogers 11:30 (2) R-Dick Van Dyke (4)C — Hollywood Squares (9) Take 30 (50) R-Kimba 11:45 (56) TV Kindergarten By CYN1HU LOWRY APTdevisioMtadtoWMu NEW YORK — MM Ga|imor came along Monday nl^t wltti an NBC special that was an impressive showcase for her talents. The show was handsome, lighthearted and bouncy. comedienne to femme from singer to dancer to sketch actress. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Flower Shower for Korean Envoy All a Mistake CAMBRIDGE, England (AP) - Chrysanthemum petals showered on the head of South Korean ambassador Ei Whan Pal Monday because his hosts thought that was the Korean custom. In my coqntry we do throw flowers around,” the ambassador explained. “We present them to people in the form of garlands and bouquets.” YPSILANTI (AP) - State Democratic Chairman Sander Levin Mniday night called for two “obvious changes” in political institutims involving a study of national conventions and a probe of financing political campaigns. Tile needed changes. Levin lid a group of Eastern Michigan University professors supporting the Humphrey-Muskie ticket, are: • “This method of nominating presidential candidates which would have to include study of the role today of national cmi-ventions, and an increase of the individu^’s role possible through a system of national primaries. “This method of political campaign financing so greater emi^asis is placed on the small, individual contributor, possibly by some form 6f tax incentive, and a system to insure TV discussions nationwide at a*reason-able cost so candidates are not drastically handicapped by lack of big money.” A spokesman for Pye Ltd., the British TV equipment conmany that was entertaining the ambassador, explained: “We telephoned Ae South Korean Embassy in London and asked if there was any special Korean custom we could use. We must have got the information mud- The flower petals were thrown by Hijong Hyun, 23-year-old daughter of another South Korean diplomat. She said she had her doubts about the ceremony, ‘but I thouj^t it was maybe an old British custom.” Food* Extension WASHINGTON (AP) - The Department of Agriculture in Washington has amMxinced ex-tension of the federal food stamp program to the fbllbwlog lOeb-igan ebunttes: Alf^, Allegan, Antrim, Barry, Bonzie, Bnmdi, C3are, Ointon, Delta, IHddnson, Eaton, Genesee, Grand Traverse, HUladde, Isabella, Mason, Muskegon, Ogemaw, Sagr inaw, Schoolcraft, Sbiawasseei and St. Joseph- | Safety Funds Set WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal Department of Transportation report released Monday says Michigan will need ah mated $1.4 billion for highway safety programs during the fiscal years 1967 to J976. Hie department said all state and local governments ctxnbined would need at least $12 billion more for the period than they are providing at the present rate. In the report to President Johnsem and Congress, the department did not say who should pick up the tab for the extra money. But a spokesman said officials assume part of the need woidd come from the federal government and part from state and local governments. Ex-Filipino Chief's Son a Candidate 12:00 (2) C - News (4) C — Jeopaidy (7) R —Bewitched (9) Lunch with Bozo (50) C-Alvin 12:15 (56) Friendly Giant 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C - Search for Tomorrow (4) C — News, Weather, ■ Sports (7) C — Treasure Isle (9) C — Bill Kennedy’s Hollywood (50) R — Movie: “Jane Eyre” (1944) Orson Welles, Joan Fontaine (56) Animal Trackers -12:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:55 (4) C-News 1:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C —Match Game (7) C—(Special)—Olympic Games—Men’s track and field. ( 9) R — Movie: “Hazard” (1948) Paulette Goddard, MacDonald Carey 1:05 (56) Art Lessw 1:25 (2) C-News (4) C — Carol Duvall (56) Science Is Discovery 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C — Let’s Make a Deal 2:00 (2) C - Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game ■ (56) Listen and Say 2:15 (56) American History 2:30 (2) C-Guiding Light (4) C —Doctors (7) C —Dating Game (50) R — Make Ro«n fw Daddy 2:40 (56) Danish Lesson 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — (jeneral Hospital (9) R — Real McCkiys (50) R — Topper (56) Auto Mechanics 3:30 (2) C — Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C — One life to Live (9) C —Lively (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Memo To Teachers (62) R — Ann Sothem 4:00 (2) C — House Party (4) C — Dimald O’Ckmnor (7) C — Dark Shadows (56) Busy Knitter (9) C — Swingin’ Time (62) R — Robin Hood 4:25 (2) C — News 4:30 (2) C - Mike Douglas (7) R— Movie: “Road to Rio” (1947) Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, Dorothy Lamour (9) C - Magic Shoppe (50) R — Little Rascals (56) TV Kindergarten (62) C — Rae Deane, Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (9) R C - Batman (50) R —Superman (56) Misterogers 5:30 (4) C-George Pierrot (9) R C-Gulligan’s Island (50) Munsters (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) Art Studio Mifzi Shines in Cat BaBoa,” an ABC of a fairly recent hit movla, who aie moved from country-sWe name fatalo. She danced numbers that ranged from jigs in cotton dress sunbonnet to production numbers in a swirl of chiffon and fathers. She sang songs and sad songs. She had an album of objectionable people in one sketch and they were headed by the telephone bore who starts, “Guess who this is?” Most amusing comedy bits kidded old movies-Rosalind Russell in her 1940 lady-executive films and Doris Day in her innocent maiden period were fiercely ribbed. ONE-WOMAN SHOW The hour was essentially a one-woman show. The sets were lavish and so were some of Miss Gaynor’s costumes. The guest stars-George Hamilton and Phil Harris—didn’t have much to do. The only time Miss Gaynor let the audience down was when she tried for the sad or poigant one sketch and one song. Neither was exactly right for her, but then she was probably just coasting to catch her breath. broadcast during fiio fi^ wodi in October, according to a NieL sen rep’NI*US4ISS add-a-room Lot ua haaiat you in youw plana for o biiatt 'new clean ond eomfortablo room for your growii^ family. Thorw am new idoot and we uae only the finest material* and croftamonahip. Spneial Prieos Now! AS LOW AS Evorythimg in ModanuMotion soaMSRs * SASASis • aooFiia • ALUNIINHiAaOVIim.SIDIM MYt... NMUn... «W WNMYi OUl . tioWMlNuron CIB^don y’ssjffi’ ' ObnslnnhonOa pg 4.aS9Y B—12 V THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1962 OCC FaH Enrollment Tallies ^5<^Pct. Increase Qver 1967 OekUmd Commuoity College’s Ull enroUment is 10,024, S. James Manilla, ccUege director ^ Eiducatioiial Services, an>< foonced today. It represents an 83 per cent increase over 1967’s 5,455 and • 159 per cent increase over the college’s initial enrollment of /, fSOO in 1965, he said. : Orchard Ridge campus in Itominghm Township leads in the number of students with fil48, while Auburn IQlls in Ron-tiac Townsh^ has 2,042 and ffigfaland Lakes in Waterfcwd Township, 1,^. -Us i Taking apin-entlceship-techni-cal programs are 944 students |nd 1,107 attend classes at ex-tensim centers fhrou^out the county. A total of 8,625 students, representing 87 per cent of the enrollment, are residents of the Oakland County CoDege District; in state but out-of-district students numbered 1,226 or 12 per cent. Hie remaining 1 per cent is composed draft “A great hue and cry went up ^m graduate schools when the new policy on draft itefmments was announced,” Col. Holmes said. “Some 'Educators predicted enroUnmt drops of 40 per c«it — but iKto« ^ happened.” Last Fevruary military draft deferments were eliminated for all but medical and ministry graduate students. Previously a college graduate coiild b e deferred for advanced study without qualificatim. ★ ★ ★ , College officials say they are still concerned about the future impact of the law change on graduate enrollments. “Right now our situati«i looks good on paper,” said an MSU spokesman. “However, I suspect ' it will change by January or February if calls go up and the draft boards begin dipping down into the graduates. DEPENDS ON QUOTAS Byron Groesbeck, assistant dean of graduate affairs at U-M, ewnmented: “I really don’t know what the situation will be the first of the year ... it all depemis on the quotas.” Henry Bohm, vice president of graduate studies and research at Wayne, said a lot would depend on who wins the Nov. 5 presidential election. “It ak) deliends on the course tlMs Paris peace talks take, along with the way the war Itself goes,” he said. SYLVANIA STEREO COMBINATION CONTEMPORARV in walnut. Stuion hi-fi with AiM-FM and FM-tlurm *2SO In SYLVANIA STEREO COMBINATION SYLVANIA STEREO COMBINATION MEDITERRANEAN In Rocan. StoiM hLR, with AM-FMy FM-Dtorww m-dio. Gorrarcl piwfottloftol twmtabi*. Svtponaion tpoakor Dyatom. Rocorrf itorofo. Extonfkm spoohor and top* vocordar {tfckt. EARLY AA4EWCAN in AlUip4a. Stoiwa hhR wHh AA4^M* PM-efovae radio. Gairaid prafottioiwl tamtadvla. Soniomlow tpoaliof •yttom. Rocord tlorado. EiitoniiNwi •poobor ond fapo racofdar Rickt. *260 *260 ^ / SYLVANIA STEREO COMBINATION *260 SYLVANIA 23” DIA. COLOR TV COMBINATION r. 395 «|. in, Cdar TV with ntonM hi-fi an waw. AotwMtic Fhw Tunbia Cwiltol. Oonaid •paohar uyitam. Tapa (acla. Chip cl • 90-day tantea. 3-yaar calar tuba $800 SYLVANIA 23" DIA. COLOR TV COMBINATION IAW.Y AMIRICAN. 295 m|. In. «et.ntulor edwwith .t..^ hm and AM-fM tlntM ladla Garnnf tumlabl. wHh dlamMid ddut. Air iu.. pnnilon tound .ytlnni. T.p. (nchi. *<«*» AmnfiMn wbinat In din-tn.»d mnpin wend.. fi« VOdny widen. 2-y«ir ednt tub# wnnan-ty. Fraa horn* triol. «850 V / SYLVANIA 23” DIA. , COLOR TV COMBINATION CONTEMFORARV. 395 .4. In. inelanaular edw with .twan hi-S, AiW-FM, FMUIanw radio. A.F.C. Oomid lumtaUa. Diamand etylu.. Air wupaarlaa Mund qr.^. Tapa locln. OSad wohut wood, hi wMit Danidi dylliit. Mldiat doan. Fraa 9(hday Mnica. Zyaar calar tuba *895 SYLVANIA 23” COLOR COMB. WITH REMOTE CONTROL KANOINAVIAir. 395 cq. In. Color TV with ttaiaa hi-fi and AM-FM •faraa ladio. WHh MUMOW TUNINO CONTROL. A.F.C. cwttch. Oaiiaid »995 L-a 1 ^ INSTANT CREDIT k*5 CF«dit buy- ____ -han««v9r. All mojer ciwdit eard$, bottle PONTIAC AAALL dakland TELEGR4PH RD., CORNER ELIZABETH UKE RD. OPEN DAILY 10 TO 0 « PHONE 682-2330 1-76 at 14 MILE RD. OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 PHONE 585-5T43 FREE DELIVERY FREE SERVICE OCTOBER ft 19 MICRO PHOTO DIVISION BELL & HOWELL COMPANY Harambee Spells Out Its Plan to)Bul m By BOB WISLER Inc. efforts to biitiate new housing in the Pontiac’s southwest section apparently are. succeeding beyond expectations^ Last night officials of the all-Negro nonprofit corporation, the firm’s consultants and planners, and the Pontiac coordinator of the Metropolitan Detroit Citizens Development Authority (MDCOA) outlined r tim^bte which calls for: • Construction of 19.5 miUitm worth of new bousing, and commercial -facilities and . rehabilitation of 48 mni^family residences in the next year. • Construction of nearly 1,800 new living units in the next five years at a total mortgage price of $31 million. William. Hawkins, the M D C D A coordinator, ^king at an informal meeting of the city commission last night, said MDCDA and the fledgling Negro corporatum are ready to roll on the first three of a planned 10-project program. The ttiree phases call for: « Coostructian of 80 apartment-type units and 40,000 square feet of com-rnerdai or neighborhood service facilities on a seven-acre site bounded by Howard McNeil, Warner, Diston and the Canton River. Construction of 172 units — a mixture of some form of public housing and relativdy expensive condlminiunii units — on a 17-aCre site now contaiiung the Crystal Beadh housing project. • Construtcion of 200 new houses and rehabilitatuHi of 48 existing ones in an area bounded roughly by Fisher, Frank- lin Road, Fildew and the Pontiac Municipal Golf Course. NEW METHOD Hawkins said that with utilization of a comparatively new method of housing construction the new units can be completed next year. The program outlined by Hawkins is ambitious, he sard. He concluded, however, that the total program can be completed wUb the help of tbg cifjr sod federal government within five ytm, Once completed, he said, It will be for the rest of the country an outstanding ex* amide of civic and ci^ cooperation. ^ ^ ★ ■ ★ ★ ■ . ■' , Hawkins said federal topis will have . to be used to complete the project, but,t„ he said, the first three phrases can be , (Continued on Page A-2, CoL 3) Arbitrator Route for 1-696 Is Told by the Governor LANSING (AP)^rGov. George Romney ’today announced the route of the controversial proposed 1-698 Freeway in six Oakland County cities and one township. The governor announced the proposed route as decided by a three -man panel of. professional arbitrators. Affected are the municipalities of Southfield, Lathrup Village^ Oak Park, Huntington Woods, *PIeasafit Ridge, Royal Oak and Royal Oak Township. The board decided the route fw 1—696 between the control point on Lhngfellow near Ift-Mile Road in Royal Oak and the control point on Lasher Road immediately south of 11 Mile Road in Southfield shall be as follows; From control point on Longfellow near 10-Mlle Road in Royal Oak, westerly to the control poipt at about Maplefield and 18-Mile Road in Royal Oak (this route is a compromise by Royal Oak); thence westerly to the control point on Greenfield ftoad at about 10%-mile Road in Oak Park, tiie route shall be the Highway Departni^’s recommended route; thence westerly to the control point on Lahser Roait tininediately ^outtTTjf It Mile Road in Southfield; the route shall be the Highway Department’s recommended 11-Mile Road route. ** SU. $. WMHwr aiMW VwacMl Purtly Suiiay, Warm ABOUT 2 YEARS Henrik Stafseth, state highway director, said it would take about two years to redesign the route, get approval from the Federal Bureau of Public Roads, and let contracts for the work. Stafseth added it would then take another two years to complete the $100-million project. ★ ★ ♦ Romney said the five-year delay in the project had already cost $50 million. . Stafseth said “by the very nature of its assignment, the arbitration board could not have chosen a route satisfactory to all six of the cummunities involved in the arbitration.” SOFT-PEDAUNG A CIRCUS - Steve McPeak plans to ride this 13-foot unicycle 2,200 miles from Chicago to Las Vegas to promote a circus in the Nevada town. He’s shown on the Windy City’s busy Michigan Avenue as he started the trip yesterday. A companion follows him with a ladder truck so he can get up and down. Steve plans to cover 80 miles a day — unless he runs into a low underpass. Little Change Made ‘ESSENTIAL ROUTE’ He said the freeway is essential to in County Budget Michigan’s transportation system and to the people in southeastern Michigan, The decision ^f the arbitration board is supposed to be binding accordit^ to a recently adopted state law creating the group. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 2) It's Indiatv Summer Today, Tomorrow I Indian summer will linger at least another day with skies mostly * sunny through tomorrow. There’s a chance of showers late tomorrow afternoon or night. . y Temperature will continue warm with the high ne^ 80. The low is expected to be in the 6()s tonight. ByEDBLUNDEN Two committees of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors took a second look at the proposed $25.8-million county budget for 1969 yesterday and after about an hour’s discussion decided it was^ okay. The only change was a proposed slicing of Road Commission pay and functions. The budget, largest ever, contains sharp pay increases for almost all employes. Raises range from about 8 to 20 per cent and average about 11 per cent. Salaries are the largest expenditure called for, $11.7 million. Of this about $1.1 million represents wage increases. The budget came under fire at the yearly public hearing, the only one NEW PROPOSAL I outlook is mostly cloudy with a chance ol s]||wers and turning cooler late in me daj® Preciptation probabilities in per cent are: today 5, tonight 10, tomorrow 20. Torches Tonight to Light UF Path A mild 61 was the low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m.’By 12:30 p.m. the mercury reached 76. h Today's Press The Pontiac Area United Fund drive for $1,130,000 begins at 9 tonight with a dual torchlighting ceremony at Pontiac Mall and City Hall. A special section detailing where the UF dollar goes is in today’s Pontiac Press. The money is divided between 5S health, welfare, youth and research agencies. Campaign Chairman Alger V. Conner the dual will conduct the countdown for the dual Prn ftnt/ rnii torchlighting via a Red Cross radio. ■ Conner will be at the formal ball for 2®® campaign workers. The 8:30 event at the HoUday Inn is spon-McCullough Realty. Inc. improvement - PAGE A-4, ^ ^ * Prison Trouhfe ~ ~ ^®*^*^*’ around once nnd then give it to Ralph Norvell, chair- *«•"«•» *—»” - rgr.sih' Best One Yet du'pucate ceremony Soft-coal miners sign new con- - a similar ceremony will take place at iaeeet f** PAOE.A'I Pontlac Mail where Mrs. Jack Ross, . ' A1 chairman of the community division, will mews ’■ 0^ made by Consumers Power Co., will D-U remain lighted as symbols of hope until thecampaigngoalisreached.Thecam-^ paign runs through Nov. 8. , ' ’ The goal breakdown for each division lltiAets , . *IM is: ■ community, $28,476; conunercial, h *.'04 $294,274; manufacturing, $40,780; (3en- ’ ®*'®1 Motors, $745,800; Brandon Township, $2,654; and special gifts, $i0,l08. ’IV^ lUhilo ^arams. .W ' — — — NEW BOARD - PONTIAC PRESS ........,... . PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1908 NO. :J10 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ASSOCIATED PRESS jo PAflWfil UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL -----* XXVrJlifiJ IOC Apollo 3rd of Way; Crew All Has Colds SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -Apollo 7’s astronauts sped past the one-third distance mark today with all three pilots battling colds for the first time and concerned about stuffed-up ears that may be painful on reentry. Meanwhile, with the majority of their flight surgeon, said today, “and there’s a slight question in my mind as to whether Walt Ckinningham just has a few sumptons such as a little bit of sniffles and maybe a slight nasal discharge or whether he has a full-blown cold syndrome.” mission goals already achieved, astronauts Walter M. Schirra Jr., Donn SCHEDULE CONTINUES F. Eisele and Walter Cunningham planned another spdceship-to-earth telecast today of the Wally, Walt and Donn Show. In the first seven-minute broadcast yesterday when Navy Capt. Schirra delighted millions of home viewers with a sign greeting them from “The lovely Apollo room high atop everything.” “It appears that at least Donn Eisele and Wsdter Schirra have bona fide colds,” Dr. John Zieglschmid astronaut There was no reason to believe the problem would force the mission to be ended sooner than the 11 days planned, he added. Schirra, who has been bothered by a cold since his second day in space, “is about holding his own on his ears,” Cunningham reported in a volunteered medical report to ground controllers concerning ear stuffiness. “Donn may be getting a little worse,” he said,‘^“and my ears are still clear and that’s barely it.” Prior to his report late yesterday, Eisele appeared to be the only astronaut to escape symptoms of the virus. “Have, the doctors done any talking down there about the possibility of one or all of us having a cold and stuffed-up ears on re-entry?” Cunningham queried. Stuffed-up ears could be painful on reentry, scheduled Oct. 22, since the crew will experience an increase in atmospheric pressure as they near sea level. Officials advised the crew to save three decongestant pUIs — one for each pilot — to help clear up the discharge in their ear-nasdl passages. The decongestant, coupled with the fact that Apollo 7 will not repressurize rapidly, should mean that “we do not have a problem” in re-entry, Zieglschmid said. / y called for by statute, Oct. 7. Protesters paraded to the microphone at the hearing objecting to farge increases in spending. ’Die over-all budget proposal is about $4.7 million above 1968. Some supervisors also objected and the budget was ordered sent back to the ways and means and personal policies committees for restudy. After the discussion yesterday it was decided to resubmit the budget almost as it was. Another meeting is expected in about 10 days. The only change recommended was a cut in the proposed salary of a road commissioner. The commissioners had not been given a salary increase in the budget, but their stipend remained at $12,000 yearly. The new proposal is to place the salary scale at from $4,000 to $12,000 yearly. This would only affect Frazer Stamen, the commissioner coming up for reappointment in January. The three road Commissioners serve six-year terms, after appointment by the board of supervisors. One comes up for reappointment every two years. « ’The supervisors discussed eliminating the Road Commission as it now exists. The announced objective was to make* the body a part-time advisory group. Allowing the supervisors to pqt the commissioners on the low salary scale was seen as a step toward altering the nature of the commission. If the salary scale Is approved by the entire board of supervisors, it would be up to the new board to make the changes. MISSION CONTROL WATCHES SPACE TELEVISION- Control, watch the television reception from Apollo 7 at the Glynn Lunney, Flight Director for Apollo 7 (back to camera). Manned Spacecraft on a small screen at the console and on a and Jerry Griffin, Flight Director of the third shift at Mission larger projection screen in the background. Pontiac's Hope in Olympics •-1 The new board will have 27 members after the Nov. 5 election which will establish one-man, one-vote in county government under redistricting-. Diver Has Winning' Twist | In a morning session yesterday, the nitteh heai ' ways and means committee heard a group representing mothers receiving Aid to Dependent Children (ADC). The group asked for a $60 yearly addition to the state allowances to provide for more clothing. They also demanded the use of the county clothing stoj-e at 1 Lafayette in Pontiac be discontinued. The protesters picketed and slept-in at the social services building at the County Center for a three-week period which ended last week. The ways and means committee agreed to hear their’ complaints and at the conclusion of the hearing, an investigation of the clothing store was ordered. It was pointed out the clothing store, which serves othbr county agdheies, has been in operation for 38 years. “Perhaj^s it is time to reevaluate our policy,” said David ’Levinson, chairman of the committee. , By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Poutiac Press MEXICO CITY - Micki King, Pontiac diver competing in the 19th World Olympiad Has the “twist” which can enable/'her to win the world’s most co\^ed title among women divers. The expert who makes this statement is University of Michigan diving coach Dick Kimball, who coached the U.S. divers in the 1964 Olympics at Tokyo. TOP DIVER “Micki is without doubt one of the best woman divers in the world,” said Kimball, who is in Mexico City at poolside daily coaching the former Pontiac Central girl who is now a lieutenant in the Air Force. “I think Micki can win the gold medal,” adds Kimball, “but whether she does or not, she will have to be considered'as one of the top three divers ever in this country.” Kimball points out that Lt. King has performed dives that no woman would ever think of doing years back or even now. Preliminary diving competition begins Thursday for women and the finals are slated for Friday evoung. “She is diving beautifully,” said Kimball during practice this week.” I can usually tell by the way she is doing her hurdles and the reverses. The reverse one-and-half is a key dive fw her. She is a little weak on it, but even so she is doing it as well as anyone here. There’s no woman diver in the world who can match Micki on the twist," says Kimball. “This is vdiere sIk can'win.” GOOD UNDE^R PRESSURE “Micki is strohg and she does hei* best under pressure. If she is ahead in the preliminaries (M* even dose to the lead she will win it,” says Kimball, “because she saves her best for the final three dives Which is where the points are won.” The reverse one-and-half with a two- (C>)ntinued on Page A-2, Cd. 4) £ p*CF}i THE PONTIAC PRESSr TUK^AY. pCl!OBEB,:lA,,1098 VP Challenges Nixon Tfrmmghdm ■ to Shun Wallace Deal City OKs Bids on 3 Trucks, By United Press Internattonal Hubert H. Humphrey says George C. Wallace is willing to bargain his elec^ toral votes to the “highest bidder” bUt insists “I am not bidding.” He challdr^-ed Richard M. Nixon to make the same statement. Wallace’s Sectoral votes to the GOP candidate. Nixon aides denied it, charging the vice president with “trick campaign gimmickry.” THOMAS E. WILSON EDWARD A. KAEGI Nixon himself has had nothing to say about charges from the Humphrey camp thatfWallace and Nixon have held secret talks on the possibility of giving Related Stories, Page A-3 Two Bloomfield Hills Execs Given New Posts at GM Panama Junta. Seems in Charge Humphrey, in his first news conference in three weeks, said Wallace has said he would not allow the election to be thrown into the House of Representatives but would dec^ide in the event of a split election which of the other two candidates to back. look like “Nixon is keeping bis options open for an electoral c^ege deal with the third-party candidate.” It was O’Brien who charged that secret negotiations were being held, saying “It would seem they . y, lie at the root ot Nixon’s rehisal.. in other pdidcal developments: t Nixon, confident of his lead, was reportedly considering members for an economic team to turn campaign promises on urban problems into a legislative Leaf-Loader Two Bloomfield Hills men have been anwinted to new positions at General Motors Corp. Thomas E, Wilson of 246 Guilford has been named executive in charge, Real Estate Activites for GM. He replaces Edward A. Kaegi of 569 Rudgate, who has been assigned to special activities on the staff of Joseph E. Godfrey, vice president in charge of the GM manufacturing staff. Kaegi retires Jan. 1, 1969. Both assignments become effective Nov. 1.: • Wilson is now administrative assistant to the general manager of the GMC Truck and Coach Division. He joined the division in 1942 as supervisor of labor relations. He was named head of the division’s personnel department in 1944, production manager in 1951 and general manufacturing manager in 195,3, He assumed his current position in 1967. RESPONSIBLE FOR RETOOLING Gdurt Will Hear Death-Row Plea WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court has agreed to hear a death-row appeal that could result in further limits on capital punishment. The court, which ruled last term that jurors cannot be excitaied from capital punishment cases for opposing the death penalty in principle, agreed yesterday to hear the appeal of a man sentenced to die for armed robbery. ★ * ★ ★ The convict, Edward Boykin Jr., pleaded guilty to holding'up five Mobile, Ala.^ stores. He conteds his. death sentence is “cruel and unusual punishment” in violation of the Constitution’s 5th Amendment. The court turned down another attack on the death penalty. That one was lodged by Thomas A. Alvarez, facing death for the murder of a Lincoln, Neb., housewife. This suggests the court ihay go part of the way limiting the death penalty. Among a score of cases accepted for argument was the first direct attack on the power of military courts to try servicemen for crimes committed off-post and off-duty. - Wilson was responsible for the retooling of the division’s engine line in 1959 and 1960 and was responsible for modification of the engine production line to accommodate the four-cycle diesel engine program in 1963-64. •Kaegi joined the Delco-Remy Division In 1926. He served as engineer, process department until 1928 and assistant bead of process engineering before being assigned as assist^t factory superintendent in 1932. s Id 1938, while superintendent of the carburetor plant, Kaegi waS selected as works manager by the Delco-Radio Divison^s plant at Kokomo, Ind. In 1953 Kaegi was named general manager of the Detroit Transmission Division and in 1956 was appointed general manager of the Browm-Lipe-Chapin Wvision. He assumed his current position in 1962. PANAMA (AP) -T- The Panamanian junta appeared to. be firmly in control today after a call from deposed President Amulfo Arias for total war against the new government failed to produce any sign of organized resistance. A spdcesman for the National Guard, the country’s army, said the country was quiet. Heavily armed- guards patrolled the capital Monday,- ready for any shows of, unrest, but none developed. OPTIONS OPEN? Humphrey’s campaign manager, Lawrence F. O’Brien, said earlier Monday that Nixon’s refusal to debate Humphrey on national television made it, • Wallace, in Fresno, charged his rivals for the presidency offer only “complicated solutions to simple problems.” • Humphrey has received the support of two southern newspapers: the Atlanta Journal, largest newspaper in Georgia, and the Louisville, Ky., Courier-Journal. Micki's Twist Victory Key BIRMINGHAM - Bids totaling 17,871 from Mike Savoie ChevrMM fbr a half^ ton pickup, truck; and three cAie-ton dump . trucks for fiie Department ot Puble Works, were accepted last night by City Commission. Contract for a leaf loader was awarded, to Greg Ware Equipment Co. for its low bid of $3,000. ★ ★ ★ The commissim approved a request from the Birmingham Women’s Club to take over -Clizbe Allen Park m MapI^. opposite Southfield. The city will work with tile club'in developing the park into* a wildlife sanctuary. The commission will also ask the Detroit office of the Army Corps of Engi-neerf to study the possilMUty of eliminating 8(M‘ing flood problems on the Rouge River. - (Continued From Page One) Arbitrators' Route for 1-696 Unveiled (Continued From Page One) Several cities, however, have indicated they may challenge t|e constitutiwiality of the board in/tbe co|rt if they find the decisirograms would be directed. The survey, which polled 13 per cent of the 10,000 jxmsons living in the project area, produced extensive results. Perhaps the mqit interesting is that household heads living in the affected areas have been living there an average of about 20 years — li in the same dwelling unit — and that most persons wanted to stay in their neighborhoods and their oity. • Hang onto all city-owned land in the develi^iment area so it can be used in a manner consistent with the development plan. Hawkins noted that the city planning commission had reviewed the plan and had advised thg City Commission to attempt to implement it. CAME IN FEBRUARY MDCDA sent Hawkins to Pontica in February to help with a number of local businesses paying his office expenses. Hawkins help^ organize Harmambee, Inc. (Harambee is a Swahili word meaning ‘let us work together”., with principal officers elected from thrfoughout the Negro community. Hawkins said it was possible to start jponstruction this .year, but the participating groups felt they did not want to begin until the needs and goals of the black community involved were known to all. NO. 1 NEED When asked what they thought the No. 1 need for them was, the answer usually was “tetier housing.” The project area is bouUded roughly by Orchard Lake Road, Franklin Road, the Pimtiac Municipal Golf Cmine, and toe Clinton Rivar. * • * ★ ★ Hawkins said redevelopment of the area will require a team effort by Harambee, MDCDA’ the city and the Pontiac school district. ' He asked that the city: • Apply for NDP funds, which he paid can te appiroved by the federal government in a relatively short time. • Initiate steps to upgrade offensive properties including two junkyards, the defunct American Forge and Socket Co. and other non-conforming uses. Congress Gets 'Good' Rating as Session Ends WASHINGTON (AP) - The 90th Congress, described by a Senate leader as good but nqt great, is over. After trying for three days to muster the House quorum needed to approve aidjournnnent, leaders gave Up Monday and voted anyway to end the session. This was possible because no one in either the House or Seriate raised the question of a quorum. / Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Montana, (nronounced this valedictory; “This has teen a good Congress, not a great Congress, not a poojr Congress.” SIGNIFICANT UWS It's Time to Enter Cooperation Asked in- City Jr. Miss Pageant your Leaves for Pickup Applications for the Pontiac Area Junior Miss Pageant are now available. The pageant is Nov. 9. The pageant, sponsored by the Pontiac Area Jaycees, is open to high school seniors between the ages of 16 and 19. Judging is based on scholastic ability, poise, appearance, physical fitness, and creative and performing arts. ... Pontiac Jaycees are currently showing the 1968 America’s Junior Miss film in high schopls. ijlATlONAL WEATHER — There will be showers in the northern and central Roqkiss tonight with some snow in the higher elevations. Showers and thundershowers are predicted in the southern Rockies and there will be, scattered showers in the northern Great Lakies region, the Pacific Northwest and southern Florida. It will,be cooler iif the Itockies, Applications are now being accepted and forms can de obtained at LaVergnes Huron Street Salon, i062 W. Huron, Waterford Township. City refuse crews Will pick up fallen leaves which are collected into containers or plastic bags. But leaves that are raked from lawn areas into the street will only slow down all refuse collections, Gordon R. Matthews, superintendent ot the Department of Puljilic Works’ operations division, said. Matthews said the city needs cooperation oif residents in wder to carry out an efficient and economical leaf pickup program. He said leaves put into containers dr bags and placed at the curb will be collected by refuse crews on the regularly scheduled pickup day. suitable for this purpose are available at local stores,” he sah). MatthevTs said if residents want to dispose of the'excess leaves they can take them to the city’s sanitary landfill site on West Kennett east of Oakland. The site is open from. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday. „ , Mattiiews said city ordinance prohibits burning of leaves in the streets. He-, also cautioned motorists about driving through any piled leaves left in the street. He said it is the habit of small children to burrow into these piles. The 90th passed much significant legislatimi including a civil rights bill with a broad open-housing provision, anticrime and gun control measures, a big increase in Social Security benefits, a temporary 10 per cent Income tax hike, an omnibus housing bill containing new ways to * help poor families buy homes, a “truth-in-lending” measure, and several important'cmiservation bills. " But it ^Iso handed President Johnson some major defeats, including its hisUxic blocking of his nomination of Abe Fortas to be chief justice of the United States. SWEEPERS COMING BAGS SUITABLE “Large, inexpensive plastic bags Street sweepers will follow pickup crews to give streets a final cleaning before winter, he said. It also failed to act on key Johnson re- / quests such as ratification of the nuclear pcmproliferationitreaty. /sr Johnson said'last week he might cal the Senate back after the Nov. 5 election to try to, win approval of the non-prolifdration treaty. y “ * A band of Mouse Democrats abandoned efforts yesterday to keep their branch in session indefinitely to to force the Senate to acLan a bill which would permit televise^jitobates between the three leading presidential cohtmiders. Rep. Janies G. O’Hara, D-Mich., said he was corivinedd it would be futile to prolong tiie session. ,.S5, HAKE OVEII PAGES trikes Blamed Hotm^Rule Village hr Building Lag in ^ Michigan (tall&^ f&dsibl» .... Construction strikes in Michigan were blame4 far a eontinuedl sigiiiflcant dedlne in building in the six southeastern counti^ during the first six months of 1968. Total construction in Oakland County was SS per cent below that for last year, according to the planning division uf the Southeast Michigan Council Govem- Cbotractors completed 2,639 single* family homes, 10 two*family dwellings, and 1,663 apartments during the' first half of the year in Oakland County. The total was 1,402 below that for 1967; AMONG WiO. ttpy was the only community to re* main among the tqp 10 of southeastern Michigan in new construction. A total of 916 homes and S76 apartment units were Involved in building permits. West Bloomfield Township was second in the single-family category with 239 permits. Waterford TownsMp allowed 179 home permits. Pontiac and Pontiac Township w^re tied for third behind Southfield with 140 apartment unfis each. w, ★ ★ Because of file construction industry strike, planners were unable t o determine the amoihit decline due to other factors. f' ByJKANSAILB. ORION TOWNSHIP ~ Hbw much wiU it cost? , What are the boaefits? w ★ ★ Are we running into prolHems we can’t handle?.''' “"t 'S'* These were the 'questions asked by some 90 residents of Bunny Run, a 46-year*000. GRADUAL BASIS From this money it was expected that roads might be taken care of on a gradual b^, that necessary office help and equipbent might be financed and that a capital improvements program be initiated. The latter would finance replacement of the^ grader and eventually provide moni^ for needed replacement of the dam on Bunny Run Lake, also lying in the area. * * ★ Fire and police protection would re- main a township service, residents were told. The problem of keeping the resident-owned club and parks private was aired, and John McGee, committee chairman, said he.thought such an arrangement might be worked out legally. SEWER LATERALS Installation of sewer laterals, expected in Phase I of the township’s Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor pact, could be guided better by a village, McGee said. “We could ask them to put the sewers down the middle of the existing roadway, rather than condepin most of your front yards with a 60-foot right-of-way,’’ McGee said. He said sewer assessments will remain THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1968 AreaNews Wixom Meeting Airs 1-96 Plans WKOM No action was taken at last night’s meeting regarding the proposed cloBipg of the Beck Road exit from 1*96 -and taiproving of the Novi Road and Whcom Road access to the freeway. Another meeting is planned for Oct. 22 to present the Wixom Ciiy Coiutcii with the information ^thered by city officials at last ni^t’s informal discussion. . ★ ★ ★ Three representdiives feom fiie State Highway Conunission presented plans itx the improvement of the Novi Road aad Wixom Road accesses after the pnqwse^ closing of the Beck Road exit. I^way Engineer Paul VanRoekel and IT-ank Beach (d the Qoiinty Road Commissicm were also present to hear \mxorn Mayor Wesley E. McAtee spell out reasons for keepfeg the Beck Road exit open. Novi City Manager Harold N. Ackley was also present at the discussion. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSftlP — An es* timated 100 persons ffom two subdivisions affected by proposed improvement of 10 streets there showed up at a township board public hearing last night, some in favor, most opposed. The Meadowlake Farms and Maple Meadows Subdivisions are affected by the improvement plan which would cost each of the 161 lot owners 31,832, acc(»d* ing to engineer estimates. ★ A * '' A petition had been circulated in early spring in favor of the improvement, which would be a blacktop surface with a gravel base with storm sqwers and drains in accordance with specifications of the Oakland County Road Commission. The petition was signed by 66.225 per cent of the lot owners in the affected subdivisions. State law requires 65 per cent approval before public; improvements are made. 8 CHANGE MINDS Attorney Charles J. Porter, at the hearing to represent eight iot owners who had ifigned the petition for improvement, said they now wished to rescind their action and register their disapproval. ★ ★ ★ Supervisor Homer Case toid Porter Requestor! Library Finances Goes to Rochester Attorney Commerce Candidate Forum Is tomorrow COMMERCE TOWNSnip - The Union Lake Jaycees will present a major-candidates night tomorrow at 8 p.mu at the Clifford H. Smart Junior High School, 8400 Commerce. The meeting will he held in the school auitttorium. It is en to residents of the Unicm Lake ^a. ''' Afqiroximately 20 nominees for state, county and local offices Ml make brief statements. There Ml be a question and answer period at the’conclusion of the program. ROCHESTER — A requipst for an in--vestigation of Woodward Memorial Public Library financing frmn Friends of the institute was referred to the city attorney last right by the City f^uncil. The library, created by a trust fund and beneficiary of what is reiiprted to be several wills, is owned by elected library board. / -k * -k Financing for general operatii^, however, has been maintained iMtil this year by Avon township w^th con-tributiMiis from Oakland Township. With the inoorporati<»i of Rochester,' city coimcilmen agreed to share on a per-card basis the cost of op^ation. Final details remain to be worked out. Chicken Dinner Friday OXFORD — Order of the East^ Star Chapter No; 266 Ml serve a family-style chicken dinner to the public from 5 to 7 p.m. Friday at the Masonic Temple, 22 S. Washington. A search of Probate Court, records, asked by the Friends, was deemed lengthy and expensive by city Attorney Arthur Cox. He said he would write the group that such information should be available from the library board. Hr k k In other business City Manager Wilifem Sihclair was authorized to meet with township officials td see if a subsidy might be worked out for St. Onge Ambulance Service, whidh is now stationed in the area. The city and township previously had a subsidy agreement Mh Fleet Ambulance, but St. Onge reportedly offered lower rates. k k k A request for water service from Slavik Developers of Great Oaks Farm was referred back to the developer to see if permission could be obtained from the township to hook into the city water supply. The township last year halted such hookups without special permission, in an effort to strengthen its own systems. Bonds to widen West University were sold to IDiauer, MacArthur & Co. at an interest rate of 4.99 per cent. The low bid ot Bill Fox Chevrolet to furnish two police cars with trade-in was accepted at $3,726. SIDEWALK PROGRAM A sidewalk construction program on East University will be investigated with Don Bishop of Rochester. Bishop was the only bidder on a more cwnprehensive program. Crossing guard salary increases voted last month as retroactive to July 1 were moved back to Sept. 23, an action made necessary by charter restrictions, according to city officials. k k k The gates at the city park will be taken down and a chain installed. The gates are in poor condition, councilmen were told. National Bank of Detroit will be asked to post a police guard on Walnut Friday afternoons to straight^) out the traffic snarl|'that^ results^irom drive-in bank traffic. on an individual basis;. Incorporation would not affect the drain okayed recently by the county and townrfjip, McGee assured. Incorporation petitions, circulated last night, wilt be presented to the Oaklapd County Board of Supervisors wMiin the next two months, McGee said. It will be up to the county' to set the date for a special election on incorporation. ELECTION COST If the election fails, he said the county would bear the approximate $500 cost. If it passes, (by a simple majority) the new village would be expected to pay. If the incorporation issue is approved a charter commissicm, also chosen in that vote, would have two years in which to present an acceptable charter. Bloomfield Twp. Residents Fight Subdivision Paving that the signatures cOuld not legally be taken from the petition since the board had officialljLaccepted the petition July 8. k k k Two signatures on the petition were to be investigated. Lot owners who had signedlhe petition this spring had sold their properties to new owners who were not in favor of the street improvement, A show of hands showed several in attendance in favoUj of the proposed improvements. HEARING ADJOURNED The hearing was adjourned to Oct. 28 after an hour and a half of discussion pending check of the petition signatures., A second public hearing was held on Hickory Knolls Subdivision special assessments for a water-main affecting 21 sites. * * ★ The total roll was confirmed on the low bid of $19,950, or a cost of $950 per site. The assessments will be due Feb. 1, 1969. They may be paid on a 10-year installment basis, with six per cent interest. DRAIN RESOLUTION OK’D In other business, the township board approved a resolution of intent with Oakland County regarding a $1,700,000 relief drain in the township. The drain would run across 14 Mile, north on Lahser past the Oakland Hills Country Club to Roland and Bradway. rgnllac Frm Plwta INCORPORATION SEEKERS-Fred Dodd (from left), 431 Dell, Robert Hord, 745 S. Long Lake, and Clayton Harris, 1391 Woodfield, all residents of Bunny Run Subdivision in Orion Township, study a plat of the area with the idea of incorporating as a village. Petitions for incorporation were circulated last night. Council in Clarkston Calls for Downtown Face-Lifting CLARKSTON - The need for downtown merchants to update and dress up their facilities as a lure to getting new business was stressed by village council last night. k k k President Frank Russell and Councilman William Kushraan reported on a meeting with Pontiac State Bank of-ficiials regarding possible new bank construction on the village-owned parking lot at Main and Washington. “They’re interested,’’ said Russell, “but they want to know that other merchants will continue to improve” k k k Both the bank and the postoffice, now located in too-small quarters on Main Street, have reportedly been looking for new sites. Russell said contact Will be made again with post office officials; “Since we now propose to get sewers, other sites they have rejected may now be all right.” John Adams, owner of several rental units on Holcomb between Washington and Miller, appeared before the council to protest recent rezoning of his property to single-family residential. He asked that his property be returned to a “B” classification which permits apartments and was referred to the zoning board of appeals. In other business the viilage adopted a uniform electrical code. ■: 'll 1 # BCOl Trdop, TOWER BUILDERS -* Building a lookout tower are Bqy Scouts of Walled Lake. The scouts camiM last weekend behind the municipal Went Maple. Dlrecttaig the opersfion was Tom Guyton of 2M0 Somerset, Huron-Clinton Unit Backs 2 Programs The board of commissioners of the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority has announced its support of the clean water ..and quality recreptiwi bpnd pro-grama on the general election' ballot Nov.E The' authority is a regional. agency Jwith eight recreational 'sites in the counties of Livingston, Macomb, Oakland, Washtenaw and Wayne. The two general obUgatitm bond issues would (1) provide $335 million for aid to communities in sewage treatment plant construction; and (2) Provide $100 milHon for recreation land acquisition and development including provisions for both state level projects and grants-in-, aid to communities. , 1 - ,.-r * . ' ’ c V AUTUMN RAMBUNG — Highland Recreational Park is a popular place on these pleasant fall days as people explore the many trails and wooded paths eit^r in groups or sep- arately. Picnic tables are ignored as visitors turn their . attention to i^ture’s seasonal scenic displ^ of color. J __________Activities— Now AnM0rii« in Th« PrtB? ' «l ■ f THE PONlTAe T»; ___ THE PONTIAC PRESS. TOESDAY, OCTOBER 15. '1 i|| p f pi» ‘ mw ijlirti :iQ. This Page tu< for ^ior H^*$d|bor ■■ ■ f , Bonfire March planned at NF Afro Club Born at Cranbrook By WHITNEY FIELD In the last few years, there has been a omsiderable influx of black students to Cranbrook School, forming a constantly growing, but up to now a relatively nonvocal n^rity. This year, though, under the leadership of student Ed Perrin, they have come together to form the Afro Club, the only organization of its kind in the school’s history. The club basically has two goals to fulfill. First, members, as an «•- ganized group, are trying to assert their color and realize their identity and what they represent as an integral part of the community. ★ * ♦ They are also establishing a better communication among themselves and discuss personal problems and'the problems of today’s society as they relate to their race. INVOLVEMENT Second, in being actively involved in all areasJif school life, the students want to inform the white student of their ideas, aspirations and of the significance of their background and present situation. This information will be communicated through personal relationships, creative articles and weekly newsletters. ■ , # ■■ t ■' * Over 100,sophomores, juniors and seniors from Cranbrook and Kingswood have joined the school’s Forum. It is probably the lar^t group ever assembled at Cranbrook for a single extracurricular purpose. Besides the presentation of guest speakers, one of the Forum’s most important functions, is to keep students posted on mher interesting speakers in the Detroit area. ELECTION WORK For those who want to work for the Democrats or the Republicans until the electimt, mere will be opportunities to do so on Saturdays, Interested students will , also be kept informed of upcoming rallies and demonstrations. W-K Homecoming This Vy^kend By KATHI CAMPBELL North Farmington’s band, cheerleaders and Raiderettes (NF pompon drill team) " will lead a procession of NF students and alumni to begin the annual htune-coming bonfire Friday night at 8. Participants will meet at the tennis courts to join in the march to ,the bonfire behind the football field, according to senior Tim McMann, chairman. Logs, provided by^^e NF students, will be tossed into a heap and ignited. Counselor Tom Eaton, the master-of-ceremonies, cheerleaders and Raider graduates then take the stand to lead a pep rally^ The bonfire will come to a close only when the wood pr the spirit is exhausted. RUMOR ON QUEEN Rumor has it that Vicki Saliba will be crowned NF homecoming queen during halftime Saturday as the NF Raiders challenge the Franklin Patriots. John Bouza, sienim- class president, will direct Act I of ‘‘Cinemaland” Saturday night at 9 in the NF gym. ★ ★ ★ Music will be provided by the Taxi, a l(Kal group. Silent movies are to be shown on the gym walls. AFTERNOON DRESSES Girls should wear afternoon dresses and boys suits. Note to flower children; please reform—no corsages. __Debate coach. Mrs. L. Schneider ex- pressed the enthusiasm generated at the debate team’s first meeting when she said, “I think we can win.” ★ ★ ★ Affirmative teams are seniors, Jeff Fishman and Steve Silverman; juniors, Steve Posen and Roger Voorheis; and sophomores, Wendy Cohn and Debbie Mordon. Negative teams consist of seniors, Tom Conlon and Bob Hite; and sophomores. Sue Hultz and Ann Smith. INTERSQUAD DEBATE Meetings will be held Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. with an intersquad debate (for the benefit of the sophomores) scheduled fm* this Thursday. Clubs are engaged in constructing homecoming floats for Saturday’s parade. ★ ★ ★ German, French, Spani^ and Latin Clid>s invaded the World Market at the International Institute Oct. 10. American Youth Hostels scheduled a crape trip last weekend and are planning a combined bonfire, hayride, hwseback riding and dance extravaganza for spme-time in November. By DONNA FURLONG Waterford-Kettering High School’s seventh annual homecoming will be held* this weekend. * Activities will begin Friday afternoon at the pep assembly. At that time Coach James.Larkin will introduce the team to the school. ★ ★ ★ ' . ' The 1968 homecoming queen and. king will also' be revealed. Voting will be held Friday morning. Queen candidates are Lynn Bachelor, Hazel Goodwin and Marcia Steehler. Vying for king are Harry Booker, Bob Earl and Mac Miller. ★ ★ ' W ■' Sophomore and junior representatives have already been chosen. Selected by the class of 1971 were Roxanne Steehler SYMBOLS OF SUfXlESS - Debbie Daubner beats drum, Jean Proudfoot points to oqe of the murals setting the mood for the Waterford Kettering High Schwl homecoming dance Saturday and Dennis Wooster practices what he hopes Will be a winning stance at Friday’s game. AH three are anxious to promote school spirit for a successful homecoming weekend. and Steve Clauser. The class, of 1970 chose Gail Zollner and Paul Ciqry. MilftNTd High School will be the oP’ ponent of Kettering’s varsity football team, when it takes the field Friday at 8 p.’m.' ■ FL6AT JUDGING During baUtiroe W-K’s marching band will perforht while class floats are being judged. Work has begun on the floats. They must be built on campus again this year. Floats will, be judged on neatness, originality, how well each pertains to the theme, color and organization. The float plaque wiH be presented to the winning class president at the ball. Class {uesidents are Mac Miller, senior; Erika Schaeffer, junior; and Steve Clauser, sophomore. “Through The Looking Glass” is the theme for the Coronation Ball, Saturday. ROY^ CROWNING Beginning at 8 p.m. the highlight of the evening 'svill be the crowning of the queen and king, Music will be provided by the Johnny Wallis 5. - • ★ w ★ ' Tickets for the ball are $3 per couple and are being sold during lunch and at tbe-dOOT.-l___________-....- - -----— Working on homecoming as committee chairmen are Siie Barkell, decorations; Sid Graves, assembly planning; Missy McGrafii, refreshments; Dan Orders, publicity; Bob Orosey, elections; Strah-anie Stewart, tickets and invitations; and Sandy Whitehead^judges. PCHSfudenls' Flocks Corhpefe ByPURVlBHUNTJR. Once agdin the sqpbomores, juniors and senirax at Pontiac Central, are competing for the Utle of Vbeat fktat/’ M the homecoming activities Oct. M. ^Each class preMdat called special meetings throu^MUt the week, to determine the individual Biectca and designs. * • * »v ' ■ Pontiac Centiei’s lioniaociisi% will end this year, fitb ita i wUlbeheldii Chief a . yesterday, but the voles are not tabulated yet; The results will be listed next week. DEBA’TE SEASON Pontiac Central is busy preparing for this coming debate season. This year the topic is: Resolved: That the United States should establish a system of compulsmy service for all citizens. (All men and women should be drafted.) Teams are formed for the first debate meet of the season to be held Thursday at Saginaw. PCH debaters and five other schools to the Saginaw Valley will compete in four different meets, through December. ★ ★ ★ Oct. 3, the debating group was vic- Rochester Homecoming Fairy-Tale Themes Floated By MOLLY PETERSON To many, the fall semester at school would not be complete without a homecoming. Rochester Senior High School is preparing for its homecoming this weekend. Each class is participating by the making of a float which carries out this year’s theme—fairy tales. FLOATS NAMED The sophomore class entitled its float, “Fee Fi Fo Fumble.” “Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Colt” is the title for the juniors’ float and “Jack Falcon the Colt-killer” was picked by the senior class. The homecoming court is complete. Sophomores chose Deb Kilbride and Kathy Upton as their representatives. Melissa Henry and Denise Marecki will represettt the junior class, and Shannon Kucharek, Ad Munchiando and Linda Sloan, the seniors. A ★ A ^ The floats are judged Friday afternoon during the traditional parade through dowidown Rocbeater. Each class .march-, es behind, its particular float and is given points for orderly marching, spirit and the percentage of the class participating, liie floats are thembrought back to the, school to aAait the game on Friday evening. A- A A The Troy (foils are opponents for this year’s game. During the halftime each' claiss float and jcourt are paraded in front of the stands and winners of the float competition are named and the queen is crowned. ★ ★ A Music fw the informal dance following the game will be provided by “The Ctioice.” It is sponsored by the senior class. The semiformal homecoming dance will be held Saturday night from 8-11. Two bands, “The Yellow Pages” and “The Solitary Confinement” will provide the music. DECORA-nVE THEME Decorations will center around the theme of Never, Never Land. Tickets ($3 per couple) for the dance are available in the school cafeteria beginning tomorrow. TTiey must be obtained before the day of the dance. The spirit week preceding homecoming is hectic as each class hurriedly finishes its float. ‘ Each day during spirit week marks a special event including class colors day, Bermuda day and spirit day. Friday, the day of the homecoming “gaiSe, aff asMn^^^ CLASS SKITS Each class presents a skit to the student body.-The skit is judged on originality, presentation and response. The winher of the skit presentation is then announced. At this assembly the various courts are also presented to the students of RHS. And the fight for the spirit jug is launched. The upperclass girls of RHS also get a chance to perform on the football field this week. Tlie annual Little Rose Bowl takes place at 8 p.m. on Thursday with the junior and senior girls battling in touch and tag football. Last year the class of ’69 beat the class of ’68 and it hopes to be the victor again in this year’s game. Sunday, a Pancake Breakfast will be held at the American Legion HaU in Rdithester. All proceeds vHll go towards the American Exchange ktudent fund at RHS. \ The junior class offered students at RHS a change of pace during Ihe week by sponsoring a “Skip Breakfast, Day.” The cla^s sold doughnuts in the morning before classes and after school. The National Honor Society fw the 1968-69 school year has Chosen Jack Wise, president; Chris Vizena, vice president; Susan Carlisle, secretary: and Mary Olson, treasurer., 01# SHEETS NEEDED Diecorations committee is still in need of old sheets. Anyone that has any please turn them in to the Student (founcil office. - ’ ★ A * Plans are under way for publishiiog a student directory. All Student Cfouncil representatives should turn is their homeroom lists. Chairman of the directory is Chris Barger. Other members are Karen Church, John Copeman, Marilyn Craighead, Mike Haley and Mary Rexford. ★ * ★ As its departing gift to the school, the graduating class of 1968 donated $100 for planters to divMe the cafeteria and the hall. The plants We donated by the biology classes. S^OR GIRLS MEET Tonight, there will be a meeting at 7 for all W-K senior girls interested in participating in the 1968 Waterford Junior Miss Pageant. The pageant is sponsored by the Waterford Jaycees. Additional School News Found on Page B-1 torious. PCH’s drama this year, “Dark of the Moon,” is a classic of rural America and a perennial favorite of conunanity theaters. BASED ON BALLAD —Basemie[ You Prehr Living in a Place of Your Yery Own By ABIGAIL VANBUREN DEAR ABBY: I have shared an apartment with another girl fm almost a year, and our lease is nearly up. My problem is that I don’t ' Swant to live with thiS §girl any longer. She’s a good kid, but |she needs a babysitter, e is 20 years old, and afraid to stay ( for one night. I t h(Hne for a week-lend, and when I re-•tunied she said she was ABBY so “afraid” to be alone s(;e slept with the lights on. One day I failed to tell her I was going to do some errands after work, so viihen I got home (about two hours later) sfTe was practically in hysterics. She was so “worried” about me, she was ready to call the police! ■My mother agrees that I’d be better off living alone even if I couldn’t afford sHch an expensive apartment. But how can I tell this girl? UP A CREEK DEAR UP: Tell her in plain English that you have decided to live alone. And ciii’t start making up excuses or ’you i?Ml have a debate on your hands. ★ ★ ★ 1>EAR ABBY: My hnsband and I have been having a big difference opinion about the use of the word “BROAD,” when referring to a woman. I say it is a reflection on a woman’s character, and no nice lady would care to.be called a “broad.” My husband says that ib|, term is more descriptive of a woman’s figure (like a “inroad expame”^ and has nothing whatsoever to do with her character. Yet he admits that he would never use INiround church people. •Where did this word come from m connection with ladies? MRS.G. DEAR MRS. G.: Beats me. But if one of my readers out there clues me in, rU let you know. DEAR ABBY: I am a 10-year-old boy, and I don’t have anybody to play with. I asked my mother to get a brother or even a sister, but she told me not to bother her. I told her I would be satisfied with a dog, but she said a dog is too much trouble. I had a rabbit once, but it died. Is there some way I can get my mother to let me have a dog? LENNY DEAR LEINNY: If your mother’s only objection to a dog is the “trouble,” write out an “agreement,” stating you will take the d(^ for walks regularly, see that it’s fed, and do everything you can to relieve your mother of the wwk of owning and training a dog. Then sign it. It’s wwth a try. 7" ' ' ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: My ft-year-old daughter finished kindergarten in June. A 6-year-. old boy in her class called her on the phone last week. He was the first boy ever to call her, so naturally she was excited. (So was I.) He calledlier nearly every day for a week. She refers to him as her “boy friend.” I thought it was cute. My husband says that by allowing the boy to call and seeming to be pleased about it I am encouraging the boy-girl relationship much too early. He Says > 6-year-old girls shouldn’t have “boy friends,” that he sees nothing “cute” about it, and we shouldn’t allow him to call. Abby, I’m not sure what I think, don’t want to be a mother who pushes her daughter into trying to be popular with the boys at too early an age, but I see nothing wrong vrtth tWs. How do you think it ought to be handled? PERPLEXED DEAR PERPLEXED: To make a big thing out of it now, telling her she’s too young to' have a “boy friend” and forbidding him to call, I think would give your daughter the idea that there is something-“wrong” with a boy-girl relationship. Let it run its course. It’s natural and inevitable, though somewhat premature. He may not call her again until she’s 15. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: My husband is in the Marines and is stationed in Vietnam. Shortly after he arrived in Vietnam I gave birth to a baby boy. Abby, my baby is- nearly 6 months old arid my father-in-law has been over to see him only three times! I told him he was welcome to come any’time. He is a widower. On Father’s day I sent my father-in-. law a card and I heard nothing from him. My husband would be very hurt if he knew how his father is slighting me. What is the best thing for me to do? slighted DEAR SLIGHTED: Call your father-in-law. Maybe he isn’t wefl. Whatever you do, don’t write to your husband about this. If there’s anything a Marine in Vietnam doesn’t need, it’s a letter from his wife complaining about how his. father is slighting her. ★ ★ ★ CONFIDENTIAL TO “ACCUSE”: Yes, it is possible for two bhae-^ed parents to produce a brown-eyed child. Consult a book on hefedity and the Mendell-an Law. And tell your sister-in-law about another law. The law of common decency with which she should become more familiar. Birmingham composer Harold Laudenslager and his wife were present Monday evening, for the performance Of his “Little Suite” by the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra under conductor Felix RMnick. The "Composition had its first per-^mance in 1958 and vm included in the repertoire of the touring Albert Tipton Chamber Orchestra. Laudenslager is q. member of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. His wife is a music teacher at Webster School. Young Boarders Will Receive Proper Care By EUZA^ETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: My in-laws reside near a cdlege and have decided to take in two 18-year-old girls as boarders. My mother-in-law is interested in obtaining a job. She would prefer to work during the night-time houris/ at which time my father-in-law would be home to supervise the girls. .a a * Would it be proper for the girls to be supervised at night by my father-in-law while my mother-inrlaw is working?— Mrs. B. K. ' a ★ ★ Dear Mrs. K.: Yes indeed! Were it only one girl, there mi^t be some raised eyebrows in the neighborhood, but the fact that there are two should discourage any gossip. Your mother-in-law should feel perfectly free to work at night, knowing that her young boarders will be well chaperoned. MAIDEN NAME Dear Mrs. Post: I have recmitly been divorced after eight and a half months of marriage. I requested my maiden hanrn again, which was grmited. DO 1 sign my name Mrs. or Miss? — Thelma Mrs. Michael Pierce of Newberry Street gets a program from lOth-grader Vicky Perry, whose scarlet jacket identifies her as a 'member of the Ushers Club of Pontiac Northern High School. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Perry of East Mansfield Street. Mrs. Pierce’s husband is a percussionist with the Pontiac Sjfmphmy and a music teacher in the. Huron Vcdley School System. 'Of, Ruth Burczyk's Fiery ; ^ Ccaptures Symphony Audience pale it for the holidays in heavenly tinted' coordinates by Koret of California. Nubby wool-cotton plaid skirt, double pocketed and single pleated rises to herald the crisp notched collar jacket of wool flannel and the contrasting cuddly angora blend turtleneck. Beginning with a skirt of pink/blue/white or custard/ gray/white, go pale with white, blue, pink, gray or custard for the jacket and angora sweater. Parliamentary Club Schedules Meeting The Parliamentary Study Club will hold a demonstration regular meeting Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. in the YWCA. Mrs. Lester Oles will be leader with Mrs. Fred Goines, sponsor. v On the agenda are: Order of Exercises, Introduction of Business, Purpose of Motion, Formalities of Making Motions, Steps of A Motion, Ordinary Main Motion and Memopze. Dear Thelma; Take back the “Miss.” Even though you have been married, you cannot use' “Mrs.” with your maiden name. By BERNICE ROSENTHAL The Pontiac Symfdiony Orchestra, under' the direction of Felix Resnick, opened its ISth seasqn last night At Pontiac Northern High: School auditoHum with a program featuring Ruth Burcsyk, pianisf. ; Using Liszt’s monumental Piano ConcOTo in E- Flat Major as her vehi^ cle. Miss Butczyk displayed a strong, masculine control of her instrument, a fiery, powerful style, an imposing and clean technique, and a polished ino-fessionalism with die turn of a phrase. ★ ★ ★ It was a carefully 'studied performance, carried off &i the grand manner, with the many difficulties of the work easily under her fdrong and capable fingers, and the subtleties of the lyric passages artistknlly and tastefully delineated. Her touch is mellow and mature, and her communication with her audience both diarming and direct.' Also featured on the program was Harold Laudenslageris Uttle ^te for strings, wood mnds and piano. A contemporary work of wit, humor and verve, the suite is carefully cmistructed, its atonal ccanbinatitms well disciplined, its rhythmic treatment both ingenious and delightful. TTie short strident overttoe was satirical and pruposely pmnpous. The slow dance ’^ch followed had interesting rhythms and effects, especially in the unusual staccato accompanimoits. Quick March, the third movement, was a infectious bit of wfahm^ reminiscent of Shostakovitch’s mocking style. A short chorale led into the final toccata, a more serious and soniber conclusion. DmECIiON Resnick directed with skill ahd expertise, lending bqth smoothness and sprightliness to the difficult and unusual score. The unifying InsfrumeM in the w(H-k is the pii^, nhidi inuir handled with skill, dexterity and pwiii by the orchestra’s staff pianist, Welton. . and closing i(ipctions, two fOd popular works, were the BalM Music from Gonpod’s operas “Paust,”i’and Tschaikowaky’s “Marche Slavi.” Mer a rather hatfing start in the violin sections, the Bali# Music was a stodgy; more or less pffestrian affair, without Mr. Resnick’s Jiual confident and Cteative touch. V Hbwew, the closing ‘‘Marche Slav” nune than made up for my inadequacies in the opening number. Taken at a much faster tempo than usual, the work emerged b r i 11 i a#t, clear and unhackneyed. In spit^.^df slight overtoning oh the part of tite low brasses, the march was really a march, -unsen-timentM, brisk and touchii#^ te^^^^ peal, a fitting finale to concert well planned and consciratiously carried out to a rousing conclusion. Writers'Confab at OU Scheduled for This Month For the seventh consecutive year, the Writers’ Conference at Oakland University, Will serve as a forum for beginning and established writers concerned with craftsmanship. • A- ★ ♦ The mie-day conference, set for Oct. 26 in the University’s Oakland Center, is expected to draw a capacity crowd. Registration and a coffee hour start off the day at 8:30 a.m. A wide choice of classes and workshop panels Ig- offered with a 12;30 p.m. luncheon break between. . ,'*■, Sponsored jointly , by the University, Detroit Women Writers and the University’s Divislop of Continuing Education, ttris Conference has been planned by a committee of published authors and Univarsity staff, , w * '4: Reservations are due in hy &L 18, Cw who does not dream of the day when he can play “Hamlet.” He already has done toat. on the stage, in Chicago, and to excellent critical notices. "THE VIETNMW WAR” by Rev Robert H Shelton, Former Missionary to Vietnam The Fiwi Bapnoi Church ot Pontiac u known at ho™*=-"d around the world for its faithfulness to the Go^l ^ the Lord Jesus Christ. That must never change. The Great Commission never changes; we must be involved in gettina the gospel into all the world. Our message never changes, it is tfce message of God’s love expressed through His Son who came and took our sins upon Himself and died in our place and rose again. I trust people will never think of any Other message than this message as they think of the First Baptist Church of Pontiac church in the world. Dr Walvoord believes thto i» another reason why todayi!’ People have already decided where they want to live and the God IS sparing our nation m spite kind of povernment they want Why of its sin; in spite of its rejection of the conflict; What s going on .n the Lord. A great work is being car- Southeast Asia.'’ ried on through the body of Christ obvious ,n our beloved country Now I would like to add one more have failed to understand that the reason to Dr Walvoo^rd’s list — one sitruggle that is really going on in more reason why 1 think God is Vietnam, the problem behind the sparing the United States in smte whole situation is not a matter ol of the way we have turned from Him. one faction within the country We still hold to the principles of wanting this kind of government freedom - principles that I believe j,nd the other faction wanting an • ' ei’-J other kind of government. That was decided in July WA, in Geneva A United Nation* Christian Bible Conterenco conducted by .Castor Shelton r village South of Saigon are in line with th^ Word oi God Our country was founded upon these principle! REV SHELTON _..._____ Our forefathers came here' because they wanted to be free to study, interpret, and obey the Word of God; and to worship Him as they pleased; ko live according to the dictates of their own hearts; I am glad to say, for the mdst part, those dictates were in line with (iod’sWord Now how does all this apply to the struggle in Vietnatn? I would like to go back about 95 years, to that That was settled What is the prob lem;' I think the problem is very simple the agitation in the South today is |iist j one more step toward inter-pational communism 1 read a book last week in which •Step number three - Diplomatic offensive Step numbei foui - Military preparedness Step number five - Korean War Step number SIX - Formosa Step number seven - Indochina And thisjs the paragraph I do want be completed i belore I'Wid'' They are oil schedule And what has thrown them off schedule? They did not think the United States would do what we are doing in South Vietnam Uoiisider these verses Daniel 11:44 “But tidings out ot the east and out, of the north shall trouble Him, Therefore He shall go forth with great fury to destroy and utterly to make away many read. Remember Chairman Mao IS speaking “We shall give the maximum assistance to our comrades and friends in Indochina The experiences we have had in Korea should enrich their knowledge in fighting the author tells of a memorandum liberation 'The case of Indochina Kxr tf'liairtvilin iMJin ISA- I _____] . .IaL ..i' But there are many other poruons “fiance catne to Southeast ot Gods Word that now and then was wealth and they need to be emphasized and there countries we are many issues that face us in the Cambodia and Viet- world today that need to be viewed together in the light of God s Word French and became a colonial that was sent by Chairman Mao Tse-, Tung in 1953 at the hand of Chou En-lal, to the leader of the Soviet Republic, Joseph Stalin This memorandum actually was a time table of world conquest for communism It was a blueprint. The information cannot be compared with that of (’.hina In Indochina, as in Korea there is serious intervention of the capitalist bloc, while in China there was nothing so direct and vigorous The experience in Korea tells us that so long as there is foreign in 1 would like to say again, although 1 know it IS in opposition to the wa\ most American preachers feel, that as I have observed this situation, one of the most noble efforts we have made as a country in recent years has beep our involvement to save a struggling little nation that has already made up its mind. It does not want to live under the tyranny of communism Revelation I():I2 "And the .sixth angel poured out his vial upon the great river Euphrates; and the water thereof was dried up, that the ways of the kings of the east might be prepared.” With that brief introduction, 1 possession of this great European in this communique was reportec^to (epyention and so long as we have no j - .. support, military operations would lilte you to turn with me for country Things went quite well for d moment to Hosea, chapter 1 the French for about 70 years, but verses 6 and 7 About half way .. the people, particularly of Vietnam, through verse 6 we come to these became very agitated and restless words; “For I will no more have, fhey no longer wanted the French mercy upon the house of Israel; but i® be their leaders and lords. They I will utterly take them away But wanted to be free from the colonial-I will have mercy on the house of ,8m that France had imposed upon ludah, and will save them by the them. It was about that lime that a I I'*dwd4 canri wafbII Ntfkf <»avA a!■.:>«vdv . AiHvanivatirktl AallACl have been intercepted by a friendly agent, and was given to Senator William F Knowland who in turn “nVbera^l'ion presented it to our United States Congress alone cannot achieve the objection Frankly. I have read so many stories ip recent months that I found out later were a little distorted and some of them were not true, that ’ •‘The military operations in Indochina should be carried out to such an extent as to make the war extremely unpopular among the French people and to make the French and Americans extremely truth about this communique I traced Mr Knowland. He is no longer a senator but is the President and Publisher of the Oakland It IS within the power of God to ‘f®!*®** , ™ Oakland, Galifornia^ destroy or to save a nation. I want <>hina. In a telephone conversation I think of ito, P.r.icul.rl, a. LTbrUnicL'Ch SlidThat w. '•i"' call the Vielcong, So the Viet- Uord their God, and will not save nationalistic organization them by bow, nor by sword, nor by ib« Viet-Minh began to form and battle, by horses, nor by horsemen _ make an impact in the F'rench controlledcolony of ^French Indo made up my mind I had to know the hateful among the Indochinese - ■ ^ • ------ - -- people The object is to torce the French to >ack out of Indochina preferably through the face-saving means of an armistice Once foreign irttervention ts out of the prettrre vigorous propaganda, inflitration. forming united fronts with the progressive , elements in and outside It has taken a bit of fortitude for President Johnson and those working with him to continue down this road with all the opposition they have received, and of all the people, from the so called church more than anybody (I use the term church in Its loosest sense.) 1 think we should be praying for our President and for our nation. Our President knows, as. Chairman Mao knows and the whole Communist bloc knows that there is more involved that just saving a little nation, now numbering something like 16 million people in South Vietnam. I’lease keep in mind that iKsualiy when directions are give in scripture they are associated with the land of Israel. When you read North, It usually means North of Israel; East means East of Israel. So the verses we have just read speak of those nations to the East of Palestine In 1965 Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek was interviewed by the I .S News and World Report and he made this statement: The day is coming when the anli-(Christ will gather together on the plains of Megiddo the greatest army that has ever been assembled. His object will be to destroy the tiny nation of Israel. It’s at this time that (tod will intervene. That one sided battle between God and the great army of the anti-Christ is pictured for us |n Revelation, chapter 19 It IS called the battle of Armageddon The church will have been raptured at least 7 years prior, so this battle actually concludes the end of the tribulation period and will be intro duct on to Christ’s reign of peai-e and righteousness here on the earth one,of the comparatively few men in llie war thaU,/ollowed was long this country who IS rightly divining and costly and finally in 1954 in the word of truth, expecially pro- that famed battle of Dien-Bien-Phm He assured me that it was presented ........ to Congress and that before the day ihe reactionary regimes will acce( ended he would have a copy of crate the process of iberatioii A that communique in the mail. 1 am final stroke ol force will accomplish glad to say last Monday I received the task. Two yeai-s may be needed that communique and I have, it for this work. "Every American should go to the Congressional record and read there report submitted by One the French were ifefeated They had lost the war and their colony. For the French it was total defeat. They were out. They lost teverything. They were finished. Vielnaniese people were toward the Jews He refers to Genesis to me purporting to be an chapter 12,verses I through 3, esneei- headed by Ho-Ch.-Minli who had . Tse-tung’s ally verse 3, "And I will bless tWm their headquarters in the Northern that bless thee, and curse him that Capital of Hanoi. Then there weie curseth thee and in, thee shall all P^gj« families of the earth be blessed phetical truth Dr Walvoord believes that the Lord IS sparing the United States from destruction because of two basic reasons First, because ol our kindness here 1 want to share it with you When Mr Knowland received this (tommunique he presented it at a session of Congres with this intro duction "Mr President. 1 askv'naninious l on.sent to have printed in the body of the Record, as a part of my r^ marks, some information which „ ____ submitted by William Knowland of a document from the plans of the Communists of China Though interrupted here and there it is on schedule and in the main we are seeing this fulfilled ” The (ieneralissimo wa.-* referring to the document I just read to you In light of all this. 1 am amazed that we have men in high places who continue to talk about this unnecessary war This senseless war This immoral war If war is immoral ihen put all of them in the same category, but don’t lake this wai out of that concept. World War I World War II, the Korean War, Malay”’Peninsula. Cjiairman Mao "After the liberation of Indo- !«?e‘»>er The stakes are just When the uieiiiorandum wa.» given. Chairman Mao had certain plans not only concerning the possession of the North but of the South Apparently he envisioned there would be a serious problem and that two yeai-s would be necessary to break down this resistance iiglit ask what does the present conflict in Vietnam have to do with the future struggle in the Holy Land. Let me repeat, there are no direct references in scripture lo the liny little nation of Vietnam lull may I suggest ihe- leaders oi North Vietnam, a- tlie leaders ol China, and North Korea might well fall under the category “Kings ol. ihe East” Here is the AbraJiBmui CouwmwI-The Gdvenant that was given to the* Old Testament giant of^ the who bpcame the father o.' .aaec ■ml those that have broughi ■ enne to .... -t . , , by Chou En-la. m March of 1953 I ears of French rule) didn l know ,he information substanti imw lo organize their owm "[j” gjates the communist policy on racy, but they did know they didn I revolution In Any event, I ant to live under coniinunisin. This Senate may find this mat led to the Geneva t:»nve»ition, and imprest in July 1954 it was decided that at - , ■ ij i .u, the I7lh parallel this nation would In all honesty I should make this IsraeL jou will find in turn ^iom> , divided The northern half of the statement. Because this documeiii • 1 blessed of Alin^tj ,8„ald be a communist state was placeM in the (.ongressional that have been coumrv ------------- ir---------- „ (tod and nations that have been j,„d ^e southern half of the country Record does not mean that Congress ciirsedby God. would be free ' took any action. As a mater of facA reason (md * It was a division of Vietnam. It was Washington from that day to because It IS the home base .a division that divided the country Tse-lung’s memor modern foreign missionary progtonr ^g^^^phically and also from the presented to Congrc! Did you know that WiMsr cent of all population It lef« oq |9.M. 13 months after ” I . .. 1 1117 .A M ant Al*t h ' * r* • Rjf f sent Ironi Chairman Mao ol Slep number eight goes on, include the neighboring nations Burma, Thailand. Indonesia and andum ol tlm new program for Malay Peninsula. Cjiairman Mao „„Hdr.v.l„.i.., earned l.i,h K.he, we f.ee .... o, good foundation has already been V’e will have to lace it some day laid there The then reactionary I was amazed that a very distin ruling clique m Thailand will ca- guished (tovernor, whom all of you pituiate and the country will be in know, .made a statement that wa-the hands of the people The liber- nearly as unthinkable as some ol ation of Indonesia, which will fall to Communist camp as a ripe fruit, will complete the circle around the Malay Peninsula” This falls m line with President Anolhci iiileresliiig observaimu appeared in the Iasi issue of U.> News and World Report "Com muiiisi success in South Vietnain IS having an impact on Arab stales dial are anxious for revenge against Israel for their loss of the June war Obserxes one Arab leader "The Vielcong heroism in Vietnam reveals lo iis Arabs the potential effectiveness of die armed struggle III Palestine ‘ the statemenis from our senators He said the only thing to do now IS to neutralize Vietnam F'rankly. 1 don’t understand Ids thinking. To neutralize, according to the (tom I'he events ot die past tew iiiuiilh.-and llie prospects of the coming «la\s might well bnng discourage ment to the hearts of Christians were ii not for these prophetical words from the lips ©four S;ivioiir Eisenhower’s stalemnt of the F alling munisl vocabulary is absolute vie roVein ..Ion.™. 'Su”’r2';;Hrr.»'pV.pT. Vn Ih. 'pril 2- .f™ Jj from America? And 95 per cent ol .,„,i 12 millh - ■ - all missionary funds come from die and 12 miliion people in the South Chii programs existing in the world today, there is no program so inu*;b in line with Ihe Word of (tod; no program so important in (tod’s sight to Joseph Stalin in Russia iiieiiioranduni Is in eleven sections, actually there are eleven Those who wanted to live under com-iinisin could mme to dTfforenl 7teps that Chairman Mao those who wanted outlined for the possession of the society could move to the boulh North hut world We don’t have lime to read the North, but . as each’one in aV^hom^ and” abroad. Although oiir ever «'ie voKrs a” parwH «wo bid in here is the outline Step number one - Asia to be tlie OV151 VOt ,, VOIVCS -I country "the United Slates, is no »'«® **‘^‘1* brief, he longer a CJinstjan -nation (aclnally. 111 a communist j*®*^®* They didn I according-to the United Nations it want to live under Ho-Chj-Minli. btep 11 accorumg ,....._ , moved to the Sputh. This iminediale goal then was the picture -r the F>ench number two - World war gWrnmeni had lost Us hold on ie,„porarily avoided lA Chin. iNorih r-n..... ihe conflict al least not righi iirtw .1 classified as a pagan nation, and that is probably true), the fact jjs. of all the nations in the world, more IS being done in the United Stales j implement the program of world communtslm _ .. .1 narttmar^' free ilien Domino principle In other words, once South Vietnam is gone, then voii cannot hold the rest of Southeast Asia. The next slep would be l.aos, (tombodia. Thailand, Burma, the Malay Peninsula. Singapore. Indonesia Iwhich is now called Malasia) and the Philippines Mr Eisenhower eoneiirred wilh this - that once South Vietnam is gone von might as well wave goodbye til all of Southeast Asia The I wish to leave wilh you (tortiniunists know this loo. and this Jesus tells us IS whv ihey arr so anxious to win SoutbH'ielnam but they are behind schedule, for Chairman Mao went on to say "The British will realize iiiidei lory How can you neutralize Viet iiain? It IS already divided in half The people have already decided what ihey want We must face the i.ssue as il is and stop this verbal nonsense As we conclude ma\ I lurii >mir llioughls again lo the Word of God Frankly there are no direct references in the Bible to Vietnain. but there are some indirect prophecies Mat ihcw 24. versus 6 and 7 — "And ye shall hear of wars and rumours ol wars, see- that ye be not troubled, for all these things must come lo pass, but the end is iiQL>eG -F®* Matthew '-24:6 ".And yc shall hear of wars and rumoiii> ol wars .see that >e be not troubled, lor all these ihing.sF must come to pass, but the end is not yel” For you who have iievei i-eceivcd (tod’s crucified, resurrei'led bon as your Lord and Saviour may I urge you to open your heart by simple faith Those who have Ghrisl as Saviour not only have the promise of Eternal Life but the peace that He offers to iis in this life One of His final promises before going UK the cross IS found m John 14:27 - "Peace .1 leave with you My peace I give unto you. not as the world giveth. give I dnto you Let not your heart be troubled, neitbei lei il be afraid ' . 44 you- don't kriu'W Ihui'^wundeHul ihpse i-ircumstanees the hoiielessneiii- milTon gtialT rise against nation, and promise of peace may 1 encourage to' putting a will with kingdom against kingdom, and there lo open your heart lo Hjitt today pu«mg ! I- . famines, and pestilences He is watting to enter upon yoai ill and earthquakes, in divers places mvilation draw as quickly as they 1 expect that the whole process 1 THB PONTIAC PBESS, OTlfeSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1068 The fonowtag an tqi> pirices covering sales of locally grown produce Iqr growers and sold by «hem hi wiudesate package lots. Qi^tationa are furnished by the D^it Bureau of Markets as of Thursday. Celery, Pascal, u. emu ........ Celery, Pascal, I le 5 dz. crt. .. Cejary/ Pascal Naarla, calla pkg., C^ sSraab'Mb ■ bag ■"^ iQaufious Advance by Market NEW YOTK (AP) — The .ing it a good leg up toward re- stock market eafbr today conr tihuesd a cautious adva^ hi moderately active trading. Gains outnumbered losses by about 150 Issues on die New York Stodc Ezdiange. The Dow Jones industrial ai erage rose more than 2 pi^. Gains of fractions to around a point mingled with losses in about the same range. * ★ ★ American Motoni in a sli^y delsQied opwiing rose % to 14% (Ml a block of 40,000 shares, giv- peating its role Monday (tf most active stock. ford made up fn-gregational ghurch, 4160 Mld-debeltlRd. —adv; Rummage Sale, Omreh ot the Resurrecthm, Oct. 19, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Claricstim-Orion Road. —adv. Treasury Position WASHINGTON .(AP) — Tllo Ctili posi 4«41,W,4»»4 I fiscal ytar July 1 51,745,«4,238.I3 41,711,014,004.53 wait fiscal year 50,438,434,235.44 53,405,148,410.27 Total dOM X-3S4JBI,404.I«3.20 140^240,283,051.31 ***lJSa7,g44,340.« 11,0004110,714.14 X-Includos 430,702,470.40 dOW not sub-Isct to statutory limit. STOCK AVIRAOES Wsok ago . “—th age hTn . .. +.2 +1.0 -.2 +.0 . 510.4 2124 14S4 354.4 . 511.1 31Z1 1414 354.0 . 514.0 311.0 147.1 3S5.0 . 403.4 3004 150.3 343.0 . 473.1 100.1 140.4 334.3 . 514.0 313.0 1S4.I 354.3 . 435.4 1454 135.1 300.1 . 403.1 3004 150.1 3434 . 4114 150.4 1344 3034 ■e^mhfnvestim^ By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. Please explain wfaat happens to tee smaller cimttpany to a merger, like Lily Tulip Cup (Owens-IIlionis); D a v o 1 (International Paper); Red Owl Stores (Gamble-Skogmo); Jones & laug^in Steel Ung-Temco-VougHt); Agricultural Chemical (U.S. Steel). Do their jHXdlts go mostly to the larger company?—M.N. A. You offer gooi examples to illustrate some of the dff* ferent merger, metlfods used to increase sales and earnings. Merger terms and accounting practices, though? are far from simple so I can cite no general rule to cover the ultimate disposition of profits. If fully merged under a single corporate name, the smaller company may operate as division of the parent company with earnings consolidated, although it may retain its original name and mangerial peraonnel. If publicly owned, its stock will no longer be traded bocausa shares wUl have been exchanged for others of similar value in the surviving cor pwation. Lily Tulip CUp’i planned merger illustrates mis procedure. ^ the other hand, Jones & Laughlln continues to trade because only 63 per cent of its stock is owned by Ling-Temco-Vought. This provides an equity in the smaller company’s earnings. Red Owl Stores is over 80 per cent owned by Gamble-which reports Red Owl’s sales and earnings as part of its own operations. Red Owl trades as usual and is carrying out expansitm moves of its own. Your two remaining U-lustrati(ms — Davol Inc. and Agricultural Chemical — were purchased for cash by fri-temati(mal Paper and U.S. Steel respectively. Profits will be cfrifiolidated as (^rations of each are to becfune a part of expanded facilities being devel(ped by the purachaseTs. Inter. Paper paid $96.5 million tor Davol’s assets whi(te will enable IP to put into productiim a new line of nonwoven disposable hospital and health care supplies. U.S. Stal paid about $100 million to Armour to acquire one of its wholly owned subsidiaries <«. Armeur Agricultural Chemical — because Big Steel Is ag-y building up Its (teemical business to offset partially the inroads of foreign steelmakers. (Cii|iyTlgIit,Ui8) THE PONtrrAC PRESS> TUESDAY, OCTOBER U, 1968 An all-oud war in southeaatem MQchi^'Oii wl^t the Oakland Coi^ ppoaecu|or calls “young tou^ and hoodUims of outlaw motorcycle gai«s adw pwtray Nasi storm troopers’* nounced this morning. Atty. Got. Frank J. Kelley called an argent meeting for Mondev of top law forcemeat officials to develop a plan to meet “an alarming outbreak of brutal crimes, sadistic violence and outright warfare involving certain motorcycle gangs.” IaP WIrapiMta NEW TRIAL DATE FOR SIRHAN — Sir- date for the young Jordanian, aiccu^ of han BLshara Sirhan (left foreground) stands wlh his attorney, Russell E. Parkms (right . fo sEronnd) in a Los Angeles courtroom yes-tentay after Dec. 9 was set as the new trial murdering New York Sen. Robert P. Kennedy. The court reset the trial date after Pmsops said his cocounsel could not be re^y for tiie scheduled date of Nov. 4r-~. |Peop/e in the News By '^ Associated Press Entertainer Dean Martin answered quickly when America’s three Apdlo | astronauts asked by space television “Keep those letters and cards coming.” Martin sent a telegram via the Houston e Center, reminding the space travelers bfr^weekly rells his 4elevhrioii~audiCTCfr-just that. “Hey guys,” said Martin, “first, you steal my song, ‘Houston.’ Now you steal my ‘Keep them letters and cards coming.’ It’s 10 to one when you land you’ll start drinking. “P.S. Like all Americans I am proud of you. “P.P.S. I was higher lastmight than you are now.” The trial of a Pontiac Iman charged with the Mqy 31 knife kiliing of a woman patient at Pontiac State Hosi^tal began today in Oakland County Circuit Court. Edward J. Stockwell of 999 James K, also a patioit at the hospital, was arrested a few hours after (he mutilated body irf 19-year-old Dannelda Stewart was found by a guard in a Uttie-used building on the grounds. Galbra&h Has Mixed Feelings About 60th Birthday o’t be terribly sorry when men begin to refer to me as old, but I’O be John Kenneth Galbraith. Hie anther of “Hie Afflnent Society” and “Hto Indnstrial State” spolw yesterday in New York «ty on the eve of Us IMh birthday which he said he was letting “dip by as qnfetty and as imobtrusively as pos- swrry when women do,” says Galbraltii, a pndessor of economics at Harvfrd, oommented: “Pm no fonder of tin notion of age toan arnrhody dse> One U flie tidngi that has always triwUed me a Ut is ' tiiat life it ralhw dhort aad you’d better mwd as mndt into it as possHile.” GaflrUtli, n tomtor UJ. ambassador to India, added the rqle of art erltie to his life today with Oe pablicatioa of “Indian Painting: The Scene, Themes and Legends” which he wrote with Mohinder Sin^ Randhawa. He was ordered to stand trial law enforcement officials from tone counties in soutiieastam Midil-gan vdio have been bivltod to the meeting in Lansing. RECEIVED REPORT Kelley called tiie meeting after receiving a report fttan Bronson on the sadoumesa of tiie' problem in southeastern Michigan and after receiving complaints from individual citizens and “legitimate” motorcycle organizations. and other attadts rdiating to reported. '•There have been numerous comidaints by citizens of being surrounded erts studying the nation’s adoption laws says that in some states a husband can udopt”‘Ws wife. This means that, in theory, the wife could inherit more of the husband’s estate as heir” than as a widow, they reported. Prof. William Pierce, who heads the group, said this only one weakness uncovered so far in the adoption laws. Pierce says t^t while the emphasis traditionally has been placed on the adoption of a child by a husbEuid and wife together, many statutes make no provisions fw adoption by a single person, such as a spouse who legally is separated but not vorced. cited by Pierce would be to specify, who may adef^t in adult, with one spouse not being ^r-mitted to adopt the spouse. In cases involving minors, the revised act Will indicate whose consent should be obtained. Pierce said. But, he added, it also will make it possible to dispense with the required consent if, for example, a natural parent has deserted the child. UNIFORM LAW BACKER Pierce is president of the National Conference of Conunis-sioners on Uniform State Laws, which promulgated a uniform revising their original act, which ^y found to be defective in several respects. The revised act. Pierce ex-fdained, wUl make an adoption decree in one state binding on other stotes and also would per. nut private placement of chil- 'U.S. Deterrent Overwhelming' A Pontiac man was found guilty yesterday of involuntary mantoaughter in the June 9 traffic death of a 7-week-old boy, Ciakland County Circuit Court Judge Clark J. Adams set sentencing of Richard Anderson, 24, of 239 Oakland for Nov. 13. ASHLAND, Wis. (UPI) - H»e Deputy Chito of Naval Operations said Monday night “no nuclear aggressor—even th he attempted to pulvmize toe United States — could escape, certain destruction” from our nuclear submarine fleet. told persons at the First An- ] Dual Admiral WiUiam D. Leahy Foundation dinner that “this overwhelming nuclear power” is the certain deterrent to war in the world. Nuclear deterrents shield which protects not only: our national existenre, but our relationship with eveiy other nation on earth,” Blouin said.! UAW Local Sets | Forum on Labor and Social Issues ‘Labor and Social Issues,” series of two-hour public lectures and discussions, begins at T pm; tomorrow. The meetings, to be held each Wednesday through Nov. 20, are beii^ sponsored by Unitjkl Auto Woikers Local 653 in Cooperation, with the Michigm State University School of Labor Industrial Relations. - ★f The lectures wffl bb at the UAW Locto 853 Utoaii| Hall, 990 Joslyn. I •Sodnll Speaking on “S l| Crises in Robert L. Greeri of Michigan State former | education director the Smithiern Christian Leadership ip Oouf^rence. tf at tom ncipal irage e Another example of revision Pontiac Man Convicted in Traffic Death JAMES M. HANNAN New President for Hospital's Advisory Unit ‘HIT RURAL AREAS’ BronsKm said the problem a De<3th Notices ALLEN. ESTHER J.; October 14, 19«; S86 Harvey Like Road, Highlaiid; age 69; dear mother of Mrs. Pate (Catherine) Parris. Mrs. Clarence (EUzabetii) BmmeO and Raynxnd FergoMn; dear sister of Mrs. Nina Faallaier, Mrs. Caatoe Young and William Funerhl service wUl be hdd Wednesday. October 16 at 2 p.m. at the purd^-GObert Funeral Home. Intermoit in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mrs. Allen will lie in state at the fUnanl BYLSMA, OSCAR; October 12, 1968 ; 532 Orchard Lake Avenue. Funeral service win be held Wednesday nt 3:30 p.m. at Spaiks-Griffin Funeral Hmne!: Interment in W*' ford (Seater Cemetery. B3disma will lie in state at the fimo-al home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.' includes outlaw motorcycle gangs riding six and eight abreast (w» highways and congregating early in the morning at deserted homes and factories to plan their weekend activities involving clubs from three or four cotmties. Many times they zero in on rural areas that have volunteer or very few law enforcement officials,” Bronson said. “Outlaw type motorcycle gangs are those dedicated to the commission of violent and brutal acts as part of their twisted and antisocial code,” Bronson explained. Children Burned Igniting Gas Tank COLBY. DUDLEY G.; October 13, 1968; 148 South Shirley Street; age 76;'beloved husband of Carrie Cfolby; dear father of Mrs. J. R. (Dawn) Fritz, Mrs. H. J. (Margaret) Roat, Stanley C. ahd Rev. Keith B. Colby; also survived by 12 grandchildren and two great-grandchildroi. Funeral service wUl be held Wednesday, O.ctober 16 at 1:30 p.m. at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Intennent in Oak HUI Cemetery. Mr. Colby wiU lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to the Michigan Cancer Society. Two Waterford Township children suffered burns on ttieir faces and arms as a result of placing with matches yesterday, according t^ township police. The children reportedly toss^ a burning match into a car’s gas tank. They were burned by a fla^f fire at 7 p.m. police Bond of $1,000 was continued and Anderson was returned to Oakland County Jail. He is- charged in the death of Anthony Dye, son of Mr. and Terry Dye of 108 Mary Day, who died of injuries suf- Fice Admiral Francis Blouin ^hen Anderson’s car col- lided TiWth the Dye vehicle at Orchard Lake and South Saginaw. Anderson was arrested at the scene on a reckless-driving charge. The boy died about nine hours later in Pontiac General Hospital. The lay advisory board of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital has a new president, James M. Hannan, a Birmingham business executive. Hannan of 344 Yarmouth was elected president of the 15-member board at its meeting last night. He succeeds Robert R. Eldred, president of Community National Band of Pontiac. Elected vice president of the hospital board was Ralph Norvell, president of the Austin-Norvell Insurance Agency, W. Lawrence. Hannan, president of the American Safety Equipment Corp. of Michigan, Detroit, has served on the board since January 1966. He will head the board for two years. Treated at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital and released were two sons of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Davis of 5606 Williams Lake, Larry, 7, and Scott B., 4. Police said the boys were playing with matches in the parking lot of the nearby Cent munity Activities Building, a640 Williams Lake, when they were injured. DAMAGE MINOR The blaze was extinquished by a passerby, poUce said. Damage to the car was minor. DICKERSON, GEORGE SINCLAIR; October 13, 19«; 43 Luella Drive. Ann" Arbor (formally of Pontiac); agi 69; beloved husband o Vanita Dickerson; d e a father of James M. Dickerson, and Mrs. Frank Bahan; dear Step-father of James Scott and George Jones; dear brother Of Mrs. Flrarance Drummond; also survived by eight grandchildren; five gr«at-grandchildren and two step-g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, October 16 at 2 p.m. at the Staffan Funeral Honw. Intennent in New Ihidson Cemetery, New Hudson NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ^ . Nolle* It hortby glvm of a public TouniVilp .Fiwnw«^_CommHWwi to M NOTICE OF PUBLIC hllc '* «ITho wfi. vmtLtki Townihip Hal ^ ^ROM d-l (Local BoilnoM) S679 ^ chord 45.11 n.p Th $ dianoet Is on «lt at the ^ice o» Township cj^ snd may be *> CBP* 'J - boart $ •3*4r3V The lay advisory board was established in August 1963. NorveU has served on the board since that time. STATE OF MICHIGAN-1 Court for tho County ol C Division. tho Msttor ot «;• — ^P*Mtlon"havlnp bw.tllod In provision* of Chapter 71IA oT^ Conv pllad Law* of W* ■* 2;:,'’® 'ar^'ri’niSi.^ iisr*.!! Slid has vtoisfid a Ww of tho About half tohere the principal hrage earn- j er ii a onion mcanlMr have Incomes of from |7,Sttl to 119,060.1 snCK-ON TATTOOS - Tattoos that stick on are still a craze with youngsters in St. Petersburg, Fla. Marla Nastir wears one on her diedk as she blows a bubble masterpiece from another sticky subirtance. 5S?. JliSf, 7HI Highland Road, to eoiwldor fho *‘*''fro111» REjffoeinii^ i^TstIict^' TO SUBURBAN FARMS DISTRICT ........"'St' ~ RONALD C. ..... L*k* Commission OORHEIS. Oct. 1, 15, IS within t ’'tho* fismo‘'ol“fh** CaunSy So^K**Oi^r ln°ff CHy*<>f .....—riS5i*"Norm*n R. Barnard, .fudgoM "W, Cowt, In tta CHv 0* PonHsc In^ssW^oonty, this Ith “^ORiMAN R.’ BARNARD, oelpha“a?*IOUOIN^* Oct 15, IMS notice of F __________ _BLIC HEARINC Mtd srt roquostod <0 bo the eW«o>ro Md moy bo axamlnod Michigan. J«r. menrn im lie In atat# at (be tawilral GLEN ;a.; October 15, U6I; 9081 D|toa Highway y Independence Towndiip; age 17; belaved husband of Jotoe Jaan EUertborpe; dear fatinr of Mrs. Betty Stoan, Mrs. George Murtow. end B% J. Ellerthorpe; dear hrott^ ci^' Fred and Ardiie Enertfipcpe; also survived by four , grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tbursdagr, October 17, at 1 F-m- at Fbst Mc-thotoet Church of Clarkstop. Intennent in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Detroit |to. piyertborpe wOl lie ia state at the Sbarpe-Goyette Funeral HmiM after S tonight GA^ERT, BABY QIRL; October 14, 1968; l»IO WiUowbeadi, Ke^o Harbor; beloved infant daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gabert; beloved infsnt granddaughter of Mr. and Mn. Jack Goodchild and Mr. and Ua. Brad Gilkey. Funeral service was held this mnnfaw at 10:3lt at the Hnrnld R. Davis Funeral Htone, Anbum. Heights, totennent in Cliria-tian Memorial Estate' Cemetery. JOHNSON, THOMAS E .; October 2. 1968; 441 Bartlett Street; age 36; beloved son of John 'T. Johnson; dear totiier of Erick Johnw; dehr brother of Mrs. Willie May Gibson, Mrs. Mary Ann Rhyne. Joe D. and Larry Johnson. Funeral service will be held Thursday, October 17 at 4. p.m. at CSiurdi of God, 296 South Boulevard West with Elder Major Watidns officiating. Intennent in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Johnson will lie in state at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 tonight. N^.«T-RSp«'SJr?bn.n, --- «S*.U ft., th N 0*UW' E too ft. LOGSDON, LOUIS; October 13, 1968; 7182 Terrell, Waterford; age 65; Retired repre$oitative 0 f Prudential Insurance; beloved husband of Edith Logsdon; dear fatiier of lifts. Traver (Marilin) Miller; dear brother of Mrs. Clair Catherman and (Bin Logsdon; also survived by three grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, October 16, at 10 a.m. at tie Coats Funnail Home, Drayton Plains. Intermoit in SummerfieM Cemetery, Hhr-rison, Michigan, lir. Logsdon will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested vi^ting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) S »*NTI0" E 45V.75 ft, th S 100 ft. btg snd oontsining t.50 serf*, also pt. .. NE V* hsfl.st 0 fl, th N l**00' W E ’A 45».85 n., in o g-iuw m iwi n., in W°00' E 550.M ft to bog and contalnir ' '0 ocros, also part of NE U bag i ditt N 217.75 ft. from E 'A cor, th to fl., th S Of’or E MOlOS containing 1J5 acros. a NE'-M beg at pt. diet N 1 _ 'A cor, th N 01.M ft., th .. M0.01 fl., th S O'Ca-lO" W t5.K , th Ik E M0.05 ft to bog idalning 1.34 acros. PropoHy local 1080, 1090, 1110 and 1130 Williams 1 ilc"« Township Planning Commlsslai RONALD C. ^RHEIS, Saerata-Oef. 1, 15, M Court for nil* Division.,. ...... Matter of the PotTtlon Ing Calvin Cramar, Minor. To Alvis Cramor, father of is child. “ititlon having boon fllod In tl ________ . ..jlrn that SOM child coma* within the provlsioitt of Chapter 712A Of fha Com-pllod Laws of I9M as smsndsd, bi that fli* prsssnt whsrsabouts of — —------------- Is Court McClellan, WYUE; October 13, 1968; 1554 Richmond; age 61; btodved husband of Rose McClellan; beloved son of kbrt. Ida McCSellan; dear totiier of Bruce Mcaellan and Mrs. Richard (Sally) Crazier; dear brother of Mrs. Ibex C 0 p e m a n , Mrs. Helen Bohlman, Neil, Gilbert and Harold McClellan; also Turvived by five granddiil-dren. Elks Lodge of Sorrow tonight at 8 p.m. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Funeral service win be held Wednesday, October 16 at 11 a.m. at funeral home. Interment in White Chanel Cemetery. Mr. McOellan will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) child I* dopondent upon th* public for support md that saW child shouM* •-contliwod under tho turlidlctlon ot Court. ■i th# Namo of th* PsopI* of th# ! Michigan, You or* hortby nol I th* hearing on sold potitlon wll. „ —.5 at th* Court Houat, Oakland County Sorvic* Cantor, In th* City of Pontiac tounte, on th* 35lh day of .D. 1MI. at 1:30 ------------------- ' “ Mws, Judo* of said Court, In oM^ntls^ m sold^Counfy, this 9ln wo, « (IteaO EUGENE ARTHUR MOORE. DELPHA A. BOUGINE, Dopirty Probote leister, Juvonite blvislon Polltlon having bosn fllad In 11 saCf^lYd comsa within .... of Chapter 71M ot th* Com-■ of IM at amsndad. In that t wharaabouts of tM father of .......r child Is unkown and said chnd Is dspsndant upon th* public tar support, and that aaM child should b* aMaiitd under th* lurlsdictlon of tMs In Hit Nam* of th* PaofM at Hi* Slafa ofMhMgjM. You ar«h*^ noNflod fliM .. ttia «aprf SarvKO Conlor. In Niaj^ ot Pon^ In S’S’i SVXBLj; Id hoar Ing . . . rWas-c CRy of ■**s*M^C;Srtw' Rite «lh aVuacopy _ Ocl, 15. INS PICKERING, FLOYD; October 12, 1968; 15671 West Fourteen Mile Road. Birmingham. (F(xmerly of Pontiac); age 74; beloved husband of Iva M. Picterlng; dear father of Mrs. Handd L. and Dr. Leonard Pidkering M.D.; dear brother of Mrs. William (LQUe) Sisk, Mrs. Harry (Cathryn) Cozart, Otis and Beryl Pickering; abo survive by seven grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, October 16, at 11 a m. at the VooriieesGiple Funeral Home witii Rev. Robert Messnm* officiating. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Pideertag wffl lie in state at tin funeral h«ne. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) SOLE, RUTH I.; October 12, 1968; 5806 Dwight, Waterford Township; age 64; bdoved wife of Ernest L. Sde; doar mother of Mn. Mary man and Robert E. S;v-:,':;';i cor 1 y>A.: