The Weather U.S. WMtlwr Riu-MU F^teaft Snow Flurries, Windy (OeliHi an Page 2) VOL. 124 NO. 292 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1967 -34 PAGES DISPLAYS DISCOVERY—Prof. Bryan Patterson, a vertebrate paleontologist of the Harvard Museum, holds a 2%-milliQn-year-old piece of the bone of an early man he found in Kenya, at a news conference in Cambridge, Mass., yesterday. On the desk is the complete arm skeleton of a modern man. The fossil represents the oldest member of the human family yet found. Bone Find Ages Man by 800,000 Years CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (^T)—Man may be older than he thinks — by 800,000 years. Prof. Bryan Patterson, a paleontologist at Harvard University, said in announcing a startling fossil discovery yesterday. Patterson said he came upon a fossilized chunk of an upper arm bone while walking near Lake Rudolph, the African nation of Ken- ya- “I found it about 4 p.m. on a hot afternoon lying on the surface,” he said. ‘‘I saw this thing and said ‘ho-hum, another damn knuckle thihg.’ ” A few hundred steps later,” a light went on inside my head,” Patterson said, “and I thought, ‘By God, this must be it.’ ” It was. Special measurements showed the bone was about 2Vi million years old — give or take 200,000 years. ★ ★ ★ Up to now, scientists have proof of man existing about 17-million years ago. It is based on the discovery of man-like fragments in Tanzania several years ago by African paleontologist Louis Leakey. CLEARS UP DOUBTS Patterson said Leakey’s discovery was called ‘Tnjanthro-pus,” or the “Nutcracker Man.” After Patterson made his find in August 1965, a Harvard computer cleared up any doubts by him and other scientists that it may have been a bone from a chimpanzee or other ape. He said the bone structure was closer to modern man’s than those of apes or even Leakey’s discovery. In Today's Study and Plan Press Big Victory Pontiac Central cagers defeat Flint Northern — PAGE B-1. Picture Page Pictorial views of the news — PAGE A-12. LBJ Plan President has three proposals for preparing poor children for school -- PAGE A-3. Astrology, ......... B-4 Bridge ........... . B-4 Church News B-5—B-7 Crossword Puzzle . C-11 Comics ............. B-4 Editorials ....... A-4 Home Section . C-1—C-3 Markets ............ C-4 Obituaries ......... C-5 Sports .........B-1—B-3 TTieaters ......... A-10 TV, Radio Programs C-11 Wilson, Earl C-11 Women’s Pages A-8, A-9 Committee Favors Funding by County Appropriation of $.40,000 for a requirement study and schematic plan for a new Oakland County jail facility will be recommended next Friday to the County Board of Supervisors. * * * Advancement of the money from the county’s contingent fund was recommended yesterday by the supervisors’ ways and means committee. The initial study is expected to be completed by early summer. County officials then will decide whether to proceed with the project. Oakland County’s present jail is 46 years old and generally considered obsolete. It is located at 104 Wayne and has a 259-prisoner capacity. ★ ★ ★ If a new jail is constructed, it will be located in the county service center. MASTER PLAN Also approved yesterday by the ways and means committee and slated for attention of the full board next Friday is a proposed $20,000 expenditure for development of a master plan for the service center. ★ ★ * Both the jail proposal and the master plan ideas were introduced by the supervisors’ building and grounds committee Jan. 4. Snow Flurries Due Tonight Winter weather will be back for a return engagement tonight, bringing colder temperatures. >' ■ ★ ★ ★ The U.S. Weather Bureau forecasts the following: TODAY — Showers this afternoon changing to snow flurries and colder tonight, low 22 to 28. TOMORROW — Mostly cloudy and colder with snow flurrfes.' MONDAY — Fair and cold. Si GOP Hopes to Block Dope Network 10 More Hunted in Australia, Called HQ for $5-Million Ring NEW YORK (iP)-Seven persons have been arrested in connection with an alleged $5-million international narcotics operation described by authorities as a “regular milk run” on which couriers concealed heroin in corsets they wore. Ten more suspects are being hunted in Australia, said to be the headquarters of the alleged ring. U.S. Atty. Robert M. Mor-genthau said the ring bought heroin from a Chinese source in Hong Kong at $1,600 a kilogram and sold it to wholesalers here at $1,000 an ounce, or about $34,000 a kilogram. A kilogram equals 2.2 pounds. Under arrest are three Australians and four alleged United States distributors of heroin for the ring. •k if -k Morgenthau said the Australian ring members smuggled' the heroin into the United States in small quantities. He said they used fraudulent passports and made frequent trips. 5 IN NEW YORK Four men and a woman were arrested in New York. Two ex-policemen from Sydney were seized in Miami Beach, Fla., as they were about to leave for the Bahamas to make connections for a flight to Australia, the U.S. Treasury Departiqent said. The Treasury Department said authorities uncovered information about the ring a year ago. Then, last month, during an Australian probe into false passports, detailed data on the narcotics operations came to light. ★ ★ ★ Roy Lawrence Peake, 24, of Hong Kong was arrested Jan. 8 in Honolulu,- accused of carrying two pounds of cured heroin. Proposed Tax Boost WASHINGTON (AP) ^ Republicans in Congress will try to head off President Johnson’s proposed tax increase, their House leader says. Rep. Gerald R. Ford of Michigan also said the GOP seeks Social Security benefit improvements without raising the payroll levy. Ford called fw development of an antimissile program to match the Soviet Union’s, for continuing air strikes against military targets in North Vietnam and improving the program for pacifying the South Vietnamese countryside. Ford’s views, amounting to a preview of the Republican “State of the Union” program to be made public Thursday, were given in question and answer form in the Republican Congressional Committee publication “Newsletter.” ★ ★ ★ “Republicans will try to reduce nonmilitary spending to the point where the 6 per cent surtax proposed by the Presi- dent will be unnecessary,” Ford, said. ‘MISTAKE’ Describing Johnson’s proposal for a tax increase as a tragic mistake. Ford said “the President has yet to present solid evidence that it is necessary and I believe the burden of proof rests on the President.” “Most top economists I have talked with are deeply concerned that a tax increase might aggravate some of the recessionary tendencies that are aheady apparent in the economy,” he said. Johnson has proposed an average 20 per cent increase in Social Security benefits without as yet discussing methods of financing it. ★ ★ ★ Ford said: Republicans will support an increase. But the 20 per cent over-all average increase would mean a sharp increase in Social Security taxes — taxes which already rose automatically the first of this month .4 per cent. Two Killed in Separate Accidents A Pontiac Township woman and a Troy man were killed early today in separate auto accidents. Killed when her car was struck by another auto at 2:16 a.m. at the intersection of Co-1 u m b i a and Oakland Highway Toll in ’67 Last Year td Date 4 LI'L ONES “We’re at the awkward stage — too old to always get our way and too young for protest demonstrations.” Joslyn was Mrs. Charles Wood, 45, of 1588 Vinewood. The accident was witnessed by a Pontiac police officer who arrested Eli Couch Jr., driver of the second car. Couch, 19, gave his address only as Feneley Court. A warrant charging him with negligent homicide is sou^t by police. .★ ★ ★ Patrolman Carl Gajewski, who was driving north on Joslyn behind Mrs. Wood’s-car, said he saw Couch’s car, eastbound on Columbia, go through the red light at the intersection. MINOR INJURIES Couch and a passenger in his car, Delbert Hall, 19, of 12822 Spencer, Milford Township, both suffered minor injuries. Mrs. Wood was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hos-pital. Killed in a 2:45 a.m. collision on Big Beaver was George C. Simpson, 35, of 90 Tacoma. ★ ★ ★ The driver of the other car is in critical condition at William Beaumont Hospital. Police said his identity is not yet known. NEAR AIRPORT The accident occurred just east of Daley near the Big Beaver Airport. Police said there were no witnesses to the crash. AP Wiraphoto PHILADELPHIA BLAZE — Firemen on ladder at right carry down the covered body of one of nine members of the same family killed when fire engulfed their three-story brick row house in Philadelphia this morning. Mr. and Mrs. John Drumm and their 10 children were trapped in the upper part of the house when the fire apparently broke out on the first floor. Three of the Drumm children escaped. Buddies To the End MASSILLON, Ohio (j?)—Tom Berry, Bill Coyne and Dick Fuchs used to shoot baskets at a hoop on the Coyne’s garage. Sometimes the three went to the park together. They lived within two __________ blocks of each other. “They always had good times together and were good boys,” said Mrs. Fred Fuchs Jr. The three were boyhood buddies. When they grew up, that’s how they enlisted in the Marines, under the “buddy system,” Dec. 31, 1965 in Cleveland. They trained together at Paris Island, S.C., and were sent to Vietnam as members of the 1st Shore Party Battalion, 1st (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 2) Power Company to Start Center Construction of Consumers Power Co.’s new Pontiac division service center will begin within a few days, Charles F. Brown, Pontiac division manager, announced today. He said the center should be completed by the spring of 1968. ★ ★ ★ The 27-acre rectangular-shape site for the new center is on the south side of Featherstone near the western edge of the Grand Trunk Railroad tracks. The $3-million service center will include office and warehouse space totaling some 128,000 square feet. Other facilities will include yards for storing gas and electric equipment, car ports, and parking lots for employes. Mackenzie, Knuth and Klein, Architects Inc., of Flint have planned room for expansion. Builders are J. A. Fredman Co. DOWNTOWN FACILITIES Brown emphasized that the Consumers retail store and customer-relation facilities would remain in the lower floors of the downtown office. He explained the need for a new center: “The amount of customers has almost doubled since 1960 and we have also added more employes due to the expanded volume of business, we have outgrown the old service center. “The new service center allows us to consolidate most of our operations in one area — in order to better serve our existing customers and keep pace with the projected growth of the community,” Brown added. Consumers Powers currently handles 14,600 electric customers within Pontiac City limits. The company also handles some 60,-000 customers in the P o n t i a c area. NEW ONES “And we are getting some 4,000 to 5,000 new ones every year,” Brown said. kr ~ k k The old service building at 55 Wessen has been sold to the city and should be vacated by April 1, 1968. Nine in Family Killed by Fire Other Blazes in U.S. Fatal to Six Children By The Associated Press A flash fire roared through a Philadelphia row house early this morning taking the lives of nine members of the same family — the third multiple death blaze to occur in the nation within a few hours. Three children in the family escaped the burning home, located a few blocks from Girard College in the North Philadelphia section of the city. Neighbors, who stood in a light rain as firemen sorted through the blackened wreckage, said the fire broke out about 6 a.m. Within seconds, said the neighbors, the house was a mass of flame. Some said they tried to rush for the front door but the intense heat drove them back. k -k k Elsewhere, in New York and Ohio, apartment fires claimed the lives of six children last night. FOUR SUFFOCATE Four children, all members of the same family, died when their apartment was swept by fire on the East Side of Cleveland. Seven persons were injured in the blaze. The children ranging in age from 3 to 8, suffocated. Twenty persons leaped to safety from the three-story building. A soldier home from Vietnam and two policemen caught some of them. A mailma rescued three youngsters from a fire escape. k k k Two brothers perished in New York when a blaze struck their Coney Island apartment while their mother was shopping. The boys’ younger sisters were reported in serious condition at Coney Island Hospital, suffering from smoke inhalation. New Service Center for Consumers Power Reds Release American on $22,222 Bail MOSCOW (AP) - A young American sentenced to three years in a Soviet labor camp, Buel Ray Wortham Jr., was released today on 20,000 rubles — $22,222.22 — bail pending an appeal to the Russian Federation Supreme CoiirL i A Leningrad court granted bail, the U.S. Embassy announced after its consular officer, Harlan G. Moen, had telephoned from Leningrad. The court wdercd that Wortham of North Little Rock, Ark., appear when the appeal* is heard by the Supreme' Court in Moscow, probably at the end of this month or early next month. Wortham was convicted last month of three counts of selling dollars illegally on the Leningrad black market and of stealing a statue from his Leningrad hotel. Wortham was free when Mben telephoned, the embassy said in Moscow. Wortham arid Moen are expected to come to Moscow by overnight train from Leningrad and Wortham will live at the embassy. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. JANUARY 14. 1967 Hits Anti-Mao Army HQ, Arrests 'Scores' TOKYO (AP) - A Red Chinese military unit has stormed a hideout of military officers opposed to Communist Chairman Mao Tse-tung and arrested “scores” of the officers, a Japanese newspaper reported today. It appeared to be the first report of violence within China’s 2.5-million-man Peoples Libera-committee a retraction tion Army over Mao’s purge of^gj jjjg ‘ self-criticism” widely his opponents. Peking radio publicized last December. ported earlier that an “acute and complicated” struggle involving a small but influential group of anti-Maoists had built u[i within the arihy. ♦ ★ ★ Other Japanese reports said President Liu Shao-chi, the top anti-Mao leader, recently demanded before the Communist Meeting Slated on Boys' Club Future of Waterford Facility to Be Aired The reports said the demand I could indicate that Liu was confident of maintaining his power and that he had launched a counterattack against Mao and Defense Minister Lin Paio. OFFICERS ARRESTED The Peking correspondent of Mainichi Shimbun said the officers were arrested last Tuesday in Lanchow, a city of more than . . , , . ,, 150,000 persons 700 miles west of Residents interested in t h e progress and future of the Boys’ Club of Waterford Township are in\ ited to attend a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Community Activites. Inc., building, SHANGHAI MARCH - Women workers in Shanghai carry Red banners and portraits of Chinese Communist party Chairman Mao AP WirepholQ Tse-tung during a pro-Mao demonstration Jan. 6. The picture was made available in Tokyo today. Whirlwind D.C. Politicking Peking on the Yellow River. The correspondent quoted a wall poster put up in Peking and signed by “the 750th Lantzu Regiment.” The regiment is stationed in Lanchow. ★ ★ ★ The poster reportedly said the ski. president of the dub s board “[““"“I imilitary elements'loyal to Gen. Liu Chih-chien, ousted by Mao s 5640 Williams Lake. Making the announcement yesterday was John H Stefan- Romney and Lodge Discuss Vietnam WASHINGTON (AP) - Gov. George Romney met with Henry Cabot Lodge, U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam, Friday for an hour-long talk on that war-troubled nation. of directors. Stefanski said directors will present plans for the club and will consider suggestions concerning the welfare of tl^e organization. Also highlighting the meeting will be a weapons display with towmship Detective Sgt. David Putnam in charge. it * * Putnam will exhibit and explain the history of weapons collected by township police from juvenile delinquents. ENABLE TO ATTEND? Residents desiring to assist' the club who are unable to attend the meeting may write to the Boys’ Club of Waterford I Marine Division. All were lance Township, Inc., Post Office Box | corporals. supporters as director of the Military Revolution Committee and No. 2 man in charge of ideological matters in the army. The officers’ documents were reported confiscated. Marine Trio Stay Buddies to Death (Continued From Page One) 576 Waterford, Mich. Operating chiefly on contributions and depending strongly on volunteer help and donated equipment, the club will begin its program in its new facilities at the CAI building Monday. Offered at the outset will be woodworking and electronics. Activites will soon expand, said Stefanski. it ir if All boys, aged 8-18, are invited to join the club, he added. DEFICIENCY Because of a budgetary deficiency, the club was forced to abandon its $225-a-month rented building at 1580 N. Williams Lake and release executive di rector Charles Sitton from his paid postion last September. * * * On Wednesday, their helicopter crashed off Chu Lai in the South China Sea, about 340 miles northeast of Saigon. ALL DIED The three buddies were killed Six other Marines died in the crash. A search failed to locate the bodies. The trio would have been returned home in July or Au-pst. Coyne was engaged to Vickie Eisenbrei of Massillon. Fuchs and Berry attended Harvey Elementary School Coyne went to St. Joseph’s Catholic School, apd on to the ninth grade at Central Catholic High. He joined his buddies at Washington High School in MaS' sillon. The Weather mM The discussion was the highlight of a whirlwind round of politicking by Romney to offices of prominent Republican leaders in Washington. Romney, who says he has not yet decided whether to run for the Republican presidential nomination in 1968, visited the capital to attend a dinner at the Women’s National Press Club. ■*■*■*■ The Michigan governor said Lodge filled him in on recent developments in the Vietnam War. Lodge,, former senator from Massachusetts, was the GOP vice presidential candidate in 1960. OFF THE RECORD Before making a tour of the Senate Office Building and the capitol, Romney held an off-the NAMED CHANCELLOR -Col. Wesley W. Posvar, head of the U. S. Air Force Academy’s political science department, has been appointed chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh, effective June 1. LSD Publicity Dazes'M'Prof record breakfast meeting with newsmen. On his political rounds, the governor met GOP Sens. Everett Dirksen of Illinois, George Murphy of Califor nia, Edward Brooke of Massa chusetts and Mark Hatfield of Oregon, Murphy is the newly elected chairman of the Senate Republican Campaign Committee. it it it Romney has indicated he will not take a firm position on the Vietnam situation until he learns more about it. He expects to visit Vietnam in the next several months. Fights Flare Throughout S. Vietnam SAIGON, South Vietnam (AP) — Sharp fighting flared up and down South Vietnam today, and the big American drive in the "Iron Triangle” pushed Communist losses beyond 450 men. ★ 1^ There were no major engagements reported, but the U.S. and Vietnamese commands listed many small clashes and these other developments: • Two U.S. planes went down ANN ARBOR (UPl) - A Uni versity of Michigan professor,j„ combat, onrover North Viet-yesterday Craft to View Lunar Sites WASHINGTON (AP)-The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said today a camera-equipped spacecraft will be launched next month to take a sharper look at the most promising potential landing sites on the moon. it Lunar Orbiter 3 will carry the wide-angle and telephoto cameras as it whirls around the moon scanning unly the most promising of the potential Apol-io spacecraft landing sites photographed by Lunar orbiters 1 and 2. if if it NASA tentatively scheduled the new launch, from Cape Kennedy, Fla., for Feb. 3 or the four days following. "Unlike the earlier flights which represented mainly a site search in the zone of the moon said he Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Becoming cloudy this morning with showers in the south this afternoon, mixed with some snow in the northern portions. Precipitation changing to snow flurries and windy tonight. Mostly cloudy and colder with snow flurries Sunday. Winds southwest increasing to 12 to 25 miles by this afternoon and becoming northwesterly tonight. High today 35 to 42. Low tonight 22 to 28. Monday outlook: Fair and cold. Today In Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding i 8 At 8 a.m.; Wind Velocity 6 Direction Southwest Sun sets Saturday at 5 2S p m. Sun rises Sunday at Bam. Moon sets Saturday at 9;25 p m. Moon rises Sunday at 10:54 a m Downtown Temperatures One Year Ago m Pontiac Highest temperature 27 Lowest temperature *8 Mean temperature 22.5 Weather: Sunny, flurries Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date In 95 Years 56 in 1950 —9 in 1893 10 a.r 32 Friday in Pontiac (as recorded downtown) Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather Sunny ; Alpei Escanaba 36 Gi Rapids 38, Houghton 'Lanbinq 'Marquette 'Miuskegon PeMston Traverse C *2 Albuquerque 10 Atlania J6 Bismarck Chicago Friday's Temperature Chart 46 18 Cleveland 42 27 Detroit 43 25 Duluth 35 24 Kansas City 52 33 4t 23 Los Angeles 74 51 41 27 Miami Beach 74 7) 42 27 Milwaukee 40 27 38 14 New York 46 41 42 22 Pittsburgh 43 38 50 32 Salt Lake C. 38 3.S 54 40 S, Francisco 69 57 30 1 S. S Marie 36 14 46 34 Washington 57 44 was ‘amazed” at the publicity given his charges that there was wholesale traffic in LSD and marijuana in the campus black market. “I said that there was either a considerable increase in the use of marijuana over the past few years or that the students were being more honest about it,” Prof. John C. Pollard told a news conference. if if -k “Three years ago few would talk to me about marijuana or 'LSD. Now this is not uncom-Imon," he said. i “The use of LSD has been brought up in senatorial investigating committees, and Dr. Sidney Cohen of UCLA told Sen. Robert Kennedy that it was 32 easier to locate LSD in Los An-25 geles than it was to find the " YWCA. j ,, , , ... which Apollo landings are nam and the other in the south. ^ gjte con- • A Norwegian motor shipifir^ation mission,” said Clifford H. Nelson, project manager at NASA’s Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va. it if k Of 13 primary and 17 secondary sites that have been photographed by the two spacecraft, Nelson said about 10 look especially promising. NASA made public Friday more than 30 photographs taken by Lunar Orbiter 2 in late November. Among the new pictures was one showing the whitish crater left when Ranger 8 plunged into the moon two years ago. and a U.S. Navy minesweeping boat collided in a river 30 miles southeast of Saigon and the Navy boat sank with the loss of three of her seven-man crew. k k k • U.S. B52 heavy bombers struck at a suspected concentration of North Vietnamese troops less than a mile south of the demilitarized zone. • Bad weather continued to hamper U.S. air raids over the Communist north but pilots attacked coastal targets and reported putting 54 junks and barges out of action. lownship Delegates Back Tax Orbit Altered LANSING (API - The 900 delegates at the convention of jthe Michigan Townships Associ-I r^ni f^ird indicated almost LL/lM LfllKJ unanimously they would favor a „ Istate income lax if property WASHINGTON (A1 i ~ ^^®itaxcs were reduced Substantial-Communications Satellite Corp ordered its new Lapi Bird satel lite towkd a isynchronous orbit around earth today in an at- ly. E23 Figurti Shew low TempefOturei Lxperted 60 Until Sundoy Morning v , FORECAST NATIONAL WEATHER—Tonight's forecast is for rain along the Atlantic Coast and snow in the Great Lakes and Ohio Valley. Rain is expected along the north Pacific Coast with snow in the Rockies andl western South Dakota. It will be coikier in the Midwest arid warmer in the East. Joseph Parisi Jr., the |associ-ation’s executive director, said Friday he asked for a show of hands and was "shocked to see almost all the hands go up” in support of an income tax. k k k "When I asked for a negative vote, not more than 10 hands were raised,” he said. Parisi said he took the vote after a legislator asked him how township officials viewed a statewide income tax. LEGISLATION SOUGHT In a formal resolution, the tempt to create a new communications link between North America and the Far East. Initial data indicated the operation was successful, it said. * ★ ★ Comsat signalled the spacecraft’s apogee motor at 5; 11 a.m. EST, at the peak of its seventh orbit, to shove the satellite to a constant 22,300-mile altitude where its velocity would match the spinning speed of earth. Sometime late today, a spokesman said, further adjust- delegates urged legislation to ments will be made to perfect the orbit, erect the satellite’s antenna and adjust its velocity. prohibit cities froiji taxing the incomes of nonresidents who work in the city. They also called for broader taxing and ordinance-making powers for, townships. ★ ★ -A The convention urged repeal of last year’s county reapportionment act, which would provide for election of supervisors from equal-population districts. The act has gond to the Michigan Supreme Court for an advisory opinion on its constitutionality. REPEAL URGED The township officials urged that the law be repealed and replaced with a plan which would include a representative of each township on the county board. Advocates of one-man, one-vote apportionment for county boards have rejected this approach, arguing that, including a representative from each township and still maintaining equal-population districts would make county boards too large and unwieldy. News Briefs at a Glance CHICAGO (UPI) - Water pollution has reached the critical state in Lake Erie, but the other four Great Lakes are “not bad,” the commissioner of the Federql Water Pqllution Control Administration said yesterday. “Lake Erie has the dubious tinction of becoming America’s Dead Sea,” James M. Quingley said. WASHINGTON m - Pfc. Joseph Maka of Allendale, Mich, will soon receive in Vietnam a small package from Rep. Gerald R. Ford, R-Mich. It contains the flag of Michigan. Maka asked for the flag because the 44th artillery, his outfit, plans to decorate their mess hall with flags of every state represented by men of the 44th. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Edward V. Long, D-Mo., is backing a bill to aid the average taxpayer who gets ensnarled in an income tax squabble with the Internal Revenue Service. Long introduced a bill which would create 20 tax commsisioners to help taxpayers obtain a quick and fair hearing on disputes involving refunds or tax obligations of less than $2,500. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Wholesale food prices dropped in December for the third consecutive month, according to the Labor Department, indicating continued reduction in retail prices. Lower prices for eggs, poultry and fresh vegetables accounted for most of the December wholesale food price reduction. WASHINGTON (/PI - Spec. 4 Carlyle L. Gould, son of Mrs. Martha J. Dishman of Climax, Mich., and Pfc. Larry D. Myers, husband of Mrs. Rita J, Myers, Pittsford, Mich., have been killed in action with the Army in Vietnam, the Defense Department said yesterday. SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI) -’The San Diego State College newspaper, the Daily Aztec, devoted an issue last November to marijuana and LSD, concluding there was widespread student use of both drugs. Yesterday, Bonni Jo Bilyeu; 21, the newspaper’s editor during the fall term, was arraigned on suspicion of smuggling $4,000 worth of marijuana across the Mexican border. OWOSSOI/PI — Merger of Eastern Pilgrim College of Allentown. Pa., with Owosso College was approved Thursday by trustees of the two Holiness Church-affiliated Institutions. Eastern Pilgrim, a four-year college de voted primarily to ministerial training, has a slightly smaller enrollment than Owosso College’s 240. Plans call for merger to be made by June 1. WASHINGTON (J’l - President Johnson has approved a Civil Aeronautics Board decision granting Pan American World Airways authority to operate across the United States, including service for Detroit. The authority enables Pan American to provide global service matching that of some foreign airlines. DETROIT (UPI) — The chairman of the Board of Chrysler Corp., Lynn A Townsend, yesterday was elected chairman of the Automobile Manufacturers Association (AMA). The board of the AMA also elected three new directors to fill vacancies. They are Virgil E. Boyd, president of Chrysler Corp.; Roy D. Chapin Jr., chairman of American Motors Corp.; and William Luneberg, president of American Motors. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -A veteran police officer will leave the township force next week. Detective Donald McLaughlin said he is taking his family to Phoenix, Ariz., for reasons Of his wife’s tiiealth. McLaughlin joined the force as a patrolman in September 1960 after serving at Sylvan Lake. it it k I enjoyed working in this community and hate to leave, but I have no choice,” Mcl^ugh- Birmingham Area News . Bloomfield Twp. Officer Leaves Force Next Week lin said. “I only hope I can find a job in, police work in Phoenix,” h? added. McLaughlin and his wife, Sharem, have two children, Dawn, 5, and Marc, 3. They live at 2792 Pinto, Commerce Township. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Reg-istratim is Monday for the winter term of adult classes offered by the schools’ recreation department. Registration can be made by mail or in person at Andover High School. Classes begin Jan. 23. Classes include: MONDAY: Aviation instrument reading, guitar and banjo, sketching, dog obedience, first aid add square dancing. TUESDAY: Archery, bridge, French conversation, stock market and water safety instructing. WEDNESDAY: . Aviation I, French cooking, interior decorating, office machines, power squadron, social dancing, upholstering, driver education, golf, mechanical drawing, oil painting, slimnastics, typing and volleyball. THURSDAY: Furniture antiquing, fencing, tailoring, dad’s gym night and knitting. THOMAS F. WIETHORN Fisher Body Manager Will Head Group The manager of General Motors’ Fisher Body Pontiac plant, Thomas F. Wiethorn, has been named chairman of the GM Pontiac Plant City Committee relationsactivities. for 1967 by GM President James M. Roch-e. The Pontiac Plant City Committee is one of 60 such committees across the nation, which is responsible for guiding and coordinating GM’s community relations activities. , Other members of the Pontiac Plant City Committee are: From Fisher Body Division: Alger V. Conner, plant personnel director; Karl F. Davies, resident comptroller; From GMC Truck & Coach Division: Martin J. Caserio, vice president of GM and general manager of GMC Truck & Coach Division; John A. Castle, director of public relations, Earl A. Maxwell, personnel director; John D. Mintline, divisional comptroller; Thomas E. Wilson, manufacturing manager. On the committee from Pon tiac Motor Division are: Theodore B. Bloom, personnel direc tor; John Z. DeLorean, vice president of GM and general manager of Pontiac Motor Di vision; Enoch Eley, divisional comptroller; Robert W. Emrick director of public relations; F. James McDonald, works manager. -* ■* ★ Wiethorn lives at 2640 Bradway, Bloomfield Township. in Early 196/ 21.1 Pet. Drop Shown From January 1966 DETROIT (AP)-Early January sales of U. S. autos, the nation’s first important economic barometer of the new year, showed a 21.1 per cent dip below January 1966. All four of the nation’s auto makers reported sharp sales declines Friday for the first 10 days of the month. It was their deepest percentage dive for any 10-day sales period since 1967 models went on the market last fall and interrupted more than a year of solid successes. SOBERING FACTORS Further clouding the industry’s economic picture were these factors: • Some assembly plants were closed or on short work schedules as production was cut down to the size of demand. • President Johnson’s call this week for a federal income tax increase poses the strong possibility that consumers will have less to spend on cars. • The industry awaits a decision, due by Jan. 31, on how tough the federal government’s final draft of 23 safety standards for 1968 cars will be. IMMEDIATE PROBLEM But sales figures were the immediate problem as the four companies reported total sales of 160,536 cars, 41,748 fewer than in the same period last year. LANSING (/PI - The Michigan Nurses Association said yesterday members have rati^ fied a contract providing salary raises ranging from 8.5 per cent for supervisors to 15.5 per cent for 51 staff nurses at Alpena General Hospital. Staff nurses will receive a minimum of $450 a month, head nurses will start at $495 and supervisors will receive at least $540. LANSING (UPI) - A public hearing was set for Houghton Jan. 31 to hear plans for main taining most of the Isle Royal National Park as a wilderness area. The State Conservation Commission will recommend to the National Park Service that 90 per cent of the huge park be left as a wilderness area. |! '66 County Budget $112,000 in Black Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the Oajdand County Board of Auditors, said yesterday that the county emerged from its 1966 operation with an excess of $112,000. This budgetary saving will be applied to the $398,895 deficit the county carried into 1966 from its 1965 budget, reducing the deficit to $286,895. Speaking at a meeting of the ways and means committee of the County Board of Supervisors, Murphy said that the 1966 excess was due mainly to a reduced obligation in the amount of Medicare funds the county had budgeted for payment to the state. Last summer Murphy expressed concern that the county, with its January, 1966, deficit carryover, might end up with a $790,000 total ideficit by the' end of the year. ' . ★ ★ ★ Cost cutting on county operational functions the balance of 1966 was called for by Murphy in an effort to avoid a deficit increase. PROPERTY TRANSFER Murphy also told committee members that paper work in conjunction with the transfer of county property for the Pontiac Municipal Airport should be completed early next month. The committee agreed that the 65-car capacity parking lot adjoining the building at 1 Lafayette will go to the city when the land switch is consummated. . ★ ★ ★ In other action the committee ruled against increasing the county’s appnipriation of $6,500 this year for emergency aid to the Royal G^k Township recreation program. xm PONTIAC PEBSS, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1967 Did Welshman landed in Alabama Long Before 1492^ By EDDY GILMORE LONDON (AP) - Did a Welshman discover America 322 years before Christoi*er Columbus, in what is now Alabama, near Mobile? British historian Richard Deacon has made out a strong case for the Welshman, Madoc Ad Owaiin Gwynedd. ★ ★ ★ In a scholarly but sprightly written book to be published by Frederick Muller of London on Feb. 23, Deacon says; “Though Columbus still takes pride of place as the best-known and authenticated discoverer of America, it seems evai with a slight study of tiie history of this subject that other and lesser-known explorers have equal claims to be considered.” GIVES ACCOUNT Over 269 pages Deacon plumps for Madoc. ★ ★ * Deacon’s hook, “Madoc and the Discovery of America,” gives this account: ★ ★ ★ The Welshman sailed from Rhos-on-Sea in north Wales and landed near Mobile. He re- turned to his homeland and then pushed off again, the second time for Lunday Island, in the Bristol Channel between north and south Wales. ★ ★ ★ This time the Welshman also landed along the southern shores of America, went up the Alabama River and other streams and disappeared in the wilds of present-day Tennessee. Descendants there were Welsh Indians, speaking a language sprinkled with Welsh words and sentences of Welsh construction. NOT PROVED What about the recent Vinland map? “It does not prove that Leif (Erikson) discovered America, despite Yale University’s claims that the map was made some 50 years before Columbus’ voyage in 1492,” writes Deacon. ★ ★ * Deacon then asks: “Did he (Madoc), unheralded and unknown to the writers of history, arrive in toe new world 322 years before Columbus? Was he the first of the great transatlantic explorers? ★ ★ ★ “Or is this a faded myth from the mists of Celtic legend, or a gilded and faked piece of evidence fabricated at the behest of toe Tudors through Jealousy of Columbus?” PROS AND CONS Deacon pours out toe pros and cons and when he’s finished the evidence seems in toe Welshman’s favor. Serving in the British navy during WoHd War II, Deacon sailed a small flat-bottomed boat from Norfolk, Va., to North Africa. ★ ★ ★ ’ “I came to toe conclusion,” he says, “that if we could cross the Atlantic in a keelless craft, such a voyage was perfectly possible in Madoc’s day, ★ ★ ★ Anyhow, toe Daughters of toe American Revolution have erected a marker of Madoc’s landing on Alabama’s cs)ast which says: “In mernwy of Prince Madoc, a Welsh explorer, who landed on the shores of Mobile Bay in 1170 and left behind, with the Indians, toe Welsh language.” What do you expect for $1409?* If you expect 4 doors, and a 7 cubic foot trunk, and bucket teats, and a heater-defroster lystem, and 4-wheel disc brakes, and 4«peed full synchromesh transmission and a 4-wheel independent suspension system, the Dauphine should come as no surprise to you, because all that comes with it. I But we expect that’s much more thari yon expected. J lAST AMD OUIF COAST P.d.t. 1 I WHITEWAUS additional R&M MOTORS -334’4738 TO 6 DOWNTOWN STORE CLOSED SUNDAYS H ■ ■ } 1.99 to 2.29 crib blankets Towels, sets —regularly $2 rec'g. blankets, 69c if perfect “Bunny West” underwear buy Juveniles' and toddlers’ polos Juvenile boys’ corduroy slacks 1.37 1.47 44* 2.»1.09 77* 1.66 100% cotton fleece, blends. Prints, solids. Soft cotton terry towels, wash cloths. > Slight irreg. 100% cotton flannelette. Reg. 2/1.39 undershirts, button front. 2/1.19 pull-on 2/99c Reg. $1 cotton knits, long sleeves, 3 to 7. Reg. 1.99 cotton corduroys, in sizes 3-7. Blanket aleeper regularly 3.29 2.17 60% acetate / 40% cotton, applique. Formula bags, regularly 5.00 2.97. Tote bags, vinyl with flip top, insulated. Colton acetate quilt, reg. 2.99 2.17 Ceiocloud non-aller-genic fill, washable. Flannel pajamas values to 3.99 1.37 Qirls' print 1(X)% cotton flannels. 2-6x. 98c crib sheet in 100% cotton 87‘ Fine' cotton muslin, fits any 6-year crib. Birdseye diapers regularly 1.99 1.67 del. 27x27" size, "Bunny West" brand. Comforter sets regularly 5.99 3.97 Downy comforter wtih matching pillow. Toddlers’ 2-pc. Toddler overall “butcher girls” regularly 1.39 1.97 99* Cotton print and solid tops, slacks. 3-7. Bib front cotton corduroys. Sizes 2-4. 79c cotton knit AII-Uins of Grand Rapids. ★ ★ ★ MRS. CHARLES W. COLLINS Alencon lace on the Empire bodice and Victorian sleeves accented the bride’s classic gown of ivory peau de soie s^ed with Watteau train. Her tiered illusion veil fell from a petal headpiece. ★ ★ ★ Phalaenq)sis orchids encircled with Stephanotis and ivy were arranged in a semi-cascade. ★ ★ With Judith Heady of Ann Arbor, maid of honor, were Inldes-maids Mrs. Mitchel Phillips, Livonia; Bonnie MacLean, and Mrs. John McGonigal, both of Ann Arbor. * ★ ★ Joseph O’Donnell of Williams-ville, N.Y. was best man along with the ushers J^C«lMir. Bicwuilit Pi(M|B Ml (Mdy •»•€!»• ' t|h' '^ram^ mjm MAX BROOCK, INC. MA 64000 BUY, SELL, TRADE - - -. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT A^S!- Solid Lumber Has Edge Solid lumber needs no cover* i^) for I exposed edges, as along shelving, sides of cupboards and cabinet doors. ^ Edges boards have same handsome g^ain as the isides. 40- } V - ''S-' W:.. ■ _ *** |IH> incompoftiW® W«ot ^ftments in Woterfod Township. ' '*' Our 1 - ond 2-bodreom suitos brin$ now eiegonce to opartment living thoy crr« guiotf All eldcfric Hot-Jjoiftt KitcHon, large tiled bathrooms fhot Of# hi for a queen, decorator designed rooms of tomorrow, o pH* vote pqtio or porch ... oil these*ond mopt wondi^ul surpriees awoH ot die f mbossy Weet Use artificial 1 ig h t to grow better house plants. Place your plants under flwMrescent tubes. A Pennsylvania State University correspondence course tells you hovfi^, fc Have fluorescent tubes in movable or permanent fixtures. Fastmed to the lower side of an unused bodkshelf, tubes ^ve light to plants placed on the next lower shelf. A single tube seldom gives enough light. Mount a number parallel. Paint the shelves white to increase reflected light. Set up fluorescent light units in yoUr main living room. Hallways and closets are godd. Basements are excellent if not too cool. ★ ★ * Commercial lighting units are available for indoor gardening Some come as enclosed cases with doors to control temperature and humidity. "LUXURIOUS TWO-B£DROOM AMBASSADOR SUIT£.^^1B5 Movable carts, equippeil with fluorescent fuEtures and trays, in decks one above flie other, Are on the market. t. "1 Study the correspondence course to learn more about care of plants indoors. A . ★ ★ 537^ Hlghictod fld., Wotorford 4\ Miles West of Tel-Horon Shopping Center on Highkmd Rd. (M59) 674^0569 IT'S TOO COLO TO SWIM NOW, BUT Wf DOHAV£AWONDIRFULPOOl,TOO HOW? I don’t know. But don’t let the snowdrifts icy roads or cold north winds keep you away front: Lakeland Estates this Sunday SNUG WARM MODELS! • Colonial • Tri-LeVel • Bi-Level e Quad-Level (Split Level) Homes from *28,900 ALL 3- & 4-BEDROOM HOMES INC. LOT flPEll SUMY 12-7 Daily 1 - 7 Closed Fridays MODEL PHONE OR 3-8021 SIMPLE TO FIND Drive out Dixie Hwy. 4/10 mtU North of Walton Blvd.-Wiliioms Lk. tntorioction. Turn ri^ht at "Porodt of Homoi" sign. Office on right. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. This 3-Bedroom RANCH Convtni«nt traffic pottam in this lovtiy horn* with family room and naturol firaploca, IVs baths, 2V^-cor garotjia, full bosamant ond ••alad-glass windows and deorwatl. 3534 Lprona Dr, Wotkins Hills. 1/10 mil* from Dixio Hwy.-Watkins Lake Rood intarsaction. FULL PRICE incl. lot $25,900 WILL BUILD on YOUR LOT or OURS OPEN DAILY r-7 P.M. CIsMd fri. OR 3-8021 Will Build on Your Lot or Oura OSS HOMES INC. 1941 S. Telegrctph Rd. FE 4-0591 Send your name and address with $3.00 to House Plants, Box 5000, University Park, PennsyY vania ^6802. A course copy will cqme to you by mail. Knife Holder From Handle A wooden shopping handle, of the kind placed on large pack ages at department stores makes a handy knife holder. Nail through its metal loops to a wall strip or a separate board. ★ ★ ♦ Finish by giving it a coat of paint to harmonize or match your kitchen color scheme. . GAIN ROOM—This family took their patio indoors, converted it to a needed family room. Paved slab became the floor, covered with resilient tile. Wood frame walls were easy to erect and panel with straight grain cedar boards. Large windows retain garden atmosphere. Enjoy Year-Round Comfort Bring Patio Inside This Winter What do you do with the patio when summer is over? Some people ignore it. Some wrap it in dreams of next summer’s sun. But others take it indoors with them, for year-around use. For those who need an extra room — family room, bedroom, or whatever — bringing the patio inside is a grand idea, for it’s neither hard to enclose nor to replace with another outdoor living area. Often an existing patio — the kind that’s built as an appendage to the house — isn’t the best for outdoor living. But freqnenUy it’s in an ideal location for a family room or child’s bedroom. % One family who made the conversion to a family room simply IMPROVE YOUR HOME NOW MD SAVE!. Quality Construction At Lowest Prices! COMPLETE. BUILDING SERVICES AVAILABLE Attics • Additions Rocraation Rooms Kitchona • Bathrooms Aluminum Sldinc FREE ESTIMATES Since 1945 UP TO 5 YEARS TO PAY ON FHA Other Finanea Plant AvaHabla to Moot Your Natdt .■ CONSTRUCTION S COMPANY S 86 North Saginaw ■ nor Pinaneo nans m G6M FE 2-1211 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC FE 2-1212! covered the patio slab with resilient tile, then added a good area rug to make a comfortable walking surface. ★ * ★ Since the area nestled in an ell of the house, adjoining kitchen on one side and front hall and living room on the other, it was easy enough to connect the new space to the existing house. ROOF EXTENDED Around two sides, stud walls Were built and a pitched roof was extended out from the present house roof. Large fir beams were left exposed as a design element for the family room’s ceiling. The wall between family room and kitchen was removed, with a bank of new kitchen cabinets built as a divider and a pass counter. Then the front hall was opened . to form a continuous passage into both family room and kitchen. Inside the family room, two walls were paneled with 1x6 inch tongue-and-groove cedar boards finished clear to let the cedar’s golden brown coloring warm the room. * ★ ★ A big brick fireplace was centered on one outside wall and flanked on either side with windows reaching almost from floor to ceiling. These capture a lovely view of the garden and retain a bit of outdoor atmosphere. Furnishings were purchased with comfort in mind, A sofa and occasional chairs covered in tight-weave wool take wear without showing it and contribute sharp blues and greens in contrast to the warm tones of cedar and brick. An informal dining area near the kitchen has a sturdy, round maple table and captain’s chairs, and the set also makes an excellent play table for youngstors. ★ ★ Just outside the family room and at floor level, a new outdoor living area was added in the form of a wbpd deck. DlXIfli COMSTRUCTION CO. Get Two Estimates and Then Call Us! No Confusing Prices . . . Buy Directly From Owner! e Porches e Bathrooms e Alum. Siding e Foundations e Alum. Butters e Kitchens e Attics e Dormers e Oarages e Awnings CALL OR 4-0371 LI I-44T6 (Call Colloet) Call After 6 P.M. 614-2434 NO MONEY DOWN up to 7 Years to Pay DIXIE CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 5144 Hithland Rd. ^ CrttotM Lk. A and Airport Nd. / Everywhere You Go More and More ISCDL.DI teQL-Dl FOR SALE BATEMAN REALTY CO. FE.8-7I6I 377 S. TELEGRAPH THE SI6N OF ACTION TRADING Is Our Business BATEMAN REALTY will Guarantee in writing the sale of your present home. BUY NOW and SELL UTER. it's os simple as that with our GUARANTEED HOME TRADE-IN PLAN For Details Call , BATEAAAN REALTY REALTOR-MLS PONTIAC FE 8-7161 311 S. Telegraph Rd. NATlONWirE ROCHESTER OL 1-8518 130 S. Rochester Rd. FIND-A-HOME : AMEIICA'S IIMKI OIE EXECITIVES EMPLCTEEt KFEIIAL MIAIIZATIU NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-8181. nmumm Only 10 Weeks to Go Make Your Plans Now This Model Open Sunday 2-5 2675 CuBtom Features • Sunken Living Room • Paneled Faniily Room • Marble Fireplace • 2V2 Baths • Full Basement • 2 Car Garage (Plastered) • 1st Floor Laundry Room • Large Bedrooms VAX Montebello We Will Duplicate On Your Lot for ‘27,950 Other Plans From $15,950 Up I DIRECTIONS: Walton Blvd. to Clinton-J ville to Angclus Road to Lake Angelas Lake View Estates. Other homes are being built and nearing completion — trade your old house. Your host Lee Kerr. AI.1,1YPES OK MORTCACKS AND FINANCING AVAILABLE INCLUDING 10% M.C.I.C. 334-0921 1071 W. HURON • PONTIAC REAL'jTY AND BUILDING CO. Dan Mattingly Offers With i No Penalty ■ W Points DOWN OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO 8 P.M. Colonial Living at it's Best $27,900 This Weinberger heme is a 4 bedroom brick colonial that you will love. 1 Vs baths, 2-car garage and a large family room with natural fireplace. An ideal location for everyone, close to shopping, schools and in a very desirable location. Ready for immediate occupancy. Oh yas . . . lots of closets, too. West of Elizabeth Lake Rd. on M-59 (Highland Rd.) to Candlestick then left 1 block to house. Other Fine Selections Call for Information or Appointment UKE PRIVILEGES $15,500 This beautiful 2-ttery, 3-bedroom home has a full basement and attached garage, a large landscaped lot with trees, and maintenance-free aluminum siding. Near Watkins Lake and you will have lake privileges. $32,500 WALLED LAKE This luxurious Weinberger homo is less than 3 years eld. A 3-bodroom ranch with attached 2-car garage, natural fireplace, paneled family room, fully bricked, in a wonderful location. Drive out and sea it today. bRAYTON WOODS $25,900 3-bodreom homo with a natural fireplace and hof water heat, full baaoment with a finished recreation room, 2Vi-car attached garage and a covered patio, built-ins in the kitchen and in immaculata condition throughout. You can own this lovely home for only $25,900 and this is a good buy. Call about it today. 1st Street $13,900 Attractive 2 bedroom framo bungalow with full basement and gat heat. Has a formal dining room,'hardwood fleers, plasftted walls, gat hcaf, a nicely'landKaped fenced in yard. It's near schools and transporfation. Call for Trade Informati6n DAN MATTINGLY FE 5-9497 FE 2-2444 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1967 A Pc^foc Area Deaths MrSr Willard Dye Service for Mrs. Willard (Min tie) Dye, 88 of 302 Seward will be 1:30 p.m. Monday at Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home, with burilil in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Dye died yesterday. She was a member of First Methodist Church. Surviving are five daughters Mrs. Guy Emery, Mrs. Tom Smith and Mrs. Blondie Vancil all of Pontiac, Mrs. Wilson Ballard of Sylvan L^ke and Mrs. Frank Kennedy of Holston, Va., and three sons. Grant Lilly of Abingdon, Va., Eldridge Lilly of Vista, Calif., and Roy Lilly of Cleveland. Also surviving are a brother. 34 grandchildren and 45 greatgrandchildren. Mrs. Melvin McClard Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Melvin (Eva) Mc-Clard. 64, of Dexter, Mo., will be tomorrow from the Rainey Funeral Home in Dexter with burial there in the Dexter Cemetery* Mrs. McClard, a member of the Dexter Christian Church, died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Mrs. Anita Garner of Dexter; two sisters; and two brothers. Mrs. Kenneth F. Oakes Service for Mrs. Kenneth F. (Clara I.) Oakes, 59, of 4085 Solvay, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. Monday at the Coats Funeral Home, with bur ial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Oakes died yesterday. She is survived by her husband; two daughters, Mrs. Robert Aiken of Waterford Township and Mrs. Kenneth Soncrain te of Pontiac; a son, Charles of P1 a i n w e 11; two brothers Charles N. Harris of Hoily and Wiiiard R. Harris of Muskegon; a sister; and eight grandchii-dren. Mr. Tiliema died yesterday He was a machine operator at GMC Truck & Coach Division. Surviving are his wife. Dor othy J.; two sons, Donald of Alger and Allan of Seattle, Wash.; two daughters, Evelyn and Velda, both of Pontiac; two brothers, Wiliiam of Milford and Albert Tillman of Pigeon; and one grandchild. Nathan E. Chatmon The body of Army Spec. 4 Nathan E. Chatmon of 215 Rapid has been brought to the Frank Carruthers Funaral Home from Vietnam. Arrangements will be announced later. Spec. 4 Chatmon, 22, was killed Monday while on a goodwill mission near Saigon. He was with the Infantry. Chatmon is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Chatmon of Pontiac. Mrs. Charles Thompson BLCWMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Charies (Blanche) Thompson, 82, of 1770 Hamilton will be 2 pirn. Monday at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home, with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Thompson died yesterday. Mrs. Charles E. Wood PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice for Mrs. Charles E. (Erna F.) Wood, 45, of 1588 Vinewood will be 1:30 p.m. Mmday at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Wood was killed in a traffic accident in Pontiac today. She is survived by her husband; a daughter, Chariotte M. at home; two sisters, Mrs Mary Ledford of Pontiac and Mrs. Margaret Stites of Waterford Township; and a brother, John Werner II of Ortonville. lyASHINGiON (AP) - Pos tal rates for mail going overseas will be increased 13 per cent effective May 1. A post Office spokesman, in making the announcement Friday, said a final decision on whether to increase domestic postal rates “is still under review.” A domestic increase would require congressional action whereas the postmaster general has authority to set rates for international mail. International postal rates were last increased six years ago. Domestic rates went iq> in 1963. The major increases an nounced Friday include a 2-cent rise, from 13 cent$ to 15 cents a bail ounce, on airmail letters to the Caribbean area. Airmail to the rest of the hemisphere remains at 15 cents. Airmail to Europe and North Africa will go from 15 cents a half ounce to 20 cents, but the 25-cent airmail letter rate to the rest of the world will remain unchanged. Surface maii rates for overseas points wiil go from 11 cents to 13 cents and post cards from 7 cents to 8 cents. Exempted from the increases is mail to Canada and Mexico where postage rates are the same as for domestic letters Mail to servicemen in Vietnam aiso is unaffected since it is sent under domestic rates to military post office addresses. 2 G/s Won't Have to Pay Fafe to Viet Baby Girl Young Mrs. John J. Thomas A memorial service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. John J. (Evalyn F.) Thomas of Castro Valley, Calif., will be held Monday at the Castro Valley Congregational Church. Mrs. Thomas died yesterday. She is survived by her husband; three children; Mary Margaret, Suzanne and George all at home; two sisters; and a brother. Lee H. Tiliema Service for Lee H. Tiliema, 57, of 160 Westway will be 3:30j p.m. Monday at the Sparks-Grif-j fin Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. TROY — A graveside service for baby girl Young will be 11 a.m. Monday at Troy Union Corners Cemetery by the William R. Potere Funeral Home. Surviving are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William T. Young of 6964 Crooks; a brother. Nor man; and a sister, Joan. News in Brief New car parts valued at $220 were reported stolen yesterday from automobiles at Lloyd Motors Inc., 1250 Oakland. STATEMENT OF CONDITION FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION Of OAKLAND PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Dectmbar 31, 17M ASSETS First Mortgage Loans .........$07,315,974.63 Properties Sold on Contract 1,1M,S02.2S Home Improvement and Modernization Loans (82.10% Insured by FHA) 2,682,662.70 Loans on Savings Accounts 395,688.01 Real Estate in Judgment and Owned 250,173.17 Slock in Federal Horne Loan Bank 750,000.00 Prepayments to F.S.L.I.C. Secondary Reserve ............. 864,665.12 Deterred Charges and Other Assets .................. 112,778.89 U S. Government Securities ......$2,088,419.01 Cash on Hand and In Banks . 3.469,595.21 Total Cash and U. S. Government Securltiei 8,558,014.22 Land and Office Buildings ’ (less accumulated depreciation) •................. 1,573,813.29 Office Furniture, Fixtures and Equipment (less accumulated depreciation) 140,742.48 TOTAL ASSETS .............$80,830,994.79 LIABILITIES Savings Accounts .............$67,346,593.30 Advances From Federal Home Loan Bank of Indianapolis ........... 8,S0O,0( Loans in Process . . 172,21 Accrued Expenses and Other Liabilities ............... 147,6; Deterred Credits 528,31 (Seneral Reserves $4,000,000.00 Surplus ........... 136,046.25 Total General Reserves and Surplus ....................... 4,136,046.25 TOTAL LIABILITIES ..$80,830,994.79 CHARTERED AND SUPERVISED BY THE U.S. GOVERNMENT I, James Clarkson, President of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland, being duly sworn, deposes and says that the above is a true and correct statement of the condition of the above named Association a; shown on the books as of December 31 1966. JAMES CLARKSON President Slate of Michigan, County of Oakland Subscribed and sworn to before me, a Notary Public this I2th day ol January* 1967. AAARILYN COTTERMAN (Seal) Notary Public, Oakland County, Michigan. My commission expires February 10,1968. January 14, 1967 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed bids will be received until 5 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, January 23, 1967 at the Clerk's OHice, 4995 W Huron Street, Pontiac, Michigan to be open^ at the regular board meeting on the following truck^. These vehicles can be seen at the Water Department Garage between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. A/londay through Friday only. Police Dept. H-ton pickup Ford I960 Building Dept. W-ton pickup Ford I960 The Waterford Township Board reserves ttie right to refect tiny or all bids or parts of bids In the best interest of the Township. BY ORD^R OF THE WATIRTORD TOWNSHIP BOARD ELMER R. FANGBONER >. / WaterfordifTownshlp Clerk " January 14, 1967 Heard Music for Traveling PENDLETON, Ind. James Mattingly is no longer a trusty at the Indiana reformatory. Authorities said he drove the prison band to Indianapolis for a concert, then stole the bus and fled with it while the band was playing a concert. ir ir -k He was captured driving the bus but not, according to police, until he had bought gasoline for the vehicle—using the prison credit card. German MagazineRejeefs Appeal on Serialization HAMBURG, Germany (UPI) -A West German ntaga^e has turned down a last-ditch ap^al by a close friend of Mrs. John F. Kennedy to stop serialization of an uncut version of William Manchester’s controversial book, “The Death ctf a President.” “There is no cause for abridging or changing the manuscript,” Henri Mannen, chief editor of DerStem, said last night. He made the statement after a two-and-a-half hour meeting with William Vanden Heuvel, an attorney and close friend who flew here yesterday morning in an Attempt to persuade Nannen to delete certain passages to which Mrs. Kennedy had objected. DerStern bought an un abridged version of the seriliza-tion for $72,000, but refused to cut the sections which Look magazine agreed to delete under threat of a lawsuit by the former first lady. William Att-wood, editor-in-chief of Look, also took part in yesterday’s talks with Nannen. •k -k -k Mrs. Kennedy was reported to be “very upset” about the plans of the West German mag abridged version of the serializa azine to continue publishing the events durii^ and after the assassination of President Ken nedy in 1963. DerStern has already pub lished the first installment of TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) — Two soldiers who thought they would have to pay $295 each to get back to Vietnam duty were en route to Saigon today aboard a U.S. Air Force jet. A reinterpretation of a new Army regulation put Spec. 4 Edward McGarry, 19, of Poland, Ohio, and Spec. 5 Michael F. Tomsich, 22, of Ely, Minn., on a special mission C141 out of Travis Air Force Base FrMay. The two GI’s had volunteered for six months of additional duty in Vietnam to be served after completing their regular one-year tour. But after 30-day leaves in the United States the two showed up too late last Saturday to catch a regular Mill tary Airlift Command flight. The Army booked them on a commercial flight according to procedure. The $295 cost would have been docked from their future pay. Then the Army said — in the words of a Pentagon spokesman — “H(dd up, boys — we’ll get you there.” The confusion stemmed from a new order authorizing government-paid travel for volunteers for extra Vietnam duty. The order went into effect before McGarry and Tomsich left Vietnam on leave but after they had volunteered. “Nobody really knew what was going on,’’ Tomsich s8id. “Now everybody will be informed.” He and McGarry were waiting at San Francisco International Airport Thursday afternoon for a commercial flight when the Army changed its mind. Pair Robs, Beats Pontiac Resident Samuel Pankey, 20, of 1551 Richmond told police that he was robbed of $22 last night and beaten by two men in the vicinity of Walton and Baldwin. Pankey said the pair forced their way into his car after one of them darted in front of it and made him slow down. Photo Exhibit at Oil Library “Queen of Cathedrals,” a color photographic portrait of the Notre Dame of Chartres Cathedral in France, is on display in Kresge Library at bak land University, in cooperation with Time-Life Books of New York. The free exhibit on the first floor of the library is open to the public from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily through Jan. 26. Manchester’s ,, bo^ last wedc and it was s(£f out in two days But the passages in the serialization said to be offensive to Mrs. Kennedy were contained in the sectHid and third parts ^ the series. ^ * k * , DerStern, which has a drcula-ti(m of more than two millirm in Germany, will publish the next installment Tuesday. Ckqjies of the magazine are available in many U.S. cities. Police Call for Help as 300 Get Unruly Pontiac police, pelted by snow- clittplER^Vl^, Mo: (JR • A burglar wbo inroke into the ^Caratbersville Hi^ Sriraol is stu^ ,with Amnething for which balls awj‘pop bokes last ni^h^ trill find rather a limiW by an unruly crowd of some 300 after the Pemtiac Central-Flint Northern b a s k e t b a H game, called the sheriff’s department for help. The crowd cm the comer of Huron and Franklin had begun to thin when two sheriff’s cars arrived and then it quickly dispersed. School officials could cite no reason for the disturbance other than the tension built up in the game that Central won 59 to 57. ir V OVNERS ality liiil U W e Offer > Finest Quality 'Service In . . . • TRACTOR EQUIPPING, SADDLE TANKS AND FIFTH WHEELS • TRACTOR AND TRAILER BRAKE SPECIALISTS • GENERAL AND SPECIALTY WELDING TRUCK AND TRAILER ALTERATIONS MARBILCAP ENTERPRISES 725 Oakland in Pontiac Phone 338-9253 or 338-9254 ndarket. He sti^ 142 souor rings for the Caruihersville High School dall^ of 1967. ’ DETROIT (AP) - Ltfby Haywood chalked up 31 points Friday night to pace Michigan Lutheran to a 11040 basketball victory over Ryerson Poly of Toronto. Paper adlars were invented in 1854. . quality & economy withStran-Steel buildings You get eeeiwiny with Stran-Steel buildings because economy is literally designed and built into every steel component It is the natural result of quality planned, mass production techniques that are not only better, but also economical. The savings are ./ passed along to you. Before you build any building, discover why a Stran-Steel building is a better investment Find out why Stran-Steel Is able to offer written guarantees to back-up the performance of the steel components. Lower heating and cooling bills are the direct result of exclusive insulated wall systems. Faster construction, often 60 to 90 days, will get you in business sooner. Call us for a free estimate or a copy of our brochure ”10 Costly Mistakes To Avoid Before You Build." We are able to handle youi complete turn-key project. Arrangements can be made for financing. OAKSTEEL DIVISION SCHURRER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 2431 Pontiac Road, Pontiac Phone 338-4019 Prandiind ■iilMcr -'.-’it CHANGE YOUR WORLD They laughed w hen Jules Veme said hack in 1866, ‘Til sail my sMp under the sea..yet we sailed the Nautilus under the Polar Ice in 1958. Patrick Henry, 1773, said, “(dve me liberty or give me death”; we gave J-L. VOORHF.KS him a place in history’. Words may change the course of w’orld affairs. - We greet a friend, “(iood Morning.” M Those two words are crammed with a promise—a good will message. They may he the vitalizing force to take him out of the doldrums. Re-memher, as Jules Verne and Patrick Henry changed our world with words, so might you change your M. E. SIFLK immediate world. VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 268 North Pcri’v Street Phone FK 2-8378 Glenn U. GrifGn Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME **Thoughtful Service** 46 Williams St Phone FE 84288 Was Emphatic in 78 Elections HALESITE, N.Y. (JP) - For 78 elections, William A. Rush-more has cast his ballot in Hale-site. He lived in the same house since then. The 99-year-old retired banker first voted in 1888 for , Grover Cleveland and has voted Democratic in every Presidential election since. Birmingham Unitarian Church Lone Pine at Woodward Minister: Robert Marshall Services: 9:30 & 11 a.ny. Sunday Welcome Does the Uncomfortable Pew Fit You? We hear a great deal these days about “the comfortable pew." Many of us might like to wrap ourselves in a "faith" that would shelter us from the problems of our day. But Unitarian Universalists are not seeking comfort. (Some even accuse them of seeking the hair-shirt). What are the things for which religious liberals ore looking? Unitarians have a deep respect for the many different views and practices of religion. More than that, Unitarians recognize we live in a world of great ethical and moral problems. They believe religion is irrelevant unless it can confront these problems. They are deeply concerned with the great issues of human destiny, yet skeptical of neat packages wrapped around "God" and "man" and "faith" and "death" and "good" and "evil." They revere the human spirit and see in it a mighty potential for growth. TheiKs is a religion that is searching and raising questions, rather than laying claim to all the answers. They are moved by the wonder of the universe. If you think the uncomfortable pew may fit you, come visit Birminghom Unitarian Church. 651 Woodward Ave. at Lone Pine Road MONDAY ONLY SPECIAL OPEN MONDAY 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. WKC HOME OF RNEST BRAND NAMES 108 N. SAGINAW-FE 3-7114 30" GAS RANGE by BROWN With Exclusive deluxe features • Safety-Lock Oven Racks • Lift-Out Oven Bottom • Four Giant Bonus Burners • Polished Burner Caps • Four Range Levelers • Low B.T.U. Flash Tub Ignition • Beautiful blue-grey Porcelain finish distinguishes the interior of all ranges by Brown, assuring rust-proof durability and effortless cleaning. A real buy! Regular 119.95 Special at... $98 NO AAONEY DOWN OTHER AAODELS AVAILABLE AT COMPARABLE SAVINGS WKC PLEDGES to GIVE YOU the BEST VALUES ALWAYS! FREE SERVICE In Our Own Sarvic* Deportment by factory trained experts. VVe Guorantef Satisfaction. Credit Arranged to meat your individual needt, budgetod and tailorod to make it easier for you. FREE DELIVERY by our expert and courteput driven te assure you of prompt careful delivery. FREEPARKIN8 Let our attendant park your car In WKC'S private parking lot at reor of our Store. Yek, It's free. YOU BUY HERE, MY HERE AND WEOURtELVES SCRVIOE, 0B.IVER ANOFlhANeE EVERYTNINO WE SELLl lit 4; & * PRESS. SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, mif K^ # -Junior EdirOi/« Quiz on Hailstones QUESTION: Haw do hailstones and snowflakes differ in their formations? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: In the middle and upper parts of high thunderstorm clouds, there are often many little drops of water wiiich remain liquid even when the temperature around them is bek)w freezing. When ice particles form in the cloud and when one of these strikes a water drop, the water flows over it and freezes at mice. These ice pellets (white arrows) may be lifted by strong updrau^ts within the cloud, dropped and lifted again, a number of times. They may hit more water droplets and get several shells of ice (cross section). When too, heavy to be lifted, they drop as hailstones (black arrows) sometimes the size of a baseball. Hailstones may do a great deal of damage. A moi^ake does not need the special conditions of the thunderstorm cloud to form. It is made when (he water vapor in the air crystallizes into a shimmering, six-sided ice crystal—-no two of which are said to be ever alike. Snowfakes may form by themselves very high up in a cloudless sky if it is cold enough. They are often the result of the water vapor in clouds freezing around minute specks of fioating matter like soil or ash. If falling through warmer air, snowflakes may change to rain. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Take a bit of black velvet out when it’s snowing and match some flakes. L 0 0 k at them quickly through a magnifying glass before they melt. De Gaulle, Kiesinger End Two Days of Talks PARIS (AP) - President Charles de Gaulle and West German Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger today wound up two days of talks that both ho^ will launch a new era of good feelings between Bonn and Paris. The visit was Kiesinger’s first trip abroad since assuming office Dec. 1. The 61-year-old chancellor has pledged to ti^ to revitalize the 1963 Franco-Ger- Five Soldiers Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon has identified five Army men killed in the Vietnam war. Another was listed as missing in action. Killed in action: ARMY ARKANSAS — Spec. 4 Joe H. Kelfv> Fort Smith. CALIFORNIA — Spec. 4 Merlin W. Moreno, Newark; Pfc. Ronald R. Conn, Pacolma. OHIO — Pic. John S. Bago. Cleveland. TEXAS — Spec. 4 John H. O'Brien, McLean. Changed from missing to dead, hostile: ARMY TEXAS — Spec. 4 Alejandro Garcia Jr., Laredo. Missing in action: \ ARMY Spec. 4 Gary C. RuhlofI Died, nonhostile: AAARINES NORTH DAKOTA - Pfc. Cleo L. Le-vang, Forman. Changed from missing to dead, nonhostile: ARMY CALIFORNIA — Spec. 4 John H. Hoeffs, Oceanside. man cooperation treaty without harming relations with Washington. After the initial meeting of the two leaders Friday, it appeared the emotional aspects of Franco-German rapprochement following World War II had giv en way to a more practical view. ■A ★ ★ The French described the talks as frank and cordial. The Germans said the discussions were to the point and free of any philosophical discourses. In a television interview, Kiesinger said he and de Gaulle were not in accord on all problems, but that there was a wide area of common ground. At a French Foreign Ministry dinner Friday night, Kiesinger said, “We do not expect any thing spectacular but the realization and appiication of the French-German treaty.” The French have been cool toward the pro-American policies of Kiesinger’s predecessor Ludwig Erhard. Bonn- and Paris still have conflicting views about what Paris calls West Germany’s special relationship with the United States. At the dinner, Kiesinger conceded that Bonn may well be to blame for the decline in relations since Chancellor Konrad Adenauer left office iq 1963. BIBLE REBINDING CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 On Greek Island Global Medical Center WASHINGTON - Hie sundrenched Greek island of K6s is turning into a doctor’s paradise. An international medical center will be completed late in 1967. The center on the 111-square-mile Aegean isle associated with Hippocrates will include a “palace of medicine,” a medical school, clinics, and laboratories. The pvject ia supported by flie Greek government and private funds. At five-year intervals, according to plans, doctors will gathbr on Kos to exchange views at a Congress on Medicine and Surgery, “For the first time in history,” V, a spokesman said, “top medical scientists from many countries have found their common grounds from which tiiey will tell the world of their efforts against pain and death.” HOME OF MEDICINE In a sense, world doctors will be coming to their spiritual home, the National Geographic Society says. Hippocrates (c. 460-370 B. C.), the so-called “Father of Medicine,” was probably bom on Kos; he reputedly practiced and taught there. The temple-hospital of Asklepios was the Mayo Clinic of its day. The Boy Scouts of America was founded on February 8, 1910. i Can Count oix Us. ..Quality Costs No More at Seai's Be Smart, Be Thrifty — Monday and Every Day! -You ,€an Be Sure of Extra Savings at Sears! No Phone Orders, C.Q.D.’s or Deliveriea *rxccpl large ilcinv Men's Moc’toe and Wingtip Brogues Handsome dress shoes with fine genuine Reg. $10.99 leather uppers. Rugged storm welts and non-marring. Jet madded polyvinyl soles and heels. Black or brown in sizes 1V% to 11. Monday only! ■Shorn Department, Main Floor ^97 Charge It MONDAY ONLA ~9 til 9 100% Combed Cotton hooded shirt sale Reg, $3.99 097 Pontiac Only md Say, “CHARGE IT” at Sears Men’s or women’s hooded .sweatshirts are water repellent. Combing refines cotton, for a tighter, tougher knit. Cotton fleeced selflining. Knitted rib - bottom, pouch pocket, drawstring on hood. S • XL. $4.47 Tall sizes.. 3.47 Sporting Goodi, Perry St. Batement til 9 Bonded Knit Wools and Blends 54 inches wide. 80% 6rlon, 20% wool. Reg. $2.98 Ideal for sewing suits and dresses for -■ q_ winterwear. Lining is 100% acetate. In assorted colors. Yard Goodt, Main Floor Charge It Solid Color Blanket Shells Blanket shells of rayon and acrylic in new 72x90-in. size colors. Completely washable. Treated to resist Reg. $7.98 shedding and piling. Long-wearing 5-in. nylon rUQ'T binding. Monday only! “w” * Domestic Dept., Main Floor Charge It- MONDW OM ^-9 til 9 Comfort Condition 5 Rooms! 2-Speed Humidifers Regularly $67.95 Monday Only 4988 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Antqmatically adds right amount of moisture to keep your family more comfortable, helps prevent dry-air discomfort to nose and throat. Protects furniture againat drying. Operates from any room. Electrical Deportment, Matn Baeement MONDAY ONLY-9 til 9 Women’s Classic Slipons The square toe goes continental. Plain vamp rises gently to flatter your foot. Soft textured leather uppers. Composi. lion soles. Sizes 6 to 10 in black or brown colors. Shoe Dept,, Main Floor Reg. $5.99 097 O Hr. Charge It MONDA\ ONLA-9 til 9 Tot’s Cotton Knit Cro-Sleepers 167 Rcff. $1.99 Popular 2-picce cotton knit sleepers. Choose from grifiper-fastener waist style to pullover style. Sizes 6 nios. to 4 or sizes 3 to 6. Pink, yellow, blue or aqua. Both styles keep their .shape and fit. infant Dept. Main Floor MONDAY ONLY-9 "til 9 Shop Sears Monday 9 Until 9 Boys’ Reversible Jackets Regular $9.99 69J Men’s Ski-Look Jackets Regular $12.99 Sizes 36 to 46 Nylon reversible jacket. Concealed drop-in hood. Knit cuffs fit simggly without binding. Two zippered pockets on reverse side. Machine washable. Sizes 6 to 12. Limit 2. Limited quantities! Boy*’ Wear, Main Floor MONDAY ()NLY-9 til 9 Charge It Quilted nylon taffeta reverses to nylon taffeta. (Warm Dacron'"' polyester batting. Reversible zipper, knit cuffs, waist drawcord Reversible colors, too. Available in sizes 36 to 46. See them at Sears. Limited quantities! Men’s Sportswear, Main Floor MONDAY OM.\-9 til 9 M.IL 6-Gauge Vinyl Window Shades Eg. $2.^ J87 Completely washable, room darkening Reg, $2.98 window shades. Shade fabric is embossed heavy duty, flame, fade, stain and tear resistant. Wliife only. Buy several. 37'Ax-6-ft. size. Charge It ttlindIDrapery Dept., Main Floor Wooden Back—Padded Seat Bar Stools Wood sanded to a satin finish and Reg. $10.99 combined with leather looking vinyl and $11.99 Heavy padding on seal. Chrome-plated footrest. Black enameled tubular steel Q88 legs. Monday only! lloueeu'aree, Main Haeement 24” or 30” Size MONDAY ONLY-9 lil 9 MONDAY ONLY-9 lil 9 2-Speed, 3-Cycle Automatic Washer Complete Bunk Outfits Mattresses and Springs Wash all fabrics Automatically 181 7 (Complete Pieces Regular $79.88 66 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Your finest fabrics are safe in this 2-speed washer. Brisk speed for washing everyday fabrics, gentle speed for delicate fabrics. Big capacity washer. Self-cleaning lint filter. Safely lid switch. Monday only! Gas Dryer .... .$159 Electric Dryer.... .$149 ini:irarit(’pr] or voiir nionev back f SEARS NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Ruggedly built of ull-solid hunlwood with extra thick posts ill wumi Suleni maple finish. Includes ladder with guardrail, 2 sturdy link springs, 2 innerspring mattresses. Sea them Monday at Sears and save! FiirnitHre Department, Second Floor v Oounlowii Loiitiar l*lionu LK 1! 7