nttac Pr«tt, W«dn«tday, Nov*mb«r 1 2, 1969
R—Rerun C—Color
MOKMN(;
5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C — On the Farm Scene
6:60 (2) C ~ Sunrise Semester
6:25 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By
6:30 (7) C — Woodrow the Woodsman
(4) Classroom — “Changing Earth:	Man
and His Minerals”
(7) C - TV College -“The New Towns”
7:00 (4) C —Today (7) C ~ Morning Show 7:30 (2) C - News , Weather, Sports 7:55 (9) News 8:00 (2) C —'^Captain Kangaroo
8:05 (9) R — Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R C - Movie: “The Seven Little Foys” (1955) Bob Hope. Millie Vitale
(9) Friendly Giant 8:40 (56) R—Modern Supervision
8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) R - Mr. Ed (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) C — Bozo 9:15 (56) Children's Hour 9:30 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies
(56) R — Listen and Say 9:45 (56) R — Science Is Searching
9:55 (4) C — Carol Duvall 10:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) C — It Takes Two (9) Ontario Schools I (56) C — Sesame Street 10:25 (4) C — News 10:30 (2) C — Della Reese — Dion, Pat Morita and Regis Philbin guest.
(4) C — Concentration (7) R — Movie: “When Comedy Was King” (1960) Laurel and Hardy, Charlie Chaplin
(50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:00 (4) C — Sale of the Century
(50) C—Strange Paradise (56) Reason and Read 11:15 (56) Misterogers 11:20 (9) Ontario Schools II 11:30 (4) C — Love of Life
(4) C — Hollywood Squares
(7) C — Anniversary Game
(50) C — Kimba 11:45 (9) C — News
\vi:i)NKsi)\v Ai Ti:H\no\
12:00(2) C — News. Weather. Sports (4) C “ Jeopardy (7) R — Bewitched (9) Take 30 (50) C — Alvin 12^05 (56) Americans From Africa
12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C — He Said. Sh ' Said
(4) C — News. Weather. Sports
(7) R C — That Girl (9) C — Tempo 9 (50) C — Galloping Gourmet
12:35 (56) Friendly Giant 12:55 (4) C - News (56) R — Art Lesson 1:00 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow
(4) C — Letters to Laugh-In
(7) C — Dream House (9) R C — Movie: “The Plainsman” (1966) Guy Stockwell, Don Murray (50) R — Movie:	“All
About Eve” (1950) Bette Davis. George Sanders. Anne Baxter, Celeste Holm. Gary Merrill. Marilyn Monroe 1:10 (56) Tell Me a Story 1:25 (4) C - News 1:30 (2) C — As the World Turns
(4) C — You’re Putting Me On
(7) C - Let’s Make a Deal
1:40 (56) R — Reason and Read
2:00 (2) C — Where the Heart Is
(4) C — Days of Our Lives
(7) C — Newlywed Game (56) R - NET Journal -Critical appraisal of the United Nations 2:25 (2) C~ News 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (A) C — Doctors (7) C ~ Dating Game 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4)0— Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R ~ Candid Camera (56) Consultation — Dr. Robert Muerhcke guests. (62) R — Movie: “Night Freight” (1955) Forrest
Tucker, Barbara Britton 3:30 (2) C-Edge of Night (4) C — Bright Promises (7) C — One Life To Live (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C -- Captain Detroit (56) Memo to Teachers 4:00 (2) R C — Gomer Pyle (4) R C — Steve Allen —. Soupy Sales and Carmen McRae guest.
*(7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Bozo
(56) R C — Sesame Street 4:30 (2) C—Mike Douglas— Shirley Jones, Lionel Hampton, Stanley Myron Handleman and Alan Burke guest.
(7) R C — Movie: “Aaron Slick From P u n k i n Crick” (1952) Alan Young, Dinah Shore (50) R — Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends
5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot
—	“Corsica and Majorca” (9) R C — F'lipper
(50) R C — Lost in Space (56) Misterogers -5:30 (9) R C ~ Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver.
5:45 (56) Merlin the Magi cian
vu n\i:si>\^ \i(.nI
6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News. Weather, Sports (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Americans From Africa — “Carpetbag Regimes” and ‘‘Negro Rule”
(62) R — Ozzie and Harriet
6:30 (2) C ^ News -Cronkite
(4) C — News — Huntley. Brinkley
(9) R — Dick Van Dyke
—	Rob has to work nights with a beautiful television star.
(50) R — Munsters — Grandpa tries to turn Eddie’s obnoxious friend into a rabbit.
(56) Basic Issues of Man ^ —What are the proper functions of the state? Shall the state b? servant or master of its citizens? (62) C — Robin Seymour
7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports
(7) C	News —
Reynolds. Smith (9) R C — Movie “Arrowhead” (1953) The
Apaches seem to prefer war to peace. Charlton Heston, Jack Balance (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) What’s New — How the United Nations headquarters in New York keeps in touch with all its offices throughout the world.
7:30 (2) C — Glen Campbell
—	Tony Randall, the Lennon Sisters alid Willie Nelson guest.
(4) C — (Special) Hey. Hey, Hey — It’s Fat Albert — Animated comedy is based on characters created by Bill Cosby. The ‘‘tackle championship of the whole world” hangs in the balance when Fat Albert backs out of a football game between Cosby's neighborhood team and the Green Street Terroi s. (7) C — Flying Nun Antique dealer decides Sister Bertrille has put a hex on him after he trades her a donkey for a valuable antique bed.
(50) C — Hockey: Detroit at New York
(56) Making Things (irow
—	“Potting”
(62) C ~ Ot Lands and Seas -- Ranching in California is seen.
8:00 (4) C — (Special) Johnny Carson — Georg(' C Scott. Maureen Stapleton and Marian Mercer join Johnny in a repertoire of sketches.
(7) C — Courtship ot Eddie’s Father — Eddie is sure the world will come to an end when Mrs. Liv-ings^n announces she will marry and go to Tokyo to live.
(56) Free Play
8:30 (2) C —Beverly Hillbillies — Sammy Davis Jr. encounters the hillbillies in New York’s Central Park, where they have built a log cabin and are about to settle down.
(7) C — Room 222 — Jason is hurt when he proves unacceptable to his^ date’s middle-class, conservative father.
(62) R — The Nelsons
9:00 (2) C — Medical Center — A teen-age
Th« Pontiac Prott, Wodnotdoy, Novonrtbor 12, 19
daujjhter oi a university pnifessor is injured in an auto accident, but Dr. Cl a n lion’s examination also reveals she is preg nant.
(4) C I Special) On Broadwav Diana Ross and the Su|)remes and T e ni p tations interpret p 0 p u 1 a r B r o advvay melodies and appear in musical-comedy sketches. (7l (’ — Movie: “Rage" (1966) (lUiit-ridden doctor in an isolated Mexican ccnstruction eamn must find the courage to save his own life. Glenn Kord. Stella Stevens.
(9) R C -Movie: "I’d Feather Be Rich" (19641 Young heires:^ finds substitute fiance to please dying grandfather wlio wants to see her happy. Sandra Doe. o b e r t Goulet, And Williams.
(56) International Magazine “The Cycle of Life - From Birth to Death" is explored in five segments: birth, thrtmgh fertility drugs: youth, through ritual dances in Indonesia; middle age.
through marriage bureaus that profit from loneliness; old age, through a Russian community with a high rate of longevity; and death, through ^a study of a funeral racket in Milan. (62) it — Movie: "The Durant Affair" (British. 1962) Some startling news, an astounding sum ol money and a brilliantly presented court case change the life of a conservative young woman. Jane Griffiths, Conrad Phillips
10:00 (2) C — Hawaii Five-0 — McGarrett seeks a university student who has stolen the royal robe (it King Kamehameha.
(4) C — (Special) Norman Rockwell — Works of the famed artist spring to life in comedy and song as [lost Jonathan Winters welcomes Michele Lee. Dick Smothers and surprise cameo guests.
(50) C -- News, Weather. Sports
(56) On Being Black In “Black Girl," a girl dreams of becoming a
dancer but is thwarted by her unsympathetic family.
10:;j0 (50) R — Ben Casey ~ Ben suspects an epidemic of child injuries stems from other-than-accidental causes.
(62) R Sea Ifunt
11:()0 (2) (4) (7) (9) C --News. Weather. Sports (62) R — Highway Patrol
(4) Johnny Carson —Bob Newhart, Billy De Wolfe and Lou Rawls guest
(7) (’ — Joey Bishop — Ida Lupino. Oliver and Rich little guest.
(9) R—Movie: "Sanders" (African. 1964) Drama based on Edgar Wallace tale of a diamond-smuggling doctor on his. death bed. Richard Todd, Marianne Koch.
(50) C - Merv Griffin Mrs Itnse Kennedy, mother ot the late President John F. Kennedy and the late Sen. Robert ^ Kennedy- guests
(62) R C — Movie: “Son
COLOfi
WEDNESDAY
of Samson" (Italian, 1961) Mark Forest, Chelo Alonso
11:35 (2) R C. — Movie: "14 Hours" (1951) Mentally disturbed man stands on a ledge of a Manhattan hotel, threatening to jump, Richard Basehart. Barbara Bel Geddes
1:00 (41 Beat the Ch»mp
(7) R — Texan
(9) Viewpoint
(50) R — Peter Gunn
1:05 (9) C — Perry's Probe
1:30 (2) R — Naked Cit'*
(4)	(7) C — News.
Weather
1:40 (7) C —' Five Minutes to Live By
2:30 (2) C—News. Weather 2:35 (2) TV Chapel
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THE PONTIAC
★ ★/★	/	PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER |2, 1960
Mom« Edition
-^trPAGES
106
Troops Moving Into D. C. for Antiwar March
WASHINGTON (AP) - The government today began hioving about 9,000 rlot-tralned regular tfoops into the Washington area as a “purely precautionary measure" in advance of this week’s antiwar demonstrations.
In the meantime, the Vietnam protesters have won the right to march down Pennsylvania Avenue—a street the government had Insisted was o f f limits—but will avoid the White House,
oncp a prime target of their demonstra-
Apollo 12 Faces a Delay After Malfunction
The Pentagon announced that paratroopers of the Army’s 82nd, Airborne Division arrived from Ft. Bragg, N.C. A regiment of the 2nd Marine Division from Camp Lejeune, N.C., will arrive tonight.
About 4,000 paratroopers and Marines will be in pmition at federal military installations tqday, with the remaining units pulling in tomorrow from bases in Maryland, Virginia and North Carolina.
ONLY PRECAUTIONARY Jerry Friedheim, 4eputy
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) - An apparent failure in a hydrogen tank on Apollo 12 was discovered today and threatened to delay Friday’s launching of the moonbound spacecraft.
The problem was a failure in a vacuum holding area in one of the two spacecraft liquid hydrogen tanks. It was noticed while crews were loading the hydrogen this morning.
secretary of defense for public affairs, emphasized that “this is a precautionary action only,” adding:
“No final decision has been made to utilize federal personnel and ... these personnel will remain on federal installations unless the Department of Justice, coordinating with local civilian officials, requests assistance.”
Vaccinating Children for Smallpox Is Hit
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Two researchers from the National Com-munlcable Disease Center recommended today that routine childhood smallpox vaccination be discontinued.
’i^e benefits, they declared, no longer outweigh the risks,
* ★ ★
The recommendation came from Dr. J. Michael Lane, chief of the domestic branch of the center’s smallpox eradication program, and Dr. J. D. Millar, director of the program, in a report to a meeting of the American Public Health Association.
The recommendation does n 61 represent the official viewpoint of the Communicable Disease Center. The center, in Atlanta, Ga., is part of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
out,’’ they said, “it could be done rapidly and inexpensively.
“The experience of Britain and cwtain other smallpox-free nations demonstrates that vigorous childhood vaccination is not necessary to prevent the reestablishment of smallpox if prompt and adequate containment measures are taken whenever the disease reappears.’*
White Cells Tied to Heart Attacks in Rabbit Tests
Related Story, Page D-1
Retired Army Sergeant Lewis Davis
“Project officials are investigating to determine the extent of the difficulty and possible effect on Apollo 12 launch operation,” the space agency said.
Liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen are, used to provide gases for operation of the spacecraft fuel cells, which produce electricity. The two tanks, located in the service module, each are loaded with about 28 pounds of liquid hydrogen.
The lead elements of the 82nd Airborne’s 4th Brigade moved-into place on the eve of a three-day period of demonstrations expected to climax Saturday with as many as 200,000 antiwar demonstrators marching through the capital.
At the White House, Mayor Walter Washington of the District of Columbia, said “I don’t anticipate at this point any violence.”
Vets' Day Ceremony Here q Du<J, Says One Old Sarge
SIMILAR REPORT
A similar report from Drs. Lane and Millar is to appear in the Nov. 27 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, along with rebuttal from Dr. Samuel L. Katz, chairman of the pediatrics department at Duke University, and Dr. Saul J. Krugman, New York University pediatrician.
Dr. Katz was quoted in the latest issue of Medical World News, a weekly journal for physicians, as saying he feels that reactions to smallpox vaccine, which cause seven to eight deaths a year, are no justification for stopping mass vaccination.
DALLAS, Tex. (AP) White blood cells—the body’s shock troops against invading germs —might also be among tike underlying causes of heart attacks, a team of New York res|archer8 said to-
ANGRY MOOD
By ED BLUNDEN
Pontiac’s Veterans Day-observance was a complete flop in the eyes of one
BEGIN TO DRAIN
Crews immediately began draining off the hydrogen dnd prepared for experts to examine the tanks.
’The space agency statement said there was “an apparent failure in vacuum holding characteristics,” indicating a possible leak in the system.
Leaks and other problems have cropped up in prelaunch preparations on earlier Apollo flights and were corrected in time to meet the launch time.
Until the malfunction was discovered, preparations for the launch, had been going smoothly.
While the liquid gases were being loaded, astronauts Charles Conrad Jr., Alan L. Bean and Richard F. Gordon Jr. sbcnt time with the complex flight plan for their 10-day mission and rehearsed m simulators.
The mayor added that authorities were preparing to' meet any violence that might erupt.
Until the Justice Department reversed its field Sunday and granted a permit for demonstrators to parade along Fennsylvania Avenue Saturday, Washington said, “an attitude of anger and confrontation seemed to be building.”
’The mayor said he felt the mood was changing and “it’s getting close to” the mood of toe Oct. 15 moratorium demonstration that was notable for its peaceful nature. '
Washington said he felt a key element in persuading the Justice Department to grant a pemnit was an agreement by mobilization leaders to abandon plans to demonstrate around toe White House. ’The authorized parade route at no point comes closer toan one block from the executive mansion.
'It wee I sad show. It hurt me,’* said Lewis Davis of 3006 Beacham, Waterford Townd^:
Davis is a retired Army Sergeant with 2^% years service. He said this was toe first time he was in toe Pontiac area for Veterans Day. He had read .about the planned ceremony in front of City Hall and decided to attend.
Besides the Ammcan L^on members involved in toe ceremony, and some service recruiting personnel, Davis said he saw only a few civilians for a total of about two dozen.
Drs. Lane and Millar argued that the United States can expect a minimum of 210 deaths from vaccination reactions in the next 30 years.	i
’They said eliminating the vaccination of children, while continuing it fw such high risk groups as health wcnrkers, travelers and military recruits, vrould reduce toe figure to about 80 deatos.
The possibility is suggested b y research on rabbits, reported Dr. Sanford C. Spraragen and several (xdleagues of New York City’s Veterans Administration Hospital and Downstata Medical Center.
★	* le
In a report prepared for the annual meeting of the American Heart Association’s Council on Arteriosclerosis, Dr. Spraragen stressed that further work needs to be done before white blood cells could definitely be incriminated in human heart disease.
But he said the rabbit research adds up to this:
‘WHERE WERE LEADERS?*
“Where were the town leaders? Couldn’t to^r have had the police department or some of the fire department turn out?” Davis asked.
“We wonder why the young people spit on the flag and that sort of thing, but the older ones don’t seem to care either,” Davis said.
Drs. Lane and Millar said “vigilant surveillance” and rapid control of any outbreaks are toe keys to keeping a nation ftee of smallpox.
“In the rare event that a mass vaccination campaign has to be carried
Ctotain white blood cells have thi ability to Invade the Inner wan of an artery, lodge there, become fat-fined cells caned “foam ceUs;” and apparentiy can contoibute to toe process of “atherosclerosis”—a techidcal toiQ .for a dangerous form of hardening of tha arteries.
CLOGGED ARTERIES
“It’s funny a city and area as big as this couldn’t do something more. I’ve been in some small towns and they have beautiful ceremonies .... It’s a traditional thing that lets you know you’re still people.”
‘‘I guess aU the officials were away enjoying their holiday ... but really it’s not a holiday, it’s a day of memorial,” Davis said.
“We keep talking about what’s happening to our country . . . well, it’s some of the Uttle'things that are making it that way.”
Hovering Clouds May Bring Snow
CJIouds hovering over toe Pontiac area today may drop some rain or snow flurries late tonight or tomorrow, the weatherman says.
Flurries and colder temperatures are forecast for the next five days.
In atherosclerosis, arteries an dogged with particles of fatty substances deposited on the inner llni^ of the blood vessel. It long has been under suspidon as a major cause of coronary he^ attacks. Diets high in animal fats and oils have been blamed by many sdentista as being key contributors.
“Foam cells”—whose name comes from their lacy appearance under the microscope—are basically tiny bags of fat which are believed to play a building-block role in the atherosclerotic process.
WILL REAPPEAR
In Boulder, Colo., toe government’s Space Disturbance Forecast Center said a large solar flare that erupted Nov. 2 near the rim of toe sun will reappear on the day of the launch.
Such an explosion could hamper radio traffic betwwen Apollo 12 and the earth, as well as emitting a large amount of
Opinion on Stadium Given
At the last minute, there was a change In the Apollo 12 landing point, moving it about 1,000 yards closer to an unpanned spacecraft that landed in a crater two years ago.
TTie weather wSs expected to be good for the launching.
In Toda/s Press
CEDITOR’S NOTE: The following comment on the stadium situation is from Pontiac businessman Isaac J. Isgrigg. An active community leader for many years, Isgrigg also served on the Pontiac City Commission.)
“The governor of Michigan has acquiesced in toe Detroit plan, likely at the urgent appeal of Mayor Cavanagh.
“The Pontiac site has every requisite as a location of a stadium for the whole of southeastern Michigan.
The low will be 27 to 32 tonight. The high will be near 34 to 39 tomorrow.
Probabilities of precipitation are 30 per cent today and tonight and 20 per cent tomorrow.
Forty-one was the low temperature before 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. The mercury stood near 48 at 2 p.m.
In toe New York experiments, 3-month-old rabbits from the same litter were divided into two fFoups, Both groups were fed diets rich in cholesterol, a chemical component of animal fats and oils.
After ten weeks, white blood cells were isolated from one group of rabbits and
(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4)
ISAAC J. ISGRIGG
“Mayor Jerome Cavanagh is moving in a great haste to have a stadium erected on a small parcel of land owned by Detroit west of Cobo Hall. He would buy additional land to increase the size to 70 acres, at a cost of millions of dollars. To prepare toe site would cost several millions more for ingress and a way out.
“To further this desire, Cavanagh has supposedly employed an architectural firm. The chance of this stadium being erected there is very improbable. Due to the Detroit River it is only a location for any purpose.
“A stadium to seat 100,000 people would require 160 acres of land. Pontiac has a 200-acre site which it has offered. It presents no problem in making ready for the erection and parking lots. Parking space would be available for 25,000 cars.
“The site is bounded by M59, Opdyke Road and Featherstohe. The Grand Trunk forms toe west boundary so special trains could be run from Detroit
(Continued on
A-2, Col. 6)
'New Mohe' CoaUtion may puU off huge success despite bickering — PAdS A4.
Report on Indians V. S. policies called a failure -.PAGEA-4.
NvrsIng Homes
Dead Gl Not Son, Says Ohio Couple
Shelby Mishap Kills Bicyclist, 14
> aauv n wikmsww ~ PAGE A-14. AfM Mmn		A4	RICHWOOD, Ohio (AP) - ’The Army insists toe body in the funeral home is dViaf jtt Cert Tntiti 911 IrlllAsI in
AltrMogy 	 BHdia - >.		C-ll	vn&i 01 oKb* efOnn ffarreiii 2d» khioq in action in Vietnam. The sergeant’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Warren, say it can’t be: Their son ; was two Inches shorter. Sounds lighter and had a big Scar on hitjeft arm which does not appear on the body. ★ aw
Poskli^ GttMtCS 	 pMaia .tMi'lMlian 	 HwImIs 				DU 	C-4, C4 	 M	
ing there’s a live boy over there in Vietnam when next week there may be another body here,” said Kerns, citing the possibility that the sergeant’s body might have been confused with that of a fellow dead soldier.
mmi
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D-I-D4
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Lloyd Kerns, a lawyer representing the family, said the body would be taken to Marlon today and Xrayed Jor .^m-parlson with Xrays itiadi three ^ars ago of Warren’s spine. He had a spinal abnormality.	,
“I hate to tempt the family into thlidc-
•ARMY DENIES ERROR’
“The Array says they can't be in error at all, this has got to be the right man. But they can’t Explain about toe missing scar.”
When toe body arrived here earlier this week the abldier's parents wid me, Sharon, said Immediately it was not
Terry Sullivan, 14, of 2768 Hessel. Avon Township, was killed yesterday when the bicycle he was riding was struck by a car on Dequindre south of Juengel, Shelby ’Township.
’Hie accidoit occurred at 3 p.m. as William E. Wilson, 56, of 46149 Schim-mel, Utica, traveling southbound, struck ^ullivan’s bike, township pol|ce said.
The boy ^suddenly turned the bike into Wilson’s path and was struck broadside, police said.
A ninth grade student at Rochester Senior High School, Sullivan’s school day ended at noon. He was just over a mile from his home at the time of the accident.	•
’The son of Mr. and Mrs. James Sullivan, Terry was dead on arrival at Crittenton Hospital, Avon Township
(Continubd on Page A-3, p>I. 5)

A

«oapu«, «v„u	BUCKET BOOTS-Aaron Berzof of Chelsea, Mass , finds a couple of.paila b^Jf
Wilson was questioned by Shelby police to cross a parking lot in Boston yesterday as rain continued to faU In Nw ipPgft ahd released;	for the 10th day.	; ' .
‘	' ' Li

J
A—2
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12,
Milliken Hits Education Group 'Nit-Picking'
nrom Our News Wires
LANSING - Gov. WUUtk G. MlUlken angrily accused Michigan's education groups of "nlt-pickln^i” his education reform program today and said this has provided a serious stumbling block to possible enactment of the plan.
The governor said if his education reform proposals are not implemented this year, he will cut bacK his request for state aid to schools for the next school year.
★ ★ ★
The governor said he feels groups such as the Michigan Education As-
sociation “do not recognise the Ifth would fade!
He also had words of admonishment for the Legislature.
“What I want and what I want now is action from the Legislature,'* he said. “I hope the Legislature will stay here in the next weeks. I hope It will not feel it must take a hunting trip."
Meanwhile. Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, R-St. Louis, said he still hoped some part of the reform package would make it through the upper Chamber this week. If not, he said, outlook for enactment of the
OUHI	I (
Lockwood managed a aquekking victory Tuesday when Republicans provided one more vote than opposition Democrats to push a $116 million property tax bill to the top of the Senate’s debate calendar.
The vote was 17-16 on Lockwood’s motion to move up the bUl eliminating the property tax credit against the income tax.
“The Republicans apparently want to pass that without negotiating on an equitable tax package," said Minority Leader Sander Levin, D-Berkley. “They
want to try to put it through on their own terms.
“Let them try/’ he ssldi"Th«t maybe we can enter some negotiations. At least maybe the governor will be more willing to do so."
Many Democrats, however, have said they wanted to look at pending measures that would "close tax loopholes” before taking up the property tax proposal.
Currently before the Senate are two bills that would bring in an estimated $60 million by removing the sales and use tax exemptions granted industry and agriculture for equipment they use.
Thyea other exemption bills — sponsored by taxation chairman Harry DeMSso, R-Battle Creak —were expected to be reported from tho committee soon.
Committee members decided yesterday to retain the diesel fuel exemption for bus lines.
Meanwhile, Sen. Coleman Young, D-Detroit, intr^uced several alternatives to Milllken's proposals yesterday.
They would amend the State Constitution ' to eliminate the State Board of Education, provide for an elected superintendent of public instruction and allow a graduated income tax.
Floor Action Expected Tomorrow
House Unit OKs ABM Funds
MRS. INDIRA GANDHI
Indian Leader Ousted by Party
NEW DELHI (in - The “old guard” majority in the top leadership of India’s badly split ruling Congress party ex-pell^ Prime Minister Indira Gandhi from the party .today and ordered Con-Ipress membo^ of Parliament to elect a new prime minister.
The party’s top policy-making body, the Congress Wwking Committee, took the unprecedented step against Mrs. Gandhi. She was accused of “spreading bidiscipline” in the 8 4-year-old organization.
The action was not ei^ted to affect Mrs. Guidhi’s positim as prime mtaiister immediately. Her supporters in the party had announced previously they would not recognize any expulsion orders issued by the party president, Siddavanalli Ni-jaUngappa, whom Mrs. Gandhi has been trying to oust.
A bieetmg of all Congren members in Parliament is to be held tomorrow. It was called to a^ance of today’s action, Mrs. Gandhi was expected to seek a fresh vote of confidence then.
Hot suMtorters claim she has an ovmrwbdi^ majorify among the 431 Ckmgress members in Parliament.
A more serious test is expected after Parliament begins its winter session on Nov. 18. Then Mrs. Gandhi is cotain to lose most or all her 234eat majority over the opposition parties because of the split within her own party. This will force her to rely on leftist. Communist and todependent members to keep her government to office.
From Our News Wires
WASHINGTON - A $1.45-bUlion military construction bill containing seed money for President Nixon’s Safeguard ABM system was approved by the House Appropriations Committee today and sent to the floor for expected action tomorrow.
The measure includes $16.6 million to begin Safeguard deployment, $2.5 million for an underground command center ini the Rocky Mountains and $14.1 million to develop Kwajalein Island in the Pacific for full-scale tests next year of the an-tiballistic missile system.
»» ★ ★ *
The tests call for an intercontinental ballistic missiles to be fired obL Kwa-jaleto from California by mid-1^0 and shot down by interceptor missiles |here.
In addltonal testimony given p^ately to an appropriations subcommi^ee in mid-June and made public in coisored form today. Army; Lt. Gen. A. D.
Pontiac Hailey as Truck Cdpithl
n the highway. |
) truck capital Jf the to a survey by ward’s rts, the 1 n d u s t| y ’ s
“Made in Pontiac" could be the| label for most trucks on the highway. ^
Pontiac is the world, acOMtiing
.Automotive Reports, the 1 n d u s t| y' weekly tradip'publication.
* * * ,(■;
With GMC Truck & Coach Division truck output totaling a record 184,786 unitf to flJe 1969 model year, Pontiac ovotook St. Louis as the top truck-producing dty. St. Louis accounted for 180,108 trucks in the last model year.
All 1969 model GMC medium- and heavy-duty trucks, a portion of its light-duty models and some Chevrolet trucks were produced in Pontiac.
STATE LEADS
Paced by Pontiac, Michigan led all states in 1969 model truck production.
GMC Truck surpassed its best previous model year output of 169,576 units set to 1968 by 9 per cent.
★ * ★
In the 1969 model year, GMC climbed from fifth to third place in industry sales, its highest ranking in 43 years.
The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report
pmmAC AND VICINITy—Mostly cloudy and colder through Thursday with dumee of li^t showers changing to chance of snow flurries late today and Thursday. Tenqieratnres today stea^ or dowly falltog. Low toni(^t 27 to 32. High Thnrsday 24 to 39. Fridiay outlook: variable cloudiness and cold with dianee of snow flurries. Winds west to nortiiwest 12 to 22 miles per hour. Probabilities of precipitation: 30 per cent today, 30 per cent tonldit, 20 per cent Thnrsday.
Tstfay In Ponllne
Starbird told Congress the Safeguard system would not adequately defend against submarine-launched missiles with pinpoint accuracy.
He suggested that four additional perimeter acquisition radars would have to be deployed at the lour comers of the continental United States at an estimated cost of $800 million.
Most Safeguard deployment money for fiscal 1970 - $748 million has been authorized — is in another bill not scheduled for congressional action until
December. But the bill approved today Includes $2.5 million for the Safeguard command center in the Cheyenne Mountain complmr deep under the Rockies near Colorado Springs, Colo.
The $14.1 million for Kwajalein Is for expansion of facilities which will not be completed until after the tests have begun,
The bulk of the money in the bill is for construction projects, including family housing, at U.S. military bases in this country and abroad!
Tuesday NY Blasts Checked for Link to Earlier Bombs
NEW YORIC (AP) - Police are checking possible links between Tuesday’s explosions at three Manhattan office buildings and earlier blasts, including an attack last month on the Armed Forces Induction Center.
More than 100 telephoned warnings of imminent bwnbings were received by police Tuesday, all of them unfounded.
■it if -k
The explosive devices used Tuesday at the RCA Building, the Chase Manhattan Building and the General Motors Building were “high-ofder explosives on the nature of dynamite coiuiected to a timing mechanism,” a policb spokesman said.
Similar devices were used at the Whitehall Street induction center Oct. 7,
the Federal Building In Foley Square Sept. 19, the Marine Midland Building Aug. 20 and a Grace Line pier in Brooklyn Aug. 9, the spokesman said.
NO CONNECTION YET The police spokesman said, “We are not at this time claiming a definite connection with those blasts, but the matter is under investigation.”
Letters puii>orting to be from left-wing radicals took credit for the latest blasts. Ttwy were 'similar in style to letters m.ailed to news agencies after a bomb riiqied through Army and Selective Service System offices in the Federal
GWee to Support Milloge Increase
A Waterford Township citizens group voted last night to support the proposed one-year, 9-roill school property tax increase on the election ballot Nov. 25.
The Greater Waterford Community Council, forined in 1961 to study townshipwide issues, gave its support a voice vote at their meeting. About 45 people were present.
★ * *
The council’s education committee reported that it found no evidence of wasted school funds after meeting with school officials and the county treasurer.
On another issue, Richard Castle, chief engineer of the Oakland County Department of Public Works, told the group that water is returning to shallow residential wells dried up by construction of the Clinton-Oakland Interceptor Sewer.
Only 13 homes to Waterford and 27 In nearby Independence Township were affected, according to county records, he rerported.
Special delivery letters were sent to the New York Times and United Press International, postmarked M on d a y evening.
They said: “During this week of antiwar protest, we set off explosions in the offices of Chase Manhattan, Standard Oil, and General Motors,” because America’s giant corporations have fomented international problems.
“From the inside, black people have been fighting a revolution for years. And finally, from the heart of the empire, white Americans, too, are striking blows of liberation.”
The three blasts caused heavy property damage and one injury.
Glenn Seen Near Senate-Race 'Go'
WASHINGTON W) - Space hero John H. Glienn Jr., who aborted one run for the U.S. Senate from (toio, has indicated he’s on the verge of launching a second attempt. j
★* *	w
Glenn, first American to orbit the earth, conferred yesterday in Washington with political advisers and Democratic party officials.
*	ik	*
“If things keep looking as favorable as they have, hopefully we’ll have an announcement in tbe near future,” Glenn
He has left New York, where he has been associated with Royal Crown Cola, and has moved to Columbus.
* * *
Glenn ran against Sen. Stephen M. Young in the 1964 primary but dropped out after receiving head injuries in a bathtub fall.
k. * -k
Young last month said he considers himself, at 80, to be too old for another term.
White Cells Called Heart Attack Factor
(Continued From Page One) injected into the other animals. The blood" cells were tagged with a radioactive material so they could be located later in the recipients’ aortic tissue.
It was found that transplanted white blood cells invaded the areterlal wall at the site of aetherosclerotic deposits already fimned there, and contributed to foam-cell formation.
Birmingham Araq
Church Gives $20,000 to 3 Urban Units
BLOOMFIELD HILlil - Grants totaling $20,009 to three Detroit area organizations have been made by Christ Church Cranbrook here.
Recipients are the Black Culture Center in Pontiac, $7,500; the Inner-City Sub-Center of Detroit, $7,500; and the Career Development Center In Detroit, $5,000.
★ * *
Grants were made by the Christ Church vestry upon recommendation of the Beyond Parish Giving and Christian Social Relatims committees.
The money comes from the church’s Urban Fund, which was established last June to meet urgent urban needs. The fund is financed by gifts from parishioners beyond their regular pledge commitments.
CULTURAL CENTER
The Pontiac Black Cultural Center Ls a social cultural' and educational coiter for the black community. Activities range from	child care	cUnics	and	African
history classes to drama workshops and secretarial skills classes. The center was founded in 1968 by Oakland University and concerned black citizens of Pontiac.
■k	k	k
More than 400 children and teen-agers have been attracted to the programs sponsored by Inner-City Sub-Center of Detroit. The programs include classes in Afro-American history and political education, instruction	to	sewing	and
crafts, and recreational activities such as dances, field trips and picnics.
★	*	★
The Career Development Center is training women in secretarial skills and men in auto mechanics, tool and die making, welding and the graphic arts.
BIRMINGHAM - Negotiators for the board of education are continuing to meet with two nonteaching unions — one representing the maintenance wwkers, custodians, bus drivers and cafeteria personnel and another unit representing secretarial and clerical workers. Contracts for both groups have been extended.
Dead Gl Not Son, Soys Ohio Couple
(Continued From Page One) Warren, who was due to be discharged next Wednesday.
k	k	k
Kerns said the Army insists that Warren, in Vietnam since last February, was killed in recent action near the Cambodian border and that the body was identified definitely by fingerprints. k	k	k
Kerns said he thought “there’s a remote possibility” of a foul-up to Warren’s fingerprint records.
k	k	k
He also speculated that, if alive Warren, being due for a diMharge, could be on his way home.
Pontiac Stadium ArgumentGiven
(Continued From Page One) and elsewhere. One-half mile east is 1-75 with cloverleaf turns at M59 and curving turns at Opdyke Road. U.S. and principal state highways lead from all directions.
k k k
“Pontiac is the center of the main Michigan population. Southeastern Michigan, omitting Detroit, is growing at a rapid rate.
★ ★	*
“The Detroit River is	a blessing	com-
mercially, but it is, without a doubt, an extreme	impediment	for	the	stadium
site. If there would be 4,000 parking spaces, where would the other 20,000 cars be parked? Just one trip to a game would be enough for too many to try it a second time.
★ *	★
“Without the people of southeastern Michigan, outside of Detroit, attending the games, there will not be any Tigers or Lions.
“The Rose Bowl is to Pasadena, far out of Los Angeles. And the Santa Anita Race Track is five miles farther awpy, being located in Arcadia.”
5 Agencies Share Insurance Fees
iMkTtoNAL iraATHER—Showers are forecast tonight for the Midweto. and til the Northeast. Snow flurries are predicted for the Northwiest and tta GbhHdUkes'irea. A cold front is moving north across the nation.
By JEAN SAILE
County officials have revealed the names of four insurance agencies involved in the split of premiums on the county’s insurance package.
The total insurance program is being reviewed by the County Board of Supervisors Finapee Committee.
* k k
Howard Huttenlocher, the county’s insurance agent of record, told 'Ae Pontiac Press that he had been asked by county auditors to “recognize five firms” in 1967, when much of the county property was put into a blanket or InstiUfe' tional insurance policy.
The blanket policy (much like a homeowner’s exteniM coverage) eliminated the need for separate Insurance to each area of risk. It was s^id to e^ect a considowble savings in^ premiums.	'
SHARE EUbONAT^
However, the new type cover^e eliminated, for many odimty insurance agencies, their share in the county's business and in> the : funds derived therefrom.
A decision reportedly was made by
some supervisors and county officials to ___________________________________
continue to recognize some of these formation supplied, the county by Hut-firms, according to a ranking county- of- tenlocher.
fidal.	The assumacUiaBMS division of tho
Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the board of audtiors, said the decision was to be based upon request of the agencies which formerly had participated.
Letters were sent to all 'of the previously involved agencies, informing them, of the change to coverage and telling them if they felt they still were entitled to premium fees their requests would be considered.
ASKED TO PRORATE ' Though Huttenlocher’s agency now did all the Work in connection with the insurance coverage, he was asked to prorate the premiums.
k k k '
The county’s list of those sharing to the premfaima tocluiies:
•	Seed-Roberts Ageqcy Inc., 480 Pierce, Birmingham.
•	Farmington Ipsqrance Agency, 33215 Grand River, Farmington.
•	Kenn Loomis Insurance, 23280 Farmington, Farmington,
• Thatoher-Patterwq Inc., 711 Community National Bank Building, Pontiac. k k k.
The last firm shares to both the Inatitutional jxdlcy and the Oakland-Ortoh Airport coverage, according to to-pUed,the ................................
County Clerk’s office reveals ownership of the companies to be as fdtows:
•	Seed-Roberts, a Michigan corporation: Andrew W. Seed and William E. Roberts.
•	Farmington, a partnership: Jdm M. Clappison, William J. Ctonroy, Frank D. Clappison and Robert B. Qappison.
•	Loomis, asumed name: Kenneth Jr., Loomis.
•	Hiatcher-Patterson, a Michigan corporation: Carleton C. Patterson Jr., resident agent; Carleton C. Patterson Sr., incorporator.- Both men are listed as members of the board of directors along with Marlon Patterson.
PREMIUM IS UP ,
The total premium for the county’s instiiutional pedicy, which two weeks ago .was $41,ttl, Is.now $41^3, due to added coverage for addliional buildings, county r^rds show. For Oakland-Orion Airport the premium is $218.
■ 'k W '■ W ■ '
Huttehlbcher, through his firin of Hut-teniochera Kem Norveil Inc., 1007 W. Huron, Waterford Township, handles about a quarter of the county’s Insurance but not the life, fleet or s’s compensation policies. k k k
The premiums on policies bandied by hie firm, tochiding tbe institutional policy and the airport pdicy, amount to In,778.
Other major policies covering the county's property and its onidoyes inclu^ fleet insurance at an annual cost of $29,750 and workm«i’s cmitpensation for $105,133, the total prentium cost during 1969. These policies are handled by Michigan Mutual Liability Co.
NO compensation bid
Michigan Mutual bids for the' fleet insurance. But, contrary to a prisvlous report to .The Pontiac Press, the County doM not bid workmen’s compensation.
, W . k"
■ The latter Is a standard policy, cm-rytog standard specifications and standard rates impost by the state. County ' auditors say itbas been let to Michigan Mutual Liabillto Co. for some years on the basis of performance.
^ k k . k'
Life insurance on county employes is anotheir major item, this year costly an estimdted 185,074 in premtuns and handled by John D. MiUls Agency of 48% N. Sas^w, Pontiac. Millls hu handled the p^cy since the early 1950's when It was Initiated, county, employes recall,
' '■ w *	*
The:Only other agency handltog county insurance through the board of auditors is Heitipstold Barrett It Asado. bt 185 Elizalieto Uke. TIm county jpays this firm ^ anual premium of UMI to
firm M pro^ 1
iff’s water safety dlvishsi.
,1^ .
And Pupils Are Stranded in Rochester
■ :i
MEETS GOVERNOR—Six-year-old Will Allen Caldwell receives a picture-book of Michigan from Gov. William G. Milliken yesterday in Lansing. Will, who has bone cancer which alreaidy has resulted in the loss of one leg, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Caldwell of Detroit.
Brave Boy Gets Wish to Meet Gov. Milliken
LANSING (ff) — Six-year-old Will Allen Caldwell, who has cancer, wanted to meet Gov. William Milliken.
In the governor’s executive office yesterday, he did.
,.>***
“You have a nice, firm handshake,’’ Milliken told Will, who hobbled In on crutches. Bone cancer has forced amputation of the boy’s ri(^t leg.
Will saw the governor during a Milliken tour a few months ago and apparently took a liking to him.
IN GOOD HEALTH
The boy was in good health then.
... But in September he fell off his bicycle and bruised his leg. 'Ehree days later he was hospitalized with a fever, and bone cancer was discovered in the injured leg. Doctors said it probably had been triggered by the bruise.
★	★ A
Will’s father, Herbert, said, “The hardest thing I ever had to do was to tell that little boy they were going to take off his leg. He was so brave, it broke my heart. He didn’t shed a tear, but I did.” Caldwell is a foreman at a Ford Motor Co. plant.
“Doctors told me there is no cure for bone cancer,” Caldwell said. “’They said maybe five victims out of a thousand live for a couple of years after it is detected. The rest seldom survive more than a few months.”
ODDS AGAINST BOY
The boy’s own doctor said Will might survive but that the odds were long against it.
Will’s friends have showered him with advance Christmas presents. His mother and father are holding theirs for Dec. 25.
*	★ ★
When Will asked his father to take him to see the governor, Caldwell telephoned Milliken and told him the circumstances. Milliken agreed to lay on the red carpet for a visit.
“It was the least I could do,” said Milliken.
BOOK ON HISTORY
The governor gave Will a book on Michigan history inscribed, “To niy friend, Will Caldwell, with every warm wish for the future.”
Milliken said he hoped Will would be able to read and enjoy It.
AAA
“I hope so, too,” the youngster said softly.
Someone Tattled on Bus Drivers
By TIM McNULTY
Embarrassment can hardly describe the feeling after you’ve t singing, children wait over an hour while you get ticketed by
ROCHESTER made 4iM hungry, the police.
Seven red-faced North Hill Elementary St;hool bus drivers sat through a ticket line last Wednesday as the entire student body waited a block away In the school gym.
AAA
Itie Oakland County Sheriff's Department received a number of calls from residents at the Ttenken and Courtland Road intersection that cars and buses were disregarding a sign indicating that no right turn was allowed onto Courtland.
Two sheriff’s deputies staked out Ae corner on Tuesday, but there were no buses in sight. The school had called a conference day.
MORE SUCCESSFUL
Wednesday the deputies were a little more successful: After nabbing 10 workers
fropi the National Twist Drill (Jo., they saw the caravan of buses make the Illegal turn. Within minutes all IS vehicles were lined up waiting for their lecture and vida-tion card.
Meanwhile, teachers were trying to entertain the children as the after-school minutes ticked away. .Some members of the school band played their Instrumenta and the others sang.
“We did everything we could think of.” said Principal Murel Bartley. “Whett we knew the ticketing would take some time, we started our ‘fan-out system.”* The system has parents calling other parents to keep them informed.
It looks like the problem is in hand now. The turn sign was mistakenly left up after a stop light was placed a block east of the intersection a week before.
Judge Robert L. Shipper of the S2nd District Court, Rochestier, dismissed all the tickets.
However, the children remember why they missed their afternoon peanut butter sandwiches, and it’s almost certain the drivers will be reminded — at least 400 times over.
THE PRESS

PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1969
A—8
Parking Strip in Park Studied by Oxford^
OXFORD — A bid by a group of businessmen to gain a slice of a downtown public park for parking was referred for study to the planning commission by Village Council last night.
The group wants a strip 22 feet wide along the left side and across the back of the park — which is nearly 120 feet square — as parking space for 19 cars'.
A A, A
“Those (businessmen) I talked to were for it,” said Bill McDaniel, owner of the Parkside Restaurant, which borders the. north side of the park. He presented a petition, containing signatures of 49 area business leaders, urging use of the area for parking.
“Certainly it’s not the answer to the parking problem, but it’s a start,” said McDaniel. ;
PROPOSAL QUESTIONED
Councilman Robert E. Tripp questioned the move. “I’ve talked to a number ot people and they are not all fw it,” said Tripp. ‘Of course, those I talked to were not businessmen.
“And who’d pay for it?” asked Tripp.
“I don’t care who pays for it,” said
McDaniels. “I will .. .the merchants will if they have to.”
AAA
Village Manager Don S c r i p t e r estimated cost of the project at just over $7,000. It was pdnted out jthe village’s master plan calls for retention of the area as a park.
“If it’s changed you’ll have a lot of • unhappy people,” THpp said to McDaniels.
BUSINESS LOSS PREDICTED
‘?You’re gmng to lose a lot of business if you don’t do something,” said McDaniels. “I don’t want to see the downtown die.”
McDaniels questioned value of the area as a park. “It isn’t safe,” he said. “No decent or reputable person will sit in the park. And we don’t have a big enough police force to keep a man there all the time.”
AAA
Scripter said procedure was for Council to refer the proposal to the planning commission. After study, that body would return it to (Council for further action.
Proud Lake Naturalist Honored
WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP - A naturalist, Hartley C. Thornton, biology instructor at Proud Lake Recreation Area, has been formally honored for outstahding services in the field of outdoor education by the State House of Representatives.
He was also named Michigan’s Conservation Educator of the Year by the Michigan United Conservation Clubs with the Sears Roebuck Foundation.
Thornton presents more than 300 programs annually to some 26,000 people and conducts evening programs, guided hikes and auto tours.
During his 35 years in the field, he helped establish a nature showplace at Boys Republic and was the first naturalist to join the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.
Fenton Youth Killed
FENTON (UPI)—Michael A. Acheson, 19, of rural eFnton died late yesterday when the car he was riding in went out of control on a curve and slammed into a tree In Argentine Township west of here. ,
SMiitc er«M eMN) bv BMtart a. iMm FALL IS WANING—Fallen leaves, a few lingering mementoes of late autumn, rest on the waters of an Oakland County pond. The bare limbs ot the reflected trees are a grim reminder that winter is on the way.
Switchman Is Killed in Rail Yard Mishap
DETROIT (AP) A 51-year-old switchman for the Norfolk & Western Railroad was killed today when he was caught between two cars at the firm’s yards in Detroit.
Police said Ralph Parker of Lexington Heights was dead on arrival at a local
hospital. OfRcials said Parker was hanging mto the side of a car being pulled by a. slow-moving engine. Authorities ^d the trail pulled alongside an extra-wide car on an adjacent track and Parker was oau^t between the two.
Wixom City Hall Is Battlegrouiid in Storm-Drain Fight
ByLOISFRIEDLAND WIXOM — Confusion,' stemming from real concern, politics and stubbot^nness are straining the political fabric here. Reactions to a storm drain going in
MAYOR WESLEY McATEB In Middle of Drain Oeairoversy
near a subdivision beach on Loon Lake
—	which some say could pollute the lake
—	have polarized conflicting emotions in some citizens and die mayor, turning city hall into a bitter battleground.
A A A
The dispute, whether to continue installing a 36-inch storm drain tb serve the Birch Park subdivision has brought dozens of ordinairly passive residents to council meetings usually attended by few.
Construction was halted last month after several subdivision residents raised questions to the council and tl)e Oakland County Health Department about the possibility of pollution.
WORK ORDERED STOPPED
The council ordered work on the $125,000 project stopped pending a hearing before state offidals on the question of ppllution. Included In that cost figure was the paving of several streets In the subdivision. Work has been halted.
Nothing was resolved at the Lansliig hearing two weeks ago according to most officials. / A ■ A * '' ■»
T .ending opponents oLthe storm draiit
—	who attended the Unsing bearing — plan to attend tonight’s council meeting where Mayor Wesley McAtee will present recommendations listed by the County Health Department for policing the drain — to the council for possible action.
The County Health Department approved a r*port by the city engineer which reads, “If tests of waters at the beach area are unsatisfactory the city will relocate the outlet further from the
N0WS Analysis H
beach “or do whatever else is practical — physically and financially — to relieve the problem.”
The anti-storm drain faction is split.
The most reasonable group ^ and apparently the largest — merely wants construction stopped until proper tests and investigations can be made to better determine if the drain would speed pollution of the lake.
“We didn’t say to stop the drain sewers — just to make the tests first,” explained Mrs. Richard Hall, a petite redhead, who is confronting city hall for the first time.
A two-year subdivision resident, Mrs. Hall went to her first meeting and met the mayor for the first time when the proUem arose.
A definite leader of those wanUng testa taken, the housewife conunented, "I can’t see why the mayor Is so against making tests. I feel that he has a closed mind.”	1
She contended, “It’s not just a few of us — but the majority of people I’ve talked to who say they definitely want paving. I just don’t think the council or people have ever spoken out before.”
Another housewife, Mrs. Loja Kent of 2809 Maganzer, added, “I think everybody favors paving but all do not want to pollute the lake. But few of us have information on It. Why shouldn’t they look for a little information from the department of conservation and' others.
“They should take time to see how much accelerated weed growth Is caused
by putting storm drains in through studies others have made.”
These women are now busy checking various health departments and colleges to find out what studies have been made.
Others opposing the mayw have lived in the area a long time and fought against him in other areas. Many of the people who fought against installing
Troy Revamps Sewer-Payment Fee Deadlines
TROY — Though no starting date has been announced, a recently revised sewer ordinance eventually will alleviate some anxiety among senior cltisens.
The revision, which will refdace 10-year special assessment financing, provides that any resident whose; home was built beforci the sewer line can tap info the sewer and extend his paynoents for the service up to 40 years at 6 per cent interest.
■ A A A
Payments are not required until the homeowner taps Into the sewer, and he must tap In within six months after the line Is laid in front of his home.
“Before this revision,” said acting City Manager Kenneth Cotirtnoy, “many M the older .people who own^ more than one lot were forced*^ to sell part of their property , to meet the front-footage
sanitary sewers some five years ago are also protesting today.
The more extreme view is being taken by Lew Coy of 2942 Loon Drive. Coy said he’ll urge the council tonight to drop all plans for the storm drain. An OaklMd County supervisor ot the 27th District, Cfoy claims that state legislation is also needed.
“The outlook is bleak,” said Coy. “Loon Lake and all of Oakland County’s lakes will suffer the same fate as the passenger pigeon and the whooping crane unless we get legislation. While our lakes become mud holes our local officials continue to equate progress with unmanaged growth,” he said.
NOT ENOUGH’
At the l,ansing hearing, Coy indicated that agreements by city officials to take regular tests and to take responsibility for any needed corrections were not enough.
Mayor McAtee — a determined man — is receiving the brunt of the attack because of his statements that the city has done what can be done.
, A A. A
“The city Is. well aware that pollutlqn can be caused lind certainly doesn't want to do anything that could cause pollution,” he noted.
He has assured residents that tests will be taken frequently and any needed corrections made. When pressed for placement of sediment traps and ponds by the drain — urged ,*A8 “pollution preventers,” he Insisted what needs to be done will be done{
FOUGlhr FOR SYSTEM
McAtee has done much for the city. He fought for a sanitary sewer system
which is just now going into effect. He also helped obtain money for a preliminary urban renewal study with option for another million dollars to do the actual rebuilding.
He rips into Coy and others for going first to the county health department and then coming to him and the coundl to discuss the problems.
A A , A
He noted that these dissenters are so busy all the time but when the council had a civil defense organizational meeting — organized by me of those apparently fighting the stdnn drain — not one person showed up.
• McAtee also mentioned that many of these same people fought against creating a city park on Loon Lake because they apparently wanted to keep it private.
FIGHTING EVERYTHIN!!
One member of city hall commented, “These people seem to bo fighting everything. Seems like whatever hi new or different as a project — they are against it. They are very active. If thmr could only use their energy for something constructive . .. I’m sure we could get something done.’*	^
Suspicions of politicking by some drain opponents has also passed through dty hall minds who noted that an aleetioo is being held in the spring.
' A A A"
Pollution is a muddyegray subjagt,.M »city residents want black and -isllte answers. No one — state health officials included - will commit themsalyap.wltb a definite answer beyond, ' ‘ ‘ precautions . . > it i so fear persists.

Jv
THU PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1960
'Federal Efforts Failing'
Indian Woes Decried
Is a "stain on the national conscience," the report said.
The subcommittee offered 60 general and specific steps it ■says will redirect the education ■of Indians and reform a bureaucratic system it labeis stagnant, inefficient and destructively paternalistic.
Educationai excelience in the school opportunities offered the nation's 600,000 Indians mUst become an urgent national goal, backed by adequate federal funding and ipvolving Indians themselves to the fuliest extent possibie, the report said.
The Indians’ current ‘‘conditions lead to feelings of anger and frustration, coupled with strong feeiings of personal inadequacy and powerlessness.’’ BLAMED ON PREJUDICE Tile report blamed much of I this on popular prejudice: "the I inability to see the Indian as I anything other than perpetually I "dirty, lazy and drunk.” j But it said an official and hls-jtoric policy of coercive assiml-jlation has resulted in the de-Istruction of Indian communities
NORTHAMPTON, M a s s. I obliged to take to end the war,”
(AP) — President Nixon’s she said. “But I’m not saying dau^ter Julie hopes the Viet-
WASHINGTON (AP) - Fed-[staff studies and field investiga-eral efforts to provide American! tions, begun by the late Sen. Indians with quality education Robert F. Kennedy. D-N.Y., and have been marked with near-to-i continued by his brother. Sen. tal failure and haunted by pre-'Edward M. Kennedy, I^Mass Judice and official ignorance,!	*	*	*"
according to a Senate subcom-j	American Indian.” thei
mittee report.	i report said, “lives in a state of
“We have concluded that our severe, grinding poverty. Ninety naUonal policies for educating jp^,,	housing is atro-
American Indians are a failurejpioug	beyond rehabilitation;
of major proportions." ttie re- be suffers the worst health con-port said. "’They have not of-i^njo„g ^be nation; his unem-: fered Indian children—either lulpi^yi^jent rate is 50 per cent, years past or today-an educa-[a„d jbe average family income tional opportunity anywherc jg jj pp^ year.” near to that offered the great	v iMAnFOiiATF
bulk of American children” HOPESSLY INADEQUATE
*	*	I This situation, linked, with an
The Indian education subcOm-'educaUonal system hopelessly mittee’s final report is a distilla-j inadequate to lift Indians from a tion of two years of hearings, self-perpetuating poverty cycle,
Julie: Hope War EndsI —for David's Sake
nam war will be over by next June: Her husband graduates from Amherst College then and he’s of military age.
'T’ve got a vested Interest In It, you know,” she told a repwt-er' 'niesday as she and her 21-yeatmld husband, David Eisenhower, toured the Veterans Administration hospital here.
* * *
She said the war has been a "terrible tragedy for our country^’ and that her father Is sincerely trying to end the conflict. She thinks the country believes that too, judging from the response to the President’s recent Vietnam speech.
Julie, also 21, said reaction to her father’s recent Vietnam, speech among students of Smith College, where she Is a senior, was “very encouraging.” 'NOTAaRED’
:"I think the students felt he was being honest and open in talking about the course he was
changed’10.000 minds on college If‘y	the gf^th of a
..	large and ineffective federal bu-
A f j 1. iu u TV reaucracy which has wasted Asked whether he or Julie ... /-propriations.	f
federal appropriations.
* * *
In education, it said, the result has been "the classroom and the school becoming a kind of battleground where the Indian child attempts to protect his Integrity and identity as an individual by defeating the purposes of the school.”
^	^	The subcommittee singled out
cuss them during Vietaam pro-jj-pp bareh criticism the policies test acUvities this w«k because | a„d conduct of the Bureau of In-thesewere designed to achieve jap Affairs which operates a specific pohUcal purpose” andj most Indian schools, that purpose was not a rational discussion of the issues.
planned to participate in any Vietnam demonstrations this week, David, grandson of the late President Dwight D. Eisenhower, answered; “No, we haven’t been asked.”
“Our views are constantly being challenged on campus,” David said. He added that he and his wife didn’t plan to dis-
“From the freshman year on, people are generally frozen into patterns,” David said when asked how his attitude toward the protest movement was viewed on his campus.
“It seems like we have two armed camps now,” he said.
“Events change peoples’ minds, not buli sessions.”
It said it found the quality of instruction in these schools low and performance even lower.
V'nie present organization and administration of the BIA school system could hardly be worse,” the report said. It said it found curricula inappropriate to the the needs of stodents, and alien to their experience, background and, culture.
fri. 9 am to 9:30 pm sat. 9 am to 9 pm
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M4 N. Sagino

Guess who thought you looked rather fascinating at the St. Regis last night.
She's always aidmired men vyho know how to dress
But, then, whether you're at work or play, a lot of people notice your clothes. Sometimes, it's the only way they have of sizing you up.
Osmun's keeps this in mind. We also keep a big selection of all the new men's styles on hand So we can get you and fashion together to create a look that's uniquely your own. To all the people in your life.
Osmun's knows your audience.
' ' ’ I '	I	" i
Stores for men and young men open evenings til 9 in the Tel-Twelve .Mall (Telegraph and 12 Mile in Southfield), ■ Tech-Plaza Center (12 Mile and Van Dyke in Warren), ond Tel Huron Center (Telegraph and Huron in Pontiac). CXir downtown Pontiac store is open Friday evenings 'til 9. Osmun's^ S^urity, Master Chargecards, or Michigan Bankarjds. f
.' '■■■
li.Ws
■ T
THE PONTIAC PtoSS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1969
wiwmwHP



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SIAAA/LS OPEN THURS. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. FRI. 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. SAT. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
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WWARDKPinOllUlD SiiWIikw Itl4-I«M
THE PONTIAC PRESS
Pontiac, Michigan 480M
WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER IS, 1M»
HOWAaOH-FITZGERAlOII
a. MARSHALL JORDAN
HARRY J. RltD
RICHARD M. SAUNDERS
‘School Day’ Undefined
Matching the vagueness of the hoary question “How high is up?” is a new subjective puzzle, “How long is a school day?”
It is imperative that a definite answer to the scholastic question he forthcoming soon if many school systems are not to find themselves in a sticky legal morass.
★ ★ ★
The Michigan Supreme Court agrees. In revendng two circuit court decisions decreeing that two school districts (those of livonia and Waterford Township) resume full-day education after a catback to half days, the high court blamed the State Board of Education for failure to define a school day in terms of hours.
Because of the indefiniteness, the decisions of the two lower courts put
the school systems in the untenable position of committing themselves to deficit-budget operation, which is illegal under State law.
★ ★ ★
We disa^eed with the Circuit Courts’ decisions as being contradictory and unrealistic. The legal hassle has, however, pointed up the two basic causes of it:
o The failure of voters of the two districts to provide tax mill-age sufficient to maintain fulltime school days.
• The failure of the State Board of Education to spell out an acceptable, standard school day.
★ ★ ★
Action to remedy both shortcomings could be easily and quickly effected. The action is plainly called for.
It is unthinkable that the Pontiac Area United Fund should fall short of its conservative goal for the third successive year. But unleift volunteer solicitors and contribr utors jpin in a concerted' all-out push during the closing da^ of the campaign, such may be , the dismal fate of the current drive for funds.
At last week’s report luncheon, subscriptions totaled $1,077,935 — 13 per cent short of the 1969 objective.
As usual, major industry and its employes have fully met their share of the subscription target aimed at. It is the com* merdal, manufacturing and advance gifts divisions that show the greatest gaps between
quotas set and fulfillment of them.
The United Fund concept has functioned well in the local community for two decades. Without it the area organization of 55 agencies dependent upon it for the means of operation would become an unwieldy collection of entities operating independently. It would pay the price of inequitable administrative and functional costs and the public pocketbook would be subjected to continuous financial appeal.
★ ★ ★
Let’s not let the Pontiac Area United Fund down, along with the thousands of disadvantaged and handicapped who look to it for the assistance that makes their lives worth living.
You can help put the PAUF over the top during the next few day by contributing liberally if you have not already done so, or by paying a little “extra dividend” if you have.
Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON (NEA)-In a private meeting the other day, a young man who had bem a leader in one of the major demon-atratloiu this year said that ha was oon-vljiced it would be impossible taj keep violenice out of the Nov. 14-15 protests, no matter how determined the leaderriiip and regardless of the nunmer of youth marshals assigned to keep order.
In his belief •- and his experience in the Inauguration Day demonstrations in January, when he was a marshal for the denumstrat-on--that if one group of pro-, teetffs decides to “go violent’’ no leadership can stop them.
■ ^	★ e
Jt this youpg man is right.
€BCMLEY
Euid if the police Eind military forces “Keep their cool,” the reading in White House circles is that this violence will result In a strong reaction of sympathy for President Nixon.
Administration strategy is based on the premise that violence is quite likely to occur, and it’s based oh the thesis that the police, the National Guard and the troops must not overreact.
TAKE THE INSULTS
That is, the priice and the troops have been instructed to take insults and rock throwing in stride. Th^ are to be as polite as possible.
They are to use only that minimum force necessary to protect public property and the safety of citizens, preserve a minimum of order and to block the way to areas the government has declared out of bounds. \
The analysis at the Pentagon is that violence by the demonstrators, coupled with restraint by the troops during the march oq the Pentagon in October 1967 boomeranged ■against the marchers and led to a decline in public sympathy for them.
The belief here in influential government circles is that police reaction as at Chicago during the Demoeratie
presidential nominating convention last year, however understandable in view of the strong provocation and the expert “police baiting,” was nevertheless “counterproductive.”
That is, they believe it won demonstrators.
♦ ★ *
The administration is determined not to make this mistake.
For the information arriving here is that, however peaceful the majority of the marchers may be on Nov. 14-15, there will be a significant group, small but determined which believes that only through violence great ehough to bring about a violent reaction from “the Establishment” can they win the masses of new converts and the publicity they require \to keep up the momentum of their movements,
Verbal Orchids
Mn. flarah Bowman of West Bloomfield Township; 87th birthday. LeRbyDeui
of Highland: 80th birthday.
Mr,f|BdMrs.
MeMa C. Heffcibower of Higiiland;

Tough Opposition
Ralph de Toledano
Voice of the People:
Involvement in Vietnam Is Discussed by Readers
Tv Recently, a man who looked like a hippiq leader waa raving on television that the war is still going on, and in spite of President Nixon's promise to stop it. He expressed extreme hate of our President, but still paid him about the greatest compliment any president could receive. He said that Nixon, after eight months in office, should by now have stopped the war that two former presidents had been unable to stop in 12 years in office. ★ ★ ★.
He said that 60 per gent of the people are against the war. He^ nmng. One hundred per cent are against any war. -
A. B. COTCHER 98 S. TILDEN
Besides resenting the fact that my patriotism is questioned because I oppose our government’s involvement in Vietnam,
1 am struck much more by fear of the consequences of such misguided thinking by elements present in the planned pro-war demonstrations. To use the flag as a symbol for a juidly debatable poUUcal point of view and to call for demonstrations of national unity on the issue when a significant miiKurity disagrees with it is in effect to make such a minority non-^eri-cans. Being well aware that one must be extremely prudent hi raising such a spectre, I can’t help but see this is precisely the same type of thinking that led to the slaughter of six million non-Aryans during World War II.
DAVID F. CARR 6884 DESMOND, WATERFORD
My heart goes out to the man pictured on the front page of The Press Saturday who feels' so strongly about revenge for his son’s life. Only those of us who bear the burden of Ms rotten war can know his feelings. I wonder where the President took his survey to say how many Americans agree with him. Perhaps each of our Representatives should take a survey and
Stokes’ Victory Misinterpreted
The UF Needs YOUR Help
CLEVELAND — ’The reelection of Mayor Carl^ Stokes in this city has been flad by the national press as proof positive that the Republican tide never really existed.
, Stokes, a Negro Denio-crat, won narrowly over his Republi- dETOLEDANO can opponent
in what was considered, before election day, as a bell-
But even the most superficial survey would indicate that factors other than the strengths and weakness of Republicanism were responsible for the Stokes victory.
■
To begin with, Cleveland has always been a Democratic stronghold. Those who predicted Mayor Stokes’ defeat were thinking in facial terms.
Many prosperous Republicans who might have beqn counted on to vote for Ralph J. Perk, his GOP oppraient, swung away because they felt that Stokes should have “more time,” “more of a chance” to prove himself an aspect of the fairplay feelings so often prevalent in American politics.
NOT DISHEARTENED
Republicans here are not disheartened by the Perk defeat. Givoi the political division of the'City, they think . he did rather welL
What Ohio Republicans fear is an abrasive primary fight in 1970 for the United States
Arthur Hoppe
No Country Would Buy a Used War From Them
President Hoping for Protest Backlash
et plan which
I
It was in the 43rd year of our lightni&g campaign to wipe the dread Viet Narian guerrillas out of West Vhtnng.
At long last, our president revealed his secret plan which he guaranteed would “bring this war to an end” — he was going to give it back to the West Vhtnnnfdans.
The joy of the generab who ruled that bastion of democracy on getting their war back can hardly be described. To discuss the situation an Emergency Crbb Dbaster Meeting was called in the capital of Sag On.
★ ★ ★
“I do not wish to look a gift war in the mouth,” said Gen. Hoo Dat Don Dar, the current premier of the week, “but I do not HOPPE see how giving the war back to us b going ; to end it.” ■ = -
“As one who once commanded our Loyal Ri^al Army to fearlessly charge the enemy,” said Gen. Pak Opp Ngo gloomily, “I do.”
GIVEITAWAY
It was then that the briUiant director of emorgency planning, Gen. Wot Nao, spoke up. “We must seize thb glorious war firmly in our grafp,” he said, as all waited breathlessly, “and give it to somebody else.”
Armed with testimonials and brochures, Gen. Tai Wun' Onn decided to go first to Paris, seeing he was on an expense account.
★ ★ ★
“Cher ami,” he said to the French foreign minister, “ha*e b an (^portunity to defend westerp civilization on the frontiers of freedom for honw, glory, tin and rubber.”
“Zut slorsi.” cried the foreign minister, (which is French for, “Don’t try to pahn off that war we palmed off on the Americans who’ve palmed it off on you”) and kicked him downstairs.
FINESTHOUR?
Brushing himself off, Geh. Tai tried the Britbh. “Look at this testimonial from the U.S. PRESIDENT, ’America’s finest hour,’ ” he said. "How’d you like a finest hour? Cheap?’’
“We already had one,”, said the Britbh and cut him dead.
* ★ ★
And «o it went. The Germains said they might surrender to temptotion, but they couldn’t afford the upkeep. And the Italians said they’d never surrender agab.
A dejected Gen. Tai returned to Sag On. There was even some half-hearted talk among the generab that they ought to fight the unilirersally unwanted war themselves. ’
' 'T
But as Gen. Phat Chhns said with dignity, “We sUll have ourprlde!’^
Thus, just as the iiresident had predicted, the war came to an end.
^tha American people were happy agafai-as iMppy. lS*iJ*,’.**	be that has sp«t 1108 billion and
35,8I» Uves an somothtaf no ana alsa waold have as a tfft,
Senate seat being vacated by the cantankerous but votegetting Stephen Young.
★ ★ *
Rep. Donald E. (Buz) Luk«is, a young and unpredictable product of Young Americans for Freedom md the Young Republicans, still has dreams of pushing for the senatorial nomination even though his record in the Congress has been hardly distinguished.
The two frontrunners to date are Gov. James Rhodes and Rep. Robert Taft Jr. DEFEATED PREIHOUSLY
TUft was defeated b a prinrious try, though h e counted on the magic of hb father’s name in Ohio. That name has not been forgotten, but It dock hot have tifo clout of another day.
Taft moreover has tried to hold on to the conservative vote while wooing the liberals. As a result, he b viewed with suspicion by both.
★ * ★
Gov. Rhodes, though a man of uncertain tenqierament and occasionally faulty political judgment — he blew the chance of being a power at the 1968 Republican Convention by not commitUng himself to either Richard Nixon or- Gov. Ronald Reagan of Califomb — is clearly the stronges't man the' Republicans can field.
He-is somewhat tarnished by 'an bcome tax allegation bvolvbg supposedly unreported bcome on fab personal return and Ms rathor vague defense.
★ * ★
So far. Gov. Rhodes is the only candidate to dedare hb intention of runnbg for ,the Senate. His supporters h(gie and believe that Taft will 'accept the gubernatorial spot, giving them a strong ticket.
But if Mr. Taft nuikes a fight for the nombatbn, with Mr. Lukens joinbgt )n, then the GOP may find Itself so rent that it ^1 bse ib base b this traditionally Republican sbte.
D there Is a great percentage agreeing with the President let them fight, regardless of sex and age, and let’s see how patrfotte they are. I tiilnk everyone against these moratoriuns should do the same and it should end real soon.
MOTHER OF FOUR SONS
Praises Press for Report of Land Deal
I praise 'The Pontiac Press for brbging the Loon Lake land deal to the attention of the people of Waterford TowosMp. The TownsMp school board is so busy begging for more millage from the taxpayers that they let a valuable piece of property that doubled in value in one year slip through their fbgers.
J. W. S.
Troubled Motorist Appreciated Assistance
Recently, wib my car filled with laundry, and like a stupid female, I ran out of gas. Embarrassed, I began the walk to a gas station about a mile away when a man ud thb three (Mdren to a red frifok qffemd me a Zl(|® the stadon. After picking up the gas and returning to the car, the canfUl didn’t start my car. The man siphoned gas from hb gas tank, refused to take any money for hb trouble) and drove away. It made me feel good to fbd bere are still people ready to help a person who needs help, albough a complete ktranger to bem.
(Editor’rf/ote: All letters to the Voice of the People must be signed and an address gipen. In some instances a pen name may be used in the paper.)
BERRY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry
.qWiN}.
“You’re interested b either a biaxi’ or a 'fun-fur^ cost ~would bat be for the lady or the gentleman?” '
Questions and Answers
(Q) I was bon Jan. 18, IMI. Caa yea tell se what day of ftie week bat liras?
J.' '
(A) Saturday.
(Editor’s Note: ThTreader whe waate
tiac,^ Waterford and West Bloow-field.
Oar class would like to spoasor a
Stowe, 73tf Rattatee Lake Rd., Oarkstoa. For aames of other handlers of wild .aafanab, ask for Mr. Greene at 874«M1.)
(U) I’m interested b the Waterford pamptag station at Mil and EUsabett Lake Read. How amek has boea qpant ea it. and who pays 1^7 f
GERALD IdARTIN * , MCLAYBURN
fA) The project, which is nearly completed, will co^ $716,000, according to Mr. Alexander at Oakland County Department of Public Works. H it paid for by toUmships which belong to the CUntonCak-land Sewaije Disposal System: yAwm, InSmodmieo, Orkm, Pod-
(«)
paper drive to ratae find anyone In bis
we’d

LORI ZULXOWSKI SOPHOMORE CLASS SECRETARY , BRANDON HIGH SCHOOL
ORTONVILLE '
(A) Royal Oak Waste POper and Metal Co. U Royal Oak^ U1-4020, is the closest we found, and they’d give yok 40 cents per 100 lbs. of paper, 20 cents per 100 lbs. for magazines. The only problem ii they can’t come that far to pkk it up. However, why don’t you try talking an area business into donating the use of a truck, and you mtuld take the papers in your-selves?
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1&69

JdL
Vets Day Crowds Hit Ww Protesters
FLAG WAVED-J. Milton Patrick (above), national American Legion commander, waves during the Veterans Day parade yesterday in Minneapolis. Patrick, from Ski-atook, Okla., viewed the parade after a meeting of the national executive committee of the American Legion earlier in Uie day. The legion cele-bt-ated the anniversary of lt» first national convention which took place in Minneapolis SO years ago.
By The Associated Press I
Hundreds of Veteran’s Day ceremonies, many aimed at giv-l ing President Nixon’s “silent majority” a chance of piping* up, drew thousands of flag-wav-1 ing citizens in cities and ham-' lets across America.
Some of tho larger crowds— estimated by police'at more than 10,000 each—were in Wash-higtQn, Boston and Tallahassee, Fla. ^
Massachusetts Gov. Francis W. Sargent—dedaring, “Veterans are being produced the hard way in Vietnam at this very mo-
ment”—led 11,000 marchers In leaders of the war protest move-Boston. ’The Tallahassee parade*ment. featured traditional floats and' They heard Rep. Donald Luk civic displays.	|cns, R-Ohio, call the war pro-
In the nation’s capital, organl-testers “Spockettes” after the zero of the Veterans Day Free- well-known baby doctor and out-dom Rally at the Washington spoken war critic, Benjamin Monument could claim success Spock. as the estimated turnout on a	*	* -k
cool but clear autumn day matched their predictions. NEATLY DRESSED The white neatly dressed gathering in Washington applauded and shouted ap-
A BA’TTLE WON — Actress Mercedes McCambridge, triumphant in a battle against alcoholism, talks at her West-wood, Calif., apartment about many warm messages she has received since she testified before a U.S. Senate subcommittee recently.
Her Real-Life Role: Win Over Alcoholism
HOLLYWOOD A(P) - Actress Mercedes McCambridge once won «n Oscar, but she said her biggest prize in life was her triumph over alcoholism.
She likes to talk about it; wants to bring it out in the open.
“The way we treat the whole problem is barbaric,” she told an interviewer Tuesday.
“I knew a woman, heiress to a fabulous fortune, who died in a comer suite of one of our best hospitals. She died of alcoholism and malnutrition after her family—in ignorance—overprotected hier."
ANOTHER NAME FOR IT
Nice pebple don’t die of booze, ■aid the 51-year-old character actress, “so it’s call^ something else.”
Miss McCambridge, who won her Academy AwaTd in 1950 for her role ta “All the King’s Men,” said her life with the bottle was ’’a kind of hell.’^
She biames basic insecurity for getting h«r started.
“I always compared my worst qualitiu to everyone else’s best qualiti^,” s^ said.
“I kpew tliefe was * rat race going On inside of me, but I thought everyone else had it
Now, of course, I know that everybody has problems.”
She said some of her film roles were destructive, too.
“I played the worst harridans, the most hard-bitten women, the absolute beavies, and It just about did me in.”
Now she spends much of her time on college campuses, starring in otherwise all-student productions.
People have helped her greatly, she said. She described as “fantastic” some of the letters she received since she told of her affliction last September before a U.S. Senate subcommittee hearing on drug and alcohol abuse.
One came from 79-year-old Rose Kennedy, mother of the late president.
“Have fun, say a few prayers, be determined to know not age or weariness or defeat,” MM. Kennedy wrote. •
Miss McCambridge also cherishes her friendship with the late Adlai Stevenson, who gave her Sir Malcolm—a West Highland terrier who is her constant companion.
A source of pride is her son, John Lawrence Markle, 27, who is studying fw a doctorate at the University of California at
20 POUNDS LA’TER-Ex-Marine Thomas Deary (right), unable to button his old uniform,. gives a thumbs-up to marchers in a Veterans Day parade in Pittsburgh yesterday. Deary, 35 and admittedly 20 pounds over his active duty days, and his son Timmy, 4, joined thousands of Americans across the country in Similar observances.
- ‘"rhey’ve had their day, they’re beginning to make daddy and big brother mad,” Luk-ens said.
They cheered agreement when Ed Butler, 34, who calls . ,	himself a “conflict manager,”
during the 2V4 hours as igjjjj	Saturday’s war protest
speaker after speaker attacked |„,arch; “Parading with these people is like marching with the Mafia for better law enforcement.”
SOLDIERS PUZZLED Sen. John Tower, R-Tex., said today’s soldier “fights with guts and Intelligence ... he is puzzled by the attitude of some people in public life who ought to know better.”
The senator said he had seen^ Americans in Vietnam field hos-l pitals, “the life ebbing from' their bodies.”
* k *
“I want to see the war end,” Tower said, “I want to see this is the last war we have to fight.”	i
At one point a man shouted “WOWant Spiro,"* and the signs said “Judas WilMam Fool-bright,” “America, love It, or leave it,” “We stand for Nixon” and “Dr. Spwk has colic.” COUNTERPROTEST Some 35,000 were on the same ground Oct. 15 for music, speeches and the beginning of a candTelight march the night of the Vietnam Day Moratorium. And it was as an answer to this war protest and others that the “freedom rally” Tuesday was declared to malm something extra of the Veterans Day observance.
Long-haired young people and tlie freedom ralliers occasionally joined in argument on Viet-nam-^maybe a dozen small clusters in tbe mass for the day.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1969
'New Mobe' May Triumph Despite Bickering
fEplTOR’S NOrp - The rials and tribulations, the fi-
nances and composition at the coalition sponsoring this mek's antiwar demonstrations are described in this dispatch.)
By KEN HARTNETT WASHINGTON (AP) - Like one big unhappy family, the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam hasjpromise that will put a Black
was not going down without a I have large numbers of people | dally Independent from the fight,”	, ndenionstrating,”
Others at the meeting broke u^ERAlJS DISTRUSTED up the brawl, and one by one all	^ facused on the
the disputes on the West Coastjjew Left's distrust -even the one between Hallman	nj^^als of the Mc-
and the Trotskyists weie re-|(Hgj.jjjy Kennedy stripe—the solved or at least put aside asj^j^j jj^prais operating the the day of the march neai ed.	| Vietnam Moratorium, a major if
There was even agreement onij,Q,newhat reluctantj,component a speaker’s list--a delicate com-Mobe coalition.
New/Mobe ahd raises its own funds through its/ own mailings and money-producing events.
bickered from the beginning.
But despite the inner strains —there was even a memorable brawl at one meeting—this uneasy alliance of moderates, liberals, clerical pacifists, radicals and Communists may bring off the largest peace demonstrations in the nation’s history.
Panther on the San Francisco platform with former Sen. Wayne Morse.
The liberals in turn distrust the radicals of both the new and old left variety. Liberals still embrace the electoral system
The same kind of compromise | and believe that majority opin was painfully reached for the|ion, not confrontation, is the Washington rally where Sen. surest way to a Vietnam pull-George McGovern, D-S.D,, and! out.
Trotskyist Carol Lipman will bej	*
among a wide spectrum of| They fail to see how a majorl-speakers.	. I ty movement can be built with a
Hundreds of thousands ofi 1" the day-to-day operationS| program and rhetoric that as-demonstrators are expected to|of the coalition, the factions;saults moderate convictions.
take part in three days of marches and rallies beginning In Washington at dusk Thursday and ending Saturday with mammoth marches and rallies here and in San Francisco The vast majority of the demonstrators will be apolitical or moderates—people	concerned
mainly with Vietnam. They will be unaware of the communications gap, occasional credibility gap and dollar gap that vex the umbrelld organization coaxing them out of their homes, schools and businesses.
COULD BE IN RED The New Mobilization, or New Mobe, could be as much $60,000 in the hole Saturday-a deficit it hopes to cut drastically through the sale of commemorative posters and buttons.
“If we're in the black, we’re doing bad,” said Sidney Lens, the veteran labor radical serving as one of the New Mobe’s eight national cochairmen. “Any movement that is in the black is doing bad. We measure our success by our deficit, but we hope that can be reduced.” But much more troublesome than the dollar gap has been the ideological gap with its never — ending clamor over tactics, power relationships, political phraseology and goals.
The storm clouds were there at the very start. Followers of Leon Trotsky, who have organized around the war issue since the mld-’60s, tried to pack the July 4th meeting in Cleveland that broUfdJt the New Mobe into being.
FREE OF LABELS A direct descendant of the National Mobilization Committee, which staged the 1967 Pentagon march, the New Mobe waa-the brainchild of the old Mobe personalities—Lens, pacifist David Dellinger, Prof. Sidney Peck, all tough minded radicals, all free of any clear-cut factional label.
They managed to retain control of the leadership at Cleveland but the three-way' contention between old and new left forces and the moderate middle has raged unabated since.
coexist and cooperate. But their ideological differences remain. WIDE SPECTRUM New Left radicals distrust Old Left radicals—who operate under a chain of command and submit to a discipline, such as, members of the Communist Party, U.S.A., or the Trotskyists.
The new leftists also have a AT THE CENTER bone^deep aversion to compro-| The Trots are members of the mise or what they see as the [socialist Workers party or its disguised sellout of radicah offspring, the Young Socialist aims.	I Alliance. They have been at the.
NOTABLE ABSENTEE	i center of New Mobe contention
Peck.-who at 42 can operate:	«>e Cleveland meeting
with the pragmatism of the 01d| "^^^e Trots hold about lO of the
Left, calls that aversion “purism” and says it is part of the tradition of the Students for a Dehiocratic Society, a notable coidition absentee,
I think there’s a helluva lot of yioung radicals who don’t go for that holiness,” Peck said.
At a Nov. 2 steering committee meeting in Chicago, for example, the Ideological din became so fierce that at one point Peck threatened to resign.
And just before the meeting dosed, the national co-chairman did indeed bolt from his seat,
Just blew my cool at the very end,” he said later.
RISING ANGER At a planning meeting of the West Coast Mobe in San Fran-dsco, the explosive radical lawyer, Terence (Kayo) Hallihan, watched in rising anger as Trot-al^ists maneuvered on the floor.	I
Hallinan, another of the New Mobe’s eight national cochairmen, said he finally had enough. | He threw a punch because. “l|
They are also wary of violence, potential or actual.
Such ideological crosscurrents are the ideal swimming place for the Trotskyists or “Trots,” a slender but highly organized international organization with roots in the historic and eventually, murderous split between Stalin and Trotsky.
The SMC has been organizing around the antiwar movement since 1966 in the single issue tactic historically dear to the Trots.
“Our line is an antiwar line, not a Trotsky line,” said Miss Lipman. a 24-yearK)ld plumber’s daughter from Lynn, Mass. “Any attempt to accuse us of being dominated by any political philosphy is Red-baiting.” WENT ALONG The Trots came oft the singleissue line at the Cleveland meeting and went along with the conference call for action not only against the war but against a host of other ills.
A conference statement, written by Lens, had something for almosteverybody:
"We call tor this demonstration and rally ... to stop the war in Vietnam now, to bring ail our troops home immediately and in one piece, to win free speech and democratic rights tor GIs, to stop the repression and free all political prisoners, to end the draft, to put an end to racism in all America and colonialism in Washington, D.C.”
To implement these goals, the
in Washingtoii. )
Scores of volunteers and a coips of 30 paid staffers operate out of a 10-room, |l,000-a-month suite in a nondescript offioe building a half-mile from the White House. *
And a dozen organizing teams began traveling the country in September to drum up support tor the November demonstrations and to help build local support organizations.
•Lens, when asked bow mUch these operation? cost, replied politely, “I know, but I’m not telling you.”
New Mobe set up headquarters
sin<^«
merof 1966,
dlHir ^Mlltlon) now' is it^initely broader (ban it Was then.”
Peck Is less optimistic. “I Uiink It has good potential,” he said, then pegged the future of the coalition to what’s ahead In Vietnam.
President Nixon, Peck said,
But these young radicals are Worried as the movement drives toward a mass political base. As they see it, the more people in the movement, the more moderate it must become and the more hopelessly compromised.
’There’s a tendency among radicals to get nervous when large numbers of people are with us,” says Ron Young, co-project director of the New Mobe.: “There’s a feeling that if we Were really doing what we ou^t to be dmng, we wouldn’t
100 steering committee seats, but neither they nor any other faction controls the coalition.
“On the campuses they constitute a very important force,” Peck said of the Trots, “particularly in the vacuum left by the demise of the SDS.” .
Trots are prominent in the leadership of the Studen^Mobili-zation Committee, an organization that claims over 1.000 chapters in the nation’s high schools and campuses: Carol Lipman, a former national secretary of the Young Socialist Alliance, is national SMC secretary.
QUITE A PRODUCTION For the Washington march, the SMC is producing over
150.000	posters, 100,000 brochures, 5W,000 antiwar stickers,
10.000	armbands, 25,000 buttons. At the same time, it is finan-
Steve Wilcox, a former teacher and the closest thing the New Mobe has to a comptroller, says the East Coast operations could cost $100,000. “But I don’t really know and I don’t think anyone knows,” he added.
Hallinan, cochairman of the parallel West Coast effort, said he wouldn’t be surprised if operations there also cost $100,000. The New Mobe expects to spend $15,000 just to; convert a San Francisco polo grounds into a rally site.	*
WORK INDEPENDENTLY Both East and West Coast Mobes worked independently to raise funds.
They dusted off old mailing
-------- ;—----------------jlists, staged benefit cocktail
; parties, dinners and art auc-. .	tions, looked up old friends in
T0X05	OmOn	movement and sought
actually served notice of war Intensification in hls'ispeech Nov. 3 and the effect of that Will drive more people into the peace movement—eventually.
lell?’ ?
it will.”
lime for that to said. '“But I think
ACCUTRON
(By Balova)
Sales and Sentea—S Fae«
sai^TratnedMepsdrmem
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Dies of Age 1 11
PORT LAVACA, Tex. (AP) -Mrs. Regina M. Hernandez of ’Tivoli in Refugio County died Tuesday at the agd of 111.
Mrs. Hernandez was born Sept. 7, 1858 at Laguna Seca, a small village near San Luis Po-tosl, Mexico. She immigrated to Tivoli in 1910 with her husband
donations through full-page newspaper advertisements. Actor Burt Lancaster’s name was used in a fund appeal letter in the Los Angeles area.
Most donations ranged from $5 to $25, fund-taisers said. One East Coast businessman, whom they would not Identify, came through with $5,OQO for the largest single individual corttribu-tion.
Lens said labor groups have
He died in 1926. She received donated between $2,000 and her American citizenship at the!$10,000 so far. Among them, he age of 104.	' jsaid, were, the Amalgamated
Mrs. Hernandez is survived Clothing Workers-and the Amalgamated Meat Cutters. ,
by two of her 16 children, Mrs. Eduardo Caballero and Mrs. Herminia Villarreal, both of H-voli, 88 grandchildren, greatgrandchildren and great-greatgrandchildren.
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WILL IT StJRVIVE?
What .will become df the New Mobe after Saturday?
f..ens says it will survive. “We’ve been holding together
Tune in on our Savings Plan
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,	THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 196P
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tllE PONTIAC I'HKSS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1969
Viefcongs T^t Victims Still Being Identified
T V. YA^iv	^^AP^ they ere without faiijlly, wlthputiworkmen laboriously exhumediexpert on tlie Identification of|More often,i the only hope la| Scotm P*™®"**.
LE XA TAY. Vietnam (AP) Under a gnarled4iM Mrk. Phan Thi Dan wept qulet^for her husband.	x
Occasionally her hand
couhtry, without reli^on. And now we know that they are without humanity.**
It was a statement without
workmen laboriously exhumed i expert on the identification of I More often, f the only hope lit Scotm of persons, mostly the
dental work, the shreds of cloth-1 women j of _ Phu yang,^prw
bodlei, and poke throu^ . bones and coltbes in hopes of A total of 104 more bodies flndlng evidence of their missing have been found in 'several men, Few succeed, gravesites within the past week
tte bodies, and, young volun-long-buried bpdles. tws metlculouslly sifted the re- rvou can tell the old women mains for Information that by their teeth and the young t^ might help Identify the victims. Umes by their long hair,” she ex-ressed the green plastic sheet, rancor, even without much out-j Mrs. Dan was one of perhaps plained, tied with nylon cord, containing ward emotion. Mrs. Dan, a 45- IW womwt from P*»“ Vapg dis- ^j^jj his remains—a few bones, rem-j year-old teacher, had known ;!*'*''*■ 1“** ““‘keast of who ^	men-and the
nants of his clothing and a skull 21 months^^
tag or lust the intuition of a wifelaround 'the plasti or mother,	'
two prominent gold teeth [most certainly was dead, one of | months as bodies were uncov-
I more than 3,000 killed by Viet-
*	*	★	Icong assassination squads dur-
“The Viet Cong? We are of tag the 1968 Tet battle for Hue. the same race, we have the!HER 14th yiSlT
hair, we speak the same This week, f«Mp the 14th time, language,** said Mrs. Dan. “But!she visited a place where grimy
ered in places to which the Viet-
cong marched their victims, then killed them with bullets and dubs or burled them alive.
She became something of an
In the case of men-and the The bodies are loaded aboard riiwJnn Inrran««tr4 overwhelming number of vie-L motor Sampan and taken two	incifOUdCU
much
were men—it is harder.
Sometimes an identlflcatlon card; a cigarette lighter or
some other article bearing a he bones.
name lies among the
miles to Phu Thu district head-,	hum hum
quarters. They are laid out on! Between 1W2 ^ 1968 tae ground, and the list of avall-|“‘«"'®''‘«l	“»e Amerl-
able clues to the identity of each can Cancer Society increased humbered cadaver is read over from $2.8 million to $5.5 mll-
a loudspeaker.
Priest Girds for War on Segregated Cemetery
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -.Vietnam war veteran, Ptc. Bill A white priest says, *‘I will askjTerry of Birminghhm. every black soldier to refuse to'	a. j.
FamiliesGet 'Dividend' of $4,000
Conducts Sessions at Prison Camp
Judge Tries to Help Convicts
go into combat, refusing to riski
WOODLAKE, Calif. (AP) -Each weekend Judge John R. ANN ARBOR (AP) — The av- Locke goes to the Tulare County
his life for his country, until the President can promise that any American can be buried In the cemetery he chooses.”
The Rev. Eugene Farrell spoke at an hour long prayer vigil Tuesday at the gates of
Terry, 20, was killed last sum-ppggg American family actually industrial Road prison camp to
mer. His mother and widow gj^^ j4 oqq g yggf ^ore filed a federal court suit July 2S.^|,gg jj, breadwinners believe, in an effort to force cemetery Trouble is — it’s in non-money, officials to cease “nialntelning|gxpigi„g g university of Michi-a , poUcy of discrimination ^gn economist.
against Negroes.” The suit has Hgysewives provide most of^ not face him again in the Supe-not been heard.	gjjjgd non-money income,]rior Court at Visalia
help rehabilitiate the inmates.
He sentenced most of them himself.
Now he hopes to reshape their social attitudes so that they will
Elmwood Cemetery, which had,	*	*	economic researcher Is-
refused a burial plot for a black An Elmwood spokesman. H. Abdel-Hamin Sirageldin. -----------------------------W. Miller, said the cemetery	g j
Against Himself** by psychia-l “He learns to face life with trlst Karl Menntager and ‘‘Art'eourage and love—and his hate of Loving” by Eric Fromm. 1 melts away.**
STUDY OF AFFKCnON '
~	,	u ,-i , probation officer, says the judge
.T?.®	"a real Interest in i4ople|
I’m sure he’s done a lot of.
DOWNTOWN
PONTIAC
study of affection and its re-
wards.
good."
The judge says his tape re- pigt. Atty. Robert C. Bereman
cordings are desiped to “atiriign-tsg gure.
the inmate’s thinkiiui about hisj «we’re having, repeaters and,; life”	6	while I don’t mean to say therei
The 58-year-old jurist drives Another of his ‘‘mind grab-jis any connection wjth his proactivities 15 niiigj ggpi, Saturday and Sun- bers” is a mock trial in which gram, we’re also having more
YOUMAYHAVC	a™®"**	morning fronfe Visalia to he is prosecuted by an inmate escapes.” Bereman said.
deeds which restrict burial priv- g, jj,g ^g^j	^	j.|,_	gther inmates as ]u- Phil Flores, camp supervisor,
PIUWORMS
leges. B*ecause of the clauses.
he said, Elmwood could not le-
ANO NOT KNOW IT
gaily deviate from its policy. NEAR ms HOME
m>y Iw vietiiiu and not know it Twntridol Fin-Wonni, thoy b b« IdIMd In tha larfo intestina w!
thay Hva and multiply. That's siaetly what Jayna's F-W tablota do... and hara'a how thay do it:
The $4,000 also includes the tie mission in life.’
Terry’s mother can see the cemetery from the porch of her home, where Terry grew up.
Father Farrell, pastor of Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church, and flve other churchmen—most of them Negroes— lea the group to the cemetery they dinoive. Then — Jayne’s mod- i irom' a nearby church. They •■pad the Bible and led singing. Said Father Farrell:
value of time spent on voluiy Locke mingles with the men, answers their questions, plays inspirational tape recordings and encourages thq prisoners to
teer work or educational activities, the rental value of owned
quickly and sasily.
Don’t take chances ous, hlchly
homes and the value of transportation provided by the family car.
In his recently published article, ‘‘Non-Market Components of National Income,” Sirageldin noted' that various countries have different proportions of market and non-market produc-^ tion.
Such discrepancies make it
rors.	Says the only thing wrong with
■‘As I defend myself, the in- the program li that “There | mater-with tin aid of his pws| aren’t more peo^e involved in —gains a new insight into him-jit.” self and his problems,” Locke I Of the camp’s ,,140 prisoners.
read such books
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By STEVE MOORE WNING, Mont. (AP) -Scriver, using skill and pounds of bronze, has tried ^oM the likeness of "a real to-Qod cMwboy.”
My he was successful, llkmess is that of the late Llnderman, a Montana who was one of rodeo's renowned riders.
^e wM one of tiie old breed Mt one. of the Honda-types have ioday,” says Scriver, ijISS-yearold goateed artist, •(le typifies all that's good il^t the American cowboy and iMHOld West-'the West of the 0&O1, the lon^rn herds/' ftp-iver was bomnilssioned by hHl<>deo .Cowboys Association nSenver to depict Llnderman i£he was, a hard-riding, blunt-ijfiken person.
A'UNIQUEMAN’
!The statue is Bili Underman jight, but it’s aiso the likeness )f^a unique man,” said Scriver, in this small north-nntral Montana community.
♦	★ w
^ taxidermist, musician and idioolteacher, Scriver spent 2>/&
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WE]^ESDAY, NOVjlMBEB 18. 198»

Statue Immortalizes lAontana Rodeo Star
went into its casting. Scriver said he and from 10-15 skilled and semiskilled men worked on it at times. It has seven major sections and eight smaller ones. ‘HELLUVA BIO MOLD’
‘‘The last mold, from the knees down, weighed 6000 pounds. That’s a helluva big mold," Scriver said. ‘‘It took two days to make it and two days for the house mover to get it oyer to the oven."
■ *	'ifc	W
Scrlver’s home studio was remodeled to accommodate toe giant work. The foundry, one of three known facilities in toe country large enough to handle the task, was modified extensively.
*	★	★
The Llnderman statue depicts the cowboy holding his saddle with his chaps and reins over his shoulder.
50 fo Be Trained
LANSING (AP) - The U.S. Labor Department has announced 30 jobless or underem-P*°yed persons in Saginaw and I ^aars creating toe statue at his20 in Houghton will receive' the Blackfoot Indian classroom training in two separate projects. A federal grant of $118,947 will be used to train 30 persons as licensed practical nurses at the Saginaw Adult Education Center. The Ford Forestry Center at Hough-ton will train 20 saw filers through use of a $58,005 federal grant.
lt(piervation.
tt was hauled away in a mov-
^n in mid-October, en ropte Cowboy Hall of Fame in ll^ahoma City—the first sculp-tuK so honored.	,,
tit’s a damn good job, and I hojie you don’t mind my saying so,” said Scriver after the movers left wito the statue, insured for $40,000.
RODEOHERO
Llnderman won the love and admiration of rodeo riders in a 25-year career that was ended by an airplatie crash in November 1965, at Salt Lake City.
That was Bill Llnderman— the guy I cast in -bronze,” said Scriver.
*	* w
Bom in 1920 near the southcentral Montana ranching community of Belfry, Lindemujiq earned $443,000 on the rodeo circuit and won more tidM..din more events than any other Hd-
ScrivpV’s stands 7 ,feet Nearly (|,0Q0 pounds of metal
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Permanent
Press
Dress Shirts Sale-Priced at Hudson’s

You U recognize the savings when you see the famous name on these top drawer shirts. Made by one of the largest, most popular shirtmakers in the country, these shirts are styled right. Spread collars in white, solid colors or stripes. Traditional button-downs in solids and stripes. The easy-care fabric is polyester/cotton so they won't need ironing, and will give you loads of wear. Choose from sizes \AVz to 17. Stock up on savings for yourself, and because these great shirts come in their original wrappings, you you can use them for gift giving too. Come see in Hudson's Men's Furnishings, Pontiac, 1st floor, also at Hudson's brsnches.
•hop Hudton’t With rwuQORvoniont tott-tnm AiimlMr. Orahopoiior works Hviton'r Fontioo, Ookland, Norihland. Earthnd. Wottlondopon Mondar thnugh Salurdar till »;30p.m.
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pBi I

THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1960
Private Postal Systems Are Spreading in U, S,
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ai privatQ postal system' calledi IPSA, which handles third-class mail at loww cost than the U.S. Post Office, now is operating in! 87 cities, making money and expanding.
On parcel post hauls, the privately operated United Parcel Service is plying streets and highways with 20,000 of its own shiny vehicles and charging less on many intercity deliveries than Uncle Sam.
government go-ahead to extendi railroads, and the Yellow Pages the House Post Office Com-I Schoolchildren boarding Iwses ita interstate service into nineUow a longer llst^each ybar ofjml«^. hut wUl return wlth|ln Oklahoma City are likely ,to|
dpUYer
-______________« «ou w	________ --	- ___________________________ . ,	«» « selooUw Itat
morr^trs7fw atotarof 48.	carrying ttiehr pendlS Undibasls
is growing because I it claims	meanUme, Is a pro- eraser, in IPSA bags.
- many business firms preferi"**“"®* *"** natlond express|p^j^	increase to jpsA has franchised' U-S- parcel-port executives
it to the U.S. mails for rellabi-lhaulers - even though toe U.S. help avert a |l-bllllon postal operators operation in St. Loul8,jW* more conscious Of the lity and predictability of serv- parcel post itself is growing. deficit. '	• and Kansas City, Mo.; Buffalo, private competition. They are
KEEN INTEREST *	*	★	★	In.y.; Jackson. Miss.; LltUe reh^hred by law to keep thefr
Rock, Ark.; Toledo. Ohio; rates high enough to r^ver all
ice.
Air freight is a booming entry! The private carriers are being "We’ll all be under one big in the package-hauling industry, watched with keen Interest by| corporation some day,” predicts
and may get cheaper as bigger'supporters of President Nixon’s IC. Wallace McPherson of
jets come along. Greyhound proposal to reorganize the Oklahoma City, an executive of buses haul bundles as well as postal system into a business-people. The venerable REA type corporation.
*	*	*	Express survives and thrives | That plan was blocked for this
UPS is awaiting a final despite the decline of the session by a 13 to 13 deadlock in
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the Independent Postal System of America, called IPSA.
What is IPSA? It is a company established 18 months ago in Oklahmna City which employs uniformed, bonded, full-time carriers to deliver. : third-class matter—advertising. !or so-called “junk mail” — at a cost below the Port Office third-jclass rate.
;838 PBR 1.088
Dallas and Fort Worth, Tex. and some 80 other cities and towns. It has openings scheduled before the end of this year in
costa. The rates exceed those of United Parcel Service on many hauls. A 10-pound package from New York to Jacksonville, Fla.,
Des Moines, Iowa; Phoenix, for Instance, costs $1.65 by mall Ariz.; Houston, Texas, and and $1.45 by UPS. elsewhere.
'The U.S. Post Office scoffs at IPSA as being a mere distributor of handbills.
UNION ATTACKS One department official commented; "Considering the shortage of labor, I don’t think it is going to be; however, that UPS has a great
From New York to Washington the charge is $1.15 by U.S. parcel post, $1.85 by UPS. From New York to Philadelphia a 20-pound package goes bt mail for $1.05 and by UPS for 90 cents.
* w ★
The Post Office points out.
$38 per 1,000 for mailings of up to 250,000 such pieces a year, and MO for each additional thousand. IPSA charges $33 per 1,000 for toe saturation-type mailings. Since it is forbidden by law to use residential mailboxes, IPSA hangs its deliveries
advantage; It deals ordinarily
’The U.S. Post Office charges around too Iwig.” Postal union leaders have attacked IPSA on grounds that only the government can legally carry mail, and have denounced the wearing of official-looking uniforms by IPSA’s delivery men.
To such beUttllng, IPSA replies that it has in hand ap-doorknobs in plications for franchises from
plastic bags. It pays the cost ofjabout 2,000 more towns and{ Some four million Americans
with business firms, not with millions of individual mailers. Typically ii operates by charging a store or bnsines house a flat weekly fee to make daily pickups of all outgoing parcels. The fee is in addition to the regular UPS rate.	j
the bags by selling advertising! cities. And that it is now.have sought medical help for a on them.	I prepared—in Oklahoma City'sleepwalking problem.
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Senate at OCC Opposes War
Orchard Ridge Plans on Protest Days Told
A strongly worded resolution eslling for an Immediate hall to ;the Vietnam war has been sent «to Presldient Nixon by the Academic Senate of the Orchard Ridge campus of Oakland Community College (OCC).
The Academic Senate is student-faculty organization irepreienting administra-Jion, facility and the Farming-ton Toemshlp campus’ 5,245 |tudents.
. “We suggest that there is a fieater loyalty than loyalty to Country. Governments, and we )is citizens of this government, jiave a responsibility t o mankind that supersedes national Interest,” the resolution reads.
The resolution calls for
America to bring an Immediate end to its violence in Vietnam” and to “(create) the new historical precedent of a major world power admitting that it has made a mistake."
A PRELUDE
The resolution is a prelude to OCC’s moratorium program plans tomorrow and Friday, which are to be spearheaded by OCC President Joseph E. Hiil •peaking out against the war as a private citizen.
: The Academic Senate will Sponsor a series of panel discussions, seminars and speeches at the campus, 27055 (Orchard Lake, Farmington Township, during the two days df the national moratorium, faculty members, students and qutslde speakers will explore a variety of viewpoints on the war. The program . is open to ^ the public.	|
President Hill’s speech iS' slated for 3 p.m. Friday ini connection with the Academic I Senate program.	|
Orchard Ridge students will vote in each of their ciasses on whether or not to hold class Nov. 13 and 14. If a majority rules, classes will not be held during the moratorium days.
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12. i960

Film-Rating Code Viewed as a Failure
WASHINGTON (AP) - The film industry’s self-imposed rating system has resulted in a rash of pornographic movies, says the president of the 75-theater Walter Reade Organization.
"This pornography has not gone begging,” said Walter Reade Jr. "Exhibitors all over the country, hiding behind the implied shield of the X rating, have renounced their personal responsibility for the films they choose and play.”
Reade told the National Association of Theater Owners’ board of directors Sunday that the year-old code is a failure.
He said newspapers and radio and television stations have imposed a form of advertising and editorial censorship based on tjie rating of a film;
'BLANKET BLACKBALL’
’’Newspapers 'all over the country—San Diego, Reno, Oklahoma City, Phoenix, Indianapolis, Miami, in several Illinois towns to a name a few— Khve decided that X-rated films can no longer be advertised on their pages. In some cases they have also refused any editorial space to these films.
‘‘Now In the past we’ve run Into cases where specific ads or titles were unacceptable but never before this blanket black-1 ball and never before has the: ban been extended to cover the news columns as well as the ad-vertisihg space.
“This, I suggest, Is the direct result of the code and rating system that was to save us from censorship,” Reade said. “It should also be noted that this ban ... is practiced by a growing number of TV and radio stations across the country.”
The X rating means young-s|ters-the age limit varies from li to 18 depwidlng on the coija-raunlty—are not to be admitted tliseeafllih.
But, said Reade, “we all knew how few youngsters get turned away from X pictures. We all khow how many times the X has been used to add to, rather than to restrict du potential audience'.
“Thill Is not a proi)d position ?for we dxhlbitorli to enjoy, copsidering the many years of service to our communities and the good will we have sought to establish,” he said.
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THE I'OXTIAC PKESS. WEDNESHAY, NOVEMBER 12, 196B
By JIM LONG
Nursing homes have long been the target of criticism, some of it justified, much of it unwarranted. Often it stems from ^ague rumors.
Deplorable conditions and inadequate care have been found to exist—but, from all indications, not in Oakland County, according to the findings of The Pontiac Press.
Nor Is it likely that extremely poor care can be found in the state, where rigid controls are enforced as best they can be.
Where there are difficulties, they seem to generate around staffing problems.
MORE THAN SATISFACTORY Nevertbeless, the operation of nursing homes locally appear to be more than satisfactory, and frequently of high quality.
Recently, a team of Pontiac Press reporters was assigned to inspect nursing homes to view the conditions and treatment in Oakland County.
Following three weeks of interviews with patients, nursing home administrators and health officials, it was the consensus that county nursing homes responsibly meet the needs in caring for the long-term 111 and the aged.
Dr. Bernard Berman, director of the Oakland County Health Department, believes the care received by the elderly in the county “is equal to that given anywhere In the United States.”
CARE UNDERSTANDABLY DIFFERS He credits this to both the state laws governing the operation of the nursing hoAes and the consultation service offered by his department.
But one thing clear in the visit of nursing homes, the care—given in the impersonal atmosphere of an institution, and dispensed by people of varying qualifications and personalities—understandably Offers,
At Its best, it produces a sprightly old man whose eyes sparkle when he teases a nurse.
At Its worst, it is tranquiiization, and sometimes restraint, both of which are defended by administrators in explaining the methods required when dealing with senile or violent patients.
HARNESS SOMETIMES NECESSARY “There are times when a restraint or harness is needed to protect a patient from himself, or just to keep him from t(9pling out of bed or a chair,” one administrator explained.
1116 use of both restraints and tranquilizers are based on doctors’ prescriptions, administrators remind.
At all the nursing homes visited, repwters arrived unannounced to inspect facilities. The object was to view the operation as it was and not as it could be if an appointment was made.
opportunity to show their
Administrators welcomed facilities.
Nearly 5t» nursing homes with a total of 1,800 beds are operated in the county, varying in appearance from luxurious. modern complexes with the latest in equipment, to modest, converted private homes.
STrer STATE REGULATIONS
Regardless of their size, ranging fmm less than a score of patients to over 300, the rules and regulations set down by the .state must be adhered to if the nursing home wants to retain its license, issued annually by the health department.
There are times that a nursing home will be placed on probation until it meets certain requirements. Often it has to do with fulfilling personnel requirements.
The state requires one nursing personnel for each eight patients on day shifts, one to 12 for afternoons and one to 15 for the night shift.
In-training program.s for aides are carried out in some of the larger facilities. Higher paying hospital jobs frequently attract them after their training and tht>y quit.
Some nursing homes have volunteer programs, but many have difficulty In keeping them gqing since some individuals are unable to relate to the elderly.
“It takes a certain type of person to work with the aged,” said Basil F. Boyce, a Pontiac nursing home administrator, and president of the Michigan Nursing Home A.ssociatlon.
While it has no full-scale volunteer program, the Avondale Nursing Center, 1480 Walton, does rely to some extent on outside help in comforting the aged.
One 85-year-old man at the home without a family has been adopted by Boy Scouts who have made him an honorary scoutmaster.
FEW ‘BAD’ NURSING HOMES
Fred M. Shinnick Jr., administrator of the 45-bed Avondale facility since it opened March 1965, said he has known of poorly operated nursing homes, “but the day of the really bad nursing home is pretty much over,” he said.
Mrs. Helen Winterstein, administrator of the plush Brae Burn Nursing Hume in Bloomfield Hills, agrees.
“I don’t care how nice a place is, if it’s not operated fwo-perly, you simply won.’t keep the patients,” she said.
Brae Burn, which cares for some 115 patients, handles nearly all private cases, charging $18 a day for semiprivate rooms and $25 for private.
HOSPITAL COST COMPARISON
The rates are in line with those charged by other nursing homes for private patients.
This compares with the approximate $50 daily room rate charged in most local hospitals.
The Bloomfield Hills Nursing Center, Square Lake and
Pontiac Prasi Photo
Association President Basil Boyce
Boyce Answers Criticism;
Hits State Rules, Medicaid
is a regulation requiring eight-jdepartment, particularly in thej foot ceilings. “What happens to I area of raising rates for the!
Task Force
Some 1,800 elderly and convalescing patients receive care In private nursing homes in Oakland County. To determine the quality and conditions of the facilities. The Pontiac Press assigned three r«toorters to inspect a cross section of the county’s 50 nursing homes. 'The results of the study made by Jean Saile, Dianne Durocher and Jim Long are reported on this special page.
MRS. SAILE
The Poniiac Press in-lcommittee to establish stan-vestigation of area nursing jdards for nursing homes in the homes was touched off after [a f s o c i a t i o n . The MNHA a senes of articles by The nsembers already operate under Associated PYess were na-h code of ethics, tii^liy syndicated.	The standards would be in
The stones pointed out glar-| addition to the rules and Ing examples of gross regulations handed down by the miimahagement and unskiUed Michigan Department of Health
or improper care in a number ol nursing homes throughout the r,ation.
which governs the operations of nursing homes, It al.so is the agency that licenses nursing homes to do business.
SOME DISAGREEMENT Not all the regulations are pertinent in insuring that the patient receives proper care, according to Boyce.
the home that has a seven-foot care given patients receiving ceiling?”	I medical assistance (Medicaid).
Boyce termed the rules and' Nursing homes presently regulations “unrealistic and receive $12.25 a day for arbitrary.”	Medicaid patientkon basic care,
Bitter over what he calls $l‘^-48 for those needing bureaucracy,” in the depart-types of skilled care
Woodward In Blooni^ield Township, is the laiigest fiursing home in the county with facilities to care top 370 patients. It is not a member of the Michigan Nursing Home A.ssoclatlon.
Mrs. Grace Christianson, administrator at Bloomfield Hills since 1965, said it was an “injustice to nursing homes” when stories “generalize” about poor conditions in some facilities.
FULL-TIME PHYSICIAN
It was the only nursing home visited by Press reporters that had a full-time physician in attendance.
Most administrators point out, however, that the employment of the doctor on a regular basis isn’t justified. They contend that nurses are qualified to call in a doctor when one is needed.
State law also requires that each patient be visited by a doctor monthly.
“We have a doctor on call 24 hours a day, explained Leslie Haney, operator of the Novi Convalescent Home, Novi Road just north of Grand River. "He lives only a block away.”
RECREATION, THERAPY PROGRAMS
The home has 22 patients, with all but one of them receiving medical assistance frem the state.
Important to the mental and physical well being of the patients are recreation and therapy programs conducted in all the homes. Some of the programs are elaborate while others are in relation to the size of the home.
At the Woodside Nursing Home in Pontiac, a pilot program has been undertaken by its administrator Ernest Good for the care and treatment of mentally retarded children.
Good, as do most administrators, object to the “unrealistic approach taken by the state in its appraisal of the physical structure of nursing homes.
LIMI'TED FINANCIALLY	‘
“f don’t mind criticism if it’s renstructive,” he said, “but we’re limited in what we can do financially.”
Woodside has beds for 139, though it carries only 132 or 134 patients presently.
Kitchen facilities in all the homes visited were clean, with menus for the week posted on the wall. Dieticians are employed on a consulting basis in preparing the menus.
Association President Boyce believes that nursing homes can provide care to its patients far more reasonably than public iastitutions, thus saving taxpayers money if state and county .officials took the time to look into the economics of toe profession.
A 50 PER CENT SAVING
He said it costs up to 50 per cent more to keep a patient in a public institution in Michigan than it does to keep him in a private nursing home.
A year ago. Boyce, appearing at a public hearing on Medicaid conducted by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, cited severa) examples of problems of toe aged receiving Medicaid.
“In Michigan, the little old lady who broke her hip lives in a nursing home bed for six months at $14 a day because Medicaid won’t buy her an $18 walker that would enable her to gel up and leam to walk. The man who needs an arMcial leg is apparently condemned to stay in a nursing home as long as it takes to vriiittle one, because Medicaid won’t provide one.”
Despite toe problems administrators are of toe opinion that they are doing the best possible for “toe segment of toe population that has been forgotten,”
“It’s the most dynamic field in health care,” said Boyce; “Just as dynamic as dealing with diOdren or transplants.”
ment, Boyce is now engaged in plan that he hopes will overhaul the entire system., ELDEIUUY COMMISSION Tc implement the plan will mean amending the State Constitution.
The fees are from $6 to $8 less than charged by nursing homes generally for private patients.
To stay in business and maintain a profit, according to
Life in a Nursing Home—Bittersweet Days
By DIANNE BUROCHER an offering to make,’* she said.
“Don’t call us senior citizens. Call us old men and old women because that’s what we are,” I said an 85-year-old woman, sit-

Thou^ only one nursing home in Michigan, an unidentified facility in Detroit, was cited In the five-part series, toe stories came under fire from the Michigan Nursing Home
Association (MNHA).	I it is no secret that the of a state commission on the private patients.	Center,
The 21-year-old organization association and the State Health elderly that would control Boyce said that nursing nursing home, represents 315 of the 427 nursing Department, headed by Dr. R.inursing homes as well as set homes are being jeopardized byfacility at 50 W. homes in the state. It has a Gerald Rice, do not see eye to rates charged for indigent pa- the failure of the state to grant Square Lake,
The association wants the among patients r ece i vin g n®'' voters to approve the creation special financial assistance and Bloomfield Hills Nursln
and toe soft, white, wrinkled face broke into a smile showing white, straight, teeth.
‘RIGHT TO DIGNITY’
‘"These old people are part of bur society and they, like
restrained
quilizers.
or given Iran-1are old enough to take care of themselves,” she said. “They “Some patients havelseem to be abie to handle regressed so far that they are themselves and enjoy toe at-like children. Some ha ve'tention.” reached the state where they| ■ ★	*	*
can’t walk, communicate or; she said it sometimes S everyoneelse, havethe rightto^®f	becomes necessary to ask the
human dignity,” said Mrs.'	^	. men to restrain themselves
an ex- carlton Reynolds, director of,
Some people are depressed but there is no problem, when they first enter a nursing i„ visiting the approximately
lobbyist in Lansing.
IMAGE IMPROVING TTie president of the MNHA is
eye on a number of issues.
Bas? f. B^ce, administrator of 1"	“’®
the Beverly Manor Convales-
cent Center (formerly Seminole Hills) in Pontiac. He is serving his second one-year term as bead of the group.
Boyce readily admits that toe image of the nursing home profession has not always been
people,” Boyce complained Most of Boyce’s ire centers around a recently issued page directive that must be followed by nursing homes. ARCHITECTURAL RULES Boyce points out that many of toe regulations involve
tients.	. . their request to raise the daily
*	*	*	Irate, shared equally by the
‘ “The control would be taken j state and federal government, out of the hands of the healto ^ dirty WORD department entirely," said'
— -nursing at the Woodside _________________u... .u____s._____n.. » i .	------"------------------•'
loom fjeld Rehabilitation and Convalescent ^'^®’Pa‘‘e"ts 1" the home, Mrs
the best, but that through the architectural requirements efforts of the association, a that if followed to the letter will better understanding of the force a number of nursing problems in dealing with aged homes to close, has come about.	|	★ *i ★
Recently, Boyce appointed a One example cited by Boyoe
Boyce. “The commission would be completely divorced from the politics and bureaucracy that now surrounds us.”
The timetable for circulating petitions and getting the, proposed amendment on a statewide ballot is still in thej planning stages.	I
RATE INCREASES
“It’s been the attitude of social planners that profit is a dirty word, and that profits should not be connected with the medical iwofession,” said Boyce.
“What they don’t seem to realize that the problem is social and not medical,” said.
Township, with a capacity to Rome, 835 Woodward care for 370 patiento, is the; Sometimes it is difficult, Mrs. largest nursing home 1» Reynolds continued. “A 90-year-Oakland County.	person doesn’t have many
friends, most of them are dead.
The old woman continued, “You know that’s what I like about the young people today. Iliey tell it Tike it is. I am 85.1 am an old woman, and that’s what I want to be called.”
‘And we old people like to be
of life and acUvity here,” she Ardelean places her hand in j theirs or on a shoulder, and “T think the reason people each responds with a clasp of find nursing homes depressing the hand, is that they feel that they aren’t, doing anything to help old Peo-'
and some old people are far
removed from S families. P‘®’ Mrs. Reynolds added.
We become their family, andj	*	*	*
they look to us for attention and' Th® Evergreen Convalescent love.”	I Home, 54 Seneca, outwardly
*	*	★	'resembles the other homes of
,	,	i	iuaia —4 2_ A , r Biwiiics esn r^itiGiTiDcr tnem
She explained, “Our goal is to The quiet little street in Pontiac. | *hev were and it is hard for lie kept in the normal mainstream'rehabilitate a patient to his or I But inside, 66-year-old Harry Ljj . accent them as thev of life as long as we possibly her maximum potential. And P*®y® ® w®Hz on the piano,	^
NEED CONTACT She explained, “They reach out as if they need the physical contact for reassurance, I have never stopped to analyze it.
Wa can give love freely.
,	aa TIC	iici iiiajuuiuiii poicnuai. AHO	gra now in a denendent and
It makes no difference until a patient is able physically | while white- and - gray-haired
ruir HaHioq nrtt Tf uta hAVA arw4 mAn#»1l«r nMUiaiM.6,..^ ..-'TYiAn Afi/1 wnmpn WASirincr
Over the years, the nursingl The opinion voiced by BoyceTrhat our bodies are. If we havejand mentally to ambulate, he or >n®n and women wearing lacei homes have had a running bat-1 was often expre.ssed by other H’® mental faculties, we have she sometimes must b e “P ®hoes and rolled-down socks
tie with the state h e al t h]administrators interviewed.
Physical Therapy Playt A Major Role In Convalescing
Sage Words
Old people have countless memories accumulated over scores of years stored in the quiet comers of their minds. The memories and the years and the wrinkles are embellished with wisdom:
On Peace:
“I have lived with war all of the 85 years of my life; the Spanish-American War, the Mexican War, the World Wars, the Korean war and how the Vietnam War: My fondest hope is world peace.”
On Landing on the Moon:
“What did they iin4 after they took the trip?^Rocksr	^
On the Young:
“Young people are heirs to all the mistakes of the past. They are looking for a forward waiy to remedy the results of some of our terrible mistakes.”	/
On Being Old:
“I don’t bemoan the fact that my world is being lost, but rejoice in the new one ahead.”
and stockings began to shuffle	accept them Just as
about the room. Some wheel	Mrs. Ardelean
themselves or are pushed closer	r®!j	Christmas time, she
in their wheelchairs. They alii lots ot people come Iiito listen-and smUe.	*>ut the rest of the
LOVES TO WALTO	S’/'	““S'
One 76-year-old woman with',DMi!< ARi?N»r uaddv blue eyes said, “I love to dance
the waltz.”,	! William R. Robinson, a
“I just like to sit around and ®P®ri®l|®l in the care o f listen,” said the 86-year-old	*®”®,	patients, said, “The
woman next to her. “After	, i" * n««i"g homes
working all my life, I most en-	'* 1“®*	n*® *he population
joy sitting around.”	general. Most are satisfied and
Across the room, Dan, 84, “I"® *"	”
watches with a twinkle in his “® added, “And those that green eyes, Originally from ®*‘® dissatisfied are quite vocal Northern Ireland, he Uved with their complalnU.”
25 cats before moving into'	★	#	*
Evergreen.	| Hohinson has about 200
“Oh, Dan enjoys the girls all ®M®f*y P«Hents in nine different nursing homes in Oakland County.
Patients living in nursing homes are generally happy.
right,” said Mrs. George Ardelean. Evergreen’s ad-tninistrhlor. She is a regibtered nurse and president of the _
Oakland County Nursing Home rM"*®" “‘d. They understand Association,	‘heir disability and have no
ANOTHEB rUHT	^
, She continued, “There is counters complaints about food, j another old gentleman Who also difficulty in cashing a Social flirts quite a bit. Some of the Security check or families that men occasionaly will hold a don’t keep in toudi with j^-woman's hand or have his arm tients. around her, and it’s amusing i Robinson said that When bns and touching to set'our old of his patients is dissatisfied or people still have these,desires,” has some problem, “Wa discuss “We uro not shocked Iflr it, it and toy to remeify dii sWua-and teil the women that toey I tion.”
THE PONXIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 19fi0
A—la
Pueblo Crewmen Are Told They'll Be Shot at Sundown
J.
^EDITOR’S NOTE “ Thia it • eighth article in a series on the USS Pueblo written by a neioe team from the Associoted
One Pueblo crewman, Ramon Rosales, was cut i and swollen from blows which began aboard ship and continued without surcease. The North Koreans yanlced him off the bus and dragged him by his hands into a building nearby. They pushed hiin down stairs and sat him on a hard bench and shouted the same question they had been shouting since they singled him out among the crew huddled on the Pueblo’s fantail.
“What la your nationality?” Rosales repeated the same reply.
“I am an American.”
The North Korean soldiers did not believe him. Or, if they did, they wanted him to say nonetheless that he was a South Korean spy.
Rosales had a dark complexion, stood five feet seven inches tall, with dark hair, high cheekbones and an Oriental cast to gentle dark eyes. He was the son of American citizens, Mr. and Mrs. Concepcion Rosales, was born in the same state as the President of the United States. His responses had a ring of defiance.
“Who ace you?”
“I am Ramon Rosales.”
“What are you?”
“I am an Ainerican.” ^	/
SHOOTING THREAT They kicked him in the face and slapped him and told him he was going to be shot. They tightened his blindfold so that he could scarcely breathe, tightened his wrist thongs sq that his hands lost their feeling. When his head drooped in semiconsciousness, tiiey yanked him upright by the hair and smash^ him again in the face. Eventually he could utter no further response, so they dragged him outside and threw him back on the bus.
In another part of the building Lloyd Bucher could hear Ro-
sales being beaten end demanded they stop it. They Ignored/ him. Instead they led him to a more distant room where he could no longer hear the thuds' ancLmoans and outcries. He demanded that his wounded crewmen be given i^edical attention. They ignored him.
* * *
Bucher had been removed from the bus, returned to, the Pueblo and threatened with hin life unless he opened the locked door of the research department. He refused; the fact was he didn’t know the combination. They also brought Steve Harris back to the ship, and Ralph Bouden who had been the last one out of the Sod Hut. None of them opened the door.
Now they had Bucher in a room six feet square, and Max, the interpreter, was asking him why the United States was trying to start another war with North Korea, why Bucher was trying to land South Korean spies. The officer replied:
NAME, RANK, SERIAL
“I am Lloyd Mark Bucher, commander. United States Navy, serial number 582154. My ship is an oceanographic and sunspot research.”
Bucher reminded Max of the Geneva Convent! o n. Max scoffed. The two countries were not at war, he said, and Bucher and his crew were thus considered espionage agents with no rights of military prisoners. Max gave Bucher every;iassur-ance they all would be shot. .
★ ★ ★
The interrogators gave Bucher' a few kicks ahd sent him back to his crew, and the caravan of busses rumbled down the road to a waiting train. Its coach windows were covered so that none could see out in during the long ride through the night across the Korean petdn-sula to Pyongyang, though the soldiers did not tell the prisoners that was where they were going.
The guards continued to manhandle the men. One hit seaman Richard Rogala in the back of the head with a rifle butt and
kicked hliP in the groin when he fell to itie ground. His ihljK mates lifted Rogala aboard the train. Another guard clouted Bucher from time to time in the back and soon the captain felt a steady pain. One who spoke English hit the big, muscular quartermaster in the head several times and questioned him about spying. The quartermaster gave the answer all the men were giving:
“I am Charles Law, petty officer first class, serial number 3898-110,”
UNEXPECTED COMPASSION
At times the captors showed unexpected compiassion. One asked Rosales if his blindfold was too tight. Scarcely able to breathe, for the cloth covered his swollen mouth as well, Rosales nodded. Tlie man iodsened the blindfold, loosened the wrist bonds. Someone noticed Bucher’s hands turning black and loosened his bonds. Another pressed a cup of water to Bucher’s lips and qhoved a large ball of butter covered with sugar in his mouth. He swallowed it.
During the trip, selected crewmen were taken forward to a separate car and interrogated, and beaten. TTiey pounded the back of Lt. Murphy’s neck until his head Was so low he could scarcely talk. Hb told them nothing. Bucher was led for--ward half a. dozen times, shoved into a seat and questioned 20 minutes at a stretch. The interpreter was Max. Bucher denied again and again thaf he was a CIA agent, denied he had in-truded into Korean waters, repeated his cover story. And that was all Max got out of him when the train pulled Into Pyongyang just bcfwe dawn add the North Koreans yanked off the blindfolds and untied the crewmen’s hands.
■ ★ *• *
’The men stepped off the train into the white glare of floodlights. They stood with their hands above their heads, the classic pose of prisoners, while cameras clicked and whirred. ’These photographs the North Koreans would boldly show the
The Ship That Came
in From the Cold
world. Then they herded the men onto more busses, with windows similarly shrouded, and made them sit with their hands in their pockets and their heads bowed.
At dawn the busses stopped. It is doubtful any of the crew slept all that night; the captain did not.
BUCHER LUNGES
As Bucher left ttie bus a guard kicked him in the small of his back, kicked him again in his wounded leg. ’That hurt. His hands free, Bucher cocked his fist and lunged toward the-guard, but before he could reach him, three other guards grabbed him.
In the cold" morning light, before the men were once again blindfolded, they could see that the building where they were taken was four stories tall, about 130 feet long and 60 feet wide. All its windows were covered. It was built solidly of brick and stone and its walls were six or eight inches thick. It would come to be known among the men of the Pueblo, and etched in horror on their memo-des, as‘"The Bam.”
★ ★ ★
Rosales and Murphy lifted Woelk’s stretcher , as gently as they could and trudged blindly up three flights along with the rest of the crew, prodded along with rifle barrels.
The guards assigned the men four to a room, except for two large rooms where they put as
many as 12 men. After each room was filled the guards removed the blindfolds and shut the door; no one knew who was in the room next door. Each room thus became its own isolated cell of anxiety.
WOUNDED ’TOGETHER
Murphy and Rosales, as directed, placed Woelk in a room with the other,seriously wounded men, Chicca' and Crandell, then were sent to another room across the hall. Dale Rigby, the ship’s baker, was put in the room with the wounded. Murphy and Tim Harris wore nothing to identify them as officers and shared rooms with enlisted men. Steve Harris, Gene Lacy and Skip Schumacher, who like Bucher were wearing their officers’ hats, were asfflgned separate rooms.
Bucher was put in a room • containing a small; table, a chair^ a cot with one blanket, a pillow stuffed with sffaw. The cdptain knew by thd shuffle of feet, and by/ an occpsional outcry, that many of his men were in the same building, on the same floor. All of them? Where were the wounded? Were they being treated? What was in those canvas bags he knew were now in the hands of his captors? His brain pounded with a torrent of questions and hi^ body ached. He did not attempt to sleep.
* *1 ★
When at last all was qUiet in The Barn, a guard opened Buch-
vhall to ^kn'i interrogation room where an interpreter waited with several North Korean officers. The Interpreter would earn the nickname Wheezy; he continually tried to cover up his inability to translate rapidly by coughing.
Again Bucher demanded care for his wounded, demanded to see them, demanded that the crew be kept together. Again they acted as though they did not hear. For 45 minutes, between coughing fits. Wheezy shouted the familiar accusations: the Pueblo had intruded, it was a spy ship, Bucher a CIA agent. Bucher repeated his denials.
NORTH KOREAN CONCERN By the frantic tone of their questioning Bucher detected that they were genuinely concerned about the possibility of sudden U.S. retallation—a possibility he himself felt was not unlikely. He decided to play on their concern. He told ^em he had radioed his position when he was captured and thq United States surely would soon be demanding quick return of the ship hnd its crew.
They sent him back to his room and gave him a plate of boiled turnips and some bread and butter. He did not touch the fo<^. A short while later they brought him back to the interrogation room and Lloyd Bucher received the first shock of his capUvity. ’There on the table lay the cardboard jacket containing his Service record.
* ★ *
Was he married? What were his children’s names? What were his former duty stations and assi^ments? They had the information in front of them. Bucher gave the answers.
One entry said Bucher had attended CIC school. True. He had attended the Navy’s Combat Id-formation School at Glenview, 111., in 1954. Wasn’t CIC the same as CIA? Thby kicked him in the back, struck him, insisted he now confess he was a CIA agent as they suspected all along. He refused. ’They kicked
him loms more and sent him In pain to h|s room.'
CONFRONTED BY, GENERAL At midmoming a guard once again thrust open Bucher’s door. In the hallway stood the other five Pueblo officers and the guard marched them, with the captain in the lead, to the end of the hall where a long, narrow room ran the width of the building. At one end tables were arranged in a horseshoe and at the center sat a North Korean general. About 40 other officers stood around, behind the tables. The captives took seats, according to rank, in six chairs placed within the horseshoe facing the general. The rom was unlit except for a single bulb directly above their heads.
’The general asked each man his name and his job aboard the Pueblo. They responded with names, ranks, serial numbers. They also gave their jobs, to protect their cover story of being an oceanographic ship.
★ *1 ★
The general, with Max Interpreting, launched into a 20-mln-ute harangue against the United States. Why did America want to provoke a new war with North Korea? Did Bucher realize there were 500,000 American troops poised in Swth Korea?
* ★ ★
Bucher argued there weren’t that many. The general scaled down the claim to 50,000 and asked why they were there. SOUTH KOREAN DEFENSE “Because the South Kwean government requested fliem,” Bucher replied, “in order to ‘ provide assistance in dMensa of their country.”
An officer drew back his hand to strike Bucher but the general stayed him .
★	★ w
“You are not prisoners of war,” the general shouted. “You have no rights under the Geneva Convention. You are espionage agents caught redhanded. You vHll be shot. How <h> you want it, one at a timd or all together?”
nntSMY, FBiMY, saiaiiMY while qiHumriES msr
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resh boneless I
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Breakfast Show Glitters With Preholiday Fashions
By JEANNE NELSON Spark up your breakfast with glittering holiday after-dark fashions, read the Invitation from Hudson’s at The Pontiac Mall. Nothing lacked luster Tuesday as
ewiIlM PrHl aiMlM IW Cdward R. NobIt
White sheared tabbit detailed elegantly with rhinestone buttons will add drdniatic touch to any after-dark gown during the holiday party: rounds. All fashions from Hudbon^s at The Pontiac Mall. i
shimmering satins and colorful brocades approached the runway.
Frosted peach, the color hit of the morning show, was seen In everything from satin to wool.
The rich brocades carried it in a variety of combinations. India ink black, an understatement In elegance, was relieved with dramatic touches of white in long gowns and smashing evening jumpsuits as well.
w	★	★
The Patou pearls were everywhere. Most reached to hems teamed with a combination of graduated lengths. Soft grey ones with darker grey and jet black strands left no doubt about THE jewelry look of 1969 holidays.
★	*	★
It was fabric and detail rather than style that caught my eye. In fact, most of the short fashions were one version or another of our favorite shirtdress. But the rich satins and tissue thin silks changed them instantly into glamourous things.
FESTIVE AIR
Shoes, hose and bags (tiny ones with rhinestone or pearl shoulder straps) all matched the festive air. Heels lo^ their clunkie appearance fdr evening to become more graceful with beaded and buckled throat bows.
Crepe, softly draped or pleated in moving folds, was another favorite of this collection. Few daring decolletes' entered the scene and of these, most were modest V’s, more often than not l^anded in beads and rhinestones.
★ ★ ★
Long, fitted sleeves or altogether sleeveless seemed the rule for bom the long and short evening frocks.
it -k *■
Detailing Included wide,, Ohi sashes,
^ sometimes fringed, rolled satid hem and sleeve bindings, sequined or dryatal waist and Empbre definers and beaded bands at hems and necklh^S.	„
Short after-dark numbers remain'Jtt the mini category while longer ones leave the ankle length of last year to sweep the floor.
★ ★ ★
Short vests and longer, open tunics cut their way into a nighttime glamour look as they add a touch of color and sparkle to cover an otherwise simple sheath.
Federal Official Says No
Credit Code Means Trouble
LANSING —(AP)- A high Commerce Department official, a banker and a former Federal Trade Commission at-
Gina Lollobrigida Says She'll Marry NY Businessman
BOME (JPI — Italian actress Gina Lollobrigida said today she would many New York real estate man George S. Kaufman “as soon as possible.’’
“We wanted to keep It a secret," the brown-haired, 41-year-old actress said. “But now that the word has leaked out on our romance, we might as well bring it out in the open.”
^
Miss Lollobrigida made the announcement at an airport news conference before flying to New York with Kaufman.
“I hope we will be able to marry In the States," said Kaufman, a tall, dark-haired man who looks younger than his 40 years.
%e don’t know the where and when, but we will announce it in New York,” he paid.	,
Miss Lollobrigida said her lawyers were taking care of legal aspects of the wedding. She is technically still married In Italy to MUko Skoflc, a Yugoslav-born
doctor and pqbllsher^ ^
They were legally separated two years
*1skoflc obtained a divorce In Vienna, Austria, last March. It is not valid in Italy.
Kaufman said he was married once and the marriage ended In divorce three years ago. He has two daughters, aged 14 and IS.	,
* * *
Miss Lollobrlidda has one child by the Skoflc marriage, Mllko Jr. Me is now 18. TecimleaHy In her eustodyk ho is currently living in a boarding school In Switserland.
tomey have joined in urging Michigan not to adopt a proposed uniform consumer credit code.
It is hard enough now for shoppers to find the best product for the money, the three said, without having to judge virtually unlimited. Interest rates and financing schemes that would be allowed under tbe proposed code.
it it it
Maurice Schoenberger, deputy director of the State Commerce Department, said Monday the proposed code would allow virtually uncontrolled retail credit lending at rates of 10 to 18 per cent. It would replace several clearly and simply written laws with a single, vastly complicated and confusing statute, Schoenberger added.
A House committee, chaired by Rep. -Marvin Stempien, D-Llvonla, is conducting hearings on the wide-ranging bill to supplement the recently enacted federal “Truth In Lending" act.
The model code was drafted by the National Ccmference. of Commissioners mi tlniform State Laws. So far. It has been adopted only by Utah and Oklahoma.
*	*	*
The code Arould substantially simplify state laws covering retail interest rates and persons who may do business as money lenders.
it	it	it
' While it would protect ah eniploye from being fired for garnishment of his wages to settle a debt, the code would offer no restriction on blank contracts and it would not protect a buyer against clauses in a contract requiring him to waive all rights against illegal repossession or collection procedures.
“People have a tpugh enough time shopping for products, let alone credit," said George Platsls of the Michigan attorney general’s office. "They obviously don’t have any choice in cr^lt. People don’t write their own contracts when they buy cars."
Platsls, who for twq years worked In the Federal Trade Cotnmlssiqn, said the prcgjosed b|ll '^wlll hurry th% day el col-1. lapse." He lu-edicted the bill would/iUive the way for home mmrtgage loana of 10 to 13 per cent ihtereat.
Drama begins with black and white when satin and chiffon keep company in a glamorous pants ensemble for evening. The satin neckline is perfect for those long jet pearls that hang to the middle of layered chiffon pants.
Peach sherbet in satin and brocade takes the soft line with front panel pleat. Gold shoes and hose carry out the Midas touch of the rich fabric. Shrug off cropped vest for another festive look.
Free-Lcxiders Should Take You for Lunch
By ELIZABETH L. post Of He Emily Post Institute
Dear Mrs. Post: I would like to know what services and obligations the owner of js auto owes to her guests Ih the ear: t am 75 years old, In good health. Frequently I take other ladles for a lOU-mile ride. Anf I expected to treat them to a luncheon or snacks on the road? All expenses of the car are paid by me.
*	★ w
Am I obligated to open doors, carry parcels, purchased on the trip? All these ladies are as physically able as I am. They never offer to compensate me in any way. I guess one would call them free-loaders.—Mrs. G.
Dear Mrs. G.: If I were you, I would stop inviting these particular "friends" on excursions. “Free-loaders” Is just the term for them — they should be offering to take YOU to lunch rather than letting you pick up the tab. And as for treating you like a chauffeur or a porter — it is inexcusable.
All I can say is look for some new companions for your trips — and good luck!
QUESTIONS HONESTY
Dear Mrs. Post: In today’s paper there is a letter from “Dora” who wishes to resign from a bridge club. You tell her to be honest in hqr letter, then proceed to tell her to make two dishonest statements. You should be consistent.
First,' sbe stated to you she did not enjoy playing bridge and second, she did not state that her husband prefers that she stay home. You suggested that she say she had enjoyed the bridge club association, and that she “use" her husband as an excuse for staying home.—Mrs. G. E.
★	★ ★
Dear Mrs. E.: I am just as much In favor of "honesty” as you are. But there are times when a small "white lie” or exaggeration Is not only harmless, but saves feelings and friendships. Dora said she did not like bridge — she did not say she did not like the girls, and it was not being dishonest to say that she enjoyed their company.
Nor was it far-fetched to assume that, since Dora looked forward to evenings at home with her husband, he felt the same way.
INTERRUPTER
Dear Mrs. Post: At a small dinner party, "A” had the floor and was reciting a story. "B” interrupted and conUnued the interruption while “A” contlnped speaking. “B” addressed "C” and "C” in turn conUnuecK the^ conversation with "P.’\ Meanwhile “A” is still speaking.
Would you butline to me the proper, etiquette so far as "C’' was concerned ?—Fred
Dear Fred: “B” and “C” were both at fault. Obviously “B” was extremely rude to irtterrupt and to continue talking against “A." “C” should have recognised this and said to ”B,” "I’m sorry, I’d like to hear the end of "A’i”
M
Wife Does Boss a Favor; Alarmed Mate Calls Time'
By ABiGA|iL Vanburen
DEAR ABBY: I have been married to Margie for seven months, and there is one thing we argue about cwstantly.
Margie; is the secretary for a bachelor, and he has asked her to telephone him every morning at 7 o’clock to wake him up! (He doesn’t trust an alarm clock.)
I say that my wife isn’t supposed to report for “work” until 8:30 a.m. and her employer has no right to expect her to call him at 7 a.m.', as she is not “on duty” then.
Margie says she doesn’t mind calling him, and that I am making a big deal over nothing. I say, my wife belongs to me at seven in the morning and I don’t want her worrying about having to wake up her boss.
I would like your opinion. Also the opinion of your readers.
MARGIE’S IRATE HUSBAND
DEAR HUSBAND: I don’t see any harm in Margie’s calling her boss to wake him up, but if you do, then out of consideration for you, she should tell her boss to get somebody else to wake him up. (And by the way, if he doesn’t “trust” an alarm clock, how about a rooster?)
df ★	★
DEAR ABBY: I have read in your column many letter^ from the family of the bride resenting bitterly the family of the groom paying off their social obliga-
Consumers Power Executive to Head Fine Arts Foundation
tions by inviting all their shirt-tail relatives, Mends, neighbors, and business acquaintances to a wedding since B’a paid for by the parents.
I recently returned from the orient where I attended a wedding, and was informed of their solution to the wedding guest problein. Each family invites as many guests' as they wish and each family pays for his own guests. Clever?
A READER
DEAR REi^ER: Very!
* * ★
DEAR ABBY: People keep writing in to say they can’t stand the smell of tobacco, or garlic, or onions. Well, there are worse smells as far as I’m concerned.
I can’t stand closer than three feet from,my mother-in-law without becoming nauseated because she uses a heavy gardenia perfume which practically knocks me out.
And those “air fresheners” that smell like pine and orange blossoms gag me.
It takes me a full hour of fresh air to get back to normal after dancing with one of my husband’s clients who uses a . popular men’s fragrance that smells like jasmine!
I am about to give my favorite wrap to the Goodwill because my niece borrowed it and in spite of numerous airings I can still smell the perfume she must have bathed In before wearing it.
The election of A. H. Aymond as chairman of the board of the Michigan Fine Arts Foundation was announced today by Clyde C. Bennett, Jr., president.
At the same time Bennett announced that Mrs. Edsel B. Ford has accepted the post of honorary chairman of the private foundation to promote the arts in Michigan.
A. H. AYMOND
Aymond is chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Consumers Power Company.
w ★	★
His first official action as Foundation chairman will .be to preside at a luncheon meeting m be hosted by Gov. William G. Milliken at Lansing Country Club Friday.
About 70 Michigan business and civic leaders are expected at the session, where Gov. Milliken and Durward B. Varner, chairman of the Michigan State Council for the Arts, will outline programs designed to enrich the quality of life for both urban and rural residents of Michigan.
ENRICHMENT
Incorporated in 1967, the Fine Arts Foundation was Orgaplzed to enrich Michigan cultural life and to implement programs of the Arts Council, a state agency.
Mrs. William Milliken is chairman and Mrs. J. L. Hudson, Jr. is co-chairman of one of the Council’s current projects, a touring art exhibit titled the Michigan Arts Train.
Through its projects, the Arts Council seeks to make available the best of the arts to the largest possible number of citizens, at prices they can afford.
Maybe I’m a weirdo, but I’ll take the smell of tobacco, garlic, or onions to some of those fancy exotie "fragrances” any day.
STINKY IN FORT WORTH
■W	w	★
DEAR ABBY: Of course that 54-year-old man should not (when he goes to-St. Louis on frequent business trips) stay with the cute 24-year-old stewardess who’s married to his nephew who’s out of town a lot. That’s ridiculous! Can you send me her address?
MAN, AGE 37
k	k	it
DEAR ABBY: Last Sunday, while driving on a well-traveled freeway on the outskirts of town, I noticed two cars ahead of me. One was a new convertible containing three young girls.' The other was a s^an in which five young men were riding. These kids were “racing,” and passing each other at a high rate of speed, then slamming pn the brakes and stopping abruptly in front of each other.
The girl was a very poor driver. She lost control of the car once, and went off the highway, but got back on again. The kids in both cars were laughing and shouting back and forth to each other..
Abby, a nightmarish accident involving not only these two cars, but others could have occurred easily. I wanted to ptop and phone the highway patrol but my wife told me to mind my own business. What would you have done?
STILL SHAKING
DEAR STILL: I would have told my wife that the safety of innocent motorists (and even the lives of those foolish Idds) were indeed MY business, and I would have stopped and called the police. k k k
For Abby’s new booklet, “What Teen-Agers Want to Know,” send 81 to Abby, care of The Poiitiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056.
Calendar
THURSDAY
Club, 12:30 p.m., Evadna Street home of Mrs. Bart Palandio. Sewing of cancer pads.
Women’s Society of Bethany Baptist Church, 12:30 p.m., in the church. Mrs. F. A. Shaw will be guest speaker.
Detroit Industrial Nurses’ Association, Inc., 6 p.m., Raleigh Houseiin Southfield. Earl J. Hill on “The Pursuit of Happiness.”
Iota I Eta Chapter^ Pi Omierpn, 8 p m., Illinois Avenue home of Mrs. Joseph Chummlngs. Cosmetic demonstration.
Pine Lake Estates branch. Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association, home of Mrs. Bernard Blelsch of Normanwood Drive. Workshop on Thanksgiving and Christmas decoratlmis irtth Mrs. William Drescher.
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12. I960
ic Tale for Children
by Puppeteers
I"'
Th« Dick Meyers Puppets from liew York bring a delightful production of “BeaUty and the Beast” to the Detroit Ihstltute of Arts on Nov. 22.
The fairytale classic is part of the Detroit Youth Theatre’s “Something Every Saturday" series which conttaues through May.
* w *
Boys and girls of all ages will thrill to magical powers of a aupercrafty '^tch, who changes a handsome Prince Charming in and out of a beastly disguise before he can win the hand of
id his
. troupe are well-established on ■the East Coast. They - represwted the United States at . EXPO '87, and in 1968 appeared ' at the British International " Puppet Show in North Wales.
•	*	* w
? Tickets for the Saturday pro-^ duction at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m : are |1.2S (groups of 20 or more
*	75c) at the Art In^tute Ticket ■ Office and all J. L. Hudson ^ ticket centers.
And, Maybe Will
I Could Have Danced All Night
pklLADElPHIA (AP) — Hiet Monte, of course, has rootlveo| "We thought we’d give m^ miirathon diAce .crMe of the In revivlniif the marathon. He’tjey,*’ Atonte says, *‘but wh®t Roaring ‘20s-retuma here a dance Inatmctor, and man-have you got after ItM all Thursday In a one-night, seven-ages a dance school In down-spent.” hour wacky revival that could town Philadelphia where his
Young Edwardian captures the mood of the Roaring 20s in this cross bodiced dress with a bias skirt flaring out from a dropped waist in Crompton’s shimmering rippled velvet.
^Old?
be quite a swinger.
It’s something now that’s really old. Just like today’s yeste^ year fashions.
aw*
“Everything seems to come back from that real gay era,” says promoter Joseph Monte, "So why not dancing?”
More than 100 persons, between 18 and 60, have signed up f(W the "no-holds’ barred” coih test. It may be the first revival of endurance dancing since it aashed in the sitdowns, slowdowns and doldrums of the Great Deisression.
HEY-DAY
“I decided it would be interesting to see it again, modem style,” says Monte, born in 1928 when the marathons were at their nutty hey-day.
“I also want to see If people have the stamina of the old days, and haven’t gone soft with all the lush living and fancy I conveniences. Maybe people I should go back to dancing for .1 exercise. Instead of jogging or
Go to Holy Landkoir’
'	I The marathon begins at
Mrs. Grace Embry o f p.m., and the phonograph rec-Cwsicana, Texas and Elvan N. I ”*‘ds — all kinds of music
will roll without missing a beat until 2 a.m.
marathon wiU be held.	| So Instead-two-foot-hlgh tro-
What happens if some couples phies. are still dancing at the end of
seven hours? ^	I Soak Brush and Comb
“I don’t think there’ll be any-	^
body going that long,” he says. I When shampooing while “But If there is we’ll Judge the showering, fill the washbasin
winner on dancing ability. I lust don’t plant to stick around.’* Hiere won’t be cash to the winner, like those ancient marathons that used to ante up as much as $1,000.
with warm soapy water, pop in your bru^ and comb to s^. Accumulated dirt and oils wUl be easier to wash away. Saves precious miputea i i cleaning your grocnnlng aids.
18 w-Huron-2"® flasr
Wood SCULPTURE
Uem Claude
FRIDAY esAwaoAV
odt SI-NOV.I
Michigan BankaRO - saagtcr CHAROe
Smith of Mt. Clemens Street are honeymooning .in the Holy Land
^Our newspapers keep us in- and up. Make complete circles, following Saturday vows and ’•fbrmed about the news of the very slowly. Lower your headj^y^^	bridegroom’s
world as well as that con- forward as your shoulders move . cemlng our local community.'- —’
Srhey . bring buzzing life right oacKwara as yuur BiiuuiueiBi
liito our living rooms. Poig-move down and forward. This .	I nnlr
■ gives you a great and relaxingj ^ ruinTcu LOOK massage. Continue slowly, with	...	The Friday marriage of Gall
Pablo did makeup for the, ^ cook and Michael W. Boyd Is Oscar de la Renta show. He’s! oonounced by her parents, Mr.n on the Elizabeth Arden staff in and Mrs. Gerritt C. Cook of!
fARui uur iivuiis ivuAiia.
Ifiancy, humor, inspiration and Ifear — the entire panorama of
living — arrives at our front your arms hanging loosely ^door each day.	your sides.
» But recently, I have read	*	*	*	r>i i, »
?about some strange happenings. Another: Stand with your feet New York. Blue or blue-green ^i^^ston.
:You, too have probably heard separated. Bend at the waist shadow ^as swept across the	was fnSowed bv a
:«bout the executive sandboxes, and let your trunk, arms an^	thel^Sr arCarnLL’s
;At first, I thought it was a joke..head, forward toward	ending in FHpt Mrs Dorothy Boyd is,|
just couldn’t imagine grown,floor. While In this P®®‘fl™ls0uare ’ "	*----^
«|nen playing in
^Howevtf, this seems to relieve intension and these boxes are 'rapidly becoming a status '$ymboL
..	squared off right at the temple.lthc mother of the bridegroom. i
sandbox, sway from side to side, moving I j^aked like someone had After a northern honeymoon,
far in each direction possible;. After six slow sways, raise your tiiink and lift arms overhead, reaching for the ceiling. Drop trunk forward and continue. Women as well as men will find these exercises relaxing.
painted on mini-glasses.
Cartier Pant Suit Comes in Mink
^ A freind of mine said, “Now I jknow what to do with the : sandbox diy 6hild has outgrown. ll have some flowers in it now ?hut I will put It to much better :-use. Whenever I or my husband 'feel frazzled, we will just sit on!
;the edge of it and wiggle our I$oes in the sand.”
I suppoes the sandbox soothes,	haven’t seen everything
l^ecutive nerves by bringing up, ,yj	viewed a trouser suit
;fhou|^ts of childhood and	leather, ac-
cented with a platinum and diamond chain belt from Cartier.
★ ★ ★
The mink jacket, trimmed In leather, is worn over white leather trousers with modified bell bottoms. Diamond flowers hange from th loops of the chain belt. A shoulder bag shown with the outfit snapped closed with a diamond flowef ’The strap was paved with diamonds — but of course.
‘of^stles in the sand, or a beach •with the pounding surf and the 'freshening aroma of wind from :fhe sea. Or, perhaps the sudden iind drastic change from the ^tensions of the moment to the !aand relaxes, and allows a new i viewpoint.
^ Actually I think five minutes 'Of exwcise might do the same J thing. It is difficult to worry land plan when exercising. My ^method is certainly less expen-«sive! If you cannot afford a It<!akwood sandbox, or even if ;you can, try these quickies for 'a break.
.	*	★ w
1 While sitting in your chair, let «your arms hang at your sides, ^tate your shoulders, lifting them up and back, and pulling them down, and then forward
r SNAKE MOUTH :	ORCHID
*	The very little Snake ’ Mouth Orchid is the most ; delicate of the orchid
*	and many feel that it is ' the most beautiful of the ; entire family. The rasp-; berry-scented crimson pink « flowers are light green, ! lance-shaped halfway up ’ the stem. The flower has ' sepals and petals of equal » length overhanging a beau-- tiful crested and fringed
:
I This lovely orchid is found in wet meadows and 1 bogs from Newfoundland to Florida and from Flor-< ida, west b> Minnesota. |
t' For CoFsages, may we sug-r gest orchids. They are ''easily worn and add to the
*	beauty of your loved one. ( We give special care and J attraction and each flower I is the frei|iest.
I ^	8si-0127
P «if OreMiM Lake Ave.
Count the Coils
A well-made mattress usually averages around 300 coils.
48 N. Saginaw
THE NEW SOFT STACK TAKES A NEW SOFT PRIC;EI
regular *14
I now ... *9.99
Savo now on this strappy soft stack that puts comfort first in block, bluo, platinum or truffle crushed leather
V,	. AN
TiHE PONTIAC rRESS, WEDNESDAy, KOVEMBEB la, 1»IH>
IBailey Vows Said
Bpnnl* Joan Bratt and Thomaa Albert Bal-toy wera wed Saturday In a mornlitli cere-.Tnony In St. Perpetua’s Catholic Chdrch.
* An afternoon reception in the Eaglet Lodge -ffo. 2887 honored the newlyweds. >
' Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Bailey fttended ^e couple as matron of honor and blit man. Parents of the bridegroom and hit tanor attendant are Mr. and Mrs. George E Bailey pf Private Drive.	’
♦ ★ ★
The bride choke a gown of peau de sole with peau d’ange lace and seed pearl accents. ;She carried a bouquet of lilies, Ste^hanotls and ivy.
Parents of the new Mrs. Bailey are Mr. ‘and Mrs. Warran G. Bratt of Sedum Glen.
The newlyweds are honeymooning in Las Vegas, Nev.

MRS, THOMAS A. BAILEY
rtfow Do You Keep Two of Anything?
* By BETTY CANARY NEA Feature Writer
I am always visiting places where there are complete sets or pairs of things and 1 simply don’t know how these women do it. I seem to remember having eight cups and eight matching saucers at one time but the memory is hazy and clouded with mystery.
★ ★ *
Maybe the women keep certain rooms open only on the days I visit. The point is, their rooms are perfectiy appointed with pairs of bookends, matching candleholders (holding candles evenly burned) and table lamps with twin shades. They never seem to have a spare cigarette box with not matching ash trays or a fireplace set minus broom or tongs.
★ ★ ★
I started out with sets and pairs of things but, what with a cat here and a child there, they got knocked over, lost or raveled. I have 12 steak knive% surely enough to go around, but
they are the remains of three different sets.
I understand about the steak knives, of course, because they are so handy for scraping mud off heels and substituting for screwdrivers. And, I don't mind using unmatched candlesticks because I once heard a decorator retkr to this as “having an artistic, eclectic point of view in home furnishings.’’ What I mind least are mismated salt and pepper shakers. I fret occasionally about my lampshades but lampshades were the favorite target of a cat named, for obvious reasons, Leaper.
KIDS, TOO
Something that completely puzzles me are children udio wear matching or ‘' C o ■ ordinated’’ clothing. I buy coordinated clothing and at the beginning of each season we go through a ritual. “These kneelengths are to be worn with THIS jumper!’’ I say. “Never wear this skirt and sweater separately,’’ I cry.- “And, see, here’s a sweet little headband
to pick up the color of the roses in your blouse.’’
Two weeks later only red socks are clean the day Cissy wears her yellow jumper, Bab’s plaid skirt are never home from the cleaner’s together and the headband and flowered blouse can never be found on the same day.
*. e ★
It was worse when my children were toddlers. At the beginning of the day I would dress a baby in his dark green corduroy overalls, matching green-and-white striped t e e shirt and dark green sweater. By 10:30 the sweater was soaking in a bowl of cold water and had been replaced by a red corduroy jacket.
By noon, muddy green corduroy overalls Were changed for navy ones and the shirt, now covered with a mixture of mashed graham crackers and modeling clay, was exchanged for his last clean shirt, invariably the maroon one. At the,
TV Interview Hits Royalty on Sore Topic
By WOMEN’S WEAR DAILY “I never realized my 'Today' Interview with Prince Philip would set alt such a chain reaction,’’ said NBC’s Barbara Walters Monday afternoon.
“We’ve had calls from just about every British publication Most of them asking about his reply to my question, Ts there any truth to the rumors about the Queen possibly ajMicating for Prince Oiarles?’ 'Ihey told me no British reporter would have dared to ask this questim. And I told them if I had known it was such a taboo question 1 might not have dared it either.’’
e *
BBC thought so much of Barbara’s 13-minute	TV	in-
terview that they took the entire interview and beamed it to England via Telstar, And no sooner did England see the show, than the Queen herself had	a	Buckingham	Palace
spokesman quickly say, “At no time has the question of the Queen’s abdication arisen.’’
★ * ♦
Even so, the flap is likely to continue when Prime Minister Wilson makes a statement in Parliament concerning another subject raised by the Prince, namely that the Queen is running out of cash.
★ w *
Althou^ the Queen has the sympathy of the public in trying to make do on a household budget set for her in 1952, |1.14 mlllion-a-year, it’s considered unlikely any move will be made to increase her allowance before next year’s general election. It’s estimated that to maintain her position as it
The versatile room divider is an asset to every home. As a separation for dining and entertaining areas or youth and adult activities, the screen is a functional device. A fabric-covered divider, as pictured, can be used to mix or match with room colors and accents, becoming a decorative piece, also.
Open to Public
THURSDAY
The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Lake Orion, baked ham family style dinner, 5 to 7 p.m. Tickets available at the door.
FRIDAY
First United Methodist Chiirdi, WSCS, South Saginaw at Judson, annual bazaar, 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Both lun-dieon and dinner served. Make dinner reservations with Mrs. Fred Manes, South Tasmania Street.
In Racent CIramonlas
Two Couples Repeat Vows
St. Paul UniM Methodist Church was the 'setting for the recent marriage of Mary Ann Jentzen hnd William Charles Wolfe.
A reception in Waltz Hall followed the candlelight ex-
lange of vows.
* * *
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jentzen of Rochester e a gown of organza. She carried a bouquet of roses with an orchid.
Nancy McMahon and Gerald Byrd assisted the couple as honor attendants.
Parents of the bridegroom are
. and Mrs. C!harl(M Wolfe of Harper Woods.
The newlyweds are honeymooning In northern Michigan.
Berry-Gottsehalk
Newlyweds, the Malcom T. Berrys (Mary Elizabe'th Gottschalk) are making their home in Salt Lake City, Utah, following their recent wedAng there.	*
Parents of the couple are Mr, and Mrs. John Gottschalk* of Woodbine Drive and M r $, James Berry of Silver Springs, Md.
j Party Shrimp Treats: I
I CARNIVAL I Mix Vt cup mayonnaiM, '/« Up. wcii I talt t pepper, 6 tbs. oil. 2 tbi. vinegar, I 2 Up. chives, ’/i cup Parmesan cheese, Z lUp.mashedanchovies (optional).
I Surround (tip with chilled I Gull Kist Shrimp
kMaaaBiBaii
I Ready to-Serve
I Keep chilled and handy I always. For salads. Appe-! tinrs. Cocktails. Casseroles. ■ Nightly low in calories, too I -only 170 I can. lummmmm.
Fret
Recipes
Write; Recipes, Dept. GK-W ■ Box 97, Harvey, La. 70058	■
end of the day chances are he | then, she should now be making was wearing his big sister’s | $2 million, pink-and-yellow-check^ jacket with the sleeves rolled up.
I still keep odd gloves and at last count the cardboard box in my front hall closet had 16 lefts and seven rights, none of which were the same pattern.
Sk *	★
The disappearance of socks continues to baffle me and 1 do wonder where so many of ours go. Perhaps there’s a weird little elf around who keeps them — along with all the cards missing from'our bridge and pinochle decks.
Jimmy Arrives
A son, James A. Hubbard III, was bom recently to Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hubbard Jr. of St. Thomas, Virgin Islands.
Grandparents are Mrs. K. V.
Hubbard of Birmingham, J. A.
Hubbard of Bloomfield Hills and Mrs. -Gordon Degener, also of Bloomfield Hills.
Avoid Accidents; Keep Poisons in Own Containers
BOSTON (UPI) - Proper poison prevention, according to the Massachusetts chapter of the National Safety Council, includes keeping poisons in their own containers — putting them in soda bottles.
. “Using pop bottles and other common food containers to store potential poison is gambling with your family’s safety,’’ said Kenneth Brown, executive vice president of the Massachusetts chapter.
* * ★
“People tend to forget that one particular bottle emtains poison and not the cool drink they normally expect, for this reason, all harmful liquids — especially household cleaners — should be stored in their original containers,’’ he said.
To make doubly certain poisoqs aren’t accidentally taken, store them away from food supplies.
KIMBERLY knits find wool the right medium for their newest pantsuit look. A sleek and slimming self lashed tunic shirt over straight pants. - Designed to enjoy the good life, now and olwoys.
»ICX)'
Handy Flatwarw Can A coffee can, piirinted or covered with adhesive-backed vinyl looks cheerful nefu* the: kitchen sink. FiU it with hot sudsy water and use it to soak silverware while washing
mw,. .WIGS and WIGLETS PERMANENT ifnd HAIR STYLE
IMPERIALS'
ISB Auburn Ave. TerK Free FE 4-8878 Edjith SleMONt owimk

THE PONTIAC TRESS. Wy.DNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1969
Pointers
Grass RemoVes Odor
DEAR POU.Y-I have a with the fine side of an emery Pointer for Anne who wanted board. Remove the needle from
to know, how to remove odors from a tent and sleeping bags. Just spread them out on the grass for a couple of days and turn them over once during that time. The grass removes all trace of odor whether it is mildew or smoke
the machine and keep turning It as the point is filed. This also works on pins with blunt points.-FRANCES
★	# a
DEAR POLLY~When corribs are hard to keep in the hair give the tip ends several coats
MRS. THOMPSON
MRS. COSGROVE
MRS. REYES
MRS. BIRCHMEIER
Four Weddings Are Announced
Our tent was burned by|of clear nail polish. This par-charcoal and the odor was still rows the space between the strong after the tent wds teeth of the comb and it will not repaired. The canvas repair [slip and fall out so easily. When man suggested this remedy for little girls have thin hair give odor which was not noticeable I the inside of their barrettes during our next c a m p 1 n g ' several coats of nail polish. This
AAUWs
Announce
Meefirigs
Tile couple greeted guests at
reception in the Waterford CAI building following t h e ceremony in St. Vincent DePaul
' Carol Ann Pemberton and PO| Parents of the newlyweds are ; J.C. John Thomas Thompson, iMr. and Mrs. Robert F.
■ USN were married recently in Pemberton of Camarillo, Calif, i Camarillo, Calif.	I and Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.
L- St. Mary Magdalen CatholicjThompson, of Hagge r t y CathoUc Church.
.Church was the setting for the!^^8^"^*y* West Bloomfield Mr. and Mrs. Fred Leal fl^fedding which was followed by [Township.	assisted the couple as honor
;|i garden reception at thej	attendants,
ibride’s parents’ home In Cosarove-Griffith	*	*	*
•Camarillo.	j	The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
I? Gowned in peau de sole with! St. Paul United Methodist Marcelo Hernandez of Hen-
as matron of honor and best
Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. V. L. Justus of Second Avenue and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Birchmeler of Marquette Street.
The couple is honeymooning in Las Vegas, Nev.
trip.—ORA POU.Y’S PROBLEM DEAR POLLY-To prevent musty odor in sleeping bags place a bar of scented soap in the bag roll and fold as usual. When the outfit is opened the soap can be used for washing.—M.D.
DEAR POLLY-I would like to know if any of the readers have re-covered a recliner
will make them hold tighter to the strands of hair.
a' *	★
I find waxed paper is the best thing to line medicine cabinet shelves. It is not noticeable and marks from medicine bottles Will not mar the cabinet Itself.-JOSEPHINE
Have Lively Look
Just for the youngsters — new
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Haskins of Spring Road, Wdst Bloomfield Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Nanette Ida, to Robert W. Grantham of Tampa^ Fla. The bride-elect attended Northern Michigan University. Her fiance is a student at the University of South Florida. Dec. 20 vows are planned.
Bruno Leon, of the consulting firm of Bruno Leon Associates, and dean of the school of architecture at University. of Detroit, will be the guest speaker at Monday's meeting of Pontiac branch, American Association of University Women.
Leon’s topic will be "The Pontiac Plan.’’ furthering the seasonal study topic of the AAUW, the urban crisis.
bantillylace'acCTnl^^	Street was gowned in’Wipe Refrigerators, Too ^hmr. I upholster^ a swivel
carried a bouquet of carnations Saturday wedding of Charlene lace over satin.	i ^	’	rocker that turned out quite dock radios described
imd roses	Fae Griffith of Watkins Lake} parents of the bridegroom are' While cleaning up a f t e rjwell but am afraid to tear intoDreomS ArO SnOrf
■	® •	Road and Lawrence James Mrs. Concha Reyes of Jackson- mealtime, give the refrigerator the recliner unless I know th.sL„.....-------------------- OflUU
The 8 p.m. meeting in the Community Services Building, Franklin Boulevard, viill be preceded by a 7:30 dessert.
Mrs. Daniel Skeen will moderate a question-and-answer period.
UNION IJIKE
Dr. Robert Relnert from the Research Division of the Michigan State F1 s h e y Department will be a gutist speaker at the Union Lake branch on Nov. 20. He will speak on Controversial Pesticides which will begin the group’s study of "This IBeleaguered Earth.’’
Birchmeier-Justus
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wolford „	, „	. „	,	.	. .	^
intended the couple as matron Cosgrove of, SuntmiL V i e W|ville Fla. and Joe G. \ht honor and best man.	Court, Wh. e Lake Township Jsan Antonio, Tex.
,	__________________ A reception m the Waterford |
it	CAI building followed the|
candlelight rites.
GoWned in peau de sole with Chantilly lace accents, the bride carried a bouquet of gwdenias with roses and Stephanotis.
Mrs. Clifford Pigman and Nick Pavilnac assisted the couple as honor attendants.
Women 0f I on Expedition
l:fo Antarctica
A gown of organza with reembroidered Alancon lace was chosen by Sonja Frances Justus of Cass Lake Road for her marriage Saturday to Robert Anthony Birchmeier.
Reyes of ® quick wipe with a sponge Rinse, then dry with a soft cloth. That’s all the care the exterior needs? Pay particular attention to handles and the surrounding area which receive the most ‘‘fingerprint’’ traffic.
can be successful! amateur.—N. H.
done by an
DEAR POLLY-When my sewing machine needle seems blunt and stitching is hard I satisfactorily sharpen the point
include one In blue polystrene with a flower design on the radio dial and clock face. Another is done in a black and white checkerboard pattern with orange trim on the radio and clock.
Mrs. Jud Huntley will open her Westacres home for the 8
Scientists studying report dreams usually last between eight and 30 minutes apiece. It’s not unusual for a person to dream a total of two or two-and-a-half hours a night.
■ ton n iP m. meetine. Cohostess will be ^ Mrs Harry Reed.
Members may bring guests to the meeting. Make reservations with membership chairman Mrs. James Malin.
The couple was honored at a
(AP) —	reception at Maurice’s following
'	Nathan Griffith of Hatchery	ct Minhooiv
)r<w	Mr’crimth
tartri ™ .h.. th. Arge„tln.Kr',iKLii“
ovemment describes 8rst female scientific expedition lb Antarctica.
’i Hie women are spending the Argentine, summer months — bewmber to March — studying marine Ufe at a scientific sta-jwn run by the Navy Hydrographic Service on Palmer Island. The island, part of Argentina’s antarctic territory. is 150 miles from the fk)UthPole.
ju |The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Mabel Cosgrove of Royal Oak and Cecil Cosgrove 6f Auburn Road, Pontiac Township.
The newlyweds are honeymooning in Puerto Rico.
Mrs. David G. Willis and David Birchmeier assisted their sister and brother respectively.
Teach by Doing
Reyes-Hernandez A bouquet of seed pearls with
* i’We have wanted all our lives lo' make this trip; to finally {ouch with our own hands the |ea life that until now We have ^ly been able to study as Ireservpd specimens,” said Dr. Irene Bernasconi, a biologist Who has earned an international reputation for her studies of Ichinoderm, especially starfish.
I ★ ★ ★
The three others making the tip to Palmer Island on an Argentine Navy Ship are Dr. ffaria Adela Caria, a bac-|eriologist who is chief of the crobiology department at the nardino Rivadavia Museum Natural Sciences in Buenos Dr. Elena Martinez I'ontes, a biologist who heads he marine invertebrate section |t the Rivadavia Museum, and r. Carmen Pujals, a university fessor of natural sciences ! a specialist in algae.
* ★ ★
\ Dr. Pujals hopes to be able to |iake new classifications of the leneralridaea and (hodogloossum ‘‘based on [bservations of these algae in heir own sauce,’’ as she puts it.
Your little girl will enjoy helping you on ironing day if you make a game of it between the roses was carried by Olivia! two of you. Let her be the Hernandez for her wedding delivery girl putting each arti-Saturday to Spec. 5 Joe G.jcle up in its right place. This Reyes Jr., USA who is stationedjsaves you stepis and teaches her I where thines belonc.
at Ft. Hood, Tex.

I The four women finally won lovemment authorization t o ^e the scientific expedition trough the efforts of Dr. jgorberto Bellisio, an hyologist who leads annual to Antarctica on ilf of the Rivadavia nuseum and the Navy lydrographic Service. D r. is accompanying the
yonu

Urban Life Now Involved
Extension h Ongoing Program
.1 ' - . ■ '
By JANEI^ODBLL ;how W/ijBw and more on how/to Elementary School, one of the Women’! 'EMItor, The Pontiac use tlw clothing dollar.	Dodge parks and Murphy Park.
Preai	Mahy members of older ex>| There were educational field
No organization will last	groups have become trips to grocery stores, the 4-H
forever If it cannot grow withP^o-Pair, the zoo and Kensington -pu ft 11 j r. , Sranil, and have dropped out. park. t|ie tinies. The Oakland County Newer clubs are younger. i ™.u .tudents in charae tried Extension Service is no ex-,	★	*	*	, ™f
11 mi.1 1	1	, . I * .	..	^ .'to find leaders in the com-
ception. This service is and has Last summer the Oakland	jjgjp
always been an extension of County Extension Service gotj children, especially to work Michigan State University. It Is f"*"® “‘li*	with the few under seven. Mrs.
an arm of similar landgrantjl"*y T®.“	"“*’®™V“n>ce Kukar who told us about
colleges throughout the country.r® “ ®" unusual summerUhig program says she hopes It
*	*	*	program.	‘	'can be expanded next summer
For many years the Ex-1	. and that it will include more
tension Service had the Image	of the 4-H Club
of farm women band 1 ng^racial teanis; all live In the
together to learn better ways of	®"® keep the children's interest are
canning, sewing, cooking and y®ff ®°,‘‘®?®'	'essential,
handicrafts.- The urban woman ^®^	fu**	*	*	*
had little contact with or youngsters between the a^s of gjj^
knowledge of the organization, seven and M In Pontiac, Royal ^jn become a year-round, STATF^lAROEvr	lS“''	Commerce	bich will benefit
I Township for praams a ull |j,„g« ^be groups and give All this has changed. In re- day a week. Most of the	\
cent years, emphasis has been!children were eight to 12 years placed on an expanded family of age. living program with much	*	*	★
emphasis on nutrition.! It was pretty much an ex-Developing consumer skills are perimental program. Part of another facet of the program| the objective was to get-across which serves 77 groups in some ideas on eating proper,
Oakland County. This is the food. The setting was like a day largest group of clubs in the camp. The children, with State.	super
*	*	*	brought, and cooked their noon
Extension leaders are meal each time.
developing more programs on
THE PONTIAC PRESS,, WEDKF.SDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1969
»B->a
employment to the leaders.
It doesn’t seem that bedtime for tired little cowboys could be all that bad when it meant climbing into one of the two bunk beds mounted in this stagecoach. De-
signed by Sprague & Carlton, the unique bed also has storage space for books and steps for the youngster in the top bunk.
DYNEL WIGS $30.00
CASCADES $22.00 up
FALLS $46.00 up
donneirs
Beauty Salon
and wig salon
Complete Service Dept.
Ckuf Ctitnnmet, of Como
PONTIAC MALL • TELEGRAPH & ELIZAIETH LK ROADS

Hmn:. I* ! *	Mt elmiyi NwMMiy
682-0420
Fashion Is Hazardous
I Barn Theatre Sets Production
Is there a relationship wearing of very tight-fitting touch oft extreme allergic	,,	_	.. „
^	.. between high fashion and good brassieres made of stretch reactions.	, n*"*"'® . , ^	.
supervision, planned, bought or beaith?	fabrics.	• And there are other
--------- YOU can bet your mini skirt . And then t h e r e ' s clothing allergS The%i^^^^^^^^^
or your maxi coat there is. formaldehyde allergy—and few possible sensitivities is long. L oaklanrf iiniversitv an Nov family life as more and more With picture^, hand puppets. ^That's the word from the the victi^^^^^^^^^	No .
younger f a m i 1 i e s a r e and discussions, the leaders Health Insurance Instrtute. chemical. YeL they have been, “bS fu^Te^rs learte! o5	the gamut of/
represented in the membership, imparted some knowledge of jj bas always been so Ever, t'wteed, very close.	tLlicbche musical comedy situa
In our buying oriented socie- Groups that were small ty, consumers have need to enough met in backyards, teow how to get the most for Larger groups used the ' their money. Less emphasis on'facilities of Commerce
Be naturally you injlie new natural part wig. Now you can be the nnwiggiest girl in town Giue your neiv wig a sexy center part enjoy the ohs and ahs for your off center part ^ freshen up with the all-American side part Permanently curled wash and wear Myracle Fibre'"* Also available in human hair Wide selection of colors Priced from $49.00
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They’ve been wearing chemically treated wash-and-wear clothing, which has some formaldehyde content. People who may be sensitive to tills should be sure 4R> thoroughly wash new garments before wearing them.
• Hazardous jewelry. In
nostalgic look back to “a time
which clothing is fashioned GOOOmLES There are some styles, however, that have proved to have health and safety benefits
when the world was much more simple than ours toi^ay, when virtue was all and Justice always triumphed, oi; at least
Take for instance, the mini we used to think so.” sklijt.	i	★	★	♦
Its widespread acceptance Ticket information may be
since the first caveman thought a bearskin would be a handy thing to wear on a snowy day.
Things have been getting more complex evdr since. New fashions, new fabrics—as well as some things imported from far away—have created, at least for some wearers, new medical problems.
RESEARCH
The Institute has studied the cars. Their bracelets catch on proved their driving. They have i • i	Friekinn
medical research reports issued gear shifts.	more freedom to move, thus lilail m ruamuii
in the last couple of years and i • Poisonous baubles. Every has come up with some in- once in a while, an alert is sounded against brightly colored beaded jewelry that is imported from abroad. In most cases, these beads are made of castor or jequirity beans.
When they crack or crumble, they turn to powder which can
some instances, heavy dangling has brought an unexpected obtained by calling Oakland bracelets have caused women benefit: one automobile firm University, drivers to lose control of their says girls in minis have im- —
teresting things:
• Ever hear of stretch garment dermatitis? It’s an acne condition that has appeared bn the backs of some women patients, It’s aggravated by the
can hit the brakes more easily. ,
Conversely, there’s a' ^ collection pf s raight-from possibility that the new maxi	®>^‘rts,
and bell-bottomed trousers may trip up some
As one wag puts it, “You can’t run for a taxi while wearing a maxi!”
I
E TttSOG FEAT 7-1 R IRISH j sweaters, shirts, coats And accessories puts the accent on| piped-up stripes, print-played tweeds, and heathery or natural handmade knits.	i
SHIRT
LAUNDRY
Gresham's assures you of the finest in shirt laundering techniques.
Wash'n wear fabrics, cotton, white or colors.
We take pride in your appearance
Know the Perfection of Professional Care
New Store Hours Open 7 am to 6 pm
605 Oiolcland Ava., Pontiac ' 334-2579 3950 W. Wolton Blvd.	OR 3-6336
BUY! SELL! TRADE!
USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS!
She Bakes Pies to Benefit GIs
LINWOOD, N.J. «P» - Preri-1 dent Nixon has sent a letter of thanks to a Linwood woman who is baking pastries to sell to buy gifts for servicemen in Southeast Asia.	;
•k	Ai	k -	. I
Hazel Slick, 56, has baked and| sold 900 loaves of bread and pies since Oct. 13 when she joined a nearby Northfleld resident, Howard Warren, in the project.
k	k	k
Warren. 41, has shipped 1,164 packages in almost two years.
In his letter, received Saturday, tile President said that "it is always heartwarming to see someone step forward in such a positive way to raise the morale of our men in Vietnam. k	k	k
“You and Mr. Warren have worked beyond the call of duty to give not only utilitarian items, but also a most meaningful	gift	of	all,	your
friendship.” the FYesIdent said. k	k	k
Nixon	said	he	became	aware
of the	project	through	news
reports.
EASY TO PLAY AS A-B-C!
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You can start playing the moment you sit down. It's that simple. Has 37 melody keys,
^ 24 bass chord buttons, and mar-proof walnut finish.
i 139’^,
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i Otiior Eitoys from 119.95
RIIMNELJ_*S
erg AMtIII/B'A'N	/I T O W !'• / I W W.
Pontiac Moll—^682-0422—Open Ivory Ivonifif 'T(l 9 27 S. Sofinow — PI S-7168—Open Monday ond Prfday lvonin|S Til 9 Um Ow OiiMmm Uyaway Man. 4.pw Min. M Days lame As Cask, Or Budist Plan
A. Jonathan Logon proaents with prido this darling akinny top and free swinging drasa for t|ho fun loving iunior. In 55% Dacron and 45% Wool.
^	■ I ,
Bi *'Accontuatp tho Poaltlv(f*“ with fh|s wordrobO must, loon ond lovoly buttony Occont, 55% Dacron arid 45% Wool.
C. Puckor up for porfoctien. Jonothon Logoin's baby doll look, young and pretty.
AllThroo ^28 •a.!.
A COAAPLETE SELECTION OF LADIES' DRESSES in ovory tixo, missot tixos 6 to 20. Potitos 3 to 13, half tixoi 1216 to 24V6. From $14 to $32.
1=^
TUB PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1969
SEW SIMPLE
By Eunice Farmtr
Dear Eunice Farmer,
Helpl Where do I place the bustline darts when they take the bra off?
Mrs. "X”
Dear Mrs. “X”:
Thanks for giving me my laughs for the day — a little humor In our sewing Is bound to make It happier.
Naturally, with the more natural look in undergarments, the darts also will change In construction. You will find more and more patterns without the conventional type darts but slight shaping in the construction seams instead.
★ ★ *
■niere Is no way I can tell you how much anyone will have to lower tlwlr darts because each indlviduaTs measurements will differ. But, I would say the darts will have to be lowered at least one Inch. I might further add that if you would have to lower the darts more than me inch, you would probably look better in your clothes if you wore some sort of undergarments with
These new styles aren’t made lor everyone. They are a young look and unless you have a young looking figura, don’t throw all caution to the winds.
TAILOR TRIX WINNER
Mrs. Howard Rash, Chllhowle, Va., is this week’s Tailor ’Trix pressing board winner for her following suggestion.
“When hemming the neck and armhole facing on eyelet or sheer material, turn it under V* inch in the opposite direction from the way the pattern directions tell you to do. In this way, the unfinished edge does not show through to the right side of the garment because it will be next to your body when the garmoit is worn.”
Women Sound Off on Packaging
Mrs. L J. Mitchell of Phoenix, Arte., formerly of Pontiac, is announcing the engagement of her daughter, Ruth Joy Johnston, to Eugene Crow. She is also the daughter Of Fred C. Johnston of Indiana. Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Crow of Mesa, Ariz. The couple 'will wed in December.
Dear Mrs. Farmer,
My question concerns hip hugger skirts. Since the young girls like them so mudi and since the Uq>s of separates are even longer this year, and since the middle-aged ladies find them very comfortable on thicker waistlines, what is your opinion m them in relathm to a conventional skirt with all the thicknesses of fabric at the waist?
Mrs. P. W. Y.
Dear Mrs. P.W.Y.:
I am all for any type of construction on a garment that will make it more comfortable to wear without sacrificing the ap-
I see no reason why the hip hugger skirts can’t be worn by women of all ages since you will be wearing a tunic type shell with it. I think it would definitely avoid the bulgy look foat most womot have with a conventimipl skirt.
A h^hugger style to usually cut about two Inches below the normal waistline and since it fits at a larger part of the body, you will avoid file use of the conventional darts that shape in a waistline. If you use darts, they will be ve^r short in front and at least two inches shorter in back than for standard dtirt patterns.
The most successful finishes for the top of the skirt to a shaped facing (jrou can cut it from the actual pattern) or finishing with a 2-incb bias band of the same or lighter wei^t fabric. The shaped band or the bias band will keep the kq> of the skirt smooth and in place. These same instructions will also work with slacks or shorts. Try it on an everyday skirt first.
Eunice Farmer gives you helpful fitting instructions in her booklet, “Your Pattern and You.y For your copy send .25 cents and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelcgie with your request for it to Eunice Farmer in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056.
Newlyweds Go to Bahamas on Honeymoon
A wedding trip to t h e Bahamas followed the Saturday marriage of Suzanne Meunier and Joseph E. Butcher.
The couple exchanged vows in St. Bede’s Catholic Church, Southfield. A reception in the Raliegh House followed the mcnning ceremony.
Wendie Meunier and Paul E. Butcher Jr. assist their stoter and brother as maid of honor and best man.
WWW
Iheir parents are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth J. Meunier of Sodon Court, Bloomfield Township and Dr. and Mrs. Paul E. Butcher of Lathrup Village.
Gowned in organza with Alencon lace, the bride carried a bouquet or orchids.
BAST LANSINQ - Much of today’s dairy products packag-hq| to anachronistic, say wneadvoi in southoist acMgan.
Comments from 341 homemakers who participated in a recent food shoppers’ survey suggest that the image of dairy product packaging 1s not all “milk and honey.’’ According to survey coordinate I^rsle Hutton, a consume marketing Information agent with the Goopwatlvo Extension Sorvlce at Michigan State University, participants were critical ol whole milk, butter and cottage cheese packaging.
One of the most common comidalnts with regard to cottage cheese containers dealt with lids. Women complained that tops “popped off’’ in grocery bags. Others complained of “breaking nails’’ while trying to remove them.
A few respondents fett the situation could be Imio'oved If overlap rather than insert lids were used. One woman suggested the use of a screw-on lid. A few respondents complained of the lack of see-through lids on cottage cheese.
The overall lack of attractiveness among dairy product containers also came in for Ism. Women sug-g e s t e d a “decorator-type’’ design on cottage cheese containers for table serving, and a butter container that could “go to the table.’’
Generally, survey participants had kind words for the plastic-aluminum tubs used for margarine. They suggested that butter be jmckaged in this
One Wolii “Couldn’t butter be quartwed width-wise to fit the plate better?"
Fluid milk containers came in for a major share of criticism. Displeasure was frequently voiced ov» spout construction. One woman termed It **ter-rlbie." Anothor asked If a plastic spout
Women indicated they were far from satisfied with butter and margarine in stick form. Some felt the marked measurements on stick wrap-po-s were a good idea, but the
wrapping on tit'Pound sticks
Leaky,
cartons were a
with SCI
tops like those on orsnge drink IS preferable to waxed cartons.
Sour cream packaging, perhaps because It does not daily confront the average con-prompted only slight criticism. One r e s p 0 n d e n t thought it would be nice to be able to buy “powdered dairy sour cream in small pouches."

Surprise them with n gift guaranteed to highlight that important dav— whether it’s a weddini;
a new arrival, a housewarming, a birthday or an annwersaiy, GIFT-O-FRUlTis always in good taste; And it’s the correct way to say thank yon to your host and hostess.
$750 $^o
$1250
Downtown Storo 101 N. Saginaw St., Pontiac
Phono FE 3-7165
Storo and Nunoiy, Lake Orion Phono 693-8383
Korean Showing
Loungewear featured in the .first New York showing by the Korean Association of Fashion Design Artists included a multi-striped ensemble in satin. Its sleeveless top, showing bare midriff, was teamed with wide-I legged pants.
Tunic Tops New Airline Uniform
’The new fall-winter hostess uniform for one airlines includes a bell bottom pant suit topped by a gray tunic. Worn, alone, the tunic becomes stylish mini accented by knee-|
j
length vinyl
ylbo^.
The airline, Allegheny, says it to the first to adopt a pant suit ensemble as part of official inflight fashion.
Three-piece caramel knit pant suit from Kimberly’s fall and winter 1969 collection. Topping the slender pants is the new collarless jacket showing the white wool
ijgnd poekn bucK$0^

ARE LINING UP FOR THIS NEW SHOE BOOT FROM STAPP^S
Warm, Wanft, Worm, with fleecy pile lining.
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Childrens size 9 thru Boys size 6
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Fine Furniture Since 1917
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8-8S48

THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAV, NOVEMBER 12, 1968
B-7^
Pre-Holiday Discounts
16.76
Reg. IB.88 4 Rays ONOlOE
a.	Traditional jbanjo-ttylad hy|rometer, barometer, thermonioter. Glait trimmed.
b.	Antique-etyll. Hat thermometer, hyin«meter, barometer. Wajltrat finUh.
c. BAROMETER SPECIAL
Reg. 14.88-4 Daye Only	____
3-icalc contemporary detign.	VV ■9 mm
Thermometer, hygrometer, too. R16VW
liaweiewiiiwieiKwwiie^wwwwicttdHe
ELECTRIC EYE AUTO PAR 550 126 CAMERA
Our Reg. 43.88
08.66
4 Day» Only
MinoIu<* camera has new COS electric eye system, bright viewfinder, fiiters as clpse as 3 ft. Compact, smart!
Boys' GOAL COAT
7.88
MEN’S tODDUIOV GOM. CUT
Reg. 10.88 4 Daye
Fine wale cotton corduroy with acrylic pile lining, knit frame collar.
Our Reg. 14.97 — 4 Daye Only
Wide wale cotton corduroy with acrylic quilted lining. Button-down knit collar, button front, 2 pockets, side vent. 36-46.
||47
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SPORTSMANS 7x35 POWER BUnCULAR 18.88
FLEECE-UNEO ZIPPER BOOTS 5.27
Our Reg. 26.77 - 4 Deyt	OmrRrg. 6»M -4 Daye
“Wide-engle". BAK 4 prism. With enshioned and eieated Magnesium body. Vinyl rasa.	soles. .Steel shank.
ii<sa.rtifleOMa.o.|rt.	is5m>HatOMdsDmt.
■ 10 F>OWER 1 PC. TELESCOPE
' Our Reg. 8.77 4 Days Only
Balacope 10-power telescope excellent for student or hobbiest. Both educationel and interesting. Allows you to see many details that would go unseen by the naked e^e. An especislly good buy at this price!
BOYS’KNIT SHIRTS
1.27
Reg. 2.22 4 Days
Young boys’ Acrilan* acrylic shins in solids or stripes. Machine washable and no-iron. iSises 4-7.
BOYS’ KNIT POLOS
78^
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Our Reg. 1.11 4 Daye Only
Fine cotton in wide variety of solid colors! Long sleeves, choice of neck styles. Stock up!
Reg. 3.33 4 Daye
2.38
Men's permanently pressed casual shirts in solid or plaid. Long-sleeve, regular collar styles. .S-M-L-XL.
30/30 WINCHESTER CARTRIDGE SHELLS 2.99
Our Reg. .1.5# -- 4 Day* fSO-gr. shetls. 30/30 A, 30/30 B.
nsulated Dramrs and Shirt Tops 2.97 raefr
ASTRONOMICALTELESCOPE
88.44
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4Bag8 0uly
Fooal9 04-S5 three-inch astronomical reflector telescope has •^flnder ocope for quick sighting of distant objects. Two eye? pieoet vary in power from 56 to 140 magnifications.
Ou8 Reg. 39.88 \
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hianually operated slide projector uses the FocaI<B < yers 100 capacity slide trays. Has sharp f3.5 color-corrected lens, !H)0-watt brilliance lamp. Self-contained in own carrying case.
114.66
FL.8 lens, behind-the-lens metering system for accurate exposures, interchangeable lens system. For 3Sinm color prints, slides or black and white film.
KA^RTJ^-STAR BOWUNG BALL,
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Gift shop for a^Meiry Christmas at Kmart^ Every Price Is Right-Low!
GLENWOOD PLAZA-NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD
B—!-8.
THE FQNTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1969
Publishing Company Is Reviving AAcGuffey's Reac|er
(EDITOR'S NOTE
of Americans.)
S^|(
Ah,/ori‘'Eclectic Readers" steted by the good old days—the ddys of an Ohioj teachei' and! t^cber NIcGuffey’s Readers. At leoat named William Holmes one publisher thinks so. He’s McGuffey. bringing back the '•‘revised cdt-	op. print
tion’;o/lS79 rcprinlcd/romlhe,	^
origmal plates And «»fr„„, succeeding editors and recollection of the rural ««»»««	they dominated the
elementary textbook markets through the turn of the century. .School officials stopped ordering them years ago but they never |
By Mn,ES A. SMITH AP Arts Editor
girls and ba>'g all love I are froii/ authors • IsklHdtol	■
woods or adventures, But there
Were Wugh didactic lessons tol.....„	—................... ............ ........... _	.	,...........
make this set of readers a I "Mi.ss May tells them there is Isuch .Items as “The Sei'mon on moral tessona continue under	confronted'
who » dh
were;with the usual pieces on tho| By the time'the ^
liing pupil Reader
CONSTIPATEDO
•Bsrtiwjs;' !
medium with a message ‘TRUE PATRIOTISM’
As Henry H. Vail one of Ihe^ later editors once wrote about'..,
a rule that she wants them tolthe Mount" Longfellow’8|such titles as "Consequences of
« lute Mllil SMie waiiio mv.ui eviaiiv mvauia m v sik * « a a w .v ...aMv.*	««■
keep. It Is, ‘Do t0 each one as “Wreck of the Hesperus’* and, a |IdleBfee»’’ kWl
' prime — selectijms. They, Included an increased number
you would like each one to do to!couple of descriptive passages,Industry!
I from "Robinson Crusoe.”;
This Is a good rule and all Shakespeare also Is represented The Fifth Reader has Bryant|of passages from the Bible and
reSdwf‘S "th^ omi? a'Sd	“.M*	Shakespeare, patriot^ items
readers are tno proper ana	*	*	*	wee	lare come," Longfellow’s "Under
honest, industry, temperance. |	iHhlttien Tennyson, Thackeray,
Thoreau and a lot of lesser j
• « M ft iUIS line* 194S
III a. iisMtw
CIMINT WORK • RATIOS 6/tRACIS • AOOITIONS coMeisTB SUILOINO iisvica TIRMS	PI 2-1III
NEW YORK - Let’s pull the have gone out of print thanks to|«courage politeness and •ll’lPf''®?™,?*)	^	^	«..v. .
Old rocker up to the fireplace their aficionados.	, other moral and '	Id bS^^	Boa Constrictors
about Franklin, Washiitgton and Patrick Henry, bits ^ b o u t American geography and history, and edifying poetry from Milton to Byron to foe.
Now Mo«y Woor
FALSETEETH
with urn* Welry
Mixed |n with these literary
pour a mug of cider and settle n„w Van Nostrand Relnhold virtues.	------------------forgotten.
MTuflL^RlaS^	There were some educators Rewarded with a dollar he 11 i . n;J ^^1*0 !mORE SUBTLE	inspirations were such uplifting
To Sday’s reader these little SitiS? o'f ?879 reproduSd who dissented from the McGuf-jbought blacking n?^eria>s and USefl tO 11106 U0P6 ! Ry this time, the pupil’s in-	a**	“j
books mav seem to be ex-„r!otinai niates of that f e v educational philosophy. Iw®’shining shoes, helping	doctrinatiiai has become a little Education* and The Folly of
pressed in incredibly quaint and ear plus *^an “improved’’Increasingly as the years rolled ^*0 support his widowed	^	con-subtle. Stories and ^ems Intoxlca^	from!
naive terms. But they arei^npiiing lyjok from Noah on they claimed the textbooksi Another lesson was about	were used to cover ^belr morals without pened to be a^ssage from
Americana: nart of the nation’s w„Kc*fr tha les? Aitiiion	were slanted to a materialistic George. Shortly after	«hinn«rf inin the underlining them so heavily. iShakespeare s Othello.
ur Mit teeth umer uS cm-_____jou by eomlas fooee end
eour. Up gummy, looey, pwty tMM.
Amprlcana; part of the nation’s	the 1857 edition,
cultural heritage.	e e e
They are nostalgic remindcTS^	forthrightly McGuffey
of a rural 19th centruy era the!at
nMniteji^a'^bing far more than reading, schoolhouse where the pupis|g ggi^Rng brief passages of learned much more than their | '	from
letters. And some of them grew;	literature -
up to earn such cli^e *® land many that were very minor captains of industry P"'*” l pieces — they taught moral
of society” and statesmen.
‘peerless
marijuana
r^SouB S™ s:; sr	1
the stwies and poems were too conscience told him to pay for ^	,v,inn«i in linen
Calvinlstic and puritanical, the window.	L	i	A
Another was that the political REVERSE TECHNIQUE	|ba8s
principles they conveyed were In the Third Reader there is a!	* haT been
whollv conservative too close to!. example of the reverse j* Hamilton and too far from Je^ Sique Xre	story	into the same type
ferson.	'STmeHn
shipped into the u"<tcrlinlng thein so heavily. , Shakespeare’s "Othello.
passage from
♦hello" j o«,l!kBTII*THbt»lldrui«»ui»ten.
OPEN DAILY 10-T0; SUN. 11-6
. . In the revised edition of 1879, jjg threw some stones at en a®®*'®®	i».
They began in 1836 and 1837 Not every	® the 6-page Primer and the W-; elderly gentleman. When James .
when a Cincinnati publishing moral. Plenty of them were	Reader are quiteigp^jy^* ome he found the old I®®"®	®"'b’®’® ®"'*
house issued the first four about birds, mountains and	in content. Each starts was a visiting uncle who - including monkeys, exotic
with the alphabet and there are brought presents for all the b'r^, 150 baby iguanas and one illustrated sentences about cat fg^j, jgmes was cured of his ocelot-were seized at Miami dog, hen, rat, fox and other iggeig^gg ^hen he failed to get International Airport Mon^^^ animals.	the gold watch and beautiful after being shipped from Colom-
ONLY ONE YEAR. By Svetlana Alliluyeva. Harper.
^The one year spanned in this memoir is from December 1966 to the same peribd in 1967. Its Imslc fteme is the disillusionment of Stalin’s daughter with her father and with
“socialism”--meking communism.	'	,
This is a much different bbok from "Twenty Letters to a Friend.” That book, written in the summer of 1963 behind the Iron Curtain, was a personal document that she caUs a "family hisbry.” intended originally for private circulation only This book was written in America and is more candid. ★ ★ ★
She concedes that “Twenty Letters to a Friend” gave an Incomplete picture of Stalin, so she dev^s a chapter to her father, portraying him as a “moral and spiritual who with “cold calculation” knew “what he was doing in “the bloodbath of absolute dictatorship.”
There are some odd omissions in her	For
example, there are only a few oblique references to Wwld
TWs is an emotional story; it is not analytical; it shows little evidence of a sense of humor, but it contains a feminine compassion.	^
GARBO, by Norman Zierold. (Stein and Day, $5.^)
Although this unauthorized biography of formar film star Greta Garbo makes entertaining reading, it does little to dispel the secrecy with which Garbo has surrounded herself.
Since her entry into American films in the l^te, the Swedish-born actress-star of “Camille,” “Anna 9“^stie “Mata Hari” and “Grand Hotel” - has kept her pnvate life
Borman Zierold claims “the pages of this book attest” to her friends’ revealing the “secret Garbo,” but actually the bo<* provides little proof of this. „ _ . _ _ ,
,	Patricia E. Davis (UPI)
FUN WHILE rr LASTED. By Barnaby Conrad. Random.
$7.95.	. u .
What Conrad offers here is a memoir covering about a dozen years. He begins at the age of 19, when in Mexico he first dabbled in amateur bullfighting. Much of this book is about the thrills and hazards of the cape and sword profession.
But there also was an episode after the war, when, needing a job, he became a so-called "secretary” to aging author Sinclair Levris; his real position was that of Lewis’ “punching bag,” he says.	^
’This sectitm is an acid portrait of Lewis as a childish *md suspicious old man. But Lewis coached Conrad in his writing, and no doubt that helped Conrad write his best seller, “Matador.”
The author tells about his other occupations -- such as nightclub pianist in Peru; portrait painter; breeder of seahorses and tropical fish, and saloon operator in San Francisco.	'
He is quite frank about his many love affairs, and almost as frank about his marriages and divorces. He is a name-dropper, having known many celebrities, but hie blithely gets away with it.
Miles A. Smith (AP)
A UTTLE The Primer contains a little lesson of three paragraphs about a teacher named Miss May:
books intended for him. The Fourth Reader
the
first in which some authors are The famous Notre Dame identified — really gets intp'Cathedral In Paris was built in! solid material. Many selections |the year 1248.	I
FRI., SAT.
A Dtviilu «f Jli. 1.1. Kr..ft Cempany with ftert. Ihiawihwl Hit OnlteB	C*mS« Snarta SlM
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1969
B-9 »
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_________THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER U, 1089___—  -
DDT Level in Esfuaries Seen as Serious Threat to Ocean Life
BEAUFORT. N. C. (AP) Marin* aclenUsts at Duka Univaralty say that II the DDT level In eatuarlea continue* to Increase, it will pose a serious threat to the larvae of crabs, ahrintp and all fish.
'U.S, Urban Ills Are Festering'
British Paper See* Biue-Coiiar Revoit
LONDON at - Hw United States find Itself battling a concerted blue-collar revolt If It conUnues to Ignore Its “festering city grievances," says the British liberal newspaper Guardian.
"America’s disgruntled white millions wlD not stay quiescent and sensible forever," the newspaper says, “If the whole drawing of . taxation and metropolitan boundaries 1 n America continues to bleed cities of funds and keep the palmy suburbs fat.” ^
Vi^ng the results of the off-ye^elecUms last week, the Guardian said President Nixon should note that virtually all U.S. dtles chose mayors "who win camp on his doorstep d«»fwndiiig mwe cash and aid." ★ ★ ★
"Whatever their alleged political hue," the newspapw said, “they will all make a national din-a din the White House must begin to listen to if every Mg urban area is not to tipple toward despair, hatred and anarchy.”
Other fcH-eign papers commented during the past week on European reaction to the withifoawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam, a soKialled new U.S. French relationship, and the American women’s "new way of handling men."
■a A ★
"France doesn’t irsltate America since Charles de Gaidle’s departure,” Maurice DeLarue wrote in the France-Sdr. "But America is less interested in France.’’ a a *
DeLanie said the ' former Frendi president fascinated the United States with “his perstm, his features and gestures. The only worry that Prance still ins^s is that she will not be able to surmount her domestic difficulties, and ‘After Guallism’ will lead to chaos."
, a a a The West German newspaper Die Welt said the U.S. withdrawals from Vietnam indicate a tendency by the United States to withdraw troops from “many positions,” which might eventually include Europe. SOVIET influence If American troops are pulled out of Europe, Die Welt predicted, “West Europeans will not feel compelled to increase their armament, but rather adjust themselves even further to the aims of Soviet foreign policy — leading to a growing Soviet . . . sphere of influence.”
a a a Malcolm Keogh, New York c(XTespondent for the London Mirror, says American women have learned to control men wifii Pussycat Power, a subtle combination of “ardoring eyes and instant flattery."
Communist China Military Tradition Topic of OU Talk
An insight into the miUtary tradition of mainland China wQ] be offered tomorrow at Oakland University in a lecture by Dr. Charles 0. Hucker, professor of Chinese at the University of
His address on "Aspects of Chinese Military IVadition" will be at 11 a.m. in the Oakland Center. A seminar will be at z:lil|>:!&i. .	, .	V >1
The author of many books tm Ming dynasty liistory of China, Hucker is a former OU faculty membo'. and was instrumental in starting the non-Western studies program at OU.
w * ■ *...........
He is founder and chairman of the National Committee on Undtogradoalb Trainiog , Isi OrienUd Stiiiae and Is non-
Two scientists brom Duke’s marine laboratory at Beaufort said their research in^cates ordinarily nonfatal amouids of the insecticide introduced into estuary feeding ‘’grounds may kill off generations of important species of ocean life.
The experiments were con-
ducted by Dr. C. G.i Bo<dcout, acting director of Duke’ip oceanographic program at Beaufort, and Dr. John D. Costlow, director of the marine laboratory.
♦	* e
The two pointed out that not only are estuarine waters in and around river mouths natural
nurseries, but they afooiform j natural collectien' poinia for ' DDT runoff from inland areas, which compounds the danger. SERIOUS TROUBLE “Out studies indicate that DDT is a threat to estuarine larvae of crabs, shrimp and all fish and that if DDT levels in estuaries continue to increase.
We a^ .in serious trouble," Dr. Bookout said. /
During the experiments, the scientists fed four types of crabs food containing small amounts of DDT in their early development stages. The crabs were not killed outright, but most became abnormal in later
Stages /of development and, few! i survived to miturity.	|
The scientists said t h a because of the c u m u 1 a t i v * ^ nature of DDT, the similarity of i developmental processes in 1 other marine species and the interrelationship of the marine food chain, toe findings indicated a clear danger to other
ocean animals such as shrilnp
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THE PON IT AC' PHESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1009
Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas
$1,000 in Drugs Taken at Store
Mrs. P«ter J. Boucher
Mrs. Piney	died yester(iay.	rGoodison Methodist C h u r c h .	Dale Goyette of West	Bloom-	,/
Surviving	are her husband,	died yesterday.	field Two n ship;'	three More than	$1,000 in drugs
Service for Mrs. Peter J. lone daughter, Gwen Kirksey of| Surviving are two daughters, daughters, Peggy, Donna and were reported stolen yesterday (Helena	M.)	Boucher,	7	8,1	Pontiac^ and	two grandchildren.	Mrs. George	V.	Wells	o f	Veronica at home; three	sisters,'morning from	the Cunningham
formerly	of	157	Baldwin	will	be I	Her body	may be viewed	Clarkston and	Mrs.	Melvin	M.	including Mrs. Paul Smith ol,PfU8 Store at the North Hill
S;30 a.m. Friday at St. Michael Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery.
The Rosary will be recited at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Huntoon Funeral Home.
Mrs. Boucher, a retired employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division, died this morning. She was a member of the Altar Society of her church.
Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Mary Plouffe of Pontiac, and two brothers, Thomas A. and Daniel caifton, both of Pontiac.
Mrs. Robert Brian
Service for Mrs. Rober (Bettie F.) Brian. 38, of 1191 Alhi, Waterford Township, will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at Hillcrest Church of the Nazarene with burial in Rochester by Sparks ■ Griffin Funeral Home.
Mrs. Brian died this morning. A member of the Hillcrest Church, she was employed in the Community Services Department at Oakland Community College. •	.	.
Surviving are her husband; her mother, Mrs. Allie Nicholson of PonUac; t children, Bruce and Brent, both at home; a brother, Charles Fields of Pontiac; and ^ sisters, including Mrs. Charlene Roehl of Waterford Township.
Mrs. Leon Copeland
Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Leon (Hiroko) Copeland, 39, of Kincheloe Air Force Base, Sault Ste. Marie, will be 2 p.m. Friday at the Pursley-GUhert Funeral Home, with burial in Perry Moimt Park Cemetery. Her body will be at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tomorrow.
Mrs. Copeland died Friday if an auto accident in Sault Ste. Marie.
Surviving are her husband and two sons, Christopher G. and Leon C. HI, both at home.
after 3:30 p.m. tomorrow. | Kelts of Lake Orion; two sons, Waterford Township and Mrs.|Plo20> 1^51 N.
Avon
Nelson E. Prelzer
Allan of Lake Orion and Robert Guss Opdenhoff of Union Lake;iTownship, according to Oakland
J. of Goleta, Calif.; three and two brothers, sisters, including Mrs. Dorothyl Service for Nelson E. Pretzer,I Goltry of Lake Orion; three' Michael Hope 45, of 2200 N. Telegraph will be brothers. Including Rober t
n a.m. tomorrow at the Hun-|Morley of Rochester and Arnold! AVON TOWNSHIP — Michael toon Funeral Home with burial.Morley of Lake Orion; and 10 Hope, 59, of 3074 Longview died in the Freeman Cemetery, May-grandchildren.	I today. His body is at the
County Sheriff's deputies.
★ * ★
Manager and pharmacist Alfred Virgona told deputies that die thief or thieves removed drugs that, if used improperly, produce a “high" or
Archie McLean
vllle.	I	*1 William R, Potere Funeral' euphoric sensatkm.
Mr. Pretzer, a former: Mri. William DeGroot Home.	*	* -k
employe of Murrey Co., Detroit,j	i	; stolen were various tran-
died Sunday.	| OXFORD - Mrs. William Samuel Park quillzers, pain pills, stimulants.
Surviving are his parents, Mr. (RolinaL DeGroot of 863 Olive	depressants and codeine cough
and Mrs. Edward Pretzer; a died yesterday. Her body is at* ROMEO — Service ior daughter, Mrs. Barbara Kerr of the Bossardet Funeral Home Samuel Parjc, 90, of 309 S.	^	^
Caro; a son, David of Kingston;!	Bailey will be 2 p.m. Friday at| j„ adjitjon to the drugs
and two sisters.	Zane J. Govette Muir Brothers Funeral Home in deputies reported that two
I n n M IT T p I n	*"	small television sets, f o u -
LOOMFIELD Cemetery there.	i ..nmoroo
Lozell Reed
1 WEST
iTOWNSHIP — Service for Zane, Mr, Park, a retired farmer,
cameras, several rolls of film, several electric razors, a tape
Service and burial for Lozell J. Goyette, 39, of 1625 Petrolia died yesterday.	recorder wrist watches anH is
Reed, 28, of 489 Going will be 2l will be 1 p.m. Friday at Sharpe-| Surviving are his wife, Anna; cartons ’ of dcarettii^ were p.m. Sunday at Henning, Tenn. Goyette Funeral Home in a son, Floyd of Flint; alg{ujg„	®
His body is at Frank Carruthers Clarkston with burial i n daughter, Mrs. Gertrude Brooksl	*	*	*
Funeral Home.	[Oakland Hills Memorial of Almont, seven grandchil- .	,	*
dren; and eight great-grandchil-1 ^ glass cutter	‘
GOING HOME - A row of U.S. Marines stands at attention as the history of the Third Marine Division is read during de-
AP WlMPhAlf
parture ceremonies in a hangar at Da Nang Air Base in South Vietnam.
Mr. Reed died Saturday. He Gardens, was a member of the New] Goyette, a carrier for the dren.
Bethel Baptist Church of Hen-Detroit Free Press, died	.	. ,
ning, Tenn., and was employed yesterday.	Gerritt Roerink
by Pontiac Motor Division.	Surviving are his wife, Wilma
Surviving are his wife, Cliffie; Rose; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. one stepdaughter, Mary Ann '
Harding at home; parents Mr and Mrs. Grady Reed; sister, Mrs. Bertha Manns of Pontiac; and five brothers including W. T. and Brozie Reed, both of Pontiac.
Wesley J. Slingerland
Service for Wesley J. Slingerland, 65, of 5200 Dixie, Waterford Township, will be
Avon Home Broken Into by Thieves
Thieves yesterday broke into the home of Mrs. George
PONTIAC TOWNSHIP -Service for Gerritt Roerink, 69, of 2468 Snellbrook will be 11 Friday at the Huntoon
open a two-foot-square hole in the front-plate glass window through which the thief crawl ed, according to deputies.
Saturday Crash Is Fatal I to City Vietnam Vet, 25
a.m.
15 I n •	. ■	^ 25-year-old Vietnam veteran
bank reinstates .—discharged from service 90
Employe Who Took M-Day Off
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A Bank of America stenographer is back on the job after fighting her dismissal for taking a day
days ago—died this morning of injuries
Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery.
Mr. Roerink died yesterday.
He was a former owner of Opdyke Market and a member of Five Points Community Church.
Surviving are his wife,
Dorothy; four sons. Jack and Robert, both of Pontiac, Joseph
p.m. Friday at the Coats!Sullivan of W. Avon, Avonlof Lake Orion and Gerald ofla?t month to participate in Fungal Home, Wa t erf ord;Township, according to C^kland Troy; a brother; a sister; and	at New Bethel Baptist Chprch,
Township, with burial Saturday County sheriff’s deputies. his father, John H. of Holland. | _.	*	*	burial in Perry Mount
in Grayling.	Missing are two rifles worth	^	yesterday Park Cemetery. The body may
Mr. Slingerland died yester- $180, a portable color television Mrs. Leonard A. Thomson Margo Pelton, 21, was fired by be viewed after 3:30 p.m. today. He was a retired machinist'set valued at $421, a $370 stereo! n,pMTMroAv, -	•	- ^ “trigger-h a p p y manager” morrow at Davis-Cobb Funeral
» ' r-ntn	_ i._________u _______ii______ BIKMINUHAM
Oakland Highway Ton in '69
108 Last Year to Date 141
■ceived in an automobile accident early Saturday. / Service for James R. Mid-gett of 274 Ce-dardale will be 3 p.m. Friday
for GMC Truck and Coach phono graph, miscellaneous Division.	irecord albums worth $100 and a
Surviving are two sons,|jewelry box containing Wesley H. of Union Lake and I miscellaneous jewelry of an John M. of Harrisville, and | undetermined amount, ac-three grandchildren.	[cording to deputies.
will be 1 p.m. Friday at the Manley-Bailey Funeral Home with burial in Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit.
”	"	i Mrs. Thomson died yesterday.
The home was entered when she was a member of the First I OAKLAND TOWNSHIP - the front door was pried open > Presbyterian Church of Birm-Archie McLean, 79, of 283, service for Mrs. Carl (Estella) with a crowbar and the latch [jngham.
Mrs. Carl Clark
Sanford died yesterday. Hisjaark, 67, of 2756 Adams will be snapped, deputies reported, body is at the Pursley-Gilbert 2 p m. Friday at Allen’s Home A neighbor told deputies that Funeral Home.	'For Funerals in Lake Orion she had observed a pair of
Mr. McLean, an employe of ^ with burial in East Lawn suspicious men in a black sta-GMC Truck & Coach Division, cemetery thore.	tion wagon near the house about
Service for whose decision was reversed by uomp Mrs. Leonard A. (Myrtle M.) higher management Thomson, 86, of 383 Greenwood'
The announcement by the bank followed settlement of a suit brought by Miss Pelton who claimed her constitutional rights were violated when she was discharged for taking time off to the protest U.S. policy in Vietnam.
JAMES R. MIDGETT
Midgett lost control of a car Saturday on West Wilson near the railroad tracks. Witnesses | told police hfidgett’s car skid-	|
ded sideways, flew through the I	k„ rimr
destmvpd a traffic sien'^®® employed by GMC Truck iJl ®^ and Coach Division, landed in a tree.	^	^	^
was a member of Veterans of Foreign Wars and Moose Lodge in Ionia.
Surviving is a sister, Mrs. Edith Lai^e of Pontiac.
Mrs. Richard Piney
Service for Mrs. Richard (Louise) Piney, 62, of 237 S. Jessie will be 1 p.m. Friday at Trinity Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by Davis-Cobb Funeral Home.
Mrs. (Hark, a member of the. 1:30 p.m.
Surviving are three sons, Leonard H. of Grosse Pointe, Milton L. of Detroit, and Stuart H. of Northville; four grandchildren; and six greatgrandchildren.
The bank said it will allow any employe to take a day off without pay for such activities . as long as the bank can still I conduct business.
ToolTheft Is Reported
More than $700 worth of tools were reported stolen yestefday from a pickup truck belonging to Richard Brockle 5001 Burlington, Independence Township, according to Oakland County sheriff's deputies.
Brockie told deputies that he first missed the tools yesterday morning at his place 0 f employement.
He had locked the truck in the garage of his home the night before, he said.
CORRECTION
UNITED TIRE, Ine.
HEAVY DUTY
SNO-CAPS
It took two hours for fire Surviving are his parents, Mr. and police units to extricate andMr8.Willie Cross;foursis-Midgett from his car, lodged in ters, Mrs. Maria Lockett of the branches. He had been Pontiac and Dorothy, Carolyn treated for multiple fractures'and Sandra Wellonns, all at at St. Joseph Hospital.	home; and two brothers, Melvin
Midgett was a member of and Carey Wellonns, both at New Bethel Baptist Church and home.
*9
88
8.25x14	$10.88
The Pontiac Press
'Need'for Rail Subsidy Stressed
WASHINGTON (Upi) - The chairman of one of the nation’s largest railroads told Congress today railroads never will be able to give the passenger first-class service unless the government shares the bill.
Penn Central chairman Stuart T. Saunders claimed “it is beymd the financial capability of Penn Central alone, w the railroad industry alone, 10 reverse the deterioration of passenger service.”
k k k
The answer to the problem, Saunders told the House (fom-merce Committee, is this: “We must have substantial assistance and we must have it now.”
According to Saunders, time already has run out on passenger service. “Unless Congress decides to appropriate funds for both capital improvements and operating expenses, there is po chance that passenger service will survive,”
said.
According to Saunders, there were two ^tematives for trains Out cannot pay their way — railra«ds should be allowed to drop them, or the government should reimburse the railroads \for the deficit.
City Apartment Scene of Theft
Pemmal papers and $188 cash olen from a city apart-rcsterdajr afternoon, ac-to police.
NOW-Sears is OPEN EVERY NIGHT Monday through Saturday
Nov. Value Days
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Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, lfl6»

Rebel Rhodesia's Whites Well Off^-but Not Its Blacks
jj/VLISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) After four years of independ' ence the white government headed by Ian Smith is in a itropg position, but the nation’s blacks are worse off economl tally than they were.
IthodeslB was a colony of Brit-•fi when Smith Issued his UDI, oClinllateral declaration of inde-p^ence, Nov. 11, 1965. Britain this as an attempt by the ctjisny’s 230,000 whites to im-ptgi permanent rule on the larfeiy voteless Africans, num-bwTng 4.9 million.
# ‘ ' * fhe British Navy mounted a blockade off Mozambique to try to keep oil and other goods out of Rhodesia. The United Nations voted sanctions.
But the counteraction has not lucceeded in throttling the Sntlth reginne, and the last sym-bols of the British empire are going. The Union Jack has disappeared from all but a few flagstaffs, replaced by a new green and white national flag.
left his post
The British-appointed Governor, Sir Humphrey Gibbs, finally left his post this year. He had itayed on at Government House B.S the representative of Queen Elizabeth II although the Smith government did not recognize him.
Former Justice Minister Clifford Dupont, considered by the government to be the queen’s representative, has moved into Government House.
Next year the die finally will be cast. After j|> general election, expected in April or May, Rhodesia will be a republic, and all pretense of loyalty to the queen will be dropped.
Dupont Is expected to be the hrst, president and Smith the Prlnie Minister.
WHITES WILL RULE • A new constitution will maintain white rule for the foresee-future. It allows for eight |)lacks to be elected to Parliament and eight more to be nominated by pro-government tribal thiefs and headmen.
! Eventual , parity between whites and blacks in Parliament is possible, but the number of blacks' ijcats will^ rise only in proportion to the' inconie tax they pay. When they pay the same as whites—at present they pay less than 1 per cent—they will get the same number of
because of the lucrative gates in the African townships, is multiracial, but the African schools and hospitals are segregated. The wives and children of black servants are barred from itay-
Allled with the constitution is legislation which divides land between whites and blacks. The whites get ili^tly more. The act bans blacks from living and owning inoperty in white areas and vice versa.
Professional soccer, mainly
Ing In quarters in white suburbs without permission.
TT’LL BE EASIER’
At the congress qf hls Rhodesian Front party In October, delegates uifged Smith to en-
force segregation more strictly. He told them it will be easier once the republican/constitution Is adopted.
International sanctions have harmed the Rhodesian economy
but never have come near crippling it. As some people see it, they put a brake oq expansion when the country should have been booming. The stagnancy of the economy has hit the blacks
harder than the whites and has meant many fewer jobs for the 40,000 blaqks who leave school every year.
There are few signs of austerity in stores. Many luxuries
can’t be had, but there s usually a substitute, probably l]0ca|ly made. Industry hail geared 'itself to a large-scale program for import substitution.
Although gasoline is still ra-
tliMied, motorists can buy as many off-ration coupons asithey' like for about 10 cents a gallon.
There are about 100 million motor vehicle owners in the U.S.
i	I"
i (fiV/7 Service i Say Boosts i $ef Backing
LANSING (AP) — Pay raises bf 6 to 12 per cent are recommended j by a committee represenilng state departments and ^chlgan’s 46,000 oivil service employes.
★ ★
It would cost the state $45 million, the conunittee told the Michigan Civil Service Commission in a report.
The commission will hold a public hearing on the proposals Nqy. 24. It is to make a decision in'December, and any raises would become effective next
mu
■Personnel Director Franklin DeWald said the recom-fnendations will be analyzed $nd the views of department heads will be sought before the hearing.
•-MEMBER PANEL The commissioq,appointed the nine-njember. committee to make pay recommendations this year. In past years, the pay plan was drawn up by the conunisslon after consultation With its wage and salary staff experts.
(WWW The plan covers 2,400 job cUsslflcatloiis ahd US salary ranges.
Gmerally, the commission laid, the recommendations are ^r 12 per cent increases in the Mwest job grades and 6 per lent in the t<v ernes'.
) ★ # * ,
!The State Constitution gives fhe Civil Service Commluion iulhority for the pay plan whiah beeomes effective unless by a two-thirds vote of iture. The payndl this expected to bo fiWII
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THE PONTIAC FRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12> 19fl9
key LBJ Aides Make Up Muskie Foreign Affairs Brain Trust
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Sen Edmund S. MusHie. rated i leading isn Democratic presidential possibility, is receiving ftu^n-^cy advice these days from several key figures In the Johnson administration’s 1968 moves to settle the Vietnam
Diey are serving on an lii{or> mal fordgiHNdicy brain trust, one of several advisory panels MUskie has been estabUshing to help him to broaden his know-le^e of national and international affairs.
* * *
Informed sources disclosed that members of Muskie’s foreign-policy team include former Secretary of Defense Clark M. Clifford, widely considered the key flg^ in former President Lyndon B. Johnson’s 1968 peace moves, and Harry McPherson, former White House aide who drafted the Mardi 31, 1968, speech in which Johnson halted the bombing over much of North Vietnam and paved the way for the start of the Paris peace talks.
★ «
Other advisers, the sources say, include W. Averell Harri-man and Cyrus R. Vance, who headed the U.S. delegation in
EDMUND S. MUSKIE-
Fewer Move to Californio
SACRAMENTO, Calif. UR Fewer pMpIe moved to Cailfotnia last year than in any year since 1948.
*	★	a
State Finance Department officials estimated that in dieir booUseeping	year	ended	last
June 90 the populatim went up only 1.5 per cent to 19,858,000. The increase included an im migration of 106,000, the lowest since the estimed 82,000 of 1948.
*	★	*
The officials said the trend toward	a smaller	number	of
Immigrants began in 1964 However, a decline in births whidi began in 1962 reversed itself last year.
Items Are linked
ONTONAGON (AP)-Author-ities at Ontonagon are investigating the possibility that a bone and pieces of clothing are remains of a research plane sririch disappeared over Lake Superior about a year ago.
★ * ★
Discovered this weekend Ontonagon County Sheriff Donald Powelson revealed Tuesday, were the bone, a brown canvas shoe and a black glove, w ★	*
A twin-engine plane owned by the National Center for Atmos-{riieric Research' of Boulder, Colo., disappeared Oct. 23, 1968 vriille conducting research over Lake Superior near Ontonagon There were three men aboard.
: 'Finn Power'
Is Big in U.P.
HOUCHTTCW (AP) - “Finn Power” is drifting through Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.
\	*	*"*	V
A \Couple of HoughUm mei <nid«red a bunch of bumper stickers «nbla;xmed with the words “Finn Power,” and the idea seems to be catching on. The promoters, who preferred to remain anonymous, say the stickers are becoming common la the UP adiere many Finnish
Paris. under Johnson; former assistant Secretary of Defense Paul Warnke; and Berl Bern-hard, former executive director of the Civil Rights Commission. BONING UP
Muskie, the 1968 Democratic vice presidential nominee, con-
centrated on domestic affairsiforeign policy and on militaryi In recent weeks, Muskie has|ttf “bounce ideas off” his brain during his first 10 years in the affairs, emerging as an oppo< delivered two major speeches trusters and pepper them with Senate, winning a name fer Lent of the Safeguard antlballis-1 on Vietnam, one at Bates Col-questions. Out of this, thiey say, himself for work on urban «f-tic missile (ABM) and urging allege for the Oct. 18 Vietnam comes the basis that enables fairs and antipollution legisla-jsix-month U.S. halt in the test-'Moratorium and the other in the him to make specific proposals, tion.	ling of Multiple Independently [Senate last Friday.	| Including a suggestion President
Since the 1968 election, howev-|Targeted Reentry V e hiclesi	* w ★	SNixon seek the good offices of
er, he has spent Increasing time (MIRVs) to facilitate arms Essentially, Muskle’a method!U.N. Secretary General U Ttiant boning up and speaking up on! talks.	|of operation, the sources say, is'in trying to end the war.
Muskie’a closeness to key Johnson administration figures, alopg with his yearlong efforts at many Democratic organlxa-tion dinners and meetings, strengthen his .standing as the “organization” candidate the 1972 nomination.
for
He thus Is allying himself (Slosely wjth the for^s whlch'en-abM Hubert H. Humphrey to overcome' primary-oriented drives in 1968 by Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy and the forces of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and win the party’s presidential nomination.	'—
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THE PokTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1960
... ^
Mideast War Seen as Unlikety but American Fears Persist
By WILUAM L. RYAN AP SpecW Coireipondeiit Tlw ,^yMr-oId Ar«b-Israell i crisla baa exploded three tlmea Into major war. Egypt’s Gamal Abdel Nasser now has called for a fourth round, proclaiming . •‘fire and blood" the .only answer for Arabs. Is, war, then. Just around the. corner?
★ ★ *
SSIIfell-lnformea sources think a 3Swr major war at this time is ;ailWkely, but find littie consola-in that estimate, They re* an atmosphere of gloom 'Svadlng the American busi-community in 9>e Arab fast, where U.S. interests run Into billions of dollars.
h	W ^
Reports from Americans in the area, the sources say, re-
flect fear that an endless and of-ten-bloody conflict will eventually drive all Americans out. The .. result, they feel, would be a ;; heavy blow to the United States <■ and an atmosphere of crisis in Western Europe, which depends on American-produced Arab oil. ★ ★ *
Nasser many times has called ;; for war as the duty of all Arabs.
; His pronouncement last week seemed a fairly typical Nasser performance of the sort which has on previous occasions got him into hot water.
unready for war
Even one of his closest advisers, Hassanein Haikal, implied criticism of the Egyptian president after the 1967 war which brought disaster to Arab arms. "People do not forgive those whose words are bigger than their actions,” Haikal wrote two years ago. He had found, in retrospect, that the Arabs had ; been unready for war and had ’ been exhorted to deeds ‘‘beyond our capability.”
j; “There should be no war with* f. out armed forces,” Haikal I wrote. “Weapons alone are niot enough. Training, too, is needed »... There can be no strong bat-‘tlefront without a stronger ' domestic front.”
★ * ♦
Nasser’s domestic front re-. mains weak and brittle. Nasser, now 52 and frequently ailiftg, can hardly afford another disaster like that of 1967.
★ ★
The Russians have spent about $2 billion since 1967 rebuilding and retraining Arab forces. Their 3,000 military ad-visiers in Egypt are often reported frustrated by the difficulties they find in trying to get Egyptians to think modem.
UCK KNORr*HOW
But Moscow has brought Arab ; forces—Egyptian and Syrian— - back to the point where they
were when Israel destroyed equlpipent In the Ightning war. The Arabs heavily /outnuipber the Israelis In manpower, but know-how, n 61 manpower, has counted In the “BSt.
The danger, the American sources say, is of endless fight-
ing short of major solution in sif^t.
In the second following the 19U
round of irai Sues crisis, a
Washington joined Moscow and forc< too, Israeli foirces
and occupied Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula and the Gaza Strip. Prime Minister David Bsn-0^^ ion had said Israel would not
ries no longer existed.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower sharply rebuked Ben-Gurlon and hinted that the Unit-
ed States would be willing to isolate him If he failed to comply with a United Nations recommendation to get out. And Israel withdrew,	/
DIFFERENT SmjA'nON The situation is different now. Israel, in addition to Sinai and
Gaza, occupies East Jerusalem, l^yrla’s Golan Heights and the west bank of the Jordan River.
era vital to her security. East Jerusalem she considers permanently hers by right oj conquest.
While the United itates has supported a 1967 U.N. Security
Council'resolution telling Israel to withdraw from all conquered territories, little h|w been done to persuade the Israelis to comply- ,
★ w ♦	^
The situation has been festering for two years. In the eyes of Americans on the scene, it
grows daily more dangerous ta U.S. interests. Some of the issues between the contendinf sides now seem so formidM>le as to defy any solution at all. and deep resmtment tl/ the United States, the sources siqr, is rising rapidly among mlUiona of Arabs.
tong Flag Burned ‘by Squad of Vets
- MILWAUKEE (AP) - About yl5 veterans, some of theqi re-‘cently returned from VleUiam, marked Veterans Day Tuesday by burning a Vietcong flag they wrested from members (rf the Students for a Democratic Society.
★	★	★
“Last	year,	we	were	sitting
over	In	Vietnam,	hearing	re-
ports about flags being burned. I guess we just decided it was our turn to bum a flag,” one of the veterans said.
' “r'	★	*1	*
The Vietcong banner was ^^zed at a booth being operated •y'SDS members at the Univer-sity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Student Union. After a brief scuffle, the veterans took the ^ag to a lawn, soaked it with a tRammable fluid and ignited it.
Charming in N«w Avocado and Blue
4 Day$-Rog.X17l UV2 x UV4 x BVa’*
In High-stylo Docorafor Colon
Shaggy Bathroom Rags
liuw ^96
Charge III
20-Piece Dianerwore Set	Heovy-Dsty Covered Roaster
Sec incJarfes aiz each: lO* aod^ pbmei, ^ ceceal/aonp boarb, caps aed aamcm. Tlw weekmdl
Nylon/polyester shag rugs, 30" dia. round or 21x36" size. Non-skid back. Buy now!
"Textrayvood^Framed
R«prodtctiois
A wide diosoe of fiuiKMts-artisc- anb-jectt* laxZZTdDays!
''WbisperiilpRosC' ItrllitMrwt Set
^^99 JJ33
4^-piux ifirii aec widi e design ! background.
53-Pc. Set Of *ReMMce”CliMa
4Days AQ
7.f9,1h-Pc.Sat....5Jt
Crystal IR-pc. Petcli lewl Set
Rog.2,97 M4 4CkrYs A Polished Prescuc glass, includes bowl, ladle, 9 cups and bodcs.SpeciaU
Loiy Sisoe Is Always Heady!
Reg. 4.44 M 4 Days O 12"secriooed,ievoitiog glass tcay;oenter bond
Aluminum, Douhle-coalod WrA TdtenP
Choice of Bohiag.Paas
Our Reg. m to 137
Gee balcmg fim aridi Ready-mix cake pans, Bzl'* ixmod or 8x^ square; 12" pim pans; 9XaHilk2Xr loti pans and iOT pie pans. For dtis aale oalf!
Durable, Heavyweight Quilted Vinyl
Jumbo-size Boroient Bogs
Beautify your closet and protect suits and dresses, too. Antique gold, pink, turc]uoise. Save now!
4 Days-^eg. 1.771 Use Any Utensilsl
TefloairiO' Fry Pan
Ahuninum &y pam is ooaaed widi ^ m Teflon II* for non-sdde cookiog Ww and fast, easy cleaning for you!	I
Broshes For Tooth-ops
B*	fruir* For Hi* ffaftfayif
[osy-te-ose Spray Eoomel
(iiHaiidr3.0z*Sb*
Eoomol For Tooth-ops
Gotham Firemen Seek Moratorium on Moratoriums
NEW YORK (AP) - Three city firemen have forihed the Ad Hoe Committee to Declare a Moratorium on Moratoriums.
★	*	★
Their him	Is to	cut	down tee
number of New York)Ka attaid-Ing the Vietnam protest acttvl-fles in Washington Saturday.
★	★	★
Their tactic	is to	try and	per-'
Buade drivers of AlO buses chartered by moratorium sympa-t^rs not te make^the run.
The three firemen paraded Tuesday outside the Transport 11 •diokm Workers headquarters 9DSioing drivers, “Let 'em jogl|
4 Days—Reg.1.131 Delicious 2-lb.* Boxes
Royal Mallows or Grahams
Scrumptious treats for the family! Chocolate-covered marshmallow cookies and graham crackers. Save! wt.
s57* sP7 38<
Like It? Charge Itl
Pure bristle brushes, just the tight size foe small touch-up paint jobs.
4Dafs-^eg,
Stoioless Stool Flatware
and inetollicfinisbes, or primer. This Week^! wroogfac iron floe block.
oeleet mew tabJewore for your
hoooe from fcmr tomely potoenm!
4 Days—Reg. 69^1 A Tasty Treatl
Burma Suited Mixed Nats
13^* ca^ of i^cma mixed noti to ^rve at ^rties, for lunchbox treats or TV-watching anodes.
49*
Comfortable Space-Saving Seats
Stuffed Hassocks fo Roeod, Square Shapes
4 Days 0,1,1
3
Dnn4>leYinylcoYeied, l4"or lS"c
wachooe foom end cotton poddod iw Rood SidM NMooAsr
Aatiqoa-Look Sewiog ChesI
Desigtied ei "VFoaia WfoocTwtdi lode and goMtonetiay. Mahogtoy; avocado or antique white. Buy now!
4«
Thursday Only-Fried Fish Fillet Sandwich With Beverage (Coke^or Cojfee)..J}othfor 49t
DOWNTOWN TEL HURON o/>UADrr /T-PONTIAC ' CFNTEK	ItlfiKUt If
/
At All KRESGE Stores

THB PONTIAC PRESS. WaPNESDAY. NOVEMBER 18, IMO

^^terize in style
contemporaiy double-breasteds. Double-breasteds with more than a dash of fashion dare. Below, left to right: a Glen plaid Eagle double-breasted with new wide lapels at $125. An Alpacuna pure cashmere db that gives you plenty of warmth with the least amount of weight at $160. A split raglan, slash pocket model by Barry Walt in an Bnglkh woolen hounds-tooth chcdc at $175. A Baron Anderson db with a belted and pleatedbackat $135.
conservatively speaking. Four single-breasted approaches that approach winta in the warmest of ways. Above, left to right: a water-repellent, split raglan Alligator all-weather coat with zip;;out liner at $85. A Hart Schaffner & M|rx split raglan model with bal collar and slash pockets at $110. A Gharter Qub classic single-breasmd in velour check at $75. A fly-front natural shoulder version from Custom Natural; in smart herringbones at $95.
new and now looks in outercoats. Four beautiful ideas in outercoats that make the winter scene in the most scenic of ways. Below, left to right: the man’s maxi by Bill Blass—shaped at the waist, deeply center-vented and presented beautifully in handsome tweeds imported from Italy; at back, wide lapels and a classic herringbone pattern and plaids at $225. $215. Malcolm Kenneth treats the double-breasted to a half-belt pleated A deeply-vented, militaiy collar 8-button double-breasted by RomelU at $125. Fake-it ... in a fabulous Borg Alaskan fake-seal double-breasted at $125.
out-going outercoats 'mth a flair for fashion and shape. Four new ideas that vmrm up to winter in the grandest of ways. Above, left to ri^t: a single-bteaSted diagonal pure wool worsted by Botany 500 at99.50. A fonfr-flattering shaped single-breasted by Hart Schaffner Sc Marx; in pedced-up plaids at $110. Custom C^i^ty shapes up the db with eight smart buttons and a amoo^y suppressed waist; Saxony wool at $110. A double-breasted blazer coat Alpacuna; complete with epaulets, metal buttons and patch flap pockets at $115.
OUR PONTIAC hAALl STORE IS OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY FROM 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M.
TELEGRAPH at ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD




THB POyTlAC PRESS, WEPNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1969

Extra
■iiPm ■ ■miPV
Top Value Stimips!
VALUABLE COUPON
WITH
THIS
COUPON
100 EXTRA
Top Value Stampi
W/ffc Thl$ Coupon And S10.00 Purehaoo Or	R
Moro, Not Including Boor, Wino Or Clgarottoo. .	■
Valid Thru Sun-, Nov. H, 1969 At Krogor Dot. 5 A Boot. Nieh.	m

./ , 'm [	' ‘a . ,	!'
,	'' »	I	ti

THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBKB 18. 1M»
•\
3RD. WiEK
Grand Opening
OF KROGER’S HEWEST STORE AT Fancy Youn^
LEAN RIB

Turkeys
lOvv’l. Grade *A’ Toms
RIVERSIDE 18-LBS. AND UP
W« r«Miy« tfc* tight H limit gvmntitl**, Prl«M W	«t Km(W ill
Wayiw, M«c«mb, OokUni, WathHnmw,
St. C/atr mrf Llvlnatton Cauatlam thru Sunday, Navamhar 16, 1969. Nana Said ' fa daaian. Capyrlght )9<9. Tha Ktagar Ca.
LS
Young
Hons
ROAST-R/TE 10 TO 14 LB SIZE
Center Cut
Perk Chops
99
LB
NO
ENP
CUTS.
ERESti BOSTON BUTT
Pork Roast L> 69*
1-0,
KBOCER CHOCOLATE, LEHON, duplex Oft VANILLA
THE TURKEY WITH THE THERMOMETER
Horbest Turkeys
Sandwich
Ceekies
WTO 24 LB SIZE
M< HUMS*
LB Size ^oFli
10 TO 14 LBi LB Size '
FRESH LEAN
</o Sliced Pork Lein
fi
CORDON'S
Roll Perk Sawsaoe
2^99
HYQRADE'S	_____
Bell Berk Prenks akb 77*
^	KftOCEft TASTY	N /^\
Angel Fe^ Cuke ^
SERVE'H SAVE	BUDDIG SLICED	^	^
SII««B Bacon.....’fkl 69* Lwnchoen Moato3««*l
ALL BEEF	FARMER FEET OR GLENDALE OLD FASHIONED
Rckrich Prenks ...• lb 89* Boneless Hem.....lb. 1
(lit	;4icU!
ALAM, OAANeC msrr. lcmon ok
COSTAL
SPECIAL LABEL
Quart Lux
Pink Letien
PLASTIC
BTL
Pancake Syrop
^23
5| COMPLETE HOME PERMANENT
Lilt Speclel
$|3#
OKAL nr Menu.
KIT
Bcopa
Moalhwnoh A ear«U
o’iya TSV ,
xNdccR PMTr THE PAvmim
Mixed Nets
’^'W9
SPECIAL LABEL SHAMPOO
Haod A Bhovldars
TOBf ' a BTL
SPECIAL
LABEL
'B11B*';^B|09‘
-	■ TUBS 1
Moathwook A earela
- 8T'
KROGER INSTANT
Dry Milk
PICO B
EAST PAIN RELIEF
Beyer Aspirin
■?ff 59*
SPECIAL LABEL-EXTRA DRY 9-EL
Arrid Daodoraat"
WHITE PETROLEm JELLY
Vesellne
Z	8.0Z
WITH EGG
CAN	Seeve Shempee
/tl53'
SmwM lAd WITH TH/S e¥0 lUf COUPON
SPECIAL LABEL
Glent Size
KROGER
A|ax Detergent
90 «s*
B.	'—	V
B Valid Thru Sun.. Nat. 16, 1969 At Kragar Dat. t Eaal. Mick, m Limit Oua Caupau
i~c
5	rnamam^ KA WTH THIS
B	Seve St coupon
B	SPECIAL LABEL
traw berry Mandarin ProBervest Oranges
a 19
NO DEPOSIT-NO RETURN COLA
DOMINO 10-X /	OCEAN SPRAY STRAINED OR WHOLE
Cenfectioner	Cranberry
Sugar	Seece
^1S	
SPECIAL LABEL LAUNDRY-AID
Bix Pre-Sonk
2-LB
4-OZ
PKG
89
Beyel Crewn.....6Bru79*
PILLSBURY JWEET CREAM
Penceke Mix «
• GO'
SPECIAL LABEL-RED ROSE
TeeAegs
2A‘c29<
SNOW FLOSS
Seuerkreut 'a •••••*• WT CAN KROGER THICK
I4-0Z. |0«
Temete Seece ..aa.wr'cAN 8*
I
, Valid Thru Sum, Nav. 16, »M» At Kragar Dat. B eaat, Mith. ' Limit Ossa Caupan.
Seve But w/thtn/5 coupon
KROGER BRAND
Beef Stew er
Cbm With
2'/a»59
*VHli thru Sun., Nau. 16,' 1969 At KrAgar Pal. A Baat, Mlah, Limit Ona Caiman.
TOP VALUE STAMPS
CUT-UP Emrs m imPKOS PRYER PARTS OR
TOP VALUE STAMPS
TOP VALUE STAMPS
TOP VALUE STAMPS
CA TOP VALUE STAMPS
TOP VALUE STAMPS
CA TOP VALUE STAMPS
IROASTERS
Be f If TmS CUUPUlf
ANY2-PKGS JE AHN’l LUNCHEON MEATS
ANYTEmm iSTON kOLL OK
AHY2-PKGS

•OITON KOU OK ■ tOTAL VIKINO " i lUNCHION MIATS aeWILISSCHUCKIlOASIl ffljSH >A8t»Y
»	Valid Thra Sam, Mau. 16, IHf	Va/ld Thia Sam, NaV. 16. 1969 mM Valid ThraSun., Nau. 16,

WHITE OR PINK
OeYS Seep
■
.....

super ciMMit .
Miradn WMln

TWOh-GALS KROGER RRANO SKIMMED MILK
Valid Thra Sun., Nuu. 16, IHf Krugar Dat. 4 Baat, mmmaammmatmi
OrCTN
KROQER 8RAND
t4-0Z>Ke

■ CACKLEIIRS IROZtN ■ FRIE^ CHICKIN
EOONOOeS9i .	..^	----
thru Sum, Haul 16, 196f ^ Valid Thru Suh,, Hay. 16. 1969 < At Kragad^at. 4 Baal. Mlah. EM ** Kragar Dat. 4 Ma$t. MlA, maagenaaaaaaanDPnnnaaaaaisiakianaal
CONTROLLED LOW SUDS
Pleffy All
FOR NORMAL HAIR
ireck

1 A
"I
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEPNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1969
..0*41

3271 SOUTH BLVD. O SQUIRRiL RD.
AU KROGER STORES
U S. CHOICE TENDERAY
Beef Rib
Steak
ireastep
WHOLE
fryert
32^
7-|N
CUT
LB
Fresh
Fryers
28
tN THE PONTIAC AREA JOIN THE CEIEBRATIONI
*M6 MORTH TELE6RAPH A ELIZABETH LAKE RD. 4> 780 PERRY ST. AT J08LYN m 8CHO COOLEY LAKE RD.>UNlON LAKE • 2B41 SOUTH TELEBRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE P«0, 8 4670 DIXIE HIBHWAY AT 8A8HABAW DRAYTON-PLAINS
LB
U.5. CHOICE 4TH I SJH.RIBS BEEF
RihResstu89«
FRESH 3 TO 4 LB SIZE
Roasters u 39*
DEL MONTE
U:S. CHOICE
Chuck
Sluek
COUHTRY CLUB
Cernud
Buuf
NO BACKS ATTACHED-FRESH
Fryur Luys or Broosts
WHOLE OR END PIECE
Stab
Bocoii
Temato
Juice
ii
I BBBBBB
PIEDMONT WHPi.E	fESCHKE'S BOLOGNA OR u-OZWTfKG SHANK HALF
Semi-ieRelMoHenBB* All Meal WieN*r>..59* SaiokeS Ham
HYGRADE'S FRESHOR SMOKED	PRE-COOKED KRISPY STICKS. COD OR
69* Liver Sev8e«e..,..LB49* Perch Flllets.....(.B69*{
1-QT
14-OZ
CAN
SIWIPrS SLICED
Beef Liver*•••••.•• ••LB
'P«uwtiteA!\
MORTON FROZEN MINCE p*
Pumpkin Pin
25*
T-LB
4-OZ
PJB
SOMERDALE FROZEN
CoBked Squash
iii«
pKo	______
RICH’S DESSERT TOPPING
Spoon N* Sorvo
29*
BIRDS EYE FROZEN
Pees er Cern*,*.wTpiec IT*
COFFEE INN NON-DAIRY FROZEN
V^Ceffee Creamer,,crN
^14*
MfSOMR PWEBH
Grade *4’ Laru# Eggs
59
SWIFTS
Vionnn
SnuBogo
WT CANS
5Vt'*|
CANS q
12-OZ
WT^
CAN
CAP BRAND
Cornod
Boot
h«
. BREWSTERS
Somi-Swoot
Morsols
BURNS WHOLE OR
Slicod
Boots
39 I «33
MORTON FROZEN APRLE OR
LIBBY’S PUMPKIN
ALUMINUM FOIL STANDARD
Cherry Pie**#** ^Jozfir 39* Pie Mia*..**., ts-oz.can 33 ReyneldiWree
BREAKFAST OF CHAMPIONS	MELLO-RIPE
******* WT PKG
KROGER BRAND
Fleke Coconut w^>kc 39* Wheetlof
PeerHelvef>3.'oi^AN
“P(U TKghU
PLUMP TENDER
Swevt
Peas
17
WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE
Sweet
Cern
IB
TENDER CUT
Beans
Green
YELLOWCLING
Slicod OK Helvos
Peachei
S
IN SYRUP
Fruit Cocktail
A
1-LB
14-OZ
CAN
29
29*
21*
MORTON FROZEN 4 VARIETIES
Pet PleS.ooOM..........
SPECIAL LABEL MARGARINE
Beed Luckoo*****’***»***pR6 36
SUPERFINE
Whole Oniens«oo*o..*jAR 33*
BREAKFAST treat-bays
English Mufflns.....wriK6
SUNSHINE DELICIOUS COOKIES
Lemon Ceelers •••* wt~p&
31*
49*
• •••••••••••a* BTl.
H-GAL qqt
BLUE RIBBON
Ami
POWDERED	^
CeM Wafer AII..>i>-z'lRQ S3*
NN/TE OR CORAL	____
Ufebeey teee .o-..o«*bIaR 19*
TOP VALUE 3V STAMPS
TOP VALUE STAMPS
TOP VALUE STAMPS
TOP VALUE STAMPS
ANYi^^TAINfjtS
S any 2 PEGS KROGER S S COUNTRY OVEN OB •	vKROOER
■ BIO VALUE COOKIES •	^SPICES
I Ymll4 Tfcai Sun., Nor.	iil Zkn Sm.,NgK.1t^m9
WITH THIS COUPON ON 1^-LESORMORE POTATOES (
WfTIf' Tffil CUIIP.vlf Uff
BAG
YELLOW 6‘HIONS
pT;rgu:r:'<i>;fc: n. A7'icr;..;o;;7c_g_o^>.Tii.k
HRRimiimnRinnnnBinmiliilniRinoainpnnueu*
.VoNrf Thru SfHt., Nov.
I AiKtaforOot. B foot. hninnonnemnjRn
MOUTHWASH i GARGLE
Aelloerllc Lloferlee
m77‘ An..9r «n»»
U. TMf ^Vofitf Thru SuiLe Nor. TC. mt pj f. Mitk., IB At Krofor Oot. B to*#, kith. IjB innnmaamnnoenwnnnnnnnneo
mSIZEPRESH
An|ou |Poars
.13 "'TV
HehiE Vleefer
T 29* T37*
NORMAL. DRY OR OICY
■reck SheMM*
.UK 77*
Ci;:*
THE^PONTIAC PRESS. WKDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 18, 196P
NOW AT SEFA’S-Beer and Wine
UPER MARKET
1249 BAUWIN AVE.
JUST ONE BLOCK OFF COIMIIU ATE.
DEER HURTERS AND THOSE WHO HAVE TO STAY AT HOME, TOO - SPECIALS!
ASSORTED
ZION COOKIES
3 14-01. Pk|t.
ONLY ^1.00
ZESTY MEAT PIES — Crisp and gojden, these. He’ll enjoy haviijig a couple of sweet these little lunch box pies have a zesty filling gherkins tucked in another plastic sandwich of ground be^f seasoned with barbecue rel- bag to munch along with the meat pies, ish. A hungry man will want at least two of
Zesty Meat Pies Are |
Ideal Lunchbox Fare Sid c^j^e
i
A carried lunch ought to be a good idea to bake them a| Looking for a surprise for the every bit as delicious and at-'little shorter time, so that they!gy|j.tggn5	j^yse?
tractive as a meal eaten at|can be crisped a bit in the oven!„	u
home or in a restaurant. A Uttle'after you take them from thei^y |*>ese chocolate cupcake Imagination is required, and freezer, perhaps a bit more effort, but ^estY MEAT PIES
(3 o«"'^es each)
will be ample reward.	| ^^eam cheese, softened
Ztoty M^eat Pies are madej ^ ^	margarine,
slightly softened
pastry and a filling of ground ,“ •' .,,	,	„
Lef seasoned with barbecuel	aU-purpose
relish. They are just about the right size for packing in a small
“cheaters.” They are made of stuff youngsters like — chocolate, marshmallow cream, malted milk powder and puffed rice.
plastic sandwich bag.
These little pies can be mqde in quantity, if you wish, and frozen. In this case, it might be
Tips on Baking Offered Brides by Experts
These cupcakes are a novelty dessert everyone will enjoy. CHOCOLATE CUP CAKE “CHEATERS”
2^ cups puffed rice
2tablespoons butter or margarine
1	cup marshmallow cream
2	tablespoons chocolate-flavored instant malted milk powder
^ cup semisweet chocolate pieces
flour
^ teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons salad oil 1 pound ground beef round 1 teaspoon salt Dash pepper
% cup undrained barbecue relish
1 egg, slightly beaten 1 teaspoon water Mix cream cheese, butter, flour and teaspoon salt with a pastry blender until particles! are very fine; form into a ball	.	, ,
with hands and chUl until firm enough to roll.	, 12 walnut halves
In the event you are altar! In the meantime, heat the oii	*	*	*
bound, you’re probably midway in a skillet; cook beef until! Heat puffed rice in shallow through a crash course in brown, breaking up with the baking pan in preheated cookery. A few tips from theiback of a spoon. Drain ground	^50 degrees) 10
experts can go a long way beef on paper towels.	. ^	„	'	,,	'
toward helping you “pass the Combine browned beef, i minutes. Pour into, well-greased course.”	jteaspoon salt, pepper and bowl.
Home economists of The Westjbarbecue relish; mix well.!
Bend Company, 1 e a d i n g-Rolling about Vt of dough at a' Combine butter, marshmailow manufacturer of cookware, ad-time to %-inch thickness, cut cream mailed milk powder vise oven cooking can be a into fourteen 4Mj-inch circles. chocolate pieces in a small breeze even for the first time^ Spoon V* cup of meat mixture saucepan. Cook over low heat,| housewife. She must keep in onto the center of each of 7 stirring frequently until' mind that temperature Is pastry rounds; top with re-chocolate is melted and mixture regulated by the oven maining pastry rounds. Moisten is smooth, thermostat. Set it according to ^be edge of bottom pastry with
recipe directions.	^ater and crimp edges with a pour over puffed rice; stiri
mirronaa nvpn rank, in ^ Combine egg and until evenly coated. Pack intoj ^	w e H -greased, medium-sized
^ • PrE oven at least 10	c“PS- Place a chocolate
mLfreS besrr^^^^^^^^^	oven 25 square on top of each “cup-
baked foods	minutes. Chill and wrap for cake.” Place in pre-heated oven
•	Leave ! to m inches |	(350 degrees) 1 to 2 minutes or
between utensils and any oven! NOTE: Meat pies may be until chocolate is softened.
surface so air can circulate frraen and packed In lunch box!	*	*	*	.
freely. Restricting free circula- without thawing. Or if desired,! Quickly spread chocolate over tlon of air causes uneven heat, they may be thawed and heated top of cupcakes. Press a walnut
•	Stagger pan on oven racks in 350 degree (moderate) oven half into chocolate. When cool,
and do not block openings pro-for about 5 minutes or until remove from muffin cups.! vided for air circulation.	: crisp.	Makes 12 cupcakes.
CBOCmATE FLAVOR£1>-Oiqcolate cupcake “cheaters” deUght youngsters.
.J' ■	' '	' ■ ! h;	■ ■ '	^
21.I.25'
6i&39<
THE l^ONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1969
Csl.,/
CRAN-APPLE SURPRISE - Bright red cranberries polka dot the apple fiUing of this open-face pte. Cheddar cheese goes into
Many-Pktrpose Fruit
the pie crust as well as over the top of the baked pie.
Fresh Cranberry Time Is Here
By JANET ODELL	I During the Alabama Ses-|The crust for the open-face
Food Editor, The Pontiac Press jquicentennial celebration last; is made with Cheddar cheese.
In early summer we havejspriogj a^cookbewk^ was CRAN-APPLE DESSERT •trawberries; in July, If
Chowder Is Full ofGood Foods
steaming hot chowder, full of, vegetables and chicken give; warmth and nutritional value to; hungry chlldMn and adults, particularly during these nippy days of early fall.
The following chowder smart shopper recipe* from the U.S. Department of Agriculture Is a boon to budgets, especially those of pefsons participating In Federal food programs.
CHICKEN CHOWDER
Measufe 3 tablespoons fat in a large pan over medium heat. Chop 1 small onion and add to fat; cook until tender but not brown. Cut-up 3 me dium-eize potatoes and 2 large carrots. Add to pan.
Measure and put in pan llA cups cut-up chicken and 2 cups chicken broth (or 2 chicken bouillon cubes plus 2 cups water).
Cook slowly until vegetables are tender, about 20 i^nutes Add 2 cups milk and salt and pepper to taste. Heat slowly, but do not boll.
★	. i> ★
Makes 6 servings, about 1 cup: each. Serve with toast, canned peaches, milk and coffee.
cherries. And now we have cranberries for vivid color on our table.
This truly American fur It is a welcome addition to the diet. Not only does it add a decorative touch to any menu, but cranberry dishes have a distinctive tart-sweet taste that goes well with poultry and meat.
Drop cookies are usually eas^ to make.
CHOCOLATE ORANGE COOKIES
Compiled by the governor’s wife, Mrs. Albert P.
Brewer, the book contains more recipes. Most of them are from wives of state officials. Many are old traditional recipes.
The book may be. ordered by
mail for $4, Including postage,	2 cups sifted flour
from Sesqulcentennial head-	“	1 teaspoon baking siOda
quarters; Alabama 150, 15 Of-	% teaspoon salt
fice Park, Birmingham, Ala.l “	Cheddar V* PO«nd. d stick) butter o
35223.	i u	-	I margarine
Anyjme you serve a platter, prom this cookbook comes a	4 cup sugar
of cold meat or turkey, you‘ll'.„s.„ cranberrv gelatin salad ^ Prepare Crust: Prepare ^
___________i.i_j -c	nn«»pv artHintf lA Min rhefise tn ^ ®8g
cup cornflake crumbs
Crust:
Pastry for double crust pie Vi cup shredded Cheddar cheese	^
FiUing:
5 cups pared, sliced cooking apples
2 cups cranberries m cups sug^
Ofonpe Cookies Studded With Chocolate Bits
To Prepare Crust: Prepare
want some kind of sauce. This T'-'	' ”	........ pastry adding % cup cheese to
ils quickly made with jellied MOLDED CRANBERRY RING dry ingredients. Roll dough into 2 packages orange gelatin
1	cup boiUng water
2	cups cold water 1 orange
% pound fresh cranberries 1 cup nuts
1 cup celery, chopped 1 apple, chopped 1 cup crushed pineapple H cup sngar V« teaspoon salt Dissolve geintin in the boiling •water. Add cold water or juice 1 drained from pineapple, plus I water. Piit Orange and cranberries through food chopper.
cranberry sauce.
CRANBERRY ORIENTAL SAUCE
1	can (8-ounces) jellied cranberry sauce
V* cup catsup V* cup Port wine
2	tablespoons butter, melted 2 tablespoons soy snice t>lace all Ingredient^ in
small saucepan. Heat until jdlly has melted and mixture is smooth. Ladle intp container and seal. Makes about 1^ cups sauce
llxl5-inch rectangle. Place in 1%-quart shallow baking fold extra dough over and build up on edge of dish; flute edge.
To prepare Filling: In a large bowl combhie apples, berries, sugar, flour and cinnamon; turn into crust. Bake in a preheated 400 degree oven 40
from oven and sprinkle % cup cheese on top. Yield: 8 servings.
Cranberries are one of the easiest fruits to use. They’re easy to look over after washing. All you have to do Is discard any soft berries. No stemming, no cutting.
Mix all ingredients together and pour into individual molds. Chill unUl firm. Makes 8-10 servings.
A new way to serve cranberries is with apples in pie.
Asparagus Di^h Uses Sour Cream
1V« teaspoon grated Sind
y* cup orange juice 1 padcage (6 ounces) or 1 cu semi-sweet chocolate pieces On wax paper sift togethe the flour, soda and salt. In medium mixing bowl cream butter and sugar; thoroughly beat in egg.
Stir in flour mixture and cornflake crunaibs alternately witl orange rind and orange juice; mix well. Stir in chocolate.
Drop by level tablespoonfuls, a few inches apart, onto {^eased cookie sheet. Bake^ in a preheated 350-degree oven until lightly browned minutes. Makes about 4 dozen.
“ /■
><.' ' '
k
Prepare this elegent vegetable in a very elegant manner. One of the easiest aspargus re-1 cipes ever is
Hungarlaii Asparagus . ' j 2 cans cooked asparagus I spears, drained ; 1 cup sour cream ! 1 cup buttered bread crumbs I Place asparagus in buttered baking dish. Spoon sour cream over asparagus, top with buttered bread crumbs and bake in 350 degree oven until crumbs
BAKE
Iveiring tn 9 . THE PONTIAC MALL
SUI8 WALTER
Delicious Sausage
Carry Outs — 681-1333
Op«i av«ry Sv«iin« 'W y
PONTIAC MALL

NOODLES ALFREDO <- Add 2 tablespoons salt to 4-8 quarts rapidly boiling water. Gradually add 1 pound wide egg noodles (about 8 ct^) so mat water continues to boil. Cook, uncovered, stirring occasionally, until tender. Drain. Return noodles to cooking pot and quickly toss — and toss — and toss with 1 pound sweet butter, softened and' 1 pound freshly grated Parmnan cheese. It will take about 2 minutes to make mixture smooth, and creamy. Makes 6-8
Cheese Sauce Is for Vegetables
For a fall supper treat, prepare and serve this Swiss Cheese Sauce whldi'^is excejlent with peas or com. In a 2-quart saucepan melt Mi cup (tb stick) butter; stir in 3 tablespoons flour and Vt teaspoon salt. Remove from heat; gradually sUr in Ilk cups milk.
Return to heat; cook, stirring eonrtantly, until thickened. Gott t wddltlonSl minutes. Add Vk cUp shredded Swiss cheese; stir until (dieese hielts. Add to 2 packages (lO^wnce each) frown peas or corn, cooked and drained, Makes 8 servings.
Extend Egg
You can stretch a slightly beaten egg into vHilch food is to be dipped before crumbing by •dding a cobple of taUespoons efwatertott.
c-^

THE POyXIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER la, 1968
ITS YOUR MONEY
WASHIN0TON STATE-113 SIZE
Prkn Bthttiv ihrou§h SaturJay, Nar. ISth In Woynt, Oakland!, Matomb and Waihidnaw Caunth$
RED OR GOIDEN
Fnien Food Speiittb
MT. MKER MUHID
PEAS, CUT CORN or PEAS & CARROTS
4»^49c
ROSEDALE IRAKD
YEUOW SQUASH
10*
12-OZ.
PKG.
Southern YAMS.... 2'^29*
Jam Pflrktr ~ Rmorlco’s Fovbrifo
SAVE AT AW	aa ■■	■ m
dexo SlMrteiiiig 3<%65
FRUIT CAKES
LIGHT RATTER
m>Ll. SIZE I 3-LB. SIZE I 5-LB. SIZE
|79 ^29 ^59
THIS WEEK’S FEATURE
OINTY MOORE	34,1
Beef Slew________79*
Ivory liquid • e e & 57
ARP—PREMIUM QUAUTY	MM A.
Instant Ceflee	99
CHUNKS OR SUCID
A&P Swiss Cheese ‘‘^99*
CEREAL
Cheeries......'^ 48*
A&P Solmen... »» 69
SAVE 20*
1-U.
A I.
Parker sue
<TOOVINCIAL SAUCmi^O
ea>
nna. tot valuh
DssMalar Impiied *dM|> h»lnr bliie end whHe fino quality dlnnoP'-ueiebBwofwifce place ntthwirfoee la faatuiad at thbwiy special pdee. Taka hcnw 3 or 4 places each time you shopi
SUM A COMPUTE SET iWD MVE UP TO 50%I
A&P-SPECIAL SALE
Freestone Peaches Bartlett Pears
OR
1 JANE PARKER—Plate •rCwtaM 14S. M MM. 1 Angel Feed take iiim 49	1 JANE PARKER—Haartlitakad ^ |4p < Rye Breads 3 89
ANN PAGE —CHICKEN RICE OR Ckicken Noodle Soup yoo ^7 CANS ■ A&P YULOW CLINO—HALVES OR « .........	DOUBLE LUCK—CUT ^ GREEN i L. I^C BEANS. . M m m OPP LAIBl—RED ROSE ^ teoBogs.......'tSi? 94'
Fruit Cocktail
4^hs99*
A&P YULOW CLINO-HALVES OR .
Sliced Peaches 4	89
1-PT.
S-OI.
sn.
SENECA —100% McIntosh
Gentle Pels........
SAVE AT AAP ON
Alhn Seltzer.....
eiANT SiZS—YOa OPP LAItt	,4, amuks
Oxydol Detergent % 73
Oyoii Crock Roane.
T.
je^efarion Reons. Heinz Vinegar.
away.
2J».» KSJaS;
•T. aan.	cnaAMarrai cAssaaoLS—raozBN
an. 29*	Mocoroni ond Cheeie
42< .	Mocoroni.
MS.	KITCHm TSSTaD
79*	GoldMedolFlour.
4 MZ.	4Ac ^ netaN-aieH>a
2 PMI.	39«	Celioo Rich
Cillefto
<*r
THi HOT ONI
,H<f. iw. '
, ' --------% .
BBIRiRRAtg^BlvPaPAiPP’ mim
WHh fhli Coupon and 15.00 Purdima
NoHAHoM
39*
Mmr.litk UmH
With thii Coupon ond $5.00 PUrehese Ann Pngo Layor-Encogl Angoi Food
Cako Mixoc
Smuekoi^e Syrupe_____________
BMucKaa'c-mieeA cAiiMSL or pmaAPSLa
let Croom Toppi^e


yffmrnmmm-
SAVE 12*
COUPON ON
cacklerird^frozen
FrlMl ChMum
- 87*

PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 186Q
SpMial
SALi
Cut from CunhM PurkunI "sum-tmr
All-Beef Hamburger
Pnpm§d fn$h Many rimasfvary^ay*
NTMADn-WHOU UMI.ldNILISS	ms
W99t Virginia Hami 95
leoHl TO t-oz. sizi	y ^
Lobstoi* Toils ••••••• ^
HYGRADrS
IONILIS»,<-«HUCK CUT
BoofRoatl...........'^09*
*ium^uaHr	aac
BoUing Baof...........*^ 39‘
Boof Briskol..........*'99
KKRICH SMOKID Ot
Polish Sgusage........*99
KKMCH—ALL Ml AT
Ring Bologna.... "i^S9
fitisn OR niiD	#
^ Filiots clix....... 69
b^n Porch Fillets.. *69*
Franks ™77‘
GLENOALE — FLAT
Boneless Hani
1"
Fully |. Cooked »
WILSON’S
Slic^ Bacon.. ^ 79
WHOU OR HALF
Slab Bacoil
59s
8 TO 10 LB. SIZE
NO DEPOSITING RETURN Choice of 9 FloYonI-—16-OZ. CAN twion IAc PCNP III	Aor unswiitinid 14t. oajUe Grapefruit Juice.. '^ 39 ML MOHTI-^LiaHT a m Mt Chunk Tuna Fish 3 *^ns 1 I.ORAIN ■■ m euc ARP Aspirin	'ISf' 19* COLD CAHUUS JW Ac Contac....	- 99*
A«P fUrathwash 39* 			 "ir:"::" 		rrrr	
ANH PAGE KRUNCHY OR CREAMY SMOOTH
PEANUT
BUTTER ^
59
SUITAIU
o o 2 45*
Broait 0"(8lilc1^fyT«Mm,
43<
Cuf Greon Beoni
aiANT SIZI
CulGioonBeoa. 2W51< •aVllSBoan......
OIANT SIZI
2&%49<
LARil MZI

OlAHTSltO-lAOFFLAlllti?	*-^1. ^ j|,	«AHT SIZI	WANT «ZI	W|B|
^lye Tablels64 dioor Dotorgont tSi 83 DaA Bolorgont..	75 flilo D
TWO COLORS
THE PONTIAC PRESS* WEnNESIjAY^NOVEMBER 12, IPflO
Twn pninpc
■	UULIIIlll
★ PEOPLES ★ FOODTOWM ★ PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN ^ PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ FOOD
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEPNESDAY, NOVEMBER H, IM9
Bridge Tricks From Jacobys
By OSWALD & JAMBS ac«, a second spade to his hand, JACOBY	irunning the diamonds and
When today’s hand was,eventually risking his fine con-played In a match-point game | tract by taking a heart finesse
In Bremerton, Wash., several pairs reached six no-trump. One player made sevoi by winning the first spade with the ace, leading a diamond to dummy’s
to wind up with three spades, two hearts, six diamonds and two clubs The hand caused a lot of
'Junior Iditori Qu|i on
to be no safe way to i seven. It was obvious that {hearts should not be attacked until the diamond Jack had been located. After that was done, a unsuccessful heart finess would leave declarer shut out of dummy’s king of spades and ace of hearts. .
We have been asked to com* ment on the hand. We ‘will start with the bidding. The hand is a very difficult one to bid while we don’t approve of the slambang style adopted by correspondent, there la sclentiBc. way to haiidle these cards. ,
As for the {day, we feel that
six no-trump Is such a good contract that no risk should be taken and, once the jack’ of dlammds drops, seven can be nude without any risk.
Here is the play. Ttidk two diamond to the ace; trldl three; spade to the queen: tlton run «ff the rest of the dlamimdt and the ace and Unf ef (dubs. South wiU be left with twn little clubs and the el^t of hearts. West will have to come down to three cards before North doer.
* w w
He wiU either have to unguaid hia king of hearts or ^t of spades. If he uiiguards the eight^ id spades, declarer will discard dummy’s queen of hearts and make the 13th trick with the spade seven.
QUBSTHKN; Does a parrot know what he’s tallShg about?
ANSWER: We speak because air, rudiing through the voice box or larynx to the throat, causes the vocal chords to vibrate produciiqi sounds which come out throu^ the mouth.
As these sounds onerge, we alter them by dianging ^ diape of the mouth civity with the jaw and especially with the tongue and Ups, thus producing the different sounds of
meet of them lack the deUcate speak.
Parrots have the gift of dosely imitating other sounds, sudi as Ittim and	can do this because the vary
large thick toniue, nydi helps' them to extract meat bmn, the nuts thqr crack, with their bills, can also shape the mouth cavify to make sounds which resemble human speech va*ycloedy.
But the parrot lacks the complex human brain whidi can attadi naeiaitogs to the diffmrent sounds, so . that speech can be used for conununication. Without such a brain, the parrot hasn't the sUghtest idea of what he is talking about.
BUSINOa SHAKEUe DUB. On* W*M vu In pow*r taint * itap cMwn «r It. HitiMd upttalri.
BEST BUYS; Guni, butinttt clotti*t.
"^tIuRUS (^11 •ccurrtnett affect Many will look to courttL Don't compound In asetntrle mannar. Sta
’‘cEiHINI (May tIOun* N): Y( atfactlon, tatlifactlon-but If could . coitly. Moant -avoid axtravagana. can hav* duality without forgattln-tnon tant* *r Budgat. B* analytical CANCER (Jun* ll-July 32) i Y aomplot* Important traniactlon. Kay It to bt ratpantipl* and ramambar lattoni from patt. Maintain ttaody pac*. Don't •o toe far atlald. Stick with ttw tamlllar.
LEO (July 2J-AUB. 22): Finish rathar than b*atn> avoid prattur* tactict. What
Cwaiit .comat to you. Maintain pelso.
Ota iont* of ihowmanship workt In your^bahalt. You oro a winner It eon-
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22): You ipend, but you got much In return. Impulsei
Breva correct. Hunchao pay dlvldondt. ut avoid being rockiest. Follow through,
Vlth you. Maont you can bo at right ploco, at right tlm*. Fun Indicatad, but
--------- .....----------- , I,,
rip may n*t%
ling With group, organijotlon. 'OTwncB .Bfda couiO. Somoono workt lulttly In your behalf. Raalla thi* and
*S?S}ITtSIrIUS*''^(Hov. 22.DOC.	21)1
Aonay daclilant ar* aeeantad. Not < '
0 mix butinoti and ploatur*. S ritndt are In mood to earebrata.,But . .
antinuat high. Taam up with LIBRA In-
Indicatad. Kay It to eoncontroti you want to attain. It It avtiltbw.
AQUARIUS (JM. 2IFFtb. IS): Avoid tuporfluout action. Tlipo your mevaa. Yeui
....... J ....	..	yp	,jy.|
2t); Aeeant on trlondt, hopat and withat. Farmit mote, partner to iharo spotlight. This VUI d* much to avoid noodlou dlspuM. Ro accordingly.
IF THURSDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY freotar froodom la on horlton. You
pooplo. Wi
y^Stii ■*'
eaaoral Fa
Truck-Train Crash ^ in Sfgfe is Fatal
VICKSBURG (AP) ^ Edward, M. HUI, aj, of Hsrlan, Ind., was killed Tuesday when his truck was rammed by a train at a crossing near this sduth-j cm Kalamazoo County community.
Police said Hall was stopped ' "Id two cars waittorfsr s
the PONTIAC PRISS. WEPyESDAY. NOVEMBER 12. lt>89

Area Girl's Promiss Cdpped in'Promises, Promises'
By EARL WILSON	,
r ®P«nlns in the bit Broadway twnffirni --Promtoes.	Donna McKechnIe went t6 London rS-
ly to open tile Wune show tihOre,
•"«» hn» MtOed
M f, j '''***®*' ™*y nnwM her many Pontiac iriendi.
★ ★ ★
ponna, daughter of Mr. and Mn. Don Mo< ^hnle, ms Middlebelt Rd., itarta her day at 7 a.n. She'i at the ABC atndlo in an hour hv to part in “Dark Shadowi.“ After teaming her iinw, ^tting on her makeup, and reheantng with others, she’s ready to tape the TV seriat by I o’clock.
★ w ★
“After that there’s Just time for a quick sandwich untii I’m due at the theater at 7:30,’’ she said at Gaiiagher’s.
“I’m home at midnight, but I don’t get to sleep until 2 in the morning.’’
I And that’s what show business means to Donna who, 10 years ago when she was 16, left home to perform with a dance group at high schools and colleges in the south.
Since then she’s danced on the Johnny Car-DONNA son show, appeared in four Broadway shows (“two hits and two bombs’’), and made her fUm debut in Otto Preminger’s “Tell Me ’That You Love Me, Junie Moon.’’
still have to make my film debut after all,’’ she said. “They cut me out of ‘Junie Moon.’ I did a scene with a non-actor, but apparently they couldn’t make it work out so they cut it.’’
Donna’s not concerned, because she’s busy with her hit Rroadway muslcaPand highly popular TV show.
“When I first did ‘Dark Shadows,’ I cried real tears in my t aeene. The writers were so impressed, they had me crying Ih every scene I did.
:. “Mother wrote, ‘Why are you so sad all the time?’ ’’
★ w ★
-■ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Singer Roy Clark, after a bumpy Hollywood-to-Nashvilla flight, said, “That ride was so rough file ttfjacker got off in Houston.’’ .
; WISH I’D MH> ‘THAT: Hal Salzman saw girls having trouble getfitig into cdbs, and philosophized: “Girls who wear maxis/-Shouldn’t ride taxis.’’
REMEMBERED QUOTE; “I’m proud to pay taxes in the United States. The only thing is, I could be just as proud for half the money.’’— Arthur Godfrey.
EARL’S PEARLS: Statistics show piore people quit smoking in ’69 than, in ’68. “Because," claims John DeConey, “everybody fho qutt^’68 quit again in’69."
Some of the Mets, wearing uniform numbers on the back of their tuxedos, opened at Las Vegas Caesars Palace. A patron asked, “Who can beat the Mets?” and Donn Clendenon said, “The blackjack dealers and the slot machines!" That’s earl,
This Is The New Judge
2 Custom Pontiacs at Exhibit
Two custom-built Pontiacs —I featuring orange carpeting and the Cielo del Sol and the La black pateht vinyl-highback Vlnta — will be the center of bucket seats with built in attraction in the Pimtiac Moti»r| seatbelts.
Division display at the S4th
nual Detroit Auto Show Saturday through Nov. 23.
Also included in the division’s 13,500-square-foot Coho Hall exhibit area will be 21 new Pontiacs.
The platinum-colored Cielo del Sol, a specially customized Grand Prix, features an eleo-trically-operab^d sun roof, a customized rear window with a fm-mal roof, special rear-oid treatment, an all-leather interior and a 455-cubic-lnch engine. Cielo del Sol is Italian for sun roof.
Highlights of the La Vinta, a special'Judge model, are anl	*	★	★
exterior of pearlescent orbit “Our 1970 models are deorange with complementary, signed to meet the full range of stripes blended with an Interior!driving needs of even the most
THE VICTOR
Under the hood, La Vinta has a Ram Air IV engine rated at 370 horsepower linked to a four-speed floor-mounted transmission. La Vinta, meaning the victor in Itidian, also is eq^pped with a hood-mounted tachometer, the rally gauge cluster and clock instrument panel and white-lettered tires.
Pontiac, which is selling in third place in the industry for the ninth consecutive year, some 167,000 units ahead of its nearest rival, anticipates selling " cars in 1970.
'910,1

Daily Almanac
By.UnltMl Press Intematienal Today is Wednesday, Nov. 12, the 816th day of 1969'with 49 to follow.
llie moon is between its new idiiBse and first quarter.
The morning stars aTe Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
’The evening stars are Mars and Saturn.
★ ★ ★
On this day in history:
' In 1920 Kenesaw Mountain
Landis was named the first Commissioner of baseball.
In 1925 Josef Stalin became unifisputed dictatorvof the ‘Communist party In Russia when Leon Trotsky was ex-, pelled.
In 1941 Nazi soldiers were halted by the Russians at the outskirts of Moscow.
In 1968 the Supreme Court ruled the Arkansas anti-evolution law unconstutitional.
HAPPIHESS IS CHARLIE BROWN’S
Comt tarly Charlie Brown TRIO
•	CHET RACINE - Banjo
•	CHUCK RUTTY - Piano
•	FRED KRAUSE - Tuba
Drinki,
**Wor$tRib$ in Town** I
eTSW.Kannatt,	332-7111
Ex-Senator Supports a Postal Corporation
“VANESSA REDGRAVE IS SIMPLY GREAT IN ‘THE LOVES OF ISAD0RA‘!”>i/ff msosz/v,.
'A WONDERFUL MOVIE...
A TOUCHING AND DEUBHTFUL W0RK!"-t//f«r.»«/».
VANESSA REDGRAVE
^^THE LOVES OF ISADORA!^
iniUfl	ammlvKIliiElREISZ ..
JAMES fox IVANTCHENKO -«JASONROBARDS
WUMCI JM« ■	MElVyN BWOO Clitt WI« ■ i, StlWH WA06
DM biKARELREISZ'PrMbrROBERTndRAYMOND HAKIM
HURON
By ISABELLE HALL WASHING’rON (OPI) - Like many Americans, former Sen. Thruston B. Morton, R-ky., thinks the U.S. mail service is deplorable.	'
The difference is that he is busy lobbying for improvement. He thinks the best way is for Congress to convert the post office into a ncmprofit government cwporation.
Mwton held a small luncheon to make his pitch to the press. He admitted almost every cause he sets a hand to these days is lost.
The celery Mi^mixed grill, and pumpkitr^to came and went untouched while the eloquent, entertaining Morton pushed' postal reforin.	,
RUN BY CONGRESS “The post office is unmanageable,” he said. “It’s run by 535 members of Congress who form the board of directors. ’They set rates and fix' costs.	I
“Actually," the onetime Republican national chairman who is ' the brother of the present one said, “the members of Congress, would it up. But publicly l say they don’t
He was talking postal . unions, which
the removal of the post office from tight congressional control in fear it will give them less bargaining power.
Congressmen are highly responsive to the postal unf who represent some 750,000 emjployes.
PROPOSED IN 1987 ’The government corpwation was first proposed in 1967 by former Postmaster General Lawrence F. O’Brien, Democrat, and since endorsed and subniitted to Congress by both President Lyndon B. Johnson and President Nixon.
Morton and O’brien united in what Morton calls a “strange political marriage,” cochairmen of the Citizens Comnutte for Postal Reform.
discriminating customer,’’ sail F. James McDonald, a General Motors vice president and Pontiac general manager.
★ ★ ★
'The Catalina, Executive and Bonneville models reflect the influence of the pace-setting Grand Prix with the vertical center grille. Grand Prix sales more than tripled in 1969 over the previous model year.
2 EXCLUSIVES A new 455-cubic-inch nigine rated at 360 horsepower is standard on the Boiuicville and optional ^n the Grand Prix Executive, Catalina and GTO.
Pontiac has two exclusives this year — a plastic gas tank and a reflectorized tailgate on S^ari statim wagons.
* * ★
TTie plastic tank will be offered on a limited basis during the model year on Bonneville Executive and Catalina station wagons sold in California.
it it
’Die reflectorized tailgate is standard on all wood:paneled Safari wagons. During the day, the paneling on the tailgate matches the rest of the car. When li^t hits the reflectorized area at night, the car is well illuminated and can be seen for several hundred feet.
I OPiN 6:30. STARTS 6.4S
oiiiiwo[P[[i,„”THE BRIDGE AT REMAGEN"
I	A dot on the map.	i
A motion picture as big as history. •
■PKBSBmijmewMj
foUVCR MICHAEL I REED POUARO
HAMHIBAL I BROOKS
12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Open II to Wed. thru Set. and 2:90 pm Sun., Mon., Tuet.
1T5 fllL FOR SHLE M;
Im #n Hake
Sunday Brunali 10:80>1
Now Appearing
THE HEADLINERS
JIM HIAD ond DICK BURNS
% Satk innr
OPEN 11 A.M. t« 2 A.M.
SUNDAY CHICKEN DINNER. FAMILY STYLE
3230 PINE UKE ROAD ORCHARD LAKE, PHONE 682-0600
Cooktiil Hour
5-7 in th* Leung*
THURSDAY Only
CHINESE BUFFET
2« DINNERS”
LUNOH
.V ^
Closed Monday
$7.2 Million in Oil Damage Claims S'eftled
LONDON (/f) — The American owners of the Torrey Canyon paid |7.2 million to Britain and France.yesterday tb settle oil pollution claims filed after the giant tanker grounded off southwest England two years ago.
Lloyd’s insuance brokers said they believed it was the biggest settlement In marine history over oil claims. Some 35 million gallons of oil spilled from the broken tanker and fouled French and British beaches.
WWW
Atty. Gen. Sir Eiwyn Jones
Id the House of Commons that the payment the owners and charterers of the 61,263-ton Torrey Canyon was “full and final settlement of the claims of the two governments.”
But he said the owners had set aside another $60,000 to compensate any private claimants against the ship wdio had not already been reimbursed by the governments for their losses.
A SUBSIDIARY
The payment came from the Barracuda Tanker Corp., a subsidiary of the Union Oil Co. of California with offices in Bermuda. ’The vessel was chartered by the Union Oil Co.
The British Foreign Office said the payment and the final agreement were made at a meeting between Barracuda representatives, the attorney general and French Anibassador 6 e o f f r oJ de Courcel at the Foreign Office.
W iW w
’The agreement ended the financial furw that began after March 18,1967, when the Torrey Canyon — three times as long as a football field and the big-ship ever to sink in British waters in peacetime — rammed the Seven Stones rocks off the southwest tip of England.
ILOOMritlD HILLS
STORE HOURS
SUN-THURS. 11:30 A.M. - 9:00 P.M. FRI-SAT. UNTIL 10:00 P.M.
VALUABLE COUPON 50c OFF
WITH COUPON
ON ANY CHICKEN, FISH, SHRIMP OR RIB DINNER
COUPON GOOD THRU DIC. 7, IM*
VALUABLE COUPON
[IVALUABLE COUPON $1.00 OFF
$5.15
«4 15
>UPOH
14 PCS. CHICKEN, FRENCH FRIES, COLE SUW, ROLLS, & HONEY
COUPON COOO THRU DEC. 7, tW
IVALUABLE COUPON
for Faster Service Please Call Ahead
332-9275

THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1969
BIG SAVINGS ARE YOURS EVERY DAY WITH BUSHEL Tl’ CASE PRICES! REMEMBER,
BuM’n’Case
EVERY DAY BUSHEL SAVINGS!
MICHIQAN QROWN APPLES
Mclntofeh or Jonothon
44'^ 48*
FRESH
Gr««n Broccoli
39*
Brwcral Sprenli f.<a.2CK
YOU
SAVE
AGAIN
NORTHWEST QROWN
Bose Poors
28*
NEW CROP-JUMBO
Wolnots or Po

ONLY	LB.
FULL *0’ JUICE, SWEET
Florida Oranges
MAKE CENTS HERE!
lOJ	use for sauces	Q
Progrosso Tomato Paste
6 OZ. FL. CAN
YOU SAVE AGAIN!
FINE, MEDIUM OR WIDE
Moellers
Noodles
1 LS. BOX
10*129
FRESH pRCHAR_D FLAVOR Eatin time	
Applosauco	1111
1A< CAN E^O	
DISCOUNTS ALWAYS!
wamaHiwifFMoaieD
Ajax
Cleanser
14 OZ. WT. CAN
Hawaiian Fruit Drinks
SAVE BIG HERE!
4^2 X 4^2 TWO PLY
Family Scott Tissue
4 ROLL PACK
WHOLE OR SLICED
Buttorfiold Potatoes
CUT OR SLICED	'
Town Pride Boots
TOWN PRIDE
Cut Groan Boons
DELICIOUS TENDER
Little Nop Poos
NORTH AMERICAN.
Moshrpom Sooco
IN sunflower OIL
Lino Key loss Sardines
14 OZ. WT. CAN
SKOZ.
WT.
CAN
4 3/8 OZ. WT. CAN
10«
»10«
no«
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C—18
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C—14
THE PONTIAC TRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 19«P
Human Factor in Plane Crashes Cited
FORD GRANT — The first payment of a $15,000 grant from Ford Motor Co. to Oakland Univ«a*slty for furthering engineering education was presented yesterday to Dean John Gibson (left), school of engineering, by Frank Budde of Ford. The grant is part of Ford’s program of aid to higher education at selected colleges and universities.
LONDON (AP) - He looks so dependable in the adverUse-r ments, with those eagle eyeq in the tanned nigged face. He Is the Image of a man you can trust with your life.
In fact, a book published In Umdon has warned, an airliner pilot Is dangerously like the rest of us in one respect; He is human, and so is liable to make mistakes. But his mistakes can kill.
★ * ★
Just like some of us, some pilots even get mixed up between their left hand and their right hand, says author David Beaty in “The Human Factor in Aircraft Accidents,” published by Seeker and Warburg.
He quoted one case of a pilot in the Norwegian air force who
was found tb look for his wedding ring tof identify his left ud right hands when ordered' to bank his aircraft.
THE HUMAN FACTOR
Beaty said that while huge sums have been spent on increasing the reliability of planes, little has been done to investigate psychological factors behind human errors in the air.
‘
Beaty, a former squadron leader in the Royai Air Force, and an ex-senior captain the state-owned British Overseas Airways Corp., wrote: “Latent psychological tendencies within the pilot should be investigated in an effort to identify them and point out the
He cited official 'findings that the percenlage of pilot-error accidents keeps rising while acoi-dents from other causes keep falling.
* w w
Despite this, Beaty continued, the tendency has been to increase pilot-error accidents “by putting more and more psychological pressures on the pilots," as, for example, through the faster speeds and complexities of modern Jets.
PRESSURE TO MOUNT^
These pressures will intensify in the next 10 years, when a pilot may be carrying 1,000 passengers in one of the giant next-generation airliners, the author said.
Beaty urged that psychologi-
cal research I go hand in hand with bcKpit design.
H4 contended that apart from the VCIO and Argosy, boUi British, few aircraft have cockpits “carefully designed to house a fallible human being ... The captain has to fit himself in amongst a myriad of switches, controls, levers and dials—and adjust himself as best he can— instead of the other way around."
“Inevitably, as a result, accidents happen. It is on the misreading of instruments and the mistaking of switches where
Beaty observed-“Just as, when you get a new car, for a while you are reaching'for fhe brdkn or the light switches to the position where these were on your old car."
* ■ * *
In calling for diligent research to cut down human errors in the air, Beaty emphasized; “The real killer areas in civil aircraft accidents appear to be concerned with human factors Involved in undershoots, collisions, hitting mountains, overshooting, overrunning the runway, training, trying ‘~
alrcrew are particularly maintain visual flight into invulnerable. For often, confusion strument conditions.
is extremely easy.”	I ------------------
Trouble can result when a pl-| Automobile accidents have lot long accustomed to one kind I claimed 1,700,000 Uvea since of plane is switched to another, 11900.
Monks' Frescoes Cut Pattern for Fashions
BELGRADE (UPI) — The taining the tunic design but way Aleksandar Joksimovic keeping it bare un-sees it, the monks of 13th cen-jdemeath—so.” He produced an tury Serbia were right up there!artist’s sketch, obviously based with Carnaby Street as creators;on the same idea, of a hip-hug-of swinging fashions for both sexes.
“Its astonishing,” the 36-year-old Yugoslav fashion designer said amid the pandemonium of his studio Just before a major j	★	★	★
collection.	“Male and female fashions
“I’ve traveled all over this'are bpeonUng more and more country, finding a n d alike, giving us a high degree of photographing frescoes o n adaptability with many of these monastery walls. The ideas are motifs. They differ chiefly in more and more exciting—and uses of material and colors,” very much in keeping with the he said, contemporary fashion picture,! a blonde fashion mannikin ‘ including the mini trend,” he sailed in to ask a question, then said.	. I paused to adjust the purple silk
ging, deep-cut dinner dress as contemporary as anything seen in the boutiques of London, Rome or Paris — but with a distinctly different look.
kerchief spilling from the breast pocket of Jbksimovic’s trimly tapered black corduroy suit. An equally violet turtle neck pullover completed the ensemble.
“Aldcsandar’s a bachelor, you know,” she purred, “We like him better that way.” Aleksandar smiled, then went on talking.
“We’re doing a lot of thinking about men as well — I think
Joksimovic means it. I n scarcely dght years, his unorthodox notions <2 a new, totally original “Yugoslav look” in fashion have catapulted Idin from a faceless Job designing uniforms for nurses, waiters^ BACHELOR and bus drivers to the threshold of international famS.
EXAMPLE SHOWN "Look l»re, for example,” he said, profforing a photo^aph of a hresco detail showing an ancient soldier in mail covered by a tunic cut to about mini length, nieh are becoming more and “All jrou have to do is I more interested in fashion, eliminate the leg covering andjThere is more ground still to adopt a deep decoUetage by rq-l explore.
Cosby Career Takes a New Turn Tonight
By BOB THOMAS | Cosby came to this realization HOLLYWOOD (AP) — “Hey, last April, when he was sched-Hey, Hey—It’s Fat Albert” on tiled to begin production on his television tonight, and his ad-1 NBC weekly series. He discov-vent marks another dimension |ered that others were doing in the remarkable career of Bill things that pertained to him Cosby.	land, he thought, doing them
On an NBC special tonight, badly. He ended his partnership Cosby will recount the spectacu- and took over “The Bill Cosby
pal. Fat Albert,^, in a n i m a ted ‘ form. Thus Cosby has gone fr«n nightclub comedian to tele vision; guest performer to dramatic series star — “I Spy”— to come-' dy series and
Show” as executive producer.
★ * ★
I His concept of the show:
I “Chet Kincaid (his character)
I is first of all a human being. The fact that he makes his living as a schoolteacher is strictly incidental. He could be a truck [driver or a garbage collector; it [wouldn’t matter.
‘This is not a show about a THOMAS school, and some of the seg-now animation. Next, feature ments don’t even show him in pictures.	jthe classroom. One show w<
•k *	*	I want to stay away from h
Although he seems to be going:‘Room 222.’ I haven't seen it in all directions—he also plays and I don’t know what it’s all Las Vegas and concert dates— about. I hope they are deliver Cosby claims he is striving to ing a lot of problems on that simplify his career. Earlier this show. I’d like them to take care year he divested himself of of the problems about schools, partners who had ratablished a	OP 3^5^.
corporation Involved m all kinds of entertainment ventures.	j
“Tve done away with the big! office in Beverly Hills, and the
branch offices In New York and Amsterdam and Rome,” he mused. “I don’t need all that. All I want to do is make this I aeries, and a couple of es we are comniitted for, and some specials, including Fat Albert
aspects of Army—or Marine-life, but each has a different point of view. Not that I’m comparing myself to Corner Pyle.” Cosby’s approach to the
television series, and a couple of
’ didn’t put him in the .classroom ;Tlip comedian himself disputed ‘BIGGEST MISTAKE’	i NBC’s selection of the fijrk epi-
“And I'm overseeing these sode, not because it failed to things myself. My biggest mis- portray him as a teacher but betake in the past was in letting cause he felt it was not one of other people do things that per- the best shows, tained to me. It just doesn’tj	★	*	★
w^rk that way. You may thinkj In any case, the results have Aat you’re getting a manager,'proved highly satisfactory to piitJater you find out that he | NBC, (Sosby and the sponsor.
wants to be a producer Tfi'haid to’find those who want to continue doing the same work toey're hired to do.”,
The show ascended to the top 10 in early ratings and appears to be one of the solid hits of the new season.
" V
THIS PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1969
C—l«
)
Milwaukee Resident Theater Is Halm
...
> ff -


(EDITOR’S NOTE - WhOet resident theater is facing <ur-vival pr'oblems in many cities of\ the nation, it appears to have\ reached a degree of solid, success in Milwaukee. Here if a look at the Milwaukee Repertory Theater Company and some of the reasons it has survived for 15 years.)
born, Bomftimei cliff-hanger survival.
“The one thing I’ve tried not to do was Just please an audience — and It’s worked dandy,’’ says the restless Impresario.
WEDDED TO ’THE COMMUNITY - The Milwaukee Repertory ’Theater Company credits Its 15 years of existence to the fact It has developed as a community enterprise. Its presentations have included both the
By WILLIAM GLOVER AP Drama Writer MILWAUKEE, Wis. -always challenge, never coax. Even If there’s petticoat rebellion.
tried and true and the untested. Here, In the' wedding scene from "A Midsummer Night’s Dream,’’ are (from left) Tana Ricken, Jack Swanson, Rhoada B. Carrol, Penelope Reed and Marc Aiatmo.
That, Tunc Yalman asserts. Is why the Milwaukee Repertory Theater Company he heads as artistic director has multiple cduses for celebration this after 15 years of stub-
“You always must remember that true theater is the opposite of mere entertainment. 11 should stir the spectator and set up vibrations. And we appear to have developed an audience which expects to think, fee! and experience emotional reactivation.’’
A NEIW HOME The company moved a few weeks ago from the cramped facilities of a converted Cinema into Milwaukee’s new, $12-million Performing Arts Center.
Six other	resident	enterprises,!	“Most important of all,” bel	“But if that’s	all you do,	then
including symphony, opera and	adds, “Is that this company has	your theater	l^omes	a
youth groups, are hous^ in the	developed	as a community museum.	So	you	must do	new,
big, boxy complex of glass and	enterprisd	and not b e e n untried	plays	too.”
marble. Extra artistic challenge superimposed from the outside The first novelty, a brace of Is promised by guest ensembles as has happened in some cities, plays by Rosalind . Ilrexler, including	on-tour	theater	Ciwwth has been sometimes	shocked some	spectatws	with
groups.	slow, but what has developed is	conversational	candor	and
For the time being, however, »“«-s.’’	brought the municipal vice
MRTC appears to have attained EARLIER EFFORTS a degree of solid st^illty that	McCallum has been a part of
contrasts greatly with what Is	the effort	to create a pro-	.ifS
in cltle. .hern
resident dramatic endeavor is ever since 1954. A guest-star experiencing increased financial gygtem, stock operation, guest and aesthetic pressures.	directors and f 1 n a 11J a
„	_	.	Marat-
rtu ,	T.	w n 11 _	*	n . j Sade”	was first scheduled,
Charles	R.	M c C a 11 urn	permanent	company were tried	20 women subscribers
business manager of MRTC, with uneasy results.	threaten^ to withdraw aU
attributes constant growth “There was a question
partly to the fact that a large whether we would survive at all „n. TrTC . stood politely
part of the populace comes a few years ago when affairs « j although several of from a Germanic.culturalgot into a state of ad-17e Tam.e 17abTfal• d
background in which theater ministrative turmoil,’’ McCal-
has traditional importance. lum says.
themselves from what turned out to be the company’s biggest box-office draw, they did renew their subscriptions.
Innovative policy was reaffirmed with arrival of the company in its new home.
For the first time the main
In 1966, Yalman, born in Istanbul and a graduate of the Yale School of Drama, was signed in the hope of achieving artistic stability.
He started his first season ,	.	-
with a mod version „ f P*«y
Sophocles’ “Electra,” t h a t ^y, Equity company of 16 some head-shaking, and	*7’
began a nonsubscription aux-
iiliary called 'ITieater of Tomor-^y^ Frank Gagl ano, opening ' It was the first ex-
iperimental program in the se/son the troupe Is doing icountry to get foundation sup-,«''«
I j	repertory, another step toward
^ '	i Y a 1 m a n ’ s goal of ac-
I BALANCE SOUGHT	J complishment.
“Let’s put it this way,’’ he Yalman isn’t impressed by sums up his credo. “One has 25 the general condition of thesplc centuries of drama to choose endeavor elsewhere, from. A 'season must be a ‘"There is no regional theater balance of classics dealing with movement, it is a wave. What eternal values, and every the Ford Foundation started in theater generation has a right the early ’60s with six com-also to see such things as panics became that wave, but Shakespeare and Chekhov. Then the degree of interest in any you have to present also the city is ephemeral until some established contemporaries — solid financial base is Pinter, Beckett, Ionesco. established.”
LAVISH COS’TUMES—Exhibiting the most eye-catching of the Milwaukee Repertory ’Theater Company’s production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream’’ — its costumes — are Charles and Mary Jane Kimbrough.
Priestly Subversives Are Target in Brazil
SAG PAULO, Brazil (AP) -Terrorists in cassocks and priestly subversives are the latest targets of Brazil’s security police. ,
Police informants say archbishops, bishops and other high church officials have been alerted by government security units that a growing number of Roman Catholic priests, friars and seminary students are participating in terrorism and other activities against the military government.
Authorities believe churchmen have helped terrorists cross the Brazilian borders into Uruguay, Paraguay imd Argentina. Others have acted as leg-id liaison officers between various temrist groups, and some turn Out antigovem-ment literature.
Police in Sap Paulo hail^e cmi-firmed that a number of priests and friars were arrested in connection with the terrorist movement led by Communist leader Carlos Marighela, 58. He was killed in a gun battle in Sao Paulo last week after two Dominican friars, arrested previously, Cooperated with police and lured him, into qn ambush. IN URUGUAY?
Marighela’s heir
[Joaquim Camara Ferreira, is beiieved to have escaped into Uruguay with the aid of a seminary student, Carlos Alberto Christo, also known as “Frel Beto.”
★	w
The newspaper 0 Estado de Sao Palo reported that security police raided the Christo Ret Seminary near Porto ^egre last week and found Communist literature, newspaper clippings on terrorist activities and a radio transmitter in Christo’s lodgings.
Church authorities have refused to comment on such raids against church proparty. They also are keeping mum about the role of men of the doth as police Informers and decoys to ambushes.
*	★ a.
The man behind the crackdown on churchmen is believed to be Vice President Adm. Au-gusto Rademaker, a hard-line right-winger with a legendary hatred of communism. As navy minister before his inauguration Oct. 30, he concentrated the e^ forts of Brazil’s navy secd^ branch almost exclusivan against militant leftists, ani( it
was he who suggested tba < ■ubvenlon.
penalty for i
\
THE PONTIAC PEESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 18. 1969
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\ ' >v\-- \




^ /■*
i, '	'	........
' ....^, ■' • ' ''......................' '.
I , ' '	■
Southfield Site Doomed
Local Domed Stadium Proposal Is Nearer to Reality
By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sport! Editor, Pontiac Preii Pontiac’! proposal to build twin-domed stadia on the site at 1-75 and M59 with the Lions and Tigers as principal ten-nants moved closer to reaitiy with a positive announcement expected before the end of the year.
As a result of Governor Mllllken' recent endorsement of a downtown Detroit site along with other circumventing factors, rival stadia groups are now Joining forces to support the Pontiac proposal
Last night the Southfield city council doomed the site in its community by resonlng the proposed area for commercial development, but not a stadium.
An ordinance Is set for referendum which will limit the size of any stadium in Southfield to 12,000 seats.
w w *
Recently, in a printed statement, Gerard Lacey, assistant secretary of the Walled Lake Stadium Committee, lashed out at Governor MUUken’s endorsement of the Detroit site, pointing to its un-
feasibility pnd Mlljliken’s "change of position" wl|h regard to endorsement.
DYNAMIC AREA
Quoting the recent national real estate market survey published by Esquire Magazine which Indicates that the "second most dynamic marketing area in the United States is the geographic triangle from Flint to Ann Arbor to Pontiac," Lacey, who supported Walled Lake as a stadium site, predicated on the reality of 1-275, noted in his state-
ment, "I would now opine that Pontiac Is the niimber one choice as a stadium site.”
WWW
He also noted that the United States ,I>epartment of Commerce, Bureau of Census projection for 1970 listed a population of 5,875,000 within 50 miles of Pontiac compared to Detroit’s 5,175,000 within Detroit’s 50 mile radius. By 1980, the same Pontiac sphere would be greater by more than a million people.
Meanwhile, the Pontiac Stadium
Authority headed by Harold Cousins, admittedly has been meeting with the pro teams and Cousins said yesterday, "We are very happy with the progress of our meetings and we expect a very important announcement to be made shortly."
NO DETROIT DOME The Detroit proposal for a waterfront stadium, which does not include a dome and which has allowed for deck parking of only 4,600 cars, would cost an
THE PONTIAC PRESS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1969 D—1

Red Wings Are Ready
for Five-Game Trip
NEW YORK (UPI) - The Detroit Red Wings’ road show has a tough act to follow.
Unbeaten'In their first five away games of the young National Hockey League season, the 1969-70 Wings are off to the best start on the road by a Detroit team in 18 seasons.
WWW
’They’ll open a six-game trip tonight in New York against the Rangers who are in second place in the ilast Division, one point ahead of Detroit and Boston.
Despite the quick start this season — four wins and a tie on the road — the Wings are still a long way from matching the performance of the 1951-52 club.
UNBEATEN STREAK
Detroit didn’t lose on the road that season until Deg. 26, 1951, when the Rangers beat them In New York, 1-0. Ths loss ended a 15-game unbeaten
’TUMBLING WEST—-Los Angeles Lakers’ Jerry West tumbles to the court after going over the back of Detroit Pistons’ Dave Bing in their NBA game in Los Angeles last night. West needed 10 stitches to close a gash over the eye and he returned to the game in the same quarter. 'The Pistons, however, won the game, 110-102.
Pistons' Coach Wins at Home'
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI) - “It’s always much nicer to win than lose in Los Angeles,’’ former Los Angeles Laker coach Bill van Breda Kolff said Tuesday night.
He well knew what he was talking about.
★ * *
Van Breda Kolff, who resigned at the end of last season in a storm of controversy to take the head coaching job at Detroit, had just finished watching his Pistons whip his ex-employers 110-102 for their fourth straight loss home this
Afterwards, the at times volital van Breda Kolff, kidded the local press corps about some of his problems last season during a much-publicized feud with Laker star Wilt Chamberliin.
VERBAL ABUSE
"I can imagine going to that pressroom where they hold the postgame interviews,’’ he laughed, "and taking all that verbal abuse from the writers after losing.’’ Under him, the.Lakers set .a club mark for season victories but dropped the World Championship in seven games to the Boston Celtics.
★	★ w
’The Pistons took the lead early In the first period and Los Angeles could only catch them in the third period. Reserves Tory Dlschlnger and Jimmy Walker came off the Detroit bench just when the Pistons appeared to be faltering.
★	w ★
When the Lakers had evened the score at 73-73 in the third period, Dischinger reeled off 10 straight points and finished the quarter with 14 of his evening’s out-p^ of 16.
Then when Los Angeles whittled a 13-point Deteolt lead to 97-94, Walker hit seven straight points to nqil the Lakers down, Eddie hfiles led the flitods wtih 24 poihts, while center Otto Moore addra 19 and Walker finished with 13.
severe cut over his left eye in ^he first period, requiring 10 stitches to close before he coidd return to the game. West finished with 24, but scored only 10 of them in the second half.
Elgin Baylor had 22 for the Lakers and Rick Roberson, who is replacing the injured Chamberlain, had 18.
DBTROIT	LOS ANOSLES
Tiger Catcher Has Gall Stone Surgery
DETROIT {JD — Detroit Tiger catcher Jim Price is in Ford Hospital in Detroit after surgery yesterday for removal of gall stones, a team spokesman announced.
Price, who works for the Tigers in the off season promoting sale of season tickets, was hospitalized Friday for X-rays. A team spokesman said the operation was not considered serious.
Bing
Hairtfon
Ballamy
• 0-0, U Baylor 7	Robtrin
4 M 9 MCartar
n 3-3 34
1	M 3 8 8-8 22 6 6-7 18 3 1-2 7 6 3-2 14 0 (M) 0
2	2-3 6
0-2 I Lynn
b.iacnyr	/ 2*2 IS Girratt
waltar	« 1-2 13 Ercksen
Hawttt 1 0-0 2 Tetalf , MH'iniO Taitto 4120.20102
Datrolt .. ....... ..... 3114 M 10-110
Llot Angtlaa ........... 25 20 20 22—102
Fouled out—Nona.
Total fouls—Datrolt 23, Los Angelas 21.
Dakota Gets Bowl Berth
KANSAS CITY (AP) - North Dakota State, boasting a perfect 9-0 record and ranked No. 1 nationally along small college teams by The Associated Press, was named Monday night as the first team to be picked for a berth in the NCAA College Division bowl games.
A W . ★
’The Bison, averaging over 500 yards a game total offense with an attack spearheaded by Little All-American halfback Paul Hatchett, were selected to play in the Camellia Bowl at Sacramento, Calif., Dec. 13.
Iowa Team Is Consistent About Grid Inconsistency
HOT SHOTS
Detroit outshot Los Angeles, hitting 57 per cent on shots from the floor to the Lakers’ 45 per cent. The Pistons also outrebounded the Lakers 47-39.
One proUeni for Loe Angeles may have been Jerry West West sustained a
ANN ARBOR (AP)-The Iowa footbaU team has been consistent in one thing this year—being inconsistent.
University of Michigan fans are hoping that the Hawkeyes will be on the down curve of their season’s graf when the Wolverines journey to meet them at Iowa City Saturday.
“From every standpoint you can think of this is the keygame,’’ said U-M coach Bo Schembechler at a press luncheon this week. “What we do at Iowa will determine our fate.’’
If Michigan loses to hot-and-cold Iowa it could give Purdue the opportunity to be the Big Ten’s Rose Bowl representative. Both U-M and the Boilermakers have 4-1 conference records behind Ohio State’s 54) mark. OSU is IneUgible for the Rose Bowl he^iiuke it went last ^ar. V\ The Wolverine finish the season against the Buckeyes a^t home, ishile Purdue meets them Saturday and then takes on Indiana the final week of the .
UP-AND-DOWN
Iowa was crushed 43-14 to ^ego^ / State i^ the seuon ofiener, then camo; back to overwhelra Washingtoh State 61-M. . .	. ,
The Hawkeyes disposed of Arizona 31-19 in the next game, then proceeded to provide Wisconsin with its first win in three seasons In a 23-17 upset.
It was almost Iowa’s turn for an upset, but the tearti couldn’t quite pull it off and lost 35-31 to Purdue. 'Then the next week the Hawkeyes edged Michigan State 19-18.
WWW
But the roller-coaster season took another downward trip the following week as the Hawkeyes were soundly beaten 35-8 by theretofore winless Minnesota. However, last Saturday Iowa pulled another upset and beat Rose Bowl hopeful Indiana 28-17.
"We’re going to ri^ally have to be up for low^a,^’ ScheinbeChler said, indicating thW, MlchigW’s 5741 romp over Illinois last week, mlght^make his players a little bit lax. '
WWW
But he said his players would realize that Iowa would be tough after the team views Hawkeyes game films.
Ipwa coach Ray Nagel may have been transmitting a / mental message to SchembeeWer regisrding/ hU /wn Hawkeyes, because Bo said, "I hope we’ve eliminated our inconsistencies.’’
streak In which the Wings won 10 games and tied five.
Captain Alex Delvecchio remained in Detroit to continue treatment on his shoulder and it’s uncertain how long he’ll still be out.
w w w -
Garry Unger, the 21-year-old center who’s had a goal in each of the last four games, will be on the first line in Delvecchio’s place between Gordie Howe and Frank Mahovllch.
Other aches are also troubling the Wings.
OTHER INJURIES
Bob Baun is taking treatment on the right ankle that had a hairline fracture during the exhibitiem season and Carl Brewer is having trouble with a sprained wrist.
Before the Wings left Detroit for the road trip, they sent down left wing Hank Monteith to their Fort Worth, Tex., farm club in the Central Hockey League, w , w w
Monteith, who collected one goal and
mine assists in 34 games last season, has been scoreless so far this year.
The 24-year-old wing played the first half of last season with Fort Worth, where he collected 17 goals and 13 assists In 33 games.
NO TAKERS
Monteith said he was unsure whether he would report to Fort Worth.
He has been used sparingly this season' and General Manager Sid Abel unsuc-, cessfully contacted every NHL club trying to make a deal for him, at his request.
After tonight’s game, Detroit travels to Boston Thursday night and then to Minnesota Saturday night.
Giants Add Taxi Pair
NEW YORK (UPI) - Wide receiver Dave Dunaway and center Gene Cep-peletti, acquir^ from the taxi squads of Washington and Philadelphia, were added to the New York Giants taxi squad Tuesday. '•
1
estimated 6.15 million for, land acquisition, relocation of properties and redevelopment of the land and utilities.
"We could have one of the twin stadia built for that amount alone," said Cousins, "that’s why they can’t afford to put a dome on their stadium."
With Southfield apparently out of the picture and with Walled Lake’s progress hampered by arterial road problems, it is expected that the Metropolitan Stadium Committee, which was originally Instituted to make a study of sites, will make a complete endorsement of the Oakland County site at 1-75 and M59.
The Metro committee headed by Tom Gardner, several months ago publicly came out in favor of a suburban site rather than any Detroit site, based on their surveys of population and accessibility.
Gardner also said yesterday that his committee has met with the Southfield Stadium group and the Pontiac Stadium Authority and there now exists a "mutual understanding and conformity of opinion” that 1-75 and M59 is the most preferred site.
Gardner said that members of the Southfield group have denied Detroit Mayor Cavanagh’s recent statement that “since Southfield Is out of the picture, the Southfield group is endorsing the downtown site.”
“This was a statement of individual politicians and not of those interested in the stadium site development,” said Gardner.
At any rate it now boils down to the major tennan^, the Lions and the Tigers. ®
UONS IMPRESSED
Owner William Clay Ford of the Lions told ’The Press, "We like the site at 1-75 and M59 very much and we hope the matter will be resolved very soon.”
Edwin J. Anderson, the Lions’ liaison representative with the various stadium groups, said “we have not been able to get into serious discussions with the Tigers as we had hoped, therefore I expect our own decision to be forthcoming before the end of the year.”
Anderson pointed to the statement several weeks ago by John Fetzer, .owner of* the Tigers, in which ha specified the essentials for a stadium, noting the dome, the parking and accessibility for the flow of traffic as major requisites.
(Ciontinued mj Page D-2, ooL 8)
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, im

13th Annual
flSSIoiitiao OpM Bowting Championship
M«n*a and Woman's Mixod SingUs Handicap toumamont (Sonctienad by ABC and WIBC)
Qualifying Dates: Nov. 23, Nov. 30, Dec. 7
(Plaata circl* prafarrad data and tita)
QUALIFYING SITES; Airway Lanos, Cooloy Lanot. Collior Lanot. Huron Bowl, Howo's Lanos, Mapio Lanos, North Hill Lanos, 300 Bowl, Wost Sido Lanos
Semi-Finals: Dec. 14, Huron Bowl Finals:	Dec.	21,	Airway Lanes
Actuals:	Dec.	21,	300 Bowl
Pontiac Open Sites Await Bowling Entries
Address.
(Mmm WMia. aMi Pm< ONkU
League..........................House.......
Final League Average as of April 30, 1969.
lOln riMl	- N.I. tiil.i I ■])
ABC or WIBC Sanction Number.................
Tournatnani is based on 70% handicap of 200 scroich based on three games. It Is open to oil sanctioned ABC and WIBC bowlers. Final lieadline for qualifying entries is 9:00 p.m, squad, Dec. 7, 1969. All entries must be left ot qualifying site with entry lees ottoched.
TOURNAMENT RULES
1.	Bowlers must present their highest final league average os of the end of the 1968-69 season closest to Apr. 30,1969.
2.	If bowlers hove no final 1968-69 overoge, highest current overage for 21 gomes, os ,of time of entry, must be presented. If current overage is 10 pins or more higher than final 1968-69 civerage it must be used. All others must bowl scratch.
3.	Falsifying overage will mean disqualification, forfeiture of entry fees and prizes and report to ABC and WIBC.
4.	Tournoment manager reserves right to reject ony ond oil entries.
5.	Tournament is In odhcrence with ABC and WIBC rules.
6.	No substitute entries.
7.	Bowlers failing to qualify first time con re-enter at sites and squad limes designated.
8.	Bowlers are eligible for only one monetary prize In the championship round. Other prizes con be accepted In qualifying or feature portions of tourney other thon championship finals.
9.	Prizes of $300 or more won In iposf 12 months must be reported to ABC and WIBC Pleose indicote some on reverse side of this blonk.
10.	Times and squods will be published in The Pontiac Press, along with winners and prices.
11.	Bowlara should check with ABC re-rating rule 27, pertaining to ichonga of average, if entered in five or more tournaments in past
GUARANTEED
PRIZES
ist-nooo
and Trophy 2nd-*600 and Trophy 3rd-*400 4th-^300 5th-»200
Top five prizes ore guaranteed and the entire prize fund is returned f00% from the purse. Ten percent of all qualifiers assured of reaching finals and of prize.
Other Feature Prizes
1.	Top OuOlifiars
2.	High Actuals
4. Top Wofflan'l Scores .5. High Gomes 6. High Series
S. High-TeamsT 9. High‘Doubles* 10. AsNirds Dinner
Nine Houses to Qualify Area Keglers
Entry blanks have been placed in all of the qualifying houses for the ISth annuu Pontiac Open Bowling Championship which gets under way Sunday Nov. 23 at nine area sites.
Bowlers will have three Sundays to qualify for ttie event which will have a long list of feature prizes to go with the top guaranteed prizes starting with $1,000.
Some 1,500 men and women bowlers are expected to shoot for the prize list by going into the tournament with a 70 per cent handicap based on scratch of 200.
The target score for qualifying is 600 which includes handicap.
This has been a popular addition to the tournament Ije-j cause once the bowler shoots the target score his qualifying ends. In the past under the per-| centage rule of qualifying a bowler was not certain of his qualifying until all scores were checked and a cutoff point was announced.
Women bowlers will benefit more h-om the 1969 tournament. I This is the third year in which; the women were permitted to! enter on the same basis as the!
WINNING PAT — Lady Iveagh, wife of the owner of Karabas which won the Washington International Race yesterday, gives
Maryland May Benefit
the Britlsh-lH-ed horse a pat on the nose in the winner’s circle. The horse defeated six other challengers.
Calls for Grid Charity
ENTRY FEE Bowling ... $1.95 Exp«ns«s... $1.25 Prizws . . . . $4.80
mep.
However this year the top woman bowler will win $200 regardless of position except il she is among the top flve which
mimdi
— Garry DaFrayna, 222; in, 211; Garaht Groan, 202; Butt Shaarar and Faith Hull, 200. Lakawood PInaaplllara High Gamat - Frank Maador, 2H; L. G. McKInnay, 220; . Joo Polmaar. 210; Joa Honaon, 211. High Sarlaa — Laa GormoM, S75; Halan Fry, 244; Batty Boucard, FIREBIRD LANES FIrabIrd Hl-Lo'a
High Gama and Sarlat — Marian ' cNalr, 237-S45. Htah Sarlaa -r Gloria,
A
The First Niter’s League has ]ust begin its conqietiUcm over at Firebird Lanes last wedc and already one of this season’s highest games and sales has come from that league.
Loretta Robertson, matched muscle with heif beauty and
■hot a league high game and High Gamaa - Euia" viek, 2221 eiio series of 27B-ffil in the first
K. 1 KirviirA'',jr»i5;;h*g!i's
Loretta, mio has been bowl- and sones - Huntoon's m.7&5. Firat tng for eight years is employed ^"%dii^!{|'pi?’Biwiino as a floor offica at the Pontiac State Bank and let on that this'^'f** game and series is the highest
Total..... $8.00
U. S. Keglers Score Big Win
JLadies Easily Take N Inter-American
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
(AP) — Joe Paterno may have to include his philos(q)hy of charity on the football field when Penn State meets Mary-has guarantees from $1,000 to! land SaturdajQ
$200.	I The Terrapins are the only learned. Win, certainly. But do
Should a woman finish in the {step left to an almost certain it with charity toward those top five then the next highest;bowl bid for the undefeated you beat, woman bowler will win the add-Lions, and Paterno’s fifth- “The mass of people idolize ed $100.	ranked team should have little the people in sports,” he
not create violent people in our society. Our culture has pro* duced football.
“But that still doesn’t mean that on the level we’re playing' it there aren’t lessons to be
SAN JUAN, P.R. (AP) - The United States displayed a balanced scoring effort Tuesday in winning the four-woman event at the fifth Inter-American Bowling Tournament.
I	*	★ ■	★
t, Herb| Rosemary Losee of Pough-Two keglers at Sylvan Lanes|£S^*15i“'KX,®Mrwiriy”L«attr^,ik^^^ N.Y« set the pace with really takes the young at heart .ci»«"ca	^anes	» six-game series of 1,067 while
H'F’ -'KMranon, 52»; Vilfene Monterosso of New York to bowling these days.	1 varj^^e^^siu	City, was low with 1,037.
Joanna VarLoa, IM. Wilma Clark, 503. Spill
wattilda Marchants Sarles — Marv Krueger, 417; Ron 412; Jim Stock, 414; Sam Petart,
Last week John Meyer and Cy Giroux each shot league high^j^^sh^^ama series of 632 apiece, tops for convamon the Senior Retirees league at
Sylvan.	4». High Gaamat - Vlrg Robem, 234;
Nothing so outstanding in prt,ro^®224'	**"*
those oyer 6TO series exc^t for „ '	WGiimora,
the fact that Meyor is 62 and mi ciata rou, 234. High Gamet-Hnep.
I. ea ......I	“ O'**" Gilmore, 213; Ciata Rots, 242.
Giroux is 66 years of age. High Sarlat Aelual-Hdcp. - Owan
MAPLE LANES	Clala Rots, 401-443.
Blllv G Friday Nyltars	f i«* Pl«» Team — Wright's Upholstar-
Hlgh Gamas — vinoa Sponoar, 214; ’"*•
Garry HIrtch, 1»7. High SarlM - Vinca .	. Pontiac Mrtpr Tampast
Sponcar, 443; Vara GolamMatkl, 401.' High First Place Team - Stoker's If. Team R»v»,
High Gama — Stoker's I NORTH HILL
High Gamat Actual - Shalla Bantlay, IDS. High Series Actual — Donna Oill, S34. High Gama-Hdcp — Shalla Bantlay, 230; Lorraine Nielson, 230. High Sorlat-Hdcp — Donna Dill, 432. High Team Gama and Sarlat-Hdcp — Waldner Com-pany, *07-2153. First Place Team -Bushman Gaar and Machine.
MONTCALM BOWL First Social Bratharn Church
LIndatl Parry, 208. Spill
A4AVIS LANES Thursday Morning Ladles Thursday Moratin Ladles Gama Actual — Bevarlay I
______m, 302; Cal Haikkila, 373.
High Gamas - Cal Haikkila, 270; David Gotham, 247; Al Manganallo, 224.
Airway Friday Night Flyers Actual High Games — GInny S >1; Claudina Jones, 114. Spilt irslons — Mabla Harmon, S-7; I rice, 4-7-10. High Series Ttam — / Alarm, 21*3.
Kings a Gamat-Hdep, uth Duncan, ' Sarlat - Al
213; Nancy Lewis,
I	AIrwy Mixed
High Sarlat Actual — lElaai S30; Nick Cantu, 5H; HM I Series — Aefuat-Hdep. — Lwl Maurice Lackey, 220; 230. High Si
, Team HM 1 s, l025-2*7t

Grace Wekmeister of Chicago had 1,061 and Jane Lesezynski of Milwaukee shot 1,045.
A	★	*
The girls totaled 4,210 while Venezuela finished a distant second with 4,075 and the highly favored Mexican team ran third with 3,928. Panama posted a 3,878 sum to finish fourth.
★	★	★
The best individual score in the entire tromen’s field was 221 by Mrs. Lesezynski.
★	★	★
Earlier in	tfie	day the U.S.
also took a comman^ng lead in the eight-man event by amassing an eight-game total of 11,996, an average of 187. Mexico was second with 11,459.
tures for winning additional prizes will be money awards to the top qualifier in each house, to the high game in each qualifying house, to the hi^ actual series in each house, for triplicates and for the feature Mix Match Doubles and Team totals.
Last year nearly 30 per cent of the total bowlers entered shared in the purse which was the second highest in tournament history.
Qualifying will take place at Airway Lanes, Cooley Lanes, Collier Lanes, Howe’s Lanes, Maple Lanes, North Hill Lanes, 300 Bowl and West Side Lanes, BUly G. Bowl (formerly Maple Lanes in Walled Lake) and Firebird Lanes (formerly Huron Bowl).
AH qualifiers will advance into the semifinals Dec. 14 at Firebird Lanes with added prizes for the top semifihalists after which the big finals are slated for Airway Lanes, Deq. 21.
The Actual’s Invitational is also set for Dec. 21 at 300 Bowl.
Bowlers should submit their entries to any of the qualifying houses or to the Sports Dept., of The Press.

Thursday Night Mixed Keglers
High Games-Hdep. - H 2i6; Gary Hewitt, 251.
I	300 Clinic
$32; Cy High Series — Bill Kirkland, 64$; Joa 'Prey, $44; Dale Perrett, and Chuck
eiroux, $32.	_
HMh Gaina^- Nanci^uffmayar, 243;| KlrtTand, 'isi; Joa" Pray',"*242i Chueii Dally Lawar, 222; Lola Vincent, 213; Dot Matrar, 234 —Sarlat — Nancy!	Thuriday Ladlat Trio
Vincent, 34t; Dot High Sarlat - Lolt Armt, SM; Allct 527.	grutnick, 544; Dorothy Tlrnirff, 343, High
Gamat — Lolt, Armt, 223; Allct Grutnick, 221; Bttty Bundtitn, 203. Tuttday ' ‘
High Strits
VBiiy ■-•werp 4^ .
Chambers, 200. High Buffmaytr, $1i; Ulf Chambers,
*W*d»iaE^N'fef

’ Junto John Green, Gamat — Bob Doan, 234; Jo 232, John Grttn 224.
High Otma Actual — vi
K!SR?;rMar-%Tiiil'
s^i?	. ,
AAargarat Woodward, 2-7 and 3-0-10, High I	. ..	...
Evalvn WIMor, 4-7-10.	Warden, 370; Joa Blaylock, 333.
Kveiyn	oamat - Jack Wylla, 224i
High Gama and Sarlat - Ella Erwin, Donaldton, 210; R(to Wardart^.
S45-424; Lucllli Mytrt, 224-404.	Pontiac Motor Inttr-Offlca
SAVOY LANES	High Gimti — Gut Cojacai
$trlk« ind Sptrtt Mixtd	Charltt Matter, 227, Wllllann kcKt
High Gamat Man - Ray Wonnaeott, Dave Fokarton, 214, Joseph Irtrgo; »I. 247; Bob Angall, 20*, Gan* Jonat, 201. High Sartot --Gut Colaear, 402; Charin High Gamat Ltditt — Marilyn Silva, 211. Matter, 423; Dev* '
High CouMat Sarlat — Ken *nd_Alll*i ...... f
Groth, 1147. High Couplet Gam* — Loran and Marg* Thompton, 4M.
High Oamat*’^— Rlch*rd*^Smlfh, 223;
Donna Cottallo, STS; Phyllit Bouchard, 33*; Paggy Parry, S3*; Nancy FItiiar, 333; Lucin* Mytrt, 340.
Sarlat — Don' Actual

Evelyn — Si High Team Gam* — The and I High Team Sartot — Up 3 2342.
Crake,
1 - Stai
E'l LANES	' mgn (>*m* ana s*r
wa'tJatt	247-4I7. High sartot-
Judy SzymanakI, 207; Helen Fry, 373; Lorrii Sarlat - Barb Myart, S4l. High Taai It Mayo, 323; Sophia - Strlck't Saculrlty, *2*-2443.
Tarry Grant, 4»; I* Dulzo, 337; Luelll*

... Taam Gam* . .
ExcavatlM, 757-2170, m — Tin* AAarla,
difficulty romping to victoy. tinued. “Football has all the in- football team without sacrificing
Also among the other fea-Bowl invitations go out Monday, gredients of courage, physical
strength, ability to think under The Lions are 7-0, undefeated'stress, pain and all that stuff, in their last 26 games and havej “Man has to play. I have a
won 18 straight while Maryland three-year-old boy (David). Iichange to soccer,” he said, is 2-6, their latest loss coming------------------------------------------------------——^-------
to Miami of Ohio.
It is probably that represen-, tatives of the Sugar, Cotton andj Orange Bowls will attend the| game. But what they may see! is an example of whmlng with, charity.	|
‘There is a tendency if you’re not careful to beat somebody badly just for the polls,” Paterno said, but not particularly re- By the Associated Press ferring to Maryland. “And that’sl You can have Mike Phipps of not compatible to good sports-i Purdue, Rex Kem of Ohio State,
mani^.”
But isn’t football a sport which mirrors the competition, vio-lance and brutalify of society, Paemo was asked. And if so, how can you temper it without reducing the desire to win?
“FootbaU fulfills a need,” Paterno said. “Sports are a part of culture. Sports, however, do
Herk keglers Maintaining Travel Lead
Herk’s Auto Supply picked up four points while dropping two, but Btill managed to maintain its lead in the men’s Oakland All Star ’Traveling Classic tMs week.
Bob Pittman of Orchard Lanes won individual high game honors with a 256 followed by Paul George of Cooley Lanes with a 236 game.
George bounced back to win the high series award by shooting a 648 while Fran Bertram of Oxford Merchants followed'With
Orchard Lanes won the team high game and series with a 1064-29341;, whUe Bedford Trophy was second in tei high game standings with 1043.
League average for the nif^t’s competitim which was
held at Strike and Spare Lanes figured out to 182.
Action in the cIbssIc will resume . liext Monday nl^ at Wonderland Lanes In Walled
Mexico Soccer Winner

Clarkiton Woman'!	.
I _ Marilyn ^MMn, «4;
vSilDHJ	MEXICO CITY (AP) - Con-
jKin High Gam* - LaDuc troUing the ball and running cir-LAKiwoop M>NBs .. cics STOund the Norwe^ans, a

224-3*7; fsster Mcxican national soccer
team defeated N(«;way ’Tuesday 1 - ewitiK ,^e^,4,4) gt Stadium.
AP HON(« Mel Gray of Missouri caught six passes for 171 yards, a schol recorl, as
44-10 last week to earn him college lineman , of the week honors.
SSaiTJ^^toring, :
Harfford Koofing ..........
^xfard Mer^hanla ...........
Jeyca't Standard ..........
ii
throw the ball to him. And he wants to throw it back. I haven’t taught him to throw the ball. It’s just his reaction.”
“I prize myself as an educator,” the 43-year-old Penn State coach said. “And there are lessons to be learned here just as there are to be learned from a Hemingway or a Lord Byron.
‘I think you can have a great
Piggott Rides to Victory, Blasts Press
LAUREL, Md. (AP) - Lester Piggott rides, reads and ,re-members—as he demonstrated 'Dieaday during and after the $150,000 Washington, D.C. International at Laurel, which he won aboard Karabas of England.
Piggott guided Karabas to a IVo-Iength victory over Hawaii of the UMted States to win hla second straight Intematlonial, but the main'thing on his mind after the race was the criticism he received in 1968.
* ■ w w
Some U.S. turf writers criticized Piggott’s winning ride aboard Sir Ivor of Ireland last year contending he should htive won more easily than he did.
“I’m not talking to any of you,” Piggott told reporters Tuesday. “You know what you wrote last year. Gear the hell out.”
The champion jockey df England later talked to newsmen but refii.sed to discuss tfw race. FINDS OPENINGS
Piggott sent the 4-year-old coll through a hole on the rail entering the stretch to take the lead away from the duelling Hawaii and Cfear Alexander, fte other U S. representative. Czar Alexander finished third, <^e-half length back of favor^ He-wall and 12 lengths ahead^ of Hitchcock of Germany.
Concluding the order of finish for the 1%-mile race over the grass, timed in 2:27. were Sabl-nus of Brazil, Don Florestan of Venezuela and Takasheba of Japan.
integrity, without bringing idy in The back door.
your anybody “I guess if we become a pacifist nation, maybe we would
Everyone Interested in San Diego Player
PTTATeam Wins Trophy
Juniors Runners-Up in U. S. Event
’The Pontiac Table Tennis Association’s Juzdor Team won Runner-up Trqihy in the Juniors Division of the United » Open Team Championships, held at Coho Hall over the weekend.
The PTTA Junior Team, consisting of Bill Lesner, captain; Jeff Smart, both 16 years old; Mike VelUettc, 13; and David Klemm, 12, played ten junior teams without a loss until their final match Sunday evening with the undefeated Muskegon Junitvs, when Pontiac lost five matches to two.
The U.S. Open Team Cham-pionriiips, hosted by the Detroit Table Tennis Association, drew over 330 participants, on 83 teams, from all over the U.S. and Canada, witii the top
taking part In this annual event.
Pontiac was represented also ^ a Men’s Team am women’e Team, Bin C* captained tiie.^en, his
being Perc Secorii, MarV Barnhart, and lUdr ‘Thompson. Women Team membere were Bath Smart, captain; Site Osier, Karen Kelmtn, and Lopetta Perrault.
„ „ Other PTTA members 40 S participating in the tourney " " were; Sam Velllette, playing for the Michigan Team; Phyllis Velllette, playing for the Detroit II Women^s Team; and, Tim Smart, playing on the Detroit Juniors Team.
Archie Manning of Mississippi, Jim Plunkett of Stanfwd or any of the other outstanding college quarterbacks. Fido Murphy— and possibly the Chicago Bears —wiU take Dennis Shaw of San Di^o State.
Of course, just about anyone would take Shaw after the performance he put on in a 58-32 rout of Pacific Saturday night. 'The 6-foot-2%, 20S-pound senior from Claremqnt, Calif., completed 25 of 38 passes for 463 yards and seven — count ’em— seven touchdowns.
For that show, Shaw was college football's Back of the Week by The Associated Press.
“Shaw is better than Plunkett and Plunkett’s a good one,” said Murphy, a scout for the Bears.
‘I honestly believe he’s better than Phii^. He’s a good deal better than Don Horn of the Packers, who played here. He’s like Roman Gabriel of the Rams, but niftier. This is a big strong, tough kid who runs better than most quarterback too.”
Shaw came to San Diego Stat^ by way of the University of Southern Califcxnia—which a|>-parently didn’t think much of
him as a quarterback—and Mt, San Antonio Junior CoUege.
As a freshman. Southern Qal had Shaw playing defensive end and he wound up4n the hospital when he blocked a placekick with his face.
The next spring there were fiv^ quarterbacks on the varsity roster. Shaw tired it at linebacker but wasn’t much good. So he dropped out of USC and spent a year at St. SAC.
San Diego State was glad to get him. ’Die Aztecs have a 74) reewd this season after going 9-1-1 a year ago and 10-1 in 1967.-Over that span, Shaw has completed 260 of 457 passes for 4,218 yards and 44 touchdowns. This seasffli he’s 126 for 217 for 2,079 yai^ and 25 TDs.
★ * *
“He has a very strong arm.” says Coach Don Coryell, “and he sets dp very fast. He’s poised, a great pressure player and a leader. He’s also dmable and a strong runner.”
Murphy isn’t the only pro scout aware of Shaw.
“What I particularly like about him,” says Ron Wolf of the Oakland Raiders, “is his ability to stay in the pocket and his coolness and poise under fire.”
Horse Race Results
Windsor Results
AY'S RISULTS ng Tr*t; I Mllai
23.30 7.10 l.«<
Windsor" Entries
WEDNeiDAV'S INTRin itt-MBl eiabnlat Faca; W Mllai Roan Diraot	Tarmatsaa Dtract
Scolty'B Malor	OoM N«la
Sacond Htfping	Floyd's Honor
Unww-tti Tim*	Olanera Lad*
Tar Haal Lady	j. R. Lallch
sira«..	scfis.
,«?S"
May Confab Set for Games
Winter Olympics to Be Discussed by IOC
LONDON (fl - The whole future of the Winter Olympics will be discussed at a meeting of the International (Hympie Committee in Amsterdam in May, Avery Brundage, iffesl-dent of the IOC, said in London Tuesday.
“We’re trying to keep c6m-mercialism out of the Winter Olympics,” Brundage told a meeting of British sports writer.
“Now we have the problem of ice hockey added to that of al- . pine skiing.
* * *
“The Ice Hockey Federation plans to allow pros to comitote. ‘This is a new problent”
He said that the International Ski Federation had proinised certain reforms, including a cut-back on the “circus,” and a sharper look at contracts between skiers and manufartur-ers.
★-	■■tk’	★
‘"This is another issue that will be thrashed out in Amsterdam,” Brundage said.
Brundage made it clear that the whole future of the Winter Olympics would be disculked before any resort was awarded the Games for 1976.
★ * *
The IOC Congress will decide the sites for the 1976 Summer arid Winter Games in Amsterdam—and the cities who win the nomination can bank on making millions ol pounds in publicity.
Stadium Bid for Area Site Gets Boost
(Cantlnued frbm Page D-^ Anderson has personally bien Investigating the stadium Ideations of the Dallas Cbwbdys, Buffalo Bills and Kansas ilty Chiefs, now under deveIopn«int, and all from 12 to 30 miles t|$im downtown areas.
“The recent Taltw suwey showfaig the population shift to Oaklknd County and to the 4Ma of the proposed stadium nw Pontiac cotainly gives sttwig support to that site,” Ihid Anderson, “as well as the fa^ of immediate land availablliW.” ' So, as Oakland County groups begin to join ftroea. hmid a common site at I-7S and RM, the probaUUty of tumliig>the first shovel by eprt^ 1B7B for the 8uper4)oma Twin is oRmt than ever tayanUfy.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 19«9
D—8
Another Visit Saturday Afternoon ^	^
II i
Purdue QB Recalls 'Dreamland In Columbus in '68
LAFAYETTE, Ind, (AP) —, Phlppi enter* the game aa an Bollermakeri, 7-1, are right be< I repeat o(lli(iiit ynar’s experience,! "I <vali hit hard on three | game, and the 19-0 score stood For one thing, he remembers Suddenly, ta the third quarter of imderdog (or the first time, al-|blnd unbeaten and top-ranked however, and he may wind up straight plays. After that I don’t up. The young Buckeye teamiwhat happened.	i
last year's Ohio State-Purduelthough he’s leading the nation Ohio State In the Big Ten race, as second team all-conference remember much,” Phipps said, went on from the upset victory ^ completed 21 of 31 passes]
football game, it was goodbye I In total offense. The lOth-ranked ewe Iquarterback behind Ohio State’sl'i can remember walking to thelto claim the national champion-i^^i^ 2ip yaWs
“Everybody has been saying Rex Kern.	^—■- —*	------'	’
WNITIWAUt
imiKvianiiii
goodbye
Columbus for Mike Phipps
The Boilermaker quarterbaclr from Columbus, Ind., left the big stadium in Columbus, Ohio, and entered dreamland thanks lo some Jarring Ohio State tackling*
“They really messed my lines," recalls Phipps, who on Saturday leads Purdue into Ohio Stadium a third straight year- A , crowd of more than 86,000 and k .national television audience will be watching.
NHL Standings
w L T eti. OF es
7	2	i	1#	M	35
I	4V2	II	45	37
7	3	3	17	47	37
I	3	I	17	37	»
5	4	1	II	33	21
. 4	, 7	2	1 0	35	45
.	, «wi Divlllmi
SI. Louis ............ 5
Mlnnoiolo ............ 5
Oaklotid ............. 4
“ lladeli
Monlrtal . Now York Boston ... Dotrolt ... Chlcaao . Toronto ..
Los
47 35
5	a	I	n	35	35
4	7	2	10	27	49
I ?
at Oakland at Toronto gatroit at New York Phlladalphla at MInnosola Thursdav's Oama Datroll at Boston Pittsburgh at SI. Louis
3 1 0	5 25 31
NBA Standings
Bsitar^DIvIslon
Wan Uit Pel. York ........ 15	1	.931
Xncisc
,San DIago
Chicago 1olr«
Atlanta 124, Phllada Mllwaukaa 129, Boston tin Datrolt no, Los Angolas 102	/
Now York 115, San Francisco 103 Taoays's Oamas Boston at Cincinnati Dotrolt at San DIogo
Thursday's Qamas Chicago at Naw York PhllaMphIa at Phoonix Datrolt at Saattia
ABA Standings
how we esn lose this one and stU' maybe go to the Rose Bowl, bul we want to win them all,” Phipps said. kern AHEAD By engineering a victory over the Buckeyes, Phipps would be a tough man to beat in the voting for the Helaman ’Trophy. A
walking I
ihench and sitting on the side- ship.
down passes and left early in
Buckeye Coach Woody Hayes • was trying to remember] Purdue wasn't overconfident tht, second half with his team said last year that Purdue,|kow we got in the stadium. J last year, Phipps said.	ahead 41-0. The final score was
ranked No, 1 at the time, had|.. "Later, I guess I asked one of	^	„
the most sophisticated passing I Ihc coaches how we got in there, attack in the nation.”	iThey told me that’s when they
n if it	|declded I shouldn't go back in.”
There was nothing sophlstlcatrlUPSET WIN ed about the way fte Buckeyes Phipps, after playing on In-
stopped it.
team.. .and we knew they’d really be up for us. We had gone In there and kind of destroyed their morale the year before."
The 1907 game is
stinct for a few series, left the I Phipps would rather discuss.
Three weeks later, the Buck-] eyes recovered and started a winning streak that stands at 21 going into their rubber match with the great quarterback from the other Columbus.
I 279 137 .491	-
Waterford Ice Team Winner
The Waterford Rangers opened league play in the, juvenile division of the Southeast Michigan Hockey Association at Port Huron last Sunday and played Port Huron to a 2-2 tie.	;
Jack Lewis and Dennis Lacey, scored the Rangers’ goals. Thej Rangers play Sunday at 11:00 a.m. at Port Huron.
Carolina .. Pittsburgh New York Miami ....

TuaiSay'i Rnulti ila> 120, Dallaa 117
- “’T»da^r#*m*a
Indiana vt.^i^ralln ^at'Vharlotle, N.C. Danver at Pittsburgh Dallai va. Washington at Loi Angeles Naw York at Los Angeles
Thursday's Gamas Indiana at Miami Naw'York
‘'■^wtvar at Kentucky
Defending Net Champ Gains
BUENOS AIRES (AP) - Defending champion Roy Emerson of Australia advanced to the quarter-finals of the Argentine International Tennis Championships Tuesday by defeating Chile’s Jaime Pinto Bravo, 2-6 6-2, 6-2, 6-4.
In women’s singles, Germany’s Helga Niessen moved into the semifinals by defeating Argentina’s Beatrix Araujo, 0-6, 64, 6-3, while BilUe Jean King of Long Beach, Calif., was winning over Kora Schedewy . of Germany, 64, 6-2.
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■ \ _ , .
THE rONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1969
Kansas City's Back Figures in 3 Races
^r■	■ /	/
'"’NEW YORK (AP) — Versa-Ipasses for an,average gain of •tile Mike Garrett of the Kansas, more than 10 yards.
City Chiefs has grabbed a piece	★	★	*
of the action in the American! Oakland’s Daryle Lamonlca, l^ootball League’s individual No. 3 behind Cook and Namath 'l*ushlng, receiving and scoring in the passing figures, leads the 4>aces.	I league with 25 touchdown tosses
h ie *	' —10 oyhem to Biletnikoff, who
' The explosive running back has picked up 422 yards on the ground, added 320 on 32 pass receptions and scored eight touchdowns In nine games to crack tlie top 10 in all three depart-i^nts. He ranks 10th in rushing,
Sventh in receiving and shares the No. 7 spot with three others ewt In the point derby.
riiih Pm pTfilf I
Event to Start L/.S. Riders Head for Toronto
has made 41 gi'abs in all to 39 for runner-up I<ance Alworth of San Diego.
Large Field Competes in Arizona
i Denver’s Floyd Little, who sat §ut last Sunday’s game against liakland with a knee Injury, still jletained a commanding rushing lead with a total of 637 yards, |ccording to weekly AFL figures released today.
Holm*,. KC . . ..	101
Klick. Mio ..... 1!3	435
Garrett, KC	05	433
LEAOIN^eASSERS
3tn 15« 1,305 35 3.3
Lamonlca,- Oak
Wyclie, Cin ... iv/	/tw / r.ra
Livingston. KC	.■	'30	47	»3t	4	7.14
Ten,I, Den ...... 175	N	1,133	0	4.M
Griese. Mia .... 353	131	1,4*5	10	4.73
Dawson, KC ...... *3	55	437	4	4.33
Hadl. SD........ 334	113	1,544	4	4.54
Taliaferro, Bo,	..	338	108	1,378	10	3.41
LEADING PAsTltECEIVERS Avg.
Reed. Yds. GaInTDS
g Greg Cook, Cincinnati’s phe-	Reed. Yd,. Gam tds
iomenal rookie quarterback,! BimmikoiL^oak 4^ inatched the pas.sing lead from!Denson,'Den	m
Joe Namath of New York while; wJii?,"6ak"’ 33 Xred Biletnikoff of Oakland con-lcSrfitL'Kc Jl tinned to pace the pass-catchers Ad the Jets’ Jim Turner re-mined atop the scoring parade.
I^Little, averaging 5.1 yards per wry, has a 102-yard margin 0W New York’s Matt Snell, &e 2 ground gainer. Cook has dOmpleted 57 per cent of his
Garrison, SD
LEADING SCORERS J/Turnar, NY
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (DPI) -A scattering (< golfers who once' were well known on the professional golf tour will joln^ more than 200 other club pros Thursday In the opening round of the second annual 650,000' PGA Club Professional championship here.
*! The field of 248 is so big the 3 first two rounds will be played 3 over two courses, the Roadrun-ner golf resort here and the San Marcos Country Club at nearby Chandler. The final two rounds Saturday and Sunday will be played on the R 0 a d r u n n course as the field Is cut to a more workable 70 golfers.
The only golfers eligible for the tourney are those club professionals who do not play In more than 12 PGA tour events a year.
Top names in the tourney include Bob Rosburg, considered by some as the favorite. Tommy Bolt, Mike Souchak, Bill Collins, Jerry Steelsmith, A1 Besselink, Billy Martindale and George Bayer.
NEW / YORK (AP) - Thel we expect them to be tougher In triumphant U S. equestrian | Toronto. Jim Elder was at the learn headed for Toronto and National only part of the show the Royal Winter Fair Horse | and Tom Gayford, who probably Show today expecting to run is their most experienced rider,
into stiff opposition in its attempt to sweep the entire fall circuit.
The U.S. squad clobbered the opposition in the 86th edition of the National Horse Show, which ended an eight-day run in Madison Square Garden Tuesday! night, finishing with 130 points, more than double the production of Argentina, the runnerup, which had 60.
couldn't come,
“Our horses are pretty tired, but that’s part of the game and we hope to win in Toronto. We realize that we probably have an advantage at home, but the
Four Pace Blind Bowlers league
TD»FOPAT TP 0 73	1?	M
0 1R 76 80 0 12	31	67
0 0 0 60 0 10	25	53
Gtrvla, Hou ..
3	0	0 48
Bill Steinkraus, the Olympic gold medal winner from Noro-tbn. Conn., who led Coach Bert De Nemethy’s team to its overwhelming triumph, will not compete In the Toronto event, which opens Friday, because of the press of business commitments.
LONDOlI—Johnny Famnehon, Ausiri lla, nutpointed Migual Harrara, Eeuadoi 10, faatharwelohts.
ORLANDO, Fla.—Teddy "Bear" Mui ray, 173, Malbourna, Fla., c Mo», 173, Miami. Fla.. 10.
PHILADELPHIA ~
Trenton, N.J., f Naw York, 10.
Keglers in the. Pontiac Blind Bowlers league at Firebird Lanes enjoyed one of their more successful nights as four of the competitors shot individual high series.
Jim McLain, a total won the league’s highest over average honors'hitting for 114 pins over His place will be taken by:his usual 51 average.
Neal Shapiro of Glen Head,| McLain shot a 80-96-91-267 N.Y., who rode both the Penn-| series for the night, sylvania National at Harrisburg! Evi Allen, a partial with an 83 and the Washington Internation-average, shot 100-113-98-311 to at.	I place second with 62 pins over
The other three riders will be average.
Frank Chapot of Wallpack, N.J.,|	*	*	*
Jared Brinsmade of Btelhany,! Cecilie Martin, total with a 62 Conn., and Kathy Kusner of! average shot 52 pins over her
/,
Canadians w|ll have the same advantage InToronto.”
Steinkraus was the leading international rider with 42 points, beating out Chapot, who had 32.
*	Wi * '
Dr. Hugo Arrambide of Ai^ gentina, up on Addagio, won the final international class, the Grand Prlx of New York, after a jumpoff with Canacla’s Ter-rafice Millar and Shoeman. Pieces, of Eight, ridden by Elder, was third.
The best the U.S. team could do was Steinkraus’ fourth spot on Bold Minstreal.
*	*	*
The open jumper crown went to Idle Dice, owned by Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gill of Collegeville, Pa., with 24 points and his pilot, Rod Jenkins, won the leading jumper rider award.
*	*	*
Dunraven, belonging to J. Basil Ward of Gates Mills, Ohio, won the regular working hunter title with 15 points.
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* it it
“The Canadians did not have their strongest team in New York,’’ said De Nemethy, “so
average with a 81-73-74-228 series, while Maxine Kretz, a partial, shot 49 pins over her 125 average with games of 142-142-140.
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College Grid Standings
epLuiai K I SKmIic
' W L T Pit OP 0 157 107 7 1 OJ5JM7 4 1 0 70 47 0 1 0 1U n 3 1 0 00100 I 3 0li7141 3	3	0 170	1)0	5	3	0 310	171
3	3	0 110	1 47	4	3	0 3)3	303
3	3	0 00	00	4	3	0 13)	155
1	4	0 00	133	3	5	0 ) 30	150
0 5 0 00 130 1 7 0 140100
W®l?TOP W L. T Pt» OP 5 0 0»6 41 7 0 0329 5S 4	1	0170 59	«	2	0 374 120
4	1	0 190117	7	1	0 296 201
3 2 0125 91 4 4 0204160 2 3 0 103 120	0 209 334
2	3	0 06 115	2	5	1 161 340
2	3	0 04131	3	6	0 100 340
3	3	0	00 175	2	6	0131 300
1	0	75 143	3	5	0 153 210
0	5	0	40 190	0	0	0 93
lUOOOrtflCt
-- -	AM 6anu
W L TPtiOP W L T Pti
4	0	0	107 40	9	0	0 277119
3	1	0136 55	5	4	0261 154
3	3	0	120 1 23	5	3	0 299 194
1 3 0 09 130 2 6 0 16 204 0 4 0 37 111 1 0 0106343
THFi PQNTIAC PllESS, WEDNESDAY, Nf)VEMl{Kll 12. loot)
D--5
Score 116-103 Vi(ftory
Knicks Break Warriors' Jinx
Celtics Talk About Cousy
Boston (AP) — General By The Aiiodated Preii iBiiaNchere and Walt Fazler had Manager Red Auerbach of the Now that they’re past the cru- 24 each (or New York.
Boston Celtics says he Is contin- clal spot In their schedi^e, the] Flynn Robinson and Jon Mc-uing to talk with Cincinnati offi- New York Knickerbockers can Glocklin shredded Boston’s decals about a deal which would relax again. 'They don’t play enable, them to activate Bob San Francisco again until Jan.
Cousy, but he calls the latest 7
proposal by the Royals “rldlcu-l The Warriors are the only Na-joiig >>	jtional Basketball Association
Cincinnati’s most recent team to solve the Knicks this suggestion was a four-part plan by which Cousy would be activated Immediately, with a panel of four owners or general managers to meet with National Basketball Association Commissioner Walter Kennedy after the
D^'
season. And that came way back on Oct. 23. New York has won 10 straight since then, the latest a 116-103 revenge Job on the Warriors Tuesday night.
In other NBA games Tuesday, Milwaukee mauled Boston 129-
___to decide what the Roy-|^^®> Atlanta ripped Philadelphia
own the Celtics (or compen-l^^^*®^' l^iroit <i”wil^ed Los An-
fenses and I.ow Alclndor dominated the boards and poured in
Hudson had 30 points and Caldwell 27 as the Hawks won , Iheir eighth straight and 11th In 14 starts this season. Bill Cun" ningham had 37 for the 76ers. Tom Boerwinkle scored 1|
28 points as the Bucks beat theip(,int8 and pulled down 13 r»-1 bounds in the final quartag, helping Chicago past Seattle.
ft'-'. Oh
0 93111
0 30118 4 5 0149 184
0 181 103 Central Michigan
MItMurl Valley CoiHtrance
Conference All Games W L T Pts OP W L T Pts OP
----------- lot..
Eastern Michigan Kalamazoo Wayne State Northern Michigan Institute Michigan Tech Perris State
Nor fax St
3 0 010* 3 5 J 0 231 140 '
3 1 0 ) 22 50 0 2 0 250 11* MlchlO»n StM*
1	1 0 44 4* 1 * 0)241‘;	----- ■ '■
2	3 0 1)2 150	. 4 0 144 247 ‘
0 2 0 34 42 3 3 1 13* 140 1
...........
6 3 0 .667 225 113 6 3 0 .667 219 127 5 3 0 .625 333 74 4 3 0 .571 152 101 430 .571 134 113 540 .555 322 185
4 4 0 .500 113 112 3 5 1 .389 139 209 3 5 0 .375 153 210 3 6 0 .333 185 T“
Wichita St 0 a 0 14
Ohio Volley Conforonco Conference	All Oar
,	W L T Pts OP W 1. T Pts OP
i Tenn st	4	0	1 102 38	7	0	1 144	~
f Kentucky	4	2	0127 76	5	3	0149
West Ky	4	2	0 158 86	5	2	1 179
Murray St	2	3	1 134 151	4	3	1 196185
Aust Peay	2	3	0117 155	2	5	1 152102
Tenn Tech	2	3	0 63116	3	5	0132191
Morehd St 2 4 0 86115 4 4 013411 Mid TennSI 1 4 0 71 121 1 7 01
Paclflc>8 Conference Conference	All Ga
W L TPtsOP W U TPtsOP 4	0	0 99	47	0	1 221	T
0	1 192	48	7	0	1 304
4	1	1175	S3	5	2	1 273	110
2	1	0 47	59	4	3	1 197	203
2 3 0 70 94 4	0 118 146
)"•■??..? SkT Aim. Kraatz* Hillsdale
0 .112 106 324
TPO PAT TOTAL 15 0	0	90
IS 0	0	90
12 0	0	72
South Calif UCLA Stan ord Oregon California
2 3 0 52 1
0127 135
0 5 0 47 154 0 8 0 79 267| 0 5 0 45 165 1 7 0119 271
kL Cent. Mich. 0 8 23	4
St. Louis Booters National Champs
satton. Boston would choose the-f‘«» ”0-panel, and Cousy would not play ^eMle 106-100.	|
in games against the Celtics. | The Knicks didn’t exactly Cousy, 41, is the Royals’.	the
coach and wants to play again
Robinson had 31 points and McGlocklin 26 while Alcindor forced the Celtics Into foul trouble.
★ ★ ★
Atlanta, enjoying almost as hot a streak as the Knicks, knocked off Philadelphia with Lou Hudson and Joe Caldwell carrying most of the offensive
Chet Walker of the Bulls led all scorers with 34 points.
iw 4/
on a part-time basis after being
Warriors. New York was down by 10 after the first period and
five at halftime. But the ram-
Fight Date Set
SAINT JOHN, N.B. (AP) -
SHOULDERING A HAWK — Philadelphia forward Bill out of the NBA for several	George Chuvalo of Toronto has
Cunningham Is about to have an Atlanta Hawk perched on years. He is still Boston proper- j] * .u.-j nprimi anrf fhpn wiw agreed to defend his Canadian his shoulder in the scramble for a loose ball in the second ty as far as playing goes, how-awav	[heavyweight boxing title against
quarter of the NBA game in Atlanta last night. Atlanta won ever, and the teams haven’t ^	★	j Charlie Chase of Montreal in
its 8th straight game by whipping the 76ers, 124-1»7.	been able to agree on any deal.] yictorv cave New York a	*|_was announced
115-1 record, one short of the all-lT^®®**®^	“T>ick” Pear-
time best NBA start ever. St.!«>"- Mcretary-treMurer of the Louis was 16-1 in 1967.	Canadian Professional Boxing
Dave DeBusschere sparked Federation the Knicks’ late snree, scoring 110 of his 18 second half points In the final period.
Another point at issue was the HIGH SCORER penalty to be imposed on Hull] .leff Mullins of the Warriors because of his holdout, in which Jed all scorers with 30 points-he already has missed 12 only six in the second half. De-
Expected to Ink Pact Today
For
SKI-DOO
It’s
CRUISE OUT
83 E.Watton-Poirtiao
FE8-44U2
L5U
Florid*
Auburn
G«orgia
C^ndorblt
T Pis OP W 3 0 0103 36 7 3 1 0101 71 7
2	1 1 113106 6
3	2 0173 94 '
WII&Mary
Furman Va Mliltarv
_	.	.	63	5	2	1 209 79
2	2	0	92 83	5	3	0221 118
2 2 0 84 97 3 5 0152 216 2 3 0 95126 5 3 0 213166 1	4	0	29 162	2	6	0 72 233
0	3	0	67 122	3	5	0 165 276
T Pts OP .».,g
W L T P)» pp '
4S 5 3 01*2
3	2	0	125 10*	4	2	0
1	3	0	71 lie	2	5	0
0	3	0	35 130	1	5	1
0	4	0	25 ) 32	0	*0
NEW YO«K{ AP) - St. Louis University is the national soccer champion among major college teams.
An 18-member coaching panel of the National Collegiate Athletic Association gave the unbeaten St. Louis team, 8-0, No. ranking with Harvard (9-0) second and San Francisco (8-0-2) third.
Completing the top ten are; San Jose State (10-1), Michigan State (7-1-1), Maryland (7-1-2), AH Games ]Southern* Illinois (10-0-1), Har-LTPtsop w.LTPtsoPu^jj,^ (6-1-1), Springfield (10-L
CHICAGO (UPI) - Bojiby Hull may sign conditional papers today permitting him to rejoin the Chicago Black Hawks, but it is tinlikely that he will play with the team for perhaps another week.
General Manager Tommy Ivan, in a statement released by the Black Hawks late Tuesday, said from what he and Coach Billiy Reay havq seen of Hull’s skating so far, he will not	■ “	-
compete “this weekend.”	J
However, while attorneys for ^ both Hull and the Hawks tried to iron out final details of the ^ conditional agreement, it was clear that Hull and the club
of their team. Hull has not obtained such permission.
It was understood that the club did not intend to force Hull to give up the endevsements, and would grant post-facto permission on the current endorsements. But the club demanded that he obtain permission for any fiRure ven-■tures.
games. Should he return for the weekend games, Saturday and Sunday, he probably would lose about $17,500, while the sum would be larger should he not return until after the next two
SAN PRANCOSCO
I 5-5 21 Lm 4 2-4 14 Lucai
her* * S-l 24
I ,h. followinai 2 . 2.6 rafisf, • 16 O C ,tw4, * oi c«n>ic> •	■* ll«,
6 Atupn. intulotion 6 Galv noil
winrfMM *	tkt» « .
3 0-0	4 Lewis
------------ ■ utr ...	.
21 31 2* 2«-11*
Tolllt 47 22-2S114 Shleutr
Tangerine Not Looking
38 26 21 18-183
Total foula—New York 16, San Francis-,, CO 20,
A-10,851.
REMODELING
FE 8-9584
MILWAUKRE
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)
when most post-sCason football bowls are shopping for teams, the Tangerine Bowl has its clas-
sic olcked, up six weeks ahead North Carolina school took
Tl ;en
•YOU ! DIDNT
;know
I	By John Carter
have agreed in principle.
Some of the phpers which must be signed before Hull can rejoin the team have been presented for signature, but others have not. Under the agreement already reached,
Hull will- sign when the papers are on hand.
Ivan pointedout that Hiill still was covered by the four-year contract, reportedly at $100,000 a year, which he signed last
6 d 1*1 35 7 0 0 281 4»!i\ __j phiiflHpinhia Tpvtilp 112.	When he returns,	,
i«2wJ)^ and Philadelphia TexUle (12-^	played ticketed for the Tangerine event
under this agreement.
It was learned that one of thq major items of dispute has concerned Hull’s endorsements of various products, for pay-
4 0 0110 32 7
- --- 35 7
**350
Icrawfrd 0 0-1 0 Bryani
Justjiiest for its basketball teams,	.........
' but the footballers under Coach
iDandrlg 3 5-7 11 Barnes
Homer Smith are en route to their best season since the
ij Lahser Fetes Athletes
Lahser High school will hold ■ its Fall sports banquet Thursday evening honoring the football, sopcer, cross, country and girls’ swim team. Hollie Lepley of Oakland University >will be the guest speaker.
I better without a coach | I than with one! .	. For |
g enample, Yale played the ■
■	12 teaton* from 1887 I I without a coach and won ■ 4 71 garnet while losing I •I only 2 - and thot't the | .e best 12-yeor record in the | J history of the school -- ■ -■ better thon in oil the years Z I they've hod coaches! ■
j ^ ^ ^ I
‘^1 Here's on oddity about I I the sport of surfing . . . | Even though surfing wot | ! practiced by Howaiions os g
■	eorly os the 1700s, the ! I sport wot not popular I
1	anywhere else in the world I ,| until the 1930s when the | ‘a great swimming champion g
2	from Hawaii, Duke * « Kohonomoku, introduced
I turfing to California and I I Australia .. . The next big | I surge in the sport pome In I a the 1950s when d. better ■
■	surfing board was de- -I veloped ... Surfing now is
;| growing in popularity in I I many notion.s and turfort | I oro potitioniiig tho e
■	Olympic eommittoo for In- g J elusion In tho Olympic ... * 1 But, oddly enough, it I
took turfing tovorol hun-drod yoors to catch on.
I ★	★	★	I
f Gelfor Tom Show, who ■ 1 It ono of tho howor com- |
I I I
inij^ stars on th* pro
ig^f tour is from-of plaeot^Oelf, III
I . ‘.dr ★
I I bot you didit't knew | S that pur 47 yoors of ierV- | - * Ing Pentio* have soon yt a I taking core of tons and _ I doughtors
I tomors.
itogrity is not just o were horoi it's o hallmark. Soo one of our
CARIFR TIRE CO,
of the kickoff.
Undefeated Toledo and Davidson’s best team in history wBl clash Dec. 26 with a crowd of 20,000 expected to pack the stadium that night.
★ *
Championship teams from the Mid American and Southern ... conferences are automatically	meeting.
and titles were tucked away in record time this season.
Toledo, 8-0 with nonleague foes Dayton and Xavier remaining, has a shot at being one of
0 0-0 0 Nelson Roblnsn 10 11-12 31 NIeminn D.Smltl) 1 2-2 4 Siegfried
B 3-4 1* 5 2-4 12 5 0-0 10 * 4-8 24i
4	1-2 13
5	^7 15 2-2 4
TOtlli 40 40-5I12* Totele
A-12,17*.
SRATTLR
the sport 73 years ago.
The Southern cochamps have a 7-1 record mark and games left against Wofford and Van-1 gwif derbilt.	|Mur«7
* n ’k	1 Snyder
The bid went to Davidson, tied Alien*"* in SC standings with Richmond, TreTvnt* since the Cats beat the Spiders
3 2 -3 2 0-0 4 4121-31 111 21 14 4W129
Nton ................ 25 29 28 16-118
Fouled out: G.Smlth, Bryant, Flnkel. Total fouls: Milwaukee 26* Boston 37.
CHICAGO
OFT
7 0-0 14 BorwnkI
L Love I Walk
OFT 7 M 15 4 2-3 10 7 4-5 18
iJil’Sl
I
42 16-23 108 Totals 44 18-24 106
Totxi fnuis—Seattle 24. Chicago !
ment of fees and royalties, the few major college un^^ Under the National Hockey'
League standard contract, players cannot make such arrangements without permission
by the ertd of the regular season.
* ★
Davidson is a aillege known
Set Funeral Service'
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -Funeral services will be conducted here Tliursday for Jack Torrance,, the Louisisana State University track star of the early 1930s.
Torrance died Monday.
ClarK
Cungha
O *= T	OFT
10 5-5	25	Beard	I	04)	2i
13 11-14	37	Bridges	4	3-4	11
4 5-4	17	Caldwell	11	5-12	27
2 0-2	4	Davis	I	2-2	10
Melzel	1	0-0	2	Gregor	-----
Imhoff	3	2-4	0	Hatzafd
Jackson	3	2-2	I	Hudson
Jones	0	0-0	0	Newmrk	2	0-0	41
Washgtn	3	0-0	4	OhI	2	0-0	4
Totifs 41 25-35107 Tollls . 51 32-37 1241 PhlledoliMiia ..	25 25 31 24-1071
AtMnta * .	. 34 12 N 30-124
Fouled out—Philadelphia, Greer. Atlanta, Bridges.
Total fouls-T-PhlladelphIa 24, Atlanta 23.
5 3-4 13 0 Hazzafd 5 5-7 15
SAVE
I will sell any new ’SS CHRYSLER or PLYMOUTH This week only for *2UU*<* under factory invoice.
Giv« Us a Try Before You Buy
/I
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Wl HAVI BUNTIUme TOU W1 HAVaHH BUT QUALITY USID CAM, AND HOH IS THI PBOOT IN WMTINQ
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Phone MA4#45D1


THE PONTtAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOV^EMBER 12, IMP
fiUhf the 0ut4wt (tail
with DOlsl VOGEL Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Prms$

Big Deer Contest Next on Schedule
* llie Pheasant Contest has been decided, and now it’s on to tha biggest outdoor derby ■p^nsoi^ by The Press — the Big Deer Contest.
A $150 Ixmd will be awarded to the Oakland County deer hunter entering the heaviest whitetaii during the Nov. 15^ season. Past records indicate that tile eventual winner will field-dress over 220 pounds.
* * *
DaniSl J. Finch, 4 612 Tanworth, Commerce Township, entered the longest pheasant, a 43%-incher downed bi Wixom, and will receive the first place savings bond.
. ,Runner-up ringneck was a 4’'/^-lndi bird taken in Hii^and Tpwnship by Adol(di Walter, | S)B5 Suffolk, Waterford 'Gownship. He will receive a $25 bond.
PRIZE
' ^nie deer Contest is open to an Oakland County residents md tiie deer may be taken aiwwhere in kfichigan. Only the fiOctdressed wd^t is used to determine tiie Winner. There is one prize.
Although pheasant season closed Monday and interest has shifted to deer hunting, there still is plenty of gunning available.
Grouse shooting in the Lower Peninsula remains open through Friday and then resumes during December. Rabbit hunting interest will pickup and the first snow should bring the hounds out in force.
★ * *
Duck hunters can continue to ply their trade through Tuesday, Nov. 18, and goose hunting will remain legal through Nov.
Two Message Agencies Set
State Police, Will Deliver
DNR
state police posts and Depart-
-nie deer must be weighed on
steti^pproved Kales ana a ^^^.y messages to deer hunters
30. Squirrels have Joined pheasants on the protected list.
A big influx of scaup (bluebills and broadbi|ls) ducks during the last 10 days has warmed the heart of big water divK shooters. Layout gunning has been very good on the Lower Detroit River and fair to good on Lake St. Oair and Sagtaaw Bay.
Topflight bluebill and goose shooting is reported along the Lake Michigan shoreline and nrarby inland lakes.
BONUS DUCKS
Two bonus ecaup can be added to the daily limit of four ducks in several designated areas around the state. This means that a hunter could get six scaup if he has no other specie in the bag.
However, there i s considerable confusion on Lake St. Clair as to where the bonus rule applies. The only area open for extra bluebills is the St. Clair Flats. This takes in most of the bays and marshes around Harsen’s and Dickinson islands where diver shooting is (miy
Fewer Whitetails in Upper Peninsula
Compared with 1968, deer populations are lower in tha Uiqier Peninsula, about the same in the northern Lower Peninsula, and higher in the farm-belt country (d southern Michigan.
Chances of this season’s army of more than 600,000 hunters scoring a kill comparable with last year’s 100,000 sHiltetalls hinge heavily, as always, on the whims of the weather, particularly during the upcoming first weekend.
Upper Peninsula hunters — particularly those in the Lake Superior watershed — are expected to see fewer deer than last
DNR game giologists toric fijll account of the situation several months ago when they called for a 19 per cent cut in this season’s anterless deer kill quota for the Upper Peninsula.
’Ibeir recommendation, scaling that quota down to about 12,000 animals as against nearly 15,000 last year, was ap-proved by the Natural R^ sources Conunission in July.
At the same time and for the same general reasons behind the quota cut, the commission agreed to limit deer hunting this season to “bucks only” action over more than a million acres above the Straits.
year.
That’s because the herd there '	*	*	^
has continued its downward I I" ■ change from last year, trend due to the growing-up of it closed most of Houghton and
of Natural Resources Dis- _fair at best and not the open
waters of the lake.
CHECK POINTS — The Department of Natural Resources will iqiarate five biological chedt stations along main highways during the deo: seastm. Biologists will examine deer and record the desired information. Ston>ing at a chedE point is not mandatory althou^i thousands of successful nimrods do each year if fiM- no dher reason than to find out the age and w^ht oi the deer they tagged. The stations will be at the Idackinac Bridge, south of Bay City on 1-75, soutii of White Cloud on M37, south of Mt. Pleasant on US-27 and at P»is on US-131.
forests which has taken more browse out of the reach of deer.
’Diat deer decline above the Straits has worsened this year in wake of last winter ndiich generally placed a severe stress on adult does. As a result, this spring’s losses of fawns ran higher than normal in the Upper Peninsula and that means there won’t be as many aniamls in the Woods to
Ontonagon counties plus parts of Baraga and Gogebic counties to anterless deer hunting in 1969.
Commission action last July also left all of Keweenaw County restricted to “bucks only” hunting this season.
BIG BUCKS
In the more optimistic vein are prospects that the Upper Peninsula’s supply of adult, big-
crop damage and trim whitetiO: numbers in some new deer food shortage areas.	'
*	♦ w
In southern Michigan, when deer face ho winter food problems, whitetaii populations have continued to grow since lai$ year when hunters took a record4>reaklng 11,460 bucks anid 2,040 anterless animals from that part of the state.
Modem Parks Remain Open
ConveniencB in U. P. Still Limited
weight slip signed by the successful hunter, person weighing tile deer and «me witness submitted as part of the entry. ’The deer must also be seen by an employe of ’The Press.
" All entries must be made at The Press jports department between 7 am. and 2:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
The building is dosed Sundays.
Last year’s' winner was a buck that wd^ed 248 pounds. R was diot oo Grand Island in Lake Sup^w by Manley E. Eamsworth, 97 N. Rosdawn.
T ★ ■	*
'i^Although there are scxne big bbcks prowling Southern Michigan’s farmland, the Uimer Peninsula has dominated the dra-by. Only once In the last 15 ybars has a deer taken in the (tekland County area won the
during the coming season Hunters should determine before heading north which post or DNR office will be nearest their camp and leave this information at home. Before going into camp they should stop at that post or. field office and
* A monster 265-pound buck l^ve the northern Lower Peninsula its only winner (1964) during that ^an. TWs year’s contest will close Monday, Dec. I, at noon.
When the action starts Saturday. ,.j,cked bucks, little affects by 'the winter, has. held up
Suggestion Earns $1,000 Award
Muck Fire Suppression Cost Reduced
A “warm” reception, notsBI^i heated rest rooms and hot run-' nbig water, awaits deer hunters at a number of state park campgrounds.
State parks offering these camping'comforts for sportsmen in the n o r t h e r n I^wer Peninsula are:
Bay City, Burt Lake, Gladwin, Harrisville, Hartwick Pines, South Higgbis Lake, This means that region’s hunt- Ludington, Mitchell, Onaway,: era still stand the best chance Otsego Lake,' Rifle River, in the state to shoot trophy Tawas Point, White aoud, bucks.	Wilderness, Wilson and Young.
Deer hunting prospects are
recent seasons.
Information needed for registering will be the names of those fai the hunting party, location of the camp and license numbers of vehicles in use.
Officials from both agencies remind that only emergency messageswillbe delivered. Should hunters shift campsites, they should notify the registering office.
★	★ w
Every year we have a few emergency messages that aren’jt delivered because the hunters are no longer where they said they would be,” said one official. “It may mean driving some extra miles, but it could save a lot of heartache back home.”
A suggestion that will save the Department of Natural Resources an estimated $20,000 per year in putting out muck and peat fir« has earned maximum suggestion award for DNR Fire Officer Lyman Beach of Croswell.
Beach, 51, received a $1,000 check and a Certificate of Merit from Governor Milliken in a special ceremony. A DNR employee since 1954, Beach is stationed at the department’s field office in Goodells, east of Port Hurm in St. Clair County.
Beach’s award-winning suggestion involves a new concept in extinguishing muck and peat fires.
Fires of this type, which bum underground and are therefore extremely difficult to put out, tradition^y have been doused with water. Especially stubborn fires may smolder for days or even weeks when fought by this method, resulting in high suppression costs in terms of men, equipment and time.
,NO WATER
that this moisture could be put to work as a control agent 1^ literally adding new fuel to the fire.
He uses a bulldozer to pile and pack down unbumed muck or peat on top of the ashes covering the underground fire site. The ashes serve as an insulating layer between the fire burning below-ground and the material packed on top. Through experience in Moisture in the top layer then
fifditing such fires. Beach developed a technique of putting them out with a bulldozer, without the use of water.
Notbig that muck and peat contain up to 70 per cent moisture by weight, he decided
cools and smothers the fire.
By this method, one man with a bulldozer can do the work of 15 w 20 men using pumps and water. A typical one-acre muck fire controlled the old way cost $845 to suppress, according to
DNR estimates. With Beach’s technique, the cost is $1^.
USE TO INCREASE
The departinent officially adopted Beach’s method in August as standard tactics for muck and peat , fires. It is expected to get more widespread use nationally following publication of an article tai the quarterly “Fire Control Notes” issued by the U.S. Forest Service.
Beach said he got the idea from boyhood memories of coal furnace fires wbidi were smothered when too much fresh coal was shovefied into the fire pit.
pretfy much the same as a year ago far the northam Lower Peninsula adiere the animals came through last wbiter in generally good physical condition and, thus, produced a normal fawn crop.
♦ w ★
In light of this and other de-vel^ments, that region’s anterless deer quota for this season was set at 30,115, a modest four-per cent bicrease over the 1968 target figure. The upgraded quota also reflects efforts to control new outbreaks of deer
Early Hunting Reserve Egg Source Cited Proves Costly for Nimrods
’The annual preseason boom in deer poaching has started across Northern MicMgan and a A<XKi number of venison-minded nimrods are finding out its on expensive business.
jQver so persons have been arrested in the Department of Natural Resources Gladwin district and law supervisor Craig Sntith admits many others have avdd-cd conservation officers.
♦ ★ ★
The same problem exists in otter northern districts and Vlo-littons in Southern Michigan continue to increase with the sto of the deer herd.
Average fine, costs and restitution for illegal shooting or pos-s^on of deer in the Gladwin-Clare area has bqen $223. In most cases the hunter also loses his hunting privilege for two to three years.
Shining deer with a rifle or shotgun in the car has been drawing fines and costs $81 toflOO.
Foresight Aids Lake Trout Comeback
MARQUETTE (* - Sprat fishermen who got their kicks out of landing large lake trout in Lakes Superior and Michigan this summer can thank Russ Robertson for a large measure of their pleasure.
Robertson, who has been supervisor of the Marquette state fish hatchery since 1943, developed the 1^ trout brood stock at the hatehery that has been the primary source of lake trout eggs in the United States. ★ e ★
If it hadn’t been for his foresight the tremendously successful Great Lakes trout rehabilitation program mi^t have been delayed for several years.
Instead, Lake Superior sport trollers this summer enjoyed the best lake trout fishing since the early 1950s. That was in the days before depredations of the parasitic sea lamprey decbnated lake trout. Some charter boat operators claim trolling success this year was even better than in the prelamprey years.
PLANTING PROGRAM
Hie spectacular revival of lake trout fishing can be attributed l^gely ta an ambitious plantihg program r- and practically all of the trout planM in
Solunar Tables
Hie schedule of Solunar Pe-rlpds, as printed Mow, has been taken from John Aldrii Knight’s SOLUNAR TABLES. Plan your dgys so that you will be fishing
M good territory or hunting Iniunit^ States waters of the good cover during these times, Great Lakes have come from if^ryou wish to find the best broad stock at the Department sitart that each day has to ed- of Natural Resources hatchery
From 1939 to 1958, the Marquette hhtchery relied on commercial fishermen to 5tttaln the front eggs used In restockhig Lake Superior. During tWs period, ROOOJWO eggs
were collected vduntarily from wUd trout by c o m m e r c i a 1 fishermen during the spawning praiod each fall and turned over to the hatchery here for eventual planting in Lake Superior.
Meanwhile, ho wever, Robertson became convinced the state should have a reserve source of lake trout eggs in case of loss of the natural supply-
He persuaded the d^artment to allow him to raise a numbra* of Irice trout at the hatchery to spawning age, vttich is five or six years. Out of the eggs hatched in 1949, Robertson held back 8,000 trout fry to be reared to spawners.
It’s a^good thing he did. In 1057, the amount of eggs collected by commercial fishermen dropped to only two quarts from the 158 quarts taken the previous year. Hie decline coincided with the increase in lamprey fiumbras and was so great that collecting of eggs from wild trout was discrai-tinued the following year.
But meanwhUe, 17,160 eggs were taken at the hatchery in 1954 from the 224 trout that survived to spawning age out of the 8,000 iRobertson had held in reserve back in 1949.
w ★ w
These 224 lakers became the famous brood stodc that was destined to play such a vital role in the rehabilitation of their species hi the Great Lakes.'
These original 224 trout accounted for a total of 1,330,638 eggs from 1954 until 1967, when they were considered too old to produce high quality ^gs.
More importanUy, they permitted Robertson gradually to increase his precious brood stock to its present size of 4,500 trout by holding back some of their eggs each year for four years.
Over the years, these 224 trout and their progency have accounted for nearly all the lake trout eggs used in all state and national lake trout planting programs in the United States.
And that’s saying a lot. Since
1954, the Marquette brood stock has yielded more than 88,000,000 eggs. This year along, 11,500,0000 eggs will be coUected at the hatchery here. This single year’s collection from the brood stock wUl total 2,500,000 more eg|p than were taken by commercial fishermen in, the entire 19 years from 1939 to 1958.
All iHit 300,0000 of the wlU be
sent to the Jordan River federal hatchery in the northern Lower Praiinsula for hatching and eventual planting in Lakes Superior and Michigan. The 300,0000 remaining eggs will be held at the hatch^ here for stocking inland lakes in Michigan.
★ ♦ *
The millions of eggs will be translated into millions of hours <d fishing eitjcqunent
Baraga state park is tta only one In the Upper Peninsula where deer hunters will find heated campground conveniences tills season. However, most otter state parks above the Straits will continue to provide basic facilities fra outdoor living, such as electricity, cold water and pit toUets.
★ «i *
Upper Peninsula campgrounds at Fayette, Indian Lake (West), and Palma Book state parka are not equipped to host deer hunters.
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So
THE rONTIAC PJIKSS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1909
D—T
Stock Market Drifts Lower
Th# following aro top price* covering tales of locally grown | produce by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lots.
Quotations are furnlshSd by the I	YORK (AP) — Theidatton with action in individual
Detroit Bureau of Markets as of market drifted lower in| issues based mostly on their
I U S. Airlines Plan Merger
Price-Pay Squeeze
'■ ■■'F"
Gets More Pamful
since World War II.
Monday.
slow trading this afternoon as learnings reports or other com-
Produc*
Apalti, Cartlind, bu. , AaSlu, OiHclou*. GeMtn, Am u. ptllcloui, aol, bu. AMIn, Jotuthin, bu. Appln, Mcintoih, bu. Abplu. Ntrlbtrn Spy. bu. Appl«>, WoK Rlvur, bu. Clatr. Abpi*. A'S*!. CPU . PMri, aoK. w Ml.
I declines held onto a slim lead 'over advances.
I Analysts attributed the market’s slow movement to several N.U factors, chief ofwhich was lack 4.3« of stimulating developments, as was the case Tuesday.
^.5o' “I don’t see any major trends to this market 1 slooking for.”
pany announcements.
The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was 858.43, off i.32.
AVERAGE SPURTS The Associated Press 60-stock average at noon' spurted to 297.1, off .8, with Industrials off .6, rails off .7, and utilities off
Bufi, Topptil, bu.
Curly, Ml. Cibbaot. RU, bu,
StanPard V Callp Pak, 2k1i. Toppai'

Some analysts also saw the .6. market as In a state of consoli-l Farm Implements, aircrafts,
utilities and drugs were mostly lower In midday trading, while airlines were up and other Issues mixed.
Highlighted In the airlines Issues was Northwest Airlines, 35*/5, up after areport late Tuesday that Northwest and Northeast Airlines planned to merge.
Storer Broadcasting, which controls Northeast, was up 5W to 40Vi around noon.
Carreti, TopmO. bu. CaulKli Calary,
Horiaradlib, pH. Kohlrabi, dz. bcl Laaki, dz. bob.
t-ooKi, Qz. acn.	.......
Onloni, D>y, JO-lb. bag ...........
Paralay, Root, dz. bch............
''aranipt, W bu.
'araiilpa. Callo Pak, dz.........
'otaloaa, SO-lb. bag ............
'otalon, 201b. bag ..............
The New York Stock Exchange
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst ! year he has tested his ability to NEW YORK-Americans have	^ht absence of
how received notice that they I l®""’	*e*''*'ed, need not
are entering what could be the,^.® “ deterrent to fulfilling de-^	i really painful period of the *
Northeast, Northwest 1 Nixon administration's attempt ‘NOW’SPENDERS
T a,a.i> B' a	economy back oh' As some bankers have pointed
/VtOKe lentotive Pact ja more stable, legs inflated out, this has led to the present footing.	I “now” generation, in which
the rate of economic expansion is slowing,
iMdrZ'l.i?'
Admiral
J-SJ AetnaLIf 1.40 J JO AIrRad l.lig 4.00 AlcanAlu 1.20 Alleg Cr .lOg AllagLud 2.40
____Otrber 1.10
Low Lait Chg. GftttyOit
Icien Aldan
7S^ 4* Vh viobai Marin T v! Goodrich 1.78 7 16% I6V4 16*/^ + Goodyear .15
—A—
31 75'/^ 75
Sauiahy butternut, by. .........
Sciudihf Ddllctoua. bu, .......
Squash, Hubbard, hu.
Turnipid Toppedd bu.
■.ITTUCB AND BRBBNt
Cabbufd bu.....................
Collerdd bo. ......... .........
|SIi«h?“bu......................... *«|AmAlrlln .
Swiu chardd bu.':::::.:::;::;:;:;:; m
^ Am Corf 2.20 ACrySuo 1.40 AmCyan 1.25 AmE(PwJ.64
13	71H	71	714«	4
23	WM	17%	18'/6	4-
70	40%	40	40
86	20	19%	20
157 27	"
3	16
,6raceCo 1.50
31	m 27 SSV7 55
.«0
46	9%	9%	9% Ranco Inc 92
48 23% 22^/t 23V4 4
32	35V4 35 169 303/4 30V X72 30% 30'/4
iSiTi
kr:'
GranlW
liteC StI 20 14% 14% 14%
64 29% 29% 29%
rr; AiiHMafr 1.40 iii Allis Chaim Alcoa l.an
Poultry and Eggs
DRTROIT POULTRY
DEtROIT (API — (OS'DA)-Prlca«
----------- ■■ ■■ ■
25-27;
______________-j&2i«r
turkayt^ heavy type young hens 27-29.
24 23V4^ 23 64 29’’	“
10 34
9 28% 28% 2848 73 74% 74% 74% 32 21% 21	21
16 38% 38	38
109 35% 35	35%
136 39	38% 38%
13 59% 59% 59%
6 47% 47% 47Ve
Gt AAP 1.30 27% + %;Ot Nor Ry 3 % Gt West Fini GtWnUnit .90 V41 GrtenGnt .96 Greyhound 1 %iOrummnCp 1 %lGulf Oil 1.50
'AjGulfStaUt
4. Halllburt 1.05 T y? Herrift int 1
5	zm	S7'A	ww	- w	fj!'!?!!'''',*,.™
AS	J0'/4	30	30W	-	Vi
51	31H	31'A	31H	+ W	■»
J3H 22’/» 23V. + »kl
iRCA 1 RaiehCb .50 + w RepubSti 2-50 Ravipn 1.A0 I Reyn Wet .90
20 455k
25;/. ^ ,/R"r Cp .50 + 'A RoyCCola .54 Royal Out 2d ^ .^iRydarSy, .50 147 325k 325k 325k	!
24 24'/k 24'/k 24'/k - 'A •5 22W 2J.A 22V. - 5k
____H______	*>	IStJosLd	1.M
**	1 StLSanF	2.40
39 59	585k 585k - Vk StReglaP 1 40
I	^ iii IS lion deficit. Northeasts’ deficit abim^to''burwilT'ten7to	F. Ken-I aMC President William Lune^.
”« is'2 1^5’* is’'* 1	nine months of 1969 crease slowly, the rate of price ®	burg went on radio and televb
II	iM% imJi'ioiJk >A '■^ported as 18.7 million. It increases is likely to continue '’’S®''®' the American Man-:Kenosha Tuesday awi;
S	'"“"ey in 13 of the last strong for months to come. agement Associates that the ad- t),g 0 qoo striking members’
n H I' -	The wholesale price Index for	^ ""“«* ^uto Workers unlbn
2J L 3?	- S storer BROADCASTING October surged to 114 from 113.6	bustoess and labor	‘1®* I*’®*',	3*^
"5 33?? 33:^ 33:F" Donald W.Nyrop, president of	125^“ wSat im
NEW YORK fAP) - North-west Airlines, the nation’s most profitable airline in 1968, plans to merge with ailing Northeast ...	...
Airlines, officials of Ixith com- “''‘"Sing with it panles announced Tudesay.	iunemploy-
Northeast stockholders would receive one share of Northwest! * *® and In stock for every five sares of 1®“/"®
Northeast they turn In under }^"® P®®tP®ne-the tentative merger agreement. | '”®"* ®' P ® /
*	★	*	I raises. Little
Tlie plan is subject to approv- evidence has al of the Civil Aeronautical a c c u mutated,
Board and directors and stock-1 however, to inholders of both airlines.	' dicate that prices are about
#•! Northwest turned a profit of fall.
*■ $50 million last year, while	*	*	★
Northeast compiled a $2.4-mil- The squeeze is on. While the
The situation Is this:	®ome funds that once would
Evidence is accumulating that have gone into the bank to pro-
Year by.prices or wages beyond a -will.., 5-1 tain point would endanger Hfii entire economy.
In effect, they maintain that the government has the mole' tary and fiscal tools Ur prodigp a slowdown, but doesn’t haw weapons as effective In the bn-tie against inflation.
And so we enter the painful period of economic war.
Crucial atAMC
CUNNIFF
Stead, spent immediately. UAWVoteSeen
So strong has been the spending pressure by both consumers and business that three widely respected economic authorities! suggested this week a stronger |
leadership role for government ! kENOSHA, WIs. (AP)-Strlk-^	! Ing workers at American Motonl
The fact that ali three wer^corp.’s Kenosha plant voted oB members of former Demo<:rati<f a contract offer today, faced
j economic teams may leave j,y conflicting recommendations them subject to criticisms asfby their union’s leadership and iPartisans, but their opinions g naming by the president of nevertheless are widely regard- the company that they may ed in economic circles.	j^e key to the firm’s fi*:
Walter Heller, former chair-jture.
22 57% 57% 57%
" 30	29%	29%
45% 45% 45% -26% 26% 26% 31 44% 44'/4 44% ■ 8 32V8 3IVa 31% ' 44 19	18%	18%
29% 30
1.40	45 67%
24	22	21%	21%	+	%
8	33%	33V4	33%
98	11%	llVa	11%
77	34%	34%	34%	•	*
?X':S
1.40 .30
+2'/i:Sch«il»y 1.40 12	27H	27'/k	275k	+	Vk	Sobering	.80
14	13	12Vk	1254	-	Vk	SCM Cp	.40b
-........ ■	Vk	SCOA Ind	.40
•	v!	r--------- ■
Northwest, and George B. Stor-;r®‘““ P™f - which generally Vk er, chairman of Northeast, an-T®n®®t wholesale price changes, inounced the tentative agree-!"'*! b® “"d®''	pr®®®"™
^jment. Storer is also chairman of ■a!
.20	108 43	42'/k 42Vk
172 34W 33V> 34Vk
„ HousILP 1.12'
DETROIT BOOS	|amk Cp
- __elvert lumbo 54-59;
'OETROIT (AP) - (USDA)-E ppid per doztn, Monday by first
(Including U.S.); Grad# A lun...........
txtra large 55-58; large 54-57; medium 50-52; small 34.
CHICAOO ■UTTER ■ BOOS CHICAGO (API - (USDA) - Butler Monday; wholatale leallng prices un-^a^nMd; « aeor* AA 4754 ; 92 A 47.444;
‘ .........^nylum whiii axtraa
''ittndatd
Livdslock
DITROIT LIVaSTOCK elwo^wiSHaV;^'’’ ■ 'MSP^HLlvostock *5.j85.7S?®'^'*'tet''25.l5rM, '^24*6
- Cattit liMW, alaughtar otaara cbolep 900-unds, II.0S29.OO; one load araund 29.25; mixod good and -----------------	'	25.50-27.50;
AMP Inc .a Ampax Carp Anacond 1.90 AnchHock .00
34'/k 34'/, 34Vj + V, 394 53Vj 53'/k ■ 535k - V, "	305k 30'/l - Vk
AshIdOII 1.20 Asad DO 1.20 All Rlchfld 2 Atlas Cham I Atlas Cerp Avco Cp 1.20 Avnel Inc .40 Avon Pd 1.10
BabekW 1.34
74 315k 305k 30V.
40	30V>	30	30'/k	+
2	48	4754	4754	—
85 1015k	lOOVz-	lOO'/k	—
97	24	225k	235k	- I
24	5	4?k	5	-P
27	27'A	27	27
27	14	13Vk	14	-P
Imp Cp Am INA Cp 1.40 ' IngorRand 2 Inland Sll 2 IntarlkSt 1.00
I Scott Paper j SbCMnd
34 149V1 147V4 147V4 —IV4 Searl GO 12 ' 445k 44	445k-p‘5k SearsR 1.4.,,
12	42Vj	42'A	42'k	-P	5k	Shell Oil	2.40
27	30’/s	30'/k	305k	-P	5k	SherwnWm 2
, -	,	SlonalCo 1.20
S—l—.	SIngerCo 2.40
9	33'/k	33	33	—	lA	sCarEG	1 19
25	MVk	1254	1 254	+	W	|„uCaT	' ’
7	av.	34'A	345k	P	'/4	I
109	15'/4	15'/k	15'A	■	■
South Co UO
sou Ry 2,80.
156	27%	27%	27V4	+
7	38%	37%	38%	+
27	43%	42%	43%	+1%
13	39%	39%	39%-	%
40	2«	28%	29	^	%
40	»% 39% Storer Broadcasting Co., which
25% 25% 25%-% owns about 86 per cent of the 83 28% 28V4 28%%j Northeast stock.
249 W5k m'a 33Vk-%! Northeast operates routes to 43 39vk 38V4 Mvk Vk ^lorida from New York, Boston
139 30V. 375k 30'k -
for several months.
PRICE RISES CONTINUE
ues its progress towards b4^. coming a successful member 0(' the auto industry.”	. ,'
AMC Is a distant No. 4 ammg’ U.S. auto makers behind General Motors, Ford and Chryslei;‘> In his talk, Luneburg pointeC out that the company’s laU
— A Spartan Ind 84 24V. 24	-r.	,	4.	^
-'a IqRareD ’i7 22?k 22vk " west statcs tO the East Coast inflation this year. In fact, it
creases are acceptable.
ABSENCE ‘REGRETTABLE’
Arthur Okum, who held the same position under President , J . . Lyndon B. Johnson, made a
viLtLknh r® 1	^'IjFowler, Treasury secretary un-offer has been endorsed by UA'
I ^	and Philadelphia and short runs an^nnual’rate of 6%er'Ll J®
7? ?7.A ?4%	bet"®®" New England cities. It and little evidence has been re-	nmim
■«?/ *4?v “47'ta iViJ recently opened a Miami-to-Los ported since to Indicate that the ®	®' ,	. - , ,	Ti ’ S
T r!? Angeles flight.	Le is any lower now.	I F®"*®''. the administra- K^ertt of L<«al 72, sarf Its
^	+ ?? Northwest holds a number of If the wholesale price Index is t'®" “continues to refuse to as- utive board has voted unan^
aT'a 47_	rtant long-range routes, in-an indication, there will be no f""®. ®ny responsibility to de- sou y apinst approval of tbo
47 - lA eluding links from the North-appreciable dip ip the rate of t^'™‘''®v W'th .the Participation contract.
105 340'/j 347'A 347'A
of management and labor, some.
ihtqr htlfiri
Shogp 700., chojn and prima 90-110 powda vMoltd alaughtar Iambi, 28.00-
29.00,	cull to good aTaughtor awaa, 4.00-
10.00.
> ' CHICAaO LIVESTOCK .tHICAGOilAP) _ (USDA) - Hoga ra-edfpta Tu«|ay, ward 3,000;bufcherawara
tV2,So;T2*;Ur!!0O«
2A35-27.75; 118 h««d 20Mia Ibt 27.75; 13 206-250 Ibt 26.75-27.25; 2-3 220-250 lbs 26.25-26.75 2-3 250-270 lbs 25.75-26.25; sows *^-idy t# 25 higher; telrly active; 1-3 350-lbs 22.75-23.75; 1-3 400-S0Q lbs 22.00-
54 24% 24% 24% + * IS 33	32% 33
1	32	41%	41	41
.50	7	58%	58V4	58%	—	'
,75b	2	19%	19Y4	19%	-	’
.60	168	60»/4	$9
Beth StI 1.80 Boeing 1.20 BolsCas .25b Borden 1.20 BorgWar 1.25 BrislMy 1.20 BrunswK .lOg Bucyir 1.20 Budd Co .80 iulovaw .60 Bbnk Ramo
Z'rX .iii“
Cal FInanI CampRL .45a CampSp l.)0 Gap. (fltlaa Ed CaroPLt 1.42 CarrIarCp .60 CarterW .40a Caao Jl CasIleCke .40
Carl-Saod .80
39'A 38 38Vk -IVk 411	S4'A	53Vk	54<A
293	14Vk	14kk	14Vj	+ Vk
349	29Vk	29'A	29'/a	4- 'A
301	33V.	3244	334k	-1-1 Vk
190	lOy.	792k	OO'k	-M44
04	25»k	244k	254k	+IV4
20	28’A	284k	2844	- 'A
14	73Vk	73Vk	7344	-f Vk
44 19Vk 19 '19 19	214k	2044	214k	+ 'A
4	17'A	17'A	17’A	- ’A
12	39'A	39'A	39'A	+ 'A
40	15H	15'A	15'A
49	39VA	39	39'A	+ 'A
337 147	144'A 144'/k -4Vk
23	19	18V.	19	-I-	Vk
44	35'A	344k	35	-(■	Vk
0	Im	3»k	3S4k	-	Vk
18	33'A	33V4‘	33'A
30	41	404k	404k	-	Vk
49	31'A	304k	31VA	-P	4k
10	14	14	14
8	32	314k	314k	-	4k
11	45Vk ...........
14 4344	.
52	434k	42'A	42'A
45'A - Vk
2U08-21.25.
Caltit 1,000; calves none; trading oi steers and heifers fairly active, sTear! steady to 25 higher; heifars 25 hlghar: onus steady to 50 higher; bulls steady high choice end prime 1,100-1,225 It,,-	.	.
alaughtar steers yield grade 3 to 4 29.00-jCbryslW 2 29;M| choKe 950-1,200 lbs yield grade 2 I0 CjTPliJ 1.00 4 2I.M29PD; mixed good and choice Cities Sve 2 27,50-20:oo;rgood 24.50-2^23; standard and ~ low good !5:00-2(.50.
Itl^h djolce and prime 900-1,025 lbs slaughter belters yield grade 3 and 4 27.75; package 28.00; choice 825-1,000 lbs yield grade 2 to 4 27.00-27.75; good and ctwice 28.25-26.75; utility and commerolal emt 1I.50-20.M; few high yielding utility 3CW-2e.50; canners and cutters 17:0(k 19J5; utility pnd commercial bulls 2i|.5^
rfenTicf;*i!ToV*V'*Mf.l^i
lambs 9 50; mixed goM and choice M-IOO in 24.W-20.00; parfjeck choice 93 Ib'riiisPw? 1.90 lambs with No 1 pelts £o„tAirL .50 ConfCan 2.20
______________Conf.Cp 2
Cont 011,1.50
14	4344	43'A	43'A
434k	42'A	42'A	—	IS4
43V.	4344	4344	-I-	'A
19	27'A	27	27	-p	Vk
2	244k'	244k	244k	—	'A
15	24	23’A	23V.	-P	'A
2	27'A	22»k	22'A	-	'A
5	584k	58'A	584k	-P	Vk
5	37'A	37'A	35'A
26	144k	14,	14V.	—	'A,
27'A 27'A 274k-V4 St Brand 1.50
44 134k 134k 13'A - Vk Std K
427 57(4 57'A 57'A-P 'AlStOHNJ 3.75g 25 334k 33	33	— «k StdOllOh 2.70
-	—■ —-| + 'A St --------
Stavensj 2.40
JrneLau 1.35
Kan GE 1.36
Kenneott 2.40 Kerr Me 1.50 KimbClk 2.20
Lab Val Ind Lahmn 1.6lg LIbOFrd 2.60 LIbb McN L Llog My 2.50 LISoTV 1.33
10 214k 214k 214k ■
U	” sun 01' lb
?l	i*ii/ J. IX. SorvyFd .80g
13 1W% 1M^ 154% + %	^
10	49»/a	48%	49%	-f-
8	13%	13V4	13Va
82	58%	57%	57%	-	%
61	51%	50%	51	+	%
181	65	64%	64%	+	%
14 103V4 102V4 103	+1
2 35^/4 35 23 35% Zm
—K—
J'Systron Donn 34 30»/
5« 3h’'	30%
and Midwest. It also flies to the Far East via Seattle and Alaska, shorter and cheaper-to-oper-ate than competing routes via Hawaii, with the same fares as competitors.
Northwest stock closed at 35 Tuesday on the New York Stock
guidelines in area.'
the wage-price
may be well into next year fore real declines begin to show.
* * *
In part, the consumer is responsible for his plight. Fortified with good wages, some monev in the bank and an ac- that in a free economy it is only to credit that was unknown natural that a wage earner
Basic to the reasoning of those who advocate guidelines or guideposts is toe assumption
'States Can Up. Federal Car Safety Limits'-
‘29iA 3f'A - ’^’ Exchange, while Northeast reg-in any other inflationary period, i^hwld seek the highest
•	e >	i|______________ __________________onH o oAllAr tna liicfhAet nr
istered 13Ts.
LonoSGa 1.12
JP.00?
17 404k 48'A 48'A - 'A Mad Fd 3.56 3 37	36V. 36'A — Vk Msonyox 1.,
7 354k 354k 354k - 'A 40 0646 06 SO 4646 46 27 5646 56
It??:
42%
Con Edit 1.80 ConFood 1.10 ConNatO ‘
31	28	27%	27%
12	23	22%	22%	’
23 42% .........
??
Jt-«^ 26 - 26'A
22	35	3446	3444	-	'
54	164k	164k	164k	-P	'
65 75'A 743/ 7444 — '
54	54 -P V6
27'A 27'A-V4 44H 444k — Vk
Marathn 1.60 Marcor Inc 1 Mar Mid 1.60 MartInM 1.10 MayDStr 1.60 Maytag 1 McOonnD .40 Mead Carp i MoIvSbo 1.30 Merck 1.80a MGM .60P
Utl&ril
MInnMM 1.60 MInnPLt 1.20 Mobil 2.20a
23'A 22'A 23	-
3	42'A	42'A	42'A	-P	4k
162	394k	39	39	-	44
x42	59	56'A	58V.	+	'A
39	344k	34'A	344k	4	Vk
—-Lr—
39	2146	21Vk	2146	-P	4k
13	17	17	17
36	8'A	0	S'A - Vk
24	22'A	21'A	22	-p	VA
74	46'A	46'A	46'A	-	'A
20	9	8?k	O'A - Vk
33	34<A.	34'A	34'A
15	34'A	34'A	34'A	-p	4k
54	554k	55	55'A
36	23'A	23'A	23'A	—	V4
255	384k	37'A	37'A	-1'A
37	26	26	26
39	20'A	20'A	20'A	-	'A
30'k
4	294k	29'A	29'A
107	10'A	10	10	-	'A
14	15V.	15'A	154k	-P	Vk
-M—
3	20	20	20	-	'A
3	39	39	39
34	26V.	26'A	2646	--	'A
64	424k	4?'A ■	424i	-p	4k
22	407A	40'k	40'A	-	'A
52	51	50'A	50%	-	Vk
,^'TampaEI .76	48 24
1.30	10 24'
79 234k 23'A
SIS-
American Sfpeksi i rT^Vf"
NEW YORK '(AF) Exchange lelacl^ m
Alaxt
Olat .1 watt
(hdf.) High LOW Lett Cbg. 13 16W 16»k 16'A 7 10H 104k 1“
..._.. .. 3 231k 234k 2
iSlRW’* S’lvk’t??*
2tSS?r^?? T??
Atamwa Oil 1112 234k 224k 2246 + 46 1I..Corpwt 17 ^JVJ ^3 45 14% 14% 14%
iS, CrwnZell }.i ^ Cudahy C9. CurtiM Wrf
Goldflald
&’,.kVSIi'’S
HySrwnklf® tmparon .50 ITI Corp KalMr In -ipl McCrory wt
Mohwk b«M Molybdofl .
17'A 17	17	- Vk
14k	8'A	84k	-P	Vk
6	646	646	644	-	Vk
39	9'A	9	1-16 9	1-16	-	V4
31	6'A	54k	6	-p	Vk
33	5'A	,	64k	6'A
25	12	!i246	13	P	Vk>
2	I'A	I	6'A	8'A	+	Vk
12	12-	11'A	12
-	-	154k	16
64k	64k
2, IJVJ 9IA lOVk^VA . 2 12Vf 13	12	- Vk
» U 14'A 14V* - 41
JSpyrlghSd'^ Mi,^ The .'A4Mglatod Rraa* 14l»
Nat Steal 2.5
Nawberr
NEngEI
2S? 'liJ? ■'iJi? ± !iM'>'’-Nor .80
551	2746	2646	27»6	+	'A Motorola	1
5 271VA 269'A 2^'A +2Vk	1.24
7 13'A 13	13	— 4k	.
4	S34k	53	S34k	P	46
57 35?k 354k J54k -'A „„	,49
.3	S	22	t	li NatBIsc	2.20
1®	?2„.	Jl,.	1 Nat Can	.80
If	iT'* IP® - it NatCash 1.20
JS	«4k	iS?	Jt???;?K;,"o“a'ii’:?*o
-0-	iStl'Pnrsii’’
26	14'A	16<A	14V6	—	4k' NatLtad	~
• 64	54	n	feVA-H	-	'
I	244k	244k	244k	.
Ill	43'A	43	43	—	4k
39	SIM	294k	304k	PI
110	354k	344k	35	-P	VA
3	1I4A,	lO'A	M4A
23	23'A	23'A	23'A
44	13'A	13Vk	13Vk
42	22'A	22VA	2244	P	'A
IS 11944 119'A 11946 — VA 174	20V.	20'A	20'A
23	46'A	46	46
55	72'A	71 »6	72'A	P	«k
1	29'A	29'A	29VA	-
II	M'A	32V.	32V.	-
38 121	120'A 120'A
10	254k	“	■■■
14 124k
—E—
90	20'A	1946
117	76'A	78
29	45 .	44H
70	l2Vk	314k
23	20'A	M'A
’J	Si?	tl	I?
2	aS4k	2S4k	25'
17	29VA	29*	if
w’r «
25'A ?.4'k 1246 1246
Newmnt 1.64-
am.}-’?
Norritind .80 NorAmPhll 1 NoAmRock 2 NoNGat 2.60 4k Nor Pac 2.60 46iNoSlaPw 1.60 4k'Northrop 1 'k'NwilAIrl .45 Norton 1.50 NortSIm 1.221
IN	52'A	514k	52
19	3I'A	31'A	3IVk	--	4k
65	41'A	41	41'A	-P	'A
2	31'A	31'A	31Vk	-p	'A
7	2846	284k	5o4k	-	'k
21	3546	3546	35«i	-	Vk
?sT’2i?r&’??i’vk —N—
144	3'A	33'A	33'A--IVk
44	49'A	4m	494k	P Vk
4	72Vi	724k	724k	- Vk
78 148	147	147	- 46
40	20'k	20	20
17	2446	244k	24>A	P	Vk
36	22	2llk	2I'A
29	264k	26'A	26'A	-	V.
34	lOVk,	10	lOVk
29	29'A	29	29'A	P,Vk
1	????	Uni
T	‘4*3??	s	VI
14	32'A	32	32Vk
y'A ?4k	t ??
34	17?k	174k	1746	P	'A
i	sn?	IT??
24 «% 4»%	. 44
Taladyna Tanneco 1 Taxaco 1.M TexETrn 1.40 TaxOSol ■
130 41 51
518 30% 30V3 30% ‘ 25% 2Sr ■ ■ 24% 24
9 25% 25%
11	24%' 24	74V4	—	'
57 125	122'/i 123V4	-	=
2	19%	19%	19%
.......	30%	30%	+	’
TImesMir .50 timk RB 1.80 TrnWAIr .50p Transmr .50b
2 44% 44V4I 44V4 --44 32% 31% 31% -141 30% 29% 30	+
714 28% 27% 27% -40	8%	8'/2	8% +
7 33% 33% 33% + % 17 39	38% 39
244 20% 20	20% - %
—U—
125 34% 33% 34%
13 18% 18% 18% •
UAL rnc 1 UMC Ind .
Un Carbide 2	134 41% 41% 41%
■	"	“	51 19% 18% 19%
27 44% 43% 43%
Un Etac 1.20
UnionPacif 2 Uniroyai .70 UnltAlrc 1.80 Unit Cp .70g Unit MM 1.30 USGvpsm 3a US Indust .45 US PlyCh .84. US Smelt lb US Steal 2.40 UnivO Pd .80 Upiohn 1.40
19% 18% 19% + % 44% 43% 43% ~ % 37	51%	50%	51%	-	%
19	44%	43%	44%	—	%
24	21%	21%	21%	+	%
12	48%	47%	47%	~	%
12	11%	11%	11%
r + 'A
212
12
12 31
80 28% 28
50 33% 33% 33^ - '/• 175 47% 44	44% + %
100 38	37% 37Va — %
79 25V» 25	25% + %
50 54% 54	54% + %
—V—
Varlan Asio 124 34% 33% 33% » % Vanda Ca .40 10 17% 17% 17% + % VaElPw 1.12	48 25% 24% 25%-%
_w—X—Y~Z—
WarUam 1.10	72 72	71% 71% - %
WnUTal 1.40 WestgEI 1.80 Wayerbsr .80 Whirl Cp 1.40 White 2
WInnDIx 1.42 Woolwth 1.20 Xerox Cp .40 ZalaCorp .44 ZanIthR 1.40 Copyrighti
53	43%	63%	63%	•
3	34%	34%	34%
39	23%	23%	23%	-
Rails Gauge Profit Track Too Narrow
|he continues to demand goods|nnd a seller the highest price. | NEW YORK (UPI)-rThe U.Hi 'and put upward pressure on! To control or restrain theseiCourt of Appeals here ruled prices.	j urges, they maintain, the parti-1 yesterday that states mjMf
I The consumer’s personality!cipants must be forewarned that ihas also changed markedly {attempts to increase either
Mutual Stock Quotations
WASHINGTON (AP) - ’Thej nation’s railroads, seeking sup-1 port for the third freight rate hike in three years, told toe In-; terstate Commerce Commission today inflation is cutting their profits to. “toe thinnest of margins.”
Answering protests filed against the 6 per cent rate hike appeal filed Oct. 10, the Associa-i tlon of American Railroads sald| unless the request is granted' “even the present minimal! earnings will disappear.	|
“The gravity of the situation, does not permit extended inves-! tigation and consequent delay,” | the association said in testimo-i ny prepared for ICC hearings. | The 6 per cent across-the-3o?k 40??i?6'*>®«'-'*	*''®*8*'*	incijEase
3?	would raise an additional $6 mil-
63 406k 40vk 4066 + 'A lion for railroads, the AAR said.
by Th. AHOCIotod Pro,. 1969
$610, figure, ar. unotticiai .	, railroads have gone up $1 billion, it added.	;
Smaller rate increases were granted to railroads In 1967 and 1968.
COMPANIES NEW YORK (AP) —The tollonvlng quotations, supplied by the Netlonel Association I ■	■
Dealers
these
Fid Cap 17.2513.39 Fid Fund 17.9519.63 Fid Trnd 27,75 29.75
Prog:
7,(lo 7.76 4.35 4.77
Secur Sor:
10.151,--5.62 6.14
Grwth
10.05 11,16 5.62 6.14 4.50 4.92 9,79 10.70 6.97 7.62
(bid) ed) Ti
(asked) Tuesday.
Am Dvin 10.90 12.N
VmN Gth	3.21	3.51
Am Pee	1.01	0,75
Anchor Group:
Cepit	f.n	10.71
Grwib	13.60	14.99
Unless otherwise noted, rates of dividends In the foregoing table ere ennuel disbursements based on the last quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special or ektse dividends or peymonts not designated as regular are Identified In the following footnotes.	,	.	.
a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rate olus stock dividend, c—LIquIdalIng dlvi-I—Declared or paid- In 1969 plus ■
dele, g—Declared or paid so ti year, b—Declared or paid after dividend or split up. k—Declared i ■ccumuletive
action taken at '
Break Blacks Out Half of Toledo
Furwf' B 8.53 9.27 Stock 4.47 7;29 ^Scl CP 5.43 5.90 Aabson 9.33 9.33 Beta Knt 10.19 10.19 *5Urr Fd 12.89 14 np Bondstk 7.05 7.70 Boston St 8.07 8.8'» Bost Fdn 12.1913.33 Boston 8.54 9.34 Broad St 15.22 14.45 Bullock 15.291674 CO Fd 9.71 10.50 Canadn 18.86 20.40
Cant Shr 12.24 13.40 Cbannlno Funds: Baian 12.21 13.34 Com St 1.14 2.01 Orwth 4.80 7.43 Incom 8.20 8.M Spaci 3v03 3.31 Chasa Group:
12.31 13.45
Investing zyy FstF Vo 11.5912.47 Pst InGth 10.5511.54 Fst InStk 9.31 10 20
Fla Gth	7.63 8.34
Fnd Gth	4.05 4.41
DNTC 11.03 12 0«
Fraadm 8.75 9 54 Fd frMut 10.49 10 49 Fund Am 10.MU.23 Gan Sac. 11.83 ll.|3 Gfbraltr 14.7414.74 Group Sac:
Aaro Sc 9.11 9.94 Com St 13.02 14.73 Ful Ad 8.81 9.71 Grth Ind 22.44 23.32 Gryphn 17.0218.44 Guardn 25.14 25.84
Incom 5.40
Grth 10.431134 wth 24.22 24.27 N^w WId 14.1515.44 ■ Vent 19.78 21 .W 17.15 18.74 unavall
100 Fd
8.40 9.4 9.75 8 ^7 15.02 16.42
lOI FO 10.00 10 9T
One WmS 17.2017.20 O'Nall 16 55 17.61 Oppanh 8.32 9.49
Pace Fnd 12.35 13.W
16 55 17.6 8.32 9.4< 8.48 1.48 2.35 13.W 8.17 8.93
Fond
Frnt
Shrhd
Spaci
Charnel

g"-?*Ok!.OE 1.M
Stocks of Local Interest !&Fjf	w
6anWlv6*T)ltMMM	i W
markdow or rtmmlUloB,	15am Iko I.IO
a	19	16:14	3164	—	'A	Stock dividend.	1—Paid
6M	366k	34Vk	IS'A	+	Vk	1963. estimated	cqsb	vel
4 M 346* 35 +1* ex dl'lribulTon dat-
11	4164	4IVk	48Vk	-
—o—
3*7	346k	l4Vk	34'A	+
75	346k	34Vk	S4VA	-	^	„r,buN«,
delivery
‘di?ra TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A T Sales In lull	broken lransmls.slon line
•nd o^d'MNs*"in®fun'''i^drs''-l^x ^d^^^	ToIcdo
‘	without war-i_a city of mor« than 300,000
persons—for nearly three hours Tuesday night.

Otis El Outbd OwenaC
PecGEI 1.n PacLtg 1.60 Pit Pet .3SB PaePwL 1.31 PecT*T 1.36 PknASul ,37t Pen Am .30p
fSJjiKvf.-*?
..	336k	3)64	31'A - Vk
i!" Mii «s* I* '»i~ln bankruptcy or receivership -.,H	115 34 M’A 33*k — A	reorganized uider the Bankruptcy
: Ind If is	1\H	3lVk	116k Act,-or securities aitumed bv such	com-
K	iLz	flS	M... "iPknlM- (n-Forelgn Issue lublect to In-
*6	S??	Kvk	MVA-mI™'®*' •duellzellon, tik.
- ,
36 3364 SS'A 3S6k - Vk	STOCK AVaRAGBS
i	S’* I ij!	** ■''’i**“l's*'**lf***46
I WVk MVk ^ - Vk	Ind. RalM 0»«. Sltg|ii
II	I?	S''	ri??'SJJn'=v5JS**„;. 44i:*‘ isi'l ia;J	mi
IS	Ji"	yt?	y??_6*'^iVk?o*?;
'M	MVk	S66k	sSvk *\Vk «on«',*«0 Y ,
4y6k
s??i??i5a’ror
54 - %
iP'd* ,’S;I ?»;l
434.3	,135 ! WJ S
m l?!:S !S.1 Si:|
435.6 16S.6 133.1 399.1

M.4 W’t
S i *5 :1
4} 3IW MVk MVk EpWR'iW '‘fl 111 74'A 346k M +
'lifP;:
166 I39<k IN 119 .f Vk
64 164V4 163VA 13 56	49'A
34 3S6k
. OIVM^. McMrkd^
*	rikd Ractrd *klt
Nik ^
A spokesman for the Toledo Edison Electric Co. said rain hampered efforts to correct the trouble, which came during, the evening rush hour and caused massive traffic jams.
C^^lkdbj(^TI»*,AM^6M^^Prkk.^\
\ , '	Rtlll IMl. UIIL 'PWI. L.Vd,
Net Cbinge “.1 \+.1'-,l	+.i
Noon wed.	59.1	13.3	36.3	19.3	7S.«
Prev. Day	39.3	N.1	761	69.3	74.1
Week Ago	W.6	N.4	,77.6	19.7	7S.(
Month Ago	59.3	11.3	'76.6	9T ^
Year Ago	65.6	M.l	79.6	6
1969 Hll^	64.1	17.6	79.3	9—
i969 Low	56.9	16.3	76.4	19.1	74.6
1961 High	66.3	91.6	11.4	M.1	63.3
1961 Lmv	61.6	U.l	71.3	116	71.4
169.3311I.N 11.1413.37 9.9116.91 19.95 36 61
’"Equry' 5.65 5.58 Fund 11.46)3.53 Grwth 6.95 7.60 Vent 7.49 6.19 Col Orth 14.6314.66 Comme 10.34 11.32 Corns Bd $.38 5.8S Investing ibyl Comnnonwith Fdi: tap Fd 10.58 n..W Incom 10,02 10.95 Invest 10.10 11.04 Stock 9.51 10 39 Cwith AB 1.53 1.44 Nwith CD 1.73 1.92 Comp Ai 14.32 17.89 Compet 8 85 9.70 Comp Bd 9.4310.47 Comp Fd 9.9310;79 Comstk $.57 4.09 Concord 15.3315.33 Consol In unoyalt Coniu In 5.11 5.58 th 10.4110.72
nd Trnd 14.32 15.45 Indstry 4.44 7.V InsBk Stk 7.45 8.14 Inv CbA 14.0915,40 Inv Guld 9.41 9.41 Inv Indie 13.7413.74 Investing u v *	-	“	12.4413.81

Sfo^ Select Ver Py
Pina St 1139 1189 Phlli 15.6918.19 Pa Mut unavall Plon Ent 1.55 T.13 Pilgrim 16.17 tl.11 Plod Fnd 13.6614.93 Plan Inv 13.5713.74
Grwth 36.73 36.73 Price Funds;
N Era 16.09)6.69 Pro Fund 11.06 II O'): _ N Hor 30.15 36.15
Georg 14.6316.30 Grth 13 64 13,16 Incom 1.36 9.07 Invest 7.94 6.66 Vlita 11,06 13.09 Voyag 9.36 16 03 Rep Tech 5.31 5.66 Revere 13.9915.39 invesling yyx Rosentb 7.93 1.66 Schustr 17 0616.66 Scudder Funds;
Int Inv uneven Spci 36.16 36.19 Bal 16.1616.10 Com St 11.96 H.M Sec DIv 13.31 13.30 Sec Equit 3.94 4.3) Sec Inv 6.34 9.0) Selec Am 10.6011.47 Sal Specs 17.3316,14 Sb Dekn 33.41 33.41 Side Sigma
Sig Inv ..............
Sigma Tr 9,1516.77 Smith B 10.SS 16.35 Swn Inv 1.73 9.44 SWInv Gl 6.67 9 .19 Sover Inv 14.73 16.13 StFrm Gt 5.81 5.6! ........... 53.60	54.36
prohibit the sale of car equip- , ment for safety reasons even though the ec^pment me4ts federal standards.	7;	>
The deebion overturnf,if previous decisions in lower courts in New York and Ver-' mont.	r,v
’The decision pointed out normally there is consklerabla delay between toe introduction of new auto equipment add ! federal testing of R.
! New equipment presenting ‘‘Ji potential safety hazard” Is a I “proper subject for the Immediate exercise of toe state police power,” it said.
, The two lower court decisions overturned by yesterday’s action had been made in favor .of the Chrysler Corp. and prohibited New York and Vermont from banning a new typo -of headlight.
16.96 19.(
Ivy	9.43 9,43
J Hncock 8.M 9.7a Johnstn 93.29 23.29 KBygtono Fuhds:
Cut Bt 19.15 19.99 Cus B2 20.07 21.90 Cus B4 9.44 lO.M Cus K1 8.08 8.82 Cus K2 5.71 4.24 Cug SI 11.9910.72 Cus $2 10.40)1.57 Cus S3 8.07 8.81 Cus $4	S.59 4.11
Pofor	4.43-5.05
Knickb	7,44 8,11
Khick Gt 12.51 13.70 Ltx Orth 10.1011.04 Ltx invtt 10.1311.07 Ux Rich 14.1417.11
Ling
13,14
7.66
14 13.36
News in Brief
All kitchen and living room furniture was completely" removed from an unoccupieft trjailer home yesterday mom* ing, according to Oakland ‘County ^eriff’s deputi^. ’Hii ; break-in took place at Ne# Trailer Hidden Lake TrailaP* Park, 505 N. Rochester, Addls<i»' Township.
St Michael’s Altar SodelQt Rummage Sale, Friday, Nov^ 14, ».« and Sat, Nov. IS, S-li, Hall basement, corner EdlsM-and Lewis St.	-Adv.-
Rummage, M50 Elizabeth Lalfd, Road, Nov. 13-14, »-5. Unih^, Church of Oirist.	—AdVfi,
SupInSt Syncr Gt 12. TMR Ap 22.40 Ttachrs 10.90 Technei 4.14 TtchVit 8.72 Tfchnol
21.42 21.42 15.98 15.98 15.21 15.21 7.90 8.44 10.5811.59
iif 149
Trav Eq 10.4411.43
......Sil wElIt
Inc 11.61	Loomli $ay|w;	Unit Mut 16.9311.93
r« 14.44 13.76	. Caned , unavall UniM 9.13x16.73
iTr J.ft *.4| i' ‘\capli (3,361356 i ,\ United. Fundi:\\
\i;n	iJ:M
DrOxtl ^ 17.4417.44 Droyf Ftf 11801S.lt *^iyt Lv 12.H 14.12 itonRHowarfll:
1.8 8.4IG0nM0t 4.10b HI 75% 74% 75	+
pilte'S lEPfi
l:t 1.6ior7^.illl? 37 5Jk MVk Sm ...
PuniT
.................
iii®S«rSL„
n	Lkowk'
'»	Midlie
16 im 31 ink‘•Ml North
Vk Acuihnol CO
IVM 13-131 13-13	1-11
iiS E li:|! llii’
iW-JONBS AVIRAOBI
30 Induitrl
n sfi'i'iii..
yii
63 Sic
■ONDt 66 Bond!
10 Hlghtr grddk ri
It
16 Indutlrlili ...
Ind 11.61 1l.(
1.46 .9.35 upq Lan unavall Value Una Pd:
Val Lin 1.41 9.31 Incom 5.46 5.96 Spl Sn 1.36-I.M VneaS Ml 1.16 9.61 Invaitntg kt Vandrbt I.M 9.H Vangd 3.16 6 46 Var IndP 316 3.61 Viking 7.33 7 97
w?n itssiiin
Wllh Mu 18.91)4.19
m«d W4
wM
Lodgl Calendar .z’
Election of outside guard, .«t toe regular meeting Wed.,
12 at 8 p.m., Waterford, Auidl*; iary No. 2887 FOE. Doris Stride* land, Secretary.
News Yesterday ip State Capital,,
•y the AiiMiBIdd Rnti , ■
THi eovianoR ' ■'>
Wkrktdiln hla Lanilno dfficd and iMttT tome tiinl with Will AIM caldwtil.T dV’ Datrolt, who It aunarlng from limat l|
a rtsoluflon lURportlng RrtiW^ n'l dtciBraq plan to an# w
D-8
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12. I960
For Wont Adi Olo! 334-498]
Wounded Teen Zocf/ac; Wont Tell of V/cf/ms! Defeat Is Seen Is 'Satisfactory'
SAN FRANCII^O (UP!) — slaves, which was followed by,Betty Lou Jensen, 16, and her	UaiinflAIArfh
The “Zodiac” killer broke a his statement there would be nojboyfriend, David Farady, 17,1 |vl llQyi IjWUl 111 at 1
VanLerberghe Funeral Home,! 13340 E, Warren, Corner | Lakevlew, Friday afternoon'
NNTUC PRm
cussvHo ABvnmswo
monthlong silence yesterday to (u t u r e announcements, ap-:near Vallejo last Dec. 5M); announce by letters and crypjparently wa.s a reference to one Darlene Ferrln, ffl, near Valle-, youth who told Oakland	9	he will ^ of his previous cr.yptograms Jo, July ,1; Cecilia A
^eh. 'Aikisn: Nominefe o Bit Short of Votes
A youth who told Oakland	i® 9	he wilt^of ms previous cr.ypioRrams jo, July ,1; Cecilia Ann,
County Sheriff’s deputies that "iW longer announced to anyone whlim said souls of his victims | Shephard, 22, In Napa County two other youths had shot him when I comitt my murders.” would be his slaves ]n thejSept. 27; and San Francisco
yesterday is listed in‘satisfac-i The b o a s t i n g slayer, afterworld^	, cab-driver, Paul Stein, 29, Oct. WASHINGTON (UPIV -
tory condition this morning at previously connected with five,	...	„	Senate GOP dean George D.
Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. killings in the San Francisco^ At the boUom of his mmagp^y^^yg,j.	Vermont said today
Charles D. Woodward. 17, of Bay area since last December, on the 8^“ng i/'a	^	Clement F, Haynsworth Jr.
6834 H i 11 s b u r 0 . Springifeld claimed seven victim,.	"^^wo aritil	Slight fail to win'confirmation
Township, told deputies that two
•nswered their knock at theicorrespondence to the	responsibility for the klllingsjf,^^^__^^^	^	Luther,
aide door of his home, look him! Francisco Chronicle, Zodiac, to the garage area and shot him said his future murders “shall In his left side at close range, iiook like routine robberies.!
Deputies found no sign of a i killings of anger. & a few fake struggle and no spent bullet!accidents, etc.”	i
shells at the scene.	! A postcript to one of his|
____________ letters indicated he wasl
! displeased bv a dwindling of|
Black Marine ^'’'
Said Framed in Rape Case
teen-age girls Aug. 3. They died him.
of multiple stab wounds.	j	*	*	*	i
Four of Zodiac’s alleged vie-1 Aiken told a reporter, "I’d tims were shot and one was say at the present time that stabbed numerous times, but he’s a little short” of the 50 the San Jose slayings had not votes needed to win.	'
previously been attributed to	it *	*
Clevelond Hom©|him.	| Aiken’s count was a variance
I	*	*	*	^ CPI poll, which showed
San Jose Chief of Detectives 43 senators firmly opposed to! I Barton Collins said he doubted confirmation and 37 firmly for|
6 Children Die as Fire Sweeps
Six
GOYETTE, ZANE J :| November 11, 1969; 1625 Petrolla, West Bloomfield Twp.; age 39; beloved husband of Wilma Goyette; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Goyette; dear father of P®8gy. Donna and Veronica Goyette; dear brother of Mrs, Paul Smith, Mrs. G u s s Opdenhoff, Mrs. Richard Fred and Richard Goyette. Funeral service will be held Friday, November 14, at 1 p.m. at the Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home, Clarkston. I n t e.r m e n t in Oakland Hills M e m 0 r 1 al Gardens, Mr. Goyette will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 tonight.
....3A
....4
....4-A
Included a piece of a slain cab-1 CLEVELAND (UPI) driver’s bloodstained shirt in a|children were killed today when! JT””"	wwk of ¥odTa'c"
melr	Xe;,!;,,,™.. rpuflbTSS,
would have wanted to take gc^ jurist in the Supreme for stabbingsy of ^-^urt ggat vacated by Abe
letter one month ago
HE GETS LONELY	j city’s East Side
•Could vou print this new i/he victims, two girjs and - ; four bi
f g« ..Mlf	"";KalW«"Sn«»y,l5...rll»
Cipher on your front ^ge?” he|^	Fortas if all voted for him.
asked,
“NEW YORK UP) — The Dailvlwhen I am ignored, so lonely I
News said Tuesday night it ha/ould do my thing !! !!!!”	|	,,	,	,	.	,
conies of affidavits giving' Then in a large, scrawled j Firemen said ail six a^* children are nice targets,
Xnce that a Negro Marinf handwriting - which contrasted | parently suffocated in a second-
convicted of raping an with his u.sual small printing—1 Boor bedroom.	•! think I shall wipe out
Okinawan girl was framed by Zodiac added. “And I can’t do a The children’s mother told school bus some morning, he
three while Marines.	thing with it!”	T	primers -	—-	-......... --
the first floor and woke up to tires and then pick off the kid-i ^n	circulated callev Audrey LaFever, Mrs
find the house in flames.	Idies as they come bouncing^_,^^^^ ^e,^^c	Rowena Riley Arthur,
r.™bllngi“!!!®^i™'’'™’';, ^	school bu»s thihughoul >te’2,MI«T‘co7m Ht'» R'SSu«rof th'o ^ry''Jili
The blaze was out of ^®oiroi wprp under armed sruard oominatloo to committee .	*7
■ “.r „h»llramehamv.d.	I -JTroSX [hMhrSl.	'S'.’ “LI	i
The Negro Marine, Lance Cpl. i The I a t e s t correspondence Ronald V. Johnson, 19, of Included a page filled with Brooklyn, has served 18 months! strange ciphers, a of a five-year term, the News letter, a note on said in W^nesday’s edition. He | greeting card — and another was convicted of raping an piece of the cabdriver’s shirt. Okinajvan mess hall girl in; ”i though you would need a April 1968, while on duty at;good laugh before you hear the Camp Hague, Okinawa, the bad news,” he wrote. He began News said.	jthe two letters vrith the usual,
*	* . *	i “This is the Zodiac speaking.”
The newspaper said evidence. .
that could lead to a reopening j ANGRY WTH POUOT
of the case was reported to! "Up to the end of Oct. I have miliUry authorities.several.killed 7 people.” he said, ‘I times last year, but Johnson’s have grown rather angry with lawyer never saw it.	I the police for their telling lies
*	*	★	I about me. So I will change the
It said a petition for a new| way the collection of slaves.”
trial, based on the two af- ’The passage about collecting fidavits, will be filed soon in Washington.
SIGNED BY WHITES	I
Both affidavits were signed i toy while Marines who served with Johnson on Okinawa the News said.	I
*	*.	*	i-
In one, the	News stated a |
white Marine said the three |
Marines who allegedly framed ^
Johnson asked him to ^ participate in the scheme.
*	*	★
He said one of the three told him he planned “to pay a local native girl” to say Johnson had raped her, it said.
The affidavit asserted that the
alleged frame-up followed a „— ------------- ------- . _.
fight between Johnson and one | need other minor mechan ofithe three white Marines who I ical assistance. Chuck armged it, according to the t Fitch road patrol officer. News.	advises motorists to wait
The News did not say how it i m their cars 15 minutes got copies of the affidavits, nor	for aid from a cruising
did it say why miiitary f REACT will be on alert authorities took no action on the i reported new evidence.	$,
In one of his previous notes,,; Washington Post said Zodiac	,,®° yesterday its poll shows 51
torao «	senators were inclined to oppose
I	'	.	, Haynsworth, 40 to support him
I .•! thinic I sh«ll wme out a^„j undecided.
* ★ ; Government p rinters,
MARTIN, AMMON A.; November 10, 1969; 140 W. Colgate; age 63; beloved husband of Florence P. Martin; dear father of Mrs. Minnie Smith, Mrs. Roger Rivard, Mrs. William Nelson, Mrs. Christ Reppuhn, A. C., Larry L„ Ronald R. and Linda Martin; dear brother of Mrs. Parzetta Nash, Mrs. Laura LaFever, Mrs. 10 Stone, Mrs. Lola Bumbulough, Mrs. Lois Martin, Mrs.
for weeks following the threat.
Cause of the fire was not im-	★	*	*	fo™ was	scheduled	for
mediately determined, but “The police	shall never	catch	distribution	to	all	senators
firemen said they believe it me,” Zodiac	said in his	latest	tomorrow._________________________
started in the living room of the I letter, “because I have been too
2Vi-story frame house.	|clever for thern.”	i ^srATE’oF^MicHiGAN-in th« Probat*
_________________-—----------———------------------------------------— Court for tha County of Oakland, Juvanlla
Division.	I
tha maltar of tha petition i
Few Clashes in Viet; Crash Kills 8 Allies
Anita Lynn and Harold minors.
TO: Larry Tso, chlMran.
Petition having
allaging that said chlldrtn come within
the Donelson-Johns Funeral | Home. Funeral service will be held Thursday, November 13, | at 10 a.m. at the St. Michael’s Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Martin will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.)
com# wimini 712A of ttit/
! continuiMl undtr tho iurlsdlcMon ^ of tho Staff
*"'* SSf McLean, archie; November 11, 1969 ; 283 Sanford; age 79; dear brother of Mrs. Edith Lange. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home where Mr. McLean will lie in state.
REACT Plans Aid to 1-75 Drivers
The Cross-County REACT Alert Team will man the 1-75 freeway from Big Beaver Road to the Holly exit this weekend, the beginning .of the hunting season.
REACTers will be alert tomorrow—Tuesday to aid motorists who run out of gas, have a flat tire or
of this Court.
In tho Name of tho _ _	_
I	I of Michioan, you arf hertby nottfiod
! SAIGON (AP) — Small scat-1American losses were two kiHed i'!*thr&t®HoJM **02k"a*nd‘coumy
tered actions were reported in and 10 wounded.	Mrd''?ouKth.tTh‘^l^”Jt	MIDGETT, JAMES RUDOLPH;
A.D. 1949, at nine o'clock In the forenoon, and you are hereby commended to ap-personally at said hearing, .at which -------------------------* severance
South Vietnam today, with B91
enemy, three Americans and ^ ^ ^ headquarters reported 11 Timi -.m^y". __.....
man killed in clashes in the,,said	hi*
ly five caused casualties. I
northern provinces and along Saigon’s outer defenses. Thirteen Americans were wounded and two were missing.
Along the ceptral coast near Qul Nhon, a plane with eight South Korean officers on an inspection tour crashed, killing all aboard. Three of the officers were colonels who were promoted posthumously to brigadier general. Bad weather was blamed for the crash.
★ ★ *
Fighting was reported on three sides of Saigon but the closest encounter was 28 miles from the city.
U.S. 9th Division infantrymen
(S»al) a trua copy
NORMAN R. BARNARD,
Judga el I IRJORIE j
tac..v, ...g	...g..,, u—	snail pa sarveo oy puDllcatlon of a copy
oily five caused casualties.	IS
South Vietnamese headquarterslc^
said 10 civilians, eight soldiers Barnard, Judge of laid Court, In tho City
,	,.	J |at Pontiac In said Countv. thi. imn a.v
and one policeman were wound- of Novomber a.,d.jm». ed in mortar barrages fired into My Tho, the chief city in the Mekong Delta 34 miles southwest of Saigon, and into a hamlet 55 miles northeast of Saigon.
'The South Korean command plane crashed into Mt. Bong Chieu, 100 miles south of Da Nang, as it was preparing to land at Qui Nhon.
A South Korean spokesmar\^ said the three pilots apparently were unable to spot the Qui Nhon airfield because of heavy killed 10 Vietcong in one fire-.rajns and cloud cover as. they
I fight 28 miles southwest of the
circled the field for nearly two hours. He said - radio contact was lost, and the pilots might have been trying to land because they were running low on fuel.
The five other officers aboard, two lieutenant colonels and three majors who were pilots. One"militiaman "was were members of the staff of the South Korean commander in American Rangers clashed | South Vietnam.
N.Y. column to the yes column: Ub-!briefly wito enemy
U.N. Rejects Seating of Red China Again
capital, and there were no U.S. casualties.
S. VIET SKIRMISH South Vietnamese militiamen killed 15 enemy soldiers and captured three assault rifles and two grenade launchers in a skirmish 31 miles northwest of
'Finch Backs Study Calling for DDT Bon'
WASHINGTON (UPI)
UNITED NATIONS; IV.I. coiumu lo me yes cutuum. uiu-,	Coionn Irill
keep Communist China out for Two other nations switched	^
the 19th time, but six more na- from no last year to absten-f _ ,, _	-pnnrtpd 25
tions changed their votes. tions: Italy and Belgium. Both	Viet-
The 126-nation assembly re- are negotiating to establish dip-skirmishes Jected the proposal by a vote lomatic relations with Pekmg.	northern provinces south
of 56 to 48 with 21 abstentions.!tWO-THIRDS VOTE	'of Da Nang. Two Leathernecks
The vote last year was 58 to 44	ipjjg closest vote was in 1965	were wounded.	,
and 23 abstentions. The outcome	^^en the result was 47 to 47	Three miles south	of the de-| welfare Secretary	Robert H.
this year was never in doubt.	go abstentions. However,' militarized zone, infantrymen of | has reportedly endorsed a
^	*	*	this was a defeat because the the 5th Mechanized Division’s;® ” ^	^"*u"** r?
Although decisively defeated, assembly has voted every year 1st Brigade, reinforced by	^	United
Peking nicked un four nations that the question of China’s mored personnel carriers bat-; , ‘	. .
who swung from the abstention	representation is a substantive	tied North Vietnamese regulars!	J'*"cns oecision,	based	on a
issue requiring a two-thirds ma-;	for 12 hours before	the North	study	by a	com-
,1^ jority for assembly action rath- Vietnamese pulled back, leaving|was expected tq. be I er than a procedural issue re-, 11 bodies and three field pieces. | announced^soon^ ^	^
I quiring only a simple majority
i TUic
Death Notices
November 11,	1969 ;	2 74
Cedardale; age 25; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Willie Cross; dear brother of Mrs. Maria Lockett, Melvin, Carey, Dorothy, Carolyn and Sandra Weltonns. Funeral service will be held Friday, November 14, at 3 p.m. at the New Bethel Baptist Church, Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Midgett will lie in state at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home after 3:30 p.m. Thursday.
PINEY, MRS. R4 CHARD (LOUISE); November 11,! 1969 ; 237 South Jessie Street; j age 62; beloved wife of Richard Piney.; dear mother
the Huntoon Funeral Home.
BOUCHER, HELENA M November 12, 1969; Formerly of 157 Baldwin; age 78; dear sister of Mrs. Mary Plouffe, Thomas A. and Daniel Clifton.
Funeral service will be heldj Friday, November 14, at 9:301
ren. Funeral service will be held Friday, November 14, at 1 p.m. at the Trinity Baptist Church. Interment in Oak Hill
C.niet»y. Mrs. Pi™, « Ite
Catholic Church. Interment in Moupt Hope Cemetery. Mrs, Boucher will lie in' state at the funeral home.
in state at toe Davis-Cobb Funeral Home after 3:30 p.m. ’Thursday.
BRIAN, BETTIE F.; November 12, 1969; 1191 Alhi Street, Waterford Twp.; age 38; beloved wife of Robert Brian; beloved daughter of Mrs. Allie Nichelson; dear mother of Bruce and Brent Brian; dear sister of Mrs. Charlene Rochl, Mrs. Patricia Fowler and Charles Fields. Funeral service will be held Friday, November 14, at 1:^0 p.m. at the Hillcrest Nazarene Church, 520 W. Walton Blvd. Interment in Rochester. Mrs. Brian will lie in state at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home until Friday morning. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.)
PRETZER, NELSON E. ; November 9, 1969; ^Oakland County Hospital; age 45; beloved son of Edward and Emma Pretzer; dear father of Mrs. Barbara Kerr and David Pretzer; dear brother of Mrs. Lorene Schlicht and Mrs. Gladys Graham. Funeral service will be held Thursday, November 13, at 11 a.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Interment in Freeman Cemetery, Mayville. M r. Pretzer will lie in state at the funeral home after 3 p.m. today.
Legal Housing, Tenant Rights Lecture Topics
Legal housing and tenant rights will be the topic tonight at the second in a series of lectures sponsored by the Pontiac Black Cultural Center and Oakland Community College.	\
Open to the public, the meeting will be held at the Black Cultural Center, Sanford and East Wilson, al 7:30.
★	★ w
Mrs, Dorothy Cootral, an attorney for the Oakland County Legal Aid Society, will be the guest
This year, toe U.S.-backed resolution for the two-thirds rule received 71 votes in favor, 48 against and 4 abstentions.
Mobile Home to Aid Protest Coverage
Frank Mankiewicz and Tom Braden, newspaper columnists and commentators on WTOP-TV in Washington, said yesterday that Finch had endorsed the report and sent it along to the White House.
Finch ’ himself has n o
Seventeen Communist or non-IIaligned nations sponsored the!
i resolution to seat Peking. The; Eight Oakland Con^munity .
^viet Union was not a sponsor! Coll4e (OCC) students will ““‘hotity to order such a ban. [and for the first time did not|observe «the Nov. 13 -14 FIRST DRAMATIC STEP?
'even speak on behalf of Red moratorium activities in! Sen. Gaiylord Nelson, D-Wls., Ichina. India, a onetime suppor-Washington, D.C., from the said he hoped the study com-'ter, also kept sjlent.	vantage point of a mobile! mission report “will be the first
I Since Moscow became em-home.	dramatic step in removing all
, trolled in its bitter power; Strug-1 The	eight, members	of	the	slow degrading pesticides froiji
gle lyith Peking, Soviet iupport staff of |he Recorder, the stu-1 the market." has been growing moreTerfunc-'dent newspaper at OCC’s DDt has been under attack tory each year.	Orchard Ridg«( Campus in because it, remains virulent,
*	*	*	I Farmington township, h'a v e finding its way into plants and
It was the mildest debate rented	the 27-foot v e	b i	c I e	animals months and even years
since the question first came up specifically	to cover	the	after it has performed its initial
in 1950. Most of the speakers op-!moratorium proceedings. pesticide function.
'^sing Peking omitted the usbal| They plan to use the roof of . polemics and dwelt mainly on the vehicle as o camera plat-;the isshe: How to admit onejlorm and will write and edit the lese government without moratorium issue pi the I throwing out the other.	Recorder while en route.
/ Nelson said DDT "has been proven a major source of en>-virdntnental deterioration on • worldwide basis.”
COPELAND, HIJROKO (HASHl-MOTA; November 7, 1969; 29 Long Street, Kipcheloe AFB, Saulte Ste. Marie, Michigan; age 39; beloved wife of Leon Copeland; dear mother . of CIhristopher G. and Leon Charles Copeland III. Funeral service will be held Friday, November 14, at 2 p.m. at the Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home. Intehnent in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Copeland will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. Thursday.
DeGROOT, MRS. ROLINA; November 11, 1969; 863 Olive Road, Oxford. Funeral ar-raiigements ai;e pending at the Bo^sardet Funeral Home, Oxford.
REED, LOZELL; November 8, 1969489 Goings Street; age 28; beloved husband of Clifford L. Reed; beloved son of Grady and Octavia Reed; dear stepfather of Mary Ann Harding; dear brother of Mrs. Bertha Manns, W.T., Brozie, Joseph, Carl and Carthell Reed. Mr. Reed will lie in state at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 p.m. today. Funeral service will be held Sunday, November, 16, at 2 p.m. at Henning Ten-
ROERINK,GERRITT; November 11, 1969; 24 68 Snellbrook; age 69; beloved husband of Dorothy Roerink; beloved son of John H. Roerink; dear father of Jack, Robert, Joseph an4 Gerald Hoerhik; dear brother of Mrs\ , Diena Kitnball and Josqpb H. Roerink: also survived by 19 FLOER, ANDREW R.; beloved! 'g r a .ft d c h i Idreti. Funeral husband of Evelyn; dear service will be held Friday,
father of Ronald A. and Janice E.; dear brother of Clarence, Lawpnee, Charles, * Waybum, Mfs. Marguerite LaMothe and Mrs. Rose Davenport; also survived by six grandchildren. Funeral from the Arthur J.
November 14, at 11. a.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Gordon Lindgay officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Roerink will lie in state at ^e funeral home aftet 3 p.m, to* day. >
NOTICES
Cord of Thbnks .....
In Memorlom ........
Announcemchts.......
Florists ............
Funeral Directors ....
Comitery Lots........
Personals ...........
Lost and Found......
EMPLOYMENT
Help Wanted Mole...........6
Help Wanted Female.........7
Help Wanted M. or Fj .... 8 Soles Help, Male-Femdle...8-A
Employment Agencies........9
Employment Information ...9-A
Instructions-Schools.......10
Work Wanted Mole...........11
Work Wanted Female.........12
Work Wanted Couples ... .12-A
SERVICES OFFERED
Building Services-Supplies... 13
Veterinary.................14
Business Service...........15
Bookkeeping and Taxes.....16
Credit Advisors .........16-A
Dressmaking and Tailoring..17
Gardening .................18
Landscaping .............18-A
Garden Plowing ......... 18-B
Income Tax Service........19
Laundry Service ...........20
Convalescent-Nursing ......21
Moving and Trucking.......22
Painting and Decorating....23
Television-Radio Service....,24
Upholstering.............24-A
Transportotion ............25
Insurance..................26
Deer Processing............2^
WANTED
Wanted Children to Board..28 Wanted Household Goods...29
Wanted Miscellaneous......30
Wanted Money..............31
,Wanted to Rent ............32
Share Living Quarters.....33
Wanted Real Estato.........36
RENTALS OFFERED
Apartments-Furnished.......37
Apartments—Unfurnishul .. .38 Rent Houses, Furnished ... .39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished.. .40 Prope rty Management.... 40-A
Rent Lake Cottages........41
Hunting Accommodations 41-A
Rent Rooms.................42
Rooms With Board..........43
Rent Farm Property ........44
Hotel-Mofel Rooms..........45
Rent Stores................46
Rent Office Space..........47
Rent Business Property...47-A Rent Miscellaneous.........48
REAL ESTATE
srala Houses ..............49
Income Property...........50
lake Property..............51
Northern Property .......51-A
Resort Property ...........52
Suburban Property..........53
Lots-Acreage ..............54
Sale Farms ............... 56
Sale Business	Property.....57
Sale or Exchange........^ .58
FINANCIAL
Business Opportunities ..... 59
Sole Land Contracts........60
Wanted Contracts-Mtges...60-A Money to Lend ........'...61
Mortgage Loans ............62
MERCHANDISE.
vwaps .....................63
Sale Clothing .............64
Sole Household Goods .....65
Antiques...............  65-A
Hi-Fi, TV & Radios........66
Water Softeners..........66-A
For Sole Miscellaneous .... 67 Christmas Trees ........ .67-A
Christmas Gifts .........67-B
Hand Tools-Mochinery..... 68
Do It Yourself.............69
Cameros-Servici ...........70
Musical Goods..............71
Music Lessons ...........71-A
Office Equipment...........72
Store Equipment............73
Sporting Goods.............74
Fishing Supplies-Boits.....75
Sond-Gravel-DIrt ..........76
Wood-Coal-Coko-Fuel ... .77
Pets-Huntipg Dogs .........79
Pet Supplies-Servics.....79-A
Auction Soles .............80
Nurseries.................81
Plonts-Trees-Shrubi .... 81-A Hobbies and Supplies.......82
FARM MERCHANDISE
livestock ................ 83
Meats ...............V...83-A
Hay-Grain-Feed ............84
Poultry................... 85
Form Woduce................86
Form Equipment ..........87
AUTOMOTIVE
Travel Trollers ...........88
Housetroilers .............89
Rent Trailer Space.....	90
Commercial Trailers .....f.90-A Auto Accessories i........91
Tires-Auto-Truck ..........92
Auto Service ..............93
Mdtor Scooters .... .	. ^,94
Motoitycles ....,.,..,....95
Bicycles .........,.,......96	I
Boafi-Accessorlii ........97*
Airplanes........99
Wanted Cors-Trucks ......101
Junk Cors-Trucks ....... 101-A
Used Auto-Truck Ports ...102 NiW and Used Trucks..... 103
Aute-Morine Insuronco .. ,104
Forsign Cors .............105
Ntw and Usid Con..........106
pleats create a paneled frame for graceful em-broidery. Above are quiet, smooth easy-sew princess lines.
Printed Pattern 4 6 27: NEW Half Sizes 1014, I21ii, 14</4, 16V4, 18>4, 20^ 22^. Size 1414 (bust 37) takes 214 yds. 45-in. Transfer Ibclud-ed.
SIXTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for each pattern—add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, P a.t tern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER.
(rtf
She’ll whirl out happily oft sunny Fall weekends in this pleated-skirt suit.
Knit cabled Jacket from neck down, in one piece, including sleeves. Can be worn separately all year ’round. Pattern 958; sizes 2-12incl. .
Fifty' cents in coins for each pattern—a^d 15 cents for each pattern for 1st-dass mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, The Pontiac Press, Neediecraft Dept., Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Pattern Number, Name, Address, Zip.
At 10 today thors wars rtpliss at Tha Pn^s Offies in tha following bexosi
C-1, C-8, C-9, C-IO, C-24, C-27, C-34, C-16, CM2, C-86.
Card gf pmhs ..............
offering!, In fh« lou of our lovM ono ind Mr friond, Oflvor T. Potorton, to fht Sov. WlllloW P#M>P»f«t fW hi* fiMulSO of ran-wlotlon, to Dr. SIvonI fpr hi* un-firing iMrti, to fho ttaert inS
•ffor tho torulcoi, fo Hi* HunfooO Funorol Horn* f«r thoir wondorful jorvleo for which wo (hill ttwov* ra groalful. Tho Pitirion inS' Mi \ Klnwr fomlllo*.	\	_____
h Mawbrlani	/
IN NISMOSY OF OOS MOVM fothor ind^ grindfottior Floyd t.
A* lom 01 lift ond mitnerv M*f ■Wf ram romtmbtr thra.
Sodly mlufd by your chlldrm thd
Want Ads For Action
For Wont Ad» Diol 334-4981
To Buy, Ront, Sill or Trod*
Uio Pontiac Prill WANT ADS Offic* Hourii B o.m. to 5 p.m. Conciliation Diadllni 9 o.tn. Day Following Pint Iniirtion i
lilt ond Found	5 Help Wontfd Mol*
yOMNO brown and Whit# dog	nnVC MCM
I lo»t In nail Ponllac, latvrday	BUTS—WltN
altarnnon. Spy. a, rad eiill#r,;	Ifl OR OVER
INTBIIVIIW WOJIK ■ XPBllENCt NICHSSAIIY, train, laid, (allary par mo., to
THE PONTIAC I’RESS, WEDNKSDAV, NOVKMnKR 12, IDfiO
D-9

Incraaia attar 4 waalii. Tha dlchard'i Co., Int, For app't. call Ballay trom a a.m.-l p.m.
anuMri to WIckla, aia-slaa. ......
LOST; sTOClT ICA'tk' pi)ria,'’laT, attarnoon, cornar ot Hoapllal Walhar Rd. Pindar plaat* puria and conlann, bi fonay. MJ-3I7J,
LOSti RiwARO.......laaditv to tha PONTIAC
rtcoyary pl a famala Pomaranlan, DBTROIT lamlly pat, Sahia color, ylclnlty ot fnahnr.lona and Ml. daman..	Ama7lca'f
I-,V-~	•	........... ' aumar tihanca Company ,
lOST:	PRIDAY eVBMINO on paraona Into a caraniHl
Ponlinc Dr. In Sylvan, 3 month 1	managamanl	training
old gray tlgar kitlan with whlia	Muat ba abla	to	accapt
taat, aniwara to Sam, subalanllal training and maatar all I raward. M3.4U7 or «aM04i.	' ot oparallon within i yra.
lOST;...FEMALE OERMAN:
Shephard, gold, ♦ month, old,	IJ
anawer. to M.cca, Init naarl SJ'l'jlSi'""" !
Oakland Avjnua. aS7-4M3j^	’
3 LOST; Faniala Schnauiarr» monltii old. rad Plaid collar, vicinity ot, ^ ,
3M» Orchard Laka *Rd., Kaago Harhor.
^ieedT
WATIR CONOITIONINO wantad, good pay tor rigl Call iss-Tait or ni-gaat
VOUSO ASAN PveM is %■ wi*^ I rtl, f-3 p,rnrMdnr-P'rL,''Eva’rgraan
Itlon, Good, 'flCiirionBr ind Fnony; bdntfiti, C«f>i
ROUGH
COATS
PPAYTOtf S»m?N8 *^'^*** ' ttAdaai
DQNEISON-JOHNS ~
rUNKRAL MOM*____
Huntoon
UrvInS W-
Id Oikland Ava.
.A,	':?."S_Laka
Help Wonted Moi* A	2 MEN
DIAL finance CO, you'rt cr Int*n»lv9
or Sj^ya.
SPARKS-GRIFFIN
FUNERAL HOME Thoughtful strvica" FE l-waa
Voorhee.^Siple
CARPENTER, ROUOH ' ond'' (inlah around. Coll 3ai-3S7l. 'tri) carpontoril all. a.	{
CREDIT AUTHORiZOR	I
crodit oulhorlior loon dapartmant, lor id-
coll for Intervlaw. 447-IMo.
5"MEN
^	with can
For prolllabla tamporary, casual ■'— 'obs. Other man neadad too.
' ready to work - 7 A.M. 1331 WIda Track W. iploya Tralnaa.
ill
Laka. John R
opportunity Salai
with axporlonco and ability, App at Blrmlngham-BlaomllaW Ban 1033 E. Mapla, Birmingham.
An Equal Opportunity Employar
STEADY PARTS MAN 'NOWI
Plaaaa call Jack Olil at
growing- enn- Blrmlnphaim-TrSy' Ml'i-Sfoo' .CottYRlaican! Honn.,JJ4-1»4:
ONE'-gupBRViio»~DRivER to HbIp WMt*d FeiimIb 7 with handicoppod. no a«p.	/
I, SI3-aH3.	/	.1 day IROttlNO AAan'i Ihirla plui
light work, IM. Muat hOva innaporiolion. aza-atJI.
^AnD'i Came wallraaa,
I lima, no aaparlanca - - . Apply In perMn, 100 Bowl, 100 5. Call Laka Rd.
AGE 30-40
will train you lor a ci'ear a. an .
OPTICAL ASSISTANT
If you quality o« lollow.;
I. Pouoii 0 nail, ottractlvt op-poiranco.
3. Con typo with accuracy.
3. Would not obitcl to aomt
YOUNO MAN ikfifPllKftV dvor Includint Ironaporlatlon,
3d to laprn cookCng, Hourly rata, quirod, 334-3373.
tiuS-jW.""'	«'• 6d YOU'enjoy: children? NOW
7|H*lp WrnitBd FiniBlt 7
OltHWAtHER. COOK, WAITRESS.!LADY BETWEEN 41-IS lor Suptr Chipt, 333-MSt.	j houiakioplna ond Clark In molal,
OEPENOaIlE biRL FOR CLEAN-1	oporlmanl plui lalary.
Tnp an Friday.. «li lor I hri.	____________
rot. ro-	lIoAL SICRETARV
oltleo Jn Ponilpc-walorlord
Bus Drivii's
MONEY TOOl Driva
aid ..............
Cuaranlaad a wk Eica banallla, Phona 333-1 P,m.. r Wialrlcl.
Paraonnal Dapt.
BLOOD DONORS
I	URGENTLY NEEDED
LfeOAL“«CRBi:ARV,-M	RH Naf!'w*h poilllva
background pfrafa^radt --“
ig and i
r
MAIDS
.LBY SCHOOL,
COMPANYTEPRKfNfATW
ihorlhand., Walarlord
*'.?S
RTS ^LERK and alio porter I lEEDEO, car daalanhlp ax- tranaporiali arlanca_pralarrad. APPLY PON- i cOCkt'AIL
...
KEECO ' >RdDUCtrON WELbERS Commarclal Induitrlal Tire Co., cornor^ot Oakhlll Rd. and Orton-
.._|,T_,^_„^^
S3 Waal Mountcalm.
PARTS bRlvlR, R"6tll!iBD“-or MmCratlrad man, phyalcally III, J a^a a waak, VanjCamp Chavrolal,
DIETICIAN ADA AFFILIATION
Siell Oiallclan theraputical con.utfatlon hoipilau Salary
Tran.porlatlon providad. Summit MOTEL MAID, OVER 3S, complata raauma to P.O. Box 374, abla FE 1.4041 Tolido, Ohio 43401. Rapllii
BLOOD
KCtllanl In Ronllac ------	1343 WIda Track Dr.,
SALARY, BONUS; EXPENSES Laiadlng national Corporat-Rm with d top product lino ,naoda p laod man. Poo paid. ' INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL PE SH47 1110 S. Woodward, B'ham M3-inat
'*'1 cost ACCOUNfANr^
Wad., Thun. IS-S	Growing comptny natda o mtn
Tu.v'?,!!,"F’rru*!""	•"	...............
BlET-A T t E N DAN T S “AND mecnaniCB, dayi and afttrnoon
PLUMBING INSPECTOR
CITY OP PONTIAC Salary a?,430410,l?S plui III fringi banatjti, muat h i
CARET AKER	FblT*~Mbt fi'
lurnlihad
. .	.............., RELVABLE miai-EDUW.CU
DISPATCHER	|	lor vandlng roulo.	_
Aim r>na-ia mnnia.i	Bluo Crotl and unitormi turn ihod,
ALSO DOCK FOREMAN	con bat. ? t.m. and noon, .Mon.-
For local tranaportollon compinv.l Prl„ 33S-3S3?.
Btnallti. Good vocation ichtdule.;
background 10, Oelrolt.
! Pontioc Mall Optical Cinter
1131113
AVON CALUNO Guaranlaa youraall
Corporat-Rm
________J3¥3I?; ? a,m'-3	-..... "I._______ .....................................?..™P-------------------------------------
Bloomflald
working condition, and ban'aiili,
Houtakaapar—Holiday Inn of F tiac, ISOl S. Talagrap^ Ponilac
ON MEDICAL assistant, ■axparlanca'cboFLl~PULL''TVM^^^^	with ""'aound 7
p r 0 V I d a	^or Or	a otfica,	paid Blua Croaa	s	managar	of apartmant complax in	Indualrlai Coat
I to .avaral	o™*''	aharlng,	.end ,	ri.uma	ot	Pontiac.	No chlktrin or oat. Ex-i	plu. oxcallant Iringa banatltl.
North Canlral Ohio	quajillcailon to	Ponllac	Pri.a Box,	parlanca	In apartnwht main-'	INTERNATIONAL PERIONNE
!	lananca	wmx nnol carl and 'SS® S. Woodward, B'ham MS
.'•aVsTtisr? ~ dental recepTTonist
-...-4 o.m. MondBv throuah PrU Vn
Jfy
EXPERIENCED SECRETARY Clark, „-i.rfiB*~»iukr.u~Trrh;i;^^ madlum manufacturing o 111 c a ,	1°
minimum hour, a tlf 3. Brltl»h-; ■' „
Amarican Yacht Corp. 144? Hamlin middle AGED, PUCL tima; Star Rd., Rochiatar._	i biby.lttar lor 1-3 yr. old boy, 7i30'
......PANtR^ :6irl| p-^ixry?;- iWT
Varnon, Ponllac. Call
a.m,-4 o.m. Monday Ihrougl
CHRISTMAS ftaP
Hllla Country
....... paopla now. 1143.50 tori dayi. —
louaawork. it wlora 4 p.m,, Mr. Clyda. U5-4I14. 3J3-a?M attar dAREfAT«R-bbOprirFu1X“trrna
•alary’'	■*“	Chr'atr;;« Vy iilling
•aiary. Track Or. E.	._	: ChrUlma. beauty
MAN lima—itartlng now.
prafarrad. Call
REAL ESTATE SALESMEN
A COLOSSAL OPPORTUNITY! Commercial, Investment, ~
Club. Ml 44M2.	-	-	............
'^S'^'^.la.w’Sfan"^^^^^	'“u -"'oor' maioidnanc..-
........... ... W"S S
FE_ 4-043?.or wrila Drayton Plain.	,...-	6MPLbYWirNT“AVA^^^
‘	' HIMi NufeinOj
Will frein In
DEGREE MEN
to $9,000 - NO FEE
Manajjamant ^nd^ MjF.poslllon In
I attar CARETAKER COUPLErPUCL tlmd *11 flald., Call Mrl. Lirai lor larga apartmant prolict at fS7 Intarnallonai Paraonnal, Ml-ltOO. r had Rarry. Will to clain, huiband;	----------
EX-GI

E haip; apply at ««urala typing i.iinllal, J day Ava 1 block. E *®'’k weak, axparlancad prafarrad. SO?;'	I call 334-3M3 bat. ? S I. Mon.
AMATURE“LApYTor-gFniL^^^^^^^^	w"*iS;ttl!r^'’'ba.!’yrr--
Ave.

'tH 9
heve ref., St.
ATTENTION ALL SALESMEN
It you have , tha ability and da.Ira jor-^^Buying, Selllriijl^ or Trading real | LOT COMPLETE WITH bronia portunlly to'**maka above avaral markar, Chrlitlan M a m a r I a I, aarnlngt, call Mr. Badora or Mr Batatgi, S450, 33l-g?33.	George, 474^101
ATTENTION '	'
i Tots, WHITE CHAPEL-In tha garden ot Brotherhood. W6-3773. BaKLAND hills ME-MORIAL Gardena, 4 gravai In Sermon the Mount. Pnona — ----------
I PE 4-3414.
PONTIAC MALL BARBER SHOP
A S.H Tree SarvIca, 403 Orchard Laka. 335-4572 or 335-0047. _ i biSHVyASHER, full’ time" at-tarnoon., off Sunday, Pled Piper I _^astaurant, 4370 Highland Rd. I
Dry Cleaner Spotter |
Experienced, top wages, paid holiday, and vacations. Father t, Son Cfaanay,_FE B-?309. ErECTRlCAL WHOLESALER, nVadj warehouso help, steady work, with futura. Opportunity lor advancement. Apply 175 $. Saginaw
Opportunillai and Land. Ovdr Two Hundred Million Oollart In Hating.. Tha only non-ratidantlal multipla .....	.... ' .arvica ot Ha'
Haling kind in tha U.S. "Michigan Butlnna
AMERICAN GIRL
Invest* Has choice temporary aistgnmaots TOP salasman; all araas Sat your own *Hm'it’'J°n ftu WE NEED EXPERIENCED; mic iuccati. All In. Sacritariai contidantlal. Aak tor> Stino. and Olclaphona Opri.
“	“	Jr., Sr., Slat.
cay adding Mach.)
working hrs,
.... p.m. 175 par wk.
- ------- rii c->rrBi/ - ..........i Croi. lurnl.had. Ml 4-4IU. 675 E
FILE CLERK	' Mapla,_Blrmlngham, _____________ j hoapllal. Soma on call. Gar
for general oltica work. Apply OFFICE CLaTm CLERK 'ibr la-raa iljr'!"? ‘•i*’',''-Town I, Country Furniture. 4107	multipla line Inauranca co. Mu.t ba “Jr?J' crary.
Telegraph, at Lonj Lake Rd.	high «hool graduate, aome typing
ENGINEER
TO $18,000 - NO FEE
mlnl.traior Hubbard
Intervlaw. Tue.., Wad., Thun. bal. 1-3 PM.
-.....general OFFICE
Typist!
YOUNG MEN
International Corporation la hiring 10 young men to woi
our Pontiac olfice. Must be _____________ ________
appearing 11-35, and abla to learn EXPERIENCED MATURE mai’ti-qulckly, no typing required. For i lananca man tor small warahouaa. Interview appointment call 332- mill operation. Call B & B
, ANNOUNCES--------------- '	BuWar. Supply Co. bat. 9 and 5,
fall HOURS 9 til 9, Mon. through * ^oRKING Wanagarlor c.r «.«,	^
----'trri "pbriwi clilVr >-a7T—^ - ^ .. mechanically Inclined. 411-3338.	;
DEBT CONSULTANTS^ HI-0333	^
PULLE*	-p F od‘u c Li,l aaVaa^aSd «“rviM“^wllh "tfaklandl
p^?ama!!I^l"or“l?ra''™	TO ASSIST manager fn
iSirtcaldiai- Im.r	'	o“taide order deparlmeni, must ba
S?4.Ma4	Rdml'Y Bible.. g,,,, neat, and available to
_______________________ atari work immediately. CALL Mr. I
Free wig, wig parties, Yanchus 3304114 balora 4 Mon.,
WIgland, 333-7048.or 474-4423.	thru FrI,	!
FULL TIME
ATTENDANT
BERT'S CAR WASH
1300 W. MAPLE E. OFjCROOKS _
" FEED AND FERTILIZER SALESMAN
IMLAY CITY AREA Salary plus commission and all fringe benafits. Advancament op>
iynai
Quirlas strictly
Gary or Ward E. Partridga,
W. Huron St., Phona <11-2111. _i Telatypa Opri.	High School graduala
SHOE SALESMAN ' co%''pV.Jit!J*r''o
Age IS or over, part time, ax- Bookkaepart callent pay, can work out schedule . Keypunch Opr., to matt-your naadt.	And other efilce .kllla
BECKER'S SHOES	Phona «B9'9477 BIRMINGHAM
Pontiac Mall _____	_	t
■ sEWicE“mTi9N A^^^^	Incidentally, We Pay I
Sundsvi1>fi*'^MI JJtrim' "’*'	Holidays, Vacatloni, Bonuje. and
___   HIghttt Ratal.	An Equal Opporlunll^mployer
SHIFT WpRKERS/Work 3 ’	“^ASSEMBLER	GENERAL CLEANING, ThurV.-'ai
Ml 4-4420 FrI., own mansportallon. 334-0414.
Exparlanca on dabur rmg or a.Mmbting of imal mechanism, dasirad.
M. C. DIVISION KELSEY HAYES COMPANY
iTnlnST	BlrmlnQham*Cl5fn'J?.'''^’'
« AGORESSIVE:cAP:^:e: MATURE
rapulrad. Excallant benafits. Talaphona 647<9900 Ask R. A. Jonas to arranga an tarviaw appointmant. Aetna Ufi Casualty Co.
An Equal Opportunity and plans progrMsamptoyar. oCDE'R lady to'halp' with'li household and ba companion sami'invalid, Husband works p
Practical
NURSES
LICENSED

FIGURE GAL. For fht Ml
retired farm COUPLC 'partj SkldMa, *M4-34n?^‘Inafllng ^and tiav. .A,aBru exctHant houst ahd' Snaillng.	*
GENERAL~6ffice. Good ganaral
call 471-3253, around 7:30
ving cc
i^uTred,	^
' SHORT'ORDErCOOKS “i
op wagai, good working con-Ition., noapltalliatlon, apply In “	- steak $, Eggi, 5395
tkllli, ability to
pai _
-■ *••«!?•,___________________ ,
: WANTED:	GRILL COOK, nighta,! Clarke,
I apply In	-........ .. ..
4ei-94«,
yAfERFL _ _______________________
immadlata epaningi, for custodians I and noon tuparvisort, apply at 5P2P ^l^ntlac Lk. Rd.
wanted, -E'XPERTENCE-0~»|gHTi
GENERAL OFFICE $375-$400
Raceptlonlita, lypl.t., accounting Clarke, Many varlad poelfloni. North suburban araa.
*43 1341
Woodward Ava.,
Lova I
-	------------1 Jerry Fleher.
I AND AFTER THIS data it iT-W,' I Will not ba rasponelbla tor any othar dabta contracted by anyi other than rpysell. Kenneth A Paul, 39 fclintonvilla Rd.,1 Clarketon, Michigan.	I
Available Openings
nan 18-25, to work In oTfIc.
ACCOUNTANT la openings, foi countani with i
SEVERAL RETIRED MEN students that want pleasant, In-tarastlng chautfauring work to help fill their day and provide extra Income, must ba aal, alert,
courtaoua. 451-9493._______________
Service station salesman and part time man, axp. assantial but,
- ------lary. Also machanlc.i
1 m I s s I 0 n ,!
______Izafion andl
paid vacation. Call 424-3234 attar
“TUES^andt	Nma positions, avaflabli to 4131, __________ ____________j
.. transport.-:	sdiTiMiMfiP	t-A
CALL 742-4915
write LAPEER COUNTY CO-OP,'Immediate P. O^Box 47. j ping am -- EXPERIENCED MISCELLANEOUsl I machine operators. C resent •®-| Machine Co., 2501 Williams Drive,
Ponllac, Mich.
Mr. and Mrs. Homeowner
Yes, you can gat a 1st and 2nd' 1035 E. Maple, BIrm -	■	■■	- piSger,
mortgage on your home. Call Mr.' jOpporlumiy Empi
^	AUTO PORTERS
FeWNY RICH BRAS cusTom Tittad by_aRPOlnl^mafit FE 3-5144.
TRUE FAfijrABOUT THE“ ■
MIHaga Ihlpjcolumn Salurday WIG PARTIEsTwIos by Calderon.
resume Bank. An Equal
EARN EXTRA CHRISTMAS money| part ‘time, 3 men needed 3 hours per evening. Call Mr. Moore, 474-1 0520, S-7 P.m. only._^____
STOCK CLERK	|
‘ng for stock ship-iving clerk. Stock! background prtfar-■ sentl rea. Good salary and working!
conditions. Apply Birmingham j Bloomfield Bank, 1025 E. Maple,] Birm. An Equal Opportunity Employer. ________ _____________
FULL TIME GROOMER
FE 2-8515
FIBERGLASS BOAT,
SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT
I Full time. Apply at Telegraph I Mapla Standard bat. 9 and S.
woman lor responsible position to Jl2<-417*_^_^___________
manage costume lewelry and	GIRLS—WOMEN
boutioua, in Bloomtlald Hlhs. Good	LtERVIEW WORK
pay plus commission. Excellent HO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY opportunity. Sell helpful but hoL necessary.
Mrs. Taltalbaum. Flint 743-7340 PONTUC .... MMITo!
after 7 P.M. OW 4-4220.	| HAIRDRESSER wanted to help take	BECKER'S SHOES
............................ larae ouerftow nf natrons. Wllllno Pontiac Mall_____ 482-8511
Studio work, no axparlanot. intarasting work, dattlng with paopla, attar 13 noon. PE 5lfl333.
r SALESliDiES
to start — Increase altar 4-weeks. Tha Richard's Co., Inc. For appointment call Miss Wells, i
33.11 to
attarnoon and night shift on qualificallons and
bonus paid' of tJUl'raackWr shift worked. Contact Personnel Dapartmant, Pontiac Ganaral Hospital, Seminole at W. Huron, Pontiac. Phone 33l-471t_ExtJlLi
SHOE SALESLADY
To sell fashion footwear, aoe 18 or ' 35-40 hr.
Attention Real Estote
WOMEN	I
We need 4 'who are alert, active and ambitious, will train if
GENERAL OFFICE $75.00 - UP
No exp. necassary, light typing, grtating cHants, tiling. Call Mra, GrpvMj Inlarnatlonar Paraonnal,
“KlTT^NCOPlRATOi^
lice. 8425 mp. Faa pajd INTERNATIONAL PEI IMP S. Woodward. B'ham 142-3211
MEDICAL RECEPfibNISf
Will train pleasant parson *a make
*nd"w*lsh
returns. Wig for Intervlaw.
aSt-isss,
work 3 hours, aarty times a weak, have car, to earn UO per waak. I noon. Ml 3-7343.
BEAUTICIAN, BONNIE JEAN'S hair stylist, FE 2-9374.	' i
BABY SITTER NEEDED 11 days a waak. Union Laka Call Brighton, 227-7814.
5, 5
_ .	NAL
assembly operations, precision SERVICE STATION ASSISTANT at Tamarotl Buick, Young vvork, Brltlsh-Amarlcan Yachti shift manager. Exparlanca
(rested in learning tha auto corp. 1449 Hamlin Rd., Rochester. | nacesaary. Outstanding pay for __
business. Apply at 28585 Telegraph Sin~TlMs:~rTl:Vif—t^uli VinriT I honest, dapandebla man. Paid BABYSITTER ox C...K.1..X O.KX.	full	vacalion. Hospltalliatlon. Ml 7-0700. | Hills dVtrict. Your home
WIGLANb AT MIRACLE Special hbllcMr treat, sty all wigi andflalls style ‘
lyllng i lor S5.C
FOUND: ABaIioonED bicyela, in vicinity at Sdihabaw school, owner Eascriba antT pay tbr ad. OR 3-,
__	!	*HC.
FoJHbT PUPPY AT TaMHufon. 474-^ - __________’'U?’’'"*''''A®!.   ...
M|3aftir7»m.	AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE
pbUNDJ 'lN t IBA of W: Kannath &|	'
Manatlald, l Ian,and whlti approx,	------------------
9 wk. oM I ippy. For Information BROWN AND SHARP set-up man, call 33S-S344 .	I top. wages, fringes, Ponllac, 333-
^OUNDt WA [cEt IN vicinity of'
Rd., Southfield, Don Behm service manager.	_ __ i gJJJJfj
a AUTO MECHANICS '	'
wm ^o" wVk*«cal*am*'(X^^ and FULr^lMb“EXPERlENCED ’"gas all fringe banalits. Our business Is	plTiulc
axeelleni and wa need good people „S’*i_.HigO|*pO_"0-£jL<>o*'*o-__
to help us grow. Apply to Bill GAS STATION Attendant, sx-Borland. ■	perlenced, mechanically Inclined,
local ralarencas, lull or part tima.i Gulf, Tatagraph and Maple.	[
iBABY SITTER, Tdays, Walton and: I Opdyka area. S52-13I0 after a p.m. BABYSITTER, O C C A S S~t O N A L
«^7,_alt^5 p.m.___!
DAYS,
Homemakers
COLLEGE STUDENTS
Turn your spare lima Into ex money by applying lor
Christmas Employment
CURTAIN . AND DRAPERY shop, must have selling axparienca, lull and part time. Also hava openings lor avanlngi, 5:30-9. Excellent working conditions. Apply Arden
KAMPSEN REALTY, INC. REAL ESTATE SALESMEN:
become a laadarl here, gel $8500. C4 334-347T, SnallingJIJ________
MANAGEMENT TRAINEE $7,200 - FEE PAID
31-up, must ba high school grad., complata training program. Call Mri. Twalt, International Peraon-
Our Building Program Is Tarritle OFF|CE O^. File — Our hema Trade Program Is	¥®®„.Cill Shai
producing a record voluma of 334-3471, Snalling G Snal tausinasa — Our financing con
Grimaldi

BODY MAN
TO TAKE CARE OF aldarly man. prafarrad. Outland Riding Stable, 33175 W. 14-
MJIa Rd- Birmingham. Mich.________
GUARDS ~ guards SUPIRVISOR Full or part-tima. axparlancad or will train, openings all shifts. Marla DatacJIva Agency. 34S-0340.
HOLLY'S LAWN SERVICE Labor lor fall cleanup. Also service station attendant. 333-1337.
for Larry Sovay at I
Only-)
LOST! GERI^N Shepard; tamala,	BLOOMFIELD HrCLS"
named "Bilny.*' Medium gray.;	SCHOOL DISTRICT
Baldwin aiM Columbia. FE 2-1873.' Night watchman tor wi LOST-TOY POObLE, tan With Bondable Reterencas
332-0289, 9:30
weekdays. ____________
BUS B(^ FOR part I -------apply
150 W. Rutgers, girls pat, reward,
RastauM Kaago Harbor. Reward. »3-7941.	BUTCHER, E X C L U S I V
gISaMN SHoSf Hair 'NGHAM ..marked no i Irewn and white, cut on Sundayy.
LOST
IMMEDIATE
OPENINGS
I .	$11,200
lekand.l	Minimum If qualltied
RETAIL STORE MANAGERS MANAGER TRAINEES F";Snt! MANUFACTURING REP. T!!:	SALESMEN
BIRM-I Nationwide appliance company, »5. or I with challenging and rewarding
light
JBm^338-79J3^	___
THE
LUSTY LIFE
IS BACK - - NO In
■(id his (ietsrmlnatlori from tha hum drum Janca. For tha tlgar —' between 10 and 35 ambition to be tli dependant before age "mllet
macbanical exparlanca. Call Friday,
Our training will taka bin
axistanca. For tha virile to and 25 with financially In-
BAKERY CLERK, MONDAY thru "	■	to 1 p.m.' Apply
3337 Auburn Rd.,
Auburn Hgts^_________________
ARMAID. MIDDLEAGEb, rnarried prafarrad. Steady, sober, liquor famny bar. 481-1455.
C I aTn W a N't i TEED waga, 50-55-40
___ commlaslon, Blua Cross
taanafits, Phlllpa Beauty Salon, 333-9370.____________________
BEAUTICIANS
or part n. High
Conlinganl available (
SECRETARY STENO, tor salat ol-: lice, work conalsta of dictation, typing, talaphona anawering and usual office routine. 5 day weak,
I permanent position, located on Telegraph near Long Laka Rd.
Phone 647-3200, tor appt.
'AUTOMATION &	0	I07t w. Huron St.
MEASUREMEIKT DIV. ^rIaTESTATE
___(THE BENDIX CORP.) __ DO YOU HAVE A LICENSE?
PROGRAMERS
SIOJXW NO FEE
Salon, High guarantee
bv hl« I mission. *47-4544.__________
I BEELINE FASHION NEEDS Christmas help. Full or part time. Call S53-503S or 335-9071.
.Hudson's
Pontiac Mall
534-94,7 I BABYSITTER, 7 A.M. - 5 p.l
TREE MAN, (CHmbar) axparlanead rtpontlae"GeLrarHoipifaiy Fe'*^ vacatfon and'‘'^afl'ts,'' ■	2740 after 5 p.m.	It to 8, 1 hour *- '
HOSTESS FULL TIME
tor cafatarla, no Sunday work P|aasant workjiig conditions, ^ali
transplanting steady work. (503 Orchard L
Rastaurarit Pon- 9 A.M.-3 A.A
LUSTY LIFE
IS BACK
TAME — IT'S NOT • 1 1 Tha modern rugged Individualist can become a legend an her own time. Our training and her datarmlnalion will taka her from th- " ~ "— everyday axistafKa. t bttween ,ts and 35 w to ba financially batora age 40. Wa portunity limited only agination. No axparler — wa train.
Call Mr. Hamilton
ED?
I WILL HIRE 3 SALESMEN IT WILL PAY YOU TO CALL: / MR. KINCANNON
GMC Real Estote 681-0370 REAL ESTATE
4 aggrtaslva salat paopM staff. LIctnMd stlasBa
334.7427
-RUCK DRIVERS, perlenced, stti good overtime
Our equipment, BABY SITTER,' LIVE In local dallveries, wixom araa. Call day weak. FE 2-3630. Chuck. 404-9415.______________________ babysitter WANTED
usfo CAR	I ('oma, .days, ‘
OR 3-1112.	J	HOSTESS
BABYSITTING DAYS OR evenings Experienced lunch hostess. 5 days SEMI-ex*'	W'y person, Mtehus
with fenced yard. 383-3683.___ ___________Red Fox, Telegraph at Mapla.
out, 6 HOSTESS F=0R' '
SHIRT WASHER
Hrmlngiuin;^ Cjeaners _ Ml 4-4820
Shirt Press Operator
Experienced, Apply Liberty Cleanars, ask lor Mr. Mitchell. Ml 4-0233. Paid holidays and vaca-
RIPAIR TECHNICIAN $6,100 - CAR - FEE PAID
I No. axp. nacasiary, 21 - u p mechanical aptitude or aleetrleal> ' background. Call Mra. Twatt, International Partannal, MI-IKW. jSECREATARV to dlractor at
RaspoMJbSf dtvariltlad,' dlviahw," S ' days.
edema i, 4xlama.__________447^lgg
SALES: Mature gal abla to work on own I $310. call Connie King, 334-2471, Snalling afnd Snalllno.
SALES TRAINEE $7,200 - COMPANY CAR
National corp. will train yau ta
R o u n d I n 0 > Intamatlonal
final, 401-1100. __________
YOUNG TYPIST RECEPTIONIST
local company will TRAIN gal. Call Mrs. Gallerd,
l%?s’<
PORTER
praschoolars, ^E 3-0033. PERATOF call now,
chlldr
840 to start, BSI-3333.

. FE 5-9257.

Vic. Walton
lalt front lag.
Adams Rd. Raward. 334-1457 333-8995.
BUMP t&N WANTED. Dibbles Collision, 3123 Lapeer Rd. (M-24). 373-OOM.	'
BABYSITTER-LIVE IN
Call 335-9001
wanted Male 6 Help Wofited Male
BEAUTY OPERATORS, top wages,
Must have.drivers license and ax-| -- -	... '
posmons, xipenmg ,n in„ are.,,	I
needs aggressive neat appearing.;	UA^LAnu
seif-starting Individual* to earn top	CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH |	_	_
a®*'—j	fe a-soS owisl'oi: housekeeper; “LIVE Tin:
SWEETS “
HOUSEWIVES	i waitress days, full time, ax-
Chlldren back In school? Use yourl perlenead, good paV, Blue Crots.] tree time for part tima income.' apply at Ricky's, 119 '
For Infarvlew call 474-3713 bat, WAITRESS WANTED.
‘	_ I working conditions,

729-4613.
contidontial Interview, {
TECHNICIAN. EXPERIENCED. SWEETS
RADIO AND APPLIANCES
PLANNING FOR A FUTIURE
da yaur family In your plans. The protactlU of rtant. Join our team and hava this pr ' ‘
gany paid banatltl Include; Employaa , Blue Cross Medical and Hospital ( and Accident Insuranct. Company F Holidays. Night shift premium ot 1o ( cost dt living Increase and many otha
OPENINGS F( EXPERIENCE!
TOOLMAKERS JIG AND FIXTUI BUILDERS ;
BORING MILL VERT.-HdR. MILI LATHE
BENCH HANDS . WELDERS AND FITTERS
58 Hour Week Long Range Program Presently Working 65'/2 Hours Wekly
Make Applications a Our Employment Offic 9
8 to 5.30 Mon.-Fri. - Sot. 8 to 12 INTERVIEWS TUESDAY AND WEDNEl lAY EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONL
USi-Artco,' In.
MACHINE AND TOOL DiV. • SUBSIDIARY OF US. INDUSTRIES,
3020' INDIANWOOD LAKE ORION
PHONE 693-838S
RD.
LAUNDRY, i
S40 S. Telegraph Rd. j Experldnced In color, top pay
FE 2-1481.
BEAUTY OPERATOR
. -IS r ■ ■ ■	—
343-8344.
Alberts Bttuly Salon.
room, bath, 5 days, 848. Ref. rtq.
Rochester. 451-1188 or 451-9333._
HOUSEKEEPER, BABYSITfiER, 5
MILLER BROS. REALTY
333-7156	R rc E> n"FNTs't7~i^i71d-
®	Ball**84^. Call*Ma^
GROWING FRANCHISE . FIELD, Brldgaa, 334-3471. Snalling *
No Investment needed. UnllmilddI ing.
Income possibilities. Salary agalnat,gcrpe'Taev—uil^rir commissions. Pleas# call Sally I Brent, Inc., at Ponllac , Mich. 473-1
' Xing. 334-24?”Snalling I, Snalling.
I TYPIST. Good meal firm naadt good tklllal 1388. Call Ann Cartar^ 3471, Snalling I, Snalling.
Instnietloiu-Sebiiiir 10
ground for opportunity. C«ll Mr.
Brannock—363-;i41.	__

SALESMEN
lnt«r-City
MEN, LEARN .	.	,
Union banaflts. Day8 or nights. Top rate* U.99 *-•-Prassy 349-5990.__
MACHINE AND AUTOMATION
ASSEMBLERS
MACHINIST
varllcsl Mlll-Oatail Specialist
Excallant opportunillai In a solid, fast moving company " am ot gro
BAR MAID. MIDDLE-AGED, Mar-, riad prafarrad. Steady, sober, II-1 quor axp. for family bar. 611-!
1455.____________________1
BEAUTICIAN WANTED. , 333-7444
araa. 474-1748.
Rafertneas. 875. 424-4971.
HOSTESS
WAITRESS	I
mdaywerk, good pay, Pled Raataurant, 4378 Highland ‘
working I
Are —
Cross positloi
Hwy.,	_________ ______
WANTED GARDENER, prfvdf# club,! Hrs. good opportunity, mi#it considtr Anderson Bakery, 124 W. 14 Mile,
year (bund. Platsa write! Birmingham. Ml 47114._________________________
qualltleatlOTa and in	CASHIER, 48 houn, no Saturdays,
salary to Ponllac Press. Box C-g,^|	workin ------------ ■—
MATH TUTOR AVAILABLE
Evenings In my home. By qualltlad Math T a a c h a r . Transportation available. For add It ten a I In-formation and malhed If ap-plleatlen phona 334-Vm,
4 a.m.-3;38 p..n
Tad's at Bloomfield Hills opening for a lull lime day shift, top wages, vacalli
hostess, WANTED HOSTESS FOR FRIDA'Y WANTED F»'ART TIM'S,
oas. food' evenings. Apply 114 Orchard Lake ------------------- —■- ■- —
aid holidays, Ave. Pontiac._____________________
Crest 8. lilt WAITRESS
FWork Wanted Male
11
store, 8-12 houra i
FULL time ly In parson only s Restaurant, Kaago Harbor.'.
82.00 to 83.50 tarviaw apMln or 332-437>r
333-5433!,
range program ot grow products. Substantial banalits and opperti
WANTED
Sandtlt
A. L.
Mapla Rd., 424-3810.
Talagrw
■ Rastaurant. 4378
Cashier-Salesgirl
I	John R. Lumbar f
TRUCK MKH6NICS
CLYDE CORPORATION GOS Or diESel. Liberal pay; | HIghlana HP. _________________________
Subsidary of Chicago Pneumatic Tool insurance fUmished, retire-, COUNSELOR •»,VOu	ability
■ “	■	‘ ' " L —r—1 Book, 332-9157.__________ -______
CLERK-TYPIST
for ganaral offica work. Book-itanographlc axp. .nsurala with ex-•blllty. LIbaral fringe
,	.. __ot age or older, $1.58
T T '	_	-I	ah- hour plui alt Iringa banalits.
Homemakers ! gr
Earn a little axtra
1800 w. Mapla Rd.: Troy 442-3208 mpnt and full benefits. See Mechanic^ . Mr. Coe, B a.m. to 4i30 p.m.
To assambla machinery, electrical ,,_
wiring 4 penal a x p a r I a n c a Monday thru Friday.
.....i ^^IvIC
Truck Center Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485
training,
Wa will train and assitt you •vary way. Salary 8180 par wl 1st mo., 1180 par wk. aacond m 8178 oar wk. 3 rd lyw. Income u limited attar 3rd. monlb. Call N Coomta. a74-2M.
'MOTEL PORTER
Days, apply 18M S. Talagrapb THE HOLIDAY INN
COUNTER GIRL FOR . Call Laa.al Ml'4410._ cCXiK OIL 4 REFTNINC'Corprbaa a new station on Highland Rd. tor jjg
MEN NEEDED
FREE TRANSPORTATION IN OUR
WORK WAGON
TO and from PONTIAC Call 318-1980 for WORK WAGON schedule and route Or report f*ady lor work a a m. to 4 p.m.
EMPLOYERS
Temporary Service, Inc.
PERNDALE	3M Hilton Rd.
REDPORD 1S14S Grand Rlvir CLAWSON	$8 S. Main
centerline	8841 E._I8 Mila
NOT AN EMPLOYMENT a6ENCY
_____^ALL JOBS ARE FREE ^
MAN FbR~CLlAN'lNO~dei
g„t(iiii;.?.?37m.k:'
- Manager""
Excellent growth dppq
as. manager M downtown hotel. Full charge el Hotel (laveloped to dl. ' oparatloni In
Seiralt
noma onica, or tnia nttiontl firm. Dtgraa raquirad end tome ex-, perlenn le hotel OMretlans. To lelerv/bonuiet, pretlt therlng, endi benetlll. 273-1988, Mr. Shoe. l
. SIMONE CORP.
iftw W. McNleholi	Detreltl
NEW AND USiD CAR "
ULESMBN, EXPERIENCED
Applyt KtEgo Softs Service
■‘•SSS&Wol"- 1
Young ' Man
18 Yeors or Older With Dependable Transportation
Pprt Time Daily
3:00 to' 7:00 P.M. APPLY
Circulation Pepartrilent THE PONTIAC PRESS
Salary Commansural
gai^^	■ ...
APPLY IN PERSON
PYLES INDUSTRIES
20990 WIxom Rd., Wixom, Mich.
drive car and llvt in 24 hours a day to be with mother while I'm In hospital tor surgery. Write application to Pontiac Press Box C-
38.	________, _
WAITRESS WANTED COOL.EY
Unllormt furnished and laun-
Friday
Apply Monday 2 Tuesday thr or 2 to 5 p.r
Bloomtlald Shopping Canter 4594 Telegraph at Mapla
Woodward near Hanrl'i
buy tha axtra things you want. Work In the evening while your husband baby-sits doing cleaning! I work In otficas and scnbols. 4 to lOi p.m. Jobs tvallabla In Birmingham! r, and Rnchastar. 11,75 to $1.90 par| '• hr., 5 days waak. Call 847-2637. _ i WOMAN Wanted, to cart'lor~ 3 motharlaas children, llvt In. 451-4895._________
WANTED JANUAR'y"
A-1 CARPENTERS
I Fathtr and ion. Lergt or iinall
lobi. 48^S137._______________
-	.	. >CAR....UPHOLSTERIFip AMd amtil
/ A r'r'OI inirmT	furniture wei^, reetenebM, raer
rA.UV-.UUUlUUl	window 824. 332-8902 after 4.
to *nn IIP	DISABLED Veteran wanta Odd
*y,OUU — Ur	I hauling loby 33^S492■ Ask tbr Guy.
tob^coft'or^cMtlna'exo"cali Mra’t TREE REtiraVAL. reasonable ratt«. UJrd™ Tnmr“ltlSnIlPa^nwli	® P-m- «*-»»«• .
461-1100.	_____
ACCURACY PERSONNEL
BABYSlffEl ^WlfH~8wn trm., SpeclalUee In tamale plecemant In PIJj*''?*!!?, LS'*”®' ehlldren. Cell
th# suburban area. Our amplayartl attar e 673-3932._.... .
tha faa and are alwaye woklngi daV WORK wantId gait who hava tha ability te|	187-4313 or 837-349?
•"““'lY*.	1H1«BANb Ahl'o”WiFfrftiiSr'a;-
r*’*^polM-i pe'"**''®*® lO. Ie'’!(8''.J9PWPE
advance
Coma In today ^hcatlons In loi
WOOl)|4tARD
between 15 4 II MILE
642-3050
_Edds,_LIJ_-72a, alt. 5, 271-3524.
CASHIER^
Naadad part timai work to tit yoi hrs. Typing and general oltic work. Plaaaa cell 3348784.
franchise!
daelars In this area. These dealers have been buying Irom us lor years. You will ba taking orders from —— *------------"
CASHIER"
TELE-TRAY OPERATOR CURB GIRLS KITCHEN HELP
RESTAURANT
BIG

4-silver Lk. Rd.
ClIaning l a d I tX aC15 bouaakatptri, Birmingham, car allowance. a43.?908.	___
aERK ‘'
Wb havt an optning in our Airm* . inaham offtcaa for a malura in> ' dividual with ability ta flla and typt (40 WPM. No racant ax-parlanct nKtiMry. Prafdr Oakland Raildani
Call Offica Sarvlcai r~332-015S
Birmingham
Oakland Mall.
439 W. 14 Mila & John R.
SANDERS
IS THK REASON IT'S GOOD An Equal Opportunity Employar jTjnToR or SiNl'bR girls, pert, gbeco's RasteurenI,' 3171 Dixie
------- ------,pp|y' Hwy. Apply 3 >0 8.	_ _
Cass YOUNG WOMAN WANTED ll waak; light houtawork, good iTax-i Call 3354113.___
YOUNG WOMAN
________I etticas to clean. 4T34444.
I Moth Tutor AvailabI* '
' Evenings In my home. By duellfted Math Teacher. Trensportel^ available. For e d d 1110 n a I tn< ■ lormetlon and method of ep-I plicatlon^Phona ^1711,
GENERAL HOUSE c'nfiOirTisnr,
I walls, windows and woodwork, dx-
tha 8128
area. Wa will provide on the lobi irainlng, phona 332-5433 or 332-1 4371 loMniarvlaw ^
WAffR'iss day bR
axparlance necassary Rocco's Raataurant,
Hwy. Apply 5 to I.
A career miss?
$280 TO $600	— __________
Desire to grow with expanding 'LADirwm eare*^^ Uy or "I
firm wins veu this opportune spot. baby. FE 5-8W. ____________
Rounding, Intamational WASHINGS
daitvar. 3354414.
or f. BHeIp WantBd M. *r P.
Manager—3! Michigan Mutua ' Jnsuranca
Paid' Blua Cross, vacation. Apply, Damaay Keypunch SarvIca lnc.| 3744 Williams Laka Rd., Drayton' Plaint. 873.1215.	|
KI-F^hI^ HE^Ei.~4 da'ya'a'wiili,
Wc'Hi‘^iritELiCl>AXoFXiflM no axparlahca nacaitary ever ll,l Apply Rocco's Restaurant, 31711 _Dlxla Hwy^5 la I. _	j
KEYPUNCH OPERATORS I
(TEMP ASSIGNMENTS, ALL SHIFTS
CALL JEAN JOHNSTON'
.., i	American Girl
days' Apply "in rAbY'wltH'bNi'CHILOi
VorcSfiU
Pontiac .Press Want Ads For Action
COUNTER LADY . store, houra 1-7, parson, soaa High Jl33_baf. J'4 3,
i	A*’VfLBPH^NE 0?RL ' lCAbXt6’'SfAY~VVI'fH'
IParl.lImt Il.Tsio 8I» hour toL«]l.M*«i.iL
Starl. a-4 hours par day.- Call' LA6y FDR OENER. Urbara, 1:38 to 18:08 a.m. ifa- llvt in,^3 days. O&n
6IWfX'CXIiil8 Wi?f rriTxSiffl	Ta‘6 y~ ior'X*<>8fei~
nacatsary, must be able to typt. weak. Blrmlpghai jpa. wal|ht ing height, rat. haute, 1 tIMr,
AL
rm„ bath. TV,

Local national firm now hiring young woman tor pleasant, parson Intervlaw work. Wa train at eur axpania. Must hava pleasing personality and ba dbla ta start Immadlata amployamnt. Excallant earning ter these who quality. No typing raquirad. For Interview call Mr. Paters batora 2 p.m. 3334115.
j NEl|i Wmted M. *r P. ^ 8
! APPLICATIoViS NOW being taitan , tor ushers, concession and daytlma cleanup. Pull pr part.time. Apply I mua Sky Driva-ln Thaaira ally's
A'PRo'FissTbi^^^ writing club hat eptningt ter 1 or 2 axparlancad groomi, excallant pay Including room and board, year round amploymant, fringe I banalits. Contact Mr. HUthm at Ml I 4-2311.
I BMKkfiPiiTX'irT'A s'iTTe r", :ipabla ot taking care at. itl ot loubit antraa bookt. Profit aharlng ilan, qi^ hmitalliatibn 'available, kpply (fen^y'a Jtwalert, 43 N.
tranaportatten.
LIVE m~KiYSii^ ’moca~ior;Buyers Sellers Me*t Thru ........................ ' Press Waht Ads.
★
DO YOU HAVE A NEED FOR EXTRA MONEY NOW THAT CHRISTMAS TIME IS NEAR? WE CAN TRAIN , YOU NOW FOR PART-TIMf DAY OR EVENING SCHEDULES IN SALES, CATALOGUE, STOCKWORK OR BUFFETERIA. MORE HOURS WILL BE AVAILABLE AFTER THANKSGIVING. IMMEDIATE EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT APPLY NOW PERSONNEL DEPT. MONTGOMERY WARD THE PONTIAC MALL

^ ^ \
THE PONTIAC PRESS, VVEDNESDAV, NOVEMBER 12, W*
Xfor Want Adi Dial 334-4981

.SSMMSfflr-.■ cS55ll?TJ”, la. 5'TK
■toi, WI-MIB,_______
*"M6ftTri« Dr6oM oMir (ipmt. rant or Inu witn otHlon to buy,
PonttK. Utic*. Royol r ‘---
chlMron l-l», N^»74,
HANDVMtAN - •uvtna twuiM In ■PPICIINCY PmiIk mb lurrounBtna •r«M. bulMIng, ut WIti MV oil witl. Agont, MI M7A Oop, ABultl
IMMEBTATE cash li^yTcffliKlTtl-
38|Ap«rtiiitiilf, Nralihidi ITillaiit HawMi,	Nomm
UNIT IN.
WAITON SQUARE
ft T««
swbp	e'b'N iTTu s^reTil	""
yssu'^'isejssh!'
gild Ptwrrtlin 13 «!'. L«.n Imko .i jVjmo, bxi,
CUSTOM PAINTINO md wall
syA;BuVra?>;:^.Vfs-jag,-
LAOIII bitIRB INTBRIOR Min-
oSymoM? OR^wyor eR*S-‘»S**
Bashi
POR TOUR PROPBRTY Mdy le movt rotira. or IPM V oloiMriy, cm w* lor loti ci Atk lor ownor,
WM. MILLEI, KEAlTy
YORK W
Aportminti
™	1675 Perry Rd. North
eiRiNO	373-1400 01- 338-1606
por Comp MO ono of Iho plcpil ’r/Hl, ‘ apprimPnlt Mlnp bull! In Iho p.rbo,
eWRObM^uplin,
p’rfvHljSi^ por twt IWW
r.kVlS,“oHBru.*iiEi:
CO,
•I, v«
^wp”flf.8rW"So«n'S
49|Sale Nbvui
"IhOMB, Uko by ownbr. twin it land conirpcil badr Crlicant walli I I1M-. lartil, by
manl with
privaia laka, ui.Mo cam. — - at fW par cant In-, polnimani only.
4^|S«lf Hwiiee *-,.2 LAND CONTRACT ASSUMPTION
49
I will pay eaih lor yi iCALL AOBNT rNVis'TO'R“wtCL“A«<ir
Orion. Adulla no pan, at}- a|»cjwir , N5ifH'siW-::raTid T/o^^^	. f?]? *
ACANT LAND
^	- .......Araa, lUi, IVi.
and baauly ara comblpad parcali. dtiign that p r o v i o a a /
BACKUS
^rn UttiijB Quortert 33
CHRISTIAN WOMAN will iliarp bar dviat country bomO witb coupla ^
two tlnpla ladlat. Sbara -
amjaya good rolai
PAlltY to $rtAlfi~iSSirfn Witofd araa. Sbara minor axpanm
.•rrd
araa. Agant OR a-iadt. SSS-aWS,
CASH
POR YOUR HOMB PROMPT. COURTBOUS SBRVICB
BRIAN REALTY
Wa Sold Your Nalgbbor'a Homo Multlola mating Sorvleo
sTgrya'r.
OELINOUBN1 P ■roumt up to dl aavad. Can w«
»ML»1 laSSlilPEf''’- uimll.V“-f u'l?n:'wl%. mII"8ulldlSg K
-------------------,-----____________________________ From $165
I iRpaii >b W II	I NORThTtoNTIACi on LAKEt tllS, lORRY, NO CHILDRIN OR PiTS
I Will Buy Your House I mo„ including utimiat. aM-3io3.	APPLIANCES BY
mywhara, any condition, no REPINED OINtUMAUT } roomi| omit, no eommitalon.	i and bath, prlyjta antranca.	FRI6IDAIRE
CASH NOW
i.Nya. j. ixwyy |	t»3.10M attar S:J0.	!
MOVE LATER Cosh Investment Co.
oixla
iki__ftnAflA 90
IffOllfWi liOWWillWl®
HIOHBST PRICee PAID MR
furnllura and appllancat. Or '
'“'" Ti B AUaiON
IWt DIxia Hwy.	OR wm
COPPER. BRASS. RADIATORS ioEt^oS 1*H1T **"*”*”*•
DAY CASH
FOR YOUR HOUSE OR LOT HO COST TO SELL PAST FRIENDLY SERVICE
Aoron Mtg. & Invest. Co.
___________SSS-Udd________
1 TO 50
HOMES, LOTS, A C R E A 0 B PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS, URGENTLY NEEDED POR IMMEDIATE SALEI
WARREN STOUT, REALTOR
I4SS N. opdyka Rd.	sn-iin
Pontiac	Dally 'til -
MULTIPLE LfSTINO SERVICE
Divorce-ForeciosurE? -ca'ra'iywTagr^.ai.
WASSia Laulngar a7S-! ELDERLY COUPLE NEEDS homa naar Mall. Caab. Agani. 33S-«ttS,
♦74-t«4t._____________________
FREE BSTIMATE, caab paid loi ilatingi and praparty. A R1 DANIELS REALTY, 474-4 111,
FREE APPRAISALS
COMPLIMENTS OF
LAUINGER
474-0)11	474.0gM
CASH POR A STARTER HOMB IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT, 474-I4M Of S3MWS.
WANTED IN immMiatt closing.
RBALTYp ♦O^ad!
SPOT CASH
CALL NOW. H A 0 REALTOI^ OR A035S NINOS FB t-?m.
TANGO MOTElTTlHAHOTNSno S- 0*	®N Lakg, atoya,
monthly rantalt. Ettlclaneyi rofrl«ra»or, and utllltla^ tur-apartmanti wltti privata antranca, niabad. no^ti, ssa a wk„ SIM turnhhad room wHb prIvata bath, — • ■
■ a Hwy. In i for alngla man i naar thair work. SIM
J-»8d«6om, temporary i call altof ) p.m„ PE MS4S.
MILL'S REALTY
jc;rLr"yo“''"'“'aw 3 W OEDROOMS ■
IN WATERFORD
immediate possession
Varlaty ot floor plant, mortgagtt avalltbit for gutlltltd buyart.
1 BEDROOMS - IVb Mtb, batamant, laka privllagal.
) BEDROOMS, m bath, walkout baiomont, oxtra bath roughad In. I ear garaga. laka privllagai.
) baoroomi, untlnlihad attic, brick, batamant, carpating and
c'^SeDROOM, brick, walk-out
union LAKE AREA
___j homa with I
batamtnl and localad In Waltrlord araa. Hurry on t ont. II Won'f latt.
YORK
C	474,0141	Ft
5r:Tll,^:^rL^ND"“foWAlnfc

BACKUS REALTY
S)}-1JM_	__Y
BY OWNER,' CRESCRNt Laka I Bilatai. iharp, claan .......... prIvIHga
bdiT
I only

, a,rb..,.'‘cayMU!:!!:'
I BUENrvilt'/rHiEIOHTS S Btdroomt. aluminum and brick ranch, wall to wall carpating, gat haat, cyclona lancad lol, PHA tarmt, ownart agtnl, PB S-
Wttarford araa
carpat, haat. hot 3 BEDROOM In rant, .air con-:	b"
i BEDROOM RARbH, Horringtdn on SHED. I Hint. SI7) por month. d3l-34l). ibalng'} beor66m u'n P u R N
'	"h"i NELSON BLDG. CO.
?l!td*dJi3?w«'^i)!i s' w* wn-'- t^ll it like it is I? Pnnimc *Sim	CALL ANY TIME-OR 3-ll»l
■ 4Si-)l«; sTeEDROOM BRiCK pTrieht
"	s,v.n----------
COMMERCE LAKE PRIVILEGES
itl tharp 4 room homa with iVi ear garaga titualtd on 3 lolt In
I.SM. P-4}.
RAY
CALL RAY TODAYJ_
LAPEER”
TRANS'FiRRiB?~f
houto and It Agent, 4SI-03: TRANSFEREE*
Seal I bedroom PONTIAc ‘■“‘.I araa, cornar lot, SIS)
_____________________I , 44}-tl44.____________
rooms and EATH,. tartly i BEDROOM RANCH WITH
6-BEDROOM HOME
oatl tida, Idaal for lerga ti ivy baths, dining room, batamant, ivy car garaga, l15,tM. FHA tarmt. P-41,
___^RAVJTODAY. 474-4101._
t ROOM. J-sfORY aluminum
oadreomt, xiienan w"n
5!
SNYDER, . KINNEY &
ai YORK BENNETT
CALL 474-0363
FE 1-7171
Whitt Ltkt •rtti.
LAUINGER
47}-1Ma
larga down paymtnt, will toko ovor your mortgagi. Call my
agant, 4SI-0374.______________
Two!'WANTED TO BUV aquily In'iaria 4-or S-badroom houta, Baldwln-
Clorksion-Orlon Rood
SMALL FARM, FHA approvad. naw rad barn, 2 car garaga. loads of fruit traat, only ivy miles from town It the location , ol thii 3 bedroom bungalow with ! a full basement, SELLING FOR ,-o.aroom .n...... ™.™, 4W ft. ot; 0N1^„ U7,»M WITH 11,000
river tronlege. Choice locetlen.| DOWN.
Can he purchated on lend with tubetentlel '
I car gerage. lull I m rac. room, on co ^}}4^, bit. 3-4 p.r
10 ACRES
tri-lovol
SIDING
UM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS
AWNING-PATIOS
SCREEN-IN OR OLASS
iiawl*'Fraa ettYOTt-WI, 4M- g g, L plumbing A Haatfng. Lot
Georgo Do It. 473-0877.
DOZERS, BACKHOE, LOADERS.
Sales 8i Rentals Used Bobcat Loaders Burton Equipment Co.
DEALER—ASK FOR BOB OR RED S770 E. Auburn Rd._S52-3553
ABtBMW Service i DreienaUEi, Tailoring
'sBRvSB^SuALITy^ WORK TERMS «
CALL NOW-DAY OR NIGHT I
KELLER
Representing
SELLER
681-1833
WE ARE READY TO BUILD, but
iDis gr acrtsgt to supporT oi larging building program. Cal >-la A Son Raaltora. 67f0326.
WEI WILLI BUY I
Your oqulty — Caah diroct to ae toon at title work le erd and deal le closed, r Call now and any courtaous appraltara your door within Remombor, a quicke may maka you a bt tomorrow I WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU
"JOIN THR MARCH TO TIMES"
5 A Heating, rp,	-r-. i.
"“UuStTiSISi 1 imes Realty
433-OwOO Rtaltor Open 9-9 Dal Off lea Opan Sunday I-) HEADQUARTERS■FOR INDEPENDENT INVESTORS JNC WANTECA A houta with quick
t)I.S0 per;
wk„ SIN dap. Inquira at 273,
Baldwin Ava. Call 33S-40S4.	middlaaga coupla. Shown daytime
3	ROOMS AND BATHTutifltlfl paid,'	2-Wl.________ _____________
dtp. rtq. 363-7919.	S ROOM DUPLBXa UDSteIrt, E. tide,
4	and Bath, inquire at 2401	'
Vacant, immadlata
MARK
IN ROCHESTER
134 W. Unlvartlty (3nd floor)
43I-4IM	___ or	334-31M
LAI^^E 0B|6N, YEAR around Ilka
LEACH”
LAND CONTRACT; Wa hava u construction a baautlluf .badroom brick ranch homa
ivy batht,
Other logturat
VII batamant and tpaciwt jl..ur garaga. Trbda your equity tor down pai
vqnll'
y, 33A3452.
$109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR
to 1-75. only Dotrolt. Open and Sunday 12 to 3 p.m. ex-
cept Thurt. For i cell 335-4171.
AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS
$400 DOWN $400
1-2-3-BEDROOM, BASEMENT, 1'q UNIT. MODEL 1 3 7 7 CHER-RYLAWN, PONTIAC, MICHAELS
REALTY. S3S-4171.	________
SIOeMONTHLY S400 DOWN 4400
1-2-3-BEW(OOM, BASEMENT, IW-
-	------ 1377 CHER- 331-4294
TOM
REAGAN
REAL ESTATE _______REAL ESTATE C(
SI N;.OBdyJra_________17M S^ TELEORJVPH_____________
49 E. YPSILANTI	Cash for' Your Equity
2 twdrpom with , perilel^^..- ^ w	5925 HIGHLAND RD. {M-S9)
i 1 PE «-<IW	*74-2142	473-944e
“	lanB contIacT or fha, 2
363-6703	bedroome, aluminum elding, living
.SDdorvd	dining room, kitchon, lake
excellent condition on the exterior, Slormt end tcreent. SII price. FHA avellable.
Sislock 8< Kent, Inc.
130* Pontiac State Bank
SIOTmONT HrY"~ ,
FHA NEW LAKE FRONT, BEDROOMS, BRICK BUILT-INS, EXPANDING ATTIC. CHILDREN WELCOME. MICHAELS REALTY 427-3840, 427-2425, 3534W0.____
tala today apartment, 320.50 weakly, r purchatai children. 33t-7325. attar 4:30.
Canterbury Aportments
Opposite St. Joseph Hospital And the Naw Sheraton Inn
CLARKSTON M-1S
S14S MONTHLY	____	_ ___________ _
PHA — NEW LAKE FRONT — 3 TnuuNfiHBuSES ADJACENT TO .
BEDROOM, BRICK, BUILT-INS. Jf^^SHOUSESAW^^
IxPANDItfG ATTje. CHILDREN I Jf^yUNTOWN •DETROIT. OPEN
1-2-J.BEDROOM, BASEMENT, UNIT. MODEL 1377 .CHERRY' LAWN, PONTIAC. MICHAEL'S REALTY, 33S4171.
$109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR
UNPRECEDENTED 0 PORTUNITY-lfOR FAMILII WITH LESS THAN St0,W m-COME. I, 2_AND .J.IEORJIPM
CLARKSTON M-15 '
S1*S MONTHLY
FHA NEW LAKE FRONT. _ BEDROOM, BRICK, BUILT-INS, EXPANDING ATTIC. CHILDREN WELCOME, MICHEAL'S REALTY, 427-3440, 427-2I2S, 35341774._
madlataly. 4»7427.	_
land fONtRACT
Attractive lermt possible 01
ranch with beau........
Ing room, with
firoplaca. Brick plantar, txira large kitchen 4nd garage. Owner Tiat pertly remodeled home, more to be done. Asklg 4IO,»00. P-4S.
RAY
BUILT-INS. CHILDREN WELCOME, MICHEAL'S REALTY,
Bicony, pool, carpet, albr, included In rei Itionj. Sorry, no children
Possession, can pay csh.
MARK
COLONIAL VILLAGE
Now rtnting l bedroom apt*, OPEN: l^til dark DAILY Closed Friday*
" ' ' I Ro^y 1 mile
On Scott Lake I
627-364^^-2825y _	____
rent while buying
rente "air' con- ^6-5 Bedroom homes with full -	basements, some with garages,
big lots for the children. Easy FHA terms. $75.00 per month
IWIlIeT'bROS. REALTY 333-7156
daily AJ^P SUNDAY 12 TO • CLARKSTON M-15, 1145 MONTHLY PM' EXCEPT THURS. FOR	l*,(e FRONT, i
MORE INFORMATION CALL 335- BEDROOM, BRICK, BUILT-INS,
6171.	....._	^_________ expanding attic. CHILDREN
410* MONTHLY^ ^ WELCOME, MICHAELS REALTY,
$400 DOWN 4400 __..	427-3440, 42MI25, 353-0770.
t-2-3-BEDROO^, BASEMENT, jvy------------—--------------------
ELBOW ROOM, acre’ lot. lake privileged, alum, ranch, 3 bedrooms, dining room, family room, attachad garage. FHA
GMG .G
.LAZENBY
•IRCHETT
SON ^ENNA
AiplwItPwtoi ______
asphalt seal citing, 3 rante to
4 eente a iq. ft- Top gra* of sqpitr uted. .SetlilectiPn
ALTERATIONS l> Dreatmaklng
ALTERATIONS
WANTED LISTINGS:
Lr	“ Jl";'	homerwJ*wll
•bli;*4M‘Lir'ar^mTcU^‘*i m*i'n‘g* oTOira
Roofing, ildira, and guttert, and . Fraa Eat.Call attar S
. 42I-3S75.
DOMINO CONST. CO. 674-39S5 Lt disi
Ilona. 474-447S.
WOMENS qltara-
Oriver'7 Training
li. ACADEMY OP DRIVER Training. PrH hamq pickup. FE t-0444.____________
Single glad to
iJOHNSON
-----	-----dRYWALL of
S s'^lodta^Nl!*?? I-7S NEW or I
M & S GUTTER CO.
LICENSED-BONDED . Comptate asvaatreughing sarvlce Frau Eetimataa 47348M, 473-5**2
_^*rick Slock a Stone
*^k laying, coll atler fc «*3-1l
@=m5i=v=aj$is*'
attar 5 P-m-_________
InBdhs ModorniioHon
M mTERIOR AND EXTERIOR.
fefe/T?£hsrf*i cT* JTnql^
tfqrmtrg, porenae, r a c r • a ij o n roemt, kltchans, batbroomi. Stit-llcentad, Raai. Call attar 5 p.ir
«S2<*4S.	____________
bfew CONSTRUCTION CO. cempigtq ramodaling a kltchans, baths, porches,
jnj^wrngyman. 1 yr. guarantee. |
**ErnONS**« **e* tVPM.° CemeStj CLARKSTON^XCWATING CO.
• ..... ' Specializing In grading, "
land clearing. 425-2750.
24 HRS. Hot
We Will Not Be Undersold!	■T«'*«3eii _fijjss};
R. DUTTON______________FE 3-1725 Aportments, rumished 37
it BEDROOM UP. there bath, 1 baby welcome, close to General Hospital, 125 e wk„ dap. rtq., 332-'
,	1470.______________ _______
2 AND 2 ROOMS, PRIVATE an-. tranca, bath, parking, utilltias turn.. Mutt tat to appraclata. 2 children welcome. From $32.50 wk.
plus tec, deposit. FE 5;^^___
2, 3 & 4 ROOM APARTMENTS with garage, ref, and dep. 334-3040.
2 ROOM, PRIVATE bath, working lady or couple. FE 0-4*35.
2, ONE BEDROOM APARTMENTS,
1 both very clean, $27.50 and 535 per wk., in town. Call betwegn *-5 PM
*42-3*45._____________________
2 ROOMS, FURNITURE and apart------- ----- --------
Icoma. $33.50
moiM Off Di«ia Highway
DOLLY MADISON
AND NEW DELUXE
PRESIDENT MADISON
APARTMENT GROUP
FROM $145
IN IMADISON HEIGHTS OpposIta J. L. Hudton't, Satra,:
41-A
CABIN IN HARRISON,
8-20*1 after 4.
Oakland
T 4. H ROOFING. Frie estlmatea. Hot tar and ihinglet.
NO JOB TOO SMALj^ 42V5474. WOMACK ROOfiNG CO.
I-A SAND GRAVEL, i
^soM,^*’reaMnabiB *' p'r"casT"''f i dellvary, *42-7527.
venlant to Blrmlngl Royal Oak, and Fll route to northern'iki restaurant. FIret o available immediate apis, upon request children's buildings.
Featuring:
Con-
$1275^ down
1 BEDROOM RANCH UTILITY ROOM OAK FLOORS LARGE LOT WATER SEPTIC
$15,450 full price	'
MODEL
YOUNG-BILT HOMES
REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT I > Rutsall Young, Bldr.	i
334-3430 — 5S'/y W, Huron St. I ALUMINUM SIDED ranch homa on 75 foot lot, gai haat, FHA approved. Privileges on Duck Lake. Owners agent, 474-144*.
m your «pi. was noi waTvr, b«> uaauib», KiTcnan, lai-nuron. man —- -■	i
cooking, kltchtn vent fan, GE area. FE 2-7M1p FE ___I ATTBArTive i BEDROOM '
Idtt' S?k!;s '.X "r"2 '-*n5Sf	PMNGALOW, dlnlnB_room, *_lull
CALL 441-0370.
15 minutes to 3 NICE ROOMS 4. bath, private an-' tranca, close to trans., 2 working girls. FE —
GMC
I	EAST SIDE
II	bedroom aluminum ranch, featur-' I Ing lull basamint, tinithad with
ROYCE LAZENBY, Realtor
Open Dally *-*
434 W. Walton	OR 4.0MI
___ _
Drayton, ftaturie
2W car garage and 75' lol, more extras, cell ^Ra^ 474-4101, for price
CLEAN Room
tad COMFORTABLE SLEEPING ROOM,
North and. 335-*27*._________^
FURNISHED ROOM FOR rent naar Item Fleher Body, SS W. Minefield.
(garage, Vacant.
Ia'll’'441-«70.
ling room, 1*'
, hot water bateooard y 2>,b-car attached newly painted outside.
FHA appraised a t 31,450 down. HURRYI
A-1 SNOW PLOWING, 24 hou aarvice, FE 5-4*4*. Jerry Mirada. cLaRKSTON ROOFING CO.
____SNOW PLOWING 473-»2»7._______
SNOW PLOWING, reasonable. 4S1-0S7I
homa prlvllagaa. 187-5444-____________
LAKE ORION, 1 ROOM coHagt, ail utmtiai, S30 weekly, sac. dap. 4*3-;
2*12. .________________________________1
MODERN ROOM WITH kitchen prlvllegei. 775 Scott Lake Rd. -------- ROOMS, SINGLE,
$17,500. FHA terms. Z* - CALL 441-0370.
GMC
GMC
FARRELL
work. *25-5515.
340 yards ftum Scelt Lake priced at onN $14,400. PHA ns are avallawt.
YORK
dost to schools ami ohopping*
YORK
4-1201.________________________
1 SERVICE. BASEMENTS, septic Free dozing - TI. aU
Open Dally 'till 7 PM
CALL 651-0042
U CARPENTRY
G. EISENHARDT Excavating v-ontractor, lakes, ponds, bulldozing, land clgarlng. 727-7030 Rlch-
DON JIDAS TREE removal. Trim- dap. 332-07*0. 10 a.m—7 p.m.
1 tiSft	LARGE CLEAN ROOMS on Square NEW APARTMENT Compitx
!	I Laka, adukt only, 33443**.	1 clarksfon hpa 1 vacancy. .
EE CUTTING and general, haul- , rooms AND BATH, utllitlei paid, badroom unit. Carpeted. Range, I working adults, children allowed, rafrigarafor, dishwasher, heat, air i Rochester, *51^727, SII5.__________________________________________I conditioning and laundry facilities
FLOOR SANDING

g, reasonable rates,:
TrockiHS
A-1 LIGHT HAULING an FE 5-422*
A-1 LIGHT Moving, tr
3 LARGE ROOMS S> bath 1 I area, carpeted, vary evarylhing furnished, S145 I month, d^.^^^wulred, n(
; FROOMS, 14 TREWNT
lies
I tor turthar Intormatlon.
Call
NEW APARTMEN'T Iroom apartment, S155. Nt children or pats allewad ova, aiK .airconditionini
chlldran or
alter.;
prln^Burgtm traintd. FE S-21*S
CUSTOM DESIGNED Addltlona, kltchans, quality at rais. liricas. 3*3-2731.	,
TmHiSK finTsh; ^kitchens,
^nqllng, 40 year oxparlsnCe. FE
COPE'S CARPET S I R V I C I Raprasantlng
Main Floor Covering
______________________________________,	„J d«p., $32 Wk., 100 Norton. i
ROOMS, PRIVATE bath, utilltias
" - i	"fTES.,	______ I furnIshaAp $34 a wk. PE 2-7f37.
typa* of glass raplacamants MAULING ANO IRU^	ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH, privata
f*'c!p1
SLEEPING ROOM IN privata homa.
for buslnass man# 332«>849._ __,
TWIN BEOS, CARPETED, ^Ivatt *M-*i?®* hom^ 1 man, naar Airport. S12.50
wk. dR 1-2294.	______________
WOMAN, $12
EVERETT CUMMINGS, BROKER	^ Oodvka Rd
llninn Laka Rood
36S-71I1 ——_____________
in, $19 par month, ], 6S2«762r.
K?n Nothing Down
plus closing i
FARRELL REALTY
d.^“3St
PRIVATE ROOM IN lovaiy ham near Ttl-Huron, good southtri cooking, for gantlaman. 3SS-1S2S.
Gkm Work
and Insuronco work. 332-**15.
Undscaping
1-A MERION BLUE SOD, pick-l del. 4*43 Sherwood. 428-2000.
4" BROKEN CONCRETi" DELIVERED
J. H. Woltman Londaeaping ___________ 373444*________

LIGHT HAULING i
lltlas. Fully carpatad. parking. 33I-9569.
$125 month. Sat at $96
camaron.____________________
WOODHALL LAKE, 2 badroom apt.,
$ ROOMS - 1500
•avinga on earpat. 62S>iO$6.
dAhipiliTs' XMd f ii"H 6rsTiT9;
eloanod. For low ralta dial
Carpets, tiles
TALBOTT LUMBER > sorvleo* wood or alum
oxportly Installed. Fraa ast. FE
I SMITH MOVING CO.
STEAM WAY ol Pontitc, brlghtnosi | OSCAR SCHA
rkino Tvning
PIANO TUNING — REPA
LIGHT TRUCKING,
KSl”"
facIMtIis, chlldran welcome. Sec. deposit p.m. 332-
welcome, 437.50 wk., 4100 dap., qi^e at 373 Baldwin Ava. Call I
ROOMS AND BATH, couple Only,
Rent Houiet/Fumisliad
ADAMS ROAD
OAKLAND UNIVERSITY AREA-mile to M-5* Ekprtttway. 3240 Square Pool. Air conditioning,, pavad parking, oil 1200 sq. **	‘
358-2266.
AVON
I SILVER UKE ESTATES
3 roncharc for IMMEDIAT OCCUPANCY ot aubitontlol reduced prleai. Making rOem f the '70$. Celonlali, tri-lovol ronchori, $2*,*00 to S41JM0.
HOMES^BY^WEmB^EJtGER
1530gRO^RD.
ANDERSON
aaburn Streat, ZERO down, cita immadiata possasslon. badrooms, 1 down and 3 up, Ifl
HANDY MAN'S I ranch, n« ‘
Is right, farms, w 601-0370.
HALLl
t prin contract
, a steady |ob, i his modern *'
. rated on Ei tiac. Rant from
........most
ncluds. _ ___________
each floor, Mporolt ontrancos, full basomant, corner lot. For information colf-JAMES A. TAYLOR. Roonor, OR 44141
INDIAN VIPGE
saparata dining i Ing room with *' 2 car garaga.
ft. haxt door. A52-3100 or
HOUSE WITH LAKfe privtiogos, 2 btdroomt, living room, dining room A kltchtn. 2 Children ac-
i captabit. **1-2*311 or 404014.	_____________________....	_
KEEOO HARBOR, eprtlolly	Rddsonoblo, A_ jEAUTY. Ranch;.t bodro;^
ANDERSON & ASSOCIATES
feyjnr^E 1-4353	0^4«rjgl'
Trucks to Rent
ROOMS and BAtN, n< Of pata, SS Wlllloma St. I ROOMS. VPI
vary I 3S44I5I
S ROOMS, 2 BEDROOMS, full bi mant, garage, fireplace, atova Wig., $40 a wk.. SI40 dap. 33241
on Pickups	1',b-Ton S
TRUCKS-TR ACTORS
And equipment
Sami Trailers
Pontiac Farm and I Industrial Tractor Co.
425 S. WOODWARD	______
I PE 44441	FE 4-1441 CTOSE
I Opan Dtlly Including Sunday___; private antranca
Hying room with ptttly furnishtd, nice sandy booet Coll Mr. Bill Bo Rotlly, 474-311*,
3513 Elizoboth Lakt Rd.
I Rent Bnsineit rropErty 47-m
SO X sir euiLDINO for Stera, at-
ir garaM. 7,908. FHA
possasslon. CALL 611-
valley PLACE APTS.
shoppino < Avsllablt
GMC
HIllER
OPEN EVERY DAY CALL. 651-4200
BRICK REPAIRS, chimney, LAW PAINTING' and ramodaling, ■ , violations c o r r t c t o d, fra# ostimotas. *438778 or «*3-*472.
Fainting, wallpapering, eom-
UPHOLSTERINQ Quotltv fabrics and y and delivery. *42-417$
canrar4d''h*TiwaW,^*ounS'prM^ _________________________^_________ .. _________________
new furhitura, utilltias Jurn., 2	j manufaefurar agent, Insur
Chlldran waleoma. Frog^^J^r	_ 5,11,^, Mgg| Thru ;
bisamant, comnlela on your lot only tl4,m. TIMES REALTY, 423-4*W. Fogolsangtr A F u t r 011
OWNER SAYS modlato possossM with 1 baths, B dining room, ' mont, 3 car tho lake. Call I
173,500 - 3 bosoment, | terms.
NORTHSIDE and bith. Li
WE BUILD - I
NEAR PONTIAC MOTOR-
Wa hava a cozy i bedroom ramodolod bungalow. In Mko n*w condition with I m hi a d 1414 possos4ion. Priced at 415,500 FHA farms. This Is an Oxcaftent stirlar homa.	;
DON'T RENTIi
Whan you can own tills 2 story ■ ramodelod colonial Maturing ) ' large bedrooms, family room, 0 lorM panalad formal dining room and 0 full basomant for as llttla os 4500 down and minimum monthly I payments.
I CARTER 8: ASSOCIATES
*7W|*7______________ 47441*1
OWNER transferred w |m.
madlata occupancy. This complatad I haw 3 badroom face brick homo on 0 corner lol, beautiful 00k trios, . fuir ceramic tiled kitchon and bith,
' IfflSL '!now*M'Xr«l&
nmmltmont ovallablo. Like priv-Uagos an Wiltor'i Laka, CtirAlen I School iroo.	■
4714448 _ Sylvan	StS-WOS
OUT WHERE THE Air^ IS FRESH-N-CLEAN '
realtor, 37*2 sq
"I®"*.''! — GENTLEMAN With good rqlordficqs. p„., Wnnt AHa work, pick up Near Airport. 473-3*41.	t*reSS WOnT ,AO*.

monthly. FRANK INC., MI-4240 or I
A. STILLWELL
Apartminh, UntHmishml 38 Apartments, Unfuririthe#
rant with option to iwvp 174M0 sq. ft. of floor sppct on is acras, all stMl and concrata construction, cevtrad loading .arap, madam
RIDGEMONT
TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS
\	* Ohe,' Two and Thrsa bedrooms
•	Ropsr Gas Radges
•	Hotpoint Refrigerataii	\
•	Carpet and Drapes
•	All Utilities Except Electric
•	Air-Conditioning by Hotpbint 4 Swiming ‘Pool ond Pool House
NO PETS ALLOWED	/	,
I ; CHILDREN O.K.	/	/
Betwien lost Boulevard and ModisOn-2 blocki trbm main gate of Pontiac Motors.
957 N. Perry St.	fhone 332-8322
A SALE IS ONLY
At GOOD At YOUR FINANCING. toM or solllni your homo? Lot us ir nhorteaso. FHA or Gl.
Mtg. & Invst. Co.
s)s-n44
BY OWNER, buljdir. 1 new t badroom homo*, roodV to occupy, ilumlnum stdlns, corpmic bath, tharmoMna window, eos haat In utility roans, has crawl
pStSfogosTw^lwLid
Friet rsMicie to soil quickly ot 417,*54 ooch Or Stt,7SS If FHA
SBAUTipm. huM	riStTW
Mott High SettOPi araid aaroeea haaomanf 9 hattM. PatM
’ijT^'ssvn.r
•obolli Rd. Cltro, Michigan, »l7-^207._______________________;
2 OR t BEDROOM .hou4#
1 beautiful homes - t Ltki Orion, 1 on Fentloe Lai both hqvq qqcqlMnt btaClM*.
APPROX., 4 ACRES, lonbd multipl* _ dwalllng, “
MILL'S REALTY
fMJnSr^ ”
t	Multlpla LIstiM Sorvleq
I, IWqfkdoys 'fll *	Sundty IM
. Ilia Dixi* Hwy.	tMm
BRlEOANCHir
sus:.. ^IrSff.s^u^nd“'^s^ras
mtnl thit will surpriiq you. MU(' dacoraiac
eras, wqlk-out bos gts host. 423,400 trict. ITS VACANT.
HAGSTROM, REALTOR
4*00 W. Huron	OR 44351
MLS Afttr 4 p.m. FM 448H
OPEN
12*4 wiLLIAMS™AKB‘Rb.
^	^rrr,	t
OPEN
atifllRS.'S.
WSOIW UAl ESTSti ' :
fitr Want Adi Dial 334-49B1
CiFFIOSLYN
■RAND NIW ),bt4rm. Ranch type,
vSiliC-BlinrbMES
Partridge
"IS THE BIRD TO SEE"
THK PONTIAC PIIESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1969 49|CARNlVAi
WILUII M.
BREWER
Wi'LL urig* on two loti, Jui
ssMM.rn.te
GMC
WOTlAKf
BROOCK
asr#" Lot ssn	°^ch.rd l.k. r..p
IM. Rrle# jAtoTBo RHA or GI j.. c	*'
r&i'Sp!ffn7.'n%“» MAMOOO 4444890
from 1-71 oxit. Aik lor No. i
PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 'OM Wilt Huron St., Pontiac <1	WO S47S9
opan waaknitai til * QUAD-Slds SLBAPORb i
({aNCH WilH^ PULL
avallabla. SIM Union
MortsoBil titta A aiioc.
Prank Marotta A aiioc.
SMITH
1>-U
IeIe HwmI ___________.^,Jt*i**l* H««*l
natty School iaiRwIn anit Walton
EAST SIDE	JITw
l-battroom S-itory horn# with larga
M7nM?£rS»nrRt wi'r'tS Richmond knolls
oai halt, iloiwr and icraani, /ull •NpW», THIS S-bMroom alum. boMmant, low down PAymant. PHA and brick ranch lhat laaturM: larmi. Hurry on fhli onal	I^^ta^^cari^InB.^jJrapoi,	air
NEAD THE MAM	fancad toiiyxIM' M In	Xa
NtAK IHB WALL	Clarkiton araa, 11,000 down	plui
and Sin- m"'"* '**'* ~ krtchom VERY CLEAN AND VERY NICE n gai naar, norm- — f Mwar and wator. .
PHA tormi.
Mt IhwM
I DMrqom ranc brick firapiaca
*H'oa'’",f sr;
ir«si ■
tanaCTna'^'’’aS?Sn'.
Ina room, country warm, elaan gai hai Krooni, city lowar and wator. Prk-
*ij "iM'yr Tr GENERAL HOSPITAL AREA
d"l||"nxm‘!iSgJ!!j^	170s”*TB%^ORAPH°**'^^^^^
full baiomant with aoi hoat, plui IW -	_
.......Y.	•"IT »n-TM> T T ATT
MARK
S1S,7J0,
Wideman
IT'S CENTS'ABLI
PONTIAC GENERAL AREA 4 BEDROOMS
Laroa family homa with. chariRIn*
I I. 0. WIDEMAN, Rfoltor
CLARKSTON AREA — I badi I	will' '•'■••	9' ••*•
Vo -U'Woy Red tv Boraga, alw 1W tilod bw................
and BuilLi Co J ?S.rnh.rR?miT a-S?.«i „ U. ^3531	rn«pr»w;
SIS Oakland Ava.	Opan 0-f formi. Call now for your ap-
STRUBLE
In Lincoln
WASHINGTON PARK
1 badroom bungalow, In axci araa with .full baMmont and halt. Thli homa hat baan plataly (or yo vacant PHA.
Tht Rolfe H. Smith Co.
SHELDON B. SMITH, REALTOR 244 8. TELEGRAPH
333-7848 SYLVAN LAKE 1432 GLENWOOD i
SAM WARWICK HAS bldar S badroom homa, maka offar to buy, or night rant. Call for ap-| .pointmant. M2-2S20.	I
TpES REALTY offori a
I CALL RAY TODAY_____________
ft AYT OPn' BUYING OR SELLING CALL 1 IjWI 11^ JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS REALTORS '
n. <25-4048
Tm at an awkward age... too young to go steady and old enough to have homework!”
OFFERS
FE 5-744< I 313 \
BRICK RANCH HOMES	first in valuei----
V/t battUy barn and. IIreplae# and
,S"tjrw«H RENTING
prlvllagai. Excluilva nalghborhood,
pHc^ 135,900. Call <931^3 or FE	VVE
5 ACRES
Room for horsoi, 3 bodroom roneh.
LAKE PRIVILEGES
footuroi 3 bodroomi, dining room, m bathi family room with wal
northildo. Coll
I Sale Houtai
49 |alE Nphiee
STOUT'S
Best Buys Today
PERRY PARK-
Flrit offering on fhla t badroom ranch built In 1913. InehidM 2V!i ! car garaga, gaa haaf, Yanead yard, and . fho earpaflng and ..................indlad on PHA
WATERFORD AREA - 3 badroom alum, ronch with full biMmonf, IW ear gorago. Alio largo i carpolod llvino room, bullf-ln ranga and ovon In kllchon plui family room with brick firoploeo. Offarad at only 119,500 and piiuma a < pet. morfgaga. Don't wait on
mlghborhood, coma toko a look*^ Htli all brick S-badroom with formal dining room. Pull baio. mtnl, 2K:ar garogo on t largo lot, priced right of I244I0«. Lot uo ihow you thli onol
Handyman's Special I
Thia laka front 2-famlly eotlaga li for lummor Only. But If hai th* il of a yair around Income tlofod Intido, Thort ora 10 In all, with 3 bodroomi and aaeh floor. Call u9 w
7150 Olxia Hwy.
Kaaltori
s5iL*eli
formi.
WALTERS of privacy for o growing family. 3-bedroom brick ranch with full biiia-
largo living room with firoploeo, cor garage. Sea thli tint n valut. Call 693-1333 or PE 14193.
Ranch homo on tl4'x2S7' lot, full baioment, 2 cor gtrtgo.. Located botwoen Laka Orion and Oxford,
built In 1952, coll <93-1333
aiding, <
sum <23O<00. Fogaliangar and' Puirtll Bulldari.________________I
THIS PINE 3 badroom homo, 1W bathi, full baiamant, 2 car gan '	' m tiding, built 19M, c...
il, Indtpandanct Twp. SSOOO
ARE NOW
TAKING
APPLICATIONS
FOR
HOMES
Call today for
bSi«hi!“sD‘k*NiM'*®? hLa	kltchon, vanity bath.
Kl^li SUS'tlr'SSln? Wn'S
room and halt, largo kitchen with
bullMni, localod on Pontiac HOLIDAY FARMS charming 3 ap- badroom ranch homo with foncod Ir roar lot. It'i ntor Khooli and ihoo Ping cantor and rocrootlon aroai have ■
CLARK ! AivnsjFTT
.TERS LAKE privllogof ind toll 4x1 N 1 N J_I 1 1
^fhl!!"
OFFERS
AUBURN AYE. - FHA TERMS.
PADDOCK ST.
droom homo with I heat, 2 full baths, carpetir
the eommitmont for tosy FHA EAST SIDE - 3 BEDROOMS.
NORTH SIDE-
School II only • for all grtdtt fr looking throo btdn Just fho right tin goi hoot, full I huge gorago, w hooting. Make on
Gl TERMS-
On thia 4 room and bath i homa In good location cli ovtrythlng, and Including prlvIlogM. Only Sl4,90g.00.
.ISSf
bungalow. Id fdaturai ntnt, and
Aftractiva

MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ...itWf	------
D RETIREE!
to^|Clml
UNIVERSAL BROKERS 31< S. Tolograph .	334-3551
YRI-LEVEL, attached gorago.	___________
JeA^? ^^2?' WxUr°^m<? MEA®DOwPBROOK**iro7near Garden Clty< 4ai«yg80.
Opan 9-9
LATOVS
Has~Country Homes 4 BEDROOMS
TUCKER REALTY REALTOR
UPPER STRAITS LAKE PRIVILEGES, 3 badroom ranch With full biMnmt, family room with btamtd'^ calling and firtpitca, htetfad on 1W icro lot, 3 mlnulH walk from like. 329,900.
COSWAY
■n-—VS(5SHTc*Pb NEWLY decoralod, fu
■ dining room.
WYMAN LEWIS REALTY 182 Auburn _________338 0325
Webster-Curtis
Oxford-Orion
Ineomo on Lake Orion, 3 family 4 roohii, bath akch, firapiaca, ancloiad porch, 31<,000, 04,000 down.
3 badroom ■traction,
«.»T»0»
toched garage and many built-in axtras. JUST REDUCED.
$31,500.00 FHA Highland Recreation
aaoalghb ■d-taval.
, cam
??a7.SIalf
$26,900,00 Stbney Creek Area
Immaculata 3 badroom all brick ranch In wall localod Aulgur Subdivision, luit West of VanDyko. High llghtod by ■ pontlad family room, firoploeo, carpeting, extra W bath, 3Vii car garaga. Full batamant, S2' swimming pool, and loodod with bulIMn oxtras.
$39,500.00
For Homes in the Hills 391-3300
REAL VALUE REALTY.
For Immediate Action Call, FE 5-3676 - 642-4220 j
OPEN
’ Two Models '
Como visit KMilc COLONY HEIGHTS. A now dovalopmont of luxurious homos In on am taaturingl povod winding stroati, sptcloui rolling lots, central woteri storm Mwors
A&G
NEW
"Goldenridge" Colonial IS
BIG •
RTcis

Good Incon 2 family
CLARK REAL ESTATE ^0 HURON ST.	SI!
OPEN »■» MLS
FE 5-8183!
OTTAWA DRIVE
1 Custom built four-bodroom brick and fromo colonial. Attached I garage — firoploeo, family Kitchen, 2W baths, nsw gas
Of living araa.
A & G'S.
' Goldanridga Colonial price It EAST SIDE
•room, S-atory
ihirp brick unit, lonad lod ClOM to and Com-
15 Ro6m brick - ZONED C-0.	UotTroo'Iwo**'	*"*'
11,000 sq. ft. bldg. In oxcollont	with full ^
.condition, txtro lot tor parking.	gorago space
Full boiomoni, olovotar. 124 ft. oouortunltvl Call nowl frontage on Stoto St., suitable for
most officos. S50.000, terms. , WARREN STOUT, REALTOR |
ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT.	1450 N. Opdyka	173-1111
Contemporary Roman brick A _____________________MLI_________________
redwood bl-lovol ‘
ceiling LR with —,— --------- -
■ , modorn kitchona. 4 badroompplus den A rt firapiaca, landKipad
wora. room. Exc.ll.nt booch.	NOT TRADE?
REALTORS 28 L HURON "sL EL'^BETH LAKE PRIVILEGES
PEAK PERFORA4ANCE
■UY THIS EXCEPTIONAL 4 BEDROOM, 1350 aq, '
Incl. In this fine family homa In North Pontiac. Minimum FHA terms tvalloblo. THE PRICE IS $20,000.
COUNTRY LIVING
DON'T YOU DARE NEGLECT - this AlMdroom ranch, locatsd In Avon. Lots of trees, horushoo drive, oarage, huge living room, 150x200' lot. Minimum FHA terms. WON'T LAST. $11,500.
MOVE RIGHT IN
ON EASY LAND CONTRACT TERMS, this II a Sharp ranch In North Pontiac. Good location, porfoet s t a r t o r homo. SEE TODAY. PRICE
more ddtolli. looltor
5925 Highland Rd. (M-S9) Next to Frank's Nuriory
' 674-3175
If no oniwof coll <IMe7<
I TIMES
^ATTENTION RETIREESI
Wo have the houi In mind. This k ranch hoi overy i

living and olM hoof, air eon-ad haatad gsrago
,_____ >t. Located In the
town of Ponton end offarad niv mjtso. und contraet ■ available.
O'NEIL
BLOOMFIELD TWP.
S BEDROOM CAPE COO. Sitting on a largo 100' x 30iy lot, having carpeting with eanallng In living room, dining room end 1 bedroom n well as part baHmint and a new 2VS car garage. MINIMUM DOWN - FHA $17,900 full price.
gat heat. Vacant and FHA
2-story homo, full
full .base- Office Open Evenings A Sunday 1-4 f
338-0466
carpeted and draped.
i CROSS
CITY OP LAPEER
Kfg s5f?£“i?U,CK
NISHED AND POSSESSION, INTEREST
Toko EllaboHi Lake. Rd. W West from w«i, ami Lake Roa Colony Holohts.
iOlRECTIONS! Watt on M-S9 to Ormond Rd. turn right and go 'A ,1 milt to modal on loft.
ANDERSON & GILFORD Building and Realty
SOUTHEAST SIDE	j
2-and thrao bodroom homoi, gas heat, at low ot S300 down. LAND CONTRACT. VACANT.
Evti. Colt Mr. Cattail. FB A7273
Nicholie-Harger Co.
FE 54183
Spacious
bodroomi, i coramic iiioo n kitchen with rofrigerotor, ovori range, built-in dlshwoshor. Largo fomlly room with door vwll to Roolty and Invostmont Co., Inc. sunktn potlo. 21 foot boloonv off tho 34S7 Soshobow Rd., Drayton living room ovorlooking Bllubofh:
Lake. Now ovorslw Acar garage and	O/N-S lUD
concrete driveway. Beautifully
jlandKapad, only S47M». No. <-33l	________
'4 BEDROOM BRICK AND ALUM.
Ir Futrtll. W# ora I our now modal an ranch with 3 bidroama, wamie bath, formica klfdian wHh larM dining araa and glaas door Will. Oak flooro. Aluminum iformt and Kraans. Insulatad walla and Callings. Full baiamant and aftachad 2<ar garaga. All thia dunllctlad on your lot for only S1l,ySIL niodol open Sundoyt 3-S p.m. jr by appt. Call our otflea W more particulara.
WHEN YOU SE^^yOUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES"
Times Realty
SalB Hmsee
49 Sale Hmmm
financing
HAYDEN REALTY
343-M04	1
W Mila
HOWARD T.
YFATTNft
M REALTY I T^T'NT'7T	i-LJ-NVa
JKliNZiLJLn.	CO.
LAPEER AREA <9<gt, acres of land, ir trtet on back, homa, kltchan with dining area, living room and baiamant, 9x12' thed, tome equipment. Only Sll-SIM. FOR appointment CALL M4-85<0, EVES. 797-4742.
I W. 13 Mile Birmingham
GILES
ENJOYMENT AND 9 ACRES
A beautiful 2-ba< everything, air
•SJSJ.SOUTH MARSHALL ST.
II for Buy on FHA with low C ,, „..'mei*t, and live rent free, v
„ J has 2 fish fed. Some out b 155,000. You will bo
WATERFORD
BEDROOM RANCHER with W both Off
EASTHAM ^ bedroom colonial _
4.J.VX Something new and different In an O-^~4.	,., ^ ~ 1 1 U
?rlj|ln.I^ ttosign over ^MO Ljzreat W e Q 11 H
not insure
and dishwasher, sunken	-liJOl-UC;
sh pondf, spring! family room with fireplace. 3 T T	■	1	■
rSUdSlIS'	'"'"’“"••• Happiness but
”“^Chite lake tri level	”0^^ INVESTMENT	Tt's o	great Help
,^5 wmic LAKE IKI-LCVtL	m clarkston School area. Strictly	,	^
has 4-bedrooms, beautifully decorated	modern, • 2-badroom bungalow withi	v-tr-*-	y-v
ip-l homo, m baths, roc. room, bullt-lns	full bosoment. Gas hoat. 2<ar	lU	CICnieVinQ	Q
: In kltchan, fenced yard, wa trade, garage. Nearly 2 acres and	^
Call for further Information. Priced borders on good fishing laka at'_ _ x _™	_
more agreeable kind of
oomy dining room, lots of	ivHnwn—rnM viv wi	.
bo used for commorclal, offic- or'storage, full basement. Priced in Waterford, a substantial older
LAPEER AREA acres of beautiful hills, miles
OA 8^2515
wards ORCHARD
3-bodraom ronch home, finished brooiowoy aftochod garaga. Large i carpatad living room, nice modern rnuucpriAl
kltchan also Florida room. Nleely!^'J™"'tl'tlAL
landscaped lofa. A dandy, only US frontage on Dixie Highway with wcoy CUADP •20.500. Quick ooliasalon.	'35' booch on Loon Lake, presently i veili 3nnnr
140,300. UUICK posMHion.	3-bedrootn home li
Kl TEMPI ETOM Danltnr home being used as Income, could ling room, dining . L. I ElVirLE I UN, KeaiTOr U,. used for commorclol, offic. or storage, full base 1137 Orchard Lakd Rd. <12419001 multiple dwolllng.	$18,900. Coll today.
U EQUITY OUT . |fH4 3 BEDROOMS
this lovely 2 badroom off'Freshly painted home, living *ln, new carpeting throughout, " '
!i"rL‘?n%T5?an':W'«w“™X	i John KinzIer, Realtor
REALTORS mt Dixie Hwy
and to pine grove otid almost with W
homo. This property i loan to bo appr Nature in Ha own true atote. Only 045,000 land contract avallabla. FOR APPOINTMENT CALL M4-I5<(L EVES. 724-U13.
IMLAY CITY <9«S, ranch type homa, on double corner lor, vary good location and —	borhood, 3
n
matter b o d r o c
cframlc tiled full bath, firapiaca, ‘pfuih caring throughout, has Study, 2.car gorago, OS' lot. Call Tor oHMlntmont to ioarP-2'
RAY
CALL RAY TODAY
I Priced $16,500.
■n and now vanity tor only 3U.100 oirogno I out coll todayl	1 Joo-ooua
RANCH-FHA OR Gl
In Waterford, ■ lubstontlol In need of som ‘9f 80* X 315,950
lultlplo "PHOTO" Listing 4arvlco
John ■
kM,'
Claude McGruder Realtor
llubolh Lk. Rd.	<02-07201
ilo Listing Strvico Opan 9-9!
FE 5-7900
5020 Highland
674-3126
MILLER
49Sale Hwiei
.^! AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP SIO-SOi full prloo on Gl tarmi. A nice tit tlo starter home on 3 lots just ot Airport Rd. 4 rooms and tath witli lots of possibllltlsi. Ste this today I
OXFORD OFFICE
SYLVAN lake PRIVIUGES
FIRST TIME OFPIRED . . . Thit 3-badroonr brick ranch on Jomot K. If effara earpaflng, drapes and ledgeroek <lr*Pl«ea„ am, extri TRADE.
CASS UKE WOODS
STARTER HOME WITH LAKE PRIVILEGES •
Sailing eompleUly fumlahed, 2 bedroemi, l•rB• kitchen and dining araa, eleitd front porch, full boiomont, only $12,900.; No. 375-E.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
Corpolad thruoot, extra sharp I-badroom ranch, with kjtj mont, brand new 2W<ar garaga on tree eovorod loL ^ Waterford Tdwnihip. Tormt on Lind Contraet ovollablo. No. 255-B.
its S. Lopwr Rd.. Oxford 62S2573-t2S2S4l
GOODRICH OFFICE
Hitrdct torma.
TRANSFERRED TO FLINT	^ ' .
'l15,iw
01331
BRAND NEW
■m/rjsras
jjiow^wllh lakd priyiiagai. Pull price only 131,900. bond «'*•«{
686-2211
B34'4204
COUNTRY SITTING
S-bodroom raiwh homo on hugo clean and compact. Just right ( invastmant. New gat furnaea and eai
young coUPit, n irpttlng. 1^-ear
.J037 s: Stata St., Goodrich 15112 N. Holly Rd., Holly
HEARTHSIDE
HAMMOND LAKE ESTATES
Deluxe brick ranch on loroo wtl lot. 3
Ins and china
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP t10,000{ coblnots wim good table space, full price on Gl Urmi. A nic# Ilf- Full partially finished baiamant a lust off with fireplace. 3V4 car attached bath with garage. 339,900.
Even though you're not wealthy
You'll not be miserable in this newly completed model home at Lake Braemar
WEST OF DAVISBURG
PRICE $37,500
large modern 9x12' atoraga
_______ and a k I p p I n g
distance to Khool. 317,000. FHA financing available, with $1100 down. CALL <<4. IMO, EVES. 793-<94S.
ALMONT <9587. Thli older home hot bean comi remodeled, carpeting, rooms, 3 bedroome, room, dining room, and forgo kltchan. Almott t acre ot shodwl yard right In town. Vary good tocoilon, con' bo purchased olthor.fumlshod or unfurnishod, Slt,3IK7 CALL M445<0, EVES. 797-4(42.
IMLAY CITY — NEAR Von Dyke, 40 aero farm, 3
PUT YOUR CHEF IN THIS PRIZE KITCHEN
Wall oven, Formica counters, she's got to set this noorly now frlMvtl away from fho bustio of city lift. 3 'bodrooms, living room, roomy ponolid fomlly room. Plonly of ox-itras and prlcod to tall at only $28,900. Bo first — W» tradt.No. M<
I OUR BEST CANDIDATE
I For 0 spoclous won built homo tor t ; growing Ufnll^ In^ on I dji ■ ]
' I schools oms, wi
cor gorago, largo Oh, y& n hot lake privileges on Lake Oakland. Full price $2<,900. F.HJL tollora will pay closing costs and hook up to township wator. Don't anvy tho lucky persons who got It, IM It first. Wo . wilt trade.	No.	0-27
IT'S QUIET OUT HERE
lAttroctlvo 2 bodroom ranch on 1W acres, with attached garogo. Full basomont, two	sIdM oxpoaod
•firoploci '	—	—-—
kitchen. ___ _
comptotod and la awaiting It's new owners. Full prico S24.9W. Call <74-ippolntmant.	No.	1^'
NOT TOO BIG BUT AMPLE
... for a amall family or ■
This 2 bodroom ronm In ton 1 chanco.	to live
without having	to go	i
financially. AIT brick, IVb
LISTING-SELLING-APPRAISING-BUILDING SHARP TRI-LEVEL-UNION LAKE AREA
Custom built trI has 3 bsdroomi. Hi baths, tomW firoploeo, 2W cor garagp with blacktop drive, Mrgt let, and I diato poasesslon. m900. Let's trade.
SPREAD OUT
?.S,5:''hi,f35h7EarSLT"n.M'^^
garage. S31.900, maka thia a muat, call today.
HERE'S A BEGINNING
All masonry oonstructlon, 4 room homa, 1 badrooma, full .bpiamafit. nice sliad lof, city itYnr and wator, tha prica la only Mm OR FHA farms. Battar call an this one.
THE "TURNED ON" GENERATION
Can put SSU In your pocket. Good location 1
Thia eating placa Is gtarri to f-
not look thia ana over? Only t
FRUSHOUR REALTY REALTORS - MLS 5730 WNIiams Lake Rd.
L
674-2245
49 Sale Homu
^ho.
m.90o
Batter
LAKE FRONT LIKE NEW. <
btdroom,
baMmtnt
it,'*uir'
yard, boat.dock, sandy baach plua tali, loto, moral Only S3S4I00. Morfgaga tormsi
LaBARON nREBT NORTHERN HIGH AREA. Cafpatad living —	----- room
ding
117,500 with "0" down on
Alumln
Wa.^
ning ot with now: droportot. Largo kltchon with bullt-lns and braakfoit area. 2>A car aftachad garage. Fully finished bosomonf. Nicely londscopod corner lot with circular drive. Early oceuponm. Land contract eon-sMerad. 835,500.	|
LAKE PRIVILEGES lot, boouftful!
Cut floldstono front Thormooono windows,
lllty room, allont bam Machinery era toncad.
JOHN A. ROWLIG, Inc.
139 W. OENE$Ei?,''LAFEER
ARE YOU TIRED?
of looklm at beat up ovtr prict I homes. Than coma toast your ays on this lovely 2 badroom full baif ment, formal dining room, corpoto 'living room and hill, foncod ytn close to ovoryfhlng yof out
1969 MODEL ttOSE OUT MANY TO CHOOSE FROM REALTOR
I RAY O'NEIL REALTY
!	3520 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD
OR 4-1332	MLS	314-4
49 Sale Kawtet
REALTOR
1K7 ORCHARD LAKE RD. '334-1593 • ,	334
Poronnial ryt soodod. -omlly room has ntturol
m
"ESTABLISHED 1930"
CURKSTON AREA
3 bodrooms, basomont, plus other foonfros, wo
DOLL HOUSE
. f tofdrownid
•;*iK^r.“\'hi'''fl!&pC‘FT?ri
:As,Tc.w«r:s«
toca, first floor utility, roam, aak
DANDY BRICK
K among teworlng aaks In lytvon ill boiomont and gti hoat and gan
TWO THOUSAND DOLUR
PrIca raduetton, unballovablt but trua. Ovi hum ranch, 14x11 living room, with tlroplot IV, ottachod garaga and lot
af aiti
bOMfY
DORRIS II SON REALTOR 2536 Dixie Hwy. MLS
OR dlihwashar 4" wall
County ipoeinoatlono on Septic tonh and flald.
ShoWn for the first time Sat. & Sun., N6v. 141^15
1 P.M. till 4 P.M. Daily
Vtr^ Wall built.
A good
313-^25-3298 or 634-9825
C. NELSEY
Solei Agent Doviiburjie Mich.
"IT'S TRADING TIME"
NEAT AND CLEAN MIDDLE BELT AREA
Levoly thraa4iadroom brick cprnor lot with Rull and ihoi S27JM on Land Contract Tai
TWO STORY COLONIAL
FHA TERMS	.
Ynonti to ISO this family homo.
LAKE OAKLAND LAKE FRONT
90-ft. cinol to Lako Oakland. 1 homo Is only four yoors old. fooii bodreomi| fomlly
booutlful Wolnborgor lorga corpotod living r I. with dlnlnji^^roa. tVk

omlc bothi. uflltty room on main floor. Full flitd lowor with walkout to potto. Nicely londKapad yird with sprln!
spajrv-TJKKrTvrtniA i
'•"WoSat'tMVISf. SSi Mit JSW'SS!,.tills
Smith./ Laena Hunt, Lao eogart, eilaan Mayor, and Dava Bradlay.
1071 W. HURON ST. MLS	681-1000
WILL GUARANTEE THE SALE OF YOUR HOME
FHA TERMS
SFIC AND SPAN ranchar In
ad lal wnh etty wator and lauftri. Walk to grada ochoel. SU.9S0. CALL TOOAYII #10
LAKE FRONT-418,900
ocanlc natural sotting wllh a vlaw af two likto. Hurry, SEE THIS ONE TOOAYII tS4
OLD ENGLISH RETREAT
LAKE ORION LAKE FRONTi With"#'*st^lnoTviaw* af*?S
laka. • bodrocma, aluminum
tort
DA?

DELUXE LAKE FRONT
of Von Norman Laka. 3 latEa
kltctwn and an gttaehad
a?r- s§fy5g*‘*c£irwwt
BLOOMFIELD AREA
A FINE FAMILY .HOME With
tochtd a car icaead yr ^ sprinkling
SKSkT" <
Ml
PRIZE PACKAGE
NEW MODEL	V
OPEN SAT. & SUN. 2-5 P.M. or by oppointment
AVON RANCHER: Avon Rd. luM part Of Crooks Rd. Daluxa all-brick ranchar with all fhaia foatoras Includad In tha prleai 5 windows, ponolid family roam with firapiaca,
laundry, and aftachad garaga. SEE THIt TOOAYl
5?
REALTOB;
PONTIAC CLARKSTON,.ROOiESTEH .UNION 338-7161	625-2t4idmmM;'^m94f

D^ia
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1969
For Wont Adi Dial 334-4981
___'_
ARRO
NEW 3 BEDROOM
Ww Mtwrty _________________II
LARSI. J Mdroom likt homi. Lind net tirini. NS-tiN.
Bt t*!!. Wootf.
w®Hnt

SPACIOUS LOT
with ] MrooRU brick ind tnmi nnch In txcilltnt condition. Brick flroplieo In living room, M' nar
ssrv^“?oa"fis
—“■■ toncod yird
682-2211 MAROARBT MCCULLOUGH, Rnitor SI43 Cau-Ellllbath Road Open W MLS CIOMd !
TED'S
Trading
674-2236
GORMET HOUSE.
Mot I box hinch apaclal, ttils " TRA PACKED"	oltand
prIvllmA IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! for ttw ho.............
holldaya, tima la right, call
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
Ovar a,in^aq^ft.,of mloyabla living
buy at
.... .... .... i contra
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
EAST SIDE
full baacmanl, dining location, t) 1,750, FHA
n'‘: 'iSJ® tii»
io*Vn'u*5^t.sj,'"%o!;rir'''A
mlnutai l-M. Eaiy accau mova on now. Caih ' balanca, U.ffl.M. Paymanti Off month. Including, low par cant Intonat. ^all owner 541-7711.	'
Northtrn Property
ATLANTA, MICH. 10 wall covarad with Mapla, Oak
51-A
large Pina,
canal and road.
lM--AerEiif E MACEDAV LAKE
4M ACRES-WATERPORD Zoned raildantlal, ott Crane SI., near M-Sf t, Hatchary. t7,00(L low down pymt. '
!*M0,MCr
M-M
Other Acrtegt Perctls
ANNETT INC. REALTORS E. Huron St. 338-0466
OgyytiiiwHlM 59
GOING INTO BUSINESS?
Do you naad a location lor your new bualnaaa vanturaf If ao, wa havi
c?N*i;rT^r.'m£int'A*8'iH
674-2236
McCullough Roolty
MAN OP HIGH caliber with ability. Oriented In nbllloua to advance, potential. Send briet intlac Praia Box C-
TIZZY
By KaU Oaann Sah
approx. 170 ft. exc. high trontage Office Open Bveningi B on the beautiful Thunder Bayi>^
River. Exc, deer, turkey and imalliOOIt ranBl game hunting. Good trout tlihlng.l ' — .
Ideal	tor inowmOblllng.	Cloie to	to	ACRES,	and	5	bedroom hi
State land. Good road .and elec-1 baiement, garage, Ul yri. trIcIty. 3 mllei from Atlanta. Haa near 1-75, Oxford, excellent been private club lor yeara. First s34,«fo. Tarms or taka time	ottered	by owner	at $4500.	mortgage.	Sheldon, 4J5-5557.
Muit be aeen to be appreciated. ---------if------
Call 7M-3I77 after 7 p.m. tor ap-l	7Q	A/^RPC!
polntment or write, William!	/g /\Or\i-jO
Hapner, Atlanta, ^Ich. 43*50.	|
M ACRES, BY OWNBRTfO per cent! white	birch,	ready to	cut and
atripplinga, 10 acres cleared, hes 3 ponds (well water, deep) can be: made Into one large pond. Iota ot; deer, t3N per acre. Land situated' near M-lf, 5 Mila NoiTh ot M-43.1 also	two 40	acres, 7	miles ot
Marlette on Marlette Rd., MOO per acre. For more Information call i Detroit 1-3*3-373*. ______ I
AND
The
ACRE NORTHERN property "ng lodge for sale or trade. MIo, Lewiston area. Subsl payment. fE 5-3434
Brown City and Marlette on paved road. Home In A-l condition, 3 car garage. Ilk baths, 3 badrooms full basement, tormal dining room, huge barn and storage shed. Silo and. much more. Full price 345,000, R-100.
CALL RAY TODAY • _________*74-4101
80 TO 800 ACRES
In Lower Michigan. Dairy, grain, beef or hogsl Noma your farm
quarters, Stainleaa Steel Equipped In Northern Mich., Hunting fishing and on Wall COUNTRY. >lxturas and good well, 333,000 Cash or 33*,50a tarms. Phono 1-*l*-775-i™,_
SDD LIQUOR LICENSE IN ESCROW
Located In Clawson. Hat moved to new location. A opportunity for existing or jiarty store. Asking US.OOO
''"'warden realty.
3434 1
Pontiac
If no aniwar call 363-^40
SMITH
Headquarters,"
fishing
474-4341.
FARM HOME 21/2 ACRES
DEER HUNTERS
WE OFFER A WELL CONSTRUCTED well furnished and well lopated little cabin on 1 aero of land In good deer hunting area. 33000 down on land contract terms,
Country Living i vanlanees not to (1-75)
Id modern con-I far from ex-and Clarkston.
C. PANGUS INC, REALTOR
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 530 M-15	Ortonville
CALL COLLECT *37-2315
SUBURBIA
a all I 3-bedri
with IV3 Ins, furnished family roi and drapes, large lot.
property. 313,yf0,
lOTS-O-UND
40 acres of rolling wooded land, amall farm house , and tarn locatad
/->(-(-. TARM home
UnUoOl 3'/2 ACRES
traffic area.
----1--------------------
AS HI-FI, TV End RyfllBi_____________64
C|irosvn?ng*'Eagt»rar,‘ '
MODI______
USED sTnger
$146.00
ish or forms, Inchidss cablnsts and MWwoit Appllonco, 334-3313,	_______________
110 J0i*i APPliancf af elOBlyn. 373.S340.
ilONli:	I7D
ReaioneyejyB 1-7724,
0 nd
HEYWOOD WAKEFllLCrd
11 on
room sof, rooionoblt. PE d-fSti."
househoTFspecials
use YQUK CRBDIT - BUY ROOMS OP PURNITU—
•lift of:
C6l!i3(3idt

Pontiac Miisic Souhd
3101 W, Huron	**3-3350
GB AM-FM PHOtiJhSninrO. Floor or Will stylo. Exc. 3*3-3*83.	_
OP PURNitURB - Con-
to ta
Iocs Hying room outfit with 3
carar^f.U’*ur'
II *'xl3' rug mcludad, wilt Ho t
ntfy* limps, •h 4 chroi
*33-3*30
only.
THE ROLPE H. SMITH CO. SHELDON B. SMITH, REALTOR 244 S. TELEGRAPH
333-7848
SALES OPPORTUNFFY TN ita
vsstmsnt nssdsd. Unllmitsd Ineotna possIbIMtIss. Salary against commissions. Pleass call Sally Brant, Inc., at Pontiac, Mich. *73-33*3 for appointmont. Ask for Mr, Bnf nt.
Oefinllelv, Roallor Herlric
bird to .................
*81-3111.
Realty and Invostmsnt Co.,
674-31^5
PARTY STORE
Good year around of fIshliM hunting trails. Bssr and
Packags liquor llconso avalloble. Also .3 gos pumps and fual oil.
p?iSd*"fo”
C. SCHUEH EM 3-77188
woo Commareo Rd. Union Lake.
Specials—Specials
KALKASKA RESTAURANT — Owner will aacrlflca, a steal at 339,000 with S144M0 down and Its
EXCEPTIONAL DEVELOPMENT -,x:i Land. 3C0 oerts. $105,000. Traversa
NORTH SIDE INCOME
rts with possible ttird In illding, full alumlnun roof, 3 encloaod per
' Amlstad*; «!S!; or, PREP.?yf.LOPMENT.SALE -
319,500 convontional.
McCullough Realty, Inc.
5430 HIGHLAND RD.
674-2236	624-2400
Pontioc	Walled Lake
REALTOR MLS REALTOR
next to staft owned I ft. of froad fron-, law, good!
Partriidge
• im 5, NIL ■«. TM. a« UA IXS Odl
“His mother wants him to be a lawyer and his father wants him to be a doctor, but from the look of things he’s going to be a drop-out!”
KENMORE 500 ELECTRIC dryisr,
530. 333-3313._____________________
KIRBY VACUUM USED, must sslf, call tat. 5 and *■ 775-0*49,
KITCHEN TABLE, Bsby stroTlsrT Walnut dining room table with 3 Chairs. Mats 12 and folds Into a dasK. 2 and tables almost naw. call batwaan 4:30 and 4:00. FE 5-7704.
PIECE CORNER SECTIONAL, bam cushions, maolo tsa waoon. WInthrop
choir, occasional chair, 9 talgo carpot, 4 oak dining c ^ glassware, china, kaosana lamps;
*	alactric
I sewing macnina, glasi Call after 3, 3*3-3***.
PANGUS INC., REALTOR
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
O^vllla
, COLLECT 427-2015
THE BIRD TO SEE''
WOMEN'S APPAREL STORE Do^j^a ver^^^good^gross
»W00.‘ For "
9x12 Linoleum Rugs $4.95
Solid Vinyl Tllo ......... 7c oa
Vinyl Asbestos tllo ...... 7c M
Inlaid Tile. 9x9	....... 7c ta.
Floor Shoo-3355 Ellzatalh Lake
Across From the Mdll"
«-piece~bedr'ooms;
097. Little Joe's Bor,
14*1 Baldwin, FI----

30" ELECTRIC KENMORE range
"a,.
'■’C*ALL.
ERCIAL FRONTAGE
ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 West Huron St., Pontiac . *01-3111	____ WO M759
'?lX
ON Ellzatalh Lok^M	Salt Land Contracts
per ft. will sail all or part. ^— ---------——-
GIROUX REAL ESTATE, *73-	| jq jg
LAND CONTRACTS
30" GE DELUXE daop-well, timer, clock, I push-buttons, sxeollsnt dition, 3*9. HO road racing set, 3 sets ot track7*25. CiTl *74-3030, ottor * p.m.
CORNER LOT OF 1W acres with g<^ building, good location tor
sporting goods Holly on U.S. 10
4 UNIT APARTMENT clean good location, oxcellont return, *o,0M down. Aftor 7 p.m. coll 07*4124* or
ALUMINUM BUNGALOW alttlng on lot with lake frontage, portable dock divinn board and sea wall, call Ray fo 95, *7*4101.
'BUD"
BAYVIEW REALTY 114 E. FRONT ST.
TRAVERSE CITY, MICHIGAN ***-3010	Evas. 414-947-41I
AT ROCHESTER
country living buy this 3 om brick ranch, family room firaplaco, kitchen bullt-lns, 2V3 car garage.
MILTON WEAVER, INC., Realtors
Loti—Acraaga
I ACRE ON CASS t AKE ROAD NORTH OF M-5*
FLATTLEY REALTY
Warren Stout, Realtor
™.1450 N. Opdyks Rd.	373-1111
IBM ®rw.	iwy w43vwi.anT| Open Eves.'til 8 p.me
business corners lost North ot thls|	enb Vamh coMTPArT^
near Warwick Hills Country Club CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS In Grand Blanc township. Lucilal	Divta sitw ' — op
Sir
EXCELLENT :ORNER LOCATION —'-------------------------------,
■■	.... 1 to 50
LAND CONTRACTS
Urgently nssdsd. Sso us t
YARDS OF GREY-Bslc carpeting, may be seen Thursd 7-0 p.m. »S. 127 Illinois.
touch button

Soli HousehoM Goods 65
KIRBY SWEEPER
EXCELLENT CONDITION-*** FULL GUARANTEE
Kirby Service & Supply Co.
3*17 DIXIE HWY.______«7«.333*
CHROME DINETTE SET and choirs. *74-3547 sftsr 5 p.m.
Absc)lutely Nowhere Such Drastic
Price Reductions!
’/2 Off
LARGEST DECORATOR FURNITURE SHOWROOM CLOSES
THE DOORS OF ITS CONTRACT DEPT. FOREVER FINAL WEEK
3100,000.00 WORTH OP DECORATOR FURNITURE MUST BE SOLD AT COST, BELOW COST OR SLIGHTLY ABOVE COST.
All Fumituro Is BRAND NEW AND FULLY GUARANTEED!
LIVING ROOMS, BRAND Vi price. Littio Joo's, 1A FE 3d042.
.. JUS. ___________
txc. condition.
. _________ ..ic"
, *50. *02-9*44.
MUST
ibout dwin,
JUST movod, Gl
MANUFACTURER'S CLoLe-OUT
STEREO
WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE
Diamond Noedlsi BSR 4-Spaod changsr
$89
Or 15 par month UNIVERSAL
Dally 10x15-0 _ _,Tuas„ Sal. 10i15-4 -	-- fv"sERvlCl“’
TV	FE *-45*9
_	_	Baldwin __
OUR STREETS TORN'UP WE'RE STUCK WITH 400 BIG NAME COLOR TV'S Selling-Cost Plus Freight
EASY TERMS AND FINE SERVICE
HURRY THESE WON'T LAST
Jot's Applianct Warahousa 547 E. Walton at Jotlynr 373-5560 AND
Little Joe's Bargain Furniture 1441 Baldwin at Walton, 332-4842 RCA VICTOR COLOR d'a I u x a , remote oontroL cabinet In good condition, 24 S. S_hir|ay^
WAREHOUSE SALE open ta publl aniira Invantarv at new Zenith, RCA and Meterela TVs, co er TVs and stsrsaa must bt said. Every Item dlscaunted, many talaw cast. Na teas, attar rtfutto. terms, sals today and tomorrow igf.
HILF APPLIANCE CO.
34123 W. 10 Ml. near TaItgraph 24)4 14 Ml. near Crooks
maple table and i
chair, FE 5-070*.
3)50, sales, service automatic rentals. *73-3792 or
For Sals Miscellaneous 67
; Vi INCH COPPER WATER PIPE, 3* MOVING TO AWBILE HOME; Lady! wa"er oloa,' »"can?s a'It g"""
-------1 larg. capacity auto. I TtamosTi SoS! 7005 M-59^^
malchTne^alac. dryer, t ». rz~ioo. . /I I tr.:. .r::.:----
gallon water heater
For Sale Miicellanaeui
HORIZONTAL ^OIL PURjl excellent Ll HQV water HtAT Consumer
gr arizes,.
rsssit, etc. *1.30 s doz. u^ *44-
443*.	________________
kENMORE CABINET S*wln_9 lurchen''doubls sfnk, wood'tgbl**,’
Jx*. *53-1335.	___________
TaMIPRlNkLINO PUMPS, I ho to 2 ho., priced Irem 3*2.50. O. A. Thompson and Son, JOOS M^W. W. ■ lavatories, complete, 3*9.9* value. 124.50; also talhtubi, lellahi, snawar slel(s, Irregulere, tarriMe value, 3)4.95; Mlchlgin Fluerat-_ctat^93 Orchard Lake, PE 4.34*3. LAWN 3PRINKUNO , W*'*"?!!
Inch plastic pipe, *3.41 tar 100, 1"
?!:«!? SIS: A**’. ?'h‘o‘;ai.ori\r7Ss;^!W MOVING SALE
MIsc. household furnlshlnga, garden tools, shredder *50,, Hetco weedcutter *30, refrlg. SUM), Am-mene chest freezer 3135, women's and amall girls' clothing, alactric guitar cables 33.00 each, music stands $3.00, odds and ends. 345 Taxes, Rochester 451-0J90. MOTORIZED' LAWN~ SWfBPER, rotary lawn mowar.
—y lawn mowar...........
tasy chair, priced right.

4700.____________
MUST) SELL travel trailer. Camino sleeper with Reese h Lot at Little Bear Lake, i Lewlslon, good hunting, while wool Stag hunting si once, size II. Also dear rl
*.“Sr
OFFICE DESK, adding machine, new slalt pool chaap. 537 *750.
PLUMBING BARGAINS
=vir»im;
irv..f'i’5!9l;
Kroahler davanport, coffaa table
and and stands. 373-3140.________
MWERN Retrlgarator for sale, taw. Call alter 5 p.m. 373-1023.
itire Inventory ot Contract Dept, ist ta aold oull Free Immcdlala livery. Free storage-layaway in. Terms to suit you. Dealers sra welcome, but must
400,000 BTU all fired boiler, and Mi JiiV
n nelinn luefer heater With	_________
_____________ __________" 334.577s. I PUMMAGE SALE
I SET WALKIE TALKIES, G.E. | gy ponilac
_________ _________NS, FEEf
standing toilet, *29.95; ^ 30-oaTla7 healer, 149.95; S-pleca bath -159.95; laundry fray, —- *' shower stalls with ti bowl sink, *29.95; tubs, $10 and up. Pipe threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO.,
841 Baldwin. FE 4-151*.________
RUMMAGE SALE; Houeeholdv furniture, old dishes, knick-knacks, clothing, 19*9-399 Skl-doo, and ‘49 motorcycle. 232 W. Strathmore.
Thurs., FrL, NOV.J3, 14;^0:30;4^5M Branch St.
Citizens.
warahousa prices.
GE, Crown, Hotpoint, Mag Jewel. From 399, terms. ABC APPLIANCE 43*25 Van Dyko ' bik. S. 33 Milo E. 10 Milo
matchod sat, *150 After 5 p.m. MY 3-3D4|.
WHIRLPOOL AUTOMATIC
washtr, axcatlant
423-
wTlh * cllairr 2* en*d REU JACKET SHALLOW and ^ tables. Best otferi msoa*.	IjJ*	n«w. 325. Solid
_
double and triple Or ;---
and
______, many solid wood, ( '	‘
IW INCH PLASTIC
(STIC dram pipe and ... --- need to thread pipe anymore. It goes togelher - with gluo, all you ntod la a hack-saw and a paint brush. Sea G. A. fhompton B Son„ 7005 M-59 W.
5 TOOL TABLES WITH lampa and 100 cua sticks; 1 Juke box; 1
METAL LATHE, power hack -ass, electric hoist, ping FE 4-3175, 2591 Mld-
13 X 12 SCREEN HOUSE.
Phono 087-
ranga,
17-974*.
many mlsc. ilams.| Tale;
glass french doors. Many house ' ' single, double and triple with aluminum stofmi.
many solid wood, tIoSot I anNouo double glass very good con-)utsf« window lumlnum stoiim , 75-3x0, 10, 12 ond 14' Jongthi, ' Ktnmora 30" gas range, 2 Id, $40. 1 Lana mahogany table 115. Call Holly, *M
RUMAAAGE SALE, 949 LokovlaW,'Off
doors, 1 heavy
Bjiraph in
34" G.
~^hl RUMAAAGE — NICE CLOTHING,
EXCELLENT CORNER lotion and building, ISC' on Baldwin Ave., »nta Kninats call *02-305* or *32-
INDUSTRIAL—NORTH SIDE
*30 C033MERCE RD.
3*34981
floor, four 3 room and bath opts, up. Full tasemont, now gai hot wW fumaco. Small house with 41x130 tt. lot ot rear for urklng. Now showing $550 per mo. Income. 350,000, land contract forms.
Other Commercial Properties
ANNETT INC. REALTORS E. Huron St. 338-0466
at this lovely ran homa. Beautiful isl feet pf lake front, bedrooms, ceramic largo living room, f dining room, 24 ft. dining art* on thi 9x12 utl patio Lovtiy
Attached garage.
AHENTION BUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS
32 Iota, lake front and off th*
2 ACRES. NIC* oru, by 1-75, *300 down, 350 mo. KIM, 373-3400.
3V4 ACRES. Clarkston arto. 240’ x *00' rolling and wooded. Horses allowed. *45 mo. Sheldon. *35-5557. 5-10 ACRE RIVER AND stream
acreage. Wooded and rolling. mshtc Fowlor Roalty, 3*33322, *85-1404, 11 UNITS
3*3-3*45.
* ACRES, Clarkston aroa. Near 1-75, hors** OK. Cleared and wooded, nm* homa ares, 075 mo. Sholdon,

80 Acres-Lapeer County
BORDMAN-BISHOP RC DRYDEN TWP., bet we Rochester and Van Dyke Rds.l Beautiful property, trontage on 2 rogds, tarn house, out-bulldings.
•nd water, oxcellont location. Coll for further Information.
NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associotes, Inc.
1141 W. HURON ST.
681-1770,
after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773
' LAKE FRONT HOmOs " Now and Used J. L. Dally Co.
3-711*
LAKE FRONT
Year around 3 bodroom, locatad on Pontiac Lake. Included alum, tiding, 1V3 car garage, fenced yard, safe, sandy taach. Full price only *19,900, aasuma land contract tt 7 For Information call J. A. TAYLOR, REALTOR, OR 4-030*.
, OR ;
contract terms.
80 Acres-Lapeer Caunty
SAND HILL RD., -------------
1 milt from path Dyke X-way. Soil <
Is point-sand usi structlon. Farm
buildings.
Contract
184 ACRE ESTATE
m 3 Roads TION RETREAT,
FOR CORPI
camp,
gantlemai
Rd^^Van"
County, lu! tor Provir
LAKE FRONT HOME
bedroom homo with a ci I, and the pleasuro swimming or boating, sc
Hreplac*, fishiiw, s« ihoroflno.
CALL COLLECT *37-2815____
LAKE FRONT LOfS
2 oxdotlont lako front lots e Grom Lake. 100 ft. frontago on th lako. 39950 each.
GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
LAKE FRONT, LAKE PRIVILEGE Lott, Commorco Cedar Island Middle Straits, Big Lakes, Fowler, 3*34332, *05-1*04, 3*3-3*45.
LOVELAND
314,700. Be on land contract, $4500 down.
Leona Loveland, Realtor
3100 Cost Lake Rd. _____________*03-1355
OXFORD AREA-dlstlnetlva new ItVilr kitchen
electric
femily room with •ths/ Jit
lve*Uke
8U^ -With acCMi. to 5 I. PRI
flreplKt# 2 beths/ tVa Bkfi Dtiementp
__________.
»ICEO AT ONLY
King Phippa ; 1H97 f. ugaof Kd.
SITUATED ON 3 URGE LOTS,, this 3 bedroom ranch home. It at' lovaly wlitBPld Lake. To annanca this family home a laraa 3 car Baraga, wifh paved driveway, carpofad Hiring ond dining room with tiroplaco, tatomonl with wot tar, rocroallpn room and firoploca, tdroonod and gitsNd
Sal
cow barn, stables, machine shop, slaughter house, freezer, paddock, rifle range and etc.
One of a kind Property.
For Information call; Thelma > Polsky at,
CENTER REALTY CO.
37315 Southfield Rd, Lathrup Village
353-8600
100x150' LOT
WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEGES. Only one left, e x c • 111 n t established area of nico homes. Prico 34,000. 4-H REAL ESTATE, 423-1400, OR 34455, OR >2391.
1*5 ACRES. Flint. FE
Dotrolt and
Pontiac North tide _ In,, good neighborhood, 334.500. TERMS.
APARTMENT SITE
2 acres, Poritlae North tido INCLUDES former Church bulldlno plus another bvlldlngy a totat of 8600 sq. ft. to convert Into apartments. Land contract. Easy
BATEMAN
INVESTMENT 3, COMMERCIAk CO
Warren Saut, Reoltor
0 N. Opdyko Rd.	373-1
Otan Evos. 'til * p.m.
MILLION
Dollars has bean made available to us to purchase and ass contracts, mortgagos homes, lets or acroagt Wo will give you tas1i oqul^. Contact TED
■'674-2236 McCullough realty
4*0 Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS )pan 9-9____;_____*74-233*
tor your McCfuL-
$40.42 CASH
west Appliance, 94 dally. 334-33)2
1969 TOUCH-A-MATIC
machinay does fancy akes buttonholes* etc.
on!y^$29.W
nlght/33B-2^M7im’Srial,'"
stitching*
, Call day or
1970 ZIG ZAGS CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
Now machines with 30
.'"b’^ad"*.....
No attachments leoeo, lull size heavy duty m w only $*9.95co mploto. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 44) Elizabeth Lako Rd.
guarantee.
A - PLENTY OF USED washers, stoves, refrigerators, and trade-in furniture bargains. Little Joa't Bargain House, Baldwin at Wat-tan %lvd. FE 24*43.
LARGE OR SMALL land contracts.
quick Closing. Rassonabl* Earl Garrab, MA 4-5400 EM 3-408*.____________
LOANS
'	*25 to sum
Insured Payment Plan BAXTER - LIVINGSTONE Finance Co.
41 Pontiac State Bank Bulldini
FE 4-1538-9
377 S.
338-9641
Attar 5 p.m. 3, Sunday CALL *73-_________ _17*7________^
PROFESSIONAL BUILDING
Very nice 26x40 c 0 m m a r e 1 a
building i..__
waiting room with 2 rooms dsch sl<f-full size
Hno. linage lOOnS
NEED UP TO $5,000?
You may be surprised how chot you can add new room repair.
A SEWING MACHINE IN CABINET
1969 SINGER ZIG-ZAG
Sewing mechlne, slightly used. Blind hem stitches, tews on buttons makes buttonholes, monograms, --------- . y stltchos. No ot-
ROjJNO OAK TABLE, 2 iMft, $70,, botton. Ilka new, TV, black 3.	Power saw, tires, ratrlo.
oriolnal finish, *150. whit* console, good condition *40.	Grafton 391-3475._____________
( bring	_____________________^_____ Living room suite, good condition RUMMAGE. 6ARAGE AND fUrnt-
resal* numbers. CROWN REFRIGERATORS. DISHWASHERS, $75. *51-2*63.	tuTsale, W. Ypsllantl.■
furniture — CLAWSON It th*	dryers, washers, ranges, crate	19*9 chEVY,	hydromlta-H'boat) also	ouMiiSAhE'TALE ~iii^anttmior
Uffl-Y location for this s*la, as	damaged and scratchisd models,	hydroplane.	12 hp Sea Kino# oil In	m.Die desk 101D Grander
they ora th* only on* In the group	Fully guorantoed. Terrific tavlngt.	SToji?"Si.?;.."	S;"*,!..!!'-?.':!?- ’“'Jl.“.'J."?.
closing thoir contract dopt.; Tormt.	'<>
Famous factqrlos such as America CURT'S APPLIANCE
" Tny" bedspreads, drapas, lolhtng,
Martinsville,
Brody, Lano, Brqyhllf Stanley, Craft, Bas»
Buy any I doubi* disci
9 PIECE LIVING ROOM GROUPS 313* - 3333 - 35*3 HIDEABEDS, QUEEN SIZE 3193 - $25* - 333* to PIECE BEDROOM GROUPS 3)7* - 32*3 - 349*
SEALY SETS OP BEDDING ALL SIZES - 349 S PIECE DINING GROUPS $5* - 311* - 3298 DECORE SOFA 3*3 - *13* - *35*
u;_________
Aasset maple
condition, *824517 or J38-3427.	Orlonvllla, Thurs., FrI. Sat.
ANCHOTTENCES I«ummaoe_sale
ColSJ,*;!)!' WILLIAMS LAKE RD. 473-1101 NO MONEY DOWN__________________FE 5-7471
Grand SALE STARTING NOv; 10, on *OU'Ng MACHINES, *29.50,
-	• s^al purchase of Dupont 501)	*»•“>
tlylon carpal, 5 colors In a tio	!®N' ‘ *49.50, calculators
corpat, 5 colors In a tip paHern, $4.99 a yard, installation a v a 11 a b la. Fra* astlmatas. Call Ron at 334-5*97.
SEWING MACHINE with zlg-zag, vanity with large round mirror, Zonith TV with outsido ontenno, I yqar old. *51-3425.
SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC
ZIg Zag sewing machine er braiders, appliques, buttonhole etc. Late model Khool trade-1
$6 PER MONTH OR $59 CASH
*99.50, check writers, *19.50, reglilers, 039.00, safes, 399.50, files, *7.99, steno chairs, 3)2.50, book case, $24.50, post cord duplicators, *14.99 olectro-stallc copiers, *129.50, postage meters, 543-4404,
231 W. 9 Mile.____________________
( RUMMAGE SALE BY LADIES Auxiliary of church,. Thurs.
FrL, 8 til 5 Pf...............
East Newport
i PM. Nov. 13 and 14. 24
5-YEAR PARTS AND LABOR GUARANTEE $56.20 TAX INCL.
pay deffrred balanca* with I6.20 down and 18 tntarast fra a paymants of 15.8*	*
carry charge.
GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
Partrid(3e
"IS THE BIRD TO SEE"
POTENTIAL
Going Business with groat c portunity for future Zoned I----
rxnv grossing nearly
dollar*. ...... .........
uhdar way i -	■ al I
call (Jdpitot Sawing credit manager, until 9 p.m. H long distance, call collect.
PH. 729-4610 WE ACCEPT
. , MASTERCHARGE n work and using | MICHIGAN BANKARD materials. Whatever SECURITY CHARGE ■■■	BANK AMERICARD
__________________ No obligation.
Voss & Buckner, Inc.
140* Pontiac Sate Bank Bldi
334-3267
AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG
SEWING Machli
1959 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, si good,^^exac. motor. For ? 3*34
1 TON CHEVY REBUILT With | camper, $950 or will trod* part. Take boat In trade lor
payment. *02-1043, 1411 -
Pontiac, Silvan Vlllag 3-BEDROOM BRICK,
Moving Co., 10 S.
19*4 DODGE A-1 tor snowmobllo or sail, *82-43*0.
Taka ovar
$5.50 Per Mo. for 8 Mos. I or $44 Cash Balance
still Under Guarantee
UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER
2*15 Dixie Hwy.__F E_*49«
A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN
s K-.»t&r2“»,r£
ibadroom (double dresser, chest, bed, mattress, sorinos, lamps); * pitet bed — 5 piece din ' knv Item Sold Sep *391 - *10 f
UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER beer bar. for .aiin^iiT
Bllsh StyS, 2*15 Dixie HWY._________FE 4-0905) '» WB,,'‘»(I> <»	"f
ir 250 room SINGLE BED, NEW iprlnqs 3. mat-
Savage Early Snooty Spanish, Classic Fi Italian Provincial, E Mediterranean, New English
and Go-Go Modern, over 25. ___ ....
groups on display tor Immadlata tress. Reas. FE 2439*.
SEASON SPECIAL
CROWNi'*'"“7«
* » ± S I	CABINET
FURNITURE
ARMY WEAPONS carrier, with 7' western blade, and hydraulics, money maker for snow removal perfect conditon, will trade for Joop, Bronco—vacant lot or equity In house, *24-73*0.
drivers,
1-237*.
blankets, cli
19*3 Olds ____________ .	.	.
Commerce Rd. to Greon Lok*t, Dandlson to 3*7* Woodviow.

RUMMAGE SALE — Wathor,_ tobtd
RAYNOR OVERHEAD DOORS
(Temcraft Overhnd Ooor'Co.) Electric garage dobr operator*, 3109, Installation ivoilablo.
6295 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59)
25-3350	_________*73-2311
SPECIAL
Two 105,000 BTU Crane turnacaa In crates. *139 oa. Will Install. A I, H Salas. *25-1501 or *73-3431.___
carry up ’
STROLL-O-CHAIR FOR baby, 1 unit I converts to 7 difforont things, rofrlgorotlon,! buggy, _ stroller, highehair, «1e.
BASEMENT RUMMAGE7 dresser* portabf sectional <
dress*
Watkins
SUBMERSIBLE AND upright $l/tnp
copch, C'othyg an;
2 90 7 SINGER SEWING MACHINE, tor
Nov clutch. 3150. .320-
zig-zag stitches. Np at-i
OF 1-75
_ EXPRESSWAY. LOCATED OPPOSITE CLAWSON SHOPPING

CENTER
JU 8-0707
OPEN DAILY 94, SUNDAY 12-3
^BATHROOM STOOL $13, sink $7,
I pair ladles size 7W ski boots $*, ______________
' 335-4953.___________________ |TWIN BABYSTROLLER
BRUNETTE WIG, neyer_worn, cost
■ RED ShVeLO STORE
COMPLETE Bodroom sot;  -------,
Tnd' MSfctaiSI t*^rliISS?'taT.
clothing, size *X. 33*494*.	|WE ACCEPT
DAMAGED mattresses'AtiD box MASTERCHARGE springs, most tlzos at tarrlflcl Bank AMERICARD Apprianca MICHIGAN T...........................—
lay pen, spring
call Ron, 334-5*97.
f CONTOUR r, llfotimo wai
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
Zoned Ml. 54'x474' Storage spa 4243 sq. tt. modern offlca. 9*0 tt. Main highway location. Call lor appointmont. Ask '	■'	----
144523-
ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE,
3*3-7*42.
1949 A-T1
car of «________
CAMP TRAILER.
idlHon!
H-^wop to 33*^.
3400, *314300.
Registered ’ toy poo6le
BUILDER NEEDS VACANT lots — Hlghland-Commerco-MItford-area. Fast closing — Coll Mr. Georgo at 399-5550._____________
CLARKSTON SCHOOL AREA
Walters Lake privileges/ several choice building sitas/ pare -----— priced -----------

673>3488
CHOICE 18 ACRE'building site on Coates Road near Oxford.
Warden 6^-3928.
Terms.
COUNTRY LIVING
CRES hilly view and 3i I road frontage, Clarkston
I ACRES, 900' of road fron for hill top homo ond hor 13'/s ACRES, for country

C. PANGUS INC., Realtor
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK CALL COLLECT________________*27-2315
.	, CLARKSTON
^ 3 ACRE ESTATES
You may have a horse on these 2 acre estates. Locatad In the Clarkston School district and to 1-75 with 200 ft. of rood
*** Priced at $6,950
Bob White
REAL ESTATE
rolling 3. setnlc wHti tf mil* ' Btto* U3h, owner, I-]«74N1 i 7*7-447*.
BMBlwew Opportiinitiei 59
ACCOUNTING PRACTICE PARTNERSHIP
Accountant capable ot hand Hog all phases ot amoll buslnossosJB.OltO Investmont roqulrod. Box C-32. _ BAR AND LIVl'klG (QUARTERS'',!
Roofing
For cash or anything of value «34-)329
SELL OR SWAP, PARTS, 1 CHEVY IMPALA, also ports 19*9 Chtvy truck, 325-5241. [SINGER PORTA~BTe
KAY FURNITURE
0 K Mart In Glonwaod Contor *34.95, dinofte sots $29:95. Inos. Countrvsida LIvIno. 334-'
{BASEMENT SALE, 142
13-14, «9 'til 3.
THE SALVATIOtl ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 113 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to moot vour new Clothing, Furniture,
JSED OFFICE DESkS, *20 Up, swivel chairs 83 up. Porbas Print> ing 8. Office Supplies. 4588 Dixie, Drayton Plains, OR 3>3182 and OR 3*9767.
2 CHAIRS, i 852-5^
i WARDS 230 AMP ARC
sinks. Hydraulic chair, orchid sink, dryer, ond dresser, *005 Hotchary Rd., and Airport. FE 2-0525.
TAKE OVER PAYMENTS, 4 rooms of furnituro, 31000. Monthly payment *38.24, Otter 4;30 MY 3-1412.
USED COLOR TV SETS 3125.00
CHAlIt With inty, 3 mos.
*73-320r	^»•ll♦^wll50
0RYE£~W; refrigerator *25;
‘	'■ I vinclal, baautiful condition 338*1729. j
for^awn	B®** w H I R LPOOL REFRWRATO^, |
ror cabin, its. 3324447.	^	„„„
sail, 3150. 3*34445.________' „
chlldran's Mlsc. ^ Lsnox,
IRIDES - BUY YOUR WEDDING announetmonts at discount from, Forbes, 4500 Dixie, Drayton Plains. OR 347*7 or *734182
CHRISTMAS CARD SPECIALS OP 25 cards par box, to ott catalogue
price,	.........
Forbes mies, 4
Otilca
Electric
alnlass
off cash Thomas 3, Elm St,
CHICAGO
NU-Produc
Products Inc., Rochester.

INDUSTRIAL SIZE RACINE Power Hacksaw. Lika new condition. Coll
OR 3-5551.____________'•	'	■
TILT TRaTl R, JO^IMO, usitil') month, 31200, *7342*7.
BUNK BEDS
f 13 stylos, trundle bodi, 3*8 Auburn, FE 4-7331.
BUNKBEDS: SAVE PLENTY! LItflo Jta's, 14*1 Baldwin, FE 2-4342. BEDROOM SET, couch, cade cloaat, taskattall board.
BACHELOR CHESTS, 2, Evony,
terms. NA 7-2535 i
portable TV or
BRAND NEW TWIN tresses and t Mrs. chairs, ..
3*3-5124.
BABY CRIB, uphols vacuum, half atumir
FURNITURE, STEREOS NEW-UNCLAIMED
Colonial lofa and matching chair, self deck, zippared ravarsibla cushion*, scmchgard fabric, sold tor 3279, unclaimed balance 319*.
Walnut bedroom , sot, IncludM dqublo 4'ottor, mirror, 4 drawer ehoat, amt ponolod l»d, soils tor 3149, unclotmod talinco $97.
Spanish consol* storoo, solid siato ^M-FM radio, diamond noodle P!*y» *1 rocordt, sold *-*239, unclaimed balanco 2152.
TALBOTT LUMBER I	----
__________________________Oakland	FE 4.4595 BELLE-HOWELL MOVIE caMOta.
warehouse SALE open to public, 1 cHipPED BATHRCjOM ti-^—1	prolactor, used only 1 tUi
DOUSES FOR deliver. FE 2-5341.
EPSEY console organ;
antique
raters, rangot, wsahart, etc. ta lold. Every itam dit---------------------------
HILF APPLIANCE CO. 24123 W. to Ml. near Ttl^raph
2413 14 Ml. I
I ANTIQUE DESK, 325.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
do YOU WANT TO BE YOUR OWN BOSS AND BE REWARDED FOR YOUR OWN EFFORTS? ARE YOU A HIGH CALIBER IN. DIVIDUAL
CAPABLE OF EARNING *20400, OR MORE YEARLY? THE GULF STATION
AT *80 W. HURON IN PONTIAC, CAN PROVIDE ALL THIS AND
SOON BE AVAILABLE TO LEASE. IF YOU FEEL YOU QUALIFY TO RUN THIS BUSINESS CALL ' PHIL HAWLEY, 155-0350 EVENINGS 2*4-1514
iuIpmbn '*, 01*0 InyfntorVi
^op OyifiMI Fra* training,
A WIG strtbutor. vasli Ruity
ning am Informal
I available. In Blvd ara*. Paid Nnancing available, tion call 341-5000, axt.
GULF STATIONS TO RENT
Pom^
31*2, EVES. *51-3422.
a tow
Mcatwia to ranr in th* ~ area. A small Invastmant
S0|g HownhaH Goods 6S
M WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY
3 ROOMS
BRAND NEW FURNITURE
. 12.50 par wtafc
$297
LITTLE JOE'S
BARGAIN FURNITURE I4*t Baldwin at WaHon FE 2-4041
J PIECE SECTIONAL COUCH, MONt|l OLD MAPLE. AIrtIta
BABY CRIB,
» lb.
fU«>^Tl:tt7..c.
lV-Wi._______
BRAND NEW BEAUTIFuL Bat^
S'at"l,“ ‘
2 SEATER BUGGY WITH cuHar, S150. 4S14771.
SOO OLD BOffLES, MNn* fruit |srs;
for *125, unelalmod tal*n-c*;| ?!S.*.''W1*t. "IS* Sun.^'“;
15-13, 10 a.m., to 3 p.m., 1*3 now, Pontiac.
Mr*. ' ehilF, zippoFta" rji'irarblo BLUE MASON JAS
37S-1475.
ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over bathtub with a baautiful glsu snclosurt, aluminum tram*, 1—
FURNACES, GAr'SR ok, new or , used initallod. 33*49**.
with tlorol Mr. zipportd rovon . «d nylon eovor, — *27?, unclalmsd talonco *1*3.
FOR SALE;
?£**-'&«
furnace' VACWM“kLlANik,	_______________
*25, hot water circulating pump, CONN CORNET, axealint ...	--- and must sacrlflea, *60. 3*1-21*1
10 WATT GIBSON lead ampllflar with 4, 12" spaskars and 1 horns, 3
■	-.............Itar 3
P.M.
Guild
wk*. old. 339-1331 __________
ask for Donny, 351-3722
BABY GRAND PIANO, In oxcolttal
■ 5 p.m.
host oHor. cm *1*4*11.
BOGAN CHALLENGER CH6 tiA amp., 3 mo. old; also Midland 22-211 Stand mike, 2 mo. old; also * speed Bell PA phonog Will sell ell 3 I
. p.m.,	b(l
S ond old bOttlo*.;^|}ER~TWlN REVERB impfier! Phone 33A2024: attar i .... beautiful LARG¥TiAND~iiFvid S». Coronado II gullor, *7> faRPASIA. MINI COMPACT irgan
FE 3-3*43.
tangulor) .................
"'pfARSOlIP* FURNITURE
Hollywood bad sot, compti mottroM, box sprm^ fra
htodbeard talanc* Sf

~iniw, balwean 9 a.m. - 1 p.m.
tests. * chairs. 335-
Sylvsnl* Color TV's low as 331 Gas tpac* hastara *24.50.
(iss rangdt *97.
Big Freezer Ralrlgsrstbri 1149.
Trade In Waihart,. refrlgaratori, rang** and TV's CHEAP.
JOE'S APPLIANCE WAREHOUSE 567 East Walton ot Joslyn
doublo drosior, mirror, 4 drawer , ctast ond ponolod bod, told SI49, unelalmod talonco 1)23.
tlorogo lays ol! il
Colonial consol* storoo, mapio finished, solid atsM AM-PM radio, diamond noodle playi all slio rocordi, lold tar *219 unelalmod talonco 3135.
PAYMENTS AS LOW AS 110 MONTHLY
HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE
WORKING 1191 EDISON ghonqgrsph, with horn and 14 eyilndir rocordi. Colloetors g
ramies,
Ola*, Sy mlsc. 434 Firniwerth Rd.
}Bp HALL BUTLDER SH(TW McRATID APPLIAkClS
Color •rv'i, rifrlgtrator, rpgsi, dlshwamar*; auto, waihfrt, and dryart, low ai SItl.
Buy direct Irem Wsratau**
Jos's Appllane* wirahousO 3*7 E. Walton ot Jeolyn S7S-IH0 Opon Mon.-FrI. ?|ll ? Easy tortna
, FiooT IWodilt ,
1 |lr&t!Pa?r* el«dlHc'’dMn^^
Crump Elictric
SMI Auburn M.	tMm
11” USED TV	tIO.OI
Ub£Sv?|lg'^"{e."04
H" ADMIRAL IN GOOD condiflsn, S25. Also hav* antonna sis. or s.
Ih^alnut, must aoli, siss,
1^(1*
3im ^tl.™
(FTRAsr-Konr^^ iSI
MASON-HAMLIN CHICKERING FISCHER KAWAI
, PRICED PROM
$1795 \
GALLAGHER'S
1710 TELEGRAPH	P| 441*3
Open Mon. Through Pr, 'III * p.m,
____l»t.?;J8'lirS:li>.m.
HAMMtJNOaW^^	■
01 p 11 a j,
curtains, elodtij tsbls, other mirror mi A

SAIUOHES'S .
For Want Adi DIol 3344911
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1969
MORRIS MUSIC
»4 l« TtMsrtph Rd„ tcriiM from Til Huron, FI 1-OMf
ifS»r¥our'cHlCriN~MO
Vomih itudio orgon lolo prictd ^ iyO^^iMILlV IRQI. AilUSIC
CpRIOrifnaifANb^FIAN Victor CniOOgo. Forloct for hall, church or
U»d Organ Specials
■ALDWIN NP, porcuMlon, IMS. >ALDWIN'40P, with oxl., Loilla opookor, im.
MAAI VIBRA CHIMIS (uiod) UM BALDWIN TONI CABINBT, oxc., for church wllh Baldwin organ that naoda more implication,
iO, ~l gun
MAqSiI~iiWRfiRn^^
_^cablnal, 175, 5M I3M,
(NORolcA'iKriob^oTriiTriri;
IM7	‘*'-
^POOrtABLtS
Wa havo purchaiad complalo Imianipry of 1 pool rooma, Tablai from 1315. Balli IS a aot, guai II, lalfron Blllard lupply, 1533 I. Woodward, cornar of lO-Mlla, Royal Oak, S4M433. _	_
POOL TABLES ~
AUTHORIZeo BRUNSWICK vauIy, FISCHBR Naw natural ilafo labial from 1375, Saffron Blllard Supply, 1533 S. ^	‘ "	' r of to Mila,
SMILEY BROS. FE 44721
i'UNN AMFLIFiel, 3W WATTS, Fandar combo organ, F.A, ayitam wifh Bogan lOO watfi, 2 Atlaa big Banahaa horns on 2 haavy duly standi, t Shura mtkai, 2 stands, •will sacrTfIca whola sat up for M7II or will sail isparataly. 551-2153.
USED ORGANS
from Hammonds and olhar Ids. Fricai as low
. " ""■ GRINNELL'S
DOWNTOWN STORE |7 S. Saginaw_______EL’’?!**
Muiic iMtone	71A
ACCORDION, GUITAR, LESSONS. 8alos-sarvlca._ Also Plano tuning
73
fSHOWCASB, fluorescent
Tights ahd whibls. 820. 33S-1553.
BILL AND COIN
ehangar, 3f1-2200. 3H-23S3.
Spertlw^ OBOdB	74
1-1S5S IS HORSE Olympic Skl-doo, S575, 1-1052 Olympic Elactric start, S775^a^^lJ>llar_4 p.m. 521-1327.
T ALOUETTE Snow moblla,'OTO, With slad. Vary good condition, I yaar old^ona OR^ 3^577.
1 PAIRS. Laiig ski bdois,“ilia"0'/j Anil 10a 1 pair Hoad Skiia Navada bindindSa 19$ Cantimataria
A73-5235. _____________
f 108S SKI-DDOS, 250 and ”37ilcc, "1 skl-doo suit; 573-5025.	_
2^X S’ NATURAL sipts'pool la'Ers ai^ul^anti must sail. Fro-
*' ■Mb¥SrTo"“win-
Cornar
Royal Oak. 542-S422. ^M.'S'NUli'inlors, SS2.i0TlS4:9iS GENE’S archery, 714 W. Huron. REMINGTON 5005, bolt action, with
Sco
Snowmobiles
rpion
Prices
Ssa tho Hottast Ono ol All' SCORPION STINGER up to 744 CC’s
MCCLELLAN TRAVEL TRAILER
4120 Highland Rd. ________575-3153_____
BEAUTIFUL POODLE pupplsf, y while toys, SS5 A up, alia •'™ 'cfYlcc. rgaionaliia,
bIdli..,.,
•'OT|}alS«..........	,
rolly-polly, coldHul markings, shots, wormod, 5Mr3072, CHIHpifHUA7~YOY FOX "torriari; Apricot Poodia pups, raglstsrad, stud sarvico on sama. FB 3.1427. CHiH¥AHUr>WFfti~2“i«jialai, AKC, 1 white, I fawn. 5234205. S55.
CHiNBSrWi~-'T3^^ p.m. ____
^mtnlalura Ichnauiar pup5a*^n wks old. AKC. 375412S. F>TB'>¥F?ilirWirii-plckH up before Friday the 14. 2251 Drlsdana, Walled Lake. 525-2717. _
normal hips, all pupplae are tasted lor temparamant, trainablllty and judgad an quality. Only those that pass are sold, call alter 5:30 weekdays, no calls on Saturday. Anytime -	-----
GOLDEN RETRIEVER FUFS, Alcg, excellent pets, good lineage, show and flald, now avallabTa. ova. g^na

iMM
AAUSER
ir. Buffi
t, 30
Teddy
White
oiSts._____________
f VALLEY FOOL TABLE, I
S2S, 22 Bu B4(HM5450.	357 Mag. S5S.
S55. FE
ib.05 SPORTER, oxcallant conJTtTon,
)2 WINCHESTER, MODEL 24, bean firad, box of sholls, and rylng caao. US. OR 3-7S47, atti Los WINCHESTER, MODEL
TRAIL BQSS
USE IT ALL 12 MONTHS .
Formtrly Evan't Equlpmtnt
LATE POOL TABLE, t>ar ! month oldr Mke new, »acrtflci Pro-Golf, $42-4973.
SNOWMOBILi”5LED^
guard bOGS, UNHAPPY In nal, must sail V» prica. Balglan shaap dogi, 5I2-S4II,
HALF COLLIE PUPPIES, i
IRISH
ilsn b'lMd, rn^a S7S,*^amalai
D—18'
TION OF USED SNOWBLOWl
KING BROS. .373-0734
Pontiac Rd. at Opdyk# Travil TroilBri
141 TRAVEL TRAILER STORAGE Saeurad aloraga for traval frallart, boat trallarb cars.
PIck-up and dallvary, call Arvl's, Inc, today. S23-S444.
' CABOVER
lAM^rST"wlf-con-m-VM.
30' TRAII
3200 Rocheiler Rd. 152^5^
I 13' Wlti
WILDCAT.
074-3752
10 mo., ihoti, license A
1948 TRAVBL TRA^RRa 14W, 0950.
: IMST17’ YELLOWSfiSSX sloepra, I Ilka naw, 373-177S.
1252 waTgon master'
Traval Trailare
Truck Caps $199 and Up
■WEIR’S-GOODeLl
wInnSago
SKI 000, SCRAMBLER I, Tral Bosa. For tha flnast servica anc fha bast daal, coma to JIM HAR RINGTON’S SPORT CRAFT, M
Sundoyi. 554.24I2.
1270
full
SAVINGS UP TO S1S0. Othor modolo from $525. Torms ovollablo
TURF & SURF
SPORTS S, MARINE, INC. 10743 Highland Rd. (M-S2)
1 ml. W. ol Oxbow Lk. 3534354 Opon ’til g p.m. dally
SNOWMOBILE HEADQUARTERS
PINTER'S
New Stercraft's—Low
$115. 573-5203 oltor 3 p.m.
30-04 AUfOMATiC.
modal 24. 22 rov., 5ev-0114,'_____
ioo MAGNUM MODEL 70 Winchester | with case end shells, S150. 373-1275,1 SNOW JET, AND Wh
11370 OPDYKE
3257 JIGGER, BEST OFFER, snow,
SKI-bOO Nordic olociric. Savs 5200 for • hour. 0{	'
prICa 1255. Howard Long Lako I, Talegra
1252 SNOWMOBILE, 21 h.p. I
call aft. S. 52>5S31.	__
f270 EVINRUDE SKEETER B 0 bed ta.
Rd., left antf toHow. sign DAWSON’S SALES, T I P $ I C 0
LAKE, phone 522-2172,	_____
ALL STEEL TRAILEft and 1262 IMto-Skl 500 snowmobile ai
^or. Used 5 mo.- 573-5328._____
>l0VE GROUND POOL, 40 x U 4, wood dock, D. E. flllor, ikli mtr, vacuum, 8250 S52-4720.
ARCTIC CAT & YAMAHA
Ovor 50 machlnoi In stock, road for dollvery or Lay-A-Woy. Got th
CLAYTS CYCLE 'aNTE*R
inilo E, of Lo'poor on M-21, 554-2251
ARTIC CAT Si MOTO-SKI
Rd. (M-52 )	573-3500
BOA SKI SNOWMOBILES SALES Si SERVICE S38-3243	573mSI1	551-0557
PROFESSIO'NAi.
BUCKHORN SPORTING GOODS
I Wlnchoator classic, 30-30’s,
o.m.-2 p. Rd., 512-4
4112.
Usod
days 0 wi Ellisbtth
tmpin Bits, 1255 FORD,
O B u I p m 0 n t, gas eloctric, rofrlgorafor,
Ihowar, roar platform for snow mochlna or motorcycio, ISOO. Coll
353-5522 boforo Saturday.__________
CbMPLEfE SKI OUTFIT, sidls, boots, polos, MO, S73-2331.	^
Suns about 40o, new, modem and' antlquo. Will trade. Ken’s Gun Shop, tV. miles N. of OtlsyJllo on M-1S, hours 1:30 to
, l;30, 7 days, 531-2221.____________
SOOD Solectlon
an.
Olflct, 15 N
, GUNS-GUNS-GUNS
One of tho largost soloctlons In Oakland County. Browning, Weothorby, Wlnchostar, Remington, Colt and Smith-Wesson pistols, scopes, sights. We do our own repair work.
SKI-DOO'S
"	12 to 55 H.P.
15", II", and 20" trocko .	20 mochinot In stock nowl
Wo hove 0 comptoto lint of tc-eaosorlas. Spoodo, tich, sleds, suits, boots, holmofs, glovos, custom colored trallors, single and double I
STOP OUT THIS WEEKENDI
' Cliff Dreyer's ’GTun arid Sports Center
15210 Hotly Rd. Hotly, Ml 4-5771 Open Dlilly and Sundays WsULpiD'Tnw	S75. OA
Join the Wiriner's Circle With A Red Hot VRupp" SNOWMOBILE Pre-Season Special
MG SALES
8557 DIXIE HWY.
DRAYTON PLAINS
JOHNSON'S
1NS0N SKI HORSE MOTO SKI SNOWMOBILES
cMfSn’and'Mioti f"®*""
YOUNG'S WIARINA ,
open dstly 2 'III S
Bu^tri - SBlIiri Meet Thru Praii Want Adt.
service what Hardware, 205 335-2424.
selection, wa II. Tom's Lake Avo.
THE ALL NEW 1970 SKI-DOOS
NOW IN STOCK—SHOP EARLY SPECIAL 23 H.P. SNO-JET . Sll» USED SNOWMOBILE TOO
CRUISE OUT, INC.
53 E. Wallon	FE 1-4502
Dolly 2-5i Sat. 2-Si Closed Sun^
THIS IS SKI-DOO COUNTRY! Come and See the Beautiful New 1970's SKI-DOO'S
COME IN AND PICK OUT THE
---■	------ WHILE
GOOD.
MODEL YOU DESIRE WHILE
ALSO WE HAVE A GOOD STOCK OF RECONDITIONED USED SKI DOOS, ALL PRICED TO SELL.
KING BROS. 373-0734
PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE
WINCHESTER 30-30. C a n a d I a
, $20, 0S3-33I3.
WINCHESTER, model 13, 15 < good condition. 502-1531.
YAMAHA
1 NEW MODELS IN STOCK Frta cover with each machine
Prices Irom $825 K4.W CYCLE
Ullcs	731-02
A SERIES OP EXCAVATIONS Ihrougheut White Lake, Independence, Waterford Twp., of fill dirt, clay, gravel. If you are In need of such, ws shell deliver this to you for tho cost of hauling. OR 3-8235. 5 a.m.-11p.m.. Sun. Incl.
EXCELLENTYoP SOIL, MPCk dirt.
S.A.W. SAND AND GRAVE.
All aravtl productip fill sand dirt, crushad llmastont. A-1 too abn black dirt. Phona 394-0042. All
LIME ttonap 10-A aton%
Wood-Ceal-Cokt-Fuel
ALL SEASONED OAK, flfoploco
wood. 623^S27.______________
ALL KINDS OF FIREPLACE wood.
H/kRP^WOOD
WOOD BY THE LOAD
dsllverad or you pick up. ______527-3223 or 52S4S02
PetS-HUBtiEf P«f* ^
AKC ALASKAN MALAMUTE pup-ges^wlll bo ready for Christmas,
rTTKrTEMALi~7n»RfC0T Ml ST-
1-A HEALTHY, FRISKIE DACHSHUND’S, AKC
TELHEIM’S_________ 321-1112
LA POObLE 0*6oMINO>U'PS ' AND STUD SERVICE. CALL 335^0iy^l24122 AKC CHOICE PbObLi~stud I Isasing, pupplas, 5S2-
2627.	____
sIlLINO' bU't KENNEL stock, beautiful Samoyed $50 up. Shaitiesi $3$ up. 394-0278, Pina Knob.^ Kennel. SIAMESE KlffENS AND "itud' tarvica. 493-d076.____
UND^R NEW MANAGEMENT
SPECIAL 10 GAL SET-UP
$13.99
PISH SPECIALS Neons, Swords, Hatchats, f
4 FOR $1.00
AKC PUPPIES
camper, 517 Pontiac, Mich.
Walton Blvd.
Bassett
Ingesa and UKC Amerlc Eskimos, 3 Ml
SUN., 1-5 PM
Uncle Charlie's Pet Shop
_52^wJtU RON _________332^15
YORKSHIRE'^PUPrilES, AKC, lus't
Pet Suppnes,$ervict 79-A
PROFESSIONAL
POODLE TSROOMING
Sugarland Kennels
Clarkston. 52S-541S.
a a.m.-l p.ti
A TO Z AUCTIONEERING
AND BUY ALL USED FURNITURE AND miscellaneous
373-0382
B & B AUCTION
EVERY FRIDAY .....2:00 P.5A
EVERY SATURDAY ...7:00 P.M
EVERY SUNDAY .....2:00 P.M
WE BUY- - SSLL-TRADK Retail 7 Days Weekly
CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 5002 Dixie Hwy.___OR 3-271
CLOSE-OUT
STARCRAFT
1969 TRAVEL. TRAILERS 1969 CAMPERS SEE THE ALL NEW 1970 ALJO'S AND STARCRAFTS CRUISE OUT, INC.
3 E. Walton
Dally 2-5i Sat. 2-5i i
I;, CENTURY YELLOWSTONE
TRAVEL TRAILERS QUI^ITY AT ANYBU DOE'
STACHLER TRAILER
2771
EXPLORER
MOTOR HOME 21’, 23’. 25’ MODELS Saa thia Calllornla built-in i which la Na. 2 In meter sales. Prices stsrt at 12,225, ui
STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC.
3771 Highland (M-52)	511
Check our deal on -SWISS COLONY
LUXURY TRAILERS
FROLIC
TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS.
SKAMPER
FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 2S on display at -
Jacobson Trailer Sales
520 Wllilamt Lake Rd. OR 3-5281
JOHNSON'S
TRAILER SUPPLIES S. ACCESSORIES DEALER FOR:
TROTWOOD
WAG-N-MASTERS
Wilton at Joslyn__FE 5-SSS3
' DEER HUNTERS
1255 Chevy camper special. '
OEL-RAY CAMPER, selfHiontained.
11705 Davis In Grand Blanc Grandfather clock, antiques. And, relics
Purnlshlngs, appliances
Plantt^TrEEt-Shnib* 81-A
NURSERY GROWN EVERGREENS. Uprlohts, spreaders. 10 trees S15. You dig. 12 miles N. of PentlaCi Vi mile N. of 1-75 Intarsectlon. Cider Lena Evergreen Farm. 0270 Dixie Hwy. 525-1222.
Hobblei 8 ShppBei
FUN AND PROFIT, for < family. Ideal Chrlitmas, metal and mineral detectors for sale. 2024 Casa Lk. Rd., Kasgo Harbor. Phona M2-1301.
2 SHETLAND PONIES
2 RIDING HORSES, 1 vary gentle, more spirited, raasonibra, ca attar 4:30. 523-5552.
0 YEAR OLD GREY gelding, ws broke, 1300, 1521 Taylor M„ Poi
Double	D	Ranch
Pony saddle................ to 137.30
Hersa saddlat,	.....035.50	to I1S0
Assarted Mankats,............$2	to S5.S0
Pony bridles, ...........03.50	and up
Horse bridles, ..........S5.S0	and up
Bits.........................01.50 up
Horses, ............ USD and up
Top Brand Equipment carries S yr. guarqntss.
4200 Clintonvilla Rd. .	573-7457
WIntsr hrs: 10 to T weak 10 a.m. te o p.m. sat. S.
HORSES BOARDED,
12 X 12 box stalls, jmsrllnga ter sale. 7S2-273S. Romaa
MUSt‘^LL,~lEAUtlriUL. biy"ii Arabian, reasonable, 55il-23H or, 52S-27SO.
SPORT TRAILER, GEM OR CORSAIR
TRAVEL TRAILER
Corsair and Gam pickup campers.
HUNTERS SPECIAL
(GEORGIE BOYS) ARE HERE 4 sizes ter Vi ton pickups. • fl camper, SS25. IVi tf. camper for v ton pickup. Insulated Pickup Top pars.
It's Here!
THE NEW
1970 GEM
TRAVEL TRAILER
COMB OUT AND LOOK IT OVER.
' MSO A FEW 1969'S at Huge Savings
ELLSWORTH
Trailer Sales
4577_pixla Hwy^
AMERIGO I. SCHOOReR Truck Camptrs SILVER EAGLE !• NIMROD Trailers
Alt St clois-aut prices
TREANOR'S TRAILERS
5W-025S Dally 2-7 Sun, 12-I OVER-CAB CAMPER7 Slava, leabox Intercom. Sleeps 5. Haatsr. Hol water. FE A1551.______
McClellan travel trailers
. 575-3153
G Wind e Wheal Camper _
NOW blSPLAYl
Franklins — Craas Fans - Lir Hobo’s nptri — FiNSura M<
OMEGA MOTORHOME \ Both Models Ori display Holly Travel Cooch Inc.
1300. call 373-MII.
SMAlL 2 WHEEL. TBNT .................. Fhena I

AnifsrMfl
SALES
Ileyclee
2 eOY'O 20" Spydtr and 025. 331-1500 aftot
Beett-Acceiferliw
OGLAI BOAT, irudt, tandam t
^ Few Boats Left for Close-Out I
ATTEX
The Go-Anywhara Fun Vehicle For Outdoer Sports . . Usa It far WInlar toe . . . A varsatlla ami Drive Your Attax rlj^hi
“May I remind you that I’M the school crossing guard??’’
F. E. HOWLAND SERVICE
*7“	OR 30558
woIviRlNE TRUCk' camper's and slaepars, Celery outlet, repair and parts, nsw and used Jacks, Inlsrcoms, t s I a s c bumptrs, spars tirs carriers, eux' lUsrj: gssollns tsnks, stabllzing
‘lWry camper sales
1335 S. Hospital Rd. Union Lake
EM 3-3681
ADD-A-ROOM TO YOUR moblli heme. Countryelde Living. 235-1502. JUST aRrIVED 13 ft. wide NEW MOON completely lurnlshad, S3223. 534H543

outroard motors
CLIFF DREYER'S
marine division
15210 Holly Rd„ Hally_MB 5.5771
GLAS8FAR, tTIURY, Mlcr»crelt Dolphin, TIPSICO
Tnal close out sale
PINTERS
Prices sisshsd an naw '52 boats, molars and pontoons I T TRAOE-WE P lyks 205 (1-75 at Univ. Exit)
WINTER STORAGE CLEARANCE 1969 Boats, Motors, Trailers COHO SPECIALS
•1222
15' Glaslron 1252 GT 150 Sport
trailer
New end Used TraAe lOf
1.2 TON wllh or 82S-318S.
fOM 'OOcToi window van, sIOO. Caii
•liar 3, 522-1022. _	_____^
1245~p6RD W-TON I25S CHEVY Vi-ton 1255 FORD Vx-len 1258 FORD S4 Ian No rsaionabla altar rttuiad.
McKenzie ford
551-2305
~Ji¥F~"»aWir-----------wTfh
brakst and pawai priced Id sail at RAMBLER-JEEP,

E8^3£55.	_____
f255 OMC fruck; Vi, larga •utnmallc, radio, pail-lractlon.
$795
Suburban Olds
860 S. Woodward Birmingham MIZ^III
f254 CMC ■s.PASSI'ngER luburban;
radio, snow tires, vary clean. 81223. Can ba saan at Float Car-rlar, 325 S. Blvd. 2 a.m. to 4 pjn.
CHEVY FLEETSIDE, 'A ■ ■ lox, 5 cylli . 502-3822.
8725
1257	CHEVY Vi ton pick-up
Daalar ___________________:
1258	PORO PICKUP F230 wll
1258 CHEVY FICKUF 'A-ton,
milts, MY 8-1212.________________
1252 DODGE 'VtON Pickup
onir compitttly tk located (n Childrai
Cranberry Mobile Village^ call 673- '
We have the
"70's"
NOAAAO-HI LO-YUKAN DELTA Don't lorgat to WINTERIZE.
VILLAGE TRAILER ^ALES
5570 Dixie - 525-2217 Clarkston SALES - SERVICE — REPAIR
i WHY?
Run all ever to fill veur ir a needs, Wouldn’t It ba i sr to make lust ONE STOPI
HOLLY MOBILE HOMES not only ottw a wide ranoa and selacllon of' MoMn homas, such as: RIchardsen, New Moon, Broad Lana, Regent, Champion and othara, but also attars tha lovllast cholca of sites to place your naw Mobile Hama ... In tha beautiful, paicaful OAK HILL ESTATES located In a aacluded area for your privacy and convanlanca.
WHY NOT SHAKE THAT ONE STOP
kup.
_____ $1850, 528-3851 after
'im'™"1 Cruise Out, Inc.|
HUNTERS
FURNISHED, late I2'x53’ With exit
porch, extra 2'x12’____
room, extra 2'x8' badroom. bedrooms, tip out in back 53 E. Walton	FB 8-4402
bedroom, complalaly tkirtad, has Dally 2-5; ^at. 2-3:
SHELTON Pontloc-Buick
US s. Rechastar Rd.	OU-HIB
rfir'CAOlLLA^illBi^^
lEROME
CADILLAC CO.
sBUPirSfr^r
I owntr, 13730; 8I^
1242 CADILLAC BldSiiidnCiiy •quipped, axcallant cendlllan, raisenabla price. 334-1335,
1250 CADILLAC COUFe OaVtlla. 4,000 miles. Air. Leather Interior.
. WIsteMe wllh mauva In. lerior. U,008, 334-7UI attar 5 p.m. 1242 CADILLAC SEDAN DaVIlli', ..c.ary..lr._,..th.^.3,,^^
W pifiVY. 327 built, 8730. OR % ifSf~CHi
M75. 573-3355;________ _________
1230 CORVETTE CONVeRTI*LC •Xt^condltlon, 82880, 575-3047.
12« CHE'VY, RUNfl OOtjOTIRT,
734-1024
WINNEBAGO
Th« No. 1 in Motor Homti. 17'-18'*22'-23'-27'
Pricei Btart at $4655.00 i Saa tha naw 27' traltar.
Ratie 8i Draw>tlta
InstaMad
F. E. HOWUND SALES
15 Dixia Hwy.	OR 3-1.
WARNER
AIRSTREAM
SALES
1 WEEK ONLYI
THIS AD WORTH $100
TOWARD THE DOWN PAYMENT ON ANY OF OUR LOW SALE PRICED MOBILE HOMESII (All prlcat pwtiBdl)
PARK SPACE AVAILABLE OPEN SUN. AFTERNOON BE SURE TO BRING THIS AD WITH YOU. TO
COUNTRYSIDE LIVING
1084 OAKLAND 334-1302
1 ONLY SALE
12’x40', 3-bedroom, 54,225 12'x50’, 2-bedroom, $4,895 I2'x44’, 2-bedroom, S3.52S Your authorized dealer for Perk, Oxford. Parkwood, —u Danish King. Free Delivsry within
DAMAGED BRAND new )m, only $4,225, at la. Countryside Living 104 Oakland, r "
12'X50', 1250 AMHUR$T,
•O’ NEW CHAMPION, complete furnishing I, 84,225. 635~4453.
HAVE MODERN DECOR
Early American - Mediterranean CAMBRIDGE	CELT
LIBERTY	MONARC
REMBRANDT
Colonial Mobile Homes
FE 3-1557	574.4544
25 Opdyke Rd. 2733 Dixie Hwy.
CLARKSTON.MOBILE HOMB
5744)000
SALES, INC.
34X60 KIT DOUBLL __________
510,2201 Countryside living, tow
Oakland. 334-1S02._____________
12M ACTIVE SUNCRAFT. Air eon ditloner, an let, skirted. 373-I3M.
'*12 x"«'*furnl?hed^31§^$042.*'°'*''^
Benner Dr. Fentlac, :
HARTFORD 11 X 50,	2
AMERICAN 10x50
M THREE-BEDROOM
CRANBROOK 12U, 50x12, skirting, jjhjg, _2_ _b • d
DETROITER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARF KROPF
Oeubit Wldst, Expends ' Custom built to your oraer Free Oalivary and Setup Within IN Mllaa
AT
BOB
HUTCHINSON
MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS
Oaan OdilY 'til I p.ml Saturday and Sunjtv ‘til I
•hbwario furntiMdllr conditlonadf , comblitaly	ahad. loeatM
on cdrnar lot in adult MCtlon or ^ranbarry Moblia Vntaaa. Call 473-
“^OYAl^OR-REGAl
ACTIVE
iJ'kViRCtSSn, Nyt®c*irS.iM'?s.ig;^’?;d. TOWN & COUNTliy MOBILE HOMES, INC.
Taltdr^l^a^ D^x^a Hwy.
Dally 'III I	*'	'
Free
angina s'toraw with all tune-ups ef lha new
BIRMINGHAM BOAT Service Center Ml 7-0133 _
' ..... WINTER
Outside Boat Storage Inside Motor Storage SAVE SSS ON NEW BOATS-MOTORS-TRAILERS
Harrington Boat Works
S. Telegraph
AT ,
OAK HILL ESTATES
HOME OF
HOLLY MOBILE HOMES
DIXIE HW r. AT OAK HIU. 14-4443_______ iJal
RD.
Rent Trailer Space
SQUARE LAKE TRAILER PARK Baaulllul lots avallabls, na pets, t Square lake. Fishing
I beech privileges. 33g-2S52.
Tirei-Autp-Trwck	92
REPAIR, MOUNT, and balineq meg and chrome wheels. New and uttd whtsit. Meg^Amerlcan ET, Cragci AP Anten. Trade old mags for nev. Goodytar Polyglatt tires. Cheater itlcks. Market Tire Ce. 253S Orchard
1 BARITONE SNOW TIRES, 200-13, 4 Ply with whaele S70, less than I3N miles. 525-1471.
EXTRA Dollars Paid
FOR THAT
EXTRA Sharp Cor
Especially Chsvelles, Camaras, Corvattas. GTO’s, Flroblrda and 442'S.
"Chock the rasl. than gat tha tut"
Averill's
FE 2-2870	2020 Dixie =E 4-5820
Ferelgw Cert	IQS
1250 VW. GOOD MOTOR. tIH. 132-
1755 Chevy Camper Spaclal.
GMC TRUCK CENTER
8:00 to 5:00 MofT.-Fri.
8:C0 to 13:00 toturdoy
701 Oaklond Avtnut 3i
?7W2?7*"* '
1257 OPEL RALLY. Full factory •quippad. Sale price 8277. Call Mr. Parks at Ml 5-75N.
TURNER FORD
m Maple Rd.____________Troy
r57 VW SQUAREBACk, good condition, 477-4735.______
1267 SHELBTgT 3», royal blue, down back uat, 382 hH»
AL HANOUTE
On M24 in Lake Orion ____________693-8344_______________
1242 CORVETTE CONVERTTfCETV: 8. four apead. 81225. Larry Sheehan's LIncoln-AAarcury, 11S0 Oakland. 333-7153,
'1262 CHEVY BEL All, automitle.
S175. FE 2-1772.	_____________
1263 CHEVY'lMriALA, TdxM ear, no , rust, faetary InatalM air eon. dltlonar, jn angina, rtal sharp. Mutt wll. 33g.383T.	_________
__________’ ISjlMd_________________
1253 CHEVY sYaTION wigtn, p:
ti?ni*S?i’»inii*'"tlr Sfnn!no''i{roj condition, tSM. OR SGtO^affTr
1254 CHBVELLB, NEW ^AINT, fI
Stanciard Auto
YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED
SKI-DOO DEALER BILL GOLLING SPORT CENTER
Just off Maple Rd. (IS Mile) Between Creaks ai Troy Mater Mall
Idge I Ml :
Ice. SEE IT TODAY. 334-1754.
125S HARLEY DAVIDSON, loaded,
SPORTSTER, 1475 or bes^ offer.
I SUZUKI, 120
*M24'
TRIUMPH GT 550 ce, FE
I255-12S RIVERSIDE,
1257 HARLEY
Shape, SSM. Cell 331-0755.
0-12SCC
I25-300CC
201.35KC
351-SOOCC
S01-7S0CC
1252 HUSQVARNA, Dkr
, $1,500, FE 5-3723.
Anderson's
24th
Anniversary
SALE
300 Motorcycles on Display BSA's —Triumph Norton — Honda Ducati - Matchless — Guzzi Mini Bikes
PARTS-ACCESSOR lES-SPBED KITS
We’re celebrating our 25th year In business with a gigantic sale. Come to one of tha world’s largsst motorcycis ssiss for tha warld's bast daal.
ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICE
1553 S. Talagraph__ FB 2-7102
; FALL
Clearance
120CC SUZUKI Trail .Bike, 6 Speed Rfc^LAR ^$485
Safe $375
. 13.0N ml or 11 mo: warranty
MG SUZUKI SALES
SUZUKI CYCLES. _ DAWSON'S SALES, LAKE, phona 530-317
50CC la 300CC. S, T I P $ I C O
ehona 530-3172._____________
Scrim'
435-I71I
01x12. Clarks'len
YAMAHA
t NEW MOPPUS IN STOCK Frta cavar with aach machina
^^’i8Iw*SycW
Utica	_ 731-0220
EXCL'ljSvipYAMAItA
Mansfield AUTO SALES 300
Sharp Cadttlaca, Fantlac, Olda and Buicks lor aut-ot-stata market. Top dollar paid.
MANSFIELD .AllTO SALES
5iSVErT°'*°“''-"SR:
TOP $ PAID
All Cadillacs, Buick Electra 22Ss, Olds 98s, Pontiac and anything sharp with oir conditioning.
WILSON
CRISSMAN
CADILLAC
Woodward and 12'/k Mila Road
125S FORD CORTINA, 11,000.
$1395
FISCHER BUICK
SIS S. Woodward
_ m ____________
1251 VW. AUTOMATIC, heatePf whItt wbfl tiras. ism mileage. Full 11493. Call Mr.
447-5400
Parks 1
TURNER FORD
"TOP DOLLAR PAID"
GLENN'S
FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS
Junk Cnrs-1 nicks
101A
14-1 JUNK CARS, WI tame. FE 3d072.
Vi, 1, 3, JUNK CAriS,
rCARS, no tew charge
Fri 3-3555.______^
CARS. Complata Fru
COPPER - BRASS. RADIATORS ttartan «nd ganaralort, C. DIxsoi OR 3.SS42.__________________
JUNK CARS. FREE TOW
FE W05
Used Autp-Truck Parts
4 TIRES FOR TRIUMPH,
I chremaa, 335-1055.
auleTcS, and'mlsc.~F'E 5-5427:_
.ffi"r.dOT’Ba.*.
l-POWEri 125 Linda V
CHEVROLET PICKUP, float a, 85 ton, 373-177$.
corvette, vinyl top. an
transmission complete, 0S2-2247.
I25S T-BIrd 320 i
I25S Falrlana or Falcon,
l25S*'Muslang 202 angina .. 1244 Grand Prix Irani and
'EL WAMN, 1200, PUtemi 3100 mllaa, 02300. 547-1117. OPEL SUPER Deluxe Coupe,
£ BUGGIES — 30 Pet. 1 ell bodies end accessorlu. JIM HARRINGTON’S SPORTCRAFT, Vi ml. E. of Lapaar of M-21. Obsm Sundays. 554-2412.________
Brand New—
I960 OPEL
Special Purchase from Fad Allows us to give you a disco prica - Modal No. 31.
2 DOOR
Full Foctory Equipment
For Only $1797
Backed by GM Naw ear warranty
GRIMALDI
Buick-Opel
210 Orchard Lk; FE S-6121 New and Used Cars
1253 BUICK SKYLARK, S1S0. 573-
Get the Feeling
YOU OUGHTA BE WHEELING? If you need a car and have a |oh coma In or call Doug Patterson at
FISCHER MUCK
1255 BUICK LsSabra Convartibla, i S, automatic, power staarlng. S52 Larry Shaahan’a Hllltlda Lineoii Mercury, 1350 Oakland. 333-7S53.
BUICK.
LUCKY AUTO
1240 w. Wide Track
327 stick. 0200, :
1245 CHEVY Impala 3-doar hardtop, — 3S0 h.p„ pricad to Mil. ll^
125S CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, tU automatic, pewar alaarlng, and brakn, $750. 5734S52 after 4:30.
CHEVY BISCAYNE. VI, allUL ■an. SMB dr Baal
I25S. IMPALA.
i! RaSr^
33S4M7I.
VC _ saw Baal al-
CORVETTE, JW^SOB rieroa, imatle,
bratMaTw^*™^'** "* CORVETTE HARim»F...!a7. astiKPA 1966 CHIVY BEL AIR 2-DOOR
V-l radio and hattar, whHawalla — sura this 1 owner baauty has automatic transmlision, no rust, llta naw condition. Worth _ hundradt moral $722 full prica. Call credit manager tor a paymant to suit your budgU.
GET A "STAN" THE A8AN DEAL
STAN ELLIS OLDS

1966 Chevrolet Impala
$1195.
Suburban Olds
860 S. Woodward Birminghom Ml 7-5111
CHEV
1966 CORVini
Blue Convartibla anly—
$2695
Bill Fox Chevy

Tom’
Rademacher
Chevy-Olds
On U.S. 10 at M15 Clarkston MA 5-5071
1966 CHEVY Convertible, Automatic, Double Power $995 GRIMALDI CAR CO.
1967 Electra 225 Convertible
WO Ooldand Ave., FE 5-9421
1165 i:6RVETTe“427; axtru, niidi ^iSM^work, SI 238. Call attar 8 p-in;
mrCHE'VROLEf" conditlonp vinyl
whit* 1
Id body pti initaiittion
OR 3-5200________________
REBUILT REBEL V-8
avaliabi*
raliabla
473-9344
393 Hami-angina. FE 4-3175. 2591 Middlabalt.
fRASsMTsTOISl, for ilil Fontlai.
195
Im, Fischer Buick
IS8;	SIS S. Woodward
2s' Birmingham	, _ 547-3588
6-l967$-1968 BUICK Electros
nd 4 dears — hardtops, factory conditioning, '
1232 FORD W-TON, buick
1180. 58M51I attar a

Ten Pickup.

ifialSc, V4,1 _	582-lar/.
raadlpoRO Fioo, vs ton”
' car trades. Daal Naw i
GRIMALDI
Buick-Opel
210 Orchord Lk. FE 2-9165
^yllndtr. 827S. 5M-7318. _ 1254 OMC, S,000 SfRllS illanl condlf
Itlon. Straight air,
FORD W ten plck-up
I FORD VAN, axcallant i
beta, custom Texas truck, 7155.
rust, 8708, FB 4-
Buyers - Seflere MeefTfiru Press Want Ai|$.
1967 Buick Special
5 dear aadan, V-8,\ autamatje, palyal itaaring and brbkti. radio, naator, whitawall tiros. Sharp car
'	$1386
"Fischer Buick
SIS S. Woodward Birmingham
gUCIK; 1258, ELECTR'A 31 hardtop; power iturli brakes, vinyl top.' law sl^rp, must sail, bast i
r,s:;
1968 Buick Riviera ”
Full power and> air condition. Sharp.
$AVE ' BOB BORST .
Lincoln-Mercury Soles
12S0 W. Mapl«^ Rd. Troy Ml '
' Cainarp, axeallgnt lop, iperl Intqrlar, on. qlr eandItloiMd, I p.m. ISI-dltl. ifAlALi 8Wh#r, Mad
WTtrjar^
CHBVvrimiwiq, 4 Spot I
Sove $$$ at Mike Savoie Chevy 1900 W. Mapla
wSfcylf-
BILL rox
D~>14
^	-	\- . ; ,A ' , - A
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVj^^MBEll 12, 1969
For Wont Ads Dial 334:4911

194
f *^%^969 OMARO I jb*?**"' "■">*
$2395
.Bill Fox Chevy
tm 1. RoCliMltr Md.	MI-rOM
|;”‘T%RH«vVCi^ie. A
fcMdrdftlp, writti V-i. automatic, radio., ^haattr, whltawalls.^ powar atoorlM,
^ brakai. wW linl»h. matchln# in-iStorlor, ♦.5o# mllaa. Ilka now con-a.dltkm. Balanca o» now ear warranty a Bla aavings, wa ara dialing, SMii » full priea.
r OBT A "STAN" THB MAN DEAt
> STAN ELLIS OLDS
* MS ftakland Ava.___.fE_^lllOt
joImSuuffe ford i
laaa chivy II J door, with .Vl,| He Iran ItOIIO
warranty. V,
Now ■R^liiod Cori 104
■ • • ^‘isasi
1965 FALCON future^
station wagon, with radio, hi automatic, powar staaring, i right front landar, olharwlia
$395
TOWN & COUNTRY
CHRYSLER-ALYMOUTH
ROCHESTER
*4Si!' *J;„	— „*Sh**»'
MUSTANGS''"
M^Rd Uiid Coro
loss 420 MUSTANG IHO 4. OH 341
Ntw Md lltMl Cars 1M
. Ytir <
car warranty, to
P.S. Wo'vo Moved
W Mila N. of Miracia Mila lias S. Tala
Automatic transmliilon. Turnar pricad at
$131)
Call Mr. Parka at Ml AfStW
TURNER FORD
W0_Mapla_Rd^ __________Troy
JOHN McAULiFFE FORD '
laas FORD Country Sadan, Station I Wagon, with VI, radio, heatar.| powar itaaring tarrlflc tacond car for tha wifa and kkfl, Claaranca Spaclal Only SSI). Full Prtca.
ftl® MAVBRIOcT^STOld. ou doluxo trim.	_
, CHOICE SELECTION
75
One Owner New Car
Trades _____________
Must sell to moke room for
1968 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan
fe95
Suburban Olds
New and Used Cwe	104
'VW^TRADES
IN4 Pontiac Convartibla .Ill*
laaa Ooal station Wagon . im
1.40 Corvalr Transportation
Spaclal............IH.H
Your authorliad VW daalar
BILLV
GOLLING
VW
1) Mila Rd. (Mapla
860 S. Woodward Birminghom Ml 7-Slll
ii4$'olds hardtop. Da'Iamont U.' Across from Bari Airport Vinyl roof and trim. Powar aouln- Troy Motor Mall	Ml J<»oo
rifi	Jr'SV.iw'i'W'' tempest CTJiToW, l5a); 3M-
1189). Call Mr. Parks at Ml 4'/)IKI. I jp.. .ftor 4,
TURNER FORD |lW"POWrAO'pis.“iSgoS ppwar
Mindows, trallar
New end Used Cert 104
I't I
1.4* Grand Prix, Mod*|.^atr-p«war'i S p.m. Ml M1S3,
new cor trades coming in daily.
No Fair Offer or Trade Refused!
GRIMALDI
-^1 ___
RiNTIAC CATALINA, VI. powtr ottering end brakti. 1550, •JJJm 338-ao(r
‘““'“[e Suburban Olds^
P.S. We've Moved
Vt Mila N. ot MIracIa Mil I radio. 184) S. Tolograph Rd. PE_
______:iM4 MUSTANG 4 cyiindor, stick. 210 Orchard Lk.
ALIBU. hardtop.; sxe. condition. IIM. OR 3,4118.	”
•>«2"*'i'!mrFORo^tATioiri^^	860 S. Woodward
iTV i Swtak.tVu’atJtkTEl-'SS^i^	Ml 7-5111
turner ford	47M3	■	JEEP, 4 WHiEL DRIVE, good m.~orD:~
tM« Maplo Rd.______ Troy 1M4 MUSTANG, EXClllENT con- -iHalSS	^	staoring, powar brakos, fa'ctory^
ewHiltlon, 4Sl-ew..Of OR_3jW4L.„
top. factory
power, power windows. 0*way i ni^whaal, othar «<tra.. «))$.
" 1968’Olds Cutlois ' ■ I	_______
4 door aadan. V-I, automatic, t.44 PONTIAC CATAlINA Con-powar staaring and brakts. Ona vartlbla, V-I, stick shllt, ownar.	I haater. Sharp. SI.5. L i
Shaahan's Hlllsida LIncoln-Mai .13S0 Oakland. 333-7143.
John McAullffe Ford
1.41 PONTIAC Bonnavllla Wagon,
10 passongor, automatic, radio, hoator, powar staaring, brakta, factory air, chroma luooaga rack.
Ytar-and claaranca tpaclal, oitly U4II lull prica.	'
, -P.S. We^ve Moved!
' 'W Milt N. of, Miracia Mila 1I4)J[ Talajraph^ Rd.^____PE S-4l»t
1.48	PONTIAC Catalina 4 door, air : conditioning, full ' powtr, I o w
mlltajr ^Bj^ owntr. Extarlor Ilka
1.41	Grand PrIx	Sava
1.41	Olds. 4 door. air. (Jl your	■
cholca....................  iji.j	MJ_Oakland	Avt.	FE	J,
1.48	Catalina	Sta. Wgn.	..	$l*.s!	'	ij»ao	r>TA
1*48 Catalina	1 dr. hFdl	.	il8*s;	1969 PontlOC	GTO
1M8 Vanlura...................  817.)	v-8,	automatic, powar	staaring
1.47 calallna	4-door ......... 814.)	brakos. VInyi top, mao whatli
1M7 Ambaitador Wgn.,	air	.	813.)
1*44 Bonnavllla 4 dr.....................................811.5	LC'JPnQK
1*44 Ford Sla. Won.......*10.)
1944 Galaxlo hardtoB	..	..	..	.14.)
Ngw aeO Can
tfSlfp'
106 New aad UeaO Care _1l|6
\*4riMReTR^^ «». U,3.5,
cREVRdLET KINOSWQOD station wagon, Powtr slttrlnB. power brakts, , tintsd windows, whirawall 'llroi. air conditioning, 473-1133.
"h^f OF
Pontiac /
Standard’‘Auto ?i
DEMOS
NOW AVAILABLE
1969 PONTIAGS 1969 BUICKS ,
PANTAStIC SAVINGS II you want to ilaal Ona r' “■—	-*“
New anf Used Care_
”fr.n'‘“te ‘.rr”'»r.it !«'ntr.rjM"®
_ Jock, .posliradjonjjjrjy^^
'Tu,fm\^itcV"LwYr^M'-.''nS
brakot, radio, whilawtil liras'and dacor group. Stvaral to choosa from. Soma with air Markad down to sail. Call Mi-***.
AUDETTE PONTIAC *
t»S0 Mapla Rd.	Troy
Ovar, and sava EIOII
SHELTON Pontioc-Buick
155 S. Rochester Rd.	051*5500 > ■ -
fOAO ifiriknrf'Priy	SbVO IWO PIREBiROr
Ml “o'ds, 4 dr. air, 17) yw .ialmJSOO
cholca	»9t*5 1.4* PONTIAC CATALINaTI paaa.
..... |on, mu4t 1411. raaionabla, 4*4-
1*43' R AMBLi
1944 Bonn.vlll.
|1M4 Ford Sl4. i^l|n.
11.44 Galaxla hardtop
Sava Auto
Pe M77I
I IM* Marcury convartibla or 11002 Ford convertible.....
Keego Soles & Service
KEEGO HARBOR	487-
1.44 Chivy I 1000 Galflxle 1003 Mercury 4 dr.
* Suburban Olds
I OLllJUi	Pord convartibli	SI.)
,	860 S. Woodward I Keego Sales 8i Service
I Birmingham Ml 7-5111 keego harbor	*ia-34oo‘
*7*51 f.4« 'RAMBLER ita'lon
W45. 4)1-4043^ ■.4*'lVMT'RAMeLBR Good condition, O outomatlc, blu* - brown
“ngo ale. 435-5940.	_	___
ROUJr'OYCE, 3»4» or but.
R, taffii.
irown * InwSfor,'
$1895
Marvel Motors, 7)1 Oakland, FE I-
1945 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 s«fan, powar, staaring,
: brakts. auto, trans. "
1965 IMPERIAI, Crown Hardtop
r with champegne vinyl root# metclilnQ
with e
• eft. 0 p.m.
IMO. full
114*)“^ 1
AUTOBAHN
VW
1765 S. Telegraph FE 84531
power, heavy duly transmission,
$1195
BIRMINGHAM
OFFER OR DOWN PAYMENT REFUSEDI
Pay H.rt
RUSS
iJOHNSON
CROWN MOTORS
ildwin__	FE 4-50)4
1969 Olds 98
PONTIAC TEMPEST
On M*24, Lake Orion
MY 3-6266
4-door powtr and factory air con- i»65 GTO, MINT CONDlf ION.‘3)7-
dltlonlng. 4 to choosa from.
John McAutitTe hord i.47 Lincoln continental, 4
1M4 FORD Custom, btautllul	Peimf, air, must ssll.
midnight blue with matching In-1 333-74M In morning only._
terlor, all tat tor tha coM waathar; mg UNCOLN CONTINENTAL, d«-ahead. Year-end clearance sale I tor's car, like new, full power, price of only STM. full price.	625-5964.
P.S. We've Moved! ! ' ^i94omercory-$Tm ;
W Mila N. of MiracI# Mila I	_______________
114) $. TtKaraph Rd. FE S-410111.40 MERCURY -AUTOMATIC, rhnieUr Plumoilth	1M4 GALAX IE FORD .....7.. W.)!
wrysier-riymouin	Oodyka Hardwer#	373-44*4 1.40 MERCURY STATION wagon,
'	iMrt;B7RDsr4 m7hSjiiT«^^^
642*7000	, have power, most have eir con- _53» afler_4.__________
dmonlng. In like new condition, i 1960 COMET.AUTOMATIC, ISO. rSLER N«w Yor^^^	sfarHng at S1099 full price.'	62341189.
i?^iond!ttan*ng;j	I i962^COMET,	860 S. Woodwortl	Rd., {M-59).
pnvat. ownor. TURNER FORD	Birmingham Ml 7-5111
SPECIAI , S5,i	-BRAND NEW-
$3395
.Suburban Olds
1.45 GTO WITH NEW 427, chimmad witb air shacks, 433 rear and, 4 speed, 11395. 3*5 Linda Villa, 3)4-
tiac Lake Motel, S730 Highland
HAHN-
. *57-2085.
(most cars)..
UTH
6673 Dixie Hwy.
CLARKSTON	MA 5-7«35
1969 Chrysler
LSfrpo5:nAy.«MS
Sathar .lnlarkir, a raal staal at only
$2885
i Oakland
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
774 Oakland Avt._FE S-.434
^	1969 Imperial
Moor hardfcp. Mplalllc tllver with black vinyl root and malching
1965
1967 MUSTANG 6T Very Sharp $1595 GRIMALDI CAR CO.
900 Oakland Ave., FE 5-9421
IM7 FORD GALAXIE, 4 door, power steering and brakes# exc. conditior best offer over $1500. OH 6284272. 1967 MUSTANG, 6 —^ "*res, radio e condition, $1
only $1399. Call Parks at Ml 4-7500.
TURNER FORD
COMET CALIENTE, automatic, oood
1970
OLDS
Town Sedan
-----latic, power steering,
brakes, radio, whltewails, deiuxe
premium tires, exc. condition.
1966 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, all' power, factory air, vinyl top, tinted glass, rear speakers, plus ext^’es.' Sharp. $1300. 363-3359.____i
tires. Your choice
$1095
FISCHER BUICK
515 S. Woodward
1M7 FORD COUNTRY
$3995 BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler-Plymouth
Troy 1944 OLOSMOBILE "8" sedan. —a Automatic, power steering. $7.5. Larry Shaahan's Vlncoln-Marcury.
•Iho. Turn., sal. pric«l itoTy' _!MOakl.nAJ3y«M----------------------
*l}». Call Mr. Parks at Ml 4-7500. ,	,	, ..___
TURNER FORD	Toronado
740a Mania Rd	Trnv	< '» '*«»« "O'"-
-----------------L'°Y	the extras Including factory air
1968 Thunderbird j conditioning, electric ' ■*
irpup, only — ^
$327^
Merry
Olds
1966 PONTIAC, 2 door hardtop, 2 to choose from. No money down.
LUCKY AUTO
1*40 W. WW* Track
1M4 PONTIAC 3-DOOR hardtop, beautiful red, power steering, power brakes, factory shift, a sharp 1 owner sioes.
NORTHWEST AUTO SALES 73 Dixie Hwy.
33S-2S30
538 N. Main St.
power. Factory I top. Only
$2895
642-7000
power steering and brakes. Radio, I conditioned, power.
. FROM
$1995
MILOSCH
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH $200 UNDER FAaORY COST!
1969 CHRYSLERS 1969 PLYMOUTHS
ALL NEW!
fo cheoee from# tome with air.
677 M-24, Lake Orion, 6934341 iNa DODGE DART, 2 door, hardtop,
VI# .avtematic# excellent transi-
flon# $175. Marvel Motors.
Suburban Olds Suburban Olds
860 5. Woodward	860 S. Woodward
Birmingham Ml 7-5111
1.45 VALIANT, I OWN I automatic. *475. UL 7-1848.

John McAuliffe Ford
1944 PONTIAC Grand Beautiful midnight biue blue bucket seats, radio, heater, power steering, brakes, power windows, be one of the going set. Year-end clearance tale price of only $1,288 full price.
, P.S. We've Moved!
</t Mile N. of Miracle Mile 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101
1*45 PLYMOUTH 9 PASSENGER wagon, automatic, power steering and power brakes, SSSO, 4S1-308g.
R,;i.47 VENTURA. EXCELLENT
ditidn. F-" ------
332-4452.
.4* FORD GT Ranchero, 3M disc brakai ' '	'
OR 3^3.
1.4* FORD 2 DOOR. Air conditlonad.l v-B. Radio, heater end whltewalf tiros. Full price *15.5, Call Mr. Parka at Ml 4-7500.	2
TURNER FORD i
7400 Mapla Rd.
1.45 SPORTS fury, power brakes and ireerlng, 383-V-O, 4 barrel,
$.00, call aft. S, 330-1150.__
Ml 7-5111 PLYMOUTH 303 4 SPEED, Hew Kii	battery, „ew muHlers, 343-7180.
1967>LYM0UTH ■FViiVicV*n.*.''certr!*perK^^ _ Pury III Hardtoi
Cell alter 3,
1947 PONTIAC.-
automatic tranimisslon.
ii»44 OLDS HARDTOP,
automatic transmission, j
2-door '
VI# -ivtpmatic# excellent transporta-flen# $175. Marvil Motors. 251 j Oakland. FE «-407»._____________________1
1.M .poocte poUAa.
,, ...SlSStBIRMINGHAM
Fastback	, - -
4-tpacd, radio, heater, I trade, call Mr. Bell, Credit ih, matching ' Inttrlor. for low payments.
hardtop, a
*475. «»3-H__________
1m« o^e club
pricad at only SSH full price. Call MrTPaHta at Ml 4-7*00.	i
TURNER FORD !
>6$0 Mapla Rd._Troy
1961 CHARGER R-T, 440 angtne,! adult ownar. 6824434.__l
1968 DODGE ,
Coronet Convertible j
-SOO" with automatic, power; atearino, brakos, windows whilowalla. Immaculate one owner,
"“■$1695
Merry
Olds
1968 Mustang
with
8S
$1995
Flannery
Ford
I 1967 OLDS Delta
, "88" hardtop, with aut -radio, heater, whitewalls, full
op
nish, black wkT " • extras, only —
$1495
exctlleni condition.
GO!
i HAUPT I PONTIAC
car. Warranty included,	,
price. Sure we will,take your, Chrysler-PlymOUth
Maplo Rd.	Troy
642-7000
GET A "STAN" THE MAN DEAL	.
FT Ski riiir nine	hardtop, power itearing, brakes.:	Sove—Save—SOVe
STAN ELLIS OLDS | ,Exc. condlflon, SISOO. FITi-?.*.. [n apicQTnw	MAS-5500
SM^I.nd twe;___________STARLITE, A-1 f947~P6NTIAC CATALItTA-rdHor
1967 OLDS Delta	"'’I
"88" hardtop, with automatic, radio. lOAO PIVMnilTU U1P	c—j------
heater, whitewalls, full power, black lYOY rLTMUUIn VIP j John McAullffe Ford
1*47 PONTIAC Bonneville Hardtop.
On Dixie Hwy. In Watarford
1.41 TORINO PASTBACX. Bucket
with matching interior, vinyl top,	_______
price Is right — so Is the car. War- exc. condition, S4.-7874.
body and engine good condition, 47,000 actual mllas. *450. Call 335-aut= GET A "STAN" THE MAN DEAL	w rr^
automatic, *145, OR 3-272#
____I Beautllul mtafnlght blue with black
1845 S. Teleoraph
TURNER FORD
427-3145 alter
.49 MARK 1 COBRA JET speed. Like new. paint. Turner priced
Ebony
r_____at *2595,
at Ml 4-7500.
TURNER FORD
3400 Maple Rd.	Troy
194. LTD 4^loor, Ford txocutive'a car, If'i a baautyi 423-0214 aftar 7
1969 FORD LTD
Call Evas. iS1-303».______________
TAKE A LOOK, we have most cars, from 1947 to 1969# such as: Lin-
KESSLER'S
DODGE
CARS AND TRUCKS SiMa and Sarvica
TWa FORD GAL condition, OaSO. 3.1 W'^FOiO GAUXIE,
*195. Marvel Motor., 25i
FE G4079._____________
iM2 FMD FAIRLANE
1*tt~1POR
FORD, NEEliS RADIATOR.
P.S. We've Moved
W Milt N. of Miracle Milo 1*4S S. Talograph Rd. FE 5-4101
JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD
1.4* FORD FAIRLANE 50 0 Fastback, Torino styled, VO, radio,
now car warranty. Special only sa,2SS. Hvtral to chooM from-
1967 Delta Custom
4 door, hardtop, factory power, factory air, vinyl top, Ilk# new.
Suburban Olds
860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111
1968 TORNADO HARDTOP
Sure this e prestige car, with full power, fectory air conditioning, tinted glass, gleaming red finish black vinyl top In oxcollont coh-dltlon, one owner, new car trade with hundreds more. S31S0 full price Call Mr.'^Bell Credit mansoar, for low payments.
GET A."STAN" THE A4AN DEAL
STAN ELLIS OlDS
530 Oakland Ave._______
1942 PONTIAC CATALINA, transportation, FE 4-9313. 1942 PONTIAC STAR Chief,
i?sr.'’a7iriaora^i%!
43 CATALINA,
1.47 PONTIAC FIREBIRD, air con-ditloning, tinted window, power brakes, power steering, tilt steering wheel. 400 cu. in. engine, Blue with white vinyl top very clean. $1900. 852-2400. After 2 p.rU;_____
1968 FIREBIRD
Convertible with automatic transmission, full power, radio,
I, good tire n, 33S-nS9.
1942 PONTIAC
1942 PONTIAC
tires.
price:
$2195
PONTIAC RETAIL
PONTIAC RETAIL 45 University Dr.
FE 3-7954
steering, > 402-2*30.
1968 Olds Vista Cruiser
. passenger station wagon, power ataerlng: Brakes, factory air, vinyl
" $2795
Suburban Olds
P.S. Wk.. M.,.4 L.
wMila N.otMiraeloMile IBirmingham IVll /-31II
S. Tefagraph Rd. FE S-41011	______
; 1.40 PONTIAC . Le/IAANS, 2 door,
I hardtop, auto, VO, power steering end brakes, like new tires, 14.0N miles. SI,.50, 373-0575. » to 5.
1.43	PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, well
cared for, S450 or best offer 425-5844 Evenings.___________________
1W3 GRAND PRIX, good condition. Call atlor 4, OR 3-3»3.
1.43	PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, 1*44 “ ^*^440’Dod*'**'**”****** 1*^343^2** T.44 CATALINA, sharp, sacrific.,
S495. 343-3554.
$3,495. Call J. Rahl,
I.4S PONTIAC CATALINA, dOUbI conditioning, 334-3048. 1*48 FIREBIRD, hydramatic, poi brakat, ntw tlras, 343-.II2.
New end Used Cars 106New and Used Cars 106
New and Us6d Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106
•TRANSPORTATION
SPECIAL
1964 FORD $195 6RINIALDI CAR CO.
900 Ookland Ave., FE 5-9421
Transportation Specials
*1tM'”*'Faleon CanvartIbIt. AutenwUc, radia and hatter. Full ^rin taw. (^11 Mr. F^rfct at Ml 4-
TURNER EORD , ^
fSN6~~", V-8. Automatic $695 MIMALIM <AR CO.
900 Ooklond Ave., FE S-9421
’J , :
1969 Ford Torino 2-door hardtM. Faifbackii V-8# automatic# p o w t r \ itfiking# powar brakof# radio. $har]j>i^ $2595V	1967 Lincoln Continentol «K irts«a,jrT!i
'1963 Valiant V-2(to | 4 cyllndtr, automatic transmission. Power statring and radio. Full \	
	1968 Pontiac GtO a-Ooor hardtop.^# aoaad, 158 V-, WWlh..^^.r. cladh.
1969 Rambler Americon * cyllndar, automatic transmission. Radio. $1495,	FREE 20-Lb. Turkey with gkarv naw and utad car de/lw^, now until Novombor
.Open Mon. and Thurs. 'til 9:00 P.M.
T..-	..,.4	r_:	__4 #-k .kj|
Ml 6-3900
, Qpeb Toes., Wed,, Fri„ and Sat. 'til 6:00 '666 5. Woodwarid, Birmingham
Dick Canaan's
wmmms'
1966 Charger Automatic and powar. Sharp. $2399	1969 Road Runner 3 In itock. 4 tptad and automatic. $2399
1966 Chevy Pick-Up M ton. V-I, 4 spaod. $1199	1966 Plymouth Fury III 3-Door hardtop. Automatic, power staaring. $1299
1969 Dart Iwingar. a doer hardtop. V-I, $hW ' U	ii-ui			1	n-A ImJ	
	1967 Dodge Polari 2-Door hardtop, powtr gtoor- ^ $169^" } ^ T
''	Hunter Specials \
Dodge Camper. Lift top, itova, ratrig. Plymouth Cuatom Wagon, .-ptai., auto., P Dgdgt Coronet 508, *-pait. Wagon .	. .
Vm
tISIf
Largest Mopar Inventory in Pontiac Area
Dodge
855 Ookland Aver
Ft 84528
OUR MAIN LOT
631 Oakland Ave.
Right Next to Our New Car Showroom!
1969 Ford
LTD 4 Door
wlth^ a dark blue finish, V-I, automatic, air conditioning, beautiful car only—
$2895
1968 Triumph
GT Coupe
Md, radio, wl i, bright rod fl
$1995
1968 Mustang
Fastback
quolst finish. Only-
$1995
1969 Pontiac	1969 Pontiac
Catalina Sport Coupe with automatic, power staaring# brakes# mag style wheels, radio.	Catalina Sport Coupe with automatic, powar staaring, brakes, radio, hoator, whitewalls,
heater, whitewalls, vinyl roof# tuxedo black finish. $2645	forest green with a black vinyl interior. Only— $2595 .
1969 Cadillac	1968 Olds
Coupe DeVille	. Cutlass 442
with aulomatic, full power# white vinyl top, white interior, royal	2 doer herdtop, with automatic.
plum finish# tilt steering whaal. Only—	power steering, power brakes, air conditioning, whitewalls, radio, heater, beautiful aleat gray fin-
$4695	ish. Only— $2395
1969 Chevy II	
Nova Sport Coupe	1969 Chevy
with V-8. automatic# power steering, radio# ' heater# whitewalts.	Impala Sport Coupe
vinyl roof# grenade gold finish. Only—	with V-8, autometic# power steering. radio# heater, whltewails#
$2395	
1969 Chevy
, Impala Custom
ffniit
. Oi
$2695
Sport Coupe, V-8, aUto power storing,
1967 Chevy
Convertible
Impale with polo while finish, white vinyl top, custom red Intgr rior, V-S, power steering, brakat, radio, whltowalls. Only—
$1769
1968 Chevelle
Malibu Sport Coupe
finish. Only-
$2095
'69 Demostrators ;
We now have on display-a beautiful selection of low mileage company owned cars, fully equipped, mechanically perfect; we con offer these to you at substantial sovings-Pick your style, pick your color in the option you want!
HERE ARE JUST A FEW SAMPLES:
1969 Chevy I 1969 Chevy I 1969 Chevy I 1969 Chevy
Caprice Sport Coupe J Impolo Custom Impolo Custom Coupe
with 358 V-S engino, hydramatic, I'^oupa with brown finish, vinyl I with Hawaii blue finish, parch-powar .l«,rlng, br.kes, fectory I	ment vjnyl top, 358.onglno, V-I,
Impolo Hardtop
doer with tllvor bluo finish.
brakes, radio, hoator.
BUDGET LOT
630 Oakland Ave.
Across From Our Main Showroom!’
1966 Ford Galaxie Hardtop	1965 Tempest Custom Coupe	1967 AUSTIN HEALEY	1967 Ford Fairlane 2 Door
heeSr# i^\tcwa1ts!°Turgundy ish, only—	ihgl* Tadte,'***haahS,"whltawaHa' bright rod lintah.	4 speed, wire whatia, only—	with gas aavar Ilk cyl, with
$895	$1095	$1095	“iTosr'"'"
1964 Chevy Impala Hardtop 2 door with dosart balga finish, custom fawn Intertor, VB, automatic, power steering, radio# hatoar,	1964 Ford Galaxie 2 Door sedan, with midntahl blue finish, V8, automatic, radio, heater, extra nlcal Only—	1965 Chevy Biscayne 2 Door Sedan, with V-I, automatic, radio, hoator, and a turguolsa finish. Only—	1965 Chevy ■ Impala Convertible . with rad finish, whit* vinyl top.
	$667	$795	$1167"’"''"';
1967“ Continental Beautiful 4 Door	1966 Chevy Bel-Air 4 Door Sedan, with V-I# automatic# whit*-	1962 Chevy Impala Convertible With V-8# automatic# p«war atotr-	1965 Mustang Sport Coupe with automatic, powar staaring,
ar,**’*whl}SWSia!*' alr**5ndHtoo»Ig! Only—	wsIlA esmal rad fintali. dniy—	jfW# radio# heater# light blue fim	f*8tl|o# - heeter# whHewilli# ettvgf blue finish. Only—
$2395	$1195	$395	$995
631 Oakland at Cass
PE 4-4547-
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12, lt|69

Monty, Monty
]iMutuia-
|%Uing( , Enaliahif iFMnohi UHabltupt* MYrilow,
48R«Im4
46 Cotori*
PMUtir 47R|*hkii4 It*	(myth.)
bugl* plant	mon*y(eoU,)
JITimatabI* 82 Oblltoratlon' abbrtviaUon 58 Stingy ona U1661 Soviet	B8Sk*l*tolpart
aatronaut	60 Jamaican
Ufootwaar	bavarag*
M.)	61	Call forth
II Through	62 Worm
20 Asian country 63Wordo( aiCirclopart	assent
24 Has recourse 64 No longer '37 Cogitate	modern
31 icMof stick DOWN MShakaapear- IReady.aa can queen	for service
tl Anglo-	2	On*	_______________________
^nerioanpoet (comb.form) IgFMudlaatarm MPrimadonna 88 Man-at-arms 8 Pecan	26 Alrieanwem SI Regret
MOratvef	54Prlnting
mlnoieli (pL) measures 21 Isle's nest	86 Drunkard
32 French	87 Piece out
86 Vivid color
region	36 Cloth
10	Shield bearing measure
11	Constellation 42SUteh
17Dowor	44Bad
21 Onc-celiad
47 Simple 46 Garden
r(pl.)
4LetlaU 10 Filthy——	8 Cut apart
401nquir*	6 Replica
41 Ancient city	7 Eggs
of Greece	8 Supply of
-Television Programs-
Pregramo furnithed by ototlont lilted in thli column are subject to chang# without netieel
Chaniielsi 2-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ.TV. 7-WXY2-TV. 9-CKI.W-TV. 30-WKBD-TV. 56-WTVS-TV, S2-WXON-TV
Rrr-Rerun C—poior WEDNESDAY NIGHT
Way Cleared for OK of Draft-Lottery Bill
WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen- He also said If Congress fails to
ate approval of President Nixon’s draft lottery proposal appears virtually certain after senators favoring broader reform dropped their fight in the face qf an ultimatum from the armed services committee.
Final action on the lottery bill could come within two weeks
The reform advocates ceiyed a pledge of hearings and possible action in 1970 from Sen
permit a lottery, he will switch to a similar but more cumbersome system.
Ibe changes are designed to reduce the period in which a young man could be drafted from seven years to one. -Kennedy has insisted other reform steps could be taken by executive order Kennedy pointed out Tuesday that a lottery “leaves touched the loopholes and the
C.	..MIS.,	M-
man of the committee, as they agreed Tuesday to go along with the lottery plan passed by the
Even though chances of extensive draft reform this year were ruled out, the subcommittee on administrative practices and procedures continued its draft i hearings today by calling Rob-; ert H. Finch, secretary of health, education and welfare,
^ and Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif,
; Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-; Mass., » leader of the draft • reform fdrees, is presiding over ! the hearings.
DOUBTFUL VALUE
The pledge by Stennls of hear ; Ings and possible action next • year appeared of doubtful value ! for two reasons:
• Stennis himself has indicat-; ed opposition to many refMm ■ proposals such as an all-vohui-: teer army.
: • There Is no guarantee the ' House Armed Services Commlt-: tee will take any action next : year.
MEETING PLEDGE
Stennis and Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Maine, the committee’s senior Republican, told Kennedy and other reform advocates at a one-hour meeting they would pledge comprehensive hearings in 1970 with s toward reporting legislation to the full Senate.
But Stennis indicated he still is opposed to many of the possible reforms.
He called a proposal for a volunteer army “just a dream,” and said he favors retaining independent draft boards and opposes any extension of conscientious objector status.
Senators who met with Stennis and other Senate leaders Tuesday agreed they would withhold reform amendments. Kennedy said he would join in seeking to block any amendments.
' The current draft law runs un-| ' tllJune 30, 1971.	i
A unanimous Senate Armed ; Services Committee supported ; Stennis Monday in opposing any - change in the House bill, which ■ merely repeals the one sentence 1 In the 1967 Selective Service Act ; that bars a lottery if 19-year-^ olds are drafted first, j NIXON TO ACT
'President Nixon has said he ^ will order the 19-year-old draft 1 by executive order in January.
Protesters Plan to Give Blood
MILWAUKEE (AP) - A war protest group says its contribution to Saturday’s Vietnam Moratorium observance will include having members shed blood—at the Milwaukee blood center.
The group said volunteer blood donors would march to the center as “a symbol of fraternity” with march participants in Washington.
1:09 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (in progess)
(50) R C — Fllntstones (50) Americans From Africa — "Carpetbag Regimes” and “ N e g r o Rule”
(62) R — Ozzle and Harriet
1:10 (2) C - News -(fronkite
(4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley
(9) R — Dick Van Dyke
—	Rob has to work nights with a beautiful television star.
(50) R — Munsters — Grandpa tries to turn Eddie’s obnoxious friend into a rabbit.
(56) (Special) Fall Offensive — Students discuss plans for Nov. 15 Peace March. Produced by Wayne State University student television.
(62) C — Robin Seymour
—	Oliver guests
7:00 (2) C — Truth Or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports
(7) C - News -Reynolds, Smith (9) R C — Movie “Arrowhead” (1953) The Apaches seem to prefer war to peace. (2iarlton Heston, Jack Palanc*
(50) R —I Love Lucy (56) What’s New — How the United Nations headquarters in New York keeps in touch with all its offices throughout the world.
7:30 (2) C — Glen Campbell
—	Tony Randall, the Lennon Sisters and Willie Nelson guest.
(4) C — (Special) Hey, Hey, Hey — It’s Fat Albert — Animated comedy is based on characters created by Bill Cosby. The “tackle championship of the whole world” hangs in the balance when Fat Albert backs out of a football game between Cosby’s neighborhood team and
Jthe Green Street Terrors. (7) C — Flying Nun — Antique dealer decides Sister Bertrille has put a hex on ;him after he trades her a donkey for a valuable antique bed.
(50) C — Hockey: Detroit at New York
(56) Making 'Things Grow - “Potting”
(62) C — Of Lands and Seas — Ranching in Call-fMTila is seen.
3:00 (4) C - (Special) Johnny Carson — George C. Scott, Maureen Stapleton and Marian Mercer join Johnny in a repertoire of sketches.
(7) C — Courtship of Eddie’s Father - Eddie is sure the world will come to an end when Mrs. Livingston announces she will marry and go to Tokyo to live.
(56) Free Play Author Halley (“Airpwt”) la Interviewed
8:80 (2) C -Beverly Hillbillies - Sammy Davis Jr. encounters the hillbillies in New York’s Central Park, where they have built a log cabin and are about to settle down. (7) C — Room 222 — Jason Is hurt when he proves unacceptable to his date’s mlddle<lass, conservative father.
(62) R — The Nelsons 9:00 (2) C - Medical Center - A teen-dge daughter of a university professor is injured in an auto accidoit, but Dr. Gan non’s examination also reveals she is preg-
Radio Programs—
I	WXYZd ito) CKLWOOOl WWJ(950) WCARd 130) WPONQ 460) WJOKd 500) WHH-W6(^

WWJ, Red Wino Hockev TtU—WJR. iBOni
I. terry
rHRt. ire J. Ceek IHURIDAV MORNINO eito-WWJ, Newe wueic Hall Newt, Dk
WJRj
WCAR. Newt. Ron »«.cr;
‘W’JOe^n*.,
Tedey I
*
WJR, ------ ,
■ill-WJR. luntiytlde aneore lito-WJR, SIMweete, Clet*. •lei-iABjR, UHWWete, Mlm
tito-^KLyT’scol) Repen WJR, Newy, KeleUfctce Sneare
Wito-WJR. Newt ■ ..
WWJ, Newt, SeorllLIn*
5lek Purte iiibtiieti
SK, Jerry BexWr
WHP1,' Mere Av#ry_ . tiM-WWJ? Merrle Carlton
lliM-WJ^. Conrad WXV?|'^l5*wt, Johnny Ren-WPON, Newt, Oiry Purace
-THURSDAY APT^RNOQN liMrWWJ, Newt'
&r
WJSK,
Newt. Perm Hal MarHn Hank O'Nal 1lil»-WJR Pocut WWJ, Bob BOatle: liM-WJR. Newt. At Home lill-WJR, Arthur Oedlr 1i4l-WJR, Sunnvtide Iioa-WPON, Newt. Dan Wllham
WXYZ, Newt. Mike lh*l
SKIW. Ed I UR, Newt,
WJI
’iJorAiSifr
li»-WPON. lliek Reaert
nant.	,
(4) C - (Spehlal) On Broadway — Diana Rocs and the Supremes and Temp tations interpret popular B r'o adway melodies and appear in musical-comedy sketches. (7) C — Movie: “Rage” (1906) Guilt-ridden doctor in an isolated Mexican construction camp must find the courage to save his own life. Glenn Ford, Stella Stevens.
(9) R C -Movie: “I’d Rather Be Rich” (1904) Young heiress finds substitute fiance to please dying grandfather who wants to, see her happy. Sandra Dee, Robert Goulet, Andy Williams.
(56) International Magazine — “The Cycle of Life — From Birth to Death” is explored in five segments: birth, through fertility drugs; youth, through ritual dances in Indonesia; middle age, through marriage bureaus that profit from loneliness; old age, through a Russian community with a high rate of longevity; and death, through a study of a funeral racket in Milan.
(ffi) R — Movie) “The Durant Affair” (British, 1962) Some startling news, an astounding sum of money and a brilliantly presented court case change the life of a conservative yoimg woman. Jane Griffiths, Conrad Phillips
10:00 (2) C - Hawaii Five-0 — McGarrett seeks a university student who has stolen the royal robe of King Kamehameha,
(4) C — (Special) Norman Rockwell — Works of the famed artist spring to life in comedy and song as host Jonathan Winters welcomes Michele Lee, Dick Smothers and surprise cameo guests.
(50) C — News, Weather, Sports
(56) On Being Black — In “Black Girl,” a girl dreams of becoming a dancer but is thwarted by her unsympathetic famiiy.
10:30 (50) R - Ben Casey -Ben suspects an epidemic of child injuries stems from other-than-accidental

TV Features
FALL OFFEN-8IVE, 6:30 p.m. (56)
HEY, HEY, HEY-TT’S FAT ALBERT, 7:30 p.m. (4)
HDCKEY,
(50)
7:30 p.m.
JOHNNY p.m. (4)
CARBON, 8
ON BROADWAY, 0 p.m. (4)
INTERNATION-AL MAGAZINE, 0 p.m. (56)
NORMAN ROCKWELL, 10 p.m. (4)
ON BEING BLACK, p.m. (56)
11:00 (4) C^Sale of the Century
(50) Strange Faradise (56) R — Tell Me a Story 11:15 (56) Misterogers 11:20 (9) Ontario Schools II 11:30 (2) C - Love of Life (4)C — Hollywood Squares
(7) C — Anniversary Game
(50) C - Klmba 11:41 (9) C-News TMURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports
(4) C — Jeopardy (7) R — Bewitched (9) Take 30 (50) C-Alvin 12:25 (2) C - Fashions 12:30 (2) C - He Said, She Said
(4) C — News, Weather
the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, Sam Levenson and Jane Morgan guest. (62) R C — Movie: “Son of ^mson” (Italian, 1961) Mark Forest, Chelo Alonso
■THURSDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C — On the Farm
(62) R — Sea Hunt 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson —Bob Newhart, Billy De Wolfe and Lou Rawls guest.
(7) C — Joey Bishop — Ida Lupino, Oliver and Rich little guest.
(9) R-Movie: '
(African, 1964) Drama based on Edgar Wallace tale of a diamond-smuggling doctor on his death bed. Richard Tbdd, Marianne Koch.
(50) C — Merv Griffin — Mrs. Rose Kennedy, mother of the late President John F. Kennedy and
6:00 (2) C - Sunrise Semester
1:25 (7) C — Five Minutes to live By
8:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman
(4) Classroom — “Changing Earth: Search lor Ore”
(7) C — TV College — “Missions and Educational Expansion”
7:00 (4) C - Today — Journalist William Shirer
(7) C — Morning Show 7:30 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports
7:55 (9) News
8:00 (2) C - Captain Kangaroo
8:05 (9) R — Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R C - Movie: “A Majority of One” (1962) Rosalind Russell, Alec Guinness (Part 1)
(9) Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) R - Mr. Ed (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) C — Bozo
9:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read 9:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies
(56) Singing, Listening, Doing
9:55 (4) C — Carol Duvall 10:00 (2) RC-Lucy Show (4) C — It Takes ’Two (9) Canadian Schools (56) C — Sesame Street 10:25 (4) C - News 10:30 (2) C - Della Reese -Arthur . Prysock, Molly Bee and Betty Walker guest.
(4) C — Concentration (7) R - Movie: “Mister Big” (1943) Donald O’Connor, Peggy Ryan (9) Ontario Schools I (50) C — Jack LaLanne
Aired Royal Finances
Prince in Hot Water
LONDON (AP) - Prince Philip’s comments In America on the royal family’s finances so disturbed senior courtiers at Buckingham Palace that they considored asking Queen Elizabeth to try to keep oft the American . airwaves, i^ovem-ment sources disclosed today.
Philip made his remarks on NBCJ’s “Meet the Press," during an interview recorded in Warii-ington last week for Showing last Sunday. ’The (pjvemment sources said advisers at the palace were filled In by telephone from the United States before the telecast, and ontemplated advising the queen to have her husband ask NBC to edit out his financial comments or withdraw the program. ,
Hr W . ★
were fears that the prlnce’i comments to the four newsmen who intwviewed him would leak out, and the queen’s intervention would precipitate an even bigger row.
ACUTELY UNHAPPY
The sources said there was no indication Queen Elizabeth had any advance knowledge that her husband intended to make his observation that the royid family would be running at loss next year.
The source said thm-e was reason to believe the queen had been made acutely unhaHpy by the airing of the trace’s mon^ problems, which has resultbd in a storm of reaction in Britain.
’Die sources isald it was as-subed thSt the prince, having consented to the interview.
could keep it from being shown B:
in the United States and Britain, if NBC was advised of the queen’s strong feeling.
But the sources said the advisers. who repwtedly never consulted the queen, concluded that any royal Intervention would only escalate the controversy th^ anttdpated. Ihere
Two newspapers, the Daily Telegraph and the Sun, said today that t|)e prince’s rebarks may backfire dn him and his wife, ’They criticized him particularly for his crack that he might have to give up polo.
’The Sun observed:
“If Prince Philip wants bravely to go. on playing polo, despite die onset of middle age, tlwe Is ample cash In the kitty to pay for a pony or two, but this is private pleasure. And should be paid lor u iueh."
People in the Ne0
By the Associated Preu
Three amateur geologists who recently made the! rock-hunting expedition in history—to the moon—have been awarded honorary fellowships in the Geological Society of America.
Astronaut Neil A. Armstrong accepted the honor yesterday in Atlantic City, N.J., on behalf of himself and fellow Apollo 11 travelers Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. and Michael Collins.
Also awarded at a Geological Society banquet were gold medals to Dr. Harold C.
Urey of thq University of California and Dr. A. Francis Birch of Harvard (or dis- ARMSTRONG tingulshed achievements in geological sciencM.
I
Montgomoiy to Auction Off Portrait Don* by Iko
“	Field Marshal VIsconnt Montgomery has
decided to anctiba off a portndt of him dona by a military colleague, the late Dwight D.
(7) RC-’ThatGirl (9) C — Tempo 9 (50) C — Galloping Gourmet
12:35 (56) Friendly Giant 12:55 (4) C - News
(56) R - Singing, Listening, Doing 1:00 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow
(4) OS- Letters to Laugh-In
(7) C — Dream House (9) R - Movie: “I Saw What You Did” -(1965) (50) R — Movie: “You Were Meant for Me” (1948) Jeaime Crain, Dan DaUey
1:15 (56) R — Children’s Hour
1:25 (4) C - News 1:30 (2) C — As the World Turns
(4) C - You’re Putting Me On
(7) C — Let’s Make a Deal
(56) Ready, Set, Go 2:00 (2) C — Where the Heart Is
(4) C — Days of Our lives
(7) C — Newlywed Game (56) R — International Magazine — The cycle of life from birth to death is examined through vignettes.
2:25 (2) C - News 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (4) C —Doctors (7) C — Dating Game 3:00 (2) C-Secret Storm (4) C — Another Wwld (7) C — General Hospital (9) R — Candid Camera (62) R — Movie: “You’re Only Young ’Twice” (British, 1954) Du c an Macrae, Joseph Tomdty 3:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C — Bright Promises (7) C-One Ufe to Live (9) C —Magic Shoppe (50) C-Captain Detroit (56) Management by Objectives
4:00 (2) R C-Gomer Pyle (4) C — Steve Allen — Jayne Meadows, Paul Winchell and Jerry Collins guest.
(7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Bozo (56) R C — Sesame Street 4:30 (2) C - Mike Douglas
—	Richard Tucker, Skitch Henderson, Shirley Jones and Robert King guest.
(7) R - Movie: “My Favorite Spy” (1951) Bob Hope, Hedy Lamarr
(50) R —Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends
5:00 (4) C-George Pierrot
—	“Touring Ireland”
(9) R C — Flipper
(50) R C —Lost in Space (56) Misterogers 5:30 (9) R C - Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to
Montgomery said he sat for the painting while acting as Elsenhower’s deputy ra-
commander in Paris after
Warn.
Montgomery said he had decided to sell the painting at an auction Nov. 21 because “an American friend who was visiting me said he thought it ouid>t to be in America."
McCarthy Sees Possibility of New Party Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn., says a new political party may emerge in the 1972 presidential campaign with Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York as its standard bearer.
“Unless the two major parties give voters a better choice than in 1964 and 1968, there will be a third party,” said McCarthy, who tried unsuccessfully for the 1968 Democratic presidential nomination.
In an interview on CBS-’TV’s Merv Griffin show, he added that Lindsay, recently reelected as an Independent-Liberal after losing the Republican primary, “could Very easily be the leader of such a party.”
I new political
I
McCarthy
A Look at TV
N. Irish Strife Rehashed
By CYNTHIA LOWRY about a spy who gave up the AP Television-Radio Writer business but could not get away NEW YORK-<IBS played the from his past, confiict in Northern Ireland Robert Horton, once of “Wag-down ttie middle in its WweeHy on Train” was the ex-spy who 60 Minutes” Tuesday night. had hung onto vital papers that Mike WaUace reported condi-jboth sides wanted. But Setas-tian Cabot, pliQlng a stony-
I
ment from the Protestant side while Harry Reasoner did the same filing on the
Cathdiie ground.
Neither added much that was new to the shfry.	MISS LOWRY
.The most interesting segment pf the program itoowed a Los Angeles lawyer explaining to a class of UCLA students ways to duck the draft or at least postpone induction. ’The attorney estimated he had handled some 1,600 draft cases and, of these one client was in jail, 12 were drafted—and the rest were still civilians.
hearted spy-master, nearly stole the show.
The ABC cmisor checking The Spy Klll^ff”
missive: In <
and an attractive yatm woman, definitely not his wife, wore dis. cussing the case, casually while occupying twin b^ in ^ gfrl’s apartment.
TV Station Staffs a Daily Tribute to United States
5:45 (56) R - G e r m i Lesson
It is not evasion, he says, bat simply using the loopholes in the law. Many of his clieifis keep out through exempt occupations while others are found to b^ suffering from physical disabilities overlooked by draft board doctors.
Student unrest a strations have been the inspiration for numerous tdevision scripts recently, and ABC’S “Mod Squad” got with it Tttes-day night. ’Ihe young undercover agents went on campus to solve a homicide and got into a student uprising.
The hour had a fresh, contemporary flavor—the young militants vs. the puzzled college personnel and police. This aspect, like a rich icing on a |dain cake, concealed the fact that the story was really a routine little cops-and-killer tale.
’Die “Movie of the Week” tiiat followed on the network was one of those good old action stories
BAL’TIMORE, Md. (AP) -WBAL-TV of Baltimore launched a daily televised tribute to the nathm Tuesday ni^.
The station preceded its regular 6 p.m. local news broadcast with a rendition of the Natkmal Anthem and a redtation of the Pledge of Allegiance.
Brent 0. Gunts, station vice president and general manager, said, “We’re tired of constantly seeming to be on the defensive as regards America and about being American."
The daily two- to three-minute segment will use both public figures and private citizens to recite the pledge.


SERVICE
SPECIALISTS
HOD’S
no ORCHARD UKE AVE.


THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1069
SALE! Adjustable Swivel Stools

Regular 23.99
YOUR
CHOICE
18«i
a.	Mediterranaan. Vinyl covered padded teat with bold floral print Chromed footrest
b.	TMlrieal. WahmMone rattan seat
tnwwfkeolor steel pedestaL Chromed footfmt	I ,
a. Madam. Padded vinyl seat in p«en« black or tangerine. Chromed footrest
HouMwarm Dtpt. ,
Open Monday through Satni^y 9 a.ni. to 9 p.m.
NOW - Sears Is OPEN EVERY NIGHT Monday throngh Saturday
NOVEMBER VALUE DAYS
12” Diagonal-measure Screen “Take-Anywhere” TV
Regular
129.99
Works on Battery or House Current
•	Instant-Start. . . picture and sound
•	Ramovabla Sun Seraan ... eliminates glare out-of-doors or inside
•	Earphone ... on 12-foot cord, lets you listen without disturbing others
•	Lightweight ... walnut-grain plastic cabinet weighs a mere 17 pounds
•	Optional 12-volt Battery Peek or car-boat adapter... take it anywhere
Buy Now on Soars Fabruary Deferrod Easy Payment Plan
Save $11—Portable TV with 9” Diagonal Measure Screen
Save $11-Portable TV with 19** Diagonal Measure Screen
Save $30-Portable TV with 21** Diagonal Measure Screen
Regular
58^8 "!s'" 88^^ """ 149^^
An ideal gift ... just right for personal use. Weighs only 14 lbs., yet has a photo-sharp 444q. in. picture. UpHfront controls. S’* speaker.
Big 184-sq.-in. picture, yet so compact . . . take it room to room. Automatic gain control. Up-front controls. Big4oned S’* speaker.
Radio and TV Dapr.
Our largest black-and-white portable. 229-sq.-in. for family viewing. Instant start picture and sound. Sun shield prevents glare. With earphone.
Mini-Refrigerators
4.5 CU. FT.... FOR REC ROOM, DEN OR OFFICE
a. Bas 30* freeser with 2 ice trays. Copper-tone enamel exterior Magnetie doorelosnre
b.Haa 10* freeser pint ice bin. Goppertone; wood-grain top, door. Pnah-bntton defrost
89”
Reg.lN4l
9997
SAVE $10 a. Regular 99.99-1
Electrical Deportment
SAVE $10	_
b. Regular 199J9-N0W 99
Save ^20-Electric Fireplace Regular 99.99	7997
Colonial-style wall-bnng fireplace made of strong steel with a baked-on enamel finish. Base, ledges and mesh screen are black; hood is antiqncd coppcrtone. Has separate controls for: heat and ‘‘flickering flame,** “flickering flame” only, or heat only (automatic thermostat turns heat off and on when needed). 40V4” high.
79.99 Modem Wall-Hung Fireplace. Cbntrals for hoot and ‘*flickoring
flamo" or *fliekoring Homo*' only.................. ■ • • 99.91
$93 T-noeo Brats Firaplaoo Ensomblo. Soman, aooottorios... 49.97
Fireplace Equipment
Save *9—Lightweight Adder
Rtgular
592“
So portable yon can carry it easily from offlee to home, even on bndiieso trips or to sehooL Compact, yet handlee fignres with speed and accuraey. listo 7 oolnmns, totals 8. Snbiracto and mnltipliaa qoleldy. Clear kqr coupled to repeat key. Mnta on permanent tape. ^
Office Supplies
Ask About Sean Convenient Credit Plans
SALE!
Sears Exclusive Drylon® Towels
Regular
3JZ5
Super-absorbent Drylon®, of cotton andxayon, is 20% more ifosoibent than ordinary eotlon terry. In vibrant twin tones ... one side Is a romantic deep tone; the other a li|bt«r shada of the same color. Extra soft; with hbigfi.
1.75 HandTowol..............
SOoFingorlipTowol.............740
70o Washcloth........................64o
Orion®
SALE! Plush Dacron® and Bath Accessoriest
Regular 4.98
24x39” oval or 24x24” contour rag
Q97
aaoh
7.99 27x41” Oval Rug........147
2.19 Mandard Lid Oovor.....1.97
9.93 2-Fe.Tnk Sot..........4.37
2.91 Wastobaakot Oovor......... 2 J7
149 Seala Oovor..............U7
141 TbMuaioi Oovor..........14T
.......kno
\
Step Into the lavish softness of this deep, fairy pile... 50% Daeron® and 50% Orion® resists matting. Polynre-thane backing makes mp skid-resist-ant Machine washable, tumble dry.
Bath Shop
Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171
omirawvcK AMP ca
EST.1940
OPEN
9:30
’TIL
9:30
Terrific vahie! .
MEN’S JUILLEROY* WIDE WALE CORDUROY SPORTCOATS
18“
Comp, value ^25
Bold, brawny 100% cotton corduroy in handsome Fall tones... two and three button models, quality tailored with two inside breast pockets, colorful print lining and matching pull-up podcet hanky. Sizes for regulars and longs.
COMPLETE ALTERATIONS INCLUDED
MarveLous buy! ORLON® PILE JACKET IN THE NEW TIE-BELTED VERSION
19’®
Comp, value ^25
The same sumptuous softness and velvety glow of beaver fmr—the acrylic pile is that luxurious looktogl Fur-like rich colors gleamed with expensive-quality decorative gold-ish buttons... its ^ notched collar, a convertible style. Sizes 8-16.

^^SAL
STARTS TODAY THRU SAT., NOV. 22nd
Get ready for our great big value spree... up-to-the-minute fashions, thrilling selections, budget-easy prices! Hurry in, bring the whole
family...find the kind of great buys you’ll be thankful for!

5.'


s •.-^^
ENTIRE STOCK OF MEN’S REGULAR 22.88 ROYAL HALL” SPORTCOATS
88
Comparabk sportcoats sell for *30 and more!
fjewest
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V.i«- 10®®
pyic^ *
gjained-DW . and nee

PWCE-SM^^, fOH THIS eve" ^
Right now, you save even more on our everyday low, low price! Choose from luxurious new Fall ’69 fabrics—virgin wools, wool-and-Orlon* acrylic blends. Glen plaids, windowpanes, herringbones, hopsack weaves. Handsomely styled two and three button models, quaUty tailored with two inside breast pockets... in sizes for regulars and longs.
COMPLEITE ALTERATIONS INCLUDED
Ideal for the outdooTSTnau ! ALL LCATHER WORK BOOTS
Extra
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welt constmctiof
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AT AU STOWS.
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THE POPULAR C.P.O. IN LUMBERJACK PLAIDS

16
95
Looks like a shirt... tailored like a jacket! Rugged, heavyweight winter-warm plaids in your choice of handsome outdoorsman tones .. . fully lined in Malden’s extra-deep acrylic pile. Convenient snap-front closing, snap cuffs, two deep slash pockets. Sizes 36 to 46.
THE COMMUTER COAT IN RUGGED CORDUROY
Bold, burly all cotton corduroy with deep-rib richness, in the go-everywhere styling men prefer... three button front with two deep patch and flap pockets, fully lined for cold weather protection in deep, dense acrylic pile by Malden. Sizes 36 to 46.




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Robert Hall lets you keep in step with the newest coat fashion at a price that’s lower than you ever thought possible! All wool cheviots, saxonies, tweeds, veloiurs... in new patterns and colors. Trim-fitting up-to-the-minute models, fully lined in rayon twill. Sizes for regulars, shorts, longs.
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Colder, Cloudy
VOL. 127
NO. 289
ONE COLOR MME OVERFAfif^ THE FONTIAC PRESS
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1960 uN.TomOTT«i!R,oNAt -64 PAGES
Protest March on Pennsylvania Avenue Gets OK
"T ' . »• ^
From Our News Wires WASHINGTON — Vietnam protesters have won the right to march down Pennsylvania Avenue — a street the government had insisted was off limits — but will avoid the White House, once a prime target of their demonstrations.
The Veterans Day armistice hammered out yesterday with top Justice Department officials ended a monthlong battle and paved the way for what both sides now say will be a massive, but peaceful, demonstration.
The government is “not giving
Merger Pattern Is Foreseen for U.S. Airlines
By JACK LEFLl^R AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Airline executives and Wall Street analysts expect fewer but bigger airlines as a result of sagging profits and the tremendous costs of the new jumbo jets.
The move to merge was highlighted yesterday when financially troubled Northeast Airlines announced it would be merged into Northwest Airlines under a tentative agreement.
★ * ★
Revenues of the airlines have increased this year but the airline executives and the Wall Street analysts feel that only through consolidations can a financial debacle be averted.
No definite moves can be made until the Department of Transportation issues guidelines in about two months.
BIG SAVINGS
The interest in mergers is that they would offer big savings in equipment and personnel.
An example of the financing problems of the future faced by airlines is that the cost of a supersonic transport, expected to be available after 1978, would be $40 million, compared with $20 million for the Boeing 747 to be in use next year. The cost of jetliner support equipment also would rise.
Related Story, Page D-7
The last big airlines merger was in 1961 when United took over Capital. The Civil Aeronautics Board, however, rejected the request of American and Eastern to merge in 1962. Since then, merger activity has been confined to talks and rumors.
Among the Big Three of U.S. commercial aviation in the first nine months of 1969, this was the financial picture;
Pan American — A deficit o f $4,497,000, on revenues of $806,955,000, compared with profit of $39,497,000, or $1.17 a share, a year earlier.
TWA — Earnings of $24,014,000, or $1.96 a share, on revenues of $831,630,000, against $25,818,000, or $2.13 a share on revenues of $718,2^,000, in the like 1968 period.
American Airlines — Earnings of $24,629,000, or $1.22 a share, on revenues of $748,947,000, compared with $33,845,000, or $1.67 a share on revenues of $719,666,000 a year earlier.
In Today's Press
CoaliUon may pull off huge success despite bickering — PAGE A-8.
Report on Indians V. S. policies called a failure -PAOEA-4.
Nursing Homes life Is bittersweet for elderly '\ «fc>AG)S A-14. X ^
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anything to which the people are not entitled,” said one demonstration leader, Rtfnr Young. But, he added; “We’re basically happy and ready to move now.” .
As Young spoke at a news conference last night, Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell underscored the administration’s viewpoint, telling a Milwaukee audience that “The foreign policy of this government cannot and will not be formulated in the streets of Washington — or in any other street of this nation.”
CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT
But, added Mitchell, “This administration clearly recognizes the right of these people uixler our First Amendment to peacefully congregate i n Washin^n and to petition the govern- , ment with respect to their grievances -assumed or otherwise.”
The march sponsors, the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, had demanded permission to swing past the White House on their march down Pennsylvania Avenue from the Capitol to the Washington Monument.
Related Story, Page D-1
Now the marchers — perhaps as many as 200,000 in what could be the biggest antiwar protest in history — will turn off the broad avenue at 15th Street, a block short of the White House, and head for the monument to cliniax three days of demonstrations.
Mayor Walter E. Washington and Deputy Atty. Gen. Richard G. Klein-dienst, who last Thursday declared that “under no conditions’’ could Pennsylvania Avenue be used, said the government agreed to the route after the New Mobilization gave assurances of an orderly demonstration.
FEARED VIOLENCE
The department had refused permission for a permit on Pennsylvania Avenue on the grounds it would be difficult to control any outbreaks of violence near the street’s business areas.
Sen. Harold E. Hughes, D-Iowa, warning against “a replay of Chicago,” urged President Nixon today to call a Christmas cease-fire in Vietnam as a good faith gesture toward demonstrators involved in the antiwar march.
Hughes asked for “a new Christmas peace offensive” in a letter that warned of possible violence as a result of “rigid, coercive measures” to control the demonstratOTS.
Vaccinating Children for Smallpox Is'Hit
1‘onliac Pr«« Photo
Retired Army Sergeant Lewis Davis
Pontiac Stadia Opinion Given
ISAAC J. ISGRIGG
(EDITOR’S NOTE: The following comment on the stadium situation is from Pontiac businessman Isaac J. Isgrigg. An active community leader for many years, Isgrigg also served on the Pontiac City Commission.)
‘Mayor Jerome Cavanagh is moving in a great haste to have a stadium erected on a .small parcel of land owned by Detroit west of Cobo Hall. He would buy additional land to increase the size to 70. acres, at a cost of millions of dollars. To prepare the site would cost several millions more for ingress and a way out.
“To further this desire, Cavanagh has supposedly employed an architectural firm. The chance of this stadium being erected there is very improbable. Due to the Detroit River it is only a one-half location for any purpose.
Dead Gl Not Son, Says Ohio Couple
RICHiyOOD, Ohio (AP) - The Army insist* W body i« tlie fuijleral hdm^ is that of Sgt. John Waiten, 26, ^killed in action in Vietnaih.
The sergeant’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Warreii, say it can’t be: Their son was two inches shorter, 30 pounds lighter and had a big scar on his left arm which does not appear on the body.
/ *' *:
Lloyd Keras, a lawyer representing the family, said the body would be taken to Marion today and X-rayed for comparison with X-rays made three years ago of Warren’s spine. He had a spinal abnormality.
“r hate to tempt the family Intodhink-
ing there’s a live boy over there in Vlet-|iam when q^xt We^'k jUiere rhay be another body h,ere," Safd Kerns^ cijing the possibility that the sergeant’s body might have been confused with that of a fellow dead soldier.
‘ARMY DENIES ERROR’
"The Army says they can’t be in error at all, this has got to be the right man. Bui tney can’t explain about the missing scarl” ^
When the body arrived here earlier this week the soldier’s parents and wife Sharon, said immediately it was not
,, (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5)
Vets' Day Ceremony Here a Dud, Says One Old Sarge
By ED BLUNDEN
Pontiac’s Veterans Day observance was a complete flop in the eyes of one observer.
“It was a sad show. It hurt me,” said Lewis Davis of 3005 Beacham, Waterford Township.
Davis is a retired Army Sergeant with 21% years service. He said this was the first time he was in the Pontiac areal for Veterans Day. He had read about the planned ceremony in front of City Hall and decided to attend .
Besides the American Legion members involved in the ceremony, and some service recruiting personnel, Davis said he saw only a few civilians for a total of about two dozen.
‘WHERE WERE LEADERS?’
“Where were the town leaders? Couldn’t they have had the police department or some of the fire department turn out?” Davis asked.
“We wonder why the young people spit on the flag and that sort of thing, but the older ones don’t seem to care either,” Davis said.
* ★ *
“It’s funny a city and area as big as this couldn’t do something more. I’ve been in some small towns and they have beautiful ceremonies . . . It’s a traditional thing that lets you know you’re still people.”
“I guess all the officials were 'away enjoying their holiday ... but really it’s not a holiday, it’s a day of memorial,” Davis said.
“We keep talking about what’s happening to our country . .’. well, it’s some of the little things that are making it that way.”
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Two researcheris from the National Communicable Disease Center recommended today that routine childhood smallpox vaccination be discontinued.
The benefits, they declared, no longer outweigh the risks.
* * *
The recommendation came from Dr. J. Michael Lane, chief of the domestic branch of the center’s smallpox eradication program, and Dr. J. D. Millar, director of the program, in a report to a meeting of the American Public H6blth Association.
The recommendation does n o t represent the official viewpoink-^onthe Communicable Disease (Center. The center, in Atlanta, Ga., is part of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
SIMILAR REPORT A similar report from Drs. Lane and Millar is to appear in the Nov. 27 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, along with rebuttal from Dr. Samuel L. Katz, chairman of the pediatrics department at Duke< University, and Dr. Saul J. Krugman, New York University pediatrician.
Dr. Katz was quoted in the latest issue of Medical World News, a weekly journal for physicians, as saying he feels that reactions to smallpox vaccine, which cause seven to eight deaths a year, are no justification for stopping mass vaccination.
* ★ ★
Drs. Lane and Millar argued that the United States can expect a minimum of 210 deaths from vaccination reactions in the next 30 years.
Tbey said eliminating the vaccination of children, while continuing it for such high risk groups as health workers, travelers and military recruits, would reduce the figure to about 60 deaths.
. ★ * ★
Drs. Lane and Millar said “vigilant surveillance” and rapid control of any outbreaks are the keys to keeping a nation R'ee of smallpox.
“In the rare event that a mass vaccination campaign has to be carried
out,” they .said, “it could be done rapidly and inexpensively.
“The experience of Britain and certain other smallpox-free nations demonstrates that vigorous childhood vaccination is not necessary to prevent the reestablishment of smallpox if prompt and adequate containment measures are taken whenever the disease reappears.”
White Cells Tied to Heart Attacks
DALLAS, Tex. (AP) White blood cells—the body’s shock troops against invading germs —might also be among the underlying causes of heart attacks, a team of New York researchers said today.
The possibility is suggested b y research on rabbits, reported Dr. Sanford C. Spraragen and several colleagues of New York City^ Veterans Administration Hospital and Downstate Medical Center.
★ * ★
In a report prepared for the annual meeting of the American Heart Association’s Council on Arteriosclerosis, Dr. Spraragen stressed that further work needs to be done before white blood cells could definitely be incriminated in human heart disease.
But he said the rabbit research adds up to this:
Certain white blood cells have the ability to invade the inner wall of an artery, lodge there, become fat-filled cells called “foam cells,” and apparentl^'" can contribute to the process of “atherosclerosis”—a technical term for form of hardening of the
“The governor of Michigan has acquiesced in the Detroit plan, likely at the urgent appeal of Mayor Cavanagh.
“The Pontiac site has every requisite as a location of a stadium for the whole of southeastern Michigan.
160 ACRES
“A stadium to seat 100,000 people would require 160 acres of land. Pontiac has a 200-acre site which it has offered. It presents no problem in making ready for the erection and parking lots. Parking space would be available for 25,000 cars.
“The site is bounded by M59, Opdyke Road and Featherstone. The Grand Trunk forms the west boundary so special trains could be run from Detroit
(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 6)
Hovering Clouds Moy Bring Snow
Clouds hovering over the Pontiac area today may drop some rain or snow flurries late tonight or tomorrow, the weatherman say*.
Flurries and colder temperatures are forecast for the next five days.
*	*	.* ,
The low will be 27 to 32 tonight. The high will be near 34 to 39 tomorrow.
Probabilities of precipitation are 30 per cent today and tonight and 20 per cent tomorrow.
★	★ *
Forty-one was the low temperature before 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. The mercury stood at 40 by 12:30 p.m.
CLOGGED ACTERIES
In atherosclerosis, arteries are clogged with particles of fatty substances deposited on the inner lining of the blood vessel. It long has been under suspicion as a major cause of coronary heart attacks. Diets high in animal fats and oUs have been blamed by many scientists as being key contributors.
“Foam cells”—whose name comes from their lacy appearance under the microscope—are basically tiny bags of fat which are believed to play a building-block role in the atherosclerotic process.
★ ★ ★
In the New York experiments, 3-month-old rabbits from the same litter were divided into two groups. Both groups were fed diets rich in cholesterol, a chemical component of animal fats and oils.
After ten weeks, white blood cells were isolated from one group of rabbits and injected into the other animals. The blood cells were tagged with a radioactive material so they could be located later in the recipients’ aortic tissue.
(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4)
Shelby Mishap Kills Bicyclist, 14
Terry Sullivan, 14, of 2768 Hessel, Avon Township, was killed yesterday when the bicycle he was riding was struck by a car on Dequindre south of Juengel, Shelby Township.
The accident occurred at 3 p.m. as William E. Wilson. 56, of 46149 Schim-mel, Utica, traveling southbound, struck Sullivan's bike, township police said.
★	*	-A-
The boy suddenly turned the bike into Wilson’s path and was struck broadside, police said.
A ninth grade student at Rochester Senior High School, Sullivan’s school day ended at noon. He was just over a mile from his home at the time of the accident.
The son of Mr. and Mrs. James Sullivan, Terry was dead on arrival at Crlttenton Hospital, Avon Township.. Wilson was questioned by Shelby police _5ind released.
BUCKET BOOTS^Aaron Berxof of Chelsea, MassY, finds a couple of palls handy to cross a parking lot In Boston yesterday as rain continued to fall In New England ^ for the 10th day. ^	^	#

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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAV, NOVEMRER la, IimO
GOP Anxious, Dems Wary on Ed Reform
LANSIN^G (AP) — Senate Republicans pushed for action today on Gov. William Milllken's education-related tax proposals as Democrats adopted a “wait and see” attitude.
Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, R-St. Louis, said he still hoped some part of the reform package would make it through the up|^ Chamber this week. If not, he said, outlook for enactment of the program would fade.
* ★ ★
Lockwood managed a squeaking victory Tuesday when Republicans pro-
vided! one "’“'■e vote than opposition Democrats to push a $116 million property tax bill to the top of the Senate’s debate calendar.
* * -*
The vote was 17-16 on Lockwood's motion to move up the bill eliminating the property tax credit against the income tax.
‘NO NEGOTIATIONS’
“The Republicans apparently want to pass that without negotiating on an equitable tax package.” said Minority Leader Sander Levin, D-Berkley. “They
want to try to put it through on their own terms.
“Let them try,” he said. “Then maybe we can enter some negotiations. At least maybe the governor will be more willing to do so.”
★ ♦ ★
In order to pass the measure. Republican leaders would have to muster all 20 GOP votes or round up some Democratic support.
Many Democrats, however, have said they wanted to look at pending measures that would “close tax loopholes” before taking up the property tax proposal.
Currently before the Senate are two bills that would bring in an estimated $60 million by removing the sales and use tax exemptions granted industry and agriculture for equipment they use.
*	★	★
Three other exemption bills — sponsored by taxation chairman Harry DeMaso, R-Battle Creek —were expected to be reported from the committee soon. *	★	*
Committee members decided yesterday to retain the diesel fuel exemption for bus lines. “It’s sort of a reverse I',” suggested Sen. John Bowman,
D-Rosevllle. "But I don’t think it will keep them in business.
The GOP caucus reportedly still was trying to pry Milllken’s proposed cigarette tax Increase from DeMaso's committee, but the chairman remained adamantly opposed.
Meanwhile, Sen. Coleman Young, D-Detrolt, introduced several alternatives to Mllliken’s proposals yesterday.
They would amend the State Constitution to eliminate the State Board of Education, provide for an elected superintendent of public instruction and allow a graduated income tax.
Birmingham Area
Floor Action Expected Tomorrow
House Unit OKs ABM Funds
MRS. INDIRA GANDHI
Indian Leader Ousted by Party
NEW DELHI tfi - The “old guard” majority in the top leadership of India’s badly split ruling Congress party ex-pdled ihdme Minister Indira Gandhi from the party today and ordered Congress membo’s of Parliament to elect a new prime minister.
The party’s top policy-making body, the Congress Working Committee, took the* Unprecedented step against Mrs. Gandhi. She was accused of “spreading indisdpline” in the 84-year-old organization.
’The action was not expected to affect Mrs. Gandhi’s position as prime minister immediately. Her supporters in the party had announced previously they woidd not recognize any expulsion orders issued by the party president, Siddavanalli Ni-li^igapiia, whoin Mjrs. Gandhi has been tiypg to ouist.
A. meeiing of all Congress members in PWl^am^ is to be held tomorrow. It wag cailpd in advance of today’s action, GandM was expected to seek a ftiai^ vote of confidence then.
Her supporters claim she has an overwhehning majority among the 431 Congress members in Parliament.
A more serious test is expected after Parliament begins its winter session on Nov. 18. Th«i Mrs. Gandhi is certain to lose most or all of her 23-seat majority over the opposition parties because of the split within her own party. This will force her to rely on leftist. Communist and independent members to keep her government in office.
From Our News Wires
WASHINGTON - A $1.45-bUlion military construction bill containing seed money for President Nixon’s Safeguard ABM system was approved by the House Appropriations Committee today and.,, sent to the floor for expected action tomorrow.
The measure includes $16.6 million to begin Safeguard deployment, $2.5 million for an underground command center in the Rocky Mountains and $14.1 million to develop Kwajalein Island in the Pacific for full-scale tests next year of the an-tiballistic missile system.
* * *
The tests call for an intercontinental ballistic missiles to be fired on Kwajalein from California by mid-1870 and shot down by interceptor missiles there.
In additonal testimony given privately to an appropriations subcommittee in mid-June and made public in oensored form today. Army Lt. Gen. ]A. D.
Starbird told Congress the Safeguard system would not adequately defend against submarine-launched missiles with pinpoint accuracy.
He suggested that four additional perimeter acquisition radars would have to be deployed at the four corners of the continental United States at an estimated cost of $800 million.
Most Safeguard deployment money for fiscal 1970 — $746 million has been authorized — is in another bill not scheduled for congressional action untii
December. But the bili approved today includes $2.5 million for the Safeguard command center in the Cheyenne Mountain complex deep under the Rockies near Colorado Springs, Colo.
The $14.1 million for Kwajalein is for expansion of facilities which wiil not be completed until after the tests have begun.
The bulk of the money in the bill is for construction projects, including famiiy housing, at U.S. military bases in this country and abroad.
Tuesday NY Blasts Checked for Link to Earlier Bombs
Pontiac Hailed as Truck Capitol
“Made in Pontiac” could be the label for most trucks on the highway.
Pontiac is the truck capital of the world, according to a survey by Ward’s Automotive Reports, the industry’s weekly trade publication.
* * *
With GMC Truck & Coach Division trudc output totaling a record 184,786 units in the 1969 model year, Pontiac ovalook St. Louis as the top truck-producing dty. St. Louis accounted for 188,188 trucks in the last model year.
4® 1909 model GMC medium- and heavy-duty trucks, a portion of its Hght-duty models and some Chevrolet trucks were produced in Pontiac.
STATE LEADS
Paced by Pontiac, Michigan led all states in 1969 model truck production.
GMC Truck surpassed its best previous model year output of 169,576 units set in 1968 by 9 per cent.
* * ★
In the 1969 model year, GMC climbed from fifth to third piace in industry sales, its highest ranking in 43 years.
NEW YORK	(AP)	-	Police	are
checking possible finks between Tuesday’s explosions at three Manhattan office buildings	and	earlier	blasts,
including an attack last month on the Armed Forces Induction Center.
★	*	*
More than lOO telephoned warnings of imminent bombings were received by police Tuesday, all of them unfounded.
*	*	★
The explosive devices used Tuesday at the RCA Building, the Chase Manhattan Building and the General Motors Building were “high-order explosives on the nature of dynamite connected to a timing mechanism,” a police spokesman said.
GWCC to Support Millage Increase
A Waterford Township citizens group voted last night to support the proposed one-year, 9-mill school property tax increase on the election ballot Nov. 25.
’The Greater Waterford Community Council, formed in 1961 to study townshipwide issues, gave its support by a voice vote at their meeting. About 45 people were present.
The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report
PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly cloudy and colder through ’Thursday with chance of li^t showers changing to chance of snow flurries late today and ’Thursday. Temperatures today steady or slowly falling. Low tonight 27 to 32. High ’Thursday 34 to 39. Friday outlook: variable cloudiness and cold with chance of snow flmries. Winds west to northwest 12 to 22 miles per hour. Probabilities of precipitation: 30 per cent today, 30 per cent tonight, 20 per cent Thursday.
The council’s education committee reported that it found no evidence of wasted school funds after meeting with school officials and the county treasurer.
On another issue, Richard Castle, chief engineer of the Oakland County Department of Public Works, told the group that water is returning to shallow residential wells dried up by construction of the Clinton-Oakland Interceptor ^wer.
Similar devices were used at the Whitehall Street induction center Oct. 7, the Federal Building in Foley Square Sept. 19, the Marine Midland Building Aug. 20 and a Grace Line pier in Brooklyn Aug. 9, the spokesman said.
NO CONNECTION YET The police spokesman said, “We are not at this time claiming a definite connection with those blasts, but the matter is under investigation.”
Letters purporting to be from left-wing radicals took credit for the latest blasts. They were similar in style to letters mailed to news agencies after a bomb ripped through Army and , Selective Service System offices in the Federal Building.
★ ★ *
Special delivery letters were sent to the New York ’Times and United Press International, postmarked Monday evening.
They said: “During this week of antiwar protest, we set off expiosions. in the offices of Chase Manhattan, Standard Oil, and General Motors,” because America’s giant corporaUons hav? fomented international problems.
‘BLOWS OF UBERA'nON’
“From the inside, black people have been fighting a revolution for years. And finally, from the heart of the empire, white Americans, too, are striking blows of liberation.”
The three blasts caused heavy property damage and one injury.
*Glenn Seen Near Senate-Race 'Go'
WASHINGTON UP) - Space hero John H. Glenn Jr., who aborted one run for the U.S. Senate from Cfiiio, has indicated he’s on the verge of launching a second attempt.
* ★ *
Glenn, first American to orbit the earth, conferred yesterday in Washington with political advisers and Democratic party officials.
★	★	*
“If things keep looking as favorable as they have, hopefully we’ll have an announcement in the near future,” Glenn said.
★	★	★
He has left New York, where he has been associated with Royal Crown Cola, and has moved to Columbus.
★
Glenn ran against Sen. Stephen M. Young in the 1964 primary but dropped out after receiving head injuries in a bathtub fall.
*	*	★
Young last month	said he considers
himself, at 80, to be too old for another term.
Church Gives $20,000 to 3 Urban Units
BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Grants totaling $20,000 to three Detroit area organizations have been made by Christ Church Cranbrook here.
Recipients are the Black Culture Center in Pontiac, $7,500; the Inner-City Sub-Center of Detroit, $7,500; and the Career Development Center in Detroit, $5,000.
* * *
Grants were made by the Christ Church vestry upon recommendation of the Beyond Parish Giving and Christian Social Relations committees.
The money comes from the church’s Urban Fund, which was established last June to meet urgent urban needs. The fund is financed by gifts from parishioners beyond their regular pledge commitments.
CULTURAL CENTER
The Pontiac Black Cultural Center is a social cultural and educational center for the black community. Activities range from child care clinics and African history classes to drama workshops and secretarial skills classes. ’The center was founded in 1968 fby Oakland University and concerned blhck citizens of Pontiac.
★ ★
More than 400 children and teen-agers have been attracted to the programs sponsBred by Inner-City Sub-Center of Detroit. The programs include classes in Afro-American history arid political education, instruction in sewing and crafts, and recreational activities such as dances, field trips and picnics.
* ★ ★
■The Career Development Center is training women in secretarial skills and men in auto mechanics, tool and die making, welding and the graphic arts.
BIRMINGHAM - Negotiators for the board of education are continuing to meet with two nonteaching unions — one representing the maintenance workers, custodians, bus drivers and cafeteria personnel and another unit representing secretarial and clerical workers. Contracts for both groups have been extended.
Dead Gl Not Son, Says Ohio Couple
(Continued From Page One) Warren, who was due to be discharged
Only 13 homes in Waterford and 27 in nearby Independence Township were affected, according to county records, he rerported.
White Cells Called Heart Attack Factor
(Continued From Page One)
It was found that transplanted white blood cells invaded the areterial wall at the site of aetherosclerotic deposits already formed there, and contributed to foam-cell formation.
Kerns said the Army insists that Warren, in Vietnam since last February, was killed in recent action near the Cambodian border and that the body was identified definitely by fingerprints.
★	★	★
Kerns said he thought “there’s a remote possibility” of a foul-up in Warren’s fingerprint records.
★	★	★
He also speculated	that,	if	alive	Warren,	b^g	due for	a	discharge,	could	be
on his way home.
Pontiac Stadium ArgumentGiven
(Continued From Page One) and elsewhere. One-half mile east is 1-75 with cloverleaf turns at M59 and curving turns at Opdyke Road. U.S. and principal state highways lead from all directions.
* * ★
“Pontiac is the center of the main Michigan population. Southeastern Michigan, omitting Detroit, is growing at a rapid rate.
*	*	it
“The Detroit River is	a	blessing com-
mercially, but it is, without a doubt, an extreme	impediment	for	the	stadium
site. If there would be 4,000 parking spaces, where would the Other 20,000 cars be parked? Just one trip to a game would be enough for too many to try it a second time.
*	*	★
“Without the people of southeastern Michigan, outside of Detroit, attending the games, there will not be any ’Tigers or Lions.
“The Rose Bowl is in Pasadena, far out of Los Angeles. And the Santa Anita Race Track is five miles farther away, being located in Arcadia.”
5 Agencies Share Insurance Fees
Inrficaltd-Coniull local
shMMisnQ Egg —EiD
NA'nCKNAL WEATHER-Showers are forecast tonight for the Midwest, rain li azpected in fiw Northeast. Snow flurries are predicted for tihe Northwest the Great Lakes area.i A cold ftont is moving north across the nation.
■' 'r ■	. j '■	:,o.,	'
By JEAN SAILE
County officials have revealed the names of four insurance agencies involved in the split of premiums on the county’s insurance package.
The total insurance program is being reviewed by the County Board of Supervisors Finance Committee.
* ★ ★
Howard Huttenlocher, the county’s insurance agent of record, told ’The Pontiac Press that he had been asked by county auditors to “recognize five firms” in 1967, when much of the county property was put into a blanket or institutional insurance policy.
The blanket policy (much like a homeowner’s extend^ coverage) eliminated the need tor separate insurance in each area of risk. It was said to effect h considerable savings in premiums.
SHARE ELIMINATED However, the new type coverage eliminated, tor many county insurance agencies, their share in the county’s business and iii the funds derived therefrom.
A decision reportedly was made by some supervisors and county officials to and	continue to recognize some of these
and	firms, according to a ranking county of-
ficial.
Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the board of audtiors, said the decision was to be based upon request of the agencies which formerly had participated.
★	★	*
Letters	were	sent	to	all of the
previously involved agencies, informing them of the change in coverage and telling toem if they felt they still were entitled to premium fees their requests would be considered.
ASKED TO PRORATE
Though Huttenlocher’s agency now did all the worii in connection with the insurance coverage, he was asked to prorate the premiums.
w	★	★
The county’s) list Of those sharing In the premiums includes:	I	\
•	Seed-Robers Agency I™-. 480 Pierce, Birmingham. \
•	Farmihgton Insurance Agency, 33215 Grand River, Farmington.
•	Kenn Loomis Insurance,. 23280 Farmington, Farmington.
•	Thatcher-Patterson Inc., 711 Ck>m-munify National Bank Building, Pontiac.
The last firm shares in both the institutional policy and the Oakland-Orion Airport coverage, according to in-fornnatim supplied the county by Huttenlocher.
’The assuined-ni^es division of the
County Clerk’s office reveals ownership of the companies to be as follows:
•	Seed-Roberts, a Michigan corporation: Andrew W. Seed and William E. Roberts.
•	Farmington, a partnership:, John M. Clappison, William J. Conroy, Frank D. Clappison and Robert B. Clappison.
•	Loomis, asumed name: Kenneth Jr., Loomis.
•’Ibatcher-Patterson, a Michigan corporation: Carleton C. Patterson Jr., resident agent; Carleton C. Patterson Sr., incm-porator. Both men are listed as members of the board of directors along with Marion Patterson.
PREMIUM IS UP
The total premium for the county’s institutional policy, which two weeks ago was $41,681, is now $42^, diie to added coverage for addttioiul\buildiiig8, dounty recon^ show. F6r Oakland-Oriim AJrpwt the premium is $218.	\
*	* : W
Huttenlocher, throu^ his firm of Hut-tenlochers Kern Norvell Inc.l 1007 W. Huron, Waterford Township, handles about a quarter of the county’s Insurance program, but not the life, fleet or workmen’s compensation policies. ^
★	* it ,
The premiums on policies bandied by his firm, including the Institutional policy and the airport polk^, amount to $69,778.
M	I'-.:
Other major policies covering the county’s property and its employes include fleet insurance at an annual cost of $29,750 and workmen’s compensation for $105,133, toe total premium cost during 1969. ’Diese policies are handled by Michigan Mutual Liability Co.
NO COMPENSA’nON BID
Michigan Mutual bids for the fleet insurance. But, emtrary to a previous report in ’The Pontiac Press, toe county does not bid workmen’s compiensatlon.
it it it
The latter is a standard policy, carrying standard specifications and standard rates imposed by the state. County auditors say it has been let to Michigan Mutual Liability Co. tar some years on toe basis of performance.
' I hi it 'Wi ■
Life Insurance on douidy employ^ ia another major item, ^ ybar costo^ an \ estimated $95,074 in pnmiiums and handled by John D. MilUs Agency of 43tii N. Saginaw, Pontiac. Millis has hmdled the p^cy since the early 1950*s when it was initiated, county employes recall.
★ ' ★ w
’The #y other agency handling county insurance through the board «f auditors
is Hentjutead Barrett & Assoc, of 185 EUzabeto Lake. The county payi thia firm an anual premium ^ $|,93S to provide marine insurance foT the aherr iffs water safety division.

ifid Pupils Are Stranded in Rochester
MEETS GOVERNOR—Six-year-old Will Allen Caldwell receives a picture-book of Michigan from Gov. William G. Milliken yesterday in Lansing. Will, who has bone cancer which already has resulted in the loss of one leg, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Caldwell of Detroit.
Brave Boy Gets Wish to Meet Gov. Milliken
LANSING — Six-year-old Will Allen Caldwell, who has cancer, wanted to meet Gov. William Milliken.
In the governor’s executive office yesterday, he did.
★	★	★
“You have a nice, firm handshake,’’ Milliken told Will, who hobbled in on crutches. Bone cancer has forced amputation of the boy’s right leg.
Will saw the governor, during a Milliken tour a few months ago and apparently took a liking to him.
INGOODHEAL’TH
The boy was in Kood health then.
. . . .But in September he fell off his bicycle and bruised his leg. Three days later he was hospitalized with a fever, and bone cancer was discovered in the injured leg. Doctors said it probably had been triggered by the bruise.
★	★	★
Will’s father, Herbert, said, “The hardest thing I ever had to do was to tell that little boy they were going to take off his leg. He was so brave, it broke my heart. He didn’t shed a tear, but I did.’’ Caldwell is a foreman at a Ford Motor Co. plant.
“Doctors told me there is no cure for bone cancer,” Caldwell said. “They said maybe five victims out of a thousand live for a couple of years after it is detected. The rest seldom survive more than a few months.”
ODDS AGAINST BOY
The boy’s own doctor said Will might survive but that the odds were long against it.
Will’s friends have showered him with advance Christmas presents. His mother and father are holding theirs for Dec. 25.
★	★	*
When Will asked his father to take him to see the governor, Caldwell telephoned Milliken and told him the circumstances. Milliken agreed to lay on the red carpet for a visit.
“It was the least I could do,” said Milliken.
BOOK ON HISTORY
The governor gave Will a book on Michigan history inscribed, “To my friend. Will Caldwell, with every warm wish for the future.”
Milliken said he hoped Will would be able to read and enjoy It.
★	★	★
“I hope so, too,” the youngster said softly.
ii:
liiE m PACES
Someone Tattled on Bus Drivers
By TIM McNULTY
Rochester — Embarrassment can hardly describe the feeling after you’ve made 400 hungry, but singing, children wait over an hour while you get ticketed by the police.
Seven red-faced North Hill Elementary. School bus drivers sat through a ticket line ..last Wednesday as the entire student body waited a block away in the school gym.
★ ★
The Oakland County Sheriff’s Department received a number of calls from residents at the Tienken and Courtland Road intersection that cars and buses were disregarding a sign indicating that no right turn was allowed onto Courtland.
Two sheriff’s deputies staked out the corner on Tuesday, but there were no buses in sight. The school had called a conference day.
MORE SUCCESSFUL
Wednesday the deputies were a little more successful: After nabbing 10 workers
from the National Twist Drill Co., they saw the caravan of buses make the Illegal turn. Within minutes all 18 vehicles were lined up waiting for their lecture and violation card.
Meanwhile, teachers were trying to entertain the children as the after-school minutes ticked away. Some members of the school band played their instruments and the others sang.
“We did everything we could think of,” said Principal Murel Bartley. “Wheli we knew the ticketing would take some time, we started our ‘fan-out system.’” The system has parents calling other parents to keep them Informed.
It looks like the problem is in hand now. The turn sign was mistakenly left up after a stop light was placed a block east of the intersection a week before.
Judge Robert L. Shipper of the 52nd District Court, Rochester, dismissed all the tickets.
However, the children remember why they missed their afternoon peanut butter sandwiches, and It’s almost certain the drivers will be reminded — at least 400 times
THE PRESS
hff/l/m
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMHEH 12, 1969
A—3
Parking Strip in Park Studied by Oxford
OXFORD - A bid by a group of businessmen to gain a slice of a downtown public park for parking was referred for study to the planning commission by Village Council last night.
The group wants a strip 22 feet wide along the left side and across the back of the park — which is nearly 120 feet square — as parking space for 19 cars.
* ★ ★
“Those (businessmen) I talked to were for it,” said Bill McDaniel, owner of the Parkside Restaurant, which borders the north side of the park. He presented a petition, containing signatures of 49 area business leaders, urging use of the area for parking.
“Certainly it’s not the answer to the parking problem, but it’s a start,” said McDaniel.
PROPOSAL QUESTIONED
Councilman Robert E. Tripp questioited the move. “I’ve talked to a number of people and they are not all for It,” said Tripp. ‘Of Course, those I talked to were not businessmen.
“And who’d pay for it?” asked Tripp.
“I don’t care who pays for it,” said
McDaniels; “I will .. .the merchants will if they have to.”
* * *
Village Manager Don S c r i p t$ r estimated cost of the project at just oVer $7,000. It was pointed out the village’s master plan calls for retention of the area as a park.
“If it's changed Jrou’ll have a lot of unhappy people,” Tripp said to McDaniels.
BUSINESS LOSS PREDICTED
“You’re going to lose a lot of business if you dqn’t do something,” said Mc^niels. “I don’t want to see the downtown die.”
McDaniels questioned value of the area as a park, vr isn’t safe,” he said. “No decent or reputable person will sit in the park. And we don’t have a big enough police force to keep a man there all the time.”
★ * ★
Scripter said procedure was for Council to refer the proposal to the planning commission. After study, that body would return it to Council for further action.
Proud Lake Naturalist Honored
WHITE lake TOWNSHIP - A naturalist. Hartley C. Thornton, biology instructor at Proud Lake Recreation Area, has been formally honored for outstanding services in the field of outdoor education by the State House of Representatives.
He was also named Michigan’s Conservation Educator of the Year by the Michigan United Conservation Clubs with the Sears Roebuck Foundation.
Thornton presents more than 300 programs annually to some 26,000 people and conducts evening programs, guided hikes and auto tours.
During his 35 years in the field, he helped .establish a nature showplace at Boys Republic and was the first naturalist to join the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.
PantiK Prtu Pinto by Bdword R. NoMo
Fenton Youth Killed
FENTON (UPI)-Michael A. Acheson, 19, of rural eFnton died, late yesterday when the car he was riding in went out of control on a curve and slammed into a tree in Argentine Township west of here.
FALL IS WANING—Fallen leaves, a few lingering mementoes of late autumn, rest on the waters of an Oakland County pond. The bare limbs of the reflected trees are a grim reminder that winter is on the way.
Switchman Is Killed in Rail Yard Mishap
DETROIT (AP) A 51-year-old switchman for the Norfolk & Western Railroad was killed today when he was caught between two cars at the firm’s yards in Detroit.
Police said Ralph Parker of Lexington Heights was dead on arrival at a local
hospital. Officials said Parker was han^ng onto the side of a car being pulled by a slow-moxdng en g i n e. Authorities said the train pulled alongside an extra-wide car on an adjacent track and Parker was caught between the two.
Wixom City Hall Is Battleground in Storm-Drain Fight
By LOIS FRIEDLAND WIXOM — Confusion, stemming from real concern, politics-and stubbornness are straining the political fabric here. Reactions to a storm drain going in
near a subdivision beach on Loon Lake
—	which some say could pollute the lake
—	have polarized conflicting emotions in some citizens and the mayor, turning city hall into a bitter battleground.
ews Analysis
MAYOR WESLEY McATEE In Middle of Jpreln Controversj^,
The dispute, whether to installing a 36-inch storm drain to serve the Birch Park subdivision has brought dozens of ordinairly passive residents to council meetings usually, attended by few.
Construction was halted last month after several subdivision residents raised questions to the council and the Oakland County Health Department about the possibility of pollution.
WORK ORDERED STOPPED
The council ordered work on the $125,000 project stopped pending a hearing before state officials on the question of pollution. Included In that cost figure was the paving of several streets in the subdivision. Work has been halted.
Nothing whs resolvOd at the Lansing hearing two weeks	ago	according	to
itomclals.	\	'
^ u \	V	V	"
Leading opponents; of the sti^rpn drain — who attended the Lansing hearing — plan to attend tonight’s council meeting where Mayor Wesley McAtee will present recommendations	^	listed	by
the County Health Department for policing the drain -rilto the council fpr pd88lble_,^tidn.A 1: ■ . /	,U/
The County Health Department approved a report by the city engineer which reads, “If tests of waters at the beach area are unsatisfactory the city will relocate the outlet further frpm the
mos^i
beach “or do whatever else is practical — physically and financially — to relieve the problem.”
The anti-storm drain faction is split.
The most reasonable group — and apparently the largest — merely wants construction stopped until proper tests and investigations can be made to better determine it the drain would speed pollution of the lake.
“We didn’t say to stop the drain sewers — just to make the tests first,” explained Mrs. Richard Hall, a petite redhead, who is confronting city hall for the first time.
A two-year subdivision resident. Mrs. Hall went to her first meeting add met the mayor for the first time when the problem arose.
A definite leader of those wanting tests taken, the housewife commented, “I can’t see why the Mayor is so agaipst making tests. I feel that he has a closed mind.” * ,
\ She contended, “It{h not just a few of hs t- but the majw'Ry of people Y’y® talked to who say they definitely want paving. 1 just don't think the council or people have ever spoken out before.”
Another housewife, Mrs. Lois Kent of 2809 Maganzer, added, “I think everybody favors paving but all do not want to pollute the lake. But^ew of us have information on It. Why shouldn’t they look for a little information from the department of conservation and others.
“They should take time to see how much accelerated weed growth is caused
by putting storm drains in through studies others have made.”
These women are now busy checking various health departments and colleges to find out what studies have beien made.
Others opposing the mayor have lived in the area a long time and fought against him in other areas'. Many of the people who fought against installing
Troy Revamps Sewer-Payment Fee Deadlines
TROY — Though no starting date has been announced, a recently revised sewer ordinance eventually will alleviate some anxiety among senior citizens.
The revision, which will replace 10-year special assessment financing, provides that any resident whos^ home was built befor^ the sew^r line can tap Intb the sewer arid ^tend his payments for the servii^e up to 40 ye^rs at 6 per cent interest.
it * . , *
Payments are not required until the homeowner taps into the sewer, and he must tap in within six months after the line is laid in front of his home. / / /
“Before this revision,’* sajd4ctln“g City Manhger Kenneth Courtney, “many of the older people who owned more than one lot were forced to sell part of their property to meet the front-footage
sanitary sewers some five years ago are also protesting today.
The more extreme view is being taken by Lew Coy of 2942 Loon Drive. Coy said he’ll urge the council tonight to drop all plans for the storm drain. An Oakland County supervisor of the 27th District, Coy claims that state legislation rs also needed.
“The outlook is bleak,” said Coy. “Loon Lake and all of Oakland County’,s lakes will suffer the same fate as the passenger pigeon and the whooping crane, unless we get legislation. While our lakes become mud holes our local officials continue to Oquate progress with unmanaged growth,” he said.
NOT ENOUGH’
At the Lansing hearing. Coy indicated that agreements by city officials to take regular tests and to take responsibility for any needed corrections were not enough.
Mayor McAtee a determined man — is receiving the brunt of the attack because of his statements that the city 1 has done yvhat can be done.
1 '	* it *
“The city is well aware that pollution can be caused and certainlyvdoesn’t want to do anything that could cau^se pollu^ tlon,” he noted.
He has assumed residents that tests will be taken frequently and' any needed corrections made. When pressed for placement of ,sedlment traps and ponds by the dram urged >s “pojlutiOn preventers,” he Insisted that whaL needs to be done will be done.
FOUGHT FOR SYSTEM
McAtee has done much for the city. He fought for a sanitary sewer system
which is just now going into effect. He also helped obtain money for a preliminary urban renewal study with option for another million dollars to do the actual rebuilding.
He rips into Coy and others for going first to the county health department and then coming to him and the council to discuss the problems.
* * *
He noted that these dissenters are so busy all the time but when the council had a civil defense organizational meeting — organized by one of those apparently fighting the storm drain — not one person showed up.
McAtee also mentioned that many of these same people fought against creating a city park on Loon Lake because they apparently wanted to keep it private.
FIGHTING EVERYTHING
One member of city hall commented, “These people seem to be fighting everything. Seems like whatever is new or different as a project — they are against it. They are very\ active. If they Wuld only use their energy for something constructive . . . I’m aure we could get something done.”
Sp^picioW of politicking by some drain opponents has also passed through city hall minds who noted that an election is being held in the spring.
★ ■ ★ w
jPollution is a muddy gray shbject, ^ city/ residents^ want black rind wnne answers. No one — state health oWlcials included — will commit themselves with a definite answer beyond, “With proper precautions ... Ih might not occur.. so fear persls|s.
THE PONTIAC PRESS. AVEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1969
Vet$ Day Crowds Hit War Protesters
mi oyffl PAGB
i
A BATTLE WON — Actress Mercedes McCambridge, triumphant in a battle against alcoholism, talks at her West-wood, Calif., apartment about many warm messages she has received since she testified before a U.S. Senate sub-conunittee recently.
Her Real-Life Role: Win Over Alcoholism
FLAG WAVED-^. Milton Patrick (above), national American Legion commander, waves during the Veterans Day parade yesterday in Minneapolis. Patrick, from Ski-atook, Okla., viewed the parade after a meeting of the national executive committee of the American Legion earlier in the day. The legion celebrated the anniversary of its first national convention which took place in Minneapolis 50 years ago.
Hundreds of Veteran’s Day ceremonies, many aimed at giving President Nixon’s “silent majority’’ a chance of piping up, drew thousands of (lag-waving citixens in cities and hamlets across America.
Some of the larger crowds— estimated by police at more than 10,000 each—were in Washington, Boston and Tallahassee, Fla.
(jov. Frands W. Sargent—declaring, “Veterans are being produced the hard way in Vietnam at this very mo-
ment’’—led 11,000 marchers In Boston. The Tallahaissee parade featured traditional floats and civic displays.
In the nation’s capital, organizers of the Veterans Day Freedom Rally at the Washington Monument could claim success as the estimated turnout on a coo] but clear autumn day matched their predictions. NEATLY DRESSED
The white neatly gathering in Washington applauded and shouted approval during the 2V5 hours as speaker after speaker attacked
HOLLYWOOD A{P) - Actress Mercedes McCambridge once won an Oscar, but she said her biggest prize in life was her triumph over alcoholism.
She likes to talk about It; wants to bring it out in the open. ★ * *
“The way we treat the whole problem is barbaric,” she told an interviewer Tuesday.
“I knew a woman, heiress to a fabulous fortune, who died in a comer suite of one of our best hospitals. She died of alcoholism and malnutrition after her family-in iporance-overprotected her.”
ANOTHER NAME FOR IT Nice people dwi’t die of booze, said the 51-year-old character actress, “so it’s called thing dsS.”
Miss McCambridge, who won her Academy Award in 1950 for her role in “All the King’s Men,” said her life with the bottle was “a kind of hell.”
' She blames basic insecurity for getting her started.
AS WIraphoto
20 POUNDS LATER-2-Ex-Marine Thomas Deary (right), unable to button his old uniform, gives a thumbs-up to marchers in a Veterans Day parade in Pittsburgh yesterday. Deary, 35 and admittedly 20 pounds over his active duty days, and his son Timmy, 4, joined thousands of Americans across the countiy in similar observances.
leaders of the war protest movement. '
They heard Rep. Donald Luk-CHS, R-Ohio, call th'e war protesters “Spockettes” after the well-known baby doctor and outspoken war critic, Benjamin Spock.
* *■ *
“They’ve had their day, they’re beginning to make daddy and big brother mad,” Luk-ens said.
They cheered agreement when Ed Butler, 34, who calls himself a “conflict manager,” said of Saturday’s war protest march; “Parading with these people is like marching with the Mafia for better law enforcement.”
Sen. John Tower, R-Tex., said today’s soldier “fights with and intelligence ... he is puzzled by the attitude of some people in public life who ought to know better.”
The senator said he had seen Americans in Vletnain fidd hospitals, “the life ebbing from their bodies.”
★ * ★
“I want to see the war end,’ Tower said, “I want to see this is the last war we have fight.”
At one point a man shouted “We want Spiro,” and the signs said “Judas William Fool-bright,” “America, love it, or-leave it,” “We stand for Nfat-on” and “Dr. Spock has colic.” COUNTERPROTEST
Some 35,(K)0 were on the same ground Oct. 15 for mi speeches and the beginning of a candlelight march the night of the Vietnam Day Moratorium. i^And it was as an answer to this war protest and others that the “freedom rally” Tuesday was declared to make something extra of the Veterans Day observance.
Long-haired young people and tlie freedcHh ralliers occasionally joined in argument on Vietnam—maybe a dozen small clusters in the mass for the day.
“I always compared my worst qualities to everyone else’s best qualities,” she said.
“I knew there was a rat race going on inside of me, but I thought everyone else had it made.
Now, of course, I know that everybody has problems.”
She said some of her film roles were destructive, too.
“I played the worst harridans, the most hard-bitten women, the absolute heavies, and it justl -about did me in.”	I
Now she spends much of her time on college campuses, starring in otherwise all-student productions.
People have helped her greatly, she said. She described as ‘fantastic” some of the letters she received since she told of her affliction last September before a U.S. Senate subcommittee hearing on drug and alcohol abuse.
Chie came from 79-year-old Rose Kennedy, mother of the late president.
“Have fun, say a few prayers, be determined to know not age or weariness or defeat,” Mrs. Kennedy wrote.
Miss McCambridge also cherishes her friendship with the late Adlai Stevenson, who gave her Sir Malcolm-a West High-
FEDERAL DAYS SALE
THRIg>IN-ONt
land terrier who is her constant companion.
A source of pride is her son, John Lawrence Markle, 27, who is studying for a doctorate at the University of California at I Los Angeles.
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NO TALON FOR DHIECTIONS - Richard Spevak of Chicago’s Broc&field Zoo keeps a safe distance from the talons of a rare golden eagle whidi was captured near Mes-' senger Woods Forest Preserve in Illinois. Two men had captured it when it landed near their rid^g stables, af^ar-eatly exhausted by hunger and a long ^ht. Spevak said the young male hqd apparently glided 600 to 1,000 miles off course. Such eligles are rarely seen east of the Mississippi, 'beialf '	'
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V
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1969
letcong s Tet Victims Still Being Identified
Le XA TAY, Vtatnam(AP) ^ Under a gnarled tree Mrs. Pnah Thl Dan wept quietly for her
Occasionally her hand caressed the green plastic sheet, tied with nylon cord, containing his remaine-a few bones, remnants of his clothing and a skull with two prominent gold teeth still intact.
•k it h
•’The Viet Cong? We are of the same race, we have the same hair, we speak the same language,” said Mrs-“But
they are without family, wiUuHit country, without religion. Ahd now we know that they are without humanity."
It was a statement without rancor, even without much outward emotion. Mrs. Dan, a 4S-year-old teacher, had known for 21 months that her husband almost certainly was dead, one of more than 3,000 killed by Viet-cong assassination squads during the 1968 Tet battle for Hue. HER 14th VISIT '
This week, for the 14th time, fhe visited a place where grimy
workmen laboriously exhumed the bodies, and young volunteers meticulously sifted the remains for Information that rnlimt help Identity the victims.
Mrs. Dan was one ot perhaps 100 women from Phu Vang district, Just southeast of Hue, who have waited and watched for months as bodies were uncovered in places to which the Viet> cong marched their vict then killed them' with bullets and clubs or buried them alive. ■k k k
She became something of an
expert on the identification of long-burled bodies.
"You can tell the old women by their teeth and the young ones by their long hair,” she explained.
MEN ARE HARDER
In the case of men—and the overwhelming number of victims were men—it Is harder.
Sometimes an identification card, a cigarette lighter some other article bearing
More often, the only hope Is al work, th^ shreds of clothing or lust the intuition of a wife
A total of 104 more bodies have been found in several gravesltes within the past week.
The bodies are loaded aboard a motor sampan and taken two miles to Phu Thu district head quarters, they are laid out on the ground, and the list of available clues to the identity of each numbered cadaver is read over a loudspeaker.
Scores of persons, mostly women of Phu Vang, pi around the plastic-sheeted bodies and poke through the bones and colthes In hopes of finding evidence of their missing men. Few succeed.
Giving Increased
Between 1962 and 1968, memorial giving to the American Cancer Society increased from 62.8 million to 66-5 mil lion.
Priest Girds for War on Segregated Cemetery
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP)-A white priest says, “I will ask every black soldier to refuse to go Into combat, refusing to risk his life for his country, until the President can promise that any American can be burled in the cemetery he chooses."
The Rev. Eugene Farrell spoke at an hour long prayer vigil Tuesday at the gates of Elmwood Cemetery, which had refused a burial plot for a black
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Conducts Sessions at Prison Camp
Judge Tries to Help Convicts
ANN ARBOR (AP) - The average American family actually earns about $4,000 a year more its breadwinners believe Trouble is — it’s in non-money explains a University of Michigan economist.
Housewives provide most of this added non-money Income, says economic researcher Ismail Abdel-Hamin Sirageldin. gg-year-old jurist drives “Do-lt-y ourself” activities 15 n,iies each Saturday and Sun-around the home account for jgy morning from Visalia to much of the rest.	[carry out what he calls "my lit-
The $4,000 also includes the tie mission in life.^’
Vietnam war veteran, Pfc. Bill Terry of Birmingham.
* * *
Terry, 20, was killed last summer. His mother and widow filed a federal court suit July 25 in an effort to force cemetery officials to cease “mal a policy of discrimination against Negroes.” The suit has not been heard.
An Elmwood spokesman, H.
W. Miller, said the cemetery had clauses in many of its lot deeds which restrict burial prlv-leges. Because of the clauses, he said, Elmwood could not le-Rolly deviate from its policy.
NEAR HIS HOME
Terry’s mother can see the c^etery from the porch of her home, where Terrji|grew up.
Fat|ier Farrell, pastor of Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church, and five other churchmen—most of them Negroes— led the group to the cemetery from a nearby church. They i-ead the Bible and led singing.
Said Father Farrell;
“Until discrimination ha
been abolished in all cemeter- mi.sleading to compare one ies, Bill Terry’s death was in country’s gross national produc-va:n ’’	jtiori figures with those of an-
MC836aes Nov. 12	other nation,
WOODLAKE, Calif. (AP) -Each weekend Judge John R. Locke goes to the Tulare County Industrial Road prison camp to help rehabilitiate the inmates.
He sentenced most of them himself.
Now he hopes to reshape their social attitudes so that they will not face him again in the Superior Court at Visalia.
Against Himself” by psychiatrist Karl Menninger and “Art of Loving” by Eric Fromm. STUDY OF AFFECTION
The latter is a psychological study of affection and its rewards.
The judge says his tape recordings are designed to “stir the inmate’s thinidng about his life.”
Another of his "mind grabbers” is a mock trial in which he is prosecuted by an inmate with six other inmates as ju-
value of time spent on volunteer work or educational activities, the rental value of owned homes and the value of transportation provided by the family car.
In Ids recently published article, "Non-Maricet ComponenU of National Income,” Srageldin noted that various countries have different proportions of market and non-market production
Such discrepancies make it
Locke mingles with the men, answers their questions, plays inspirational tape recordings

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“He learns to face life with courage and love—and his hate melts away.”
Merlin D. Winter, veteran probation officer, says the judge has “a real interest in people I’m sure he’s done a lot of good.”
Dist. Atty. Robert C. Bereman isn’t so sure.
“We’re having repeaters and, while I don’t mean to say there is any connection with his program, we’re also having more escapes,” Bereman said.
Phil Flores, camp supervisor
rors.	I Says the only thing wrong with
“As I defend myself, the in-, the program is that “There mate—with the aid of his peers aren’t more pe(q>le involved in —gains a new insight into him-it.” and encourages-the prisoners tql self and his problems,” Locke Of the camp’s 140 prisoners, read such books as “Mam says.	'68 are participating.
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Breakfast Show Glitters
With Pre-Holiday Fashions
By JEANNE NELSON
shimmering satins and colorful brocades
Spark lip your breakfast with glittering holiday after-dark ffishions, read the invitation from Hudson’s at The Pontiac Mall. Nothing lacked luster Tuesday as
approached the runway.
Frosted peach, the color hit of the morning show, was seen in everything from satin to wool.
The rich brocades carried it in a variety of combinations. India ink black, an understatement in elegance, was relieved with dramatic touches of white in long gowns and smashing evening jumpsuits as well.
The Patou pearls were everywhere. Most reached to hems teamed with a combination of graduated lengths. Soft grey ones with darker grey and jet black strands left no doubt about THE jewelry look of 1969 holidays.
It was fabric and detail rather than style that caught my eye. In fact, most of the short fashions were one version or another of our favorite shirtdress. But the rich satins and tissue thin silks changed them instantly into glamourous things.
FESTIVE AIR
Shoes, hose and bags (tiny ones with rhinestone or pearl shoulder straps) all matched the festive air. Heels lost their clunkie appearance for evening to become more graceful with beaded and buckled throat bows.
Crepe, softly draped or pleated in moving folds, was another favorite of this collection. Few daring decolletes entered the scene and of these, most were modest V’s, more often than not banded in beads and rhinestones.
★	★ -k
Long, fitted sleeves pr altogether sleeveless seemed the rul* ftr both IN long and short evening firocks.
Drama begins with black and white when satin and chiffon keep Peach sherbet in satin and brocade takes the soft line with front line is perfect for those lonij^jet pearls that hang to the middle of	pledt. Gold shoes and hose carry out the Midas touch of the
company in a glamorous pants ensemble for evening. The satin neck-
layered (^iffon pants.
rich fabric. Shrug off cropped vest for another festive look.
Free-Loaders Should Take You for Lunch
Detailing included wide. Obi sashes, sometimes fringed, rolled satin hem and sleeve bindings, sequined OT tayittd waist and Empire definers and beadied bands at hems and necklines.
MMIk Prau e.lwtw by Edward R. NoMt
White sheared rabbit detailed elegantly loith rhinestone buttons will add a dramatic touch to any after-dark gown during the- holiday party rounds. All fashions from Hudson’s at The Pontiac Mall.
Short after-dark numbers remain in the mini category while longer ones leave the ankle length of last year to sweep the floor.
Short vests and longer, open tunics cut their way into a nighttime glamour look as they add a touch of color and sparkle to cover an otherwise simple sheath.
By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The EmUy Post Institute Wta. Post: I would Me to know what Services and obligations the owner of a private auto owes to her guests in the car. I am 75 years old, in good health. Frequently I take other ladies for a lOO-mile ride. Am I expected to treat them to a luncheon or snacks on the road? All expenses of the car are paid by me.
lAAate Rings Alarm When ife Does Boss a Favor
Federal Official Says, 'No'
Credit Code Means Trouble
LANSING -(AP)— A high Commerce DOpartment official, a banker and a former Federal Trade Commission at-
Gina Lollobrigida Tells Plans for Coming Vows to Realtor, Businessman
ROME (JB — Italian actress Gina Lollobrigida said today she would marry New York real estate man George S. Kaufman “as soon as possible.’’
“We wanted to kfeep it a secret,” the brown-haired, 41-year-old actress said. “But now that the word has leaked out on our romance, we might as well bring it out in the open.”
Miss Lollobrigida made the announcement at an airport news conference before flying to New York with Kaufman.
hope we will be able to marry in the States,” said Kaufman, a tall, darkhaired man who looks younger than his 40 years.
tomey have joined in urging Michigan not to adopt a proposed uniform consumer credit code.
It is hard enough now for shoppers to find the best product for the money, the three said, without having to judge virtually unlimited interest rates and financing schemes that would be allowed under the proposed code.
■k It k
Maurice Schoenberger, deputy director of the State Commerce Department, said Monday the proposed code would allow virtually uncontrolled retail credit lending at rates of 10 to 18 per cent. It would replace several clearly and simply written laws with a single, vastly complicated and confusing statute, Schoenberger added.
A House committee, chaired by Rep. Marvin Stempien, D-Livonia, is conducting hearings on the wide-ranging bill to supplement the recently enacted federal “Truth In Lending” act.
The model code was drafted by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws. So far, it has been adopted only by Utah and Oklahoma.
Am I obligated to open doors, carry parcels, purchased on the trip? All these ladies are as physically able as I am. They never offer to compensate me in any way. I guess one would call them free-loaders.—Mrs. G.
Dear Mrs. G.: If I were you, I would stop inviting these particular “friends” on excursions. “Free-loaders” is just the term for them — they should be offering to take YOU to lunch rather than letting you pick up the tab. And as for treating you like a chauffeur or a porter — it is inexcusable.
All I can say is look for some new companions for your trips — and good luck!
QUESTIONS HONESTY
Dear Mrs. Post: In today’s paper there is a letter from “Dora” who wishes to resign from a bridge club. You tell her to be honest in her letter, then proceed to tell her to make two dishonest statements. You should be consistent.
First, she stated to you she did not enjoy playing bridge and second, she did not state that her husband prefers that she stay home. You suggested that she say she had enjoyed the bridge club association, and that she “use” her husband as an excuse for staying home.—Mrs. G. E.
By ABIGAIL VANBUREN
DEAR ABBY: I hjW# been married to Margie for seven jnohth^ and there is one thing we argue about constantly. Margie is the secretary for a bachelor, and he has asked her to telephone him every morning at 7 o’clock to wake him up! (He doesn’t trust an alarm clock.)
I say that my wife isn’t supposed to report for “work” until 8:30 a.m. and her employer has no right to expect her to call him at 7 a.m., as she is not “on duty” then.
Margie says she doesn’t mind calling him, and that I am making a big deal over nothing. I say, my wife belongs to me at seven in the morning and I don’t want her worrying about having to wake up her boss.
I would like your opinion. Also the opinion of your readers.
MARGIE’S IRATE HUSBAND
DEAR HUSBAND: I don’t see any harm in Margie’s calling her boss to wake him up, but if you do, then out of consideration for you, she should tell her boss to get somebody else to wake him up. (And by the way, it he doesn’t “trust” an alarm clock, how about a rooster?)
k k k
DEAR ABBY: 1 have read in your column many letters from the family of the bride resenting bitterly the family of the groom paying off their social obliga-
tiqns by inviting all their shirt-tail reiatilM. irlasdb. tMtfdmrs. and
bdsineilk actpdntniip. %
slhce it’s paid for by l^ilNNi||iarents.
I recently returned tront Ite orient where I attended a wedding, and was informed of their solutioii to the wedding guest problem. Each family invites as many guests as they wish and each family pays for his own guests. Clever?
A reader
DEAR READER: Very!
Maybe I’m a weirdn, but I’ll take the smell of tobacco, gaittc, or onions to some of those fancy exotic “fragrances” any day.
STINKY IN FORT WORTH
DEAR ABBY: People keep writing in to say they can’t stand the smell of tobacco, or garlic, or onions. Well, there are worse smells as far as I’m concerned.
I can’t stand closer than three feet from my mother-in-law without becoming nauseated because she uses a heavy gardenia perfume which practically knocks me out.
And those “air fresheners” that smell like pine and orange blossoms gag me.
It takes me a full hour of fresh air to get back to normal after dancing with one of my husband’s clients who uses a popular men’s fragrance that smells like jasmine!
I am about to give my favorite wrap to the Goodwill because my niece borrowed it and in spite of numerous airings I can still smell the perfume "she must have bathed in before wearing it.
DEAR ABBY: Of course that 54-year-old man should not (when he goes to St. Louis on frequent business trips) stay with the cute 24-year-old stewardess who’s married to his nephew who’s out of town a lot. That’s ridiculous! Can you send me her address?
MAN, AGE 27
Consumers Power to Head Fine Arts
Executive
Foundation
DEAR ABBY: Last Sunday, while driving on a well-traveled freeway on the outskirts of town, I noticed two cars ahead of me. One was a new convertible containing three young girls. The other was a sedan in which five young men were riding. These kids were “racing,” and passing each other at a high rate of speed, then slamming on the brakes and stopping abruptly in front of each other.
The girl was a very poor driver. She lost control of the car once, and went off the highway, but got back on again. The kids in both cars were laughing and shouting back and forth to each other.
Abby, a nightmarish accident involving not only these two cars, but others could have occurred easily. I wanted to sti^ and phone the highway patrol but my wife told me to mind my own business. What would you have done?
STILL SHAKING DEAR STILL: I would have told my wife that the safety of innocent motorists (and even the lives of those foolish kids) were indeed MY business, and I would have stopped and called this police.
“We don’t know the where and when, but we will announce it in New York,” he said.
Miss Lollobrigida said her lawyers were taking care of legal aspects of the wedding. She is technically still married In. Italy to Milko Skofic, a Yugoslav-born doctor and ^ublisher^
The code would substantially simplify state laws covering retail interest rates and persons who n;ay do business as money lenders.
, Tliey wbri legally separa^tpd fwp years
. V> ... '
While it would protect an employe from being fired for garnishment of his wages to settle a deM, the code would offer no restriction \on blank Contracts and it would not prote(;t a buyer against
Dear Mrs. E.: I am just as much in favor of “honesty” as you are. But there are times when a small “white lie” or exaggeration is not only harmless, but saves feelings and friendships. Dora said she did not like bridge — she did not say she did not like the girls, and it was not being dishonest to say that she enjoyed their company.
Nor was it far-fetched to assume that, since Dora looked forward to evenings at home with her husband, he felt the same way.
INTERRUPTER
Dear Mrs. Post: At a small dinner
The election of A. H. Aymond as chairman of the board of'the Michigan Fine Arts Foundation was announced today by C!lyde C. Bennett, Jr., president.
At the same time Bennett announced that Mrs. Edsel B. Ford has accepted the post of honorary chairman of the private foundation to promote the arts in Michigan.
Aymond is chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Consumers Power Company.
For Abby’s new booklet, “What Teen-Agers Want to Know,” send $1 to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, MiCh. 48056.
SkoQc obtained a divorce in 'Vienna, Austria, last March. It is not valid in Italy. ,
clauses in a contract requiring him^^to waive all fights agaih^ \jlle'gal
party, “A” had fhe floor and was reciting a\^ story. “B” y continued the interruption while
Kaufman said he was married once and the marriage ended in divorce three years ago. He has two daughters, aged 14 and 12.
★ * *
Miss Lollobrigida has one child by the Skaflc marriage, Milko Jr. He is now 12. TadMcally ki her custody, he is currently living in a boarding school in
repossession or collection procedures.
“People have a tough enough time shopping for products, let alone credit,” said George Platsis of the Michigan attorney general’s office. “They obviously don’t have any choice in credit. People don’t write their own contracts when they buy cars.”
Platsis, who for two years worked in the Federal Trade Commission, said the proposed bill “will hurry the day of collapse.” He predicted the bill would pave the way for home mortgage loans d 10 to 12 per cent interest.
interrupted and _ don while continued speakihg. “i” addressed “C” and “C” in turn wntinued the conversation with “P.” Meanwhile “A” is still speaking.
Would you outline to me the proper etiquette so far as “C” was concerned?—Fred
Dear F«d: “B” and “C” were both at fault. Obviously “B” was extremely rude to Interrupt and to contirtue talkitig AGAINST “A.” “C" should have recognized this and said to “B,” “I’m sorry. I’d like to hear the end of “A’s” story.”
A. H. AYMOND
His first official action as Foundation chairman wlil be to preside at a luncheon meeting to be hosted by Gov. William G. Milliken at Lansing Country ClubFric(ay.
About 70 Michigan business and civic leaders are expected at the session, where Gov. Milliken and Durward B. Varner, chairman of the Michigan State Council for the Arts, will outline programs designed to enrich the quality of life for both urban and rural residents of . Michigan.
enricEm^smt	\ \
Incorpbrated in 1967, vthe Fine Arts ' Foundation was organized V to enrich Michigan cultural life and to implement programs of the Arts Council, a state agency.
Mrs. Wl^am Milliken is chairman and Mrs. J. Li ifudson, Jr; Is co-chairtitan of ohe of the (Council’s current projects, a touring art exhibit tltl^ the Michigan Arts Train.
Through its projects, the Arts Cknmcll seeks to make available the best of the arts to the largest possible number of citizens, at prices they can afford.
Calendar
THURSDAY
Webford Clab, 12:30 p.m., Evadnk Street home of Mrs. Bart Palandio. Sewing of cancer pads.
Women’s Sddety of Bethany Baptist Chnrch, 12:30 p.m., in the church. Mrs. F. A. Shaw will be guest speaker.
Detroit Industrial Nurses’ Assodii^,\lnc., 6 p.m., Ralrigh House id Southfield. Earl J. Hm on “The Pursuit of Haiipiness.x'’ ^
Iota Eta Chapter, PI Omlcron, 8 p.m., Illinois Avenue home of Mrs. Joseph Chummings. Cosmetic demonstration.
Pine Lake Estates branch. Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association, home of Mrs. Bernard Bleiscti of Nbrmanwood Drive. Workshop on Thanksgiving and Christmas decorations with Mr8.WiUiamDrescber.

THE PONTIAC I’llESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1969
Th« following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Jtlday.
1 U.S. Airlines
Mart Advances Edge Declines Plan Merger
Northeast, Northwest Moke Tentative Pact
Produce
Prices on the New York Stock Exchange included;
NEW YORK — ( A P ) — |Investing 32, off V4; Benguetjmarket into the losing column,
Advancing issues edged ahead 16‘A, up Ralston Purina with the Dow Jones industrial I of declines early today, as the 26%, up %; and Ta 11 ey| average closing at 859.75, off stock market attempted to'Industries 39V4, up	3.30.
■reverse its downhill journey of	★	*	★	I Trading was the slowest In
Tuesday.	j Opening block trades;	over a month, mostly due to the' NEW YORK (AP) — North-
I The Dow Jones industriafi Xerox, 46,900 shares at 104V4, nonparticipation of banks and Airlines, the nation’s most •JH average at 10;30 a.m. flitted to off %; Standard Oil of New other businesses on Veterans	P'®"®
Jersey, 5,600 shares at Wk up Day — a holiday. V4; and Northwest Airlines 10,000 shares at 34%, off %.
Lack of any new Emtoh-
Musicaliments to stimulate investor City{interest helped push Tuesday’s
Other factors depressing the market was a streak of profit-taking left over from Monday’s
The New York Stock Exchange
to merge with ailing Northeast I Airlines, officials of both companies announced Tudesay.
Northeast stockholders would receive one share of Northwest stock for every five sares of Northeast they turn in under the tentative merger
_________ Buck, Vi bu.
Squaih, Acorn, bu. Squaih, Buttercup, bu. .Muath, Buttarnut, bu, . Squash, Dallcloui, bu. .. Squash, Hubbard, bu. . Turnips, Topped, bu. . .
LBTTUCa AND I
Cabbage, bu............
Collard, bu............
Kale, bu...............
Mustard, bu.............
Sorral, bu. ..........
Spinach, bu............
Swiss Chard, bu........
Turnips, bu. ..........
pPoultry and Eggs
DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP) — (USDA)-Prlces paid ptr pound (or Mo. I live poultry: Hens heavy type .W.32; roasters heavy type 25.37, broilers and whitars, whites ioili turkeys heavy type young hens 27-M.
DETROIT (AP) - (USDA)-Eoo prices paid per dozen, Monday by first redelverr (Including U.S.): Grade A jumbo 56-Sf. ■avtra large SS-5S; large 54-57; medium 50-52, small 34.
CHICAGO RUTm A ROOS .CHICAGO (AP) - (OSDA) - B
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Anacond 1.90 AnchHock .60 AncorpNSv i ArmcoSt 1.60 ArmstCk .60 AshldOII 1.20 All Richfid 2 Atlas Cham 1 Atlas Carp Avco CP 1.20 Avnat Inc .40 Avon Pd 1.80
BabekW 1.36 BaltGE 1.70
Mvestock
DITROIT LIVHTOCK |DETROjJ (AP) ~ (USDA)-Llvestock

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i600p ilaughtar idSe 26.00-29.00;
27*50-28W*^ I
^50-950 poundta
vfe’erhia'fe a.
42-U, choice, 38-42, good, 34-38.
--- ...-------- __ .
lambs, 28.00-^ awes, 4.00-
aughtar
staughti
50 to 75 higher, fairly active, shippers
;^5-2%^; ,Vo aWoV
-- 7.75, )
200-250 lbs 24.75-27.25, 1 . _______________
34.25-24.75 3-3 250-270 IbS 2S.75-24.25, I . — - - ....................................
active; 1-3 350-
!9!^'’ch0lce 250-1,200 lib yield grade 3 to •4 38.00-29.00, mixed good and ct~'~~ 27.50-28.00, good 24.50-27^^ Standard irlow good 25.00-24.50.
High choice and prime 200-1,023 tbs .slaughter heifers yield grade 3 anr ' 27.72, package 38.00, choice 025-1,000 yield grade 2 to 4 27.00-27.75, good choice 34.25-24.75, utility and commar cows 18.50-20.00; few high yielding utility 20.00-50.50, canners and cutters 17.00-
"5, utility and commercial bulls 22.50-

and commercial bulls !
slaughter lambs steady, irlma 107 lb woolad slaughi
choice and prime 107 lb woolad slaughter lambs 22.50, mixed good and choice 80-100 lbs 24.00.38.00; parf deck choice 23 lb shorn slaughter lambs with No I pelts 22.00._
American Stocks
Exchange selected noon prices: lalee

33% 33% 23%.-..-34% 34H 34% + 14 66 5H 5% 5% ...
7	21%	21%	21% -
16	32	31%	31%
^
76 14% 14% 14% ......
116	15%	15%	15«/4 ...
41	12%	12%	12% -	%
22	14%	14%	14% . .	..
354	19%	12	13% +1%
5	32%	»%	32% +	%
19	14%	14	14	-	%
30	25V4	24%	24% *
...... .'o.t-*’
DIversind .36 Dov^hm 2.60 brtssind 1.40 DukePw 1.40 duPont 3.750
(hds.> Nigfi Low Lost ——
19 75% 75% 75%
6 16% 16% . . .
26	71%	71	71%	+	%
4	17%	17%	17%
32 40% 40% 40% ......
44	20	19%	19%	—	%
40	27	27	27	+	%
3	16	16	16	-	%
1	40%	40%	'40%	+	%
4	23%	23%	23%	+	%
43	29%	29%	29%	..
4	34	33%	33%	-	%
6	26%	26%	26%	—	%
67	7^	74%	74%	%
4	21%	21%	21%	+	%
79	35%	35	35%	+	%
100	39	38%	38%	-
7	59%	59%	59%	%
2	47%	47%	47%	....,
2	27%	27%	27%	.
23	30%	30	30	—	V4
11	31%	31V4	31%	+	%
1	31%	31%	31Vg	....
12	67%	67%	67%	.
57	41%	41%	41%	-f	%
7	21%	21%	21%
3	33%	33%	33%	-	%
65	11%	11%	11%
28 3% 34% 34Va - % 14 12% 12% 12% - % 47 33% 33% 33% f % ‘ ‘ r -f %
Goodyoor .85 GroceCo 1.50 GranitoC StI Grantw 1.40 Gt A8.P 1.30 ^ .r Rv 3 . ist PInl GtWnUnIt .90 GroonGnt .96 Greyhound 1 GrummnCp 1 Gulf ON 1.50 GulfSUUt .96 GulfWIn .40a
9	34%	34%	34%
70	53%	53%	53%	-
26	30%	30%	30%	-
16	57	56%	57	+
13	47%	47%	47%	-f
34	31%	31	31%	+
23	45%	44%	45%	■¥ %
13 30
26 36% 36% 36% .
44 30% 30	30 •	-
58 101% 100% 101	- %
18 14 : : 13% 14 ,

gSlJIfin’fso
1 19% 19%
5	59% 59% 14 39% 39
6	54% 53% 176 16% 16%
16% -
BorgWar 1.25 BristMy 1.20 runswk .lOg jocyEr 1.20 Budd Co .80 BulovaW .60 Bunk Ramo Burlind 1.40 Bdtrghs .'60
Cal FinanI CampRL .45a
WlaV’Sd
CaroPLt 1.42 CarrlarCp .40
33% -HH
88 7»Vi 2*H T*H :
Msiivi
.216 33%
89 791 23 25 8 28^
6 73% 73% 73Va 21 19	19	19
1 21% 21% 21%
1 17% 17% 17%
♦11 39Va 39V» 39%
20 15% U% ^%
66 147	144% 144% -4%
15 34% 34% 34% - % 6	35%	35%	35%	- %
10	33%	33V4	33%
13	41	40%	40%
31	31%	30%	30%	•
15 45% 45% 45% -f- ’ 9 63% 63% 6^ + 1 27 43% 42% 42% -V 2 43% 43% 43% + » 13 27% 27% 27% + ^ 2 26% 26% 26% - 1
PI Stt .60 ht6 Ohio 4 ChlPheuT 2 ChrliCft .05d ^hrvsler 2 _iTFIn 1.80 citieaSvc 2 OarkEq 1.40 ClavEtlll 2.04 CocaCol 1.32 CoIgPal 1.20 CoiflnRad .80 Colointst 1.60 CBS 1.40b
»v’;S
ComwEd 2.20 Comsat ConEdls 1.80 ConFood 1.10 ConNatG 1.76 ConsPwr 1.80 ContAIrL .SO
Cont Oft 1.50
4	37'/i	37Vi	37'/i	-
8	VtVi	ItVk	ItVi	.
67	38'/s	38'/i	38V.	.
'i ....................
35% 35% - %
2	37
17	8?^	86'A	86W	- '/4
46	461*	46	46
18	56	56	56	.
2	42'/.	42'/*	42'/.
4	50</4	SO'*	50'/.
17	27Vi	27%	27Vi
11	23	22Vi	22Vi
15	42Vi	. 418b	42Vi
»	278*	27'/.	27'A	- Vi
12	44V.	449
26	26V*-Mi
8	36	348*	35	..
28	168i	16%	16%	..
16	75V4	7«i	75%^
10	47Vi	47%	47%	-f
iji 1U% in% - Vi i 268'w! 268% 268Vi + VJ
6 13V4 13V4 1X41--%
12 38% 33% 38% - % 5 14	■■
E—
8* 20'*
,,	,J86 448*	.
“Sialic
12 S'/. 28 28'/* — %
2 47V* 47% 47%+.% 17 28	28	28
—F—
*2 16	15% it
' iS i
*111
Stocks of Local Interest
&’il
lanliSyi'lnfirSSlw'l'prlcM In'ftrdSTar i	t	17 ii ?!*'•
.........!ft,nMini .11 43 18% H%
f4ji%r *4i
U t’7?S	!»■
IM Askid'aanMot
: ifi i?lOTi ...
28.4 27.0 San Tiro ft
11 •liM'iif?’
......	21.2 22A SaltvOII .3lg
• 19% 19% - 19% - %
miM
(hdi.) High Law Last Chg.	(hdi.) High Low Lai
90 30%. 30Va 30% Rohr Cp .60	3 28	27% 28
x24 30% 30% 30»,4 + %LRoyCCora .54	..........
a, .a.4. ,4,. ,4-a.	»RoyalDut 2d
RyderSys .50
Price-Pqy Squeeze Gets More Painful
Halllburt 1.05 larrls Int i aclaMng .70 larcin l.20g vPack .fo irnWal .62
4	32%	32
6	18%	18%	W/e +	V4
3	29%	29%	29% ....
76	»%	32%	32% ....
7	24%	24%	24%
42	22%	22%	22Va -	%
up 1.20 itka .40 Honaywl 1.20 hF l.ip -P
IdahoPw 1.60 Ideal Basic i III Cent 1.14 Imp Cp Am INA CP 1.40 IngerRand 2 Inland StI 2 IntertkSt 1.60
iSt“H.:v 1,81
IntAAIner .25p
6 59	59	59	+ %
1	76%	78%	76%
12 31% 31% 31% — % 16 35% 35% 35Va - % 41 101% 101	101% + %
3 27% 27% 27% + %
5	13	13	13
6	42%	42%	42%	+	%
^ 3 22% 22% 22% — % 14	20%	20%	20%	4-	%
16 149% 148% 148% 4* %
1	46	46	46
5 42% 42% 42% 4* % 10 30% 30% 30% 4- %
—I—
33% 33% 33% 4- Va
Safeway l.io SUosLd 1.80 SfLSanF 2.40 StRegisP 1.60 Sanders .30 SeFelnd 1.60
SanFeInt .30 Schenley 1.40
SbCLInd 2.20 SearIGD 1.30 SearsR 1.20a Shall ON 2.40
SignalCo SingerCo 2.40 Smrth KF 2 SCarEG 1.19 SouCalE 1.40 South Co 1.20
18 12% 12% 12% 4-6 34% 34Va 34Va — > 172 15V4 15% 15% — ’ 13 37% 37% 37% >- ' 6 42% 42% 42% — '
1.20 Pap 1.50 T8.T .95
JohnMan 1.20
6 30% 30% 30% 4- % 26 368% 367% 368	4-
9	27%	27%	27%	—	"
"	13%	13%	13%	—
42%	42	42%	-	.,
43%	43%	43%	+	%
StOillnd 2.30 StOIINJ 3.75g StdOtiOh 2.70 St Packaging StauffCh T.BO SterlDrug .75	x15 44%
226 42% 42	42% - %
46 43% 43% 43% ' ' 100 57% 57% 57%
7 33% 33	33*1
10 21% 2T% 21^
33 76	74% 76
4* % +1%
Joy Mfg 1.40
Kaiser Al 1 Kan GE 1.30 KanPwL 1.18 Kety Ind KayserRo .60 Kanneott 2.40 Karr Me 1.50 KimbClk 2.20 Komrs 1.60 Kreftco 1.70
1 51% 51% 51% •
11	34% 34	34% '
6 154% 154	154% + %
12	59% 58% 59	4- %
T

41 36
1	23%
2	22%
6	14	13% 13%	%
11	33%	33%	33%
13	45	45	45	.
7	100% 100% 100% -
7	79	78%	79	.
3	42%	42%	42%	+	'
45	39%	39%	39%	—	%
1.30
LoewsThe .13 LoneSCem 1 LoneSGa 1.12 LongIsLt 1.30 Lucky Str .60
x1	58Va	58%	58%	—	%
21	34%	34%	34%	4-	%
..	....	....	—
22 21% 21% 21%
3	46>/a	46%	46%	—
9	8%	8%	6% —
12	34%	34%	34%	--
5	34%	34%	34%	..
30	55%	55%	55%	- %
6	23%	23%	23%
73	38%	38	38%
17	26	26	26.
11	20%	20%	20%	~ %
4	24%	24%	24%	4-
28	30	30	30	»
Macke Co .30 Macy RH 1 Mad Fd 3.56g Magnvox 1.M Marathn 1.60 Marcor Inc 1
2	29%	29%	29%	♦.
49	10%	10%	10%	4-
5	15%	15%	15Va	...
—M—
2	20	20	20	- %
2 39
13 26% 26% 26%
‘2 42% 42% 42%
2	40% 40% 40%
!5 50% 50% 50%
I	41% 41% 41% ~ %
3	22% 22% 22% ......
II	30% 30% 30% 4- % 16 26% 26% 26%
24 27% 27% 27%
20 23% 23Vt 23%
5 70% 70	70%
43 108% 108% 106%
27%
27% •
MontDUf 1.61 MontPw 1.68
MtSt^f 1.24
TfST
NafLaad .85h Nat Steal 2.50 Nat Tea .80
neI!oI7^,
2 23% 23% 23% —
32	117% 117% 117% 4-13 20% -20% 20% 4-
33	52	51%	51%	— %
9,31%	31%	31%	— *
25	41%	41	41%	...
2	31% 31% 31% 4* %
2	28%	28%
28 144% 144% 144%
12	23	22% 22% ~ %
—N—
43	34%	34	34	—
27	49%	49%	49%	+
3	72%	72%	72%	-
46	148	147, 147%
21	20%	20	20
13	24%	24%	24%	+
20	22	21%	21%	..
11	26%	26%	26%	»
22	10%	10	10%	,.
21	29%	29	29	—
16	45%	44%	44%	—
5	13%	13%	13%	4- -
178 61% 60% 60% 4'2%
1	43%	43%	43%
11	32%	32	32
4	24%	24%	24%
100 27% 27% 27%
21	17%	17%	12%
9	87%	87%	87W
11	21%	21%	21%
47	$8%	56	58
36	27%	26%	26%	~ %
11	49%	49%	49%	..,
7	43%	43%	43%	4-
4	25%	25%	25%	...
8	39	38%	38%	—
299 36% 34% 36 f1
4	35	34%	35	4- %
7	48%	48%	48%	'
150 24% 24% 24% 4-78	24%	24%	24%	-
2	22%	22%	22%	+
1	19%	19%	19%	..
M	24	23%	23%	— '
12	21%	21Va	21%	,.
28	49	48%	49	4-
32	29%	28%	28%	-
19	35%	35Va	35%	—
8	26%	25%	25%	-
64	28	27%	27%
6	20%	20%	20%	- ’
PacTlif 1.^	21	20%	20%	20%
PanASUl .770	48	16%	16	16	4- ^
ParkaDavIs 1	20	36%	36%	36%	4*
PannCan 2.40 497	30%	29%	30
V.tt
NIagMP 1.10 NertolkWst 6 Norrislnd .80 NorAmPhll 1 NoAmRock 2
fc V“
NwstAIrl .45 Norton 1.50 NortSim i.aif
OccldntPot 1
Efll
• Otis Elev J Outbd Mer )


8SnM"l?c'% *ntvi 8c1a*^ ^ Itl 4lvi iSi* ijVi + >*
The plan is subject to approval of the Civil, Aeronautics Board and directors and stock holders of both airlines.
Northwest turned a profit of fall $50 million last year, while I Northeast compiled a $2.4-mil-lion deficit. Northeasts’ deficit
By JOHN CUNNIPP AP BuilneBB Analyit NEW YORK-Amerlcans have now received notice that they are entering what could be the really painful period of the Nixon administration’s attempt to put the economy back on a more stable, less Inflated footing.
The situation is this Evidence is accumulating that the rate of economic expansion is slowing, bringing with it more unemploy-| ment, less over-t i m e and in some busirtesses the postponement of pay raises. Little evidence has a c c u mutated, however, to in-
CUNNIFP dicate that prices are about to
for the first nine months of 1969
JJ M J7V. J7V*
)« 40	39'/2	39'/i
J5»* 55'/i S5'/l JB7* JB'/4 MV* 33V* 33V* 33'/* —
Stevensj 2.40 StudoWorth 1 Sun Oil 1b SurvyFd .80^
Tektronix Teledyne Tenneco 1.32 Texaco 1.60 TexETrn 1.4o TexGSul .60
TimkRB 1.80 TrnWAIr .50p Tranimr .50b
6 30'* 37V* 38V* + i/*|was rcportsd as $8.7 million. It *7 M7* MV* MV* i’V* has lost money in 13 of the last JT r* 2»,.-’‘il4years.
STORER BROADCASTING Donald W. Nyrop, ^rpsident of Northwest, and George B-^Stor-er, chairman of Northeast, an-, nounced the tentative agreement. Storer is also chairman of Storer Broadcasting Co., which owns about 86 per cent of the Northeast stock.
Northeast operates routes to Florida from New York, Boston and Philadelphia and short runs between New England cities. It recently opened a Miami-to-Los Angeles flight.
Northwest holds a number of important long-range routes, including links from the North-, west states to the East Coast ' and Midwest. It also flies to the Far East via Seattle and Alaska, shorter and cheaper-to-oper-ate than competing routes vis Hawaii, with the same fares as competitors.
Northwest stock dosed at 35 Tuesday on the New York Stock Exchange, while Northeast registered 13%,
*7	MV*	38'/.
33	33V*	33V*
I)	MV*	M'/*	M'/i	-	V*
31	38V*	38'/.	38V*	-I-	'/*
155	70V*	70'/*	70'/.	-	V*
43	53'/j	53'-*	53'/.	+	'/*
3	58	58	58	+	'*
4)	37'/*	38’/.	36V*
39	86%	85%	66%	+1%
161	47%	45%	46%	4-1%
2	26	26	26	4-	%
15	33%	33%	333/4	-	%
41	27%	27V»	27%	4-	%
96	47%	47	47%	-	%
66	36%	37%	36	%
6	47%	47	47	—	%
77	24%	24	24%	-f	%
34	45%	44%	45 '	4-	%
11	22%	22%	22%	-f	%
7	49%	48%	49%	4-	%
5	13%	13%	13%	—	V4
59	58%	57%	57%	—	%
32	51%	50%	51%	4-	V4
103	64%	64%	64%	+	V*
5 102% 102% 102% 4- %
2 45% 45%
13 52% 52	52% 4- 1
6	7%	7%	^ 7%
44	30%	30%	30%	—	’
22	30%	29%	29%	—1'
—T—
M	24	23%	24
50 66V 18	AVA.	....
35	26V«	26
66% 66 118 41% 40% 41%
"■ 26V«........
”7 25% 25% 25% 4- %
51 24% 24% 24%.......
52	125	122% 122% -1%
1	19%	19%	19%	%
9	30%	30%	30%	4-	V4
48	14%	13%	14
1	44%	44%	44
32	32%	32	32	—	%
■	29%	30%	4-	%
27%	27%	—	%
8% 8%
3	33%	33%	33%
-	—
20 —
31 30V4 666 26%
8% 8%
33% 33%
38% 38% 38% •
TwenCnt .50p	232^0'
UAL Inc 1	107 34% 33% 34%
Un Pac Cp 2 UnionPacIf 2 Uniroyal .70 UnitAIre 1.80* Unit Cp .70g USGypsm 3a US Indust .45 USPIyCh .64 US Smelt 1b US Steel 2.40
92	41%	41%	41V4
32	19%	18%	18% -
21	44%	43%	43% -	%
14	51%	51	51 Vi	-
19	44%	43%	44%
20	21%	21%	21%
91	48%	47%	47%
1	11%	11%	llVt
67% 68 61 28V4 28 2BV4 38 33% 33% 33% • 132 47% 46	47
37%
37% — ' 54% 4- ^
33 54% 54
—V—
52 3*'/. 34	34'i -I- '
Vendo CO .60	5 17'/i 17'/. 17'/. - V
VaEIPw 1.)2	30 35'/* 24V* 25 — '
_w—X—Y—Z—
WarLam	1.10	66	72	7)'*	72
W*«Wat	1.28	9	7VA	‘
3	25 14 42M 56 51% 51
25 63% 62% 62% - 3 84 43% 43% 43Va ' " 63% 63%
34% 34%
..	23%	23%	-
4	35%	35%	35%	-
Varian Aaso
WnBanc 1.: WnUTel 1.4( WestgEI I.e Weyerhsr .1 Whirl Cp l.f
21% 21 Va 21% 25	25	25	-
42% 42% 42% •
WinnDix 1.62 Woolwth 1.20
52	63%	63%	63%	-	'
3	34%	34%	34%	.	.
28	23%	23%	23%
4	35%	35%	35%	4-	’
35	40%	40>/^	40%	4-	'
________	559 105% KMVa 1p5	+ '
Zale Corp	.64	243	47%	47%	47%	—	’
ZenIthR	1.40	41	40%	40%	40V4	-	1
Copyrightad by The Associated Press 19<
Unless otherwise noted, rates of dividends In the foregoing table are annual disbursements based on the last quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special or extSB dividends or payments not.designated as regular are Identic following footnotes.
__________.
valua on ax-dIvIdend or ax-dlitrll date. g-Detlarad or paid ao far year. Ti-Declarad or Mid after dividenror «pllt up. k-Declarad or
m plu!
Paid thi* year, dividend omjttrt, Mferred or no action taken at last dividend maet-Ing. r-Dtclared or paid In plus stock dividend. t-Pald In stock during 1968, estimated cash valua on tx-dividand or ex-dlstrlbutlon date.
z-Salas In full.
cld-Callad. x-Ex dividend. v-Ex dand and salts In full. x-dls-Ex - -tion. xrr-Ex rights, xw-rants, ww—With warrants, tributtd. wl—When Issutd,
In bankruptcy
_____ reorganized u
Act, or securities In—Forel* equal Izetlon
recelv^shlp
„ __________________ by 1
penits. In—Foreign Issue subject ferest
Bmkruptcy
STOCK AVRRAORS ^ _ CetnplM by Tlw Asseclated^Pre In*. Rills Util..!
Mel change Nbon Tue. Prev. Day Week Ago AAonth Ago Year Ago 1969 High
443.6 154.0 445.5 154.1
iis-i 1H.8
Rails Gauge Profit Track Too Narrow
WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation’s railroads, seeking support for the third freight rate hike in three years, told the Interstate Commerce Commission today Inflation is cutting their profits to “the thinnest of margins.’’
Answering protests filed against the 6 per cent rate hike appeal filed Oct. 10, the Association of American Railroads said unless the request is granted “even the present minimal earnings will disappear.
★ *
“The gravity of the situation does not permit extended investigation and consequent delay " the association said in testimony prepared for ICC hearings.
’The 6 per cent across-the-board freight rate increase would raise an additional $6 million for railroads, the AAR said. At the same time, costs to the railroads have gone up $1 billion, it added.
Smaller rate increases were granted to railroads in 1967 and
The squeeze is on. While the ability to buy will tend to increase slowly, the rate of price increases is likely to continue strong for months to come The wholesale price index for October surged to 114 from 113.6 month earlier, indicating retail prices, which generally reflect wholesale price changes will be under strong pressure for several months.
PRICE RISES CONTINUE This is bad news indeed, for consumer prices already have been rising very sharply. In September, increases were at an annual rate of 6 per cent, and little evidence has been ported since to indicate that the rate is any lower now.
If the wholesale price index is an indication, there will be no appreciable dip in the rate of inflation this year. In fact, it may be well into next year before real declines begin to show, * ,★ ★
In part, the consumer is re-spcMisible for his plight. Fortified with good wages, some money in the bank and an access to credit that was unknown in any other inflationary period, he continues to demand gooOs and put upward pressure prices.
The consumer’s personality has also changed markedly
since World War II. Year by year he has tested his ability to handle credit. Tht absence of cash, he has learned, need not be a deterrent to fulfilling desires immediately.
NOW’ SPENDERS As some bankers have pointed out, this has led to the present now’’ generation, in which some funds that once would have gone into the bank to provide future security are, instead, spent immediately.
strong has been the spend Ing pressure by both consumers business that three widely respected economic authorities suggested this week a stronger leadership role for government ★ * «
The fact that all three were members of former Democratic economic teams may leave them subject to criticisms partisans, but their opinions nevertheless are widely regarded in economic circles.
Walter Heller, former chairman of President John F. Kennedy’s Council of Economic Advisers, told the American Management Associate that the ad ministration should consider es tablishing “ground rules’’ that would give business and labor some indication of what increases are acceptable. ABSENCE ‘REGRETTABLE Arthur Okuni, who held the same position under President Lyndon B. Johnson, made a very similar suggestion at New York University. And Henry H, Fowler, Treasury secretary under Johnson, called the absence of ground rules “particularly regrettable.’’
prices or wages beyond a ee^ tain point would endanger the entire economy.
In effect, they maintain that e government has the monetary and fiscal tools to prodOce a slowdown, but doesn’t have weapons as effective in the battle against inflation.
And so we enter the painful period of economic war.
UAWVoteSeen Crucial atAMC
KENOSHA, Wls. (AP)-Strlk-ing workers at American Motors Corp.’s Kenosha plant voted on a contract offer today, faced by conflicting recommendations by their union’s leadership and a warning by the president of the company that they may hold the key to the firm’s future,
AMC President William Lune-burg went on radio and television in Kenosha Tuesday and told the 6,000 striking members of United Auto Workers union Local 72 that their votes will determine whether AMC “continues its progress towards becoming a successful member of the auto industry.’’
AMC is a distant No. 4 among U.S. auto makers behind General Motors, Ford and Chrysler.
In his talk, Luneburg pointed out that the company’s latest offer has been endorsed by UAW international vice president Duane (Pat) Greathouse. However, Ralph Daum, pres-Said Fowler, the adminlstra-lident of Local 72, said its exec-tion “continues to refuse to as-[utive board has voted unanim-sume any responsibility to de-jsouly against approval of the termine, with the participation contract
of management and labor, somej -------------------------
guidelines in the wage-price
isic to the reasoidng of those who advocate guidelines or guideposts is the assumption that in a free economy it is only, natural that a wage earner should seek the highest wage and a sella- the highest price.
To control or restrain these urges, they maintain, the parti-oipants must be forewarned that attempts to increase either
Mutual Stexk Quotations
INVESTING COMPANIES NEW YORK (AP) tatlonSf supplied^ by the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., are the prices at which these securities
Alt Am F .96 1.05 Afutre 11.3011.30 Elpha Fd 12.69 13.87 Emcap	6.26 6.66
Am Bus 3.30 3-57 Am Dvln 10.9812.00 AEx spl 10.72 Am Grth *6.38 6.93 Am Inv	8.37 8.37
Am Mut 9.6010.49 XmN Gth 3.21 3.51 Am Pac 8.01 I.7S Anchor Group:
9.7710.71 13.68 14.99 9.12 9.99
-	...V
Invst 8.69 9.39
Bond Divid Grwth Pf Stk
sfocIT
10.8511.86 5.62 6.14 4.50 4.92 9.79 10.70 6.97 7.62 5.60 6.12
Fst InGth 10.5511.56 Fst InStk 9.31 10.20 Fst Multi 10.1810.34
Fst Nat =st Sler Flet Ca, Fiet Fnu Fia Gth
7.63 8.34
Fnd Gth	6.05	6.61
Foundrs	8.68	9.49
Foursq 11.8612.96 Franklin Group:
Com St	6.95	7.62
----	11.03	12.09
6.68 7.32 2.23 2.44
Nei Grth 10.4311.34 Neuwth 26.22 26.22 New Wid 14.15 15.46 NY Vent 19.78 21.66 Newton 17.1518.74 Noreast unavail Oengph 8.60 9.40 Omega 8.75 8.87
100	Fd 15.02 16.42
101	Fd 10.00 10.93 One WmS 17.2017.20 O'Neil 16.5517.61
DNTC
Penn sq
8.32 9.09
_____	8.48 8.48
Pace Fnd 12.3513.50 Pilot	8.17 8.93
Pine St 11.2911.29
13.68 14.99 9.12 9.99 Fd Inv 10.3911.39 %socia 1.35 1.48 Astron 6.76 7.39 Axe Houghton:
Fund A 6.84 7.43 Fund B 8.53 9.27 Stock 6.67 7.29 Sci CP
Berg Knt Blair Fd Bondstk Boston St
Bullock CG Fd Canadn Capamr Capit
5.43 5.90 9.33 9.33 10.19 10.19 12.89 14,09 7.05 7.70
i#roup oec:
Aero Sc 9.11 9.96 Com St 13.0214.23 Ful Ad 8.88 9.71 Grth Ind 22.64 23.32 Gryphn 17.0218.64 Guerdn 25.84 25.84
Hedge 13.1414.40 Herl^e	3.15	3.44
H Mann 16.2116.89 Hubsmn	7.26	7.93
SI Gth	5.75	6.28
10.1711 13.6614
-	... 12.5713.74
Prfee Funds ■ Era U Fund 11
30_______
4.89 5.34
Pton Fnd 13.6614.93 “■	12.5713.74
26.72 26.72 .. J$:
N Era 10.0910.09 “ * 11.0611.06 30*15 30.15
'States Can Up Federal Car Safety Limits^
NEW YORK (UPI)-The ifJS. Court of Appeals here ruldd yesterday that states may prohibit the sale of car equipment for safety reasons even though the equipment meets federal standards.
The decision overturned previous decisions in lower courts in New York and Vermont.	'
The decision pointed out thkt normally there is considerable delay between the introductim of new auto equipmait arid federal testing of it.
New equipment iM*esenting “a potential safety hazard” is a proper subject for the immediate exercise of the state police power,” it Said,
The two lower court decisions overturned’ by yesterday’s action had been made In favor of ■the Chrysler Corp. and prohibited New York and Vermont from banning a new type of headlight.
G*org	14.8218.M
Grth	12.0413.14
Incom 8.3Q 9.07
Vista
11.0612.09
Capit Shr 7.76 8.50
Batan 12.21 13.34
7.89 8i5l 7.28 7.91
Rep Tech 5.31 5.80
Break Blacks Out Half of Toledo
Com St 1.84 2.0 Grwth - - “ Incom Sped
Chase Group:
12.;
109.23111.08 12.14 13.27 9.9110.91

3.03 3.31
jp:
12.31 13,45
Trnd 14.32 15.65 try 6.66 7.28 InsBk Stk 7.45 8.14 COA 14.09 T ‘ ' Guld 9.41
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — Aj iJjiS MB.4 broken transmission line ip7 »u blacked out about half of Toledoj sii's 217.? iMif	—a city of more than 300,0001
Ml? 217 4 140 4 wl persons—for nearly three hours
«4( LO'W . . . .43S.4 145.4 135.1 »»■'Tuesday night.	|
A spokesman for the Toledo jm	Edison Electric Co. said rain
Czechs oenrenced hampered efforts to correct the
.	.	tL Is. ; trouble, which came during the
in Arms Thett evening rush hour and caused massive traffic jams.
Sp*cI :hemcl Colonial
Fund Grwtn
Col^Orth 14.6314.63 Comme 10.3611.32 Corns Bd 5.38 S.8S Investing Ibyl Commonwith Fds;
-* 10.58 tl.56 10.02 10.95
Chemcl. 19.95 20.81
5.05 S.$2 11.4612.52 6.95 7.60 7.49 8.19
Cap Fd lO.a Incom lO.C- -Invest 10.1011.( 9.51 10.39 1.53 1.66
Cwith AB
Nwith CO u/j t.Yx Comp As 16.32 17.89 Compel 8 85 9.70 Comp Bd 9.6310.47
1.931 $.57
15.33 15.33 Consol In ^yna|^
lOili 18.M
5*..
Prtv. Day S».2
PRAGUE Wl — Two CStecho-slpvaks charged with Attempted theft pf al^ms to kill Communists.. and stage acts of j terror were sentenced to prison j
^	IVM,	55,7 M.1 7»,5
*	*	*	IMf High 44.3 87.0 7».3
The news agency CTK said'IM	'i|
the two, Frantlsek Navratil and lIw 83.i i5.i w.3 Frantlsek Vltous, were cortvlct-^^yflhii avsraori . ed in the BmP district Cpurt on + Seharges of eriterlng military iio r*hi ~ - compounds Aug. 23 “with the « y'--''** purpose of seising weapons and * using them—as they admitted^ to shoot Comipunists.”
Cm WDal 13.5415.51
Indstry
Tk St.............
CoA 14.0915.40 inv Guld 9.41 9.41 Inv tndic ^3.7413.74
InlaTili? 12.44'l3.81 Investors Group:
IDS ndl 5.52 6.00 Mut 10,29 11.19 Frog 5.33 5.80 Stocle 20.48 22.26 Select 9.02 9.69 Var Py 8.59 9.34 Inv Rash 5.13 5.61 IStet 24.19 24.94 Ivest	16.0n7.56
Ivy	9.42	9.42
J Hncock 8.96 Johnstn	23z2123a9
Keystone Funds:
Cus B1 19.1519.99 Cus B2 20.07 21.90 Cut B4 9.44 10.30 Cus kT 8.08 8.82
Cus S3	8.07	8.81
Cus Si	5.59	6.11
Polar	4.63	5.06
Knickb	7.46	8.18
Knick Ot	12.51	13.70
Lax Orth 104011.04 Lax tnvit 10.U 11.07 •	“ ‘ 16.36--“
9.2010.05 5.31 5.80 13.99 15.29 Investing yyx Rosenth 7.93 8.66 Schustr 17.0018.60 Scudder Funds:
Int Inv unavall SpcI -- 36.19 36,19 Bal 16.10 16.10 Com St 11.1 Jec DIv 12.1	_ .
Sec Equit 3.94 4.31 Sec inv 6.24 9.01 Selec Am 10.6011.47
Sec Div 12.21 13.2 “	“	•	3.94	4.3
6.24 9.01 10.6011.47 $PK5 17.2316.84 sn Dean 2M123.41 Side	10.5411.55
Sigma 10.9912.01 Sig Inv 12.31 13.45 Sigma Tr 9.8510.77 Smith B 10.3510.35 Swn Inv 6.73 9.44 Swinv Ot 8.87 9.59 Sover Inv 14.72 16.12 StFrm Gt 5.81 5.81 State St 53.80 54.26 Steadman Funds: Am Ind 12.1413.30 Fiduc 7.86 8.61 Scien 4.98 5.46 Stein Roe Fds;
Bal 21.42 21.42 Cap Op 15.98 15.98 Stock 15.21 15.21 Sup InGt 7,90 8.66 Supinst 10.58 11.59 Syncr Ot 12.0913.21 TMR Ap 22.« 24.48 Teachrs 10.9011.^ 7.50
f.'n i.M
‘Sit HjS
8s:j, 'f" m :ti
Technci Techvst Ttehnoi Tamp; 0 Towr MR 7.47 8.16
Gt 24.78 27.0
40 Bonds
10 Higher grade r 10 Induitrlil* ....
tlXi* i kX)
mSu Gth )3.M 14.47
Miu T, lt.f>17.M M*t*l	*.S4 4.S4
M*thW(	H.t7 IJ,»7
.................. McDon y.7010.43
Pihwth	I3.W)S.M	MI*A	Mu	7.0$	7.70	VnetS	ul	I.M	0 4i
Incom 4.41 7,61 Moo^ Cp 13.1714,Jt	InvMlIng M _
1^	11,7J13.ij	N^y't	_	)4.301S.43	Vindrbt	f.3f	7.31
!or«?	74:U 15.35
mrg Sc	5.37 7.04
iMrgy	13.4313.03
Inlprip l.««r 4.77 iquity	10.0410.74
■out 0th	t4.t5M.45
Tudor . Fd )7:44 14;m
Phi 1:8 li
IaIi 14.37
Spl Sit 1.54 4.M
Ru
Fid’Orth 14.7414.U
News in Brief
All kitchen aad living room furniture was c o m p 1 e t e l,y removed fron an unoccupied trailer home yesterday morning, according to Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies. ’The break-in took place at New ’Trailer Hidden Lake Trailer Park, 505 N. Rochester, Addison Township.
Altar Society Rummage Sale, Friday, Npv. 14, 9-6 and Sat., Nov. 15, 9-12. Hail basement, comer Edison and Lewis St.	“Adv.
Rummage, 6650 EUzabeth Lake Road, Nov. 13-14, 9-5. United Church of Christ.	—Adv.
Lodge Calendar
Election of outside guard, at the regular meeting Wed., Noy. 12 at 8 p.m., Waterford^ Auxiliary No. 2887 FOE. Doris Strlck-land, Secretary.
News Yesterday in Stafq Capital
V
Workad In hi* Linilnp pttlet dnd ^t •omp tint* with WIN AITihi CiMwtft.Ti of
---T, who It •utftrlng from whpf It
Bd to M Incurpblp eon* Mnetr, TMa SRNATa
i4d • ruolutlon BUPporllng Frt»l-Nlxon'* dpciprtd pl»n to pnd’lh*
Conit|tuUon to pNmInatt (ha SWa ' Idycatton, alact a >*ala luparln wbUc Mitruct)Mt/and rapaal 7 Mon on a graduated. Ineoma f« iR Y, Young. Rapaal the eonitl section requiring reduced MPraP