Weather “•were changin';'"o' ■ - - Colder.— (Detail* h« 118th YEAR Heme 'Edition ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, BIICHIGAN,^SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, *901-24 PAGES ' Harriman May Go on Mission to Moscow to approval, Legion of- French Optimistic lers Kennedy Said Eager to Sound VofesiKhrushchevOut Swiss Take Over for America ALGIERS (API - French officials beamed optimism today as the crucial referendum on president'Charles de Gaulle's self-determination plan for Algeria tered its second day. ■ A voter turnout, averaging 62 per cent Friday in 600 rural com munitles bolstered official hopes for approval of De Gaulle’s plan to end six years of strife in thil French territory. orders ‘from the rebel National Front of Liberation (FLN),‘ officials stressed, and went to the polls. A major teat—and the possi- day when residents of urban centers, tense with agitation by Moslems and rtghtwlug European settlers, east their bai- ter a It p.m. curfew silenced the city Friday night. IVeops camped in front of government buildings and steel-hel-meted patrols crisscrossed the streets. Five , plastic bombs planted by I anti-Gauliist right wingers had ex-! ploded in the city earlier In the) day.' Gets Briefing by Rusk on Cuba, Laos; Then Changes Plans The settlers violently oppose De Il03Cf {Gaulle's plan for mailing Algeria De Gaulle haw pleaded'.for s heavy "yes'’vote and rebel leal- |an autonomous state and giving ; XSS?!v^Totn. K ***** ***** --rials fnftdrty believe a heavy j ^‘determination at a later date.) vote of approval would Sire De : .* * ■ * chance cf : De Gaulle Warned Frenchmen; Tak&Oit Hurt* Ptiet j WASHINGTON (AP) — President - Elect John F. [-{Kennedy is believed, to be ' considering sending a special emissary to the Soviet {Union. The mission: to {sound out Premier Nikita Khrushchev on what ideas he may have on Improving, Soviet-American relations. A B|oomficld Township man y Presumably, the emissary would, be W. Averell Harris ** terras The French.army maintained af,em* There ** 8 risk. hc said. tha,{Tempted to take off on m the Try- vigilant watch'today as about 57fli^wld events will sweep it out Of Roa(j shortly before dawn today. |man Administration. communities voted. The armyJtheir hands. was ordered to prevent absten-j of battle-equipped Harriman. who later served The victim, Stephen Kaan, 45, ofjSwrrnor of New York, was nam 'd GMC Deliveries Rise 19 Per Cent During 1960 Gajn Amplified by Fact That Truck Industry Sales Were Dc^vn tion. _____________•_ ' troops look positions at strategic (7235 Bingham Road, was to under-]® we*k. ago by Kennedy to I Moslems generally disregarded points in and around Algiers af-~[go facial surgery today at Williamy1*® ambassador-at-large. Michigan One of Slowest Reporting Election Returns! CHANGEOVER IN' CTBA — Daniel M. Brad-dock (left! af Grand Rapids. --UJL Emha««v charge d’affaires in Cuba, hands over interests of the United States in the Castro-controlled nation to Swiss Ambassador Walter Bossi. Bossi Hoapttal in Royal Oak.] of late. Kbrushckev bas been His condition was described j claiming he cmn do business with by Ms wife us “not serious." j Kennedy. The special Hospital authorities refused to { would try to find < comment on hit condition. I shchev is engaged on another I A' n , , ... , . Mrs. Kaan, the mother of three! '!** l^StTO Continues WOOIllg of JFK daughters, said her husband {brought his plane home, recently! The emissary report eirciflatod to .perform minor repairs, and | here today as Kbnnedyrematned arose early this morning to fly it tin Washington, for a tight schedule I back to the airport. She did not {of conferences on politics, national In an effort to make elecUon resets more quickly available |knw which airport. and international affaire. * * * He leaves later oh what will ap- Tho low-wing craft apparently jparently be his last extensive trip Domestic retail deliveries of GMC trucks in 1960 totaled 84,84&. units, an id-crease of more than J9 per cent over 1959 figures, It Iwas announced today by Calvin J. Werner, vice presi-dent of General Motors and general manager of GMC {Truck and Coach Division. -GMC Track made the substantial gain in a truck {market that was off slightly in domestic retail deliveries iln 1960, he said. , | “Truck buyers have recognized the value of the product features by GMC in Its 1960 modefsTMVer-nor said. “We have in the GMC i. j i, .j . „ , light line proved the efficiency picked up Friday by police {and reliability of our V6 gasoline !es\ engine design and the riding com- fort of independent front suspen- % ■i.’wi af rk.ur., will take-over a chronic problem: How to affect tho-reiease of American-citizens held by Cuban police. Four members of the Columbia Broadcasting System on undisclosed iCuban ‘Exodus’ Halted to the citizens of Michigan; The Associated Press has launched a study of the slow-voting returns In Michigan during the re- jhif'X’phteh’ftf cent presidential election. . The pitch to Kennedy v HAVANA l AP)—Fidel Castro’s = I on the road and {before coming to Washington for!reR,me cracked down today oh ]by Ernesto (CheV Guevai reived into a ditch along !4-Mile jhis inaueuration Even this visit]Cu^a”» trying to flee the country [dent of Cuba’s national bank and is “In the GMC heavy duty models, truck operators have found-greatly increased flexibility in meeting {particular hauling needs through a broad selection of conventional and tilt-cab, single- axle and tan-idem'axle units in a choice of V6 {and V12 gasoline engines or V6 and emphasized that Kennedy1V8 GM Diesel engines.” E. Knudsen, GM vice presi- r responsibility for the break- dent and Pontiac Motor Division of its votes at 11:06 election night, compared to. Arkansas’ 40 j take-off, state police said. per cent; Florida’s 61 per cent; and Maryland’s 80 per cent. I They were Investigating the {and other parts of the world. Other states and their percentages at that'time were Illinois, crash In the sparsely settled sees rusk 22; Kentucky, 51: Mississippi, 57; New Jersey, 60; New York, 10; aw*. »•'"’* with a represents- | frofn New york « North Carolina, 54; Ohio, 27; Oklahoma. 45; Pennsylvania^ 45;1 **“ fl M—1 MMMfgM - - -■ " Texas, 55, and Wlscbnsln, 26. glowering problems in Cuba, Laos reconciliation with the .United {economic policies. John . 1 . r __Uiia * iron i ----------------------------------- - ° ---- ----------' vmuh a iiouuikii whir aim buiiic n-.->|n/ii>ii»uu v iui . me uit’HR- According to AP figures, Michigan had reported 6 per cent|old haunts is overshadowed by ®^ floated another pitch for a {architect of Castro's revolutionaryjoff of diplomatic relations until!general manager, yesterday an- - Enounced last year's sales of Pon-“impor- tiac automobiles were,the highest note_nf since the record year 1965. ~ ‘ Pontiac sales in eu totaled 409,-—-xmoibie 667 units, representing a 6 per certain cent gain over the previous year, ' Knudsen reported. At the same time, Guevara ad-I rrritted in a three-hour television idav, froze Nuance;speech Friday night that Cuba|un^rtai^y night, Kennedy went straight from. ^ ter 0,1 Cuban [swapped its 1960-B1 Sugar Wop I aitport mro an hSlfand fcisITSi ^ ^ AP Bureau Chief Clem Brassier said that six counties— Wayne, Oakland, Macoirib, Genesee, Kalamazoo and Ingham—contain 52.8 per cent of the state’s vote. They have voting machines in 91 per cent' of the precincts, but by II election night, their reported results were meager. federal aeronautics agency Kaah lr a selT-ifaployed cm-jludfCTinference with his secretary)1 suiting engineer. He has been fly [of state designate, Dean Rusk. He mg for business-and pleasure for told newsmen later their talk cov-l lie took office Jan. 20, This, Guevara said, mt in that' it inject! the issue, is affected, {considerations. He did not say * * a -«vhat—the—poljtiGJil- considerations —1---------r------i—were ■ . , -fc a i .■ ■ t, nss a i . . ■ - ' American residents leaving j at least 13 yearf, his wile said. |ered the two trouble spots and wm - {differences." Yet Kent County had 40 per cent in at 11p.m. ... . , .. _ .. And Kent County* noTa sparry populated "the whole spectrum” of foreign | Kaan had towed the plane home {affairs. , - {behind his car with the wings dis-j He gave no details, but did II not require i [NOT KBiiPON'MBIX_____ In.carrying the Castro regime's • i wooing of Kennedy further, Gue- "The I'nilrd Slates shoald never feel small In discussing reconciliation-with ns,” he-si “We always are willing but terms of respect for Cuba’s sov | bounce a change in his plans ranks fourth in population in the state with 361,145, compared ic^ri^anTfiSSleP Jdd° Ite! to^iM hT^StSll^ro to Wayne with 2,6 with 405,366. 1,244; Oakland, with 867,611; and Macomb, hint yesterday lor peimils- for ^ {Sion to take 'off on Telegraph|will include more conferences 4 it it ' jRoad, near 14-MUe Road. iltusk, the retiring secretary of -&I told him I had no authority treasury, Robert B. Anderson, and to permit it, and if I did I others. pel Winter to Return short stay Tuesday which;, .• n «with|io Pontiac Area - In Oakland County's 46 voting units, townships and cities, individual precinct chairmen supposedly cut off the line to|Wouldn’t' let him,” said -Chief] vote at 8 p.m.. letting those in line at.that time cast their bal- Dehnko. lots. , ’ After this, the absentee ballots are cast, then the totals j taken from the machines. Each precinct then reports this total | * m _j ' n to either the townshlo or city clerk, the precincts are added ill i OCfOy S i TGSS together and the clerk sends s total figure to the county clerk.) TOP TEN LISTED The first 10 governmental units In this area to have their j Church New; returns in (with number of precincts and time Indicated) were: 1. Wixom. (2) 10:18 Kennedy’s first appointment to- With 18 Degrees Winter will l>low in tonighUwil Suspects Russia Outspent U. S. in IGY^“ But Guevara also referred Kennedy's presidential campaign statement that the United States encourage anti-Castro ij4th Quarter Second-Best gn {for Car Sales day i WASHINGTON (UPI)-A mem-iber of the U.S. Committee for the! DETROIT iff)—A year-end buy-| ing fever, which sent auto sales say Kennedy has soaring in the last 10 days of ’hanged," he said. "We must be December, gave new car dealers tor breakfast with the |l8 to 30 mile-an-hour northwest International Geophysical Year 2. Rose Township, (1) 10:27 3. Holly Township, (2) 10:85 4. Springfield Township, (1) 10:37 6. Keego Harbor, (1) 10:40 6. Walled Lake. (II 10:50 ; 7. Addison Township, (U 11:01 . 8. Oxford Township, (5) 11:37 9. Bloomfield Hills (2) 11:39 10. South Lyon’, (1) 11:47 Comics Editorials ............. Home Section .......... Obituaries ............. Pet Doctor ...... Sports ................ Theater* ...... ....... TV and Radio Programs' ' Wilson, Earl ... • Women'* Pages Democratic national chairman, i Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Wash-l Ington. | He arranged ports from two of his task forces,! one on India and the proposed {peace corps of young Americana to serve abroad, tne other on natural resources. {winds, fringing scattered showers' reports that Russia their second-best fourth quarter said Cuba's sale of volume in history, Ward's Auto-s Reports said Friday, flurries and i receive later re-jperature of near 25. spent more than America on this “greatest cooperative enteriwise fbr peaceful purposes in all human1 i history-." . markets was the "result simply Sales for the Dec. 21-31 period of a political action. The weatherman said Sunday! Capt. Elliott B. Roberts of the • jumped 16.6 per cent 'above mid-{month totals, the statistical agency reported. .will be cloudy, with snow flurries[u-s- Co?s! and Geodetic Survey!>u,v ( and colder temperatures, the high 1 i report published' and base sugar at those price* -------------—. i ■ . . „ ■ „ , Friday by the Smithsonian Insti- nomic motlv | He had appointments also with|ran*ln* from 25 to 30 degrees. ,ute that Qg nBtion8 had contribut [Gov. David L. Lawrence of Penn-[Monday will continue cold. ed about $2 billion to IGY. petition on be until, “be--witty there was no within world eommerrlnl He said Russia and the United; terms for soch purehnses.” The surge gave entire JM# a * aear-reroed level «,14t,3M sale* of domestic hull! cars, it s per rent above 5,t«U7t 1a ISM and second only to 1.4M.4M In peAk year IMS. Thirty was the lowest thermo-iSlates eack have spent more than|. Ife said Cuba is willing to sell) Ward’s said December sales to* million tonsitaied 488,168 units, comparing fav-{ jorably with the best volumes for t F Hollins metci” reading In downtown prc-iil I,alf'bU!i.0" lLolla? m.}GY United Stags': t r. Holnngs ’ * . 1 ects—and the Russian effort "mav.of sucar at- "rease l r £, - | _ .. ects—and the Russian effort "may of sugar at- “reasonable’1 T. _, _M..8Mth -CUSUna.. WM. Tke. B”!cu,5L!^a 2:27 The last ten governmental units were: 1. Avon Township. (8) 2:05 ' 2. Novi Township, (2) 2:05 3. Waterford Township, (18) 2:20 . 4. Oak Park,..(20) 2:26 5. Farmington Township, * 6. Pontiac. <44i 2:29 . . ; — 7; riawsnn i^i 2:30 8. White Lake Township. (3) 2:37 .. . 9. Groveland Township, (1) 3:30 10. Madison Heights, fill 4:32 —-—Hi Madison Heights,-latest in the cotmtjr to report Its 11-4 -precinct total, voters in* one precinct were still balloting at 11 p.m„ three hours after poll closing time. This latest precinct was set up during the summer to conform to the state’s 1,490 maximum of registered voters { per precinct. But City Clerk Myrtle Chamberlain says heavy registration'In the fall boosted the figure to 3,299. She diverted an additional voting machine to the precinct, but there were still hundreds of people waiting In line at the j 8 pin. closing hour. Wrong Kind of Wings at Miami Airport ml tv-,,. V ♦»/ .'**-& t, £? •■"'S*. / r. 1 tj* jrj • i ’,rf-T*JH:’- * , • same amount. paid for the sugar. Before President Eisenhower dosed U.S. markets to Cuban £ sugar, the Cubans were paid a | price higher than the prevailing ! >rld price as a form of economic | Daily sales during Dec. 21-31 period surged to 20,689 from 17,-'32 daily for Dec. 11-20. American Legion j SelecteLasYega&. Over Detroit The stattattral seniee credited the. industry'* ISM Mies upturn to widespread Big Three entry In the compart ear field. LAS VEGAS (UPII—The American Legion's 10-member conveh-i site committee has selected) 31. General Motors, Ford and Chrysler dealers sold 1,126.100 compact* in 1960. their first full - fledged yenr In !tn> trf rfrf.! aeonrfling {n Ward'*.—pushing the • industry’s compact sales to 1.668.300 units or 27.1 per cent of total car sales. The jthis desert gambling center for the nSuylng, topping the previous peak organization's 1962 convention. ‘ ................. Recommeiidation of the S Diegp, Calif., committee Is tanta-) {of 30 per ,c6rit set in November. Ward's said the Pard Falem (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Mrs. Chamberlain sald The city’s 10 other precincts hall reported their to this by 2 a.m., but Precinct 11 didn’t come through until 3:45 am. Accordinr to Oakland County Clerk-Register Daniel T. Murphy Jr., state law requires '• - ,- -• - ' ~j .Commenting on the make-up of the election boards, Murphy said they are named by the township or city cleft, oh a partisan basts, with an even apUt of Democratic and Republicans. * ✓ | Committee Chairman Harry L. {Foster said Friday the Legion's j executive committee would vote _ion the recommendation May TS in! ' IMlknapOllk, liicT Detroit. Mich., original site se-| lected for the 1962 convention, lost! | out when it was unable to guaran- { [tee 7.000 first-class rooms. This j city was able to guarantee the! |necessary rooms and has pledged' $50,000 to underwrite convention {expenses. Aids Thailand N-Project IT S DANGEROUS. BY GULLY - For centuries, mqn tried to find out how birds fly. Now, the tables are turned. The birds are Intent on finding out how man flies. Or so it would seem -from the feathered activity at some of the nation’s major airports. Miami International Is plagued by swarms of seagulls which are a menace id jet airliners. The helicopter has been unsuccessful in routing, the “spies,” so a special spray designed to sicken the gulls without harming them is. being considered. A flock of starlings was blamed for the fatal crash of an Electro jet-prop airliner last year in Boston, *..., ANN ARBOR (UPI) - University, of Michigan Prof. William Kerr Is on route to Bangkok, Thai- j ! land, today .to help prepare for ar-J rival of that country’a first nuclear [reactor. PUNJABS BOA CONSTRUCTOR w-fvvo TOE JA^TAHTT, im" Drinker Booked in Frisco Fire Facn Manslaughter for Hotel Blaze That Took 19 Lives, Injured 38 . | :: SAM FRANCfeCO (UPD _ A r") heayy-dtjnklng pensioner faced * manslaughter charges today for the second worst hotel fire in San Francisco history — a blaze which killed 19 persons and injured 38 ;■ others. 1 f • . "I didn't do nothin' ” insisted! Raymond Gorman, 62, when he > was booked , at a police station. ) The fire began in his room in I the 48-yea r-okl Thomas Hotel at 1 Sixth and Mission, before dawn j Friday. The blase, was thought f-quenched once, but spirang Into ■ deadly new life within mlnutee and spread flame'and dense smoke throughout the five-floor structure where 135 tenants slept. The first of five alarms came at 5:10 a m. and by the time the first of 40 pieces of equipment and 250 fire fighters strived, the death and injury toll had started to cltthb. Screaming tenants, almost all of them elderly and many- of them crippled, poured out of the front entrance, jumped into firemen's nets, or were carried down lad* F ders. Near-freezing 36 degree, weather added to their mlseiy. The unlucky ones died in thdr beds or dived out windows to the pavement. Many Jumped down the hotel’s fonrftoor llghtweil. The Day in Birmingham! Willits Si. Bridge Plans Due Before Commission to Curtail Role Detroit Paper Predicts Hell Step rFrom Active Ford Management---------- DETROIT behalf of commercial airline service during the recently, decided.. Great Lakes local service case. Looking on are the. three members of the city's air transportation committee. They are (from left) Bug Prevents Usual Donations Zntiu Prn> Photo Sherwin Al. Brinkrant, assistant city attorney; Homer D. Hoskins, manager of Pontiac. Municipal -Airport; and (far right-* John W. Hiclinger, manager of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce. The Department of Aeronautics spearheaded the. drive for more short-haul service which resulted, in part, in the commercial airline service that began at Pontiac Municipal last month. Breech, however, will remain as a member of the company’s board Indefinitely, the Free Press said. vv The 63-year-old Breech, reached at his vacation spot in Phoenix, Ariz., refused to comment on the report. Breech told the Free -Press flatly that he would remain as a director—“at least until- my 65th added to the estimate to rover engineering fees. In his report to be presented to the commission, Killeen states the road grade of Willits should be raised in order to eliminate a grade problem at the Willita-Green-wood intersection and to reduce the steep slope on the "hill east Tof Greenwood. it it y * “The grade ' change from the , . , • ... ,---- giaur uifuigi* Hum me birthday, he added, ^ I hope bridge to Greenwood is directly lor if any years after that. ^ related to the bridge construction Breech of Long Lake Road’ and should be done at the same Wild N-Reaction Flu Drains County Blood Bank l|jyy in Rl^t nitrous'.ids of heroism ___ The first two policemen on- the I jpqu has hit the Oakland Count v| She blamed the shortage on tii scene were credited with “ving . R t influenza siege currently grfobft at least 30 lives. Patrolmen Peter Blood Bank’ ZZ wZZs in the area ami Cappadona, 35, and Don Taylor, * critical shorty* of who!? I* others who have not ben 28 found 15 men milling around b,00<* ,n the Red Cross regionall. . .. . donate blood ‘in the lobby unable to find their blood bank at Detroit was not&F by the flu ,o donate W°“!' hearing. In the UilrTr Wiirtf .rV.nVfl yesterday b^-rtWr-fflldl^Biyl-^^lenM 100pinto«f blood are They formed a single-file rescue nett, Oakland County executive dt-| needed Immediately to ade- line to lead them out. Others, including crippled and aged persons, were carried out oq the backs of the policemen. This Crime Means More to City Police Detective Pontiac police Detective August K. Martinez Is especially hopeful that fellow officers solve a theft! which occurred yesterday. Marlines reported his topcoat, valued at MS, was stolen from a' coat rack while he lunched at a Pontiac reotaurantr—..... Colder Weather Swoops Toward Parts of Midwest rector of the American Red Cross. | quately restock the regional Believe Blue Cross to Ask 20 Per Cent Rate Increase blood bank which serves Oak- j Wayne and Washtenaw j she said. Atomic Runaway Is Bfoomfleldjltlto, served as chairman of the board from January 10S5, . until his semi retirement last July 11) when Henry Ford II moved up 'to chairman of the company and Breech became head of the then newly farmed finance committee. time,” said Killeen. ~~He estimated the total cost for the approach work at $9,100. Included In the approach work Would be the construction of a new 4-foot sidewalk on the north side of Willits from Greenfield to about SSO feet east of the pro- Killeen said that most of the existing sidewalk to be replaced poor condition. of the product planning committee, a post the Free Press said Breech: r . j j - — , iis expected to surrender Wednes- Suspected ps Cause of day. Mbhap Fatal to 3 I * *'*— J If the preliminary plans are ap- j —-------"—' proved by the commission, final -construction drawings for the J>roj-ect wiit be prepaTed: By The Associated Press Continued \ mild weather ~ . vailed-over—most of the country today but a return of colder, more seasonable temperatures was f< cast for parts of the Midwest. Below - freezing temperatures •early, today were generally lim- ---. - .u ... iled to the Northern Appalachians, bow much increase they will ask. extreme' Northern Minnesota and Northern North Dakota south westward into the Rockies and port ions j of the Central Plains, _ The return -of colder ' rathe | DETROIT Iff!—There was sprcu-| crease of 11.5 per cent in May. lation today in. usually ■ wcll-in- ft had asked 19.5 per cent, formed quarters that Michigan The hospital-operated Blue I Blue Cross will ask an increase I Cross plan got a 21.4 per cent jof ?0 per cent or more in its Inrrease on Jan. l, j856. I hospi tal bill insurance rales. I Blue Cross-Blue Shield have three . * * * . ; combined rate schedules, and if a The same source estimated Bluejperson’s income is more than the! Shield, a companion doctor-bill in- maximum for his salary bracket jsurance plan, ..likely might ask lOja physician or surgeon may charge per cent more. -------------- ia lee in addition to that paid by | Both Blue Cross and Blue Bluc Shield disclosed Friday they will j file next week with Stale Insur- Present combined ance Commissioner Frank Black- 85.000 to $7,500 a year income, I Q* e J RT* _ „ ford for Increased rates. Both '87.49 monthly for a single person; OalQ iVCdT reported they operated in the 818-27 for a couple fend 820.08 fori _ _ red In I960.' « toral|y: to 85.000 a year, FfOVA/ l ltV „ , 87.13; 817.39 and 818.92; up to 82,- * lyJY CU K^llY ^either, however, would disclose ^ # ^ jg.78 816.52 and 817.74. much increase they will ask. Community Health Association, QUERIES BLINKED which recently entered the De- Re peated sueries on this were j trait hospital-medical field la | turned back at a news conference j competition with Blue Cross-Blue spokesmen for both plansf-shleld, has a singlt According to Mrs. Bennett, therei _______ Ironly 60 pints in the .bank at • Following former company Presi- liiis-time when there should be a Tn-,,lf. i-'n, r ■ . ___ . [dent Robert S. McNamara’s p?sig- minimum of At least 150 ttntie^^,^^ Ja»- ^ secretary foreseen-requirements in the next .^ ^ .. . .jt..ff.iitSiofi defenselnthehew national ad- Sh, said du have !£,"Slight « «» vented many persons in tnel * s w county from making blood dona- i,, a statement issued Friday, lions during the past month. the men apparently were killed by period of approximately ■ 60]the force of the explosion. Hie dayfr must elnpae after oyereotw-jriatomvnt. added that if the ing (he flu before donors can didn’t immediately cause death, give blood. the high radiation level could have it it. ♦ been fatal. “As of today we are1 unable to * * * supply blood to local hospitals ex- "From evidence-now available, cept for emergencies, and we arc pbere are strong but not conclusive fast reaching the end of the line | indications that a nuclear excur-altogether,” said Mrs Bennett.I*'0" wa? involved in the incident. She urged persons to donate11 cannot ™>w be established blood to the local Red Cross at whether or not there may have the Elks Temple. 114 Orchard Lake b.een„a1 explosive chemical reac-facilities will bo of- !?!!• *be AEC said. fered Monday between the hours . e wor^ * excursion9 generally Bethany Baptists to See Camping Group Pictures . Dr. E. Floyd Norton of'Lansing, state director of Christian education and camping, will shot# pic-. tures of ..several camping groups at Lake Louise ’ Baptist Camp, north of Gayiord at 7 p.m. Sunday at Bethany Baptist Church. ‘Thirty young people and adults of Bethany attended camps during the past summer. Dr. Charles A. Carman, interim pastor, will speak on “Faith in the Unknown Future” at both the 8:4(1 and 11 a m. services Sunday. ' • pet solo by Jerry Ryan. Elda Sutter, minister' of music, will lead the choir In the anthem, “Give Me a Fatih.” Assisting the ’pastor wilt be Terry LuFountain and Karen AntoHrh. The series of pictures on “The ijfrcf Patfl” Will begin at the 8 o'clock vesper hour. Installation services will be r active in the [conducted at the United Church Women's annual meeting Friday Since McNamara's departure, at **» W Methodist Church. j1 Ford has held the posts of prest- [ Following tQo regular meeting dent and chairman. j at 9:45 a.m. Mrs. Lynn Russe The Free Press said there was 'T1'1 £ ***** “ PrMWp Imr immediate mdication whether+^‘bfi..l9^i.group. the board would elect a new presi- Mrs. Russell, who dent .Wednesday. [the Women’s organization of the! •The annual dinner' and busi-ess meeting wilt be held at 6:$) ,m. Wednesday. [Nab Escaped Lifer From Hazel Park of 2-5 p.m, and 6-7:30 p.rr ;Laos Rebels which Churches on Russian Yule -n------. . ,, .. insisted rising costs and usage re-Lturc iiir jlLjegardle "r* foF®cast tor Tbe N“!',hI‘!.rn quired more money from aub-f Plains, Uper Great Lukes, the Up- 1 - . per tind Middle Mississippi Valley and western portions of the Ohio The doctor-opcnXed Blue] Valley. I Shield plan received » slrne- The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Increasing cloudiness and mild but’ becoming windy and turning colder late this afternoon. High 48. Cloudy, windy with scattered showers changing to snow flurries'and colder tonight, low 25. Vari-. able cloudiness wlth snnw flurries and colder Sunday. West to southwest wTntTs 12-20 miles becoming 18 to SO miles tonight and Sunday. • of incoi It is 88 monthly for a, single [person; $18.80 for h couple and $20.60 for a family, j DOCTOR CAN’T ADD FEE I No participating doctor chatgc a fee {paid by C1IA j t’HA also . Includes physical j rhechapw. Immunisation s k o i s, home nuntfog rare and home | calls by doctors la Its protection i addition to that The explosion was in.a -metal [building wfiicfT hoosed the prototype of a mobile reactor intended for use as a power source in remote areas. Radioactivity was so. high inside the building that experts probing the cause could stay inside only about a minute at a MOSCOW. (AP) — Archbishop [Alexei, patriarch of all Russia, celebrated the .Orthodox Church’s Christmas today by officiating at midnight Mass' in Moscow Cathedral In an atmosphere of min-gied majesty and melancholy. Only a few young persons Attended the services. VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) - A time, column of pro-Communist Pathet] - - — r ~' " Lao rebels was reported advanc- _ . .. . .' . . ing on Luang Prabang todayj\au 7 YflllllK AflITl t from the north. Advices varied. I A- * UUIIIJ MUIIIII however, ns to whether that royal tpital wa« imminently threaten. ed, Most of the congregation made up of older persons, mostly {women. Many, of them were mare ried under the Czar more than 43 years ago before the Communist 12 Pontiac BUrQl3ri6S!wwtoy0churo™awi reduced U^a an almost pitiful remnant. Two youthti who will be ar- * * * raigned in Circuit Court Monday] Other.midnight Masses we Hqn charges of attmpted breaking ebrated in pattered city and fiowl onlorimv Iibiia 101 COUntTV •h sources said' the threat to . Luang Prabang was increasing. Other Western military men|al^'’Tnrerinp lMvp r»dmIt»^"i5lC0Untry churches throughout the placed-the column still 60 miles }Bthh 1 "JT^unp“ Soviet Union to mark Christmas. Wi » unto .he culto)„ i no immediate danger. The more opfimbtic | day- Two escapees from The Ohio [State Penitentiary; one of them a [lifer from Hazel Park, were arrested today in Englewood, N.J., [by FBI agents. B- W. Bachman, special agent in chatge of the Newark, N.J., office of the FBI. announced the arrest, of James D. Thornton, 22, formerly of Hazel Park, and Russell T. Freeland, 32, ol Cleveland, [Ohio. « Thornton was serving a life sentence for a murder committed during an armed r_____ at Wapakoneta, Ohio, Jan. But years of Communist domination has changed all that. Enamel cups, not the old crystal or silver glasses, were used to dip holy wate^from founts to pass out among worshippers. Royalty was long since gone, replaced by about 2,000 workers and peasants. Old women in’ shapeless black garb kept changing slender brown 2LSto^s"wto was candles used in the serv‘"“ 1 they spurtted out. Together with Warren Simones, I, of Cleveland, the two convicts ed a snow-shoveling detail out-the penitentiary walls on t denied to be shared by King | Robert Gobbei, 17. 148 Wall St.. _ * ' * Navang Vathana. He took off |and Michae| T cervantei, 18. 2591- Thmisands walked through today from Vtoattaae tot Lnang jRaeburn St., are charged with an do i | Prabang after earlier delays that raised questions sbont the security ol the city. The king, in -Vientiane ■ for Ific Despite this, Archbishop Alexei j» _ r^^vctoLS”z:,£|lnree Ortonville Men Mass.- -His- congregation- showed Ij .—-a !+•»—r______ pleasure at singing the old re-T|Nff Lflr H K IFPP Hgious songs, hearing thd old rltu- V01 1,1,3 11CC ing the old service. ... T. _ . ______________ I Three Ortonville men were injured early tl.s morning when their car missed -a curve -in Brandon. Township and smashed into a tree. Reported Ip satisfactory condi-tion at Hurley. Hospital, HteL— [were Rotond Morley, 22, of 62 W Joscman Road; Arthur Talbot, v* 91 nt gnnn ah_« Press Reveals Promotion of TwoStaffers— attempted break-in of . Calabrese's Market, 430 S. Jessie S sriEtSifriBicrHiartii «k foUk, Rurt -ft flniiSif'fPf; fresh snowfall to crowd into Mos-j Pontiac • Press Editor John V» i0, ---- -----— cow Cathedral, ornate in gold an* Fitzgerald today announces the of 2500 A,,en Road; and Bud white. , promotion ol two staffers [Hosner, 21, of 51 Viola Lane. * * * I * ♦ * . All three men suffered head In- Archbishop Alexei, past 80 but | Telegraph Editor Robert J-' driv^ato^had R?°r,e?’-the Premier Prince ■ Boun Oiim, had [beer for a New Year’s Fortuneteller Puts Faith in i C Prnnliocw loss than two hours, and a spokes-l juage s rropnesy |m((n explained that ,herP hadl been engine trouble the - center- of - the—cathedral.’ipaitnr muium iw iincw x.ear s eve party, Um.ma uim |cclltm- UOPY- Editor Richard r]u!il.vcd:_his. dupurture. but itien Both w.lved ™,mtoutloo k Kme’s EuSlto'' D'lr°"' ■elurned. in|Munic-,tuI Conn Jan. J. Lu,:iug. gemmUded c.wns. bet0m“ 1'legra|>h ed"”r' started Friday. Municipal Judge Maurice E. innegan didn’t need a crystal ! -- • ...__, . - all to foil the future of a woman ^ ,fParturel irtuhetellcr in his courtroom yes-|!^L.,0Na- ;tiops was dedicated Friday. _ ___________| _____ coat 83,750,000 and U directly[purchaso of new material essemj American Motors followed with I across the street from U.N. bond- tlal to the armed forces of' the 434,700 and Studebaker - Packard *ro- ^ |Republic of Indonesia,” < I with 105,’300. • Ward's said General Motors sold about 2,926,900 new cars last year, . .wtth Ford showing 1;749,600 and1 The Soviet news agency Tass Chrysler 925,7». « said the'agreement concerns ’ J. C, PENNEY STORE HOURS: MIRACLE MILE Open Every WeeMoy—Mondey through Soturday 10:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. DOWRTOlffl — Open Mm, end PH. 9:10 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. All Other Weekdays 9:30 A. M. to 5 JO m! > Dag, Verwoerd Confer [Bob Hope Back in Bod; Pretoria, south Attica (ap) ' Dropped Out of Tourney Hammarakjold today .befan . .. . ._- _ ■ i«n Bob" Hope, S6„who dropped out dONOooor talks tilth Prim* Min. . •; - Ufpr . me MUvof a golf tournament after a spell SS1SJT5&S.w* *— « do, other date with his doctor today. Baby Photo Contest SMeily lot AmMlemn" WIN FREE ZQSS 35mm CAMBU tw., U Ur Cemplete Detail, EXPERT CAMERA SHOP 57 West Hum* FE 5-5615 Hope was up and around Friday [after his sudden withdrawal from a proamateur tournament at E3 Rancho course Thursday, but his doctor ordered him back to bed. Hope,-said he ,was fatigued by his recent holiday tour of U.S. bases in the Caribbean and subsequent chores. IT’S INVENTORY CLEARANCE TIME! Save on APPLIANCES Our first big sales event of 1991 Is now In progress. We have; drastically reduced prices on ranges, refrigerators, w a s h e r s; dryers, TV, Stereo and all appliances. Some are floor models' dr window'display samples, others we simply want to clear out to reduce our Inventory. SAVfr See for Yourself- The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP ofPONTIAC 51 West Huron Street FE 4-1555 Open Monday and Friday ’til 9 MDCARt&S <{. We have had a deaert turtle tor ts yean. Now we are moving from an altflnde of :,M0 feet to an altitude over 5,200 feet above sea level, Will this move affect our turtle? Mrs. c. Dear, Banning, Calif. A. Anyone who has had a turtle for 25 years is certainly a devoted animal kiVer. I fully understand your apprehension. ■ j% iSJE12 The .desert turtle thrives in its own environment but usually ______ not do too well when taken to a different climate. Apart from altitude, we have to consider such ifactors as change- in humidity, temperature and quality of the water. ■ L Unless you have facilities to simulate climatic conditions of the turtle's present home, (moisture; humidity, etc.) taking her with [you would be a risk. Report Couple Pays $100,000 tof JFK Home WASHINGTON (AP)—A youi* ouple is reported to have- paid nope Burn flOO.OQO for President-Elect John- F. Kennedy's Georgetown House. Mrs. Perry Ausbrook, the former Dale Ktnible, confirmed Friday that she and her husband had bought the house, but she refused to reveal auy details. Nor would Kennedy spokesmen. ' Mrs.. Ausbrook is the daughter of Herman Kimble of Ocean City, N.J. Her father is the former president of the Kimble Glass Cte of Vineland, N./., taken over to 1946 by the 'Owens-Illinois glass Co.— He now is a director of Owens-Illinois. Ausbrook, also of a wealthy family, is a young lawyer with the. Development Loan Fund-They have two children. Kennedy bought the house at 330V "N” St. for (70.000 in 1957. Three MSU Professors- Year’s Polio Count Lowest Since 1938 WASHINGTON (AP) - There were 3,277 polio cases in United States in 1960, the lowest for any year since 1938 when -there were 1,705. Reporting this Friday, ther Public Health Service said the total of 2,285 paralytic polio eases previously reported for last year may rise closer to the 8,489 listed for 1957. Fire-Scarred Carrier Structurally Sound Murray7! Sales Down DferROrt IB — Murray Oorp. of America reported Friday its consolidated net sales for the three month period ended Nov. 30 were (10,776.531, compared to (15.322,466 for the corresponding It laid the consolidated the -period was (102, 10 centra share ef 1969 period, net loss for 0, equal to stock. Some Virginia fishing on Sunday. survey of fire damage on the aircraft earner Constellation says the slhlp is still structurally sound. —♦——♦ h This finding was reported Fri-[lay by Gapt. Donald 'Furlong, planning officer of the Brooklyn iNavy Yard, to the naval court of inquiry investigating the Defc. 19 [firp on the Constellation. The blaze, .took 56 lives, and caused about $48 million damage. The 60,006-ton aMp, originally scheduled for completion in May, is now expected to be finished in [December. It has brien under IstrUction since 1957. at nusu WINS IN COURT — Charlayne Hunter, 18, is a Wayne State Univereity student,, from Atlanta, Ga., who came to Detroit hoping she wouldn’t stay. This is no insult to Wayne because when she started there Charlayne had a court case pending for admission to Segregated University of Georgia. Friday Federal Judge W. A. Bootle ruled Georgia must admit her and Hamilton E, .Holmes, 19, also a Negro from Atlanta. Plainwell Steel Firm Is Sold for $500,050 GRAND RAPIDS (AP) — Anglejh Steel. Inc., of Plainweil Hn« h»n . Tihy Girl Keeps ] 3-Day Vigil With 1 Dead Mother GLASGOW, Scotland, (API—For Police broke into their home Friday night to find-Mary, weeping and frightened, huddled in bed with her mother's ’body, f Mary Is deaf and 'dumb. She had kept herself alive w-ithj slices” or bread - and a bottle ’ of] milk left - c i table. The 1957 paralytic total is the to Joirt in Aged Confab yw* «kk»aeparate] la records of paralytic cases were EAST LANSING ==Thfr| produces steel cabinets, benches,-South Viet - Nam —giivmsmont tables, utility carts and seating for|banned firecrackers (or the Feb: j schools and industry now becomes 15 New Year's celebrations. Fire-a wholly owned Crampton subsid- crackers were declared a luxury liary. 'to be avoided now. | Homeowner's package Insurance -.finest gift you could present t< family for the new Year. Call now AUSTIN-NORVELL AGENCY lac. 70 W. Lawrence FI 2-9221 i Nanette Fabray Tolr to Rest for 3 Days. j HOLLYWOOD (API — Actress Nanette Fabray is recovering at home from what her doctor terms exhaustion and laryngitis. |. A spokesman said the comedienne will remain in bed at least' three days. She wag ordered to bed Friday after working contin-j uously for six weeks on her new television series. Bargains You Can't Afford to Miss-On All Carpets-lnlaid Linoleum- Floor Tile-Wall Tile Unfinished Furniture-Points Sold ItgsUrly at $10.50 TWO DAYS ONLY $^88 s< u Batty Ham Reduced 66% and.Hon PONDER GREEN TWIST 15'xl0'x2' o.„$100JS BEIGE TWIST 15'xlO' Wat $225 <,,*100“ QREEN LOOP PILE 13^11^ Wb# $tti .■ 75" Beige Tweed ) 2x1,1 '5" Loop Pile ' K»g. $12.95 ... $000 Only O UNFINISHED FURNITURE Chestrobe ........: . Was $38.49 $22.50 Desk ...............Was $29.95 $19.50 Step Up Table „ .. Was $11.49 S 4.95 3-Drawer Chest . . . Was $27.95 $17.50 *•» »M $595 Sq. Yd. ONLY ^ Vi OFF Weodea Table Lest...Reg. $2.98 $1.99 Wronght Iron Table Legi Reg. $3.25 $1.60 Bran Tablt Legi.....Reg. $5.95 $2.96 Plastic Wall TOt.... .........kit Plastic Wall TUa Cap..........Sc Ft. Plastic Feature Strip ........Sc PL McCANDLESS 11 N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 ™.........—Pontiac Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION * PON t I A C. M I C H ! G'A N ‘^r.!'■' ' X ' branches \ * • — II1EA8T LAWRENCE STREET. PONTIAC. MICHIOAN 761 WEST HURON STREET ' MAIN STRSTr. ROCHKBTRR. MICHIOAN 4419 DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON PLAINS. MICHIOAN 1103 W. -MAPLE RO.. WALLED LAKE c$atem£^ PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION PONTIAC, MICHIGAN December 31, 1960 AHSH^ETS •T::~.:-;x.r \ First Mortgage Loans ................................ $23,841,886.38 Properties Sold on Contracts ..... ,Wv*.. 974,882.05 Home Improvement and Modernization Loans (FHA Title 1) 53,652.93 Loans on Savings Accounts ,...... . ..... 392,610.91 Real Estate in Judgment. ........... ... 70,456.78 Stock in Federal Home Loan Bank .. .......... 500,000.00 U.Sa Government Securities .... _________^741^7^ _________‘ Prepaid Rent ..... ....... ' 207.88 Cash on Hand and in Banks................... 2,445,697.52 Land and Office Buildings (less accumulated depreciation) ... ................... 551,474.02 Office Equipment, Furnishings and Improvements to leased property (less accumulated deprerialion-ttmi —7 -..'. amortization) .......... 7,.., . * * 71388590 $29,076,910.13 LIABILITIES Savings Accounts . .... ............ ........ .. $24,797,206.84 Advances from Federal Home Loan Bank of * . Indianapolis ..... .. _____ ' .. 2,500,000.00 “ ] - Loans in Process ............................ 179,318.24 f '■•■T Other Liabilities.. ....., ..J.,. .. , . : . ... ‘ ' *^ - 15,079.78 — Specific Reserves ... ...37^26.40 . 4 -r „ ,r——.... General Reserves -•-* /, !,; ■■■ r $1,513^09.94 Surplus ... .................. ........ 34,568.93 Total General Reserves and Surplus........... 1,547,978.87 $29,076,910.13 Chartered and Supervised by The V, S, Government B. CLARE CUMMINGS JAMES M. RAUL CORABELLE M. BELL BOARD OF DIRECTORS iuTiV.r'- A«toto.» TfMtorw HON. CLARK J. ADAMS LOUIS H. COLE JAMES CLARKSON WILLIAM DEIKE M1 *'.G*liir^N MAHLON A. BENSON, JR. R. CLARE CUMMINGS EuraUv*VlM Prc.ltfrnl ......... *,tl»Unl Utn\»n ■■4 ter,ur, S3 Br...k M...pr MARJORIE E. TODD CONRAD N. CHURCH JOHN Q. WADDELL VERN McM ASTER THORALF ULSETH nwiHttr JAMES CLARKSON vim Pmttwt A,St7!iri h3ST WARREN D. NEWTON E. W. JOHNSfON 0 RONALD FACER AUDITORS TrMiar*, MtoiTNMn,.M C. BRYAN KINNEY * _ „ nr..rk iitom, JENKINS AND E8HMAN PONTIAC FEDERAL SAVINGS 76i W. HURON STREET , Down (own: 16 E. Lawrence St. 467 Main St. Rochester / 4416 Dixie Highway,Drayton Plains. 1102 W. Maple Rd„ Waited Lake '» A THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street ' f_ • Pontiac, Mich. ' SATURDAY, JANUARY 7,1961 itjBiD i fjnonuLD : Scivno h rntnui a, Vie* PnStat end , Buslneu Menegrr It Seems to Me ,. .. Nation’s Aviation Development Progresses While Ours Lags Increasing attention is focused on all air developments. Investigations of two bad accidents play a part, but authorities are almost frantic in their struggle to keep up with the swift upward trend in speed, volume of passengers and number of flights. Pontiac has a stake In this.' Our own airport lags. ★ ★ ★ We had the first A-l-A setup, in the country. It was ideal. But the expansion hah swept far, far beyond us in every way. Local airport authorities have done well in the circumstances. Primarily, they’ve had no funds of anV com sequence in proportion to the national progress. Many airports have spent tens of millions where we’ve spent tens of dollars.' We’re that far behind. And we're losing ground. ’ ' _ jk___A____if >r- ‘ We can’t handle one of the "big” passenger planes of ten years ago. And these have been superceded by •the turbojets, the pure jets, the stepped up jets and now 1961 brings the superjets that cruise faster than ■600 miles anJiour.’ ; The problem is entirely too big and too expensive for Pontiac. Our airport Is supported by 80,000 taxpayers and It is used by three-quarters of a million. It’s really an Oakland County deal. ★ ★ ★ The City, of Pontiac alone ran NEVER afford io develop this ! airport ps it should he. In spite of some new and commendable activities out there, each month we lose more ground than we gain. ★ dr ★ This newspaper tried to interest a big private corporation in locating its ’ home operations here. They surveyed tthe-situation carefully and said: You lack a north-south * runway. Your east-west runway istoo short. Your airport isn’t easily ailable by car. There were other objections but these came first. ★ ★ ★ . • Enlarging- our airport appreciably woul4 mean closing a road or two. This isn’t anything new in airport development. Across the nation it has been done repeatedly and just recently a Press editor landed at a big airport where the highway had been re-ibuilt beneath a heavy, cement •vun--way that was designed for super jets. ★ ★ ★ The only adequate solution to ■ the local problem may be to join with the county. Oakland serves three-quarters of a million people, it won’t be long until this number is a million. Most of them have a stake in an acceptable airport—or —they will in the future^____il,—- Home authorities say Wjilow Run and Metropolitan will even-^ tualiy become “jet oniy" airports. That will force aq. enormous amount of traffic to seek another landing spot. . We’re the closest. And we have a start. ★ ★ dr * Delos Hamlin and other air-mind-. ed supCrvisers-have shown a friendly finterest in thePontlaeCity Airport and have evinced a willingness to ; study the situation. Perhaps the city ; and couhty could operate the airport * jointly. 'Perhaps they should name an * Independent commission. Perhaps ! the county should take* over and ! handle it alone. And there may be better solutions. ★ ★ ★ ■; Residents adjacent to any airport * anywhere will object to greater opera-; tions. But the complaints from en- larging ah established airport will be appreciably less than those that would arise, from an entirely new location. Oakland Couhty is too far settled to find huge areas where no one lives. dr ,dr Airports that were no larger than ours a few years ago have spent millions of dollars. If we want to go. forward with the nation’s aviation development, we must move now. Otherwise we sit ' on the sidelines and leave the advancement to others. Nikita Khrushchev greets the United Nations Assembly’s resolution calling for the'termination of coloni-alism with cheers—the bum. And he roundly supported the -section.urging imprisoned peoples lo“ revolt—the tramp. And he promised Russian aid to those that did—the’two-faced hypocrite. . How about the iron-heeled captives Russia holds? Yes, how about those millions of unwilling slaves that bow before the iron flst of communism? -*■ Yes, how about them. And in Conclusion .... Jottings from the well thumbed notebook of. your peripatetic reporter.: Dorothy Young just counted 17 pheasants in her back yard. Is this a local record? .............Pontiac Motor sold 33,000 Tempests during its brief run in I960.... Down In the Virgin Islands, Archie Barnett says he would gladly exchange his N.Y.‘Times (50 cents copy) for any issue of The Pontiac Press. Atta boy, Archie! ........... “Camelot" has the biggest advance seat sale in history of Broadway theaters. Critics vote it absolutely tops ........ . In the annual Nativity play at BuckinghamPalace* the_lead was taken bylittle Susan Lewis, a cabby’s daughter. Princess Anne was an angel and spoke one line.. . ______Currently abroad in Havana: Castro to Khrushchev: “Merry Christmas comrade:” K. to C.: “And a bloody New Year, chum.” ★ ★ ★ A Kennedy cocktail: three parts Old Fitzgerald, one part holy water and a twist of Norman Vincent locale ,f........ Michigan Republican: *Td have voted for Kennedy myself if I’d known he was going to send Soapy to Africa.” ......... Purely per- sonal nomina- Ydtse of life* People: : * Reader Calls City of Detroit Disgraceful, f ull of Crime Detroit is so crime ridden end so infested with thugs, ifturdcreri, holdup men and teen-age hoodlums, my family end I le^pa^efow dark when we visit there occasionally. r' * ★ a . a Central Park in New York waa supposed to be the mmt danger- __ins arre «- amorfeo mtimr dark, hat Detroit ts is the seme class and that meaaa the wkote city end net Just one spot. Detroit officials pat aa extra officers mad the thugs actually step ap oa their mar- A A, A Detroit is the Number One disgrace of the United States of America. I hate to live within 25 miles of this crime Jungle. L.G.G. City Murder Case Brings Comments To clear Up a misunderstanding caused by the report that Keith Hamilton was “licensed to preach by the Wesleyan Holiness Association,’’ I wish to state lhat this association is in no way connected with the Wesleyan Methodist Church of America, of which the local Wesleyan Methodist Church is a part. Other groups that have taken . the name "Wesleyan’’ are not in any way affiliated with the .Wesleyan Methodist Church in this city, or with the denomination. J. M. Kavanaugh, Pastor First Wesleyan Methodist Church 65. N. Lynn St.. I am very upset over The Press’ coverage of the .shootings by Keith Hamilton. He was a sick man and the police knew it. When he kept getting in trouble leading up to what happened, why did our .courts CTpeatedly let Jdm g . done for—humanity—temperance—peace—breaking the rod of the oppressor—higher edu- M cation .. . . I would enlist for another » year s campaign, anff fight it out for the glory * of God and the welfare of man.” : Days of All Faiths: Christians Honor the Holy Family By JOHN C. METCALFE I like to take my motor car . . . Into the countryside ... And with my faithful dog across .: . . The early morning glide ... I like to ride ”a“ speeding train . . . Beneath a moonlit sky . . . And. from my steamy window watefi .. . The silken stars pass by . . . I like to fly a roaring jet . . . And trail the setting sun . . . Above a mountain range of clouds . . . Until the day is done . . . I like to see the water spray . . . Against my racing boat . . . AndleOny lazy sun-tanned dreams . . . Upon the whitecaps float . . . But most of all I like to walk . . . Along our garden lane . . . And In' the stillness pf the night . . . Be here with you again. (Copyright INI) If the kind of “God and love” that Vine was filled wjth was like that of the Rev.* A. J. , Baugbey, when he aald, “Hamilton had wver been connected with our church," I wouldn't want nay of It. Would God look down on a aick man or think ha waa not good enough for Him? ★ A it . I hope all whd are running this man down will stop and think how they could have helped him. I hope the court* don't Just say he was insane and in a couple of months let Mm free to hurt someone again. i. A. ‘Recent Church Ad Wasn't Explicit1 • In a recent Saturday issue of church news. I noticed ah advertisement for the Crescent Hills Baptist Church with the following caption above the church name: “Waterford Township’s American Baptist Church." * A A I am wondering what the word American means. Would a foreigner be welcome or is it re-. strictod to Americans? The words “everyone welcome” did not appear in the ad as it does in most church ads. , Jnst Wondering ‘Police Department Needs Weeding Gut* By DR. HOWARD V. HARPER The three holiest people that ever lived, Jesus, Mary and Joseph,*1 lived together. The Church and the world honor them separately on many occasions, but it is also logical that there should be this one day, Jan. 8. on which they, are thought of together as the Holy Family, living their beautiful fami-, ly life for all those years in the house in Nazareth. The Sunday after Epiphany (Jan. 6) Is Holy Family Sunday in the . Roman Catholic church. The day Is well placed. Epiphany ha* important family aspects. It follows closely upon the celebration of the IAN’S birth, and upon the Orcamcibfoii, at which time the Child waa named. These are big events In any family. , It is rather strange that it was not until the seventeenth century that devotion to the Holy Family as a family began , to appear in any sizeable proportions. Of course, the first stirrings were In Europe, but the honor ;of holding the first festival in commemoration of the Holy Fami|y goes to the New -World. It was held in Quebec in 1675, by Bishop Laval, first Bishop of Quebec. STIMULATED BY SOCIALIZED NdtMng*~8Be^acular^ "happened for a century and a half liter that, but in 1884’Belgian church authorities, alarmed by the growth of socialism in their country, established the' Society of the Holy Family, ‘ with membership open only to workingmen. By 1893 Pope Leo- XIII recognized the Belgian group and expressed a desire tor the establishment of similar societies everywhere. The reason* for combatting socialism with devotion to the Family of dedlrnled workmen aimed only at expressing gratitude for the purity and holiness of thl* example of (tirtstlan family fife. ' ~ ■Htew • today many congre- gations of "religious” (monks and nuns) under the patronage of the Holy Family. Parents can plow the ground, and they should. And if they do, God can grow the seed. (Copyright, 1MI) Dr. Brady’s Mailbag Honest Working People Can Eat Fried Foods A local policeman Is protesting the orders of his superior and “wants to go to court” or something. This is still a hangover of that impossible ctvtl service mess we got sucked into several years ago. Caiuyou imagine a corporal « *1 in the army wanting to "go to ^mileS court” because he was transferred? We need a weeding out process as One week's bills placed end to. well as transfers. Taxpayer TV Commercial Placed in Low Spot We vote Danny the Bartender as the silliest and most ridiculous TV commercial of 1960. It had stern competition but my friends and I unanimously put it in the lowest spot. Six night crarfips is tetany. For the pamphlet on Adult Tetany send stamped, seif-addressed-envelope^ signed letter*, not' more then on* p*g* or 100 word* long, pertaining to ______ by Dr. William Brady. If a imped, self-addressed envelope Is sent Tht Pontiac Pres*. Pontiac. Michigan. (Copyright 1961) Case Records of a Psychologist: MARGARET Skelton is the bent comic in the buHinem. 1 think it’s Jack Benny but Skelton would be a sharp second............Honestly, H a r- i old Euler jjs doing a tremendous job with the business management of (ieneral Hospital......... .....Elvis Presley records are selling Hke mad. “Are You Lonesome Tonifht” is expected to touch the two million mark. The whole industry is gasping. (And so'm I —- for a different reason). ★ ★ ★ . Illinois Medical School says a hot cup of coffee will actually promote sleep if you take it piping hot at the last mini^e. The only thing that keeps you awake Is your own silly, imagination (says the IJM.S.) ..... ..... The C; E. Wilsons got Presi- ation. Honor to the Holy Family ho longer ha* any economic purpose*. Since 19*1. the festival he* been i world-wide obeervaace In the Reman Catholic (Burch, dent Dwight D. Eisenhower’s Christmas, remembrance, a picture of a Bavarian Church he did himself. I ThThk one of -the beat things I ever saw that Eisenhower did was a copy of Stuart’s “George Washington.” The original of this famous masterpiece belongs to Mr. and Mrs. Al-fred G. Wilson and I should think The Pontiac Press would photograph that and Eisenhower’s copy for the benefit of our reacLers- By DR. WILLIAM BRADY . Are foods fried "ftt, butter or vegetable oHs-hard to digest or-harmful to health?—(F.O.W.) Ans.—Such food is as wholesome and digestible as food c o o k e d in any other way. People who live by their wits or as parasites may find fried food a little more nourishing than their | digestive organs | ran handle, but this is no reason Why honest work- __ ing people or DR- BRAnY those who get enough exercise should not eat fried foods. ---Oa you beilevc_bF the 86 per rent-alkaline and *0. per-Cent-Retd balance of food* for the correct diet?—(E.W.T.) Ans. — I never give M a thought. Don’t be a fu**-budget about your food! Mother. 70, has Parkinson’s disease and is very deaf. She insists that xou said |t is not harmful, to take a bath in the morning, and she says she has always done it and never took cold that way-'-tM.W.L.l -——- Ans.—Mother knows best. I wish ’“to high heaven there were 10 mil*-lion more like her. Contracted diphtheria working in . . cafeteria lait year—throat culture.. J?* UK before 1 begad work there. After several months there my throat culture was found positive, although I had no illness. Health board quarantined me three weeks, used penicillin and other things, but culture still positive. Now they want to remove my tonsils, although they say even that has failed in many cases. My own doctor says my tonsils seem OK but that removal of tonsils is headers an Opportunity to see whether Dr Pierce Is correct. A Kentucky man was arrested for wearing no clothes. The men just can’t get away with tt.---- A ' A A . Get your mind off your troubles and you'll have your troubles off your mind. A large percenage of home accidents happen in the kitchen. Give ' the new bride time—she’ll learn to COOk:--:--- A A A Our butcher bill reminds us that every time a little pig goes to market we have a chance to squeal. A A A An Ohio woman went to court over a masseur’s $200 bill, she was rubbed the wrong way. > Questions Headers *1 The I invited to send let of public interest —cotum o. Letters must be - under SM words, signed, lull address and In good taste. Points previously fully covered by other letters wiU not bs printed since It would be repetitious. 8tgnetures will bs withheld on ro-quest. Teen-Agers Basically Idealists Dr, Pierce brings out a point on which there is often a lot of debate, especially when we redd headlined stories concerning modern delinquency. But tm "textbom "Test” below shows the inherent tdeatisfn of " modern teen-agers. They are crusaders at heart. So we must be sure they crusade wisely. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE G—472: Dr. Robert B. Piferce is a famous pastor in Detroit and one of the leaders in our Scientific Marriage Founda- were visiting, Recently, as we we talked- about the . problems of cheating—during college exams. And the other letdown, such as “payola” and rigged TV shoWs. “Young people^ are basically! Idealistic if given! a chance, don't! you think?” Dr. DR. ClUNE Pierce said. A . A A Before I reply, I’ll give you iMt them to it I* a “panoramic” text, with 21 chapter* on *uch vital tophi ■ a*: —Individual & Sex Differences 3-How to improve Personality w —Sales Psychology. —Advertising Psychology —Psychology of Writing It Art —Psychology of Public Speaking —Psychology It Religion —Child Psychology —Psychology of Music . —Psychology in the Professions When I was first told about Dr. He**’ ingenious assignment, -+ gue**erf that mont of Hie wtu-dent* would helect the chapter on “How to Improve Personality.” ‘ - . For it contained many helpful sections about carrying on Interesting conversation, tooting your escort’s horn* by sincere compliments, and other data of pertinent concern to 18-year-olds. - But I was wrong. : A A A The overwhelming preference of the students (90 per cent) was Religion’.!. Oldsters grow cynical and disillusioned, but young folks In every generation are easy fodder for soap box orators if. the. latter veil their own basic selfish interests under the guise of ."wd-"“tare^projecis or even “national- ‘ Castro and Hitler and Khrushchev derive their support front idealistic though often misinformed teen-agers. Teen-agers want to do right and _________!____^ M *wve * ***** inner urge even to ’ chapter concerning “Psychology It down their lives to make this the usual procedure—(Mrs. C.L.M. Ans .—Ypur own doctor should __________________ It pointed out why Jesaa was Recently br t. W ~H»w~~was ^ ti^^^t ^Ppligtl Fsy head of the psychology department f^^E*** ***! listed.the many con-in a leading collage In Michigan. —tHarold A. Fitzgerald advise you whether the risk In the major operation IF1 warranted in the circumstances. In your place I’d have (1) ultaviolet treatment (of course by physician skilled in such work) and If that failed to eradicate the diphtheria bacilli I’d settle for (2) electrocoagulation treatment. These «rw safe. Sent for. your pamphlet on nocturnal leg cramps, three months ago., I had beeft suffering with -r.- ___ i _ wr^. the.cramps for a long time..Have ,h*T were to write a short theme lege of the Liberal Arts type. been taking the calcium capsules *e™nji why./ Yo 1 nr>[. , .___■ regularly, and I want you to know Nam this college text Is la- • * * how frateful.- hut two slight at* traded to opea toe eym el *ta ehampton many____________________ tacks since—(H M.S ) tomb to all toe many practical <:«l reuse* that appear to be of fields when psychology wifi pat- the Geod Samaritan variety. He used my college textbook “Psychology, Applied” as the basic text, sad toward the ead of toe coarse, he gave a unique homework assignment to the student*. He asked them to pick out the one chapter in the textbook which they appreciated most, and then tributlons of’ religion to human Religion.” * So Dr. Pierce is quite correct in saying that American young people are basically idealistic IDEALISM IS YOUNG • Ttemember, too, that this college was not a seminary hor a school for preparing missionaries or nurses for altrustic careers. world better. It is in the teens when we us-ually make our loftiest -resolves, both as to -veeation and marriage partners. Alwby* write ie Dr. Oeerft W. Cram ”, *WW ot n* Pontlae Pran. Portlet. MfcMfm. ataleiai s has 4 cent etemrri **“ iwniul envelope and is cent* to —Thank you. Name for th« The Auoelated Prise Is entitled exclusively la the u* for republf •Kil"* Printed I No. it was a typical-private col-. e *5* Ponttee Pres* t* delivered by mm----------------- — .cmnuw it. a lit ot • . jMty they jag BQKTIA^ Pttg
    inipncuun tbs Holy Spirit. Turmag to Acta, chapter two,, we learn that Rater preached Ch. to the Puateoeettaas. He proved eonoluslvely by Infallible proofs t Jesus was the 'resurrected Christ. This evidence was so convincing tl balls rad It and this faith prompted them ta oak, "Brethren what si we do." Acts -3:37; . "Peter eald unto thorn, repent ye, and be baptised every one of y in the name of Jesus Christ unto the remission, of your sins; and shall receive the- gift, of the Holy Spirit." Acts 3:38. Remember, i Is addressed to aU who are already believers in Christ. Two thlnss remain: repent and be baptised. How many should do thief "Si one of. y°u.” Acte 1 11. Therefore, we must conclude. If one has FLEETWING 26-INCH 3456 Primary street F. Wm. Palmer, Faster Sunday School ......10 00 A.M. Morning Worship . ...ILISA.M. Infant Baptisig 6:30 P.M. ....... Youth Groups SPORT BIKE DRAYTON Drayton Plains, Michigan W. J. Teeuwlssen Jr.. Faster Bibio School :.. .... 9:46AiM. Morning Worship .... 11 00 A.M. Youth Groups . ....6:30 P.M. Evtning Worship ... 7:30P.M. Wednesday Prayer and Study Hour, . .. ... 7:30 P.M. church of Christ SCHEDULE OF SERVICES I0SLTN AVE. Bibld’School Sunosy .. 9:45 a.i Sermon and Worship . I I dX> a.i Evening Worship and Sermon i..., 6.00 p.i Bible Study Tuesday. 8:00p. Young Adults Thurs. . 8:00 p. Joslyn at Third t Edmond I. Watkins, Pastof Biblet School-........9:30 J Morning Worship . 1Q:4S J Youth Mooting .......7:00 20-inch Dtluxt tike, R.g. 34.95 29.99 Evening Worship PI THE T5yTIAT;PftESSt^ATURDAY,-JAyUlfflY 7, im— —- WESLEYAN METHODIST First Christian Church * - Disciples of Christ Sunday School 9:45 A M: Church Service 11:00 A. M. ' 858 W. Huron Bov. D. D. McCo7/ 7 CHURCH OF GOD East’Pike kt Anderson" . Rev. Es'ol D. Moore, Pastor Adult Program at Orchard Lake Series of Seminars on Islam and Judaism Sett for Winter, Spring The Christian education committee of the Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian is sponsoring an adult .program through the winter and spring months. The first project according to chairidan Howard Scharfenberg will be a series of seminars on Is-1 lam and Judaism beginning at 8 p.m. Sunday. • : The discussion wilf be based onj-I the Jdnescope lectures of. Profes-i fsor Houston Smith of .Washington! -University. St. Louis. f .’ft - ** % ; . . 7 OthCr projects include a family , life discussion in February, three Lenten Family Nights on. Sundays in March, and a class on "intro* duction to the Old Testament" to be tauRht by the Rev. Edward D. Auchard, pastor, after Easter.-The Orchard Lake Church found it necessary many years ago to eliminate adult church school classed to make room for the expanding program of Christian education among children and youngj people. ' - , ! The short term courses of-! fered represent an effort to meet I the need for varying types of study at an adult level. The pastor will preach on ‘'SicIC; of What We Wan*" Sunday mom-jing. The Chancel Cholrwifi sing at the early service and the Chapel Choir at 11 a.m. _____•____ The executive board of the Women's Association will meet at the church Monday. The board of trustees will discuss the 1961 program at the Monday evening meeting with Robert Newton pre-I aiding. g Holy Communion at Pine Hid (Mi ' The second .terries of Holy Communion will be observed at 11 a.m. Sunday by tbs Fine Hill Congregational Church in the Pine Lake Elementary School on Wept Long Lake Road, one mile west • of Middlebelt Rood. Church School classes will meet at the same hour. "The Parables of ChrieT'W« meditation by the pastor, Dr. Alfred D. Grey. All founding members are expected to be present at the morning service when new members will be. received and founding members recognised. ....■........ A cooperative dinner is scheduled for. Jan. 19 at the West Bloomfield Township Hail. .*■ NORTH EAST COMMUNITY CHURCH — The first unit of the new North East Cnmmimlty Church located on a two and one-half acre site at Mt. Clemens and Featherstone, will be dedicated at 3 p.m. Sunday by Bishop Reuben H. Mueller. West Central Area Bishop'of the Evangelical United Brethren Church and a Vice president of the National Council of Churches. The exterior of the building embracing 7,900 square feet.of floor.ana on the two floors, is constructed of masonry and combed redwood. Designing the building were the Roth Engineers of Birmingham. Joha E. Roth ft Sons. Inc. of Birmingham were the builders. The Rev. Harry B. Schlosser is pasftr. 10 A.M-SUNDAY SCHOOL 1 li A.m. WORSHIP HOUR 7 P.M. WORSHIP HOUR North East Community Chu Be Dedicated Th? first unit of tjye new North! >ga> Cenlereace, wifi otter to C. Ed Hampshire of the local < tabling peas for 30 choir members. I structure contains k multi-purpose’ * ...-----------------— —im which will be used for Sun-j Nigh* CHURCH of SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP MALTA HALL, 82 PERKfNS.STREET Servlet Sunday, 7:30 P.M. Lillian Winters . Thrusday. 12th Silver Tea 15th Rev. Warren Smith of Coldwater f EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE Sunday School lO a.m. Classes lor all ages! Preaching 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Youth, 8:30 pm. • Radio — CKLW 7:30 a.m., 800 kc in Detroit SSOO Walk In* taka tut., N. W. Osk. Co. Mkt. I1/* MU*I DaWttt Baugh**. A*it In East Community Church at Mt. W*-~~~ Mr. Hanii»hire will then pre-| The' Interior is finished with day School convocations, fellow-Clemens and Featherstone. will be Leading repsonsive reading will ^ key to the Rev. Mr. Sdflos- Philippine mahogany paneling. To ship, and dining. The front*wall dedicated at 3 p:ra. Sunday with ** tbs. Rev. G. H. Kenerman Jr. ^ Who will ^ ^ to Bishop Muel-blend with the blonde mahogany,is painted plum; the rear wall is, Bishop Reuben H. Mueller DJ).j?f,er ^ay>ng "The building commit-interior, portions of the masonry(done in yellow, the Sidewalls in; LLD. of Indianapolis, lnd„ West !^ tee. appointed to supervise the have been painted a soft plum)neutral beige; and all doors are. Central Area Bishop, preaching Melons and ronference frection of this church, has com- red, the theme color throughout,painted plum red. Draperies are a ‘he sermon. f**”"’Pleted its wprk, and now presents the building. jdeep cherry. * ♦ + gjJSJJ Unite^BreUwro mS!*° you the key °fPews and chancel furniture are KITCHEN EQUIPPED The service will open with ^ wuIifTfsts you to dedicate the build.] ^ Mk, to a silver- Tbe kitchen is installed with gan music by John L. -Bryant of ;^^ ^ First Lesson. ' i‘n®' " toned lacquer to blend with the built-in ovens and ranges; double- Ann*'Arbor. Rudy Ball-wifi serve, ft, * ft- COFFEE HOUR FOLLOWS aquh green carpet covering the {well stainless steel sinks; fruit- Robert Everett. Grant Kitchenj A coffee hour will foUow in the! chanc<'1 "V “d cen‘er ai,le- [wood flbor and wall cabinets; and Macro B SCh o^r ’ i6®"*1 Frederiksen ftnd Roqald basement fellowship rooms with; The Udies’ L^lrTfc” reai-jtonflc^^^ «P«*- *' ;Metz a male quartet from thcjwomen of the church serving as of the chapel can also beused as] The low-roofed wing house thel The Rev. Myron R. Everett, jBaldwin Church.Will sing "Chris-;hostesses. Ian overflow room It is furnished church office, rest rooms; and! minister at Baldwin Evangelical jtian Awake." The L-shaped building embracing! with ivory and toast lounge-type specialized space for the Tower United Brethern Church, will | * * * 7.800 square feet of floor area on furniture. The biscuit colored dra-|grades of the Church School. The read the Hcrlptfare and the Rev. I Thomas F. Roth of Bloomfield | the two floors consists of a chapel peries add warmth to the whole blonde mahogany paneling with1 Newell C. Ltosemer, East DU- Hills, representing the designers seating more than 144, with the I decorative scheme the beige and plum red color ! trict Superintendent of the Mich- land builders, will present the key]conventional divided chancel* con-' The basement under the main,scheme is also carried out through-;—p—•----------—; “..................... “ .... — —1'== ...s '■ ■• - = ' -...., ’ out the wing. First Social Brethren Church 318 Baldwin, FE 3-0384 Sunday School .... 10:00 A.M. Sunday Morning Worship.........11:00 A.M. Tues. Young People . . 7:3Q P.M. Thursday Prayar .... 7:36PM. REV. TOMMY GUEST, Pailor KEEGO HARBOR BAPTISTCHURCH 8UNDAY SCHOOL—II A M MORNING WORSHIP—11 A .or—Rev "Bob'* Kunnert 1,500 Witnesses Hold Convention jr DONELSON BAPTIST CHURCH BUttbith Lake ltd. at Tlldtn OR. 3-3J0* Sunday School 10 A.M. Morning Worship .11 A.M. _________________IM........................... 7:30 P.M. Midweek Service-............... ...........7:30 PM. Wed. Paatar—RKY. LIE LaLONK ' S. 8. Supt —EOOENE THOMAS LEACH ROAD COMMUNITY CHURCH I Mil* Eaat of Auburn Height*, 1 Block North of Auburn Rd. Sunday School I# A.M. . MernlPt Worahlp 11 A.M. Ivanlnf Wpriblp T:M P.M. , "II You Need Spiritual Encouragement ., . Come1!_ Pastor THEODORE MOS1E8 A OAKLAND PARK METHODIST CHURCH m Montcalm and Olenwood Rev. J. W. Deeg, Pastor -I------"MORNING SERVICE 10:00 A.M. Sermon: "COME LATE. BUT COME" ■ Sunday School 11:15 A.M.____School ol Mlsslona 5 30 P.M. I'lft^njisy Some 1.500 are attending the.^frorkftFJohovah's Wltpesses were. ln family life and the congrega-convention of Jfhovah's Witnessea baptized by immersion this after-! tion. “Directing Intereal to the at Pontiac Central High School nooh in the school pool'following Congregation" will be Mr. Kova->ver the .weekend. Sessions will the sermon on "Baptism." by Mr. lak’s subject. !"S5L‘l’'Sl?rdJT dl,trl<-t K”V,1'kV:' ■ highUghl ol tte aucmbly " . , . . ___. bol of one s dedication to Jehovah. 'Watchtower headquarters in Brook-1, building committee consists Ibf C. Ed-Hampshire, Albert T. gregational meetings are held eacbPlate- John. A. Axen, Earl C.l week at the halls. Sparks and The pastor. Serving on the board , of trustees are William "Ail sessions of the convention are free and no collections will be taken, smldWIUlam S. Strong, presiding minister of Pontiac. Chairmen of committees making FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 578 Orcharti Lake Avonuo Bev. Harold Marshall, -Pastor , Harry Nichole* president ‘ Sunday Service 7:30 P.M/—Mrs. Elsie Beesley speaking •- Wednesday Service 7:30 P.M.-—Rnv. Marshall ^toking ST. PAUL METHODIST m e Bquar* uka Rd. PC s-»«:u rt 2 2ii2 Morning Worahlp ■ 10 A.M. and 11:15 A M Jommunlan Meditation Church BBhpm'lO A.M. --------ALL SERVICES - AMPLE PARKING . _____ ____ jnlor -Youth Oroup*. 6 00' P M. Old** Vouthi l-.M 10 130 P.M "RrV~ JAM«S A MrCt.UNo Minll|l»T * SURKRVSCSD NURSERY ‘Baptism," he said, ________ ___________ bol of one’s dedication to Jehovah, [Sunday when Mr. Kovalak speaks lyn^-DL-J5wJkftUon^the*,,cOTVen- *”1 ®od ^tere»ted in the Af'«^m*hti‘'^entto lion theme, “Be Taught By ’fai” °f Men‘ include Joseph LaBarge, informa- iHoyah,” at the opening^rograpn]^" m.?^ -------- - .t .-t*. ..^—JtUinLEdgkBeitler^iSQma,foE del^ Friday night. serveTJod 41id Tils neighbor hs aT jihovah’s Witnesses have King-,gates; Samuel Wallace, advertis- "The purpose of the aasem- minlster of Jehovah- dom Halls locally at 800 E. Pike ing; and Richard Baugh, ushers. I>lv," he said, "I* to t-ntln-* to Tonight’s program will empha- St. and 4000 Walton Blvd., Drayton David Nesbitt of Royal Oak is te'ach Jehovah’s Witnesses how *^ie tbe Importance of worship 'Plains. Five Bible classes or con-!music director, to serve God more efficiently in the Christian ministry, _ I "Because Jehovah's Witnesses]^ L J. rlivc by His Word.-they-are united.IIrPy lr|pr|Hr(|\ having no barriers, of race, color *■*' dr nationalism." j A typical theocratic ministry school session as conducted each 1 week by ail congregations of Je-[hovah’s Witnesses followed his j address] The program closed with a service meeting conducted by Edwin W. Kriefall, Eastern Michigan supervising minister and. Watchtower representative. Taking pari In the ministry I school program were Richard | Kline* Joseph Tindall. Harry McCallum mild Robert Irvin, all of Pontiac. Participating in the s e r v i c e meeting were David Lockwood. :S3 i™>«««., _ . . _ . V’ ' lontl hsvnmA itiariMiMMfl #h am Richard Baugh of Pontiac. BAPTiZKD IN POOL Stark, FVancis Ball, Mr. Slate, Mr. Hampshire and Mr. Sparks. Other committee workers ip-elude Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Shaffer, Wilma Snyder, Mrs. Helen Schlosser, Mrs. Louise Greenwald and hr-and-Mrs: Dean Hampshire. The Rev. and Mrs. Schlosser and daughters, Lee and Ann, make! thBir home in the parsonage at 820 Mt. Clemens ~ Apostolic Church of Christ 458 Central Young People Saturday .... Sunday School and Worship Sunday Evening Service .. ■ Services Tues. ond Thurs. . . . 7 :30 P. M. ,10:00 A M . 7:30 P. M. . 7:30 P. M. Church Phone FE. 5-8361 UL 2-5142 Bishop L. A. Parent to Present Plan Program Developed to Eliminate Problems of Visits, Records , "Visitation is the key to bundling Sunday School attendance,” said the Rev, Robert Richards, director of Christian Education at Calvary Baptist Church of Hazel [Park. he found, many ofrai land became discouraged thi finally gave up. the Rev. Mr. Richards determined to develop a Newly qualified members enter- j program that would be simple but Ing the teaching and preaching,effective. - * ’ H J_____- - —■ . •.*-----1............. - , | CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH ;G. W. Gibson. Minister ■ FE 4-0239 • 847 N. Saginaw Bible School 945 A.M. Morning Worship 1100 A M. Youth. Service. . . 8:00 P.M. Evening Service 6:00 P.M. Prayer Meeting and Bible Study Wednesday .. 7:30 P.M. CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC -SCIENCE CHUHCH 30 Whittemore St. iSun. 7:30 P.M.—Harold Phillips Wednesday, Silver Tea ’ REV. ROBERT RICHARDS First Congregational Church Mill, E Huron and Mt. Clemens Makom K. Burton, Minister Howard Clegg'.. Ir. Assistant Morning Worahlp and -j— -—Church Sehool—*— 10:30 a.m; • A PURIFICATION' Rev. Malcom K. Burton, Preaching We are pleased to Announce the Completion of the first unit of the new Building of'the forth CaM CcmChurch ~________ UVANGELICAL UNlTEETEKETHREN) . " ' . Of Pontiac Mt. Clemens Street at Featherstone Road THE SERVICES OF DEDICATION . SUNDAY, JANUARY 8, 1961 TT o.m. The Service of Wprship 3 p.m. The Service of Dedication Bishop Reuben H. Mutter, D.D., LL D!, of Ihdlanapdlit, • ojFficIhting. Bi»hop Mutter it President of the Board of Biihopt of the- ivengelicel United Brethren Church; end is lntern«t{oqji|.iy known et a Church Leader and Pulpit Orator. l The Rev. Horry B Schlosser, tX B., J.D (Refreshments, Fellowship Hour and tour ,of the building will follow th) DediCAiunl • a‘YCTVtro to 1o«nH churches Pq^qT Installs he will give a pcraonal presenta- ^ tion of his living file system at Plriarc D&rtf*c\na: 7:30 p.m, Tuesday In the multi-piUCi*/ L/t?UL.kJiio purpose room at-Christian Utera-|syf fncIvn C'hliwh ture Sales. 39 Oakland Ave. |Ul VaUUIV.il | F!»y,d M"«’ ™,nMcr‘ The service of ordination and said the public Is Invited. installation of ruling elders aqd and Mrs. Charles Edie Tbe firing file system was de- j deacons was performed this week trustees, vetoped* by the Rev. Mr. at .the Joslyn Avenue United Pres- Chosen congregational officers Richards wttb The goal lw-mlwd4byterian Church by -the Rey. E. Include Charier ©He, chairman; I of eliminating many, problems '[. Watkins, pastor. Bruce Brede, vice chairman; Mo of duplication of visits, eompll- j Elders Installed were .Harold John Gemmell, secretary;' and rated record keeping and other Brown, Harry Hoffman and James William Webb, treasurer. Presbyterians Adopt Budget Congregation Chooses Officers; Elects Elders, Deacons, Trustees Members of file Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian adopted a budget of more than $50,000 at the annual parish meeting this week. Elders elected to serve the church were Charles' Bradsher, Dr. Wayne Good, Walter Hill,! Ernest' Johnston, Alex McAllister, Robert McCormack and Howarili Webb. Chosen as debeons were Mr. | and - Mrs. Carl Comer, Mr. and | Mrs. Ralph Osbomq, the Howard Tanners, Mrs. Edna Matheny, and Mrs. Walter Napersky. Lester Bell, Mrs. R. G. Criteti ?re named! Central Methodist HURON at PERRY MILTON H. BANK. Pastor D. J. WALLACE and I. H. HALL, Assoc. Pastors * Morning Worship 8:3QrlO:45 BROADCAST OVER WPON UtflD A.M. "GO PREACH'V" Rev. Wallace Preaching Church' School, 9:45 AM—Youth Fellowship 6 00 and 8 00 P.M. We cordially invite you to worship" Wilh ii FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH e. Michigan Office: FE 4-1111 •etdese*: FS ft-6924 Tbe I JLLe Rosier. i Is adaptable to I Deeons schools with attendance from 50 were Doris Anable, Vlrglee Dew7 to 2,500. Gloria Hoyt, Francis Thorpe, Originally developed for hts own FJsl* Baker, Margaret Bern-church, he made his plan avail-i berger, Norma GI|roy, Violet able when pastors of other! Compton. Mary Graham and churches heard of its success and Joan Haider, asked for It. Elder Robert Nelson gave the * * * \ I charge to the elders and deacons. Recently It was presented in a {Elder Harold Kline gave the work shop .at the National Sunday {charge to -the congregation. School Convention held in'’ St.! Winter Communion Sunday will Mo. It Is being adopted by [be—observed tomorrow. - Officers In tbe service Serving on the nominating com- mltfee were Circuit Judge Fred-1 erick Zlem, Anderson Bee, Mrs. Bruce Brede, William Catling and Joyce Sweet. The congregation also voted to buy a personage. Tbe seven-member - parsonage committee will work oa tbe project. The Rev. Theodore R. Allebach will preach on "A Place of Serv-Everyone" at the 10 o’clock ijevera! ■ denominations including I will bo dorterf at the churoheorp. Sunday morning service. Fthe Church of God with headquar-[oration meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tues- ““ v‘* ---------- ters In-Anderson, Ind. [day. Marimont Baptist Church 68 W. Walton • FE 2s-7239 ____Rgy. .PHILIP W. SOME.RS, pgitgr. Sunday School ! ........... 10 A.M. Begtnnihg Prophetic Studies tn the Book ol Danis/ Morning Service 11 A.M. >' "THE PROOF OF SERVICE" Evening Strvice ................ 7:30 P.M. ‘ "THE GIFT OF GOD" • Pastor Somers, Preaching Youth - Group .. A... ......... 6:30 P.M. ___ ___ At T Ms message will ^e "A Spiritual Chedmp." Janice Higgs will sing a solo. ★ ft ♦ Members will conduct the servlet at the Pontiac Rescue Mission] on South Saginaw Street Tuesdayj everting. Bible study and prayer hour wtH—be held Wednesday.- BETHEL TABERNACLE Plrrt F*nt*co*t Church •( FontUe 8.8. 10 SJB. Worship 11 BJB. Evangelistic Service 7:80 pra. Tues. and Thurs, 7:08 pm. Be*, sae Mrs Creasy , IMS Baldwin Art FI MW Faith Baptist Church 3411 AIRPORT ROAD Sunday Schooj........1-0:00 A. M. Worship S*rvic« .....11:00 A.M. Evening Service...... 7:30 P. M. • Wednesday Prayer SeiVice 7:30 P. M- Ample Parking—Supervised Nursery ' All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike The REV. C. GEORGE WIDOIFIELD, Rector 8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion 9:30 end 11:15 A.M.—Morning Proyer end Sermon by the Rector. Church School i Thun,, Jen. 12,10 A M.—Holy Communion CHURCH OF THE. RESURRECTION will meet in Clerkston Elementary School, 6595 Welikm Rd. 9:30 A.M.—Holy Communion and Sermon with Church School, by The Rev. Alexander T. Stewart THE PONTIAC PRESS. &ATgg5^frJAytTAR7y7^l96r Evangel Temple to SHow Film 'Disdpkship Sunday "Waterford Township's American Baptist Chard)" CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST Odeoent Late Road soar Hariwtr Rood Worship » AM. 11 Ate. Sunday School Large Parking Lot Nursery During AH 8enrto« of Michigan; will preach at the Epiphany. Feetival of Lights service at 7:30 Sunday evening at St. Kny'i hi the (tuts Church. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH NVION AT WAYNI WORSHIP SERVICES CHURCH SCHOOL . FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Oakland andSdgirtow-—-*■*» WR) 9:45 A. M.~SUNDAY SCHOOL * Claeses for All Agee 10:45 AK M.—MORNING WORSHIP "THE YEAR OF MY REOEEMED IS COME" EVENING SERVICE—7:00 P.M. * "A PROBLEM OF ARITHMETIC" REV. JAMES SAVAGE Speaking at Both Sendee* PONTIAC 17 Hill St. at Cherry St. Chirk* A. Cotter*. Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A M. CHURCH SERVICE 11 .-00 A M. Rev. Harold L. Hart is FE 4-62l6 Rational Lutheran Council Churches ASCENSION WATERFORD IfeaUne M Lillrtl fchool •831 Pontiac take Rd. Wm. LaFouatain, Patter. CHURCH SERVICE 9:00 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 10:00 AM! CHURCH SERVICE' 11:00 AM. CHRIST of the LAKES WHITE LAKE TWP. 8533 Elizabeth Late ltd. /van C. Rocs, Pattor SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:15.A.M. CHURCH SERVICE 1030 A.M. SYLVAN LAKE Fig*, off Orchard Late (Behind Sylvan Shopping Cantar) Patter Clark McPhail SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. SERVICES ........11:60' AM. CHRIST •WATERFpRD TWP. Airport at William* Lake Rd. Arrid E. Angerion, Pastor WORSHIP 11 AM. SUNDAY SCHOOL 930 A.M. BEAUTIFUL SAVIOUR Donald G. Zill, Pastor ----Morning Worship'" 8:30 and II A.M. Sunday School ,9:30 A.M. CALVARY CLARKSTON Clarks ton Elementary School Pastor Paul A. Johns WORSHIP..... 9:30A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL . 10:45 A.M. "Disdpiahip.f a full-color motion picture portraying the Sermon on the Mount and the Lord's Prayer along lated events wUhbe presented at 7 p.m. Sunday at Evangel, Temple. One of 12 episodes in the aeries of films on the life of Christ, the film shows Jesus choosing the 1? men whom He names Apostles. The Rev. Gedftrey Day said the public t* invited te see the picture* as well ae other shew-tags la the weekly aeries. SundAy evening is also "Sunday School ff ght." The pastor will JuKioF^Suadsy- School rsuperinten- -debt, officers and teachers. A gift wifi be given each teacher with 90' per cent of her class in attendance. * ★ * The brilliantly Hghted chart tor the contest, ” Devil vor Angel” will be demonstrated and the rules explained. BALDWIN EVANGELICAL U.B. The Rev. Myron R. Everett will install 6unday School teachers and officers at the Sunday morning service in Baldwin United Brethren Church, 212 Baldwin Ave. The pastor will preach on "Firing the I Future.’’ I At 7 p.m. his sermon theme will j be “God Helps Us”’ I The annual church meeting of i the congregation will • be held at 7:30 p m. Wednesday. Reports wffl I be presented and Plans made tor ] the future. TRINITY ! Dr. Joseph W. Moore will preach on "The City Had 12 Gates’’ at [the li o'clock eerviee in Trinity ' Baptist Church Sunday morning. Church School will be at 9:15 j a m. with Junior Church following | at 10;1S. The Trinity congregation will . worship with Providence Mis-! slonary . Baptist* at 3:30 p.m. ‘ Blindly "“Whwt •tht‘r“Tlnirclr-iil>»“ ■erves the Usher’s anniversary j service. Officers will be installed at 7 p.m. with the congregation of New I Bethel Baptist Church as guests. ! The Rev. Amos G. Johnson of the 1 visiting chtirch will preach .and The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. Lcrvvronc® Street Sunday Sch'l 9:45 a.m. Young People's Legion 6 p.m Mom'g Worship 11 a.m. Evangelistic Mtg. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:00 p.m. CAPTAIN and MRS. J. WILLIAM HEAVER Good Music — Singing — frut .to (ha Word Preaching God Meets With ,Us — You Too, Are Invited FIRST CHURCH of the BRETHREN 46 NORTH ROSELAWN Sunday School 10 A.M. Morning Worship 11 AM. . Evening Service 7:00 P.M. Bible and Praysr Meeting Thursday. 7:30 P.M. The eefvfoe light at the gospel taken Into a dark world. The church will be la darkaea* at the beginning el the service. At that time an Old Testament prophecy win be read from the rear at the church and the foepel candle on the altar lighted, the church lights are put on during the service and extinguished again c!pse of the worship .period. + * * Ind'iv dual candles held by par-tic'pants and congregation are then Lghted frem the gdspeLcajj; die with members of the congre-gat ion taking the lighted candles out into the' dark as they leave the, church. NEW HOPE The Rev. Thomas H. Holt Jr. will preach on "Differences” at the 11 a.m. worship hour In New Hope Baptist Church Sunday.. At 3:30 p.m. the Rev. Mr, Holt will preach in Detroit at the New Light Baptist Church. There will be ho evening service at the local church. FIRST CHURCH OF GOD . . I Representatives of the - First | Ghurch of God wiU attend the i lecture concerning the Richard's Record System at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Christian Literature Sales. The church Is currently using the system. SELECTING SONGS—Choosing hymns for Oakland Youth for Christ Sljngspiration scheduled for 9:15 Sunday evening at Stone Baptist . Church, 3951 Auburn Road, are. David Breen of 373 S. East Blyd. (sitting) an&.Terry Waiter of 5424 Drayton 8t.,TTarkiton. The Rev. James Savage, vice president of Youth for Christ in South America and editor of the new Spanish Youth for Christ magazine, will speak and play the trombone at the rally at 2:30 tonight in Pontiac Northern High School. Warren Driver, professor at the Bible Grace College and farmer violinist with the Los Angeles Symphony Orchestra, will play violin selections. Providence Missionary Hosts to Trinity Baptists The,Riey. Joseph W. Moore, pas-tor of Trini’y Baptist Church, with his choir and congregation will be guests at the 3:3Q Sunday after-I noon service at Providence Missionary Baptist Church. -The Usher Board Will be In barge of the service at 7:30 p.m. when Holy Communion and the rite of Holy Baptism will be observed. Walter Richardson is president of the board. The pastor is the Rev. Claude, Goodwin. "*• — CHUROrTOF THE GOOD SAMARITAN 4110 HUIenat Dr.. WM*rtord Sunday School 5:30 to 6:00 Servico 7:00 P.M. Allan Hinz’, Waterford, Mich. For Information Call OR' 1-1114 ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL CHURCH •:M A.M. Holy Communion 30 and 11:1* A.M. Identical Service* of Morning Prayer, arm on and Church School Olaccti Rev Edward A. Lowry. Rector Drayton Plaint, Mich. FIRST CHURCH the -Sunday School , Mamina Worship . orNAZARENE 60 STATE STREET . . 9:45 A.M. rihee A.M. MUSIC NIGHT 6:30 « 8:00 P. M. For All the Faiyiily • Men's Quartet of Owosso College • 50 Voice Junior Choir (In White Choir Robes) • Message by Evangelist Ross Emrick • Adult Choir Numbers ■7, v Dick North, Minister ol Music , MSSMMSSMMMMMtaHMMaMl Columbia Avenue 64 West Columbia Are. FE 5-9960 Sunday School . ....... -9:45 A.M. 'Traublo of Tho Altpr" * ' “Morning Worship :..-rl0:55 A.M. Training Union .... . 6:30 P.M. Evening Service ............7:30 P.M. Caught Red Handed XXV. MARION r BOYD JR-. »hni*t*r CLARENCE B. JACKSON MlnlaWr ol Bducation Affiliated with Southern Bcptiat Convention _ Momtenhip Over 1.100,000 ^cES™icBEI^5 SUBJECT FOR SUNDAY “SACRAMENT' Sunday Services and Reading Room I Sunday School 2 East Lawrence Street § 11:00 A M. Open Daily j 1 Wednesday Evening 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. I 1 Services 8 P.M.1 Friday to 9 P.M. I FIRST CHURCH of CHRIST, SCIENTIST Lawrence and Williams Streets Dr. William H. Marbach to Be Honored at Dinner New Year communion services | During the evening John Hunt-will be celebrated at 9:30 and Ulzinger will be installed as incom-j l a.m. Sunday at First Presbyterian ling president: Gordon Cox, vice I Church^ | president; Ford Everett, secre-j These will be the last services tary; and Samuel Bailie, treas-of Holy Communion to be con-urer. | duct tri by Dr. William H.' Mar- * * * who retires on Feb. 5 after The farewell reception honoring as pastor of the church I Dr. afid Mrs, Marbach will be I for 30 years. held on Sunday afternoon, ,Feb. 5. The choir will sing Shelley’s The committee la charge of i "Hie King of Love Mv Shepherd j arrangements consists of Mrs. j Is” under the direction of Lyn- ; Earle Van Dyke, Elder Warrea I don Salathlel. Mrs. Basil B. Abbott, ana Trustee Gordon Kimball will slag "Como Unto | Doule. Representing the board 1 Mo” by Lindsay. . of deacons will ho Mr. and Mrs, Hie monthly dinner meeting of Bob*rt c- ,fwta- Presbyterian Men scheduled for Junior high young people wilt Wednesday evening will be in thelmeet at 5:30 p.|n. Sunday and sen- form of a testimonial dinner in lor high youth will get together honor of Dr. Marbach. The retir- at 6’p.m. ling president, William Herman, ★ * * will be in charge of the program. The Session will meet Monday iThe men are inviting women,evening and the board of trustees II guests to the festive affair. . and Church School staff Tuesday. jjSilvercrest Baptists Bob Pierce. i Slate Film of 'Christ' *orean Worker' I "Men of the Wilderness’ | the series of films on the Life | of Christ will be shown at 7 p. !to Speak to Youth Holy Baptism at Auburn U.P. Junior, Senior, Post High Youth Meetings to Resume Sunday [ The Sacrament of Holy Baptism | will be administered at the 11:15*1 morning worship service at the I United Presbyterian Church in ; Auburn Heights. The Rev. F. .William Palmer will preach on "Tomorrow's Church.” dr ♦ • * | Regular youth meetings will j resume at 6:30 p. m. with groups • arranged for junior high, senior ; high and post high young .people. | Mrs. Shelby Lockamy >vlll open her home at 811 Nichols Road at • a. m. Tuesday to the I Sarah Circle. The Sunday•• j School Cabtaet will meet at 7:38 p. m. ! Mrs. Fred Reinkc of Nichols I Road will be hostess to the Esther; Circle at' 1 p. in. Wednesday. Attend Church Regularly in 61 THE ALLIANCE CHURCH . 220 North Cast Lake Road, Pontiac, Michigan G i BERSCHE, Pastor B. W. LANPHER. Asst. Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL . . .. Ml A. M. YOUTH FELLOWSHIP . 6:00 P. M MORNINO WORSHIP 11 00 A. M EVENINO SERVICE .1:00 F. M. "Th# Oood Work* of ChrlgtlMUy" "Tte Second Coming el Cbrlat" I Dr. Bob Pierce, president of World Vision Inc. and former war thadey"it" jilvsrCTestVa p7j^Scotte*p^flrtiri Church, 2562 Dixie Highway. The picture opens with John the Baptist telling those whom 1 HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS RADIO STATION CKLW—800 KC. SUNDAY/ 9:45 A. M. TV Every Sunday, Channel 7, 9:3Q A.M. CHURCHE5 of CHRIST Liston to tho "Herald ol Truth" Each Sunday CKLW TV 8:30 A.M. WXYZ 10riX> P.M. B meets that Jesus is the Son of H God. It portrays the temptations, H conflict between Herod and Hero-Si dias over the disposition of John, B the first disciples of Christ, and ■ the healing of the man at Caper- ■ mum. ” '.r Ji The film’s cast consists of more than 200 speaking parts. Gene Wright, general chairman, said the I public is invited. SYLVAN .LAKE Orchard Late sad Utddlatelt Rd* Cl yd* Baldaraon, MlnUtar Bible Schdol 9:45 A.M. Morning Worship 10:45 AM? Evening Service 6 P M/ Wed. Night Blbl* Cinses 7,:30 P.M. PONTIAC SVERINO WORSHIP IMP V ■Aarmon Horn* Raaaaaa Why 1 Should Ballavc la Ood" WED BIBUI STUDY 1:N P M LAKE ORION W. A. Luctett. MlnUtar 1080 Hsmmlngway Rd. off Clarkston fid. Blbl# Study Sun. 9:45 A M. Tuts. 7:30 P.M. Worship I0rt5 AM. \ -6.-00 P.M. Do not think that what Is hard for thee to master ia Impossible for man; but if a thing Is possible iiH r**T*l HI imn ill ill 11 attainable by thee- — Aurelius. at the Holiness Youth Crusade at 7:3ff tonight in the Detroit Institute of Arts. The meeting celebrating the 15th anniversary of youth crusades, is open to all Pontiac and Oakland! County young people as well as youth from other Detroit Metropolitan areas. The organisation takes care of national missionaries helps our missionaries, - deals extensively with homeless children. Dr. Pierce supervises the care of 18,-j 000 orphans in Korea. Mow than ,70 ctaurchss sponsor Holiness Youth Crusades. Jim Conner will preside at the! congregational meeting following, the 6:30 covered dish dinner | j Wednesday evening. Reports witT [fee received and the 1961 budget! voted upon. ZION CHURCH of the NAZARENE 239 E. Pike Street 10 am.—Sunday School 11 am.—Morning Worship 7 pm.—Evening Service First Assembly of God January 8th through 15th Indoor Winter Camp Meeting" BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH West Huron ot Mark Street , Dr. Charles A. Carman, Interim Pastor ‘ ——■—Percy M. Walley, Jtr, Minister ol Education Two Worship Services — 8:40 and 11 ;0J> AM. Sarmon: "FAITH IN JHE UNKNOWN FUTURE" 9:45 A.M. Church Schdol Classes for AN . 7:00 P.M; Camp Promotion—• Dr. E. Floyd Norton 8:00 P',M. Vespers—“1st in the series ot colored motlgn pictures on "The Life, ot Paul." Wednesday 7:30 P.M. —ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETING , ’’An-American Baptist Convention Church" Women Plan Breakfast Mrs. Doris Russell will serve as chairman of the breakfast from I until noon Sunday at the home of cochairman Mrs. Mary Anthony, 304 Rapid St. The breakfast is sponsored by Group Two of the [St. James Missionary Bapttht i Church. METHODIST CHURCH 501 MT. CLEMENS STREET Ly*l M. Howiton, Patter Flint's Singing Cop Lieut. Wilburn Legree Choruses •— Stories Testimonials — Object Lesson. —.---Polirie E«perience« 10 A.M. PILGRIM HOLINESS CHURCH BALDWIN & FAIRMOUNT Services Nightly at 7:30 Except Monday and Saturday “Hear These Outstanding Evangelists" Sunday School—9:45 A. M. Morning Worship—11:00 A. M. Pastor A. Q. Hashman - 210 NORTH PERRY ST. Sunday School Ip A. M-Morning Worship It A. M. 6 P.M. Bible Topic (Book ol Genesis) Mid-Week .Service Wed. 7,-30 P/M. Emmanuel Baptist Church 645 S. Telegraph Road DR. MALONE r—Speaking at Att Services— 10:00 A.M. and 11:00 A.M. 7:30 P. M. > BAPTISM v - Special Music Radio Broodcaif WPON Midweek . IOiIS'A.M. Eoch Sunday ^3^PM. ! Sunday School Attendance Last Sunday 1085 Ok TOM MALONE, PASTOR I THIjTpQyTIAC PRESS!" SATUB^ATr^^KjARYX TOfif EIGHT brother lots of chili, stews and meatloafs and I am wondering if maybe she isn't Maybe the Dog Home, but Not This K (9) Rafidns Ceri/binly q Dish to Set Before the 'Kin By ABIGAIL VAN BIMEN DEAR ABBY; Please doh't think I am a snoopy person, but I* see canned dog fefed in my ‘ sister-in-law’s cupboards^ and they don’t Sh? feeds my using some of -this canned horsemeat TrT her cookiBR. My brother hasn’t looked well lately, so it rite is using that sniff on him, could it do him any harm? t , JUST WONDERING DEAR JUST: While dog food was not meant 4or human consumption, many have eaten it (accidentally) and suffered no ill effects. The next time you spy dog food at your sister-in-law's, ask her who the lucky dog is. ■ A ’ DEAR-ABBY: * lam 17 and .can’t let any boys—come'tST1 nty liouse because’ there’s no place for them to sit. You see, my father has been in. poor health for a long time and now he is home all the time. » sits in the living a portable TV lor Daddy’s bedroom. It's very important for a girl your age to entertain her friends at home. Your parents will cooperate when they Understand your problem. " * * * DEAR ABBY: I have a slight hearing defect. At times I am unable to hear the telephone at the first ring. My fellow ' employees Wat me like a deaf person. They shout when they talk to me." And when they come up behind me they tap me"on the shoulder, instead’ of calling me by name. This is very unnecessary and Is becoming most annoying. I like these people otherwise. How cap 1-tot them know how ”1 feel? ■ . ■ ■ , ; , CAN HEAR nDEAR CAN: Confide in the person with whom you are friendliest at your place of work. Tell her (or him) that you would appreciate it if the word were passed around that your hearing is only slightlydefective. By the way, have you visited a specialist in this field lately ? You would be wise to try . to solve your problem at its source. .. . ... ■ ' • ★ w . ★ “Who pays fdr *whar?T^iH5Sr “ so cents; to ABBY, Box 3369, Beverly Hills, Calif., for Ab-by’s pamphlet, ‘‘How To Have A lively Wedding.’’ Local Chapter 61 Years Old Observe DAR Birthday , -watching TV from the time he gets-up until he goes to bed. That's Daddy's only pastime. We don't have a dining room or den; Mamma sews in the kitchen at night and uses the table to cut patterns. I don't want to start slipping around to meet, boys on street corners like some girls I know. What should I do? Sign me, DISCOURAGED DEAR DISCOURAGED: Perhaps ypur mother could cut her patterns in the bedroom one night a we^jt? Or your family couldsaveupandbuy Forty - one ‘members and guesta of the Gen. Richardson chapter. Daughters of the;. American. Revolution, observed " - the chapter's 61st birthday celebration with luncheon Thursday in Ted's Restaurant. Regents Mrs. Robert D. Willoughby of Plytnouth-Northville chapter, Mrs. Newell Alien of Birmingham and Mrs. Francis -At von Schon of Iteyai Oak, were guests, as were Leila Thorpe of Pontiac and Mrs, Henry Sage of Royal Oak. Organized on Jan. 4, 1900, the Gen. Richardson chapter was the Uth to be chartered -in Michigan, It was named for a forfrier Pontiac residehf and hero of three wars. Maj.Gen. Richardson fought in the Seminole war, won 'honors in the Mexican uprising and gave his life in. the Civil War. . Guest speaker Dapicl Skeen, senior at Michigan State Uni-versity. East Lansing, and a member of the honors college, wfs one ol ajpoup .of 14 young young mm ahd women from the United States called “Operation, Crossroads Africa." Seeking to establish bonds of friendship with Algerian natives, the group worked, studied and discussed problems with the African students, A market place was built entirely , • Costumed to-eepresent the 60 ytafs of the existence of the Oakland County Federation of Women's Clubs, these representatives of their clubs appeared in a pageant “The Decades Speak” Friday afternoon at First Baptist Church in Birmingham. Seated is Mrs. Irwin Weiss of Birmingham. With her (from left) are Mrs< 'Ralph Schowaher of, Berkley, Mrs. Harley Banwell of Rochester, federation president Mrs. Louis Stieb of Rochester, pageant author Mrs. D. Otis Tewksbury of Ferndale and Mrs. Forbes Hascall of Birmingham. Personal News Mrs. John Braid, formerly of’ Green Street, was honored on her 80th birthday Sunday at a family dinner in the home of her son-in-law and daughter the Donald Bronsons on Lone Pine Road. Assisting were the John Braids and lifr. and Mrs. Carroll C. Braid. Among ihe 28 guests were Mrs. Braid’s brother and sister-in-law the Ogden Chamberlins of Morgan, Mont. They have been visiting his daughter and son-in-law Dr. and Mra. Frederick A. Jeffers.of Valley Vista Road, Birmingham. ■" v * ★ ★ ★ Pvt. Betty Jane Arnold has returned to Fort Knox, Ky., after a holiday furlough with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Arnold of North Tasmania Avenue. ★ ★; •. ★ "■ Carol Ann Esser, daughter of the Richard Essers of Oneida RoatHias returned by plane from Westchester, Pa., where she was a house-guest of Jerry Sauter over the New Year holiday. /Jerry Is a student at Cornell University and Carol attends Michigan State University, Bast Lansing. ★ ★ > it Dr. and Mrs. John P. Wood of Rudgate Road, Bloomfield Hills,' left early this week tor their apartment In Reding ton Beach, Fla. She will stay for three months and Dr. Wood will commute for brief vacations. ★ dr ★ Recent house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Omar E. MacNutt of Neome Drive were Dr. and Mrs. LaMar MacNutt and daughter Alicia of Jacksonville, Fla., Leah MacNutt of Colorado Springs, Colo., Mra. Q. R. Mahan and daughter Delta of Clearwater, Fla., and James Hayslett of Indianapolis, Ind. ' . ' A family dinner for 38 was a highlight of the holiday season. ★ ★ dr ■ >. The birth of a daughter, Laura Eunice, Dec. 29, In -River view'Osteopathic Hospital, Trenton. Is announced. Grandparents or the infant are the Duncan E. Mc-Veans of East Beverly Avenue and the Manley A. Drakes of Pinegroye Avenue. . dr ★ ★ Mrs. Grover Kile of Scott Lake Road left by plane Thursday for a month's vacation with her sister, Mrs*. Francis Gardner of Orlando, Fla. She will then fly to Montgomery, Ala., for another month-long stay with relatives and friends, returning home about March 1. countries. * * * - Members were urged to write to Washington, protesting the move to abolish the House un-American Activities committee. Mrs. Engel Groenberg has been accepted to active membership in the chapter. The committee of hostesses was headed by Mrs. Lucius Howlett. Assisting were Mrs. Louis L. Dunlap, Mrs. W. F — Todd, Mrs Harry E. Windiate, Mrs. E. B. Wallace and Mrs. Ray W,' Kemp. Honking Horn Rude to Hearers By The Emily Post Institute Question: Whenever I go to my bridge club meeting my husband usually comes for me and drives'me home. I am the only one in the group who lives on the other side of town and as I have no one to go ’ home with, my husband has kindly volunteered to pick me' UP , - We usually stop playing at a certain time, Rather than have my husband get out of the car and come to the door to fetch me, I told hirfi to honk the horn three times when lie arrives so that I will know he Is there and leave. I overheard one of the women criticize him f°r honking the horn and say that it was bad manners. Under the circumstances, I see no objection to his honking the horn and think her criticism very unfair. I would like your opinion on this. Answer: Your having told him to do so, excuses him from any rudeness to you personally, but honking his horn unnecessarily was nevertheless disturbing, and therefore rude, to everybody else who heard him. Question: I am a widow in the late sixties and live alone. I-have a smalt house of my own here In.Florida. My lute husband's brother who is in his early seventies plans to spend a month here* to get away' from the cold weather. Would it be proper for him to stay in my house as a guest or Should he go to a hotel? Answer: It will be entirely proper for him to stay in. ymfr house. The Emily Post Institute Is , sorry 1t cannot answer personal mail. City of Nice Gears for Rousing More// Gras NICE, France — This French Riviera city is gearing itself •lor a rousing two weeks of revelry that will mark this year's Mardi Gras festival,- he-ginning Feb. £ it h h From then until midnight Feb. 14, the 250,000 “Nicois," as the citizens ol Nice are called, and their thousands of visitors will leave all earthly things behind them as .they parade together through the “Reabir-of-Faney" — theme of this year’s celebration. Among the many programs on tap lor the 1961 "March Through Madness" will be the traditional floats and fireworks‘ of the opening day procession to greet His Majesty King Carnival, and the colossal grand parade which will follow the next afternoon. The parades won’t stop after .. these two great. processions, however — they’ll go on lor the full two Weeks. OTHER ATTRACTIONS At the same time, visitors to . the flower-bedecked Riviera city will also be able to witness these other famous attractions: BATTLE OF FLOWERS: Feb. 9, French beauties will shower each other, as well as their admirers, with thousands of colorful and fragrant blossoms as part of the first “Battle of FloWers." Two others will be held In the Riviera city after Lent: one Feb. 16; the other April 3, the Monday after Eaiter. COSTUME BALLS: Three major dances will be held in the Municipal Casino, one a phantasmagoric costupne ball that will last the entire two weeks of the festival. Other balls win be Feb. 9, 12 and 14, but the. most exciting of them all, perhaps, will be the one under the stars on the main Promenade des Anglais and all the other streets and avenues in the city. Although the Carnival bf Nice is France's largest and oldest Mardi Gras festivity, it is by no means its only celebration of this holiday. In fact, some 50 others have been scheduled in various parts, of France. CHARIOT IN DUNKIRK In Dunkirk, for example, "Reuse Papa” will ride about the city in a Roman chariot lor the three days preceding the beginning of Lent. Across the country in the Alpine town of St-Claude, the medieval pastime of “devil chasing" will once again become the favorite pre-Lenten hobby of the townspeople.— As in any hunt, weapons in the "devil chase" ere limited — In. this case, to minuscule bellows. * * * Meanwhile, other provinces will be celebrating their own style of Mardi Gras, based on folklore of their, areas. In Nantes, for example, King Carnival will be dressed In Breton costume, while a Norman monarch promises to rule over festivities in Granville. Other cities with their own version of the Mardi Gras monarch of merriment include the Catalan town of Amelie-Ies-Bains, In Southwestern France; Angers, in the Chateaux country, noted for its Corpus Chris-ti procession; and Biarritz, near the Spanish frontier. DIES VIOLENT DEATH All these celebrations have one thing in common, however: King Carnival will die a violent death — as he has throughout his centiiries-long history. Jane Underhill Wed This Morning Orchard Lake Country Club was the setting for a reception following the marriage of Jane Underhill and Paul E. Gibbons this morning atSt. Hugo of the HUM Church, Bloomfield HUls. The Rev. Francis T.. Stack officiated. Parents of the newlyweds are the Carl A. Underhills of Granbrook Road, Birmingham, and Dr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Gibbons of Westwood, Mass. The bridal gown of pale ivory satin was designed with scoop neckline, elbow-length sleeves and bell skirt that swept into a chapel train. LACE ADDS ACCENT Guipure lace applique . ac-. centcd the fitted bodice and unpressed pleats _ of _the _ftUl . skirt. The bouffant veil of silk illusion was caught by a" small crown of the' rare taco. The bride held a crescent 61 white Barbara Underhill attended her sister as maid of honor, with her sister-in-law Mrs. Carl A. Underhill Jr. and Judith Frost, also of Birmingham, bridesmaids. Other attendants were Mrs. pavid F., Meyers of Bloomfield HUls and Mary Gibbons of Westwood, Mass., the bridegroom’s sister. Their dresses of mat paeu de sole in beauty red were styled with square necklines, draped bodices and bell skirts with unpressed pleats. VeUed headpieces matched their dresses and they carried white poinsettias. The bridegroom had Richard Mulhem of Westwood, Mass., as best man. MASSACHUSETTS USHERS Coming from Masaachuetts to serve as ushers were the bridegroom's brother William of Westwood, William Lynch*of Dorchester, Daniel J. Daley Jr. of Brookline, William C. Ham-- it ton Jr. of Malden and Donald Vahey of Mattapan. Also seating guests were the bride's Mother Carl A. Underhill Jr. of Rirmingham. ‘ GoltT accessories compTe-meiited Mrs. UnderhlU’s dress of kelly green satin styled with bell skirt, worn with matching satin hat. * * * The bridegroom's mother appeared in beige Alencon lace over satin with matching accessories. After a 10-day honeymoon of skiing at Mont Tremblant, Quebec, the couple will live in Watertown, Mass. The actual execution of this symbolic monarch of madness has been traced to primitive times, when tribesmen sometimes killed their king at the end of a fixed term ,—to the general merriment and laughter of all his subjects._ Mardi Gras itself seems to be the Christian descendent Of the Roman Saturnalias and Greek festivals of bread and wine. It Is, literally, the “Fat Tuesday" which precedes the Lenten fast. In. its present form It dates back to at least the Middle -Ages, when Geofredo, the historian, described how Charles II, king of Naples and Provence, participated merrily at the Nice Carnival. In those days, however, the BatUe of Flowers would have been described more accurately as a "Battle of Eggs, Soot,-Beans and Mud" — and there’s no mention ol any young French starlets. Toward the middle of the last century, however, when the oamival became a highlight of the social season for the bulk of European royalty, eggs and mud were replaced by confetti, paper streamers and flowers. -500 TON PROBLEM Today, in fact, these scraps of adored paper, along with masks, spangles, tin horns and paper hats, amount to a, 500-ton-per-year problem for Nice's Municipal Cleaning Department. Decorative operations, like the cleanup procedure, also are more organized, thanks to efficient direction of the "Comite des Fetes de Nice" which was established in 1873. Among its many functions is selection of the carnival theme and the personality of the giant king. The comite must also choose the carnival anthem, main theme of singing and dancing, and superviae the work of “camavaliers” who make the giant floats, some of which weigh as much as eight tons. Actually, "camavaliers" are skilled craftsmen who have inherited their trade over .generations. Their work; however, keeps them occupied throughout the year. For as soon as the 1961 carnival is over, and the city of Nice ha* once again returned from the "Realm 6t Fancy" to the “realm of reality," the "camavaliers" will begin the work of fashioning a new papier mac he king who wiU Assume his brief two-week reign a year from now," in February 1962. Newlyweds Skiing", in Quebec City Lawyer Weds Nancy Crawford InKoyalOak After V wedding reception in the Pontiac City dub, Kenneth B. McConnell aAd his bride, the former Nancy Louise Crawford, left for a boneyipoon at Mont Tremblant Ski Lodge in Quebec. The Rev. John Shufelt per- ' formed the single-ring candle- . light ceremony Dec. 30 in St. John Episcopal Church, Royal Oak. . Parents of the Birmingham couple are the Thomas J. Crawfords of Gaylord and the ~ T5Ie~mraiMrMrg. Bruce MC-- Connell .of. Arthur, Ont. * * ■ .★ Styled along Empire lines, the bride’s gown of white bouquet taffeta featured a portrait neckline, butterfly bustle h0* and sweep train. Alencon lace and teed pearl applique enhanced the molded bodice which extended into wrist-point sleeves. A shell cap of AlenCon lace secured the veil of silk illusion. The bride carried Amazon lilies, stephanotis and ivy. Jean Elizabeth Crawford, her sister's honor maid, appeared in a short Empire dress bf Pervenchl blue delustered satin styled with scoop 'neckline and cap sleeves. An Obi sash fell over the bell skirt. Stiffened veiling was attached —to her inatchlng satin circlet headband. ★ * it Denise Baldwin of Birmingham, in an identical ensemble, served as bridesmaid. They carried ivory Fuji chrysanthemums, with blue pompons accenting the honor attendant’s bouquet. On the esquire side were W. Gerald Warren, of Grosse Pointe, best man, and ushers Peter H. Crawford of Gaylord, brother of the bride, Patrick F. Plunkett of Detroit and Terrence Fitzgerald of Toronto, Ont.____ , , An all-pink corsage of cym-bidjum orchids and rosebuds accented Mrs. Crawford’s sheath dress of French blue silk crepe, with chiffon side drape and panel neckline of Chantilly lacs. Mrs. E. H. Sine of Detroit, aunt of the bridegroom, wore a sheath dress of navy blue silk crepe, variegated flowered hat and orchid corsage. The bride, a graduate of Brenau College for Women, Gainsville, Ga., chose a wool costume suit of blue lavender and purple for traveling. She is affiliated with Alpha Delta Pi Sorority. An alumnus of University of Michigaji Law School, the bridegroom also holds a B.A. degree from Hope College. He is a member of Delta Theta Phi Fraternity. After Jan. 15, the couple will be at home in Birmingham. WCTU to Give 'Pay the Piper' Movie Sunday The Women's Christian Temperance Union will sponsor \» film showing of “Pay the Piper" following Sunday evening services at First Baptist Church. ★ A ♦ Mrs. Walter L. Willson at J Murphy Avenue wiU open her Home Tuesday for a dessert luncheon for members of the Dora B. Whitney Unit. Mrs. Frances Zalants, director of the Alcoholism In-formation Center of Pontiac . Public Health Department, will speak. ' / > ★ * * The WCTU Federation will meet for family night dinner Tuesday at the Christian Temple oh Auburn Avenue.' Each group will provide one djsh and those Attending should bring individual table service. The Rev. David Martin of the Crusade for Christ TV program in Detroit will be guest speaker. DIANE Summer vows are planned by Diane Lee Elliott, * daughter of the Leonard E. Elliotts of Drayton Plains and Pfc. Zvonko Ivosic, son of the Ante Ivosics of Allen Park.' Both attended Ferris Institute and Pfc. Ivosic is stationed ~ in Korea. The Arthur . M. Bowens of Drayton Plains announce the engagement of' their daughter Linda Marie Richard L. Carey, son oj the Edward Careys, also of Drayton Plains. Her . fiance is attending commission school- in— Norfolk„ Va. I LINDA MARIE BOWEN JANICE CHARUNE KING The Milton M. Novt announce the 'engagement of their daughter Janice Char line to William C. Stricklin, son of the Otis Stricklins of Grand Rapids The bride-elect attended Southeast' Missouri Stott College and her fiance • General Motors . Institute. The Ward M. Baileys of Lana the engagement of their daughter Judi Dorine to Michael J. Dailey, son of the John A. Daileys of • Upper Long Lake. No wedding"date has been set. JUDI DORINE BAILEY i I Saturday, l^eMY^rrtwr 'Ar^.: • NWS Officers Are Installed Figure Club Fashion Your Figure Club Installed officers Thursday evening in Adah Shelly Library. -- * * '* . Mrs. C. W. QtWtty was installing officer for Mrs. Conrad Burli-son, outgoing program chairman. win serve, for the next .four months wffli Mrs, Burllson, vice president; Mrs. Earl Franklin, recording secretary; Mrs. Willard Hardenburg, treasurer, Mrs. Ralph Selling, corresponding' secretary; Mrs. Robert Tucker, scales manager; and Mrs. Clarence Mahaffy, weight The new president appointed as committee chairmen; Mrs. Joseph McLeod, program; Mrs. Crawley, publicity; Mariam Lawrence, trophy; Mrs. Harold Miller and Mrs. Ray Vess, telephone; Mrs. William Parrish, Card and flowers; and Mrs. Robert Sawyer, hospitality. Mary. Trash was named historian. jh. W<- .4# Mrs. William Buckles, Mrs. William King, Mrs. Robert Wilaoh and Mrs. Robert Hopkins were welcomed to membership, Mrs. Thomas Lewis won the greatest weight loss trophy tor the . second consecutive week. Mrs. Richard Stevenson aqd Mrs. Richard Drake tied for second place. Next week the group will tour Pontiac General Hospital. Service Unit Opens Year at Luncheon The Women's Society of Christian Service of Central Methodist Church o p e n e d the new year Thursday with a luncheon served by the Otto Sisters Circle. Edwina L. Skelley told of her visit to World Friendship Camp last summer and Mrs. William J. Tracy gave a book review. Devotions were led~by Mrs. Mil-ton H. Bank and Mrs. John La-Monte sang a solo. Mrs. Loy Bennett was luncheon chairman and the Ortha Lane Circle members were hostesses for the day. Noted fabric designer Marianne Strengell is shown at the Worn in her Bloomfield Hills studio. A one-man showing of the weaving and photogra- phy of the internationally famed artist-craftsman opens Jan. 16 at Kingswood «School Cranbrook. ,¥J. . Cliff Dwellers Live It Up By GAY PAULEY [ours, friends of friends of ours, NEW YORK (UPI) — In small' «“d friends of their friends," skid towns, where everyone know.l^ ,n a" ^ . ... . dred people showed up, muchto everyone else, socializing is as easy'^ amazement.” as reaching tor the. telephone. J "Cliff Dwellers has been grow-But in the coldly impersonal ing like Topsy since," continued ity, - loneliness is the malady of ,[‘“^>gre Sorority Meets With Mrs. Ladd Mrs. Robert Ladd of Genella Street was hostess to XI Alpha Nu Chapter of B$ta Sigma Phi Sorority Tuesday. “"High Moments tn Naturc' ’ was] the evening's program. Slides of Michigan flora and fauna were shown by Mrs. Arthur Ellis, Mrs. Clarence Gordon and Mrs. Richard Benham. Members are planning a tour of the Michigan Bell Telephone Co. Jan. 17; Mrs. Douglas Mcnzel will be hostess for the next business meeting. many who came to the big town to make their mark, have made it and still sit home nights. Numerous ate the ways of conquering loneliness—the good book, the TV set, the neighborhood movies, and the cocktail party circuit If you can stand the pace once you're on the endless list of favifetidris.... Or, there Is an organisation j called “The Cliff Dwellers,” whose major purpose Is pleasure from each member's company. I first heard of the Dwellers from John Cronin, a member, who a skin-diving equipment center in [Manhattan. Cronin said, “Boy, the Dwellers enjoy life. A party every few days. Call up Bill Boat if you want to know more about them.” Boal, 29, fumed out to be president of the organization which had its beginnings in a conversation among him and a few friends evening in the spring of 1959. ‘ were trying to figure out haw to build an audience for a magazine, before and not after you started one,” said Boal, who has experience in the magazine, the theatrical producing and acting fields. | The group decided to aim for New York’s “young successfuls” —the single set between ages SO to 40 mostly In the advertising and communications world, in Wall Street, fashion and the professions. one,has a full stag line.”, CUff Dwellers stages a dance or cocktaU party once every 10 days. And now, Boal said, special Interest groups also are planning their own gatherings-wlthln-gathe rings. Some members are gourmets York and affiliated branches in Miami, Boston, Washington, Toronto and Buffalo.* We hope to open another branch in Chicago in February." MAGAZINE DEBUTS atnw Bnal has two associates helping him run the organization— Arthur Bernstein, a free-lance tel* vision writer, and Ted Steeg, an industrial designer. The organize-also has that hoped-for magazine, called "The Cliff Dweller,” naturally. Several mefnbers have married, he said. Boal. said the number of men and women members runs about| 50-50—“the proportion’s self-leveling. If one party produces a surplus of girls, you’ll find the next! Will Exhibit Weaving, • Photography CRANBROOK—A one-man show Of weaving and photography by Marianne Strengell will be at Kingswood School Cranbrook Jan. It through Feb. 10. The eftibttk^ opens with a preview tea Jan, 15. ■ ★ a. • a Miss Strengell is head of the department of weaving and textile design at Cranbrook Academy of Art. Wb|le Kingswood present* her work, fabric*, by Miss Strengell also aits being featured at )k« Brooklyn, N.Y., Museum of Art la n 10 man invitational show of artist-craftsmen. A noted fabric designer. Miss 3tmueelj wartfthi and educated in Finland" and worked in Europe a few years before making her home in the United States. DIVERSITY OF WORK Throughout her career in Europe and the U43., she has worked widely with architects, designers and industrial firms. Her .many comission* Include woven fabrics for the Owens-(Oming Flbergla* Building In New York, the Geoeral Motors Technical Center In Warren and United Air Lines Jets, as well as automobile fabrics and designs fbr the open line la heme and meet regularly to try food in famous or a new restaurant. Others -are skin-diving hobbyists and gather at hotel swimming pools for practice. Still, others like to ski, so plan ski weekends in New England. And, Boat said, some are helping on capitalization for a new play he is producing and planning to open in London in early March. Still other CUff Dwellers want to travel, and last year a group' chartered a three weeks vacation in Europe. 'The vacation cost each one about half what he’d have paid as an individual,” said Boal. ‘That’s one of the things the dub [does . . . helps us collectively to afford what we could not other- Mlss Strengell has had more than 60 one-man shows, a traveling show in Scandinavia and numerous group exhibitions. In addition, she uses her talents as a In 1957 she touted around the world with her husband, architect Olav Hammarstrom,- lecturing in 14. countries on developments in U.S. architecture, arts and crafts. One highlight of Mtss Stren-grll's career Is her work with the U.S. government,........ In 1951 the International Cooperation Administration sent her to Japkn and the Philippines as technical-adviser on weaving and textile design, to help re-establish textiles as a cottage industry. Pubitc hours for the Kingswood exhibition are Mondays through Fridays, 4:15 to 5:30 p.m.; Sundays, 2 to 4:45 p.m.; closed Saturdays. Heredity, Activity Have Effect Hints on Varicose Veins Assure Homemaker Lot of Carpet for $$ CHICAGO—Homemakers shopping .for new carpet this year will find that they will be able to buy "a 16t of carpet” for their money. This happy report can be made from a preview of the nevfr carpet stylings being introduced at the Winter Home Furnishings Market which opens here tomorrow at the Merchandise Mart. Brilliant c»lorings^ beift^..ie?t: tures and many elegant designs constructed Into "healthy hunks” of -carpet .pile will be available at ‘ ’ pocketbook-f iff ing' ’ prices ranging from |7 a square yard and up, the new lines reveal. The broadening of the carpet color spectrum that has developed during the past t*h> years gets another boost In the ' 1961 offerings. This has been accomplished not only by the use of new, deeper pigments, but also by the clever use of texture to achieve unique, tones 'Texture for color’s sake” Is a good way to describe the design techniques being employed to create these subtle coloring effects. Handcrafted textures, swirling light looped designs, bulky curl-loops, "wood-carving” ripple tones, wavy striated multilevel piles and long shaggy yams— looped and uncut—have been utilized by the carpet stylists and manufacturing engineers to develop the new hues. For example, a yellow-green dye used in tight, velvety idle glows a vibrant gold-green. The-same dye applied to a heavy, shaggy texture takes,on a deeper oUve shade. The carpet stylists, however, have not been content to crente new colore solely through trx- »I in ply by reverting to "pare” colors, «och no Me yellow, trao red, treo green and even a tree gold. in Some lines, formerly muted tones/have been boldly deepened. The /purples, for example, have been given a strong bluish cast as A departure from the lavender or orchid tones which have become popular carpet colors. Another new color to be found is ’henna,” a vibrant red rust. FLORALS BACK With t’-e public showing a growing taste, for Early American and 18th Century furnishings, several mills have . brought back some delicate floral-patterned carpets and :rtSgsr MBtijr of these designs indicate old English ancestry, reproducing the feeling of the elegant Georgian and Regency periods. Some use widely Mattered bouquets on soft pastel backgrounds. Several of these patterns feature as many as H different colored yarns, but they are cleverly styled to provide restrained, glowing shading*. The use of man-made fibers con tinues to offer style excitement hi the 1961 carpets. An important development noted has been the treatment given to the popular continuous filament nylon yams. This hardy, fiber has been, constructed into new textures that make the pile appear softer and less lustrous. <- ★ ★ * One mill has created s “plaid' effect fai one of the styles It Introduced last summer as a plain, heather-type coloring. This has been accomplished by heightening some of the colors used in the special yam, which is produced from multicolor fibers. The revived Interest in rugs— both room-size and ana rugs—is also apparent In the 1961 offerings. The use of bolder fringes made from the same yams that go into the carpet can be found In a good number of the new rug lines, v W A. It-A new collection of hand-carved rugs, with designs cut into deep-pile all-wool yams, has been introduced by one mill. A wide variety of the hand-carved patterns are offered In the lute, Including bolder ang center motifs aa well as medallions and scattered designs. Also newsworthy is the very reasonable price tag on theee high-fashion Items. If you are c hours, your veins may pot be able to stand the strain. On the other hand, exercise is good for this condition in its early stages. ' SUGGESTIONS Here are a few suggestions; Do not wear garters. Do not sit for long periods of time without getting up and walk- BsrsBsar-^ Always rest with your feet up on a stool or chair, or with pillows under your feet If you are lying your feet for long'down. This is especially Important By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN Once human beings decided to get up off their four legs, the foundation was laid' for varicose veins. The blood must then flow back to the heart against the pull of gravity. The strength of the veins you inherited has much to do with whether or not you develop varicosity. — In this way varicose veins Inherited. The work you do i Spadea’s American Designer Pattern [during pregnancy when the blood vessels are subjected to an extra strain. If you have any reason to believe that you are getting varicose veins, see a physician immediately. Early treatment is important and can save you lots of trouble later on. Elastic stockings not only give you comfyrt, but help control the condition. Your doctor should prescribe them lor you. Walking and swimming are splendid exercises for the woman who has this trouble. If neglected, varicose veins be painful arid crippling. However, ao much has been learned about their treatment in recent years that they can be controlled. If you would like to have my leaflet "Superfluous Hair Varicose Veins,” send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for leaflet No. 53. Address The Pontiac Press. Proficiency Unit oi OES Chapter Reaches for Vote Thirteen members of the Griffin Proficiency. Group of Pontine Chapter No. 228, Order of the Eastern Star, met Thursday evening Stt the homv of President Mrs. Davy Gilpin'on Neeme Drive. Mrs. .Edna Warden, Mrs. Edward Ziem and Mrs. James Qfl-loe were appointed to ti ing committee for Feb tions. _ Refreshments were served after an evening of games. MR. AND MRS. WALTER J. BEAUREGARD A dinner in West Bloomfield Township Hall marked the New Year's Day golden wedding anniversary of former Pontiac residents Mr. and Mr* Walter J. Beauregard of Cheboygan. The 65 guests included four of the couple’s eight children: Mrs. Nelson White. Blaine Street; Mrs. Ernest .Lucier, G i n g • 11 v 111 e; Everett Beauregard, Hazel Park; and Mrs. - Vernon Reynolds, Keego Harbor. Other sons and daughters are Chester Beauregard, Auburn Heights; WO Ralph Beauregard, Winthrop, Mass.; Mrs. William Wilson, Atlanta; and Mrs. Arthur Boyea, Cheboygan. There are. 25 grandchildren. Suggests Simple Pattern for Sewing Fur Fabrics— Fabric sales include bolts of fake fur in many stores, and the reduced prices may encourage a seamstress to whip up a jacket, hat or stole. Since fur fabrics are bulky, they present some special |ment sewing problems. • Dorothy Erler, clothing specialist at Michigan State University, suggests a simple pattern .with a minimum of darts, tucks and seams. Furlike fabrics do have nap and sheen, ao all pieces must be cut In the same direction according to tTfe pattern guide for ‘fabric with nap." Moat fur fabrics also have some shading or swirling effects which should be considered In placing m pattern. Front pieces should be matched, with some consideration for the design effects at the back and sleevee, Miss Erler explains. The clothing specialist suggests you use sharp pins to attach the pattern firmly to the fabric, and j cut the fabric with sharp shears. For facing, a less bulky fabric, such as firmly woven twill, taffeta atin can be used along with an interlining or interfacing. ★ # A Fake fur is actually fabric, so curved edges should be stay-stitched' to keep them from stretching. Sections should be basted together firmlyto prevenl: slipping and machine stitched with] size if to 16 needle at 8 to 10 stitches per inch. Heavy duty thread may be needed lor some fabrics. Darts can be slashed and opened to eliminate some bulk. Some fibers used In fake lure are damaged by pressing or •teaming, so the label en the bolt should be checked for specific to the noaiinnt-FebnWry elec^i Sorority Takes Look at Hawaii Members of the Michigan Ep-sltorrchipter-of-AtpharDclta'1t*iw pa Sorority were guests of Mrs. Gorttoh Rice of Nelson Street ‘ Thursday evening. Mrs. Lola Sand-age was cohostess. Colored slides of Hawaii were shown by Mris. Genevieve Van’t Roer of jdarkston with narration by Mrs. Lola McCune. they attended a National Elementary School Principals’ Workshop on International Relations last summer bn the islands. Coupje Entertoins Fellowship Closs Mr. and Mrs- Floyd Levely of Shawnee Lane, Drayton Plains, entertained the Berean Fellowship Class of Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church Saturday eve-ning. . - 1 ■ Miss Erler says it may be well to test a small sample of fabric before pressing the actual gar- To hold facings in place-,‘the seam can be opened and the facing stitched through all seam allowances. This keeps the seam line from rolling outward- Seam edges may be catched • stitched .loosely to the garment. Large hooks and eyes, braid loops or frogs may be used for closings: j Following entertainment by the— Lester Bell Group, a New Year’s Eve dinner was served by the hostess and Mrs. Walter Hill, Mrs. Donald Wilson and Mrs. David Du-Vall. Pack Away Blues (UPI)—When packing away seldom-used household linens, put them unstarched between layers of blue paper or plastic to prevent their turning yellow. Baby Photo Contest “Strictly for Amgtours*' WIN FREE ZEISS 35mm CAMERA Boo Twee. Atf ft Complete Dolollo EXPERT CAMERA SHOP FI 5-6615 57 Wort Huron MON-TUES.-WED. SPECIALS • Shampoo RUDOLPH’S BEAUTY Salon 16 W. Huron St. FI S-S811 For Your Wedding QUALITY At Prices You Can Afford and Quahtity C. R. HASKILL STUDIO I ML Clemens St.. FE 4-6US MBS. KENNETH DAT N-123j6 This simple dress with Its beautiful shape was recently given much publicity when i twas purchased by a famous young matron. The bodice'is slight, eemi-fttted, the waist gently lowered at the sides. The peg-top skirt is pleated front and back. It's a step-in model, zips up the back. Choose sheer wool, rayon or silk, faille shuntung or notehy cottons. The sizing is comparable to ready-to-wear. IVoni theee corresponding body measurements select the size for sun,. To Size -12 requires 2% Wards of rjdMneh material for order Patten N1236, state size, send |1. Add 25 cents for first etage tad special handling. For Patten Book 17 send $3, Address SPApEA, Box 535, GP.O„ Dept. P-6, New York 1, N.Y. RUG and CARPET CLEANERS “•lake mr 42 W18NER ST. FE 2*7132 Pear Mrs. Pontiac--- For a happter 1961 remember... When a door-to-door salesman or telephone solicitor talks you into buying his product or service—or con- ( tributing to a ’Cause’..think twiee before parting with your money. . Remember that dealing withlreliable local stores is • usually much more satisfactory; the stores are always here! You may never see the doorbell salesman or telephone solicitor again. If anything is unsatisfatocry with the product or service you buy, you may find, it impossible to get eatsfaction. And many times the’Cause’to which you contribute actually receives only a tiny percentage of the solicitors ’’take,” or perhaps doesn’t exist, except in his mind. Don’t Be High Pressured BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce r|P m ifi PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. SATURDAV, JANUARY 7, 1961 Pontiac Central 70 Pontiac North'd 70 RO St. Mary ...60 Avondale .....51 lake Orion Ortonville ....54 Walled lake ..73 Holly ...,.i...63 Bay City Central 36 Southfield ...49 St. Michael ...SS Oak Park........49 Oxford .......39 Imlay City....jl Waterford ....61 Clarkslon.......39 KH Romps Bay City, 70-36; PNH Trounces Southfield, 70-49 It was the Chiefs* 4th’oonseci tivc victory and hiked thel -Chiefs Pile Up 17-2 Lead, Then Easy Triumph Enables PCH to Tie. Hillites for 2nd in Valley* t By BILL CORNWELL BAY CltY-'-The Chiefs of Porv-tiac Central may never win a has. ketball game any easier than-they did here Friday night?- Art Van Rytln’s warriors Jumped off to a 17-2 first-quarter cushion and coasted to a 70-S6 massacre of weak Bay City Central In a Saginaw Vat-ley Conference, contest. tf ik ua\ Jk Walled Lake Waterford, ...ItiOKIXff m HELP — Pontiac Northern's1 Mike Fedynik is surrounded by Southfield play-.ers, lie seems to be trying to figure a way to ■pass the ball to teammate Jerry ~ BCli (52). all 1960-61 season record to a re-spectable 5-2 figure.. The defeat was the 4th in a row for the hap-leas and winless Wolfpack. ’ Pontiac's runaway triumph also; enabled the Chiefs to deadlock] Arthur Hill for 2nd place in the Valley standings. - Arthur Jitll and PCH. now share, the runnerup spot with 2-1 records! fallowing unbeaten Saginaw High's I : 7 . 77-58 verdict over the Hillites last j__ .. li . • ' • „ night in their intracity show-down Hawks Leading South Central Conference on the winner's court. R was Saginaw's Mh straight victory and the Trojans are now undisputed leaders of the Valley race with a 3-0 record. Flint Central, whipped Midland, 68-56, yesterday In non-league action on the loser's floor. Flint Northern was Idle. The Chiefs grabbed a commanding advantage so early that play became ragged , and sloppy after the firsT eight mtnutes. Pontiac margin was 32-18 at halftime and By DICK BUCK Walled Lake threw a two-man gang at Waterford in the third period to build an 18-point lead, then weathered a fourth-quarter [storm to sink the Skippers Friday night, 73-61 j One of the Vikings*. two torpedoes Scored more points in the third latonra than the entire Waterford 'squad. Compact John Maragos out-ipointed the visiting foes 14-ll over ’that *span. Maragos taking game honors with 23 points and, Carter tallying 16. -Tall Bob Kaedler, showing surprising poise for a sophomore, led Waterford’s offensive with 17. Fouls could be partly blamed for the Skippers* submersion In the third quarter. They were whistled down for 10 personal period trailing 60-42. The Skippers, with sophomores hi ‘the line-up, narrowed the difference to 71-60 at 1:54 to go, but their task was just too big. Walled. Lake never trailed. Wa, terford tightened things to 32-31 at 1:04 in the second quarter, slipped five behind at halftime and then ... Southfield' defenders -are-^Jim Robinson (431, Mike Fournier (54), Joe Andrews (50) and Harry Breniser (40). Fedynik scored 19 points to lead PNH to a 1&49 wln~6n ffic IIu&kTcs ffdwr fered punishment three times. But Walled Lake reared away' i from a 36-31 -halftime margin by Ills partner in destruction was ;getting g* big ones _ the two-Blll Carter who notched nme ( ^inters. Twelve of Maragos’ 14 counters In the decisive third for example, were on field eight minutes. Igoals! As might suspected, these wo paced Walled Lake's scoring. OrtonvilleEdges Imlay City, 54-51 Ortonviiie proved last night.that Iter for the Hawks with 16. He alsoi Millington spotted -North Branch {he‘Black Hawks are very much picked off17 rebounds. Ilutchingsla 14-9 first quarter lead and then in the South “Central championship tossed in 15 points and Bob Hickey, blew the gome wide open in the race by upending Imlay City, 54-51. |tallied 14. (second half. After holding a three- ★ * * j Roger Lomerson hit ten points jpoint halftime edge, the Cardinals Millington moved into a tie for] for the losers. outscored North Branch 37-21 in isecond place with Imlay City on] * *■ * .11 the last two quarters. the strength of a convincing 6l-42j 'IMensiverywclid a ltne job."]-*-* *----I Cl ->2 pntnrinc the 4th nuarter triumph over North Branch. Both said coach Harvey Fletcher. "Stop- Mike Zink of Millington took - — - - - -—Itearps arc t-1 in the league. ping Perkins in the second half!game scoring honors with 24 points-. Rated a darkhorse behind Im- was *he big difference. Moors' re-jNed -Lockwood added 14 and Jen-lay City and Millington before 'bounding was a definite help," Kolaje 10 to the winning cause.] Bay City, now 0-3 in the SVC. never came closer than nine points and there never was any doubt about the outcome from the opening minute as the Chiefs were in complete control of the situa-j *“v®rtie. The Hawks defeated I b?n«*k Daonak ..a.,I UIIIImwIan am Hon. ; full I Three Bay City player*—Stan I)oane, Bob Rchaler and l.add Irvine—fouled out In the final period and the Wolves committed a total of 24 fouls In a futile effort to stop a superlo Ortonville h with Jerry Brosseau, 8-5 add veteran guard Ife kiss recovered from football in- j Hut.|11((S juries.. Bros’au Fletcher figured his team would JJjjJJgj* get stronger as the season prp-l ength Tom Gormley and Les Framton North Branch and Millington the road and then dropped the Spartans at home for a 3-0 mark.' This puts the Hawks in a good ..... fM>sition. Their toughest test away ^.*^7 Being iir:finit ptaee and] t® tt*«i *' home will toe'' flic rematch getting better each game isn't- good r oppon- is for future opponents, ( Romeo Quits Loop Cellar Romeo moved out of last place I Rochester played outside t h < |with Imlay City. They play Mil-jlington at home. , cnl' ' a second half Tally was needed The Chiefs scored the first 10 to down fmlity. The Spartans used points of the contest and just 3:15 15 points by Doug Perkins to .remained in the 1st period before. * 29-23 halftime lead. But the Bay City tallied its only points of Hajyks put th& damps the stanza. u Held goal by Garylin. the, second half, limiting him * Gwizdalu on a layup. Bay City jto four points. ...ye. h nJM : kn all except one broke' into the Ortonville finally caught and Friday night. in onp o( Rud Brote- acorlng column. | puoaed the ftpartan* early In the * * , * . ' beck's team with 1:10 remaining Clarence Douglas spearheaded fourth quarter but could never Roseville dumped Lapeer Into in the last quarter.-Then the Lane-the PCH assault with 21 points on pull away. Lbe ce|jar 5^5 anfj ga|ned a tie!era were detepted with six players eight fielders and five of seven at Moors was the leading point-get ! with Rochester for first place, on the floor. the charity stripe. ---------I • , ......... ■ —--------- M — , . „ - j Romeo * Larry I/*to made the ! Bprtngy (ieorge Fed came next ' With If potato on four bucket* and eight of 16 from the free throw line and the big fellow •loo collected 20 rebound*. The Yellow Jackets are tied with Pontiac Northern for the lead with a 2-0 mark. Berkley la now 1-1 and deadlocked with Walled Lake for third. . Waterford went into the final . Farmington jumped to an early I lead and was never headed. The [visiting team eut the deficit to thyee points at‘one time, but could never make the necessary spurt. Tom Thomas was high sewer for Farmington with 12 points. Jerry fponahoe: tallied for 13 for Berkley. ' WALLED LAKE WATERFORD May in First Blue Jays Hold Early Lead but Inexperience Eventually Hurts ----By DONrVOOEL------- A full court praising defense can spell disaster for an inexperienced basketball team. * * * '• This was never more evident last night as Pontiac Northern used this maneuver to down Southfield 70-49. It was the second Inter-Lakes win for the Huskies this season and gives them a 12-0 mark -since they joined the loop. j) Poach Dick Hall's team, 6-1 over all, Is tied with Farmington for first place. Southfield la bow 6-8 for the season. The Huskies probably would have downed Southfield without using the press. But the Blue Jays proved In the first quarter that they weren't going to be pushovers. With big Mike Fournier and Ted Mallon controlling the backboards, Southfield jumped to a 7-2 lead.— The few Southfield fans seated on (the north side of the PNH gym began to sense a possible upset. jBut this wasn't to ,be the final story. ro FT TP PO FT TF ] Southfield managed to survive Carter Keenan 4 8-14 It 8 7-10 U Newm'n O Mor* 8 3-7 13 3 1-3 1 ('the press PNH began using late in ; Mark's firt'lner Worry M a I 5 M IS Healea Ooff Kaedltr Lememux 1 |*3—i 13-4 i 6 5-10 11 [the quarter to Tteto w lS-lO lead ((going into the second period. Then [Twicony 0 0-1 • ft a-« n 0 3-4 2 ( the trouble began. TOtal* aft §3-37 73 Totals i o-i a 88 n-88 81 '! Marty Everett, Jim Capistrant Walled Lak* Qaarlors. ...18 18 *4 13—73 ' and Mtke Fedynik were the front W.terto 11 18—61 | players In the pres*. Thla brio I kept the Blue Jays sa effectively ( pinned down In the backeonrt 1 that the visitor* started throwing ; the ball away trying to reach I the 10-second line. The Huskies took advantage of these errors to score four straight baskets while holding Southfield scoreless. Capistrant picked up a loose ball and dribbled in for a layup Unmolested to give the Huskies a 16-15 lead they never lost. I Jerry Bell, 6-5 center, came off Another team in the Eastern the bench late in‘the first halt to Michigan League bit the dust last give the Huskies much, needed renight leaving only Femdale and I bound belpv With Bell screening Mt. Clrinens as the two unbeatens. under the hoop, Steve Thompson Femdale, losing 2S-24 at half- ga,ned S"** 255 ** ***** Southfield used a fast-break of- start In the thlrt^rterfow1.lpfense whenewr the Blue Jayi Port Huron 01-80 wjiUe Mt. U*, , b the ^ ** | n«nen* whipped Hasel l»a*. play„ open within 15 to 20 feet of 'the basket would shoot. IJnfor- lEMLLead Down to 2 Unbeatens r»ntu« run r>»t* ELUSIVE SPHERE — Mike Fournier (left) of Southfield and 1 Pontiac Northern's Steve Thompson (34) battle for a loose ball. Making the task more complicated are Jerry Bell (right) of PNH and Southfield's Joe Andrews. 1 Birmingham got into the EML win column by defeating East Detroit, 64-56. Next on the scoring jwrade Itiusqjjar Bradell * Pritchetl. whrvj tallied 12 points iind picked 14 off the backboards. Dennis Diehip netted eight points before leaving the game in the 3rd period with hls’Tith personal tout The only Bay City player to! reach double numbers ivaS Irvine, who bagged 10 points. Donaldson Sets 2 Team Swim Marks in Defeat technical shot then converted i basket to put tlfr game out of j reach. St. Mike Falls to League (.(Leading St. Mary, 60-55 tunately for Sauthfield, the Huskies, never gave up their domination of the rebound department in the last three quarters. This meant only me shot per trip down the floor. Northern out rebounded the visitors 65-38' with Thompson grabbing 14. Fedynik topped all scorers.with 19 points. Thompson added 16 and Ben Ttonaldson and Rrucc Nor-1 places, Bud Dofrr vdl shared the four first placesIterfly and Jim paw won by Pontiac Central last night ling event. -as the (Chiefs lost a 65-40 swim-] Coach Gene Norr mirut meet to Rtiy City Central, iwtth the Improven Boh lx rixotv set pool qnri tram iHOJlhf in the 400 and 200 yard* Whin *?'•/ * -’ll • ®c» llUJ Is.tbf ISO wit« i only •»c*f ill* off the state I 'eeord •pen e wOii the event r •natty. ItM) ;nn «l llm Ctly finished and hi* time was f 1:28.11. — tr- jlOO, •Diiii,'iid*on'« time LWwl Bill Trieloff topped Romeo 16 points. Bruce Sigme'n collected 14 for the losers. Romeo iis—nowj ■----- ... Uiprt with L’Arise Creuse for third _______ ________ _ i the 100 but-h,i;,ce. Each team has a l-rmaik (the Suburban CatfioluTLeague ty on in the dlv- j * * * " | defeating St. Michael's, 00-55 with, ‘A 29-point chore by .Tom Con-a second, half, surge. 1 W8S pleased n(j,.s faiit>d to help Lapeer against! St -Mary,' with a 54). season (Roseville. enz ami Mike i w a * cm oix,, a Tom May scored the winning ihV.' " basket ((or the visitors with 30 , T Bhook „ndg 'to play, Duane Soine.scored! Ferpdale’s 6-4 ace Larry Tregon-ing poured through 13 field goals land picked up one free throw for 27 points. He got help from Mike [Brown with 10 and Gary Burkhart JwW» 12. ;. . . .Tile Maples got good scoring j from Bob Sayle with 20. Hap reserve forward Dennis Harbert (Dunne with 16 and Jim Stephen- scored 11. Although he tallied only son within It was 29-28 in favor 8 points, guard Bruce Norton of Birmingham at halftime andjplayed a good game tor the Hus-; midway in the third*period the Ma-|kies and also picked off several pies started to phi) away. ■ timely rebounds. / Royal Oak St. Mary added anoth-|mark, got a 21 and 17 point out- * * * ,Foi*r?ier p"”d■ ^th notch to Hs^first olace lead in,put by Pick Dorr and Bob Bli“ L„%il SllU 17^ Wt U‘ The Shamrock* matched the j t 1 redrntk* vi m Royal Oak team from the court !_.• . . . , ■«.... ;, \ (E»*r«u« with *2 field goals but poor free lohrine l-1 tor 5005011 , throw shooting, which amounted M . ... to Ira* than 60 per rent, doomed “ bT1,*r M|, r ! ry McCullough's 23 points, ' evened Its season record at 2-2 -(ill Athletic losses and Then Victory At Tunney got 22 points and by defeating Bedford St. Mary [Charlie Paul lOfor St. Mike which 54.45 |Mt night.' I kept the game nip and tuck for| jthe first two periods. It was 9-9 and 23-23. Morton 4 0-0 1 Four rr 0 4-7 14 I Caplstr’t I 0-0 2 'Andrew* 3 5-9 11 . Bell 1 2-4 4 Wllk’e'n 0 5-8 5 Woeik l o-o 2 SrOnls'r 0 i-0 % Herbert 5 1-1 11 Scott 1 M 3 ruher 10-0 2 Towle SO 10-14 70 Totela 10 rf-32 40 Score by Quarters Northern ........ 10 24 10 17—70 Sodthtlifld ..........10 9 19,14—40 iieo medley relay, llr I only two s(*cond1K!m ESf'JJifi' ei2«d* t Emmanuel Christian High School ( * * * (marie history hist night. I Closest gap for St. Mike in the [ The Crusader cagers scored tbeirj isst half whs four pulnt*. after 9t. first athletic victory ilk varsity Mary extended its margin as much sports by defeating Our Lady of a* 10 points. OUT OP) NOWHERE, BANti Of the official (left) send the 40 yard freestylers on their way in Poutiuc Central's pool last' night. Thi Chiefs met Bay CHy Central and lost 68-40 In the lanes left to right are Paul Phillip* bnoox appears to nave the best start but was Freeman in, a time of 119.6. Shook finished second took third. The I Nchool, which went 3 straight dur-' Ing fnotball ha* now ipade It i S ir for hankrthall by alpplng Lutheran East, tf-W. ----1 amphrni wa» IwMnd MII at halftime and never took the lend until, the last six seconds. PMI i Freer who had 23 for the night, ' stole the hall w ith 36 seconds to I play and drove for the tying bucket, 46-46. He was fouled and made the Hi I to ranch It. BASKETBALL SCOKESm Wren Hits 38 Points to Pace South Lyon Jack Wren went on a scoring rampage last night to lead South Lyon to a hard earned 7869 upset victory over high rated Monroe Catholic Central. * * * Playing on his home Court, Wren stole the show by pumping In 38 big points. He collected 17 field goals and four free throws. Dave -Taylor was the only other.: Lion la double figures.' He scored 14 points. * ' * ★ Jim Jennings dropped In . Bints i for the Falcons. Monroe Ckthohc led only once, at the end of the first quarter. South Lyon now has a 4-4 record. Jayyee Scores THE mNTIAC PRESS* -t^'^ Only Milford Stands in Holly's Way in W-0 Tree Throws Hurt Oxford Quintet Failure to make free throws hurt) would have been greater If the Oxford’s bid to Upset Lake Orion Dr*g«m hadn’t tplssed over half last night. j •*** trt«* ,r®™ the Mae. They The Dragons srotj the non league] ma*e ^ • tussle, 47-39. 4 The loss gives , Oxford a 0-4 4' poor fourth Varter cost: Ox--}"6!1* otl ^ 8ea9W- ^ drion Broncos Trim Clarkston to Stay Unbeaten Wayne-Oakland Race Narrows'Down to 2 Teams Now ford the game. The Wildcats werer gumr8nma»ragnt irw tnrows; {upped its overall mark to 3-2. SETS 2 MARKS — Pontiac Gentral’s outstanding freestyle swiftimer, Ben Donaldson approaches the finish mark ln the 400 freestyle event in. Tvhlctohe set a pool and team record in a time of 4:15.6. This was just six-tenths off Pontiac Pre»» Ph**i the state record. In the 200 freestyle, Donaldson also set pool' and team marks in 1:90.8. The Chief swimmers lost to Bay City 05-40 to the PCH pool last night. more than half on the first attempt) of a one-and-one, and blew two layup shots. The Wildcats converted only ]3 of 32 free tosses in j toe game. Lake Orion’s margin of victory Avon Nips Oak Park, Falcons Bow Local Rivals good hisfet for toe winners. The 6-3 senior took' game sooting honors with' IS -points. Bucky Craven, Orion’s fine guard, chipped in with 13. Ray Converse paced Oxford with 12. Clawson kept Madison to the Oakland B celler by posting a 47-41 win. Jerry Matteson of Madison was high with 1& points. Craig Shoqp scored .11 for the winners. ClashToniaht Sub Rico Hits Jacket Clincher; Rochester Falls, 50-49 Titans Finally Road Contest, 8 By CHUCK ABAIK Many of the Avondale arid Rochester basketball fans may be short un ORION * g rr tp ra n ■0 2-2 9 Halnec 8 t- ( _ « o o-i o Cpnr'M • 0-2 12 Unbeaten Holly Tolled to an easy victory over: Clarftafdh Tail night to keep its first place position in the Wayne-Oaktand league just ahead Of Milford which defeated Brighton, 61-47. The Broncos led 32-24 at halftime and hit the hoop for 41 per oent as Don McKenzie collected And Ron Morlan 19. Except for Milford, the W-O rare already appears to he oat of reach for the other six teams. Bloomfield Hills made its league record 2-3 by defeating Nortftvllle (2-3), 60-52, and CTarenceville (Won its first game dl-4> in downing j West Bloomfield (2-3>. 59-37. Milford's Bob Oaks was toe top lan to All league'games last night as he hit for 28 points with 10 field goals of 15 attempts. The 6-4 Scoring Record Set at Ferris SOOTH ORANGE. N.J. (AP>-Charlie North and Dave De-Busschere combined for 50 points Friday night as Detroit blew a 13-point halftime lead, then rallied for an 84-79 basketball victory voice when the local rivals clash j over Seton Hall, tonight on the Falcon court after The Hall, dropping Hs fourth screaming throughout wild 1961 game in 10 starts, battled back openers for their teams Friday, trap • The Yellowjackets won out in a •big-Oakland B battle besting pre-1 viously. unbeaten Oak Park 51-49I at home while. Coach Gene Kon-ley’s' crew was dropping a 50-491 verdict to visiting St. Clair Shores] Lakevlew. 46-33, halftime deficit to|nationaUy. three times tie the score in the second period before ,field goals by Frank Chickowski and -Larry Hughes in the last minute wrapped it up for Detroit. North had 31 points and De-Busschere 19 for the Detroit Titans, 'who ran- their record-to to 9-3. Detroit is ranked 17th Unheralded Junior reserve Biff Rice, was the hero. With the score tied, 20 seconds to play sad Oak Park In posse islon, he stole toe ball KV mtdeouri and calmly dribbled in (or an easy la.vnp. A quick floor violation ruined any Parker hopes for a final Shot as the Avon boys held the ball. Rice had seen spot duty to earlier Jacket games but his basket was his first varsity points. - It was Avondale’s 3rd triumph in four starts—all in the Oakland B. Each victory has been by two points. The latest one drew adornment of "I can’t take much more of this’’ from Mrs. Marion Bye, wife of winning boss Dick .Bye, How about her husband? . LOS ANGELES (AP) — Ted Kroll led the- way through the first round of the 245,000 Los Angeles Open Golf Tournament Friday, but It was a gigantic blowup by Arnold Palmer, the National Open king, that provided the shock of the day. The Oak Park-setback tightened the loop race considerably. Flttgerald moved Into the lead this bright, sunny day with a 35-31. That gave the veteran from Fort Latiderdale, Fla., stroke lead over three rivals—Bill Collins of Crystal River, 36-31; Bob Goalby, also booked out of Crystal River, 34-33, and Eric Monti of Los Angeles, 35-32. Monti ,,, , , . , . , ____1 led for three rounds here a year 13. times and toe lead changed ^ ^ with a ?inal hands on 14 occasions. — - I Avondale now share 2nd. Clawson kept Madison In the cellar by winning 47'41. Lake Orion was idle In league play. The big Oakland B duel was a tight one all toe way with a shortlived six-point edge the biggest difference. The score was deadlocked Palmer Blows Up’ on Last Hole in Los Angeles Open Palmer, 1960’s “Golfer of the Year," took a staggering 12 on the final hole—seven over par for toe hole—and a 44-33—77 tor-the otherwise fine round. Kroll, 41, fired a 5-under-par 66 on the 7,000-yard, par 36-3$—71 Rancho Municipal Course,_____ Kroll, whose last major victory brought, a $100,000 payoff in the 1956 ‘‘World Championship" by Masting Troy 61-39. The Park- Chieagar-re-entered-ihe-nspotllgllt ™ mer, Casper and Bob Wlnlnger finished on the par-6 508-yard ninth. Palmer’s drive from the tee was good and straight down the hard fairway. .But something happened. Using a 3-wood he' soil two consecutive shots out of bounds to the right in the adjoining practice range. His next two shots flew to the left, over the temporary bleachers and onto a street that rpns alongside the fairway. The distressed Palmer finally reached the edge of toe "green in 10. It took two more to get the ball into; the hoe. 1 Was this his worst experience? “I can’t think of a worse one,” Pafiher conceded. The gallery, however, gave him round 80 and a tie for seventh Holding the advantage mi the I Djace boards. Oak Park 1*1 15-1? Bracketed at 68 were Paul Har- i- quarter. An eight-point spree, , _ . . .-___ ney, Worcester, Mass., old-folks by T‘m Avon.lte E.J. (Dutch) Harrison, San Frtn- ‘•fS* cisco; Bob Gajda, Bloomfield Hills half hot he losers had evened the ch from nearby South Pasadena, and Lidnel He- , . herr,"former Ntttiuimi PBft chant- AftgBM * pion, from Lafayette, La. ’Among the better known 'players in the 70 group were Art Wall Jr., Billy Maxwell, Gary Player and Walter Burkemo. There were some mild disappointments. Jay Hebert, Lionel's brother and1 1960 National PGA champion, shot a 73, and Mike Souchak had a 74. | But the Palmer matter was the' stunner of the round. - - I The stocky, 31-year-old pro from Miami by way Of Pennsylvania, whose $80,000-plus winnings last year set a record, came up to his last hole one under ..par. The field of 150 wSs divided^ half starting from toe first tee, the other from the 10. Thus, Pal- count at toe intermission: Two suc-L 9 starting the last The victors appeared in trouble when star Jim McDonald fouled out on the 1st play of the 4th quarter bat Rice and Roger Van Conaat helped lake up the slack, oak Park went In front 45-41 and then 47-43 but a three-point play and a Bourdo foul tied' It with 3:20 left. Fine Parker guard Stan Dressier canned two fouls but Bourdo’s goal matched them. Both teams missed shots before Rice came through. All members of the Shaky Six night. — the slim Utile Maud" of major college unbeatens — are In action, together, wltli most of the btgtinfo conference and independent clubs, In n whopping Saturday schedule that sends sub-par Illinois Into the Buckeye den at Columbus, Ohio. . Two of the other unbeatens, second-ranked Bradley, and lOthRated Auburn, figure to stretch their streaks but toe three other Shaky Sixers — DePaul, Louisville and Vanderbilt evenings. -warm welcomg~whe!r tie finally Farmington CC Plans for '61 State Open Aug- 18-20 have been selected as the dates for the Michigan Open to be held at Farmington Country Club. Farmington was the site of the Michigan PGA in, 1959 and the Pro-Am in 1960. , It is located at 12 Mile and Haggerty Roads. The cldb has just completed a new watering system to cover the entire course. LOS ANGELES (AP)-The LoslHuth.. Angeles Angels have picked • up Nun«m their first flayer since the draft, viu,,,,ir' a .255-hittiiig International1 League |. v*foi* infielder, Leo Burke, Bohhfet Nets 40 Points ... '.... AT rMttfst BAD DAY — Arnold Palmer, 1980’e Golfer of the Year, had a. bad day Friday in toe Lo< Angeles Open. He sends ball off on an unsuccessful 10-foot putt here. Later, he knocked four straight balls out of bounds for a whopping 12 strokes on the last hole and wound up with 77. —•’—1—:—1 .■ •» ' . £ « Hill had IS and Randy 10 for Brighton as no other d player hit In doable flg- Fifth Straight On Road Art Tregenza was high man for Bloomfield Hills with 18 as the Barons led 27-25 at halftime. North-.ville got within three in the final in 89-64 Bulldog Rout Qqarter bur never took the lead. Art Hicks led Seton' Hall with 22 points. Ohio State's top-ranked Buckeyes so tall, tough and poised that dazzled basketball coaches call them a “pro-type team,” Open their drive toward another Big Ten championship tonight — the first step toward a hoped-for delense of their .■-----------■ -■ -,,________________________________... .. Nr A A crown Ipert from Fems Institute, etched Rouble figures with 11. 'his name In the record bboks last] Milford’s lone league loss Pistons Easy for Celtics of Detroit Tech i four-point Craig Bell and Dan BroWn each ] DETROIT (AP)—Tom'Heinsohni two free throws for I had 14 for the-losers. . and Bob Cousy paced the Boston edge. i Or it ★ ■ Celtics in their fifth straight vie- Detroit had taken a 28-24 lead, • Nine of the 10 Qarenceville play- tory—all on the road—as they but Boston came back to hold a ers scored but only Ridlirig hit squeezed past the. crippled • De-j 56-51 advantage at halftime, and |troll Pistons 108-102 in a National]then stretched the margin to eight at Basketball Association game Fri-1 points early in, the third period. day night. the hands of Holly, but the two teams wflTmeet again February" Bohnet broke his school’s scoring J c°r d.uby 'swishing. 40 polntoj «1>T, kets as the Celtic through the nets In leading the oibron 2 l-i 6 Dymond 3 i-j , . Bulldogs to an 89-64 victory over SST J-R-» ■■ « « Division lead Detmtf Tech. ---- * During the last quarter, the sooFe ctrasged hands eight times ~ Hcinsohn"scored 31 points. Cousy and was tied five times before [had 19 and assisted on nine bas- Russell’s shot put the Celtics in front for keeps. hed thei iKurnlcl I Priestley 1 : Totals 91 18-J3 61 Totals , SJi_ . . 2 Pearsall 1 2 Ferris encountered no difficulty In rolling to Its seventh win against two setbacks. The Bull- . dogs enjoyed a 44 33 halftime j Brighton lead and continued to pour It on Hft) | In the second half. I "ra.H n may be in for rough] Bohnet set his record with 17] field goals and six foul shots. to IV the idle Philadelphia HOLLY (AS) ^ games oi si Warriors. In dropping their fourth In io 7-18 «1row. the Pistons played minus - regulars Bailey Howell, their top H scorer, and Archie T5ees. Both are iton (SB) sidelined with injuries. The Pistons had six players in double figures, led by Shelly Mc-Millon with 20. Bob Petitit scored 35 points and led the SL Louis Hawks to 108-104 victory Friday night over the Los Angeles Lakers before 5,964'tn L.A. Woody SaUldsberry proved to be Morlan If Wtltrr [Ennis' 1 2-3 , |B3e) r . Two other Michigan college auin- i_..rT_. Bnpley, 11-0 this season and car- tets dropped out-of-state decisions] rying toe nation’s longest major night. I ™*“e winning streak at l7, is home to Gentral; Mkhigan was whacked] ^ Missouri Valley Coqjerence foe Tul-. j,lini stat 81.53 for Holly •-. Auburn, 64) this season with|Dy J>iaie.81w ior irsjci^L.t. i jj ijl Dagplte their riddled 'line-up, 0 o-o o the Pistons battled on even terms 3 o-i f until the final 4 minutes. With the 1 l-a 3 seore tied 98-98, Bill Russell sank i-i. i wogwi_____^____?ja layup and Cousy followed vrithi ' S-16 S3 ToUU 16 7-16 3S|’ —■ - .. — ...........-... laneWMl Score by Qiurtrri —------------------------------------—j™’--'*" 6 Powcil the Hawk hero. He replaced Cliff I Hogan in the third period with the assignment of covering the Laker star, Elgin Baylor. He held Baylor to two points in the third pefriod and scored 10 himself. its^'&^eartem^Snferenre^Den-'^^^^l^brorb^an W BLMm ^ dafart -Rt- -the- hands of Winona f ft. | * “ and Vand,rb(lt (M) all an on fe ,“rd lo” ““ [S, j B I & road fw toughies — DePaul atl ‘ ★ ★ ★' gaaiins g 7-io n _ Dayton (7-2), LouievUle at MUwau-] ,n two other garafeSi Soo Tech S«DDtU i ft \ kee against a Marquette team that ^t^ Gogebic Community Col-1 S. 0U^her^an„ «« -"i'MneriA JC Whipped indicate, and Vanderbilt ill a SECh^rtHuron JC 98-85. iwSrffi test at Tennessee, which shows ~—v. . _______ only a 6-5 season record but has -""•“ill" 0,*“* T ‘““ Notre Dame, Then NCAA fpBratkowski NFL 1 ] I'[Golf Champion {irtlRCOtoff ss IN** see Dukpfi • f It Firry i e it v— III McMlllon Lions' Yale Lary^Fadfis After Holding Halfway Local Go,fer Wi« Lead in Florida Third-ranked St. Bonaventure entertains Duquesne, sixth-pegged ft C* ± 1 1 fTI TT 1 North Carolina plays Notre Dame X C^lTUCJCf TOT I r)T HPPIG! at Charlotte, N.cTfoventh-rankedp WUUyyiW iUl 1 Cll ilCCid Iowa is home to Minnesota, eighth- rankad Duke has an Atlantic Coast PITTSBURGH (Al — Nojth Caro-■ Conference game with North Car-jlioa basketball coach Frank Medina State, and ninth-ranked UCLA Guire sends his sixth-ranked Tar plays upstate Washington again in Heels against Notre Dame tonight, BKLLEAIR, Fla. i*-J. H. Wallace of St. Petcrsburgh, Fla.; defeated George Haggarty of Detroit 2 and 1 tn the championship flight consolation of the Bellcair Invks tational Senior's Golf Championship Friday. Detroiter Simeon Janes defeated A. B. Harrison of HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP)-Zeke Bratkowski, Chicago Bears' quarterback won. the 36-hole National Football League Golf Champion-, ship Friday with a 3-stroke edge over King Hill of the St. Louis Clearwater, Fla., 3 and 1, In the The football coaches,' meeting Cardinals. second flight, and J. P. Stapchin- here in conjunction with the annual] Bratkowski, who finished the skas of Birmingham, Mi eh., NCAA conventiqp, revised their first 18 holes in a third place tic downed Frank Moore, of Coral _ . _ . _ . _ annual poll this season. Previously,'with an 81 Thursday, toured the Gables, Fla., 2 and 1, in the third other key matches on a 75-game then wings West for a possible the coaches had voted in a nation- 6.350-yard Rollwood Beach course fflight. major schedule that siweads over showdown here with the National]wide pdl. ------------------ {in 4-over-par 74 on.the fine round all the major conferences. [Collegiate Athletic Association. | *, * f ] Hilly shot a 81-77—158 SETON HALL The powerful NCAA council to-| But the voting was changed to Yale Lnry of the Detroit Uons IffMAt ,1 am hlckowrtl 3 II Walker 0 2 purch A I Brooks Burkbardt AIImAasm: >.iW Bourdo topped the scoring with 12 rebounding very well In the last half. Rochester came from behind to go ahead 39-24 at the end of the 3rd quarter and stayed in command until the last two minutes. Lakevlew broke the spell but Chuck Kelly quickly regained the lead with 1:18 to, go- Two free throws gave it back to the winners. A missed layup alter a steal was Rochester's final futile bid. A Mg 21-point effort by Phil Kwiereht went to waste as the RHS record dipped to 2-4. AVONDALR OAR FARR H ,, ,, ro nr w Burt 6 14 II Carpmaa I M If Bourdo I 9-7 i| brassier 3 6-9 1 McOon'd- I H 1 x-r-— * ‘ Peel I M 11 Da. Pink 3 n Con’t I 0-1 Howe to Miss Sunday Game Against Boston DETROIT UR — Detroit Red Wing star Gordie Howe Trill sit out tomorrow night’s National] Hockey League game here with Boston. Howe, who was hospitalized in Toronto for a head injury suffered in a -game against the Maple Leafs __________________________Wednesday night, returned to Dels* 61 Total* 16 13-38 46 trott yesterday. . (•or# by Quarters jg ]d_n He will undergo more tests • is » 13 io-* be kept under observation at De-LARBjrncrr- jtertt Osteopathic Hospital. Doctors McDon'd t M ” W ^ probably will be out of aq-1 ft iSition another week or JO dayk. Noei ; o-o til The Detroit veteran was hurt Sunwsr o 34 a collision with Eddie Shack 1 toms 2*a amts by Quarters icussion and R 12-stitd| gash on his ------ itiSlforeHfead. IBCHESrtri RsUy t-akrrir* . Something: for the Girls Learn Beauty Bowling & r.T|mtl|rrpw will hear l\1(-(|uii(; and two i Ti oroer North Carolina reprenenta-i J 22 lives answer questions concerning j < lcthe possibility that the university i 2 4 recruited basketball players best i7 n yond the limit permitted by the . | NCAA code. The team that plays the Fight- : Ing Irish In North Carolina tonight list* eight players from the New York-Pennaylvanla-New Jersey area. A well-stocked hunting ground tor Atlantic Coast Conference bird dog*.. first nominate imJ tricts, then ballot on the eight in each category for a national winner. The major nominees: Dist. 1. Jordan Olivar, Yale; Dist. 2, Hess; 84, finishing . third at 163. Ralph Guglielmi of the Washington Redskins won the second flight With a 78-411—159, and Jim Weath-irall of the Lions took the thild With bowling attracting women in ever increasing numbers, Newspaper Enterprise Association and The Pontiac Fresh bring you something for the girls — that also will interest the mate followers of America's popular participation sport. Dee Purcello, one of the finest and most successful instructors, shares with readers of'The Press the talents, knowledge and unusual teaching methods that have made her famous. Step by step she shows how to master the basies and at the same time gives hints that will prove interesting and helpful to even the best of league bowlers. Learn to bowl beautifully through the sprightly, bright, authoritative new series, Dowling Beauty, by the famous teacher and glamorous competitor who carries an average of 189 in two leagues. It starts Monddy. IWLINGB BEAUTYH Dirt; 3, BUI Murray, Duke; Dist. 4.1 flight with 94-91—185.— Ray Graves, Florida; Dist. 5,J Bratkowski had one birdie • i Bump .Elliott, Michigan; Dist.* 6,1 the final round, sinking t Wolverine Skaters Nip Michigan Tech Murray Warniath, Minnesota; Dirt- putt on the ninth hole, HUI lort a 7, Frank Broyles, Arkansas; Dist; I chance for the title when he took 8, Jim Owens, Washington. |a double bogey on the -1.5th hole * * * And bogied the I6th and 17th. The minor nominees: 1, Harry Arlanson, Tufts; 2, John Potsklan.j Victory for Sorrow* Baby Photo Contest “Ilficlly for Amaleun” WIN FREi ZEISS 35mm CAMERA Bm Taw. AS for Cawpli EXPERT CAMERA SHOP 57 Wert Huron FI 5-6615 Albright; 3, Clarence St.aa.vlch, Lenoir Rhyne; 4, Alonso Gaither, Florida AAM; 5, Frosty Ferxacca, Northern Michigan;. 6, Stanley After trailing in the 1st quarter, Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows bounced back to take command By United Press Internattonal Red Bcrenson tallied for the University of Michigan hockey team with 3:20 left in' the game to give the Wolverines a 2-1 decision over] Michigan Tech in Western Collegiate Hockey Association-action at Ann Arbor last night. In a non-league tilt at -East Lansing, Michigan' State buried {Ohio University, 124). The Wolverines won their fifth league game of the seaspn against three losses and a tie in the first game of a weekend double-header. Lou .Angotti sent Tech ahead in the opening period but Berenaon tied it before the first session waa over with a 40-foot shot. Larry Babcock set hint up for the winning goal with a- corner past and Beitenson converted it from 20- Shcrlfl, Iowa State Teachera; 7, and whip St.. Leo 48-42 laft night. Woodson; 8, Cecil Cotemhn, Fresno Jack Nell scored 13 ahd Mike Sutler 12 tor the victors. New Haven Leads STL as Almont Hits Cellar feet. Pat Baldwin, a Spartan .aophor more from Birmingham, Mich., 'had a three-goal Kaj trick while Bob Boyle anfi Art Thomas each had two goal*. made it 43-41 and 'Dryden stayed] The Southern Thumb League had pair of sboardown • games in oxtreme opposite ends of the league standings last night. New Havre and Brown City, eeeh 66 met aad New Havre seared a M M victory. la the battle sf the cellar, Dtydre and Almeal, mu-Ii 6-4 tangled, aad Dryden scored a 47-46, triumph. .In other league games, Capac,_. _________________ . stayed in. the race by defeating ] ! ft ,} Anchor Bay, 57-34 and Armadai Jfitotoin 3 <’-s » Kuh " T?Kt??t.r | « t fei L. ar'dln 3 Wayne Uppgger had to for Almret and OroRdia and Ton Lobateln each had 16 for Drydra. John Stanilou had 16 to lead] Capac's victory while Julius Traub his for 26 to pace Armada. Barber got 17 for Memphis. DRV»«N U7) AU60NT(W) - -“*•■**- ■ - y£jr' surprised Memphis, 58-56. Almont led only after one period, 12-9 and tied It 41-41 with three [minutes to play, but Paul Grotfdbi attar 11 OVER 2,000 COLORS WALLHIDE • N» "Priktr" 04n • Exti* ScivUmU* Pontiac Glass COMPANY 23 W. Lawrence Si. PK 5-6441 ^WEOTT~" THK PONTTOT^B^SyrSATlJ RBftTrfCTTOlrY N)o. 6—Baseball’s Unforgettable Games The Fantastic 26-Inning Game in 1920 Still Has Baseball Historians Amazed ADAM AMES xeuppcwin* FOOLISH O'ME-I I WISH THE LAO HAD NO ONE.X NOTHIN' T' 90 BACK By Lon Fine- Almost any, well-versed baseball fan knows that the longest fame .ever played in the major leagues was the 26-inning, 1-1 tie between the Brooklyn Dodgers and Boston Braves-at Braves Field in Boston , The chances are, too, that almost all (ana will know the ttwo pitchers involved in the marathon ^lblt‘ —yloe Oeachger of the Braves and , Leon Cadore of the Dodgers, both' ~ of whong1 started anchfinished Thf^ ' fantastic game. However, there are fact) about the four-hour centest played in Boston, on a Saturday afternoon. May 1, ins, which still amaze baseball historians. They take a second look at the "At Bat” column,, which snows that a couple of Boston players, Tony Boeckel and Charley Pick, had 11 official trips to the plate. They %aze in awe at the long string of zeroes which stretches unbroken for 20 frames after the first 6 innings, when Boston pushed a man across to equal the first to get Mann as Rabbit Maran-ville crossed the plate with what appeared to be the winning run. Base umpire ruled the run invalid, however, because Pick had left the base line to avoid being tagged. It was a disappointing’anticlimax when umpire McCormick, called theg ante at the end of the 26th because of darkness. Olson hisbed out and said. "Wait one1 more Inning. I want in be able to telf| liny grandchildren I played tne Finally; In. the J7th. Brooklyn NUd| break up the game. The harder1 they tried, the easier it was fob) I Cadore and Oeschger to get them] 1 With one out in the ninth, Boston came within a whisker of scoring.1 )The-baseswcreTutI. Leslie Maun [hit a grounder to Olson, who tried1 to tag Charley Pick heading in 10 second. He missed and threw to! Uotkf was wild, and Hotke barely knocked it down. Ed Konetchy tried to score on the plaiy but was tagged out by Gowdy', who took Holke s hurried throw aiid threw himself into the spikes of the ing .Konetchy. ★ ♦ ★ « The pitchers completed the 18th in 'good shape. Then the 19th and 2fljh. WhAi they completed tbe 2nd inning, they broke the National League record for nymber ot innings played in any game. The tension was tremendous. They finished 24 innings, then 25, breaking the major league record. made 42 put,-outs, Konetchy .30. And the whole Incredible 26 innings! had taken only 3 hours and 50 minutes. As the players struggled out of} the park, fans shook their heads and muttered, "Cadore and Oeschger will never be the same after this.” Somehow that Met has persisted (0 this day, but while it’s true that Cadore never had aj winning year after M20; he did win 13 games for a fifth-place team the next year. Oeschger, on the other hand, had Ms best year In the majors, the following season, when! and lost 14. UK zr# _kn7 nT "You know’. I've always wondered why waiters lay your check e the table upside down — it’s so you won’t choke io death." BOARDING HOUSE ^IVIAT OPPEttildb BLOCKHEADS W9& OF FR EE j FULL O' HOLESydXJ [ 5O0MD LIKE A BAGPIPE DUET E^ERY \ TIME fH' V4tr40 BLOWS/ HAT PHONY, _ l clockege ~c HOW DID V f HE HE GET GETS so ©ood?( PLENTY y Practice YEP—MV UNCLE^ IS THE BOWLIN© CHAMP OF THE WHOLE STATE HE'LL GODLY ^ 6IVC ANYBODY THE6HICT0FF / HieancK. < Wa t X 1/ REALLY? WELL, 1/ that eenLM IT— l HE'LL HAVE TO OO/ ~V ( Zi ij) Ky / 1 H I, / 1 / f \ llLI § /If in By Dick Cavalli Orion Skaters Have Two Sunday Contest! The Lake Orion Hornets will play! a pair of fast hockey game*.! Sunday. At 11:00 a.m. the Hornets tnpei Hillman in Detroit at Hayes and Gratiot and at 1:00 p.m. “they1 conic' up to Pontiac's Northside rink to mact Wallaceburgh from Canada. All hockey games slated for today have been called off because of the warming spell. By Walt Disney THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THIRTEEN tfATCRDAY, JANUARY 7,1961 planning desk and eyen Is used to construct the cupboards. Walls are yellow green. Draperies are ytglow, green and brown. The door in the background leads U> the garage. ' EFFICIENCY—All the modern materials possible have Wen used to make this kitchen efficient and easy to care for. Formica covers the counter tops, toms the top of the breakfast table and Your Neighbor’s House base. You can see the projecting parts that imprinted the design. The lake to be seen through these windows is small but beautiful. TABIC FROM INDIA—The octagonal table between a pair of green club chairs is made of teakwood, inlaid with mother-of-pearl. On it is a lamp that has an antique wallpaper roller for the all parts oTthe living room and » 11 "H|r.ijiiHfiiiriil ~ the dining room. __ The tight fixture over the 1 dining room table Is composed L of three cones suspended from a three-pronged piece of wal- P ■ ,vv—; Jacobs' Home terraced garden space near the house, the land Is left free tor the children to uar. Ease of maintenance was another must with the Jambs’. The whole lamily has too many interests to spend excess hours keeping the house clean. Take the -kitchen, for instance. Even the cupboards are made ol Formica in a wood grain that had your home editor fooled at first.. All counters have plain white Formica on them. Window sills are marble. The beige linoleum' floor has gold speckles in It. children become teen-agers nfiey will complete the lower level. There are two boys and two girls in the Jacobs household. Edward—more commonly known as "No"—is 11; John is 8; Anne is 5; and Cathy is 3. Then jhcre's Teeny, the German Shepherd. The Jacobs have a wonderful, lot sloping down to Vhay Lake. There Is I he lake for swimming and skating. There are tires to climb. There in even a .hill, for tobogganing and smaller By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Home Edltpr Young Couples who build homes have to plan for the years ahead, If there are just two of three in the family when the house is 'built, two bedrooms will be enough. But lot the tom, ily grow in size and the house starts bulging at the scams. The; William E. Jacobs who live on Lakeyiew Court think they have anticipated their future needs. They have built a hoitie that fits their needs Green, brown and yellow fruit Is printed on the draperies. The plastic .topped table has bronzetone legs, Danish modenr chairs are a combination Of bronzetone metal, walnut and beige plastic. There's a plastic-topped free-torn desk in one comer of the room. Between the breakfast room . and the front halt is the family room. This is the “African" dining room there are two coral leather armchair*. A pair of overstaffed green chairs stands In front of the windows. Between these chairs 'it a beautiful Oriental teakwood table inlaid with mother-of-pearl. The lamp on it is unusual top;, the perfectly right now. When the skiing. Except tor room.___Mrs.: Jacobs' parents base is an old wallpaper jhller. travel a great deal and bring ^ back interesting souvenirs, it The floor is rorktrtone tile. £.] Walls are painted a color { known as “maple sugar", j- . Draperies, woven by Mrs. ;;; Jacobs' mother, arc semi- sheer white ones. ,> Ip . one corner is a red brick At fireplace with a raised hearth. .which printed the design on paper long ago. In the gflis' room the waits are sandalwood. Furniture Is maple. Curtains are brown and chartreuse, Spreads are green. - The boys sleep In a blue. room. They also have maple furniture. The master bedroom at the front of the house has an at- Light fixtures are brass. Doors tached green and white bath. to the frolit haU are louvered. Bedroom walls are Ivory. There's a hooked rug on the floor. Furniture is maple. White cafe curtains and blu% and white draperies dress the Above the green sofa is an interesting wall hanging showing African natives. The colors are brown and orange on a natural background. Rugs are brightly colored ones made In South America. ta*l backed white leather chair with a walnut frame. The spacious entrance hallway hat a slate, floor. At the righ't of the front dour is the stairway to the lower level. The exterior of the Jacobs' house is pinkish brick. Trim is creosoted wood. All windows are thermopane. A bright orange front door makes it easy for strangers to find the house. John Ar Allen. AIA, oi Farmington was the architect. J. L. Cook of Bloomfield Hills was the builder, .It's, been about a year since the Jacobs' moved from There are 9 windows on the lake side of the house in the dining room and -Jiving *room. These are curtained in green. Walls are a paler green. The floor ir polished oak. Hl'KKY I’l.A VMATF — John and Edward hill next to the house where the rose garden will ive Teeny,lor their1 playmate, whenever they're lie next summer. Stones make terraced gardens recreation room. Mada of white brick, the up-stairr fireplace is set 6 bricks above the floor. . It is built orange print depicting African natives. The rugs, woven in bold primitive colors, came from South America. Walls In this room are a maple where it can be enjoyed from TWO-U5VEL SIDE—The William E. Jacobs’ home la built dh sloping ground with room for a second level,at the back. Although the lower level Is not finished inside, windows for the,rooms planned were installed irf the right places. The future bedroom, BfNIXG ABBA—A three-way fireplace marks the division striped material is used for 'chair cushions. Beyond the between dining room and living room. Oriental ruga art used on Is a sfont-top desk under the windows. ^ ■ thr oak floor. The drop leaf table Is mahogany. Green and blue > ( . A three-way Ifotatoce Is homp in " i huilt track .to back with the • « fireplace In Ike family room. On the lower level there’* n third fireplace In the futare BgrVI * T rjT FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. JANUARY 7, 1061 V. New Plywood Top b the old bridge table lagging' Cut a panel of plywood to alae,| aan^down the surface and nail it to the top Of the table. Finish the new topdesired. jSteel Sinks to Be Colored DON’T TAKE IT SHORT! INSTALL ADVANCID, AUTOMATIC Janitroi HEATING IQUIPMINT • err run details at OTTO A. TRZOS CO. -3101 Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 20278 After 5 P.M. MA 6-6247 m ' PONTIAC Rockcote PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPER 2 South Ces*. - - FE 1-7129 LAKEWOOD VILLAGE Home Sites EM 3-0085 or MU 4-8825 JlalL-thfc- nation's -links. will be stainless steel in another 10 years; This is the yearend prediction of a pioneer manufacturer of stain-lees steel sinks — Kali Jensen, president of Jensen-Thorsen Oorp. of Addison, HL ★ ‘ ♦ Jensen said his forecast was based on the stepped-up interest in stainless steel sinks which continued ty> be evidenced during the past year, as well as new developments—such as the tatrodudtion of color to stainless steel—which will make stainless steel even more versatile in Kitchen decor. • "Manufacturers of stain less steel will soon introduce the metal In n variety of colors.*’ Jensen said. “Shades of brown and black have already been tested and will be on the market seen, while rainbow colors such as bine, green and red, w well ns shades of gray, are In the teat stage now. "This,colored stainless,steel can be used in sinks. And this means that the stainless steel sink will er homemakers a wider choice in ever.before in. kitchen deepr. 'Eveh without the development of color, all evidence Indicates that stainless sinks would continue to climb In popularity," he continued. “Already they account (or nearly 20 per cent of the sink | market, and the year-by-year to-steady Concrete Inside and Out Among the new types of cor Crete masonry now being used inside homes at well as out, the most striking is probably grille block. These units with open spaces in geometric or free form form design are not ontjnrttrac-tive to look at but perform, a useful function by giving privacy without completely cutting off the' view. They are especially suitable for use In room -dividers, carports, patio and garden walls. SOUTHERN SUBURBAN - Hera's an adaptation of traditional Southern architecture to the demands of the present. The home Is luxuriously large to some rooms, yet if* total living area is only 1,097 sq. ft, ,a modest size for a twestory. SECOND FLOOR in Basement Wfetsc’s a good tone to check your basement tor potential play iTcan be toe best, and least expensive, area to remodri as an activities room. The basic structure is already there. Much of toe work of remodeling can be done by anyone bandy with hammer and saw. And toe noise of boisterous youngsters at pity won’t carry through to the tematodetsof toe house. JFtrst) of bpurse, any damp condition to the baaement .must be corrected. This'll a good policy to any case, for moisture win cause wood sills to rut. cracks to mason-ry should be filled and walls waterproofed. Study the floor plaa carefully. partition off “ROCHESTER MEMOHS” An Address You’d bo,Proud of ^* 3 Bedroom Hornet • Full Basements • All Brick* —o City Water emt Sewers • Pered Streets *13,750 f°h* Available Located at 424 RawoM Drive la Rochester Meadows Toko Rochester ltd. North Thro««h the VMUfO of RocfcoWor tom. Right oe Romeo Rd* Turn Right on PerMsto. Watch tor Signs. SHUT IHLRH CO. , Model Mi. OL 6-9491 Office L11-7517 3 | Ttz’Tfl.TTSrTv" ------ POmi-C0|iv Jji "EITMICE that maximum space will be left i tor the activities room. Select materials lor floor and walls carefully. One of the most satisfactory tor floors is ceramic, tile, since its wide range of-ctrioraj and patterns can do away with : the need tor rugs. And children! can even roller, skate on a ceramic; tile floor without marring dr damaging; it. Wood panels and knotty pine are two of toe most popular finishes' tor walls. They look good, but not, toe dressy for a recreation area. Locate your cabinets and stor-spacea so that they will elosej In such awkward features as me-j ters and vertical pipes. Build in, plenty of storage, so you may . , keep bridge tables and play equipment out of sight when not in use. ' FLOOR PLANS — Note the immente stretch of the entertainment area starting to the living room and flowing across dining room through folding doors into the long family room. Upstairs there are three bedrooms and two baths. BARNES HARGRAVE YOUR SWEEPER DESERVES the REST i Pontiac’s Factory Approved Official HOOVER SERVICE STATION Cell Us for Your Yeorly Service Check-Up FE 5-9101 Free Pickup and Delivery. All Work Guaranteed. New and Rebuilt Sweepers at Special Low Prices. PARTS-BAGS-HOSES for All Make Vacuums 24. Hour. Service. by. Trained. Service. Personnel BARNES HARGRAVE 742 West Huron St. FE 5-9101 Across Prom Now Post Office SPECIAL NOTICE! FREE SAFETY INSPECTION on All Types of Hooting Equipment *■ BE SAFE e • e Hove inspection Today, no obligation. 24 hour service on ell makes of furnaces. Offer good through the month of January. Cell FI 4-3811. I A 1%T1£ A HEATING end air conditioning 177 Edison Street FE 4-3811 Austin Building Co.’s FASHION SIXTY-ONE Display Homo 3-6 P.M. Sunday 1 - 7 P.M. .1 I MOM L Ibaberfi rx tutu | |MMw JW IN CHEROKEE HILLS Exterior Is Old Style llnterior Spells 1961 By DAVID L. BOWEN The South may have lost toe Civil War, but its architecture has on the test of time. When you think of gracious hospitality and living to a comfortably grand manner, you may well conjure up in mind’s era a picture not too much different from the artist’s rendering of this House of the Week design. Outside, B-46 has a graceful trance portico with columns rising 17 feet/to the porch roof. Inride, there's a spectacular spiral stalr-case coming up (ram wide reception foyer to the broad hall on the bedroom fldor.______ The home was designed by Architect Lester Cohen, who •ought to capture the gracious and expansive mood of Southern architecture. One iff tho areas of special success Is the tremendous stretch across the front of the house. As guests fill up the living room to this home, they can spill out across | the foyer, across the dining room and into the family room — an unbroken distance of 52tt feet from wall to wall. Despite the luxurious slse of some rooms, this is no mansion. Living am on the first .floor is 982 sq. ft., with another 715 on the second bringing the total to 1,897. 11m kitchen at toe back Iwa a* adjoining breakfast nook comfortable for family meals and beyond the lavatory at the serv-Ice entrance la a covered porch. Over-all dimensions with a two-car attached garage are 74 feet in width by 27'8" in depth. ADDITIONAL' DETAILS I * Ttwr Hvtog loom extends; the tin*] tire depth of the house, with true, through ventilation: windows at front and back. Across the foyer to the right, the dining room opens through a wide arch. Folding doors separate the family room from the dining room. Family room has a wide window at the front and Immediately behind It a picture window overlooking the porch. The kitchen is handy to both formal dining room dhd the casual relaxation areas. There’s provision for everything a homemaker: B-46 Statistics There are seven rooms to thin two-story Southern traditional, with most—rooms of luxurious size. An interior feature is the grand staircase spiraling upward from the wide welcoming foyer. There are three bedrooms with 2^4 baths. Habitable area on the first floor is 982 sq. ft,, with 715 on the second floor. That’s a total of 1,697. Over-all dimensions are 74’ in width by 27’8" to depth. ~ —* —- Chock Following Details In New House Kitchen In planning for the kitchen in a new home, you should ask yourself these questions: 1. Will it have ample storage space? There should be about 10 square feet of storage space for every member in the family. 2. Will the room be surfaced with a durable yet easily cleaned material such as ceramic | tile? Real tile’s fireproof quality is( also important. 3, Will lliere he a large window? I Hie window area should be at least! one-tenth aS large as the floor arid! nreferably should look out over ♦he children's play area. Choose From 80 Models BUY WITH NO MONEY DOWN As Law os $23.00 Far Month Townsowd-Swtft Homos SSI# Lspoor ns.. Orton FE l-MM FINISHED NO DOWN BASEMENTS I NO PAYMENTS PAYMENT TIL MAY 1st Viriy s450 For Week Average 12x24 Recreation Room INCLUDIS: Printed Writs and PartMen Wall-Asphalt Tile Fleer • Acoustical Tile Ceiling • Electrical Outlats (41 and 3 Flush Calling Lights • Stairs Cndesad * 2 Flush Doors * 2 Heat Runs and I Cold Air Rstnm. 1 So*V* \ 1 "DEAL 1 amg l 1 1 1 Trm,t os* •*' ■ TrT. footto* 1 *•**-?;* ■ .Inc n “Our customers are our friends”. MIDWEST BUILDERS 711 W. HURON (Across from New Pest Office) would want for easy and efficient* operation. Glide up the curving stairway toji the upper hall aiil| you reach the j bedrooms. The master bedroom, IJj with walk-in closet and shower[e bathroom, takes up the left side afj| this level. The family bathroom is|| at the back of the main hall con-1 venient to the children’s bedrooms. !| In addition to the garage and basement for • household storage. | there are adequate closets through-11 out the hpme. Especially notable is'| the oversize linen closet next to the 1 upstairs bath. ■ iprng Study Plan Order Coupon Bend to Hie Pontiac Press. Pontiac. Mich. Enclosed is 60 cento to coin. Please send me a copv of the studyplan of The House of The Week Design B-46. No stamps accepted. Please do not use sticky tape on coins. NAME ..................... STREET CITY .... STATE : Over Throe Centuries Since the nation's first sawmill was started at Jamestown, Virginia, in ISOS, the manufacture of Southern Pine lumber has been continuous. In cepturles, enough has been produced to frame 100,000,000 homes. Good forest management has assured permanent increases to forest supply. At-the 1960-rate, production in the next 100 yean could approximate! the volume of the past 3H centuries, BATEMAN REALTY CO. NOW LEASING Ask For J77 SJ Telegraph TOM BATEMAN FE 4^)528 in .. ji bbi".i. I iwi »i 'i iw. inen . ,n INSULATE REPJOP BLANK IT BATTS Vm wet? atsShMyssr-toMiids*. toe comlori peri tor hr rs