The Weather „ '>■ V.S. Wmiwr Bunau Faracaal Partly Cloudy (DMfDl Paga j) THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMfc^R 15, 1967 PAGES ers Ordered Baskin Birmingham Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer at noon today granted an order compelling Birmingham teachers to report to work Monday. ★ ★ ★ However, in granting the request of the Birmingham board of education, Beer said he would not sign the order until Monday when it becomes effective. This, he said, would allow negotiations over die weekend to settle the dispute over teacher salaries. No immediate ar- rangements were made to cpatipae negotiations. Beer, in announcing his decision said, "Teachers, in this case, have no right to strike.” "Hie teachers made a contract with the children of Birmingham and you (teachers) can not be allowed to depart from your obligation to teach.. REFUSED TO RETURN Nearly 1,000 Birmingham teachers refused to return to classes last week when the school board did not meet their demands. Their three-year contract is starting its second year and only opened to allow negotiations on the; teachers' salary On Arbitrating Money Dispute John Dunlop, president of the Birmingham Education Association (BEA), said teachers would honor the court order Monday even if there is no settlement over the weekend. The judge made his ruling after attempting a last-ditch effort to have the BEA attorney and representatives of the school board reach agreement. CONGENIAL COMPANY—Gov. Nelson Rockefeller (left) *f ****** and Gov. George Romney and their wives enjoy a laugh at night. Mrs. Romney is at the left and Mrs. Rockefeller is the Rockefellers' Fifth Avenue apartment in Manhattan last at the right. Detroit Teachers Will Vote FAIL TO AGREE Charles Fine, attorney for the school board and Harvey Wasz, BEA attorney, met for nearly an hour but could not reach agreement Romneys Hat Nearer to Ring NEW YORK (AP) - Gov. George Romney appears today to have sailed his hat closer to the Republican presidential ring. But the Michigan Republican said he had made no decision on when he might formally announce his candidacy. He was scheduled to make a walking and driving tour in two poverty areas of Brooklyn today and confer with top city officials from the police department, planning commission and human resources administration. Romney talked politics and issues over, dinner Thursday night with New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and afterward acknowledged, "I have a good feeling.” i * ★ ★ Romney had declined to discuss politics during a 19-day coast-to-coas* *A,,r 1 he says is aimed at finding p< solutions to big city racial problem* When asked whether He might change his timetable, Romney said, “I didn’t have a timetable except a very ^general one.” * NO SPECIFICS YET He indicated that he had not made up his mind on any specific time or steps. Romney indicated he had been encouraged by the reaction of people during the first four days of his trip aipidd at putting him in 17 cities in lMtates in 19 days. He declined to say whether he and Rockefeller had disjMsed the hubbub over the MichigajKgovernor’s “b r a i n-washing” charge si* * * Romney had contended his original support for U.S. involvement in Vietnam a s due to a “brainwashing" from American generals and diplomats during a Romney visit: to Vietnam in 1965. He has since termed the involvement tragic. MEETS WITH LINDSAY The govprtior began his New Vork City visit with a 35-minute private meeting witipMayor John V. Lindsay at Grade Mansion. Rocks Thrown at Jail RICHMOND, Vl. m - Sporadic rockthrowing by Negro youths occurred early today outside the Richmond city jail, where Black Power firebrand H. Rap Brown is being held. The incident ended quicly, however, without arrests or injuries, authorities said. DETROIT (AP) — Mary Ellen Rior-dan, president of'the Detroit Federation of Teachers, said today striking teachers would vote Sunday on a proposal to 'submit the money dispute in contract talks to binding arbitration. But 1,500 chanting teachers urged her: “Turn it down now!” Mrs.' Riordan clung to plans for the Sunday meeting and, despite urging from the throng, declined to make any public recommendations on the proposal, made by Ronald Haughton, appointed mediator in the Detroit crisis by Gov. George iRomney. Haughton said yesterday money was the only issue that could not be settled in “free, unfettered collective bargaining,” and warned that if either side rejected it he would be led to believe that side did not desire a settlement. ^Teachers rallied at the city public school headquarters and heard Mrs. Riordan give a brief speech saying Schools needed more Afro-American history, a clear understanding in regard to policy on staff integration “especially in But after dining at Rockefeller’s Fifth Avenue apartment, ,Rompey‘ eased his vow of silence at an informal late-night news conference at the hotel he is using as headquarters during his three-day stay in New York. He and Rockefeller, Romney said, talked otfer issues including politics and public reaction to Romney. There have been reports that Rockefeller, one of Romney’s chief boosters, had urged him to speed uprei formal announcement of his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination next year. Rains Flood SW Texas UVALDE, Tex. of - Cloudbursts estimated at up to 8 inches turned loose floods in parts of Southwest Texas and drenching rains fell across most of the, interior of the state during the night and early today. The heaviest deluge hit the village of Utopia, 46 miles northeast of Uvalde, where water up to 3 feet deep covered all highways for a time. OPENING TH6 FESTIVAL - Miss Rochester, Cynthia Jo Thomas, officially opens Rochester’s Art ’n’ Apples Festival yesterday. Standing by are Dr. John Solverson (left), arts commission chairman, and Peter Vernia, festival chair- man. A record crowd df 3,021 was tallied for the first day of the four-day {estival, being held at the civic center grounds. VOW OF SILENCE EASED Romney declined to say whether he and Rockefeller had talked about that, schools that are all Negro,” and other topics. Throughout her talk, teachers in the crowd interrupted her with shouts of "Money! Money! Money!” A few feet in front of Mrs. Riordan, a man shouted “You haven’t said anything yet, MaTy Ellen - let’s hear it. Do we want arbitration?” The crowd answered “No! No! No!” and then began chanting “No contract, no work.” li In proposing arbitration, Haughton said at this point in time there is a com' plete stalemate on the critical salary issue.” During that conference the education association representative said he would recommend that teachers return voluntarily to classes Monday if the'board would delay its request for a court order compelling them to return. Fine said this proposal was unacceptable because the, BEA could not guarantee that all teachers would return. “This poses as many problems as not having teachers there at all,” he —M Dunlop said teachers and the board are far apart in reaching agreement, from<400,000 to <500,000. No signs of settlement is in sight in the neighboring Bloomfeild Hills school district but negotiations continue. LBJ Listing Spending Cuts to Push Tax Surcharge Plan WASHINGTON W - The Johnson administration is reportedly preparing a list of specific spending cuts in a bid to give its proposed tax surcharge a push through a balky Congress. The House Ways and Means Committee begins closed meetings Monday on Weekend May Be Balmy and Wet Skies are expected to be partly overcast over the weekend with a chance of showers. Temperatures will continue balmy. Here is the official day by day U.S. Weather Bureau report: \^TODAY — Mostly sunny with the high 80 to 85. Increasing cloudiness and not so cool tonight. Low 50 to 56. ★ * * TOMORROW — Variable cloudiness with little temperature change. SUNDAY — Cloudy and mild with a chance of showers. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 10, tonight 10, tomorrow 20. The low temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 55. The mercury recorded 80 at 2 p.m. the plan to raise individual and corporate income taxes 10 per cent. Committee Chairman Wilbur Mills, D-Ark., has implied more and more strongly that his committee may not act on the tax surcharge proposal until Johnson recommends specific reductions in spending. The administration promised to chop civilian spending by at least <2 billion but never said where the cuts would come. it it ir Johnson scheduled a meeting for today with his Budget Bureau director, Charles L. Schultze, but Schultze declined to say beforehand what they planned to discuss. TOP-LEVEL MEETING It was learned, however, that reductions were discussed at a high-level government meeting yesterday. There has been'much “pulling and hauling” over where the cuts should be made, it was said. Appeals for quick action on the surcharge came yesterday from Schultze, Treasury Secretary Henry H. Fowler and Chairman William McChesney Martin Jr. of the Federal Reserve Board. Johnson asked all departments and agencies several months ago to spell out areas where cuts plight be made. Replies have been screened by the Budget Bureau. \V City Anxiously Awaits Tax Election Independence Twp. I Clarkston antiannexation views I aired - PAGE A-4. I „ National Guard I Pentagon ad campaign seek ing more Negroes — PAGE C-9. I Tax Break Congressman readies battle to slash oil depletion allowances— PAGE B-8 Area News ............ .A-4 Astrology ...............C-9 Bridge C-9 Crossword Puzzle . . . ..(Ml Comics ....C-9 Editorials ... A-9 Education Series “ ... B-S Farm and Garden D-l—•D4 * Markets .... D-4 Obituaries ............. D-5 Sports ........ • .,*•• C-l—C*4'- Theaters ..........:. C-9, C-f TV and Radio Programs . D-u Wilson, Earl.....}..w.D-II Women’s Pages .......B-P—BH I DETROIT — Chevrolet unveiled its I 1968 line of cars today, with the division’s general manager predicting the Chevrolet series will expand the sales lead it holds over all other U, S. automobile lines. “The climate is right,” said E. M. Estes, General Motors vice president for Chevrolet, ' “There are many optimistic business indicators for the coining year.” The six car lines of the divirion are the regular Chevrolet, Chevelle, Chevy II, Corvair; Camaro and Corvette. Estes said Chevrolet expects to have 123,000 new cars in this hands of dealers by next Thursday, when they go on sale in dealer showrooms. This number is , slightly higher than the number available when sales were started in 1966, and the number of leftover 1967 models is 13 per cent below the number of leftovers ,• on the same date last year. Besides widening the sales lead of the regular Chevrolet, Estes said, the division expects to' sell 37 per cent of all the cars Bold by U.S. adto firms. (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the first in a two-part series on Pontiac’s upcoming tax advisory election.) By BOB WISLER City officials are anxiously awaiting the results of next Tuesday’s tax advisory election. The results will point the direction that they wifi take in attempting to meet ominous financial problems. A full-scale campaign has and is being waged in order to attract as large a voter turnout as possible. Taking a big part in the campaign is a blue-ribbon committee representing a cross-section of the city’s businesses, and' social arid labor organizations. A pamphlet explaining the city’s financial dilemma has been mailed to all city residbnts along with their quarterly water bills, i This weekend the Citizens Finance Study Committee expects to deliver a tabloid-size paper throughout the city explaining the problems and asking for citizeu response at the polls, » Voters will be a)&ed Tuesday to express their preference for either a city income tax or a 4-miil hike in the present property tax levy. The income tax— 1 per cent for residents, one-half of 1 per cent for nonresidents — would be accompanied by a 3-mill property tax cut. The tax advisory election was scheduled by the City Commission after months of study by commissioners and by the citizens committee. Commissioners felt that this would be the best way to determine citizen reaction to a new tax, A new fqrm of tax money is absolutely necessary, they feel, and consequently, they are hot asking whether the voters approve a new tax buf are asking how the voters would prefer to pay a new tax. If city officials could have a choice they would certainly have chpsen another time for the election, but time is' swiftly funning, out as far as city coffers are concerned. The tax question fomes on the heels of a recently imposed state income tax Of 2.6 per cent on personal income, the prospect of a long auto strike against Ford Motor Co. and the additional prospect of a strike against General Motors, and in the midst of federal planning for a surtax. Despite these disparaging sidelights, one thing is certain as far as city finances go — according to city officials the city will need an additional <1.6 million more next year than it had this year just to operate the city departments and proride almost minimal city services. The thought of operating next year without the additional money is painful to city officials. To do so, they say, would entail substantial cuts in services and personnel. Why does the city need <1.6 million more next year than it needed this year? . First,'1 the city will need <500,006 to overcome its depletion of a cash surplus that had been built up-over a three-year period. , , , The city will use the last of that Surplus this year. Next year there won’t be any surplus except, perhaps, a “paper” surplus of about <176,000. Most of this will be in accounts receivable and really can’t be considered cash. Second, the city -Fill begin negotia-tions next month with four employe groups all intent on keeping pace with the national economy. From last year’s experiences it is estimated that <500,000 will be needed to, provide pay raises and fringe benefits. The next <600,000 would be used to provide services which are most demanded and which most need shoring up. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) * Sold Horse For College Tuition... “A quick and most successful sale created by our Press Want Ad.” Mrs. J. B. SACRIFICE SMALL HORSE - GELDING ter collefl* with Mddtt KX) hrMH. PRESS WANT ADS are most flexible in their use. They will tackle most any problem and usually do Mint job quickly and profitably. Try one. Dial— 332-8181 or 334-4981 EXPECTED SALES A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER U,'l967 Negotiators Ford-UAW Talks; No Hint of Progress Yanks Catch. 500 Guerrillas Crack Unit Lands Froth Gunboats inDelta DETROIT (AP)—Negotiators for Ford Motor Co.1 and the United Auto Workers return to the bargaining table today, with no indication the talks .will herald an end to the union’s strike against Ford, now in its ninth day. Both sides have met only once since bargaining broke off Sept. 7 after midnight, and that was just to set up today’s pariey. Close to 160,000 workers are off the job at Ford’s operations, which cover 25 states. The top items on what the union calls its “longest and most ambitious list of demands” yet made are not on today’s agenda. . The chief topics will be such noneconomic issues as the union’s demand for more say in _ the firm’s subcontracting poli- it cies and for more precise ‘ - -1- *- ■ of demarcation for skilled work ers’ jobs. The union is seeking, among its top items, a substantial wage increase, equal pay for Canadian and American workers and some form of guaranteed annual income. * * * The average worker- now makes about $3.41 an hour in straight time pay or $4.70 an hour when fringe benefits are thrown in. ALL OFFERS REJECTED The UAW rejected as inadequate the nearly identical offers of General Motors, Ford and Chrysler, which called for a 13-cent - an - hour raise in the straight time rate to be improved at the rate of 2.8 per cent a year in the last two years of the proposed three-year-contract. News From Notion and Area WASHINGTON (ft - Congressional investigators are talcing a close look at automobile insurance companies which privately discourage business with people ranging from construction workers to clergymen. The House Judiciary Committee is surveying 20 majpr automobile insurance firms for information in a preliminary inquiry which could lead to a full, public probe. Resignations Weighed COLDWATER (ft — Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of the nation’s Selective Service System, said yesterday he is looking into the resignations of the chairman and secretary of the Branch County draft board. The pair resigned in protest of what they called poHtjcal pressure from state Selective Service officials to postpone seven times the inductions of four youths from Influential families. Oxford Man Is Killed DETROIT (AP) - Herbert T. Hapke, 43, 998 Lake, Oxford, was killed Hwnday and a man injured when a large steel ball on a crane used for breaking pavement crashed into the steam shovel they were operating. Police said Hapke died with a crushed chest, legs and arms. Anothet worker, William Balch, 40, of Detroit, suffered a laceration of the left leg. SAIGON (AP)—A crack American Army combat team stbrmed ashore from river gunboats today, flushed out 500 hard-core guerrillas in the mud' dy Mekong Delta and locked with them in a bloody battle. * * * Initial reports told of continuing fighting in the rainswept rice paddies 45 miles southwest of Saigon. The eruption of fighting in the delta paralleled eontii heavy Communist pressure along South Vietnam’s'northern rim where artillery and mortar duels spanned the Demilitarized Zone and high-flying B52 bombers drubbed suspected Red staging areas with tons of .bombs.-* . * * With heavy weather again limiting missions over North Vietnam, U. S. fighter-bombers also concentrated on foe DMZ The union says it has no intention of changing its mind and accepting it. County Studies Annex Pleas The boundaries committee of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors accepted today petitions signed by Wolverine Lake Village residents proposing annexation to foe City of Walled Lake, but tabled similar annexation-petition for parts of Commerce Township. The committee also set a public hearing for Oct. 12 on foe proposal for annexation of the village and set a tentative election date of Jan. 16. .The committee will reconsider the petitions from the three areas of Commerce Township Sept. 29. It tabled the petitions pending for an opinion from corporation counsel Robert Allen regarding an alleged precedent foe committee may be making if it accepts the township petitions, said committee chairman Philip Mastin jr. ' Acceptance would be a precedent because foe township petitions include additional required signatures obtained after the petitions were first filed with the ^county clerk, claimed Robert Long, a committee mem ber and Commerce Township supervisor. The committee will make 'no recommendations to the Board of Supervisors, which must approve foe eleqtion date, until foe Oct. 2 board meeting, If foe committee accepts foe township petitions, it will recommend both foe three township areas and Wolverine Lake Village for an annexation election Jan. 16, Mastin said. 1968 CHEVROLET — The Chevrolet Caprice coupe introduced this yearfooasfo a square-line roof line, ventless cealed windshield wipers, ' taillights. new split grille Detroit Police Chevy Offers 41 Models Buy U. S. Rifles 400 Join NRA to Get Carbines for Riot Use DETROIT (AP) - Some 400 Detroit policemen reportedly have joined the National Rifle Association (NRA) in order to battlefront where all signs point,buy low-cost, government surplus carbines for use in case of riots to a powerful Red buildup. NEW OUTFITS ' The guerrilla battalion caught in foe Mekong delta was a companion unit to the hard-core 514th Battalion which lost 134 dead in the same area only two days before. That outfit ,had gone into battle with new, green fatigues and jaunty red scarves indicating its elite status. The battle today broke out rifled arms, shortly after dawn as a battal ion of the U. S, 9th Infantry Division disembarked from boats that pushed up foe Rach Ba River, which flows gishey into the Mekong. Foil US. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly sunny today. High 80 to 85. Increasing cloudiness and not so cool tonight, low 50 to 56. Variable cloudiness with little temperature change Saturday. East to southeast winds 5 to 10 miles becoming south to southeast 10 to 20 miles this afternoon. Sunday’s outlook: Cloudy and mild with a chance of showers. Percentage chance ‘of rain: today 10, tonight 10, tomorrow 20. A second American battalion moved up in support and a third battalion swept into blocking positions just to the north, putting some 2,000 Americans on foe battlefield. Deadline Today to Register for City Tax Elections New resident and those who haven’t votgd in foe past two years have until I p.m. today to register to be eligible for the scheduled Oct. 17 special mil-lage election. Persons who wish to vote in the tax advisory election to 'be held Tuesday should also register, City Clerk Olga Barkeley said. * -k * The City Clerk’s office is open until 8 p.m. today to accept registrations. Absentee ballots are available tomorrow from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m-for Tuesday’s advisory election. Although the Detroit Police Officers Association says foe weapons are being purchased by individual officers for riot protection, foe purchasers are obliged to certify they intend to use them “in civilian marksmanship programs which promote practice in foe use of The report was published by foe Detroit Free Press today A spokesman for foe Army Material Command was quoted as saying Certificates signed by purchasers were a “subterfuge.” in Six Series for 1968 Carl Parsell, president of the Detroit Police Officers Association (DPOA), said up to 2,000 more applications to foe NRA by policemen are being worked on at the present time. . ADEQUATE ARMS “The Detroit police officers feel they were not adequately armed in the riot area, and this is the only way we can do It,” Parsell said. ‘The responsibility lies with foe (city) administration, but lacking their action we have to do something.” " * * * Parsell said that although he didn’t think policemen should have to go through the NRA to get the carbines, “we’ll have to. take them under any circum stances." ★ ★ ★ Police Commissioner Ray Gir ardin said foe department i! working, on tlie prOblem of having enough guns available for similar emergencies in foe future. Chevrolet for 1968 offers 41 models in six series, including the regular Chevrolet which has increased length and new front, side and rear styling. Cheyrolets go on sale Sept. 21 Area dealers are Matthews-Hargreaves, 631 Oakland, Pontiac; Mike Savoie Chevrolet, 1900 W. Maple, Troy; Tom Rademacher, 6751 Dixie Highway, Clarkston; Homer Hight Motor Sales, 160 S. Washington, Oxford; Van Camp, Milford; Taylor Chevrolet Sales, 142 E. Walled Lake Drive, At Hanoute, Inc., Lake Orion; and BUI Fox, 755 S. Rochester. Chevelle, Chevy II and Corvette will have new bodies this year with Chevelle featuring ro wheelbases. ■"* w w A larger V8 engine will be standard on the regular Chevrolet, Chevelle and Chevy II. ★ ★ * The regular Chevrolet features a new bumper with a-central bar splitting foe grille, and concealed windshield wipers. Concealed headlamps are optional on Caprice models. The Caprice coupe has a square roof-line. This is also offered in foe Impala Custom Coupe as is the fastback roof line. There are sty engine types available for the Chevrolet including the base VS with 387- cubic-inch displacement 218 horsepower. A 250-cubic-inch six and three other V8s up to 427 cubic inches gives a horsepower range from 155 to 385. . ' * '■ W ★ Corvette features a new aero dynamic body utilizing foe design of foe experimental Mako Shark II. The Corvette is s inches longer and two inches lower while retaining foe 98-inch wheelbase. HIGH-RISE FENDERS, High-rise front fenders with louvers frame foe sloping hood The grille, including front park ing lights, is beneath the.buihp-er. Headlamps are concealed Five V8 engines offer a horsepower range from 300 to 435. Chevelle comes in 14 models in four lines including two that are hew —- a 380 Deluxe two-door hardtop and a two-seat station wagon (Nomad) which replaces the Chkvy H Station wagon. ’ Sedans and station wagons have 116-inch wheelbases while coupes and. convertibles have 112-inich wheelbases. Chevelles feature new interiors with recessed instruments and eight engine selections. Corvair comes in two sport coupes and a* convertible on a 108-inch wheelbase. BLOOMFIELD HILLS There ' will be a Members’ Illustrated Lecture In foe Cran-brook School auditorium Sept. 22 at 8tis p.fo. WM. F«rrinF ton Daniel of the yniverslty of Wisconsin, will discuss "Direct Use of the Sun’s Energy.” Guest tickets are ft. The Institute of Science’s fall classes are headed by an 11-week, four-hour college credit course starting Sept. 22 called Glacial Geology.” Cosponsored with Wayne State University foe classes are from 6:30-9:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays and are conducted by Dr. Andrew J. Mozola. The fee is $56. Birmingham Area Mews CranbrookSlates Lecture OP Use of Sun's Energy to provide children with actual learning and doing “experiences something more than just day Care. Classes will be from 9:30-11:30 a.m. and 1-3 ‘-pm. from Sept. 25 through Oct. 2. NoncredU courses include starting Sept. 26, Gems and Gem Materials, eight weeks from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Tuesdays by Dr. Reynolds M, Denning and three Thursday evening courses starting September 28, Lppidary Techniques, eight weeks from 7-10 p.m, by Donald E. Tompkins — $15; Ba sic Astronomy, 10 weeks from 30-9:30 p.m. by Doris N. McMillan — $25; and Ecology, 10 weeks from 7:30-9:30 p.m. by Dr. Daniel S. McGeen — $25. The Will-O-Way Apprentice Theatre on Long Lake Road is scheduled to begin its preschool classes in foe communication arts on Sept. 25. An open house will be held tomorrow from 3-8:30 p.m. for parents desiring to discuss the unusual program. Registrations are now being accepted, anc those interested can call Mrs Ernest Savoie at 647-2863. Mrs. Celia M. Turner, director of the theater, which began operation last year, explained that foe experimental program designed for 4-to-6-year-old stresses individual growth and social adjustment through foe basic communication arts: story telling? poetry, drama, art and music.! f • She said that foe program is 2 from County ■ «i on Two state representatives from Oakland County have been appointed to a special House subcommittee to study the new slidingi scale tuition plan at Michigan. State University and Oakland University. The area legislators named to the seven-member panel are Republicans William R. Hampton of Bloomfield Hills and Clifford H. Smart of Walled Lake. Smart is chairman of foe Hou&e Education Committee and Hampton is majority floor leader. Hampton, who earlier this year requested an attorney general’s opinion on legality of the plan, is firmly opposed to the ability to pay” tuition sched-[ule. ★ ★ it. The committee will hold a public hearing Tuesday in the State Capitol Building at 10 a.m. ONLY HEARING SET “This is likely to be foe only hearing held by the subcommittee in foe foreseeable future,” said Hampton, “so we are hoping for a large attendance.” ★ . ★ ★ Smart said, “Diere are many people in our area who will be affected by foe new tuition plan at OU and MSU and this may be their only chance to offer opinions in foe presence of foe university officials who are responsible for formulating and administering the tuition program,” Tax Advisory Vote Near (Continued From Page One) Tkay In Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 At 8 a.m.: Wind Velocity 5 m.p. Direction Cost Sun sets Firday at 7:44 jkm; Sun rises Saturday If 7:14 a.m. Moon sets Saturday #4:48 a.m. Moon risae Friday at 6:56 p.m. Thursday in Famine /(as recorded downtown) temperature ......'.... ...... 80 g----------- . ........,.,8§ ........67.5 day# log early morning City Manager Joseph A. Warren said $276,000 would provide 24 new policemen and equipment fifr foemT Eveh-then, he said, thi* works out' to just five men more per shift, considering holidays, vacations and side days. This is almost a token increase when considering the skyrocketing crime rate. In 1966 criminal activity rose 51 per cent over foe year before. That percentage will rise again this year. Street repair projects would come in for $150,000 and this again is not nearly enough to the deterioration On* Year Ago temperature temperature temperature Weather—Sunny Hiphest end Lowest Temperatures This Date in IS Years 71 41 Fort Worth 82 70 67 61 Jacksonville 82 66, 83 so Kansas city 68 59. overcome 71 45 MiaminBeach S 79 which has been taking an ac* 76 63 Mffwaukae 75 62 rM1Tr.\1iai:n(y aaii 83 55 New Orleans 88 69 Cumulating toll. 83 39 New York 79 4)1 ADDITIONAL EXPENSES U » fyg* g **| Beyond this, Warren said, | 0 £ new *ncome would be used for « si |! ste. Mar°« 7* ss| longevity pay which has been l! 49 Washington So m promised employes, $80,000; street lighting, $15,000; more recreation programs, $30,000; and more housing inspection, $25,000. If foe city was forced to operate next year without additional money city commissioners would have to reach agreement on exactly where they would 'slash foe budget and no decision along these lines has come yet and would not come easily. " NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered showers and thin^ dershowers are forecast tor portions of the southern plains tonight. It will be cooler in fob central and southern Plains, milder in the northern Plains and milder in the northern Rockies. Little change is expected elsewhere. 'w v; f\ ,r ■ For one thing pay raises woqld be in brder whether or] not there was a layoff. the dty manager estimated $357,000 could be saved by: _ » Eliminating one of the fire department’s six fire pumper companies and one of its three ladder companies —savings, $152,000. • Closing the East Side Branch Library, the Adah Shel-ley Library and eliminating the bookmobile - savings, $78,000. ★ * ★ . • Closing the, Hayes Jones Community' Center — savings, $55,000. , • Eliminating the y o u t h service operation -- savings, $17,000. • Stopping subsidy of t h e privately owned bus company (thus eliminating bus service) and rental payments on the -Office of Economic Opportunity Action Center — savings. $44.-000. * * * j • Eliminating one of two.por-licewomen’s jobs — savings, $10,800. • This only approaches foe cuts that would be needed, however. Last week dty commissioners indicated that they would also consider stopping all winter and summer recreation programs if new tax money is not generated. f Beulah Threatens Cuba MIAMI, Fla.' On — Reborn hurrican Beulah surged power-fully through the Caribbean to- attention: motel and hotel operators, apartment owners, home owners^ etc.-aclearance at cost prices of -Grand Rapids Casemate’ furniture modern two-lone scratch finish pumice-heavy duty open bookcase 10*» s |fp price • model 30-B-16 open bookcase • 80x15%x3& info size • 2 large open foe Ives ;• as shown • 56x9x36 inch, size • sliding door-bookcase • model 56-DB-9 by Casemate. 3-drawer chest 1^99 Simms cost * price • model 24-3D-16 chest of drawers has 3 drawers e easy to assemble With just a screwdriver. Hiding dpor 'Simms cost price bookcase 18" *• open shelf—sliding door bookcase Is 30x15%x3O inches 4 easy to assem-' ble yourself. room divider • Simms cost price e as shown e 36x16 inches with 4 sliding door compartments • 2 pullout drawers e easy to assemble. 5-drawer chest 19" Simms cost price e model 30-5D-16 chest of drawers is 30x16 Inch size, e easy glide drawers. corner unit table 10" Simms cost price • fits into any corned e- 2 shelf uni is 1544x15% by 30 inches • ideal fa any room • easy to assemble. jte buffet unit 368# Simms cost price • 3 sliding door buffet unit with one shelf • 48xl5%x30 inch size • ideal as buffet unit or room divider e model 48-SD-16. Simms annex store horn fri. 9 am to 9:30 pm and sat. and mon. 9 am to 9 pm Charge It! All Major Credit Cards Honored instant oradit on purchases of *30 to *150 with any major credit card-ask us u « . 1/ „ M. . day threatening to whip Grand If there is a layoff the amount!Cayman & and bulldoze aSi* W r^*°^d Cuba’s rich tobacco crop While likely be more than $400,000 and turnabout hurricane Doria was that is another $400,000 that off the New England coast.Hie would be cut from services. third Atlantic hurricane, Chios, . In preparing a Ust of areas (splashed harmlessly far at sea, where cuts could be considered!500 miles east of Bermuda. bIMMj DISCOUNT ANNEX i44 N. Saginaw St. A1 the Pontiac press, Friday, September is* 1967 a—8 No Giveaway to Identity of Generous Money Man MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) -'visited by the money man so The mysterious Mount Pleasant far, but none seems particular-money man has struck again. He claimed his latest victim, a 53-year-old bachelor college professor, Thursday. At least 11 persons have been SINGER’S SWAN SONG - Wreckers’ scaffolding appears on the face of the Singer Building in New York as demolition begins yesterday. When completed in 1908, the building was the city’s first skyscraper, but the taller Woolworth Building went up at right within five years. At left, workmen, one with a cutting torch, start at the top, 47 stories in the air. Senate Investigator Hits Viet Equipment WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States has wasted millions of dollars in shipping broken-down construction equipment to Vietnam, says a Senate investigator. The money was spent to repair equipment, Joseph Lipp-man said Thursday, but much of the machinery wasn’t repaired or was beyond repair. was sent in to help the Army cope with the problem of unloading ships during the massive U.S. military buildup Much of the equipment has sincqjbeen put to use elsewhere he added. ly upset. The money man isn’t stealing. He’s giving it away. “It’s kind of weird, isn’t it?” said Police Chief Harold E. Haun. But, said Haun, since it’s no crime to give money away, “We are not investigating it. We’re only kind of watching it.” Eleven persons so far have reported finding envelopes containing between 82 and 810 in ones or fives in their mailboxes, under their car windshield wip- UK a; port Haiphong is safe from “»» ‘*™ f**”* •■**» U.S. air attack—at lent tor the!"* •* K «n(rfoyes, Jan Phelps, present j women’s program director, In an unusual tip to an enemy,1fou?d an e"vel°Pe » in it top Pentagon spokesman Philln her mailbox Tuesday. ANN ARBOR (UPI) ~ A la- G. Goulding said Thursday N. Viet Docks SafeiaysU.S. Union 'M' Rift Ends Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac bor dispute which has tied up 865 million in construction proj-at the University of Mich there’s no truth to published re-| Hughest, WCEN news diports that U.S. raiders have rector, said 10 other persons been given approval to attack since have called the station de-igan ended today after the,the port of Haiphong. “Attacks daring similar finds, school agreed not to stand in!On the port facilities are not ap- From the 11 cases, Hughes the way of attempts to organize'proved," he said. said this much is known about a uni0n I The statement followed air at- the money man’s M. 0. (modus Pickets representing skill* totem, emptoy* b, £** &S&S&/S!."T ““ T". the uniyersity had paraded .in _hon„.s areas_ i Each envdope contains two front of construction projects1^ 8 mMTC inscriptions, “Today may * * * j on the campus for nearly a™ HINTS jyour |ucijy day,” and “Good1 But Lee conceded some ma- week, causing a work stoppage! The administration previously jUck in the future.” chinery was irreparable and! when unions honored the lines. |has given North Vietnam littfej The address, but not the useless, and. added: “In a case| * * ★ indication that specific targets^ame, of the recipient is typed Uppman, chief investigator for the Senate subcommittee on foreign aid e x p e n d i t u r e s, blamed the foul-up on the Agency for International Development. He said AID paid contrac- . |HP . _. _ . J_, nam came under attack mean- tors to put the equipment, most , Massachusetts ln £ worxing oraer. Icret testimony released Thurs Lippman showed the subcom-j^y mittee photographs of broken-1 down cranes, bulldozers and Sat® I . allows public employes to or- AID s import policies for Viet-1 ganj2e and bargain collective-mil ~ ly. The tradesmen are not now represented by a union. were off-limits to bombers. I neatly on the envelope. Goulding’s statement was I 0ne witness thinks he saw the viewed as a PentagOT money man’s car and can iden- to show tha^rwomme^tions J ^ _ red A by Defense Secretary Robert S.1 ..___. . ___ .. ____ McNamara aren’t being ignored ^ess thinks he saw the car by the White House. |an* can ** m“ke; Just days before the attacks M one Hughes, on Cam Pha and Haiphong,|“‘ha P«>Ple had had their house, More than 200,000 large codjMcNamara told Congress there,Painted this summer. The house jhave been hookCd in one day ; was little to be gained from at- number had been removed, but ; * „ „, , near the Westrtan Islands, off tacking North Vietnamese the enveolpe still had the cor- other pieces of heavy equipment HePublican Rep. SUvio O !lceland 7 [ports. ,rect house number he said littered a Saigon I hnldinff area hearing of the House Appropria- noiaing area. )tidns subcommittee that the USED ELSEWHERE j South Vietnamese were import- H. Rex Lee, assistant AID ad-jing more luxury items than ne-ministrator, said the equipment cessities from the United States. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. You Save More When You Shop on SIMMS 2nd Floor Thos* specials for Friday and Saturday i/2 Off on ‘Wiss Grass Shears J99 Save one-half on model 711G Wiss grass shears, lightweight model with offset handles. Limit 2 per customer. Fast Drying Appliance White Aerosol Spray Paint 2:99* 3-H.P. Rotary Gas Engine Sunbeam Power Mower Glossy appliance white paint is lead-free and non-toxic. 15-Oz. aerosol can. White only. $99.95 Value IfW 88 Famous 'Sunbeam' quality built mower. 20-inch cut, 3-H.P. gas engine, dial master wheel height adiustments and cast aluminum housing deck. Limit 1. —2nd Floor Wake Up to Music with a 4-Tube Electric Clock Radio 10" Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac You Bet Your Boots SIMMS Has Boots and Shoos for the Whole Family Endicott-Johnson Brand Young Men’s Shoes Price Special on boys' sizes 2Vi to 6 loafers, elastic gore loafers and pebbled loafers. Ail famous Endicott-Johnson first quality. Endicott-Johnson All LEATHER Uppers Ladies’ Shoes Simms Price Endicott-Johnson Men’s Industrial Oxford Simms Price First quality Endi-cOtt-Johnson in-jj dustrial oxfords ‘with Neoprene sole and heel, cushioned innersote and arch support with steel, arch. Sizes 6 to 12 in B-D-EE widths. Nationally Famous ‘Sandy McGee’ Men’s K Oxfords At Plain toe navy style oxford in blpck with Goodyear rubber heel and leather uppers. Man made lining and outersole. Sizes range from 6V2 to 12 in ■ D or EE widths. Men's-Youths’—Boys' Hi or Low Basketball Shoes At First'Quality Simms Model C403 toble model clock w radio with 4 powerful tubes and rectifier. Wakes you up to music automatically. With General ^ Electric guarantee. Limit 1, ◄ ◄ ◄ ◄ Thermostatically Controlled Electric < Baseboard Room Heater A Surrounds you with' worm ' forced ps well as radiant heat ^ and no installation is needed — just plug it in any electrical d outlet. Takes the chill off. any , room. Thermostatically controlled and UL approved. Model i BB37B. Not as pictured: Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St American Made Rubber Boots For Men-Youths-Boys These ore slight irregulars but guaranteed waterproof rubber boots. Flannel lined 4 buckle in sizes 11 to 2-2Vi to 6-6Vi to 13 or zipper boots in sizes 7 to 13 f6r men. American Made—Irregulars Men's Work Boots 4-buckle work. boots with heavy duty red soles, ond guaranteed waterproof. Americon mode. Sizes 7 to 12. —Basern Styles include smoke stack and lower styles in various colors; Slight irregulars of ti^$8.95 values. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Everything In SIMMS CAMERA DEPT. Costs Much tess...why Irv, Bob, Harold and Gay Will Even Give You Expert Advice Absolutely lDLL,,,. and this is a fact, you'll get the camera, radio, recorder and rULL, binocular you want at the lowest price in this area. Plus FREE ADVICE from the above experts on the particular item you need for your specific purpose. Ask for Irv, Bob, Harold, Gay or any of the other trained sales people and you'll get the best advice for thd item you're interested in. Alt specials below for today and Saturday. CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS Beat the Coming Price Increase - Stock Up Now! K0MK (Mor Flhn Proensiat "5SS5.” 139 I per JM. mailer 2*° Take Up To 50 Feet ot Movies wnnouv winning KODAK Compact SUPER 8 Camera 23»« Stock up on mailers now — beat the price increase. Choice ^■of mailers for 8mm movies, Super 8 films, 20-exp. I 35mm filth.*.M 27 slide film or Iristawatie slides. Genuine KODAK processing ot this price. Limit 10 mailers per person. 36-Exp. 35mm COLOR SLIDE PROCESSING BY KODAK - Pro-Paid Mailers - Now..., Take Up To 50 Feet of Movies Without Winding Automatic Exposure and Film Advance Battery Drive-'No Winding Pocket size Instamatic -Kodak Ml2 movie camera lets you take the new Super 8 movies with one setting. F2.7 lens, built in filter for indoor and outdoor movie making. Cofhpact, lightweight camera fits your pocket or purse. $1 holds. A regular $29.95 value. KODAK 404 Instamatic SS Color Camera Set shot, Floshcube lets you take 4 flash shots without changing bulbs — you're always ready for the next picture with this camera. Set comes with and floshcube. $ 1 holds or charge it with a major POWER ?0QM - ELECTRIC EYE - FOCUSING and ELECTRIC DRIVE ON “BELL & HOWELLS'' Super 8 Camera wi,hSL0M0T,0N $269.50 value — model 432 power drive, power focusing and electric-eye camera for perfect movies. ZOOM 5 to I ratio for wide-angle, telephoto, and regular movie shots. Only $1 holds in layaway or a major credit card gets you instant credit, (Pistol grip is an optional extra) wins 9kv*mu ■ ivn 18898 trbnics- TRANSISTOR Use It Anywhere-FULLY PORTABLE 4-TRS. Tape Recorder Regular $17.50 value — as shown — portable tape recorder with good sound. Takes 2" reels, famous 'Mayfair model 1602 recorder plays and records on low cost batteries anywherqn you go. Only $1 holds in free layaway. 9“ 'REALTONE' 12-Transistor Pocket Radios $ 14.95 volue E= a power packed radio with ^‘transistors, 1 diode, 216“ full tone speaker, built-in ferrite bar antenna to pick up all area AM stations . . . 4'/2x3xl% inch pocket size. Complete with leather case, battery and earphone. New 1968 — models ot this low, low price. ‘REALTONE’World-Wide FM-AM-SW-MW 6-Band Portable Radio G98 $59.95 volue — powerful 6 band radio to pick up FM-AM, shortwave and marine wave broadcasts. Built into its own carrying case, fine electronic tuning, AFC control, full speaker telescopic antenna. Model 2646 Reottone radio better than pictured. Only $1 holds or gel it oi? credit with.a major credit cord. ____'____ j 'SCOPE' 6 to 12 Power ZOOM Binoculars Nationolly advertised at, $66.95, nevji precision binoculars lets you select the magnification power you need with a touch of the handy zoom lever. Amber-coated optics and perma-locked prisms. Exclusive soft-rubber eyeeups fold down for full field viewing with eye glasses. With cose and strops. SIMMS!?,. HALF-PRICE! Cameras -Main l Floor A~-* TIIE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1967 Amount Not Set for School Vote in Walled Lake WAULED LAKE - The board of edu-cation’s planing to hold a millage election Nov. 8 but has yet to decide the amount of the levy. Eight mills of the total 2?.2 mills levied for school operation and debt retirement expire this school year and should be renewed, said Schools Supt. George Garver. Hie eight mills, approved five years ago, bring in 8880,000 per year, he added. “The school district needs additional operational monies to open new schools and maintain current educational programs,” Garver said. Garver and the Board of Education will discuss needs in detail at a meeting Monday at 8:15 p.m. at the board offices. Hie superintendent pointed out that the district has one of the lowest school tax rates in the county. r COUNTY RANGE CITED By JEAN SAILE INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP —“A structural chapge of govermgant is accompanied with a degree of finality. It is essential that you Know the answers to three'questions,” said Joseph Paris!, secretary of the Michigan Townships Association. “What do I get?” “When do ! get it?” “How much will it cost?” ' Parisi was one of the panel of experts called to answer questions for some 300 township residents, whose property has been proposed for inclusion in an extension of the Clarkston village boundaries. ★ * * * The meeting last night was antiannex-ation, and a show of hands at the Clarkston Senior High School auditorium revealed a few annexation support- PLANNING REPORT At issue was the village’s recently announced planning report which would include land triple the size of the present village within new boundaries. All of the land contemplated for inclusion is residential. It contains some 275 homes and a vast amount ol undeveloped area. ’ Because Clarkston is a general law village, no vote but wily approval by the Oakland County Board of Supervisors is needed to extend’the boundaries. Supervisor Duane Hursfall announced that the township is proceeding with a campaign which would cause die legislature to change the general law statutes to include the need for a referendum when any annexation is proposed. Hursfall last night virtually promised his constituents that they would have an opportunity to cite their disapproval of the proposal at a public hearing to be held in the community by the county board’s boundaries committee. *. FUTURE BENEFITS > He said he felt the county would have to take into consideration the services now offered by the township plus'lhe planning for future benefits as opposed to the lack of same in the village at the Umt of the bearing. The lack of statistics, charts, graphs or analysis of the tax rates and assessments in the village’s planning report was assailed by Paris!. “It is essentia! that you be furnished with a comprehensive study,” he said. I j llr: ' Parisi put in a word for the Council of Governments now being formed in the tri-county area of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb as he enumerated the problems facing the fast-growing area. NEEDS COOPERATION “How can a single unit of government undertake such problems as water control without the cooperation of other units of government?” he asked. Hie Clarkston planning report, among other items, had proposed to insure better control of the four lakes within its -proposed extension of boundaries. \ “Water safety regulations can be imposed by any governing unit,” Parisi added. “Hie other items hre a matter for the Department of Conservation.” * ★ # * *. The matter of sewer service for the village was also discussed as Hursfall reported that Independence Township has purchased enough capacity in the projerted Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor to take care of any village needs. ' SPACE CHARGE “If the village proposes to go it alone on sewers, and if they wanted access to the Clinton-Oakland,” Hursfall said, “we could charge them for space: If we all do it together the charge could be considerably less.” A point-by-point attempt to answer all boundaries as set forth by the village occupied much of the meeting. One issue was the promised acceptance by the village of several now-private streets in the area to be annexed. “If the area does become part of the village,” said Township Attorney Paul Mandel, “the streets will not automatically become public property. The village has thngs methods of obtaining Ownership, just as the. township now has." WIDTH REQUIREMENTS He listed sale of the land, condemnation and donation as the means. He also inferred that several of the streets might not meet width requirements for public ownership. Control by the township of last night’s meeting was lost only at one point when a resident of the affected, area, Ralph Chambers took die microphone for a 15-minute discussion of benefits to be gained under village government. The orator was greeted by the mut-terings of an unrestful audience. * h ★ “Speak next Monday night,” said one. The village at 8 p.m. that night will conduct a like information meeting giving its side of the proposed boundary extension. Independence Will Decide on Township Police Force chased for the new high school on Beck at Pontiac Trail to open Sept. 1969. Items purchased are for the kitchen, food training lab, arts and crafts room, home economics room and science rooms. Hie board also heard that the State Department of Education will be setting a date for a hearing on the boundary lines between the Walled Lake and Waterford school districts. MOST ARE BACK At present, most of the 74 Waterford students once transferred to Walled Lake are back in the Waterford schools, reported Garver. This is the result of Walled Lake Schools’ decision Aug. 28 allowing the 74 pupils to attend school in the district of their choice for this year or until a different ruling is made by the state department of education. LANDSCAPING AT THE BOYS’ CLUR-Armand E. Fer-rand (second from left), chairman of the Auburn Heights Boys’ Club landscape committee, shows (from left), Mike Robinson, John Johnson and Rick Gerber * the proper way to Highland Asking County for Drain HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - The Township Board is requesting the County Drain Commission to install a drain across Jackson Boulevard west of Hunter Drive. Hie board at its meeting Wednesday discussed the possibility of the county setting up a drain district to vote on a bond issue to finance the drain. Township funds can’t pay fa- services to only a segment of the township, explained Township Supervisor Louis F. Oldenburg. West Bloomfield Women Voters Set $1,000 Goal for Fund Drive The West Bloomfield League of Women Voters is conducting its annual finance drive to raise $1,000. The money will pay for the league’s informative services such as the voters’ guide. Dues and member contributions alone cannot meet the group’s expenses, explained Finance Chairman Mrs. Maurice Allen. So far in the finance drive, the league For Antique Rail Collection has sent out letters to be followed by telephone calls. The ladies plan to ask for funds door-to-door sometime after Sept. 18. i * ★ * The, league’s activities include a current study of township government. Members worked for the passage of the vocational educational millage and promoted a parks and recreation program in the township, Mrs. Allen explained. Romeo Man Renovates Red Caboose Boys7 Club Board Examines Needs PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - A reevaluation of needed community services has been undertaken by the Boys’ Club of Auburn Heights, Inc. Board members Calvin Barnhart, John Eldon Jr., Harold R. Davis, Robert E. Hewett, Jesse H. Holmes and Raymond D. Thompson serving under the chairmanship of Benjamin Douglas have been asked to prepare a report by Nov. 7. Executive Director Sam R. Sbeehy said the chib area has seen considerable change in the past year. He listed completion of a new $256,000 club addition, the formation of other youth agencies, a Little League franchise, revisions in the Scouting movement, the organization of a community school program by the Avondale School District, and the organization of youth groups within area churches. ROMEO—Bob E. Owens, sign painter and railroad buff, has added a shiny red caboose to his already large and growing collection of rail antiques. * ★ Owens of 55401 Hayes in Washington just finished renovating the ex-Chesa-peake and Ohio wooden caboose which he purchased for $600 in Grand Rapids this summer. V “I painted it Grand Trtigk colors because they were kind enough to ship it here for me, and my station is the old Grand Trunk station from Washington, anyway,” he explained. The former schoolteacher-tumed-sign-painter bought the old station last summer for $200 when it was abandoned by the railroad and had it moved to its present site on Van Dyke near 29 Mile Road. The freshly painted gray building is used by Owens as a workshop for his sign painting business and doubles as a small museum filled with lanterns, train models, rail and trolley photos, and even the original dispatchers desk and phone. TROLLEY CAR Owens who also owns S trolley car with two other Romeo residents, Louis Verllen and Pat Heenan, has hopeful plans of running it on tracks of its own near his “Whistle Stop” ^station. The interurban car was purchased In IMS from the abandoned Chicago and North Shore Line Which ran from Chicago to Milwaukee. He hopes to bring it here from Cadillac where it is temporarily stored. “I think about a mile run with loops at each end for turning would prove to be a nice tourist attraction for the area,” he said. “Rights-of-way will hopefully be obtained in the near future. Owens is a stockholder of the Cadillac and Lake City Railway which runs a steam excursion train in that resort community, and is active in the Ohio Railway Museum near Columbus, Ohio, and a trolley museum in Maine. “These changes plus the fast-increasing population have made a reevaluation necessary,” said Sheehy. “We have to leam the areas of duplication, conflict and competition.” Sheehy is presently attending the Boys’ Club of America midwest regional administrative conference in Toledo. Oxford Postmistress to Retire Today After 42 Years of Service OXFORD — Postmistress Mrs. Donald Awrey will retire today after 42 years with the Oxford office. She has been postmistress for the last eight years and was assistant postmistress for three years prior to that time. a •*-.;* - . , ■ Mrs. Awrey said she had not been informed as yet as to whom her successor will be. In the last eight years as head of the 12-man office, Mrs. Awrey said the mail volume has increased by 40 per cent. She started with file postal department as a clerk in 1926. plant shrubbery. The new $256,000 addition is almost ready for occupancy and an Oct. 22 grand opening is planned. Work contributed .by the community is believed to have saved $u,000 on the estimated price of the addition. RESTORED CABOOSE — Sign painter and railroad enthusiast Bob Owens proudly dons a trainman’s cap as he boards his own caboose, which he recently purchased for $600 and restored to better-than-new condition. Food Course Offered SOUTHFIELD It) — Oakland Community College said yesterday it will conduct a 10-week course in food service for hospital employes at the South Oakland County Health Center in Southfield beginning Sept. 20. INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP-Some 5,000 registered voters will have the opportunity to vote Monday for a township police force. They will be asked to approve 1-mill levy for a period of 10 years. Hie tax is figured to bring in about $40,000 annually. The township fire department, which also serves the village, operates on a like millage, which is also spread over the village. Hie 1 mill for police protection would not be spread until next year, meaning that no force would be organized for about a year, according to Howard Altman, township clerk. 1 ‘r‘ ■ * * * Planned is a three or four-man department operating under a chief. Two-proposals are currently under study -r one calling for a yearly budget of $49,386 and | second for $54,862 a year. MAINTAINED CARS Until the beginning of this year the township annually budgeted $13,000 with which it maintained two Oakland County Sheriff’s Department patrol cars in the community. The millage plus the former budgeted amount for county help is seen as the basis for the township’s own police department, according to Altman. “We have been criticized for not re- newing the county contract,” Altman said, “but we have found that there are as many sheriffs cars available in the township now as there were before wo canceled.” ★ • * ★ “We also have the services of the Michigan State Police," Altman said. “This budget may be small, but we have to start some place. In the future it is conceivable that we could provide a force which could also give the village of Clarkston full-time protection.” Clarkston is presently covered by a part-time force under the direction of Chief Robert Phillips. Clarkston Sets Adult Education Registration CLARKSTON-Registration for Clarkston schools adult education classes will be conducted from 7 to I p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in the Senior High School lobby.* Classes will begin Sept. 25. Hiey will include courses in business, industrial arts, modem math, physical fitness, Gqrman, rug-hooking and knitting. ★ ★ ★ Additional information on these and, other possible classes which will be arranged if the demand is great enough can be obtained by contacting William Dennis at the school. County Unit to Eye Annexation Petitions Petitions proposing the annexation of Wolverine Lake Village and parts of Commerce Township to the city of Walled Lake were to be considered by the boundaries Committee of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors today. If the committee finds the petitions sufficient and valid, it will then decide on a public hearing and an election date, said Committee Chairman Philip Mastin, Jr. The peitions are sufficient or valid if they contain signatures of 1 per cent of the population in each of the seven areas involved, Mastin said. Areas involved include Walled Lake and those proposed for annexation bounded by 14 Mile, Haggerty on the east, Oakley Park Road on the north, Beck on the west and Pontiac Trail bn the south. PUBLIC HEARING If the petitions are found insufficient:, the committee will deny the petitions. “This is not likely,” said Mastin. With approval of the petitions, the boundaries committee can either grant or deny a request of the petition circulators that the committee hold a public hearing Oct. I* in Walled Lake, the citizens’ committee can secure on Its petitions 80 percent of those signatures on the annexation petitions, the incorporation vote will take precedence over the annexation vote. Although Schnelz based his opinion on Michigan Statutes Annotated, Mastin indicated that the county corporation counsel’s opinion is not the same. The committee chairman said that precedence of the petitions will p ably be discussed by the committee day. Wolverine Lake Village Manager i ford Cottrell reports that the 80 peri is lacking only in the eastern portioi the village. Cottrell is heading the village citizens’ committee, which initiated the incorporation proposal. The next step would be selecting an election date and recommending it to the Board of Supervisors Monday, said Mastin. Walled Lake City Manager Royce Downey has talked about Jan. 15 as the annexation vote date, “If Mr. iDowney requests this date and there is no objection, that date will probably be Set,” Mastin skid. Circulating petitions Wolverine Lake Village is still circulating petitions proposing cityhood for itself, one of the saipe Commerce Township areas considered for annexation by Walled Lake, and another portion of the township. , ."" ,; Wolverine Lake' Village Attorney Gene Schnelz has reported that if the village Rochester LWV Unit Schedules Coffee for Prospective Members ROCHESTER — A coffee to introduce prospective members to the work of the Rochester League of Women Voters will take place at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday at St. Paul’s Methodist Church. puests will be apprised of the group’s governmental projects, its studies of water pollution, Red~ Chint, ~firobate court and the best used of human resources. . ★ ♦ h / The coffee marks the local observance of League of Women Voters Week in Michigan designated Sept. 18-23 by proclamation of Gov. Romney, Hie group’s regular meetings take place at 9:15 a.m. the third Wednesday of each month at St. Paul’s Methodist Church. Baby sitting service is provided, according to Mrs. Traoey Scholtz, membership chairman.. Also at a recent board meeting, $200,-900 worth of fixed equipment was pur- Tax rates in the county range from 44.99 millls to 21.11 mills, according to Oakland Schools. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY* SEPTEMBER 15, 1967 AS 37 Americans Identified as I Killed in Vi$t WASHINGTON (API -of 37 men killed in action are included in the latest casualty list from the conflict in Vietnam. The Defense Department list also includes the names of three men who died of wounds, and five who died not as a result of hostile action. Killed in action: ARMY ARIZONA - Sgt. Bravie Soto, Som«r- In-The-Store WAREHOUSE sale Saturday 9:30 to 5:30 L-orner Saginaw and Huron Dressing Table R«g- \$1088 18.00 O Sturdy Mesh YARD ,%> $148 Died of wounds: ARMY Size No Phone Orders Limited Quantities All Sales Final Second Floor ILLINOIS — Pfc. William T. McDaniel# Springfield. * INDIANA — Spec. 4 Loren L. Morford, North Manchester. KENTUCKY—Pfc. Manford D. Stewart, Owensboro. MICHIGAN — Pfc. Dennis A, Getty# Lapeori Pfc. Wendeir ‘ Riverside. High Chair $H97 3 way folding high chair converts to junior chair and utihty chair. Brown and white PANEL END FULL SIZE CRIB * e 3-Position steel link fabric springs e 3-twirl balls for baby to play with Single Drop $1 A 88 Reg. 32.00 ' I *+ Donbl. Drop $|^88 Reg. 34.00 ILLINOIS — Lance CpI. Jackie Rood# Mundelein. MAINE - Lance CpI. Eric M. Warden, Bucksport. MISSOURI -Horton, Joplin. NEtRASKA — CpI. Robert L. Kemp- ILLINOIS—Pfc. Matthew R. GoossensJ /Chicago. Missing to dead—hostile: ARMY SOUTH CAROLINA — Staff Sgt. Claud. L. Collins# Conway. WEST VIRGINIA — Pfc. Earl R. Cobb, Quincy. ., Missing to captured: I I AIR FORCE j Capf. Edwin L. Attorberry. Capt. Thomas E. Norris. Missing as a result of hostile j action: MARINE CORPS Ma|. Vladimir H. Raclk. Died not as a result of hostile! action. ARMY OKLAHOAAA - Spec. 4 J. D. Singleton, | Qokchito. * PENNSYLVANIA — 1st Sgt. Jack l.j Maguire, State College. WEST VIRGINIA - WO James G. Bos-, Lower Level ■ MASSACHUSETTS Andrade# Taunton. AIR FORCE TEXAS - Lt. Col. Norris R. Smith, Fort Worth. Missing not at a result of hos-| tile action: - ARMY Spec. 4 Paul 1 Clark. Spec. 4 Dannie Coleman. Breathlessness: Pill Danger Sign? I —NOTTINGHAM, E n g land! (AP) — Women taking birth | control pills were warned that signs of breathlessness may be1 a danger signal. * ★ w I The warning came at an in-| quest Wednesday into the death | of Pearl Pullen, 39, mother of six who had been taking the pills and was short of breath for several weeks before she died. Coroner Anthony Rothera ruled that .she died from thrombosis —a blood clot—“related to the use of contraceptive pills.’’ i rtxpwt FAMILY ROOMS %£? sioqc AS LOW AS I WUV CWeeflcm ffonslntclimi 8b. BUILDING COMPANY 1032 W«t, Huron Street FE 4-2597 In Pontiac Since 1931 MEMBER PONTIAC AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE . All Work Guaranteed 6500 BTU Ambassador Room AIR CONDITIONER *129 12,000 BTU, Reg. 239.00 .$178 Reg. $159.00 4-way air direction, 2-speed fan, washable filter, automatic thermostat fresh air intake. Slumber quiet airflow. Automatic jirn Gas $i QD WASHER I DU DRYER loU Perfect economy model for family sized loads. Just load and set one dial, washes, rinses, and spin dries, and shuts off automatically. Extra cycle for heavily soiled clothes., Just set one dial for fast, safe drying. Two drying temperatures: normal or air fluffy Convenient up-front lint filter. i; 1 Miscellaneous LOWER LEVEL AND FIFTH FLOOR 9x15 Aluminum Frame Tent, Reg. 84.00 ..... 50.00 8x10 Aluminum Frame Tent, Reg. 60.00......... 30.00 9x12 Aluminum Frame Tent, Reg. 80.00 .......... 50.00 9x9 Umbrella Tent, Reg. 45-00.................30.00 Redwood and Alum, Chaise Lounges, Reg: 17.98,..7.88 Redwood and Alum. Cart, Reg. 12,98 ...........,.. 5.88 Redwood and Aluminum Table, Reg. 6.98 ........ ,., 2.88 3-Pc. Oblong Redwood Picnic Set, Reg. 34.95 . . -. , ,. 19.88 ■ 3- Point Hammock, Reg. 17.98....... 9.88 4- Point Ham-O-Cot, Reg. 19.98 . .............8.88 42" Umbrella Table, Reg. 14.98..fjj...........7.88 Deluxe 7-WebChaise Lounge, Reg. 8.98 ..,,......... 3.44 Deluxe Contour Chaise Lounge, Reg, 16.98 8.44 Bunting Innerspring Chaise; Reg. 29.95 ,. ........... 19.88 All Steel Play Gym with Horse, Reg. 35.00.....22.00 24" Split Oven Grill, Reg. 24.95 ,., , ....... 13.88 30" Hi Level Gas Range, Reg. 309.00 . . ..... 259.00 30" Coppertone Gas Range, Reg. 189.00 . . i 152.00 30" Tappan Gas Range, Reg. 269 95 ...... 199.00 30" Ambassador Avocado Ga% Range, Reg. 179.00*.. 145.00 30" or 36" Ambassador Electric Range, Reg. 189.00 .. 138.00 30" Famous Make Electric Range, Reg, 239.95 »,.... 178.00 17‘ Frost Free Refrigerator, Reg. £79.95 ......... 248.00 1 S' Frost Free Refrigerator, Reg. 259.95 ............ 199.00 Double Door Refrig./Frpezer combination, Reg. 529.00 399.00 Ambassador 14.2 Cu. Ft. White Refrig., Reg. 208.00 .177-00 Ambassador 12 Cu, Ft. White Refrig., Reg. 199.0,0 . . 168.00 Ambassador 10 Cu. Ft. White Refrig., Reg. 179.95 . . 137.00 Easy Spin Dryer, Reg. 168.00.................158.00 Eureka Tank Style Sweeper,1 Demo., Reg. 69.95 ......, 54.00 Eureka Tank Style Sweeper, Demo., Reg. 129.95 ..97.00 RCA Color TV, AM/FM Stereo Coipb. Reg. 895.00 . . 797.00 RCA 295 Sq. In. Console Color TV, Reg. 625.00 . . . 549.00 RCA 295 Sq. In. Console Color TV, Reg. 650.00 . . 567.00 Ambassador 295 Sq. In. Color Console, Reg. 499.99.477.00 Ambassador 295 Sq. In. Color Console, Reg. 519.00 497.00 RCA 172 Sq, In. Black and White Portable, Reg. 169.95 148.00 Ambassador Phono Record Players,. ..... 7-,7®^.0%-tQ,FF -172-Sq, In'.-Remote Control Portable TV, Reg. 169.00, . 118.00 • 172 Sq. In. Portable TV, Reg. 139.95..........110.00 2 Speaker Portable Stereo, Reg. 69.95f(, • ■ - • 33.60 AM/FM Stereo Console, Reg. 279,00 ‘.......... 199.00 180 Sq. In* Viewing Area Ambassador Portable COLOR TV Contemporary tajble model with walnut Reg. 399.00 grained vinyl. Noise immune color- d* ^ killer circuit to eliminate color on black t . X S rV and white reception. All SS’channel UHF/ «■ ^ VHF reception. s,ond lnclud,d 16.2 Cu. Ft. FREEZER 544-lb. capacity, drop front basket, adjustable shelves, magnetic door seals rand big stielf storage $170 CklaMdiiA# Full Cut 21" Rotary Mower 3 H.P.-4 Cycle Tecumseh-Lauson Engine Reg. 54.95 14 gauge slanted deck, tide discharge. E-Z height ad luttment Crankshaft is guar anteed one year agains bending or breaking. 24" Riding Rotary, Reg. 199.00 ...,T* < «*• • 130.00 19" Recoil Rotary, Reg. 94.95..............80.00 21" Deluxe Impulse Rotary, Reg. 109.95...... 94,00 Deluxe 18" Push Mower, Reg. 57.50........1.46.00 Deluxe 16" Push Mower, Reg. 44.95 ....... 34.00 Deluxe Lawn Spreader, Reg. 26^95 ... r.... 21.00 Fifth Floor ■ -rp . .. PERMA-PLATE THe Only Hust-Proof Finish Guaranteed 3 Years Steel Storage Building Large 8' x 5' Roof Measurement BUILT-IN RAIN GUTTERS-C«ty-edg«d length both front ond rear. N-U interlocked into one huge structure of strength. FLOORING ^Exterior grade construction type floor completely frames in steel. Homosote floor. DESIGN—Streamlined and modern to enhance Tyour* property. In Pristine White with Aspen Green trim. 'Complete with deebratory plastic lanterns. PERMA-PLATE FINISH—The finish guaranteed to s DOUBLE RIBBED WALLS - To increase rigidity under ony stress, oi/strain. GALVANISED STEEL FRAMES - Featuring rugged midwall braces for durability and long life. ' | WIDE/DOUBLE GLIDE DOORS - Glide oh inside-track nyloy rollers that won't clog or stop in snow. , TOR-O-NADO BIKE -V. Reg. $QQ 49.99 vJ LJ Limited quantity left of t(jis-expanded frame -bike.for 1 adults or i kids. Chrome plated Jhenaers,"!3-speedsj ond caliper hand brakes. 24" and 26" Middleweight Bicycles, Reg. 44.95 34.88 26" 3-speed Lightweighf, Rig. 39.95 ....29.8(8 3-Speed Deluxe Jigercat/Reg. 49,95 ... • 41.00 THE PONTJAjC PRESS 48 West Huron Street - ' Pontiac, Michigan 48058 FRIDAY* SEPTEMBER 15, 1967 Karol* A. FitaotRALR John A. Rxlrt Secretary a Director Richard M. Fitzgerald Officer Treasurer and ^finance Local Advertielnc A. Floyd Blakeslee In the death of A. FloVd Blakeslee, the community loses an esteemed citizen and an able member of the legal profes-| sion. | Born in Luther,! Mich., Mr. Blares-| lee practiced law in Pontiac for more than half a century,! during which time he served as county | prosecutor and assistant state attor-| ney general. He was active in fraternal and professional organizations and gave freely of his time and effort in furtherance of many local projects. Mr. Blakeslee was mi ardent out-doorsman, finding relaxation in hunting, fishing and golf. He was also adept as a billiardist whose cue had few local rivals. An engaging personality and droll sense of humor had won Mr. Blakeslee a wide personal following Vho deeply mourn his passing. Japan Seeks U.S. ‘Strategic Goods’ Ban Relief Japan views itself as a bridge between East and West, and has fashioned its foreign policy and trade patterns accordingly. Now, faced with growing halance-of-payments troubles, Tokyo would like to expand trade with Communist countries. Japanese exports to Communist countries in 1966 were valued at around $600 million, while imports amounted to $687 million. If certain restraints on trade in “strategic” products were lifted, Japanese officials reckon, exports to Communist lands might rise as much as $400 million a year. The trade restraints Japan wants modified are ‘fixed by an . international committ.ee on trade with ‘Communist states (Cocom). Its members include the North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries, plus Japan. Press reports from Tokyo indicate that Wataro Kanno, the Japanese Minister of International Trade and Industry, will ask American officials to support some lowering of Communist trade barriers when the United States-Japan Committee on Trade and Economic Affairs meets in Washington Wednesday. Japan’s request, if it is made, could get a sympathetic hearing. President Johnson has said that the United States is prepared to remove “hundreds of non-strategic items” frpm the list of U.S. products barred from shipment to eastern Europe. ★ it ★ On the other hand, Washington no doubt would be cool toward the idea of shipping strategic goods to a non-Communist Asian country with the possibility of their winding up in Communist hands — at least for the duration of the Vietnam war. New York’s ‘Met’ Hangs Up SRO Sign When the Metropolitan Opera opened in its gleaming $46 million home in Manhattan’s Lincoln Center last fall the box office crush was so great for so long that many opera buffs could say only “wdit till next year.” Next year is here — the Met opens its 83rd season Monday and all but the season ticket-holders find the scramble as maddening as ever. Seven hundred music lovers spent Labor Day weekend on the sidewalks of New York in line for remaining tickets to the first two weeks of performances. Some, equipped with sleeping bags, had spent as much as four and a half days waiting for the box office to open. Even then, many could obtain only standing room tickets ($1.50-$2.50 each). Such is the state of opera at its apex. Professional opera, once scarcely found in America outside New York and San Francisco, now dwells even 4n faraway New Mexico. The summer Santa Fe Opera Company, concluding its 11th season, draws popular support at home and critical acclaim from abroad. Ironically, success often means bigger deficits. The Metropolitan Opera, unlike the major opera houses of Europe, operates without state subsidy and again this year expects to incur a $2 million loss. Higher seat prices — an orchestra seat sells for $14.50 ^ don’t keep abreast of mounting production costs and bigger salaries. In .17 years Met salaries for lead singers have risen from a $1,000 top per performer to $4,000. But oldline patrons who once filled the annual deficits now have corporate help. A leading airline, for example, recently donated $500,000 for the Metropolitan to perform a new “Ring” cycle of Wagnerian operas. Opposes Matrimony Contract Changes hi SAUNDERS By DICK SAUNDERS It took a woman to come along and put marriage in its true perspective — a sport. .......The woman is Mrs. Virginia Satir, a psycho-logical social worker from B i g S u r, Calif. She did it in a recent paper prepared for the American Psychological Association in which she suggested a cure for our divorce rate would be to sell marriage licenses on a five-year basis. Pointing out marriage is the lone human contract in our society without a legal time length (short of life), she sug-, gested a plan whe^efiv people could marry for five-year periods which are renewable if both parti^ desire renewal, dr A-. Until now, marriage in vjny book ranks a close second to ice hockey. Putting man and his spouse under terms of a five-year contract could make the mating game even .more interesting, though* somewhat complex. Take a rocky marriage, for example. Even your best friends talk. The gossip might run like this: “Think she’ll quit Or play out her five-year contract?” ' * . > “Chances are she’ll play out the option. Rumor has it she was a bonus baby.” And what about when the contract, or license, expires? There could be all kinds of new faces in .the lineup 'next year. This opens a whole new field of interleague trading on a scale yet undreamed of. Maybe, even, an annual player draft. Can you imagine asking , waivers for your wife? While several of my associates feel the psychological value of such a plan would be well worth the price of a license renewal, it, does pose some problems. ★ ★ ★ Would such a plan be retroactive? There would have to be some sort of clause along these lines for long-suffering souls who desire immediate relief. And the existence «f such a plan could make for some complicated family reunions in later life. A young man of 21 could find Mothers Day the most expensive holiday of the year. Social, writers for newspapers would be hard pressed to come up with a sound policy to cover “renewals.” ★ ★ And what about the father of the bride? He pays for the initial “contract,” but getting stuck for a batch of renewals could make birth control a financial necessity in future generations. Then, too, what about the couple so happily engrossed in doing what comes naturally that (hey forget to renew?. • \ i ■ I mean, you can get a ticket for driving with an expired lidense. What happens' in this case? ★ ★ * Better yet, who decides who is doing what with whom without the proper license nenew-al? Sounds like an invasion of privacy to me. Personally, I’m in the 10th year of a five-year plan and Voice of the People: ‘Let’8 Shorn Our Loyalty hy Displaying Our Are Americans uninformed or apathetic as to the nature of our enemies on the displaying of our flag? We have the opportunity to show our belief in the fundamental principles underlying our nation's greatness and to express our loyalty to our constitutional form of government and our Christian ideals by displaying our flag on Constitution Day, September 17. We should pause on that day to consider the tragic end of every nation that has adopted socialism, communism or any other form of statism. We should pray that this nation will be informed and thus show respect by displaying the flag properly and realizing it is a symbol of strength In this world. Display the United States Flag during Constitution Week September 17 thru 23. MRS. A. E. KOHN 2640 GARLAND GEN. RICHARDSON CHAPTER D.A.R. Ever Feel You'd Said The Wrong Thing? David Lawrence Says: LBJ Avoids Basic Issue on Riots WASHINGTON - President Johnson has apparently decided that lie will not allow any blame for riots of the-last two years to be imposed upon him in the political arena in 1968.. But the speech hel made in Kan-| sas City yes-| terday to the LAWRENCE International Association of Police Chiefs, stating that the responsibility tor keeping the peace is “squarely on the shoulders of local authorities” and that the federal government cannot “prevent a riot in a great metropolis,” by no means closes the debate. Strictly speaking, the President is right in saying that the local police most bear the harden of law enforcement. Bat this is not the basic issue. The causes of riots are far more pertinent than what is done to squelch them once they have begun. * * * • Indeed, the federal government is today primarily responsible for the climax that has been reached in the conflict between the races arising from the problems of segregation and desegregation. FEDERAL RESPONSIBILITY Under the civil-rights acts which have been passed in the last few years, the federal government has assumed a responsibility for racial relations such as has never been undertaken by the states' in the North or the South. , Congress has enacted laws giving the federal government the right to intervene in questions involving racial “discrimination” in almost any form. The federal government, moreover, wields its vast powers over the disbursement of public funds as a club over government itself cannot prevent a riot by sending policemen into a community, the federal courts and a majority of the Congress, together with the President, joined to impose upon the states rules and regulations in the handling of racial “discrimination” which are at the heart of the whole problem of rioting and discontent. * ★ * It is largely because there has been no denunciation from the White House that large numbers of “c i v Q rights” demonstrators have felt that they had the support of the administration' in their quest for more and more benefits and that “the end justifies the means.” When the 1968 campaign begins, it may be expected that, just as has happened in the past, the voters may tend to blame the incumbent administration for the unrest and lawless conditions prevailing throughout the country. (CtpyrtjjM, 1M», Publish* rs- Bob Considine Says: New S.Viet Government Should Be Given Chance Lists Necessary Steps for Democracy If this country is a democracy subject to the trill of the majority, the following steps will be initiated immediately: Laws requiring popular approval of all tax increases and popular vote on all legislative and executive salaries; laws establishing strict civil service requirements for all elected and appointed officials!' laws requiring popular vote on all foreign “police action” and outlawing riots, and a popular vote on the continuation of urban renewal and Johnson’s great society program. * * w We will initiate a program of strict applicatioa of traffic laws to everyone; complete elimination of government programs in competition with private enterprise; laws requiring and enforcing elimination of air, water, and food pollution; laws requiring public approval of foreign aid, and a law initiating life Imprisonment for any public official found guilty to pilfering public funds or falsifying vote returns. FOR DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT Disagrees With Teaching Sex in Schools Many parents do not teach sex to their children. Likewise, many do not teach love of God to their children. On this basis, if sex is to be taught in school, love of God must be taught in school. Or should we have freedom of choice? ' ★ ★ ★ Teaching sex in school at early ages will not stop VD, premarital sex or teen-age pregnancies. It will -only cause tiie child to start dwelling on the thought and wanting to experiment A MOTHER (Continued on Page A-7) SAIGON - At the risk of sounding like an apologist for a bunch of blokes I’ve had no oppor-t u n i t y to study seriously, I’d urge that we give President -* elect Thieu and his elect-■ ed govern- CONSIDINE ment a chance to prove they can live up to their campaign pledges. The tendency among the resident newsmen is to express skepticism that any such miracle can conceivably “I’ve got seven bullets in my gun — six for the VC and one for me." Didn’t get to meet him, but figured he was the officer- in charge of passenger morale. Smiles After sampling a certain packaged, add • only • water beverage, we know what the kid who once ran the lemonade stand in the neighborhood' now does for a living. Question and Answer Will city residents who don’t own property be allowed to vote on the proposed property or income tax? If so, is this fair? JAMES PATTERSON 282 S. MARSHALL REPLY All electors mil be allowed to vote. Apparently the State Legislature felt it was fair when they provided in the State Home Rule Act that all voters must be allowed to vote on proposed tax increases and charter amendments. If increased property tax is approved on September 19, it will be necessary to hold a second election in October to approve a charter amendment to permit increa^d millage. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages The mood of the U. S. military and diplomatic people stationed here is to believe that Messrs., Thieu and Ky and the Assembly will make a go of things. You pays your piasters and you takes your cherce. But I. think my news brethren could be dead wrong. * * * It is hard, to believe that Gold Drain Dispatch Some solution soon must be found to stop the flow of gold from the United States. At present all but $2.8 billion of the 813.1 billion U S. gold stock is earmarked as h 25 per cent reserve behind the nation’s currency. ★ ★ ★ It seems we are getting were Detroit, Newark, and so on. * It seemed to us that Chicago’s newspapers covered the New Politics affair straightaway and down the middle, but an assistant professor at With disgusting regularity, perilously close to the end of Harvard who intended dis- th* b***8 f local responsible men like West- authorities in order to up “integration” not only in schools but in public accommodations, housing and employment. M * ★ * What Mr. Johnson conveniently o v e r 1 o ok s is that in many Cities in the North — like Milwaukee, for example — the issue of “open housing” would never have developed into the bitter controversy teat has been the cause of recent rioting if it had not been for the federal government’s intrusion into tee whole housing problem. HEART OF PROBLEM Thus, while it may be literally true that the federal morelapd, Bunker, Komer, etc., who know these people intimately could be hoodwinked by the sort of fakery which resident and transieht correspondents ascribe to just about everybody in the Saigon government. EQUAL CHANCE One doesn’t get to American four-star -or ambassadorial rank by royal decree, or by cutting out paper dolls. Give then| tee chance we give our- own untested governments. If they flbp, we backed a loser and — in view of the size of the) commitment — will1 try to get a better deal. If they make it, well, that’s why we’ve been here since the ' Eisenhower administration. Ran into a marine chopper pilot tee other day on top of Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Berdan hill 190 at a jump-off place Verba! fVchids Mrs. Gertrude Wardell of 63 S. Johnson; 89th birthday. of 847 Sqrasota; 51st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Mary J. Bradford I like tee sport tee way it is. of 6 S. Tasmania; 93rd birthday. $ . . : " ■' r : l maybe 30 miles put of Da Nang. Bummed a ride back to the big city. (Ed. Note: Da Nang) f Before taking off he said, if not practiced France is redeeming our dollars for gold. During the past year almost 10 times tee amount of gold produced by American mines was drained out of the U.S. Treasury by France, the international Monetary Fund has just reported. U.S. production in 1966 totaled $62.8 million — an increase for the second consecutive year and the highest output since 1956. ★ ★. dr Despite this, U.S. gold reserves, along with those of most Western nations, fell sharply. Under the U.S. policy of free interchange of gold for official dollar balances, the U.S. reserves fell by $830 millipn. 4 In its annual report for 1967, the IMF noted that many “countries — notably West Germany — were showing restraint in adding tp their gold reserves through purchases from the U.S. Treasury. France was singled out as an “Important exception” among industrial countries shdwhig less tendency to add to their gold reserves. our rope and if we want to stop the flow of gold abroad we better quit spending so many dollars there. Two Types Chicago Daily News Recently a band of fair housing demonstrators visited the office of Milwaukee’s Mayor Henry W. Maier, rifling office files, breaking furniture and tearing things up generally before being herded out by policemen with riot sticks. Earlier tee honored spot was Chicago’s Palmer House, where delegates to tee National Conference on New Politics messed up and daubed up the hotel in tee mijdst of gleefqi drinking parties and fist fights. Before ^that, the host cities The Associated Press b entitled exclusively to the use for repubtl-cation of sH local new* orbited In •nation. Macomb, Lapeer and WeeMenaw Counties It Is SILOS a veer; elsewhere In Michigan and all other places to the United States ISL0S a year. Ml mail sub, script Ions payable to advene*. Postage bat been paid at to* tod clast rata at Pontiac, Michigan. Member at ABC. He charges that tee reporters gave undue attention to the Communists, kooks and hippies and not enough to tee “respectable types” who “dominated” the conference. Had the professor been a trained reporter instead of a partisan he might have perceived, as the. reporters did, that the “respectable types” were methodically muscled out of the scene by the unrespectable and disrespectful types who took over and ran tee show. * * * It is one of the tragedies of the current civil rights movement teat the do-gooders have become so myopic that they can’t see how thoroughly and alarmingly they are being had by an element teat couldn’t care less for anybody’s rights f *4 i fiy ■■ W The first, obligation of responsible civil rights leadership at this point is to articu-late the sharp line between legitimate protest and plain rowdyism, and out the kooks, bums and criminals out of the movement. The distinction is easy to draw: The test Worts are ‘motive” an* ' bility.” ' A—7 1'iiE PONTIAC PRKS& FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER \6, 1967 Voice of the Peopleui5''-^pM '&* word (Continued From Page A-6) /"*fr 11/ «|* H J : *'I* iH I Clear Writing Becomes a Federal Case Next week our city administrators are giving us a choice an trTSH ft W of additional revenue^ hi* h2»*n^n wtb built-in Property tax relief or an increase ¥ . ★ ★ ★ I agree there is a need for additional revenue. The tax In« « S&2WCity owns “O'1* property than ever be-1928 1 have been subsidizing many well-intended projects that cost money—wars, poor farms, schools, hos-pitals, slum clearances, urban developments, etc. There lEr^ of ,®y ann“aJ salary to spend for a meager , wlU be ,eM when Michigan, our city, county and federal government get through for the year. I am ympathetic because their situation compares favorably with mine. Where do we go from here? Harold b. wright 19 S. EDITH Doesnt anyone but the Kuhn brothers have any pity on taxpayers. President Johnson wants a 10 per cent tax on our 1"c°me-^ State is taking another two and one-half per cent, ,Clty w,a”k more- "^a* wron8 with an austerity budget. Most people in the State are now living undo* these conditions. ★ ★ ★ I hope readers of this paper aren’t naive enough to believe that the two and one-half per cent is the maximum limit of the state income tax. Remember when the sales tax was raised from three to four per cent so we wouldn’t have to have pn income tax? ★ ★ ★ The City wants to raise property taxes or dip into our paychecks for another one per cent income tax. I understand a so-called citizens committee recommended the latter. Who were these citizens? Don’t be naive enough to believe that once the income tax has been okayed that it will not be raised as soon as the politicians need more money. Why don’t we get a chance to vote for austerity and less taxes? C. NELSON 91S SPENCE j WASHINGTON (AP) ms The book considered ad good that it’s government is teaching its em- offered for sale to the public at 40 cents. The title: “Gobbledy- dictionary as “wordy and gener-WORDINESS STAYS Gobbledygook—defined by one dictionary as “wordy and generally unintelligible jar- ployes how to It’s even got. a aaiefatae to tut Has Gotta Go.’’ show them host not to be stuffy. The campaign isn’t likely to impress tile public as much as a 10 per emit tax cut. And those on the receiving end of government utterings might say it hasn’t helped much. But the government—prodded by President Johnson—has been making a big effort for two years. Most agencies have some kind of writing campaign for their dealings with each other, the public and newsmen. The Interstate Commerce Commission has its teaching machine, a step-by-step journey through the jungles of grammar and style. The course takes 6 to 12 hours. The Air Force has an impressive 192-page book that goes from explaining the need fra: better writing to explaining the need for writing in the first place. The latter: “Reports arel written because they help to ac-j curately transmit information; 'serve as records for later refer-ence; provide an economical Iimeans of keeping other agencies informed s „?! The Agriculture Department, and several other agencies have a “fog index’’ that mathematically measures an item’s clari-j ,fy- . j The Department of the Interior has a 119-page, illustrated! gon”—hasn’t gone by any means. s In Portland, Ore., a federal judge recently sent a tax indictment back to government lawyers and told them it was “so full of complicated words and phrases that 1 don’t blame lawyers for disagreement over Let’s give a flat “no” on the city income tax. Our paper j stated it would cost $87,000 to administer the collections, so | why not have the extra millage added on or property tax. I Senior citizens are to get a break in property taxes, aren't 1 they? Isn’t it called taxation without representation to tax out-of-town residents as they cannot vote on it? PONTIAC RESIDENT AND TAXPAYER Committee Makes Recommendation on Tax The Citizens Finance Committee, composed of executives, attorneys, a doctor, dentist, professor, realtors, certified public accountants, retirees, ministers, merchants, businessmen, housewives, bankers, union officials, factory workers, residents and nonresidents of Pontiac recomemnds the adoption of an income tax. ★ ★ ★ Pontiac employs the same number of police as ten years ago. However their workload has increased 700 per cent. We recommend 30 policemen be added to the force. Fire department personnel stands eight short of providing the level of servicy existing prior to 1964. Understaffing exists in the department of parks and recreation, building inspection, streets and sewers. During the present fiscal year, the City is spending $175,000 to repair its damaged streets—25 per cent of what we believe necessary. Many of our City employes are underpaid as compared to employes in other Michigan cities. AP Wlrtphota GOBBLEDYGOK GOBBLER — Mrs. Lynda Bryne, a secretary for the Interstate Commerce Commission in Washington, demonstrates the Autotutor, a projector with a brain that teaches a 6- to 12-hour grammar and style course. what it means.” The government was told to “write it over in simple, concise words that mean something.” -* ★ ★ The Interstate Commerce Commission, despite its teach jing machine, recently used up 1112 words in a single sentence to say that freight must be carried at the lowest possible cost with good service—while allowing the carrier to make a profit. PROJECTOR HAS BRAIN Its teaching machine is a microfilm projector with a brain. It will flash a sentence such as this: At 10 p.m, in the evening, a petition was circulated around. Then it asks: “Which words should be deleted? In the evening and around? At 10 p.m. and around? In the evening?” Any answer but the first sends the film spinning back to the lesson. Get it right and you go on to the next. j! * * * There are sound economic -reasons for unmuddying pompous, official communications. John O’Hayre, in the gobbledygook book, estimates every word costs the government |1.6 cents. And that gets expensive, he say^, when you consider that “in all government agencies and private industries, more people are working at producing words than at anything else.” Celebrate. Celebrate for a dozen reasons. Or just because it's Fall. Whatever the occasion: Jim Beam.' It’s the Bourbon with the celebrated formula that’s been passed down from ^father to son for six generations. Celebrate friendship. Celebrate just because it’s Wednesday. Pick your reason. Cheersl (POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT) Detroit's Riot ".- " ' '' Called Racial I People in the News | Turning Points An income tax would be the fairest method of raising the additional revenue in that: 1. Those who utilize City services aad facilities, such as streets and police protection (those employed here, as well as those who live here) will pay their share. 2. It will allow the City Commission to cut the property tax by three mills. 3. It provides tax relief for Senior citizens and persons on fixed incomes. 4. The City cannot increase this tax. It is set by the State and is the same for all cities. 5. Each taxpayer receives an exemption of $600 per dependent. 6. Persons over 65 receive an exemption of $1,200. •7. This tax more nearly reflects h taxpayer’s ability to pay; for if his income increases, his tax will increase by no more than I per cent. If his income goes down, his tax goes down by at least 1 per cent. 8. Lowering the property tax will encourage commercial and residential building within the City. The choice as to how these funds are to be raised is yours. The advisory vote is September. 19, 1967. Please vote and help this community to be a safer and more prosperous place to live. ROBERT WADDELL CHAIRMAN INFORMATION SUBCOMMITTEE CITIZENS FINANCE STUDY COMMITTEE (Editor’s Note: Ko letters will be run after this week concerning the September 19 City election.) Stopper Gives Three Cheers for New Strife The letter concerning the lack of a snack bar in the new Hudson store irked me. There are numerous places at the Mall to “get soft drinks or sandwiches.” I was disappointed-,that the Pontiac Room wasn’t “fancier.” Being a Hudson shopper, I’m glad they have a department store in town. Along with their “No Smoking” signs at the entrance, I wish they would hang out a sign “Women in curlers, shorts’ or slacks shop elsewhere.” ★ ★ ★ Three cheers and a welcome to a great store. The Pontiac Press has added new highs in its advertising department with those elegant full-page ads for Hudsons. MRS. W. R„ SHIRLEY I » 255 CHIPPEWA Two Support School Board Ruling on Dress It’s time t6 make another list on how to, make sure your child is a delinquent. Add the mini-skirt. I hope the schools ban them to try tp save more trouble. A BELIEVER It is too bad a school board would have to act upon miniskirts and dresses. Toot bad because parents don’t care enough to see that their children wear enough to cover them. I hope Waterford, Clarkston and other surrounding school boards do the same. Hurraih fra* foe school board and down with the girl watchers. A PARENT NEW YORK (AP)—DaniilP. Moynihan, director of the MJT-Harvard Joint Center for Urasn Studies, says the Detroit riot marked a turning point in the American attitude toward race relations. “We lost the illusion this summer that things would get better if we kept on as before,” Moynihan said. * * * He appeared Thursday on the Today Show on the NBC television network. Moynihan appeared with producer Fred Freed and NBC investigative reporter Walter Sheridan to discuss an NBC news special, “Summer’67: What We Learned.” Hie program will be seen at 10 p.m. tonight. “Up to Detroit you could | explain what was happening in our cities,” he said. “But in Detroit race relations had been good, the money that needed to be spent was being spent. “But we learned that all these efforts weren’t reaching a great class of people who were being crushed. Things were getting worse for them.” CAPOTE REAGAN IN MINI WHIRL—Reita Faria of India, Miss World of 1966, leans back on a London hotel terrace yesterday, wearing a minidress velvet coat in black with silver fragging, which she designed. She announced at a news conference that she is going into the mod boutique business. By The Associated Press Edward Hirsch Levi has been named eighth president of the University of Chicago. Levi, 56, has been around the university most of his life since he entered its laboratory school kindergarten at age 5. Provost since 1962, Levi will succeed George Wells Beadle in the fall of 1968 when Beadle will retire at 65. Levi joined the faculty of the University of Chicago in 1936 and moved up to head of the law school before becoming provost. He smokes a pipe and cigars and drives a battered old car to work from his wooden frame house in the Hyde Park-Kenwood area where he lives with his wife, Kate, and their three sons. Levi enjoys classical music, plays tennis and pilots his cabin cruiser around the waters of Lake Michigan. Beadle, a Nobel prize winning-geneticist, was named chancellor of the university in 1961. Reagan to Support Death Penalty on TV Gov. Ronald Reagan will be a featured star of a forthcoming television documentary on capital punishment directed by the author Truman Capote. Capote, author of the best- |*. seller “In Cold Blood,” conferred with the California governor yesterday on capital punishment. Capote told a news conference that Reagan will be one of three persons favoring capital punishment on the planned documentary. Three others will offer views against the death penalty, he said. The documentary will be shown in September 1968 by the American Broadcasting Company network, he said. Actress, Mother Sue for $250,000 Each Actress Sue Lyon, 21, and her mother, Sue Carrlyon, 62, are each suing for $250,000 damages from injuries they say they suffered in a traffic accident in 1965. The actress, best known for her title role in the film “Lolita,” claims one of her knees was severely injured and her dancing ability was impaired. Mother and daughter filed a $500,000 suit in Los Angeles Superior Court yesterday against Roderlc Jay Tiech-ncr, 67, of Pacific Palisades, Calif. They allege he made a U-turn in front of the car in which they were riding. New Tarzan Threat: Personnel Problems Tarzan, the jungle hero who has fought his way across the printed page, the silver screen and now the tube, faces a new threat: personnel problems. Actor Ron Ely, who portrays Tarzan as a sometimes hip, always voluable, philosopher, had assumed the job of directing some of the eposides now being filmed in Mexico by Banner, Productions. ' Then, production chief Alfonse Sanchez Tello, who has been with the series since filming started in 1966, ^resigned. His resignation was followed by the public announcement that the entire crew intended to quit after filming the current episode. A source on the set attributed the wholesale resignation movement to [discord between Ely and the rest of the staff. In the future, the source said, Ron Ely’s duties will be confined strictly to performing as Tarzan. Which Wiry Pontine? UP____________ are we willing to pay ton • Increased police protection-we need 30 more men just to come up to the recommended standards. • More street lighting—especially in the neighborhoods to protect people against crime and accidents. o Local street repairs—our streets need to be paved or resurfaced to get rid of annoying and dangerous potholes. ^ • Adequate recreation programs - our parks, ball fields, and golf course need to be improved and expanded. We need more swimming facilities, too. or DOWN will we let the City continue to decay: e Major crimes went up 21.4% in 1966-almost twice as much as the national average. • We are losing valuable employees to other cities— Pontiac employees are underpaid compared with other cities in the Detroit area. eThe reserve fund is empty-the $500,000 deficit in this year's budget used up all our surplus cash; e City services will have to be cut to balance the 1968 budget—and the cuts will come in firefighting capacity and service, library service, street maintenance,. Hayes Jones Community Center, bus service, and more. When you stop and think about it, thete is only one choice. Pontiac needs more money. How it is raised is up to you! City Income Tax or Property Tax Increase i > It more noariy reflocts the ability of tho taxpayer to pay. Thos# ■ earning money would be taxed. I i It would lot tho City Commission1 | cut your property tax 3 mills. > It providos relief for Senior I Citizens and persons on fixed • incomee by not taxing pensions, I Social Security, insurance pro- ■ coeds, annuities, unemployment * and workman's compensation, I welfare payments, government bonds. , Every taxpayer receives an ox- . emption of $600 par dependent. I (Just like the Federal Income . Tax) I ' It would increase the tax burden of property owners in Pontiac— especially Senior Citizens. 'Income from this tax' is dependant upon tho assessed evaluation of property in the City. > Money from this tax increase would bo inadequate in a year or two. ' It would further discourage property owners from improvirtg their property. VOTE TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 19 Property Tax Increase City Income Tax (of $4 per $1,000 of I—I (with a 3 mill property i—| assessed valuation) I I tax reduction) I I Citizens Finance Study Committee OF FOMTIAC ... ypmQlb Jfakju (A)*aJU~ :1 Ar—8 THE PONTIAC PRESfS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1967 LADIES’ SILK-LINED LEATHER GLOVES 5*0 r«g. 9.90-11.90 Butte rsoft, handcrafted laathar In black, mink and white. Wa>h by hand. 6% to 8. fashion Accessories SAVE 2.12-NEVER NEED IRONING SKIRTS 3«« Reg. $6 Dark fall color*. Ideal for work or school. Sisas 10-18. Buy now and save LITTLE GIRLS* SWEATERS, SHIRTS 188 ' rag. 2.99, 3.98 An exciting assortment of pullovers and cardigans, velour turtle-neck shirts, Sixes 2 fa 6X. Children’s Dept. HEALTH NIKE EXERCISER 19“ reg. 29.95 Stimulating, figure-trimming motion ... healthfully exercises your entire body. Cosmetic Dept. Popul Hosiery Dept. MISSES’ NUMERAL SWEAT SHIRT . 199 ^ reg. 2.49 Football style with colored dumber* and stripes on white cotton knit. Ribbed sleeVe, hen/, S, M, L. Sportswear STUDENT DESK WITH ATTACHED LAMP rag. 10.49 Roomy 34x18-in. sandal-wood-enameled steel top. Enclosed shelf. Adjustable lamp. Office Equipment Dept. Handsome rain dr shine. Zip-in Orion® acrylic pile liner. Plaid; striped, solid acetate. 36-46. Jtfm’t Coats MISSES’ N0-IR0N RANCHER JEANS 4|20 Reg. 00 Western styling in tfx-tured homespun of cot-ton- polyester.. Loden, gold rand brown. Sizes 10 to 20. Sportswear WARDS 5-FT. GLASS HUNTING BOW SET 12“ rag. 11.80 Dual arrow rests for right, left hand. 4 arrows, bow-quiver, armguard . and tabs. Sporting Goods INDOOR, OUTDOOR FLOODLIGHT BULB |66 rag. 2.11 Fits all Wards flood-light holders. Weatherproof, ’ not affected by temperature. 150-watt. Electrical'Equipment FIBERGLASS FURNACE FILTERS 39* RE0. 69c Keep furnace dust out of the air, off your fumitu.ro and draperies. 1 -in.x-16x20- to 20x25-inch. Heating Dept. Stufont’s Gooseneck HI-INTENSITY LAMP J99 rag. 5.19 Tip-proof metal base has textured top.' Brass-finished gooseneck. Swivel reflector. 100-watt illumination. Lamp Dipt. 1.52 OFF! OFFICIAL SIZE FOOTBALL 2” rag. 449 Easy - to - hold pebble grain. End stripes make it easier to see on early fall evenings. Cowhide ball.........Ksr . Sporting Goods DECORATIVE PLASTIC PANELS 533 rag. 3.99 For room dividers, cabinet fronts, shutters. Light, easy to handle. Three patterns. Home Improvements' MISSES’A-LINE ALL-WEATHER COAT *5 rag. 12.98 Double-breasted, silky rayon-and-acetate in beige or black. Limited quantities. 8-18. Coat Dept. BUNK BED SET WITH MATTRESSES *66 complete rag, 99.99 Space-saver! Maple panel bunks With springs and innerspring mattresses, ladder, guardrail. Bedding Dept. AIRLINE® POWERFUL 7-TRANSISTOR RADIO 788 rag. 9.98 Compact, fits into pocket. Tone and volume controls. Complete with earphones and case. Radio-TV Dept. 1 KING ALFRED DAFFODIL BULBS 133 3-lb. bag rag. 144 Imported from Holland in time for Fall planting. Large, beautiful Highbred specimens. , Garden Shfip STURDY STEEL SHELVING UNIT 988 rag. 13.79 For storage , flexibility. Black baked-on, rust-resistant finish. Ten shelves. 60x12x5-ft. Power Tool Dept. STAINLESS STEEL TW0-B0WL SINK 24“ Special Quality nickle-chrome steel can't chip, rust; resists acids and stains. 33x22-in. over-all. Homo Improvements 20-LBS. SIGNATURE® DETERGENT 2^8 rag. 449 Concentrated! Use less, get bright, clean wash in low suas. Softeners built-in. 20-lbs. Hosssewaree STURDY STEEL FOOT LOCKER 6“ rag. 9.99 Tongue-in-greove closure keeps out dust. Three-ply wood frame, black steel covering. Sportissg Goods SAVE 29% DOOR CANOPY 4* rag. 5.99 Rugged all-stool eon-straction in special white plastic Coated • vented sides. House WORDS S-INCH BENCH GRINDER rag. 9.99 Sharpens tools and knives. Ball-bearing. - 2 vitrified wheels, with guards. Limited quantities. OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-1910 M ONTGOMERY WARD Granc-^Opening Tonight, Saturday and Sunday Only (Soma are limited quantities) THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1967 A—9 MEN’S BRENT® COTTON PAJAMAS W rig. 1.99 H Sanforized® cotton broadcloth in popular coat stylo. Handsome patterns. S, Mr L, XL sizes. Men’* Dept. LITTLE GIRLS’ CASUAL OXFORDS 344 reg. 4.99 Shiny black leather with Patenlite® polymeric vinyl vamps, red inserts. Crop* soles. 8%-4, C,D. Children’* Shorn PINCH-PLEATED DRAPERIES 99 Assorted colors and patterns in acetate chrome* spun or all-cotton. 45-, 63-, and 84-irt. lengths. Linen Dept, BOYS'V-NECK ORLON® SWEATERS 304 reg. Ml High-Mk Orion® .aery-lie in his favorite pullover style. Top Fall colors. Sizes S,M,L. . Boy’Dept. LITTLE BOYS’ BRENTJR. OXFORDS $5 reg. 6.99 Scuff • resistant black leather vyith rugged vinyl soles to take tough wear. Sizes3Mi-7,C,D. Children’* Shoe* GINGHAM CHECKS AND PfJUDS reg. 69c, 79c yd. Colorful, crease • resistant and yarn-dyed. Transitional plaids, checks in many colors. 36-in. Yard Good* Children's warm lined jackets .• 29T reg. 8.99 Smartly - style cotton poplin interlined with acetate quilted fo acrylic-Attached hoods. 3-6X Children’* Do ft. MISSES’WHITE WASHABLE SKIPS® r rsg. 2.99 Trimly-styled for casual wear. Fully - cushioned arch and insole. 5 to 10, 11N; 4 to 10,11M. Shoe Dept. FOAM MATTRESS, SPRING SET $59 rsg. $99.99 Four-inch foam Latex mattress. Woven striped ticking. Full and twin sizes. Limited quantities. Bedding PONTIAC MALL Super Specials Monday thru Friday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. - Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. - Sundays, 12 to 5 p.m. SIGNATURE® ELECTRIC DRYER *99 Two temperature and air-fluff control. Lint filter. 14-lb. Free 220 wiring on Detroit Edison lines. Appliance* VIBRA-BEAT0R UPRIGHTVACS 34 88 YOUR CHOICE reg. $39, $39.99 Both beat, sweep and suction • clean your rugs. Vibra-beat includes 8 attachments, rack. Appliance* 172 SQ. IN. SCREEN PORTABLE TV $87 Compact portable has full - sizes 19-in. screen. Keyed AGC offers steady reception, controls flutter. Televition ECONOMY PERCALE ■SSS FULL-SIZE SHEETS I” reg. 2.39 Smooth, durable cotton percale in full 81x108 flat style, ‘or Sanforized full-size fitted bottpm. Bedding MEN AND BOYS’ WHITE SKIPS® J44 rsg. 2.99 Suction - grip rubber soles, friction - proof counters. Men's and boys' sizes in N and M widths. Shoe Dept. TINY WORLD® CAR SEAT REDUCED $2 11 . reg. 13.99 Fits any car seat — front or back! Vinyl upholstery I over foam”1 padded steel frame; attached headrest. *Ward* lab-tetled urethane foam M ONTGOMERY WARD reg. 19,98 All transistorized for instant music. 45 RPM adapter. Two color combinations: red or blue with white. MuticDept. EARLY AMERICAN MAPLE STEREO *99 special Solid state chassis. AM/FM and FM stereo radio. 4 speakers. 4-speed turntable. Automatic shut-off. MuiicDept. JUMBO 12X12-IN. VINYL TILE 19 reg.29o King • size all - vinyl tile in smart, marble - like pattern. Four colors. Installs easily. Floor Covering* STYLE HOUSE® VINY FLOORING 188 Sq. Yd. reg. 2.99 sq. yd. ‘Resists scuffs, grease, harsh alkali. Rich 3 -dimensional patterns in Dutch tile and marble designs. 6-ft. Floor Covering* SOLID MAPLE STEP TABLE 19** reg. 14.99 Authentic Early American styling with turned spindle legs and shaped base. Warm, solid -maple. Furniture Dept. VENTILATED AUTO CUSHION special Ait-cooled comfort for driving. Wire construction in multi - colored plaid pattern. 16x32-in. Auto Acceuoriet MOSAIC TYPt CERAMIC TILE sheet reg. 69o Easy to install In bathroom or foyer' floor. Ready - set in 1^44 (Ini-' in.) tile sheet.' Salt -pepper. I Home Improvement* RIVERSIDE® 2-CYCLE OIL Qt. Cans 166 reg. 2.79 Specifically - designed for outboards and all other 2-cycle engines. Gives complete lubrication profoction. Automotive Supplie* ACOUSTICAL CEILING TILE 088 mP carton ‘ reg. 10.50 Reduce noise in your home and modernize at the same time. White ceiling tile, vinyl finish. q4 sq. ft. / Homo Improvement* STURDY OAK CAR-TOP CARRIER £44 reg. 9.45 Put luggage, bundles on top of car, keep inside roomy. Walnut-finished oak is weather-resistant. NylOn straps. Auto Acceiiorie* WHITE WOODEN TOILET SEAT 2^2 reg. 2.97 Pressure - molded and seamless for extra strength. Glossy white enamel finish resists chipping. ■Plumbing Supplie* BUILT-IN, POWER HUMIDIFIER 188 rag. 49.98 Humidifies 16,000 cu. ft. (up to eight rooms). Automatic humidistat, 24-V transformer, tubing and fittings. Heating Equipment WARDS FOLDING TUB ENCLOSURE $42 rag. 59.98 Best quality! Tempered safety glass. Folds flush for full access. Right or left opening. 5-ft. recess fob,' ’Plumbing Supplie* ;kQIL fkkiL UJ the General Federation of Women’s Clubs at a White House' tea Thursday that if “anyone can find a better word than ’beautification’ Pd rise up and call you blessed.” The First Lady said she and otjher White House associates have searched in vain for a better word'to better personify her national campaign to preserve and enhance the nation’s, natural beauty. Mothers' Club Hosts a Tea on Sunday Mrs. Milton Ricketts (left) and Mrs. W. D. Sexauer, both of Birmingham, admire a Spanish table setting at the 1Woman's National x Farm and Garden Association Pontiac \Mall Flower Stoto, Thursday. Mrs. AUon Deutser of'Lake Angelus puts the er«^ehot« b» The blue ribbon holder for this classically beautiful •arrangement final touch on her table arrangement in the “Oak- represents a Meadow Brook Theater mood. She went to-Mrs. Newton Skillman of Lake Angelus for her entry m “The land Festivities?’ class. The lovely formal setting took a blue ribbon for the elegant total effect. World Is Our Neighbor” class. The Mothers’ Club of Marian High School, Birmingham, will host their annual tea for faculty, parents and students, * * *:y: Scheduled for Sunday from 2-4 p.m., the event will also honor the first president of the club, Mrs. Sidney F. McKenna. * * W\ ' & Mrs. Laurence Carino’ Is chairman, assisted by Mesdames Gerard SulliVan, John Bode, Harold Pierce, W. H. Corrigan, 'James Osborne, Charles MacDonald, George Hedges and J. L. Naylon. 7 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER IS, 1907 J Frankfort SettingJ - for Their Vows i Pair Jokes Vows of Union lake Ohio Vows for Airman Base ik€»Urait Spring, Margaret Ellen Ferguson became the bride of Ralph Eugene May recently. Their parents are Mrs. Leamon Fergu-son of Mansfield Street, the late Mr. Ferguson and the RdlphE. Mays of Florence Street. The Startling New 1968 GENERAL ELECTRIC , Insta-View JSSSKPS. ^ Great TV Value PORTABLE Every table is constructed for sturdiness, plastic laminated on top for easy upkeep. The table legs are tipped with seifleveling nylon glides to prevent denting or mailing your floor. Chairs seats are T-nut constructed for greater strength and are handsomely upholstered in extra thick vinyl with a fabric leek. Famous Furniture Top Quality I Enjoy this TV TONIGHT! PAY ONLY ’P to ’5" FIRST 5 MONTHS BEDROOMS Sunday Breakfast BUFFET Every Sunday 9 A.M, *til Noon fit Bloomfield Hills WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD. DISCOVER WKOS UNIQUE SELECTION OF DIAMONDS Where Values Reign MAGNIFICENT CUT DIAMOND and Matching Wedding Band Choose this sparkling, beauty "Storfire" Diamond end matching 14K gold bond . .. For The Bride Who Loves a Ring of Distinction. Both For Only... *150 No Money Down — At Little A$ 2.00 Weekly 108 N. SAGINAW FE 3-7114 WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOWERS. BOATS;! ROLLER SKATES? - - - USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS. CALL 33&8181. Announcement has been made ti tbe marriage of Barbara L. Sterling, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Join L. Sterling of Williams Lake Road, and sou at Mr. and Mrs. Harold Miriam of Frankfort Tbe ceremoAy took place at the Elizabeth Sterling, aster of the bride, was maid of honor and the bridegroom*! brother, Spec. 4€ Andrew Mi-eham, was best man. The ucolyweds are residing in ML Pleasant where he is a senior at Central Michigan University. MRS. T. ANTHONY 0 I1! KEYPUNCH GIRLS ... get o language of computors. You can learn operation and programming of lira 111 Card Punch in jud 8 weeks! Class tin limited to 6. SATURDAY CLASS NOW FORMING "~N>J Mail ad for full information or call FI 3-7023 Pontiac Business Institute 18 W. Lawrence — Pontiac Pirate tend information about | ' inch Trminii ! obligation. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and lb*. Ronald K. Anthony of Airport Road. * * : The bride’s gown was Empire style with lace appliques covered with seed penis and sequins. Her floor length veil of Ohislan was secured by s matching lace crown. * * * iialpl Quick was of honor. Bridesmaids were Barbara Pyszkas, Carol Sposita, and Susan Gates. John Car-isle was best'man, David Young of (Tare, Arthur Py- J szka and David and Stephon Anthony ushered. Dec. 81 wedding vows are being planned for Phyllis Jean Patterson and Spec. 5, David E. Wilson USA of Fort Knox.Ky. Patents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Patterson of Berrien Springs and the Paul E. Wilsons of Palmer Street. The bride-elect is a student at Andrews University in Berrien Springs. Mr. and Mrs. George Hose of St. Glair Shores have announced the enga gem eat of their daughter, Deborah Lee to Seaman Appren. Mi-chael Dennis Pgtprson. He is the son. of the Charles M. Petersons of Newland Drive East, West Bloomfield Township, and *is currently stationed in South Carolina with the USN. Following a reception held at die First Federal Savings of Oakland, the new Mr. and Mrs. Airihouy left for a honeymoon in Canada and North- The couple left for a honey: moon Id Northern Michigan following a reception in St. Mary’s HalL WUL Pontiac Mall Optical 0 Hearing Aid Center Charm all eyes with your cheery, new china. Embroider it on towels, cloths, mats, 8 - to - Inch cross - stitch 2 ■hades, hive leek of gingham applique. Embroider in red, yellow, green or bine. Pattern M4: six Mh x 8-in. motifs. Thirty-five cents in coins for each pattern — add IS cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, The Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept., Box 181, Old Chelsea Station, New York, N.Y. 10811. Print Pattern Number, Name, Ad- Our Services Include PAY ONLY $1.00 FIRSTMONTH PAY ONLY $4.00 FOURTH MONTH PAY ONLY $2.00 SECOND MONTH PAY.ONLY $5.00 FIFTH MONTH PAY ONLY $3.00 THIRD MONTH • Hearing scientifically a Hearing instruments custom fitted from $75 Small Easy Terms on Balance Great Savings for the Thrifty Youth Styles in Furniture! All mokes ef hearing instruments serviced NEW 1987 Needlecraft Catalog — 200 knit, crochet fashions, embroidery, quilts, afghans, toys, gifts. Plus 2 free patterns. Send 25 cents. • Ear melds custom fitted LIVING ROOMS • Fresh batteries available for most aids Afghan lovers send for new Book of Prize Afghans—12 complete patterns to knit, crochet. Value! Only 50 cents. Nathan Lipson Save Now! Hearing Aid Audiologist mi ul is an fa star 12 Unique Quilt Patterns — Museum Quilt Book 2. 50 cents. Special! Quilt Book 1 — sixteen complete patterns. 50 cents. * , 682-1113 imdittonal good food EARLY AMERICAN CONTEMPORARY Formica top dresser and chest, framed minor arid handsome bed — all finished In warn authentic maple. rtiful long# tow sofa with harmonizing chair. Cloud foam cushions, complete selection of fabrics and No Monty Down Mts.C. M. Schrieber of Pontiac Received the August Free Gift! SEPTEMBER FREE SIFT A "SUPER-SUPREME QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS" and BOX SPRING B—8 A oJLa Mil) GROUP Hop into Exquisite Fornvs newest "In Group" Plaid" fiberfill bro, petticoat, pettiponts, brief and panty girdle. This mad mod print is a five-color tartan on nylon tricot that's ph-so swervy, vervy and full of mischief. You'll feel that way, too, in these good-fitting, good-looking coordinated derfashions. From the Designer Collection of Exquisite Form. FINE FURNITURE AND CUSTOM FITTED DRAPERIES AllTEN KSSS, 6055 DIXIE HWY.-CLARKSTON 625*2022 THE PONTLAC PRESS: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1967 Worn With Pride Generations Brides The Store Where Quality CounU FPED N^paufi ~CO. , Pontiac's OldejJ^WWelry Store 28 West Huron Street FE 2-7257 AND FOR A LIMITED TIME... Stlie* VPIdyful Plaid" gcii$ 1.Offiw 'f '' you-! 1 join "T'ii':|n Group" by Exquisite F^rm, Look in B»&ohd for details. Bra $4 <££ Parity Girdle $6 Pettipants $4 Petticoat $4 Brief $2.50 Q Two members of, the Roches-ter Junior Woman’s Club, (seated from left), Mrs. Donald Golding, Orchardale Drive and Mrs. James King, Dutton Road, bo$h Avon Pontiac Prats Photo Township, make selections from, Sak’s Fifth Avenue, Troy for their annual luncheon fashion show slated on Sept. 28 in the new Roch- I ester Elk’s Temple. Fall Styling Show Set and Conditioning PERMANENTS designed with simplicity and the contours of your face in mind. Hie couple who attend Central Michigan University are living in Shepherd. SEE OUR MEXICAN ROOM4 fctoaDure Cfjest 3231 Union lake Rd.—Between Commerce and Richardson Roads. 11-4, Fri. 'til 9 P.M. EM 3-0242 Closed Monday I Slate Fall Vows | . Mr. and Mrs. Robert Becb-ler of Adams Road, Oakland Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Karen Sue, to William Boyd Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Smith of Seward Street. A Nov. 11 wedding is planned. Trtitjrsph sflottf Me M-BhemfkM Hills ' Fall Enrollment s (Today) Friday, Sept. 15th — 5:30-8:00 (Tomorrow) Saturday, Sept. 16th — 10-2 and 1-3 Tap • Ballet • Toe • Baton • Modern Jazz JACKIE RAE 3109 West Huron 332-2128 DISTINCTIVE OCCASIONAL TABLES END TABLE Cherry Veneer Top, Side taiel* and Drawer Frenis SI "1 A Solid Pecan Legs and Mouldings I I VJ Burnished White Finish Base . ............119.50 SALON NE HERITAGE a llvtnd tradition In furniture STORAGE LAMP TABLE $19950 Dramatic were occasional tables from HERITAGE . designed for discriminating'tastes — priced la give you outstanding valuo. Elegant Louis XVI styling distinguished by light scaling, design sensitivity, lasting quality. Fifteen lovely stylos created for a refreshing, elegant Ieoh, Salome boldly combines richly grained pecan solids and figured cherry veneers, finished 1st dlstjisctive gray-broem tones, for vssriety, ekooee any tsMetsitk a Burnished White base delicately etripod Its cenlrasSingantique irwee. ] 8oothoaese Saloano tabloe and ether famous HERITAGE collections In our gttllsrioe.Xitfoy the esthetics assd function of authoritative design stud craftsanatsship. Cherry Veneer Tap, Door Pdnel, ond Side Panel. Solid Pecan Mouldlngi Burnished White Finish . SQUARE LAMP TABLE Cherry Mfnper Tab, Side Panels _ _ ond Drawer Front. / 91 I -N Solid Pecon Leg. ond Mouldlngi I I sJ Burnished White Finish Base ........ $125 INTERIOR DECORATING SERVICE l-:\ x FREE DELIVERY , TWIN COCKTAIL TABLE, Cherry Veneer Top and Base Solid Pecan Pedestal Burniihed,White Finish Base *75 Recent Bride Wears Chantilly for Wedding Wed Saturday in the First Baptist Church of Pontiac were Barbara Jean Boomer and Gary Lynn Kline. Their parents are the Rex Boomers of Voorheis Road, Mrs. Helen Kline of Liberty Street and John C. Kline Jr. of Birmingham. A sister of the bride, Mrs. William O. Pitcock, was matron of honor. Attendant was Sharon Bragan. * * * Chris Fitzgdrald served as best man, with groomsman John Jakust. Ushers were William 0. Pitcock and Richard Elshblz. The new Mrs. Kline chose a flow-length gown of peau with handclipped Chantilly lace. A high scoop neckline, Empire waist and A-line skirt with em Michigan honeymoon following a church parlors reception. Shallow Servers It you have old-fashioned soup >lates with shallow bowls plus rims, you’ll find these are perfect for serving fish stew. Have lots of crusty French bread as an accompaniment for the stew. When beating eggs for meringue, have them at room temperature, tree of every trace of the yolk, and beat in a deep medium sized bowl. FURNITURE I.M«INMr ir.AIOKHMO (MI AVI. ni-mh routine OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS GAS DRYER WITH WASH AND DRY CYCLE for at littla ag Little Joe't BARGAIN HOUSE Cantor Baldwin at Waltsn Taiapbana 332-M42 Opan Daily to 9 P.M. SatardayalAJLtof Pif. full cage back train were highlights of her gown. | jyj|| A forward lace orchid se- pill cured her bouffant veil. Eu- charis lilies with levy and k/f Stephanotis were carried. 1 * ★ ★ IMj The couple left for a north- • Gray Suode • Groan Sued# a PONTIAC DORIS HAYES <1968 TELEGRAPH at HURON ROCHESTER OAKLAND MALL 1 :*^*ie>MAT*C st\o ....... .....1 H You Don’t Buy From Us, Wo Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! 1 075 W. Huron St. Phone 334.9957 GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD TUB ENCLOSURE BEAUTIFY YOUR BATHROOM • Alum. Frame • Heavyweight • Frosted Glas ONLY $2495 IN PERSON AT Kmart FRIDAY and SATURDAY Only! THE POLAROID CAMERA OIRL . FRIDAY, Sept. 15 ... 6 P.M. to 9 P.M.-SATURDAY, Sept. 16, Noon to 6 P.M. To demonstrata the new "200" series of Polaroid Cameras for your convenience. Come in. Save on these Polaroid Specials Friday and Saturday, Sept. 15 and 16, 1967. VINYL ASBESTOS ' _ 9x9x1/16 TILE 'ir„ fit W|UP Plastic Wall ^ TILE C EA. 1UF ’ j CEILING TILE 12x12 plain ... 10',.. PAINT SPECIAL MAC - 0- LAC $C99 Magic Form. 99 If Gal. 12x12 acoustical 13,,. MAC-0-LAC LATEX M99 ■f Qal, 12x12 styrofoam . 15'.., ROYAL BOND OWENS CORNING a LATEX $095 FIBERGLAS 11 Be ENAMEL and CEILING ■! [■SQ. SEMI-GLOSS £ Gal. TILE (pebble white) ■ 9 FT. B—a ±, Ha* triplet len*, electric eye. 4 exposure settings and film speed settings and electronic shutter. Expensive features at an economical price. Color in 60 seconds, black and white in 10 seconds. Our Reg. $124.66 wm Carpet your kitchen! Use OZITE* Town *N* Terrace Carpet made with Vectre* fiber anyplace indoors or outdoors. Resists stains sad spotting. Hosts SPiClAl. SAU ARMSTRONG VINYL C0RL0N $995 ^ SQ. YD. COMPLETE LINE OF SUSPENDED CEILING TILE As Low As includes “T” Metal ALL FORMICA 24” VANITY INCLUDES SINK AND RIM Modern $^^95 Styling THE PON T1A C\,l ’ R lS S. FRIDAY* SEPTEMBER 15, 1967 POLAROID 220 COLOR PACK CAMERA Features double-window range finder focusing, duplet 1 lens and electric eye. Adapts to a number of Polaroid accessories. Color prints in 1 minute, black and white in 10 seconds. Our Reg. $79.88 mm POLAROID 250 COLOR PACK CAMERA | The Aery best Polaroid ha* to offer. Feature* electronic <' shutter, electric eye, Zeiss Ikon rangefinder focusing and ability to shoot black arid while picture* indoors without 2L flash in low light. You can't top this lor instant pictures. POLAROID 240 COLOR PACK CAMERA Features rangefinder focusing, electric eye exposure control-indoor or out—brushed chrome body and uses ell Polaroid accessories. Use a Polaroid self-timer to take your own picture. v °ur*eg $9788 \... $104.88 u/”” POLAROID 210 COLOR PACK CAMERA Feature image sizer focusing, sharp duplet lens, electric eye for exposure control and lightweight body. Color pictures in 60 seconds and black and white in 10 seconds. Our Reg. *44?7 1370 Wm m “Charge It” *S8” POLAROID SWINGER FILM 1.38 Aussie Smokes High-Risk Bv Science Service MELBOURNE - Australian cigarettes are much more dam serous than American, ,says a le by the Anti-Can-of Victoria.; irands of Australian may be delivering as as 40 per cent more tar and nicotine than is normal in the Council says. The investigation showed that only 10 out of M American brands tested exceeded the average tar content for the Australian sample of 3S I milligrams a cigarette. I Ten leading Australian brands ,of cigarettes were chosen for [the survey which Was made at ian independent research insti-Itute in America. CHICKERING PIANOS Our Reg. $63.88 Polaroid-Type 108 Color film for both the Polaroid “100” and “200” Series. P 3.61 Our Reg. $3.97 CHECK QUASHED — Police Judge Don-hid Bjertness of Billings, Mont., has refused this check written on a 75-pound squash. The Average Student—3 author, Dennis Catkins, said it was in protest to a parking meter system that is intolerable. Organize for Better Grades By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed. D. University of Southern California Hoping for better grades this year? My advice — keep organized ! Organizing knowledge is a key factor in learning new materials. It helps recall at test time, too! The sorest way for an average student to in-crease his studying efficiency, make higher scores on tests and insure himself of better grades is to keep his learning organized. Many average students plan to learn first and then NASON organize. Some merely rely r upon cramming with ho at- tempt at organization. No wonder they stay “average.” Consistent, conscientious application of the following suggestions should, raise any student out of the “just average” doldrums. Start ybur study by reading through the -table of contents for each course, observing the way in which the authors organize their material. Grasp Hie‘organization of each chapter before beginning your detailed study. This makes it possible to build up an orderly structure of toe materials in your mind toe first time through. When you have completed your book work quickly review the day’s lesson, preferably with the book closed. Glance through the organization of the upcoming chapter so that you can fit new ideas: presented by the teacher into their proper place as they are being presented. This makes for maximum learning during class time and is a real timesaver. Take a few minutes at least once a week to review what has been learned and what remains to be covered, and — most important — how It all fits together. * A CASE HISTORY Mary, a high school junior, made herself into a better than average history student in the following manner: She reviewed toe course to date at least once a week, thinking about what she had just studied and what was coming up next.v This was a little extra effort at first, hot by midsemester, Mary had made remarkable progress. Thinking about history with toe book closed until she could visualize toe happenings facilitated recall at test time, She learned at a faster pace and absorbed more in class. History now consumed less time and was more enjoyable — and she made A grades on most tests. What had started out as a few moments of added time organizing history worked so well that Mary almost automatically applied better organization to her other subjects as well. All of her grades improved. PIANO KEYS offer unequalled training to complete your youngster’s education. Opening many doors, the young pianist finds new avenues to happiness, popularity and achievement. With modern methods, it’e so easy Yo learn to play, and real fun besides! To be surt of the right start—choose Chickering* Superb tone, smart styling, easy action, important exclusive features, and reliability famous for over 100 years will sustain your child’s interest, and assure success. Come in, nee the newest Chickering today Large Selection Immediate Delivery BANK TERMS You Will Enjoy Shopping at Open Monday and Friday Nights ’til 9 1710 South Telegraph Road V* Mile S. of Orchard Lake Ave. Lots of Free Parking FE 4-0566 b-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1967 ELOW^t WSSlBli PRICES AND THEM , I’LL GIVE EVERY CUSTOMER THIS MAI KITCH E N TOOL SET ABSOLUTELY FREE! HOOVER Vacuum. NY Exhibit Draws Weekend Inventors (AdvirtlumanH NowMaiyWiar FALSE TEETH (AP) — Robert idea they think will improve a pair of shoes, thfrgs. They develop it and then feet long. they bring it beta in hope of shoes, of finding p manufacturer.” de across thej how many do connect? Sort of like “At last year’s show, manu- personai 'pontoon “skee- pos< venl used, he said, to slide across the surfaces of New Products Pygmies of Central Africa May Not Be Short Long j NEW YORK (UPI) — The some of their findings in the pygmies of Africa are one of British medical weekly, the the hig tourist draws of the con-j Lancet, tinent, but will travelers journey TWO CURRENT THEORIES to see them when they are six _ , , , . ' feet tall7 The group, headed by Dr. Pygmies six feet tall! Well,;^ L- “n1of ,W““I!g|on maybe not quite, but scientists'™?^*, ^ of “**«*»* are interested in why these lit-l^ si.Loul8' ,Mo;-‘°°k; tie people are so small a n d Pfevalent theories what can be done to help them Ith® PyS®*68 calls them ivented them. They’re .on exhibit here this week, at the third annual International Inventors and New Products Exposition. The show has drawn some 1,200 inventors from 23 countries with 15.0Q0 products, inventions, ideas and applications, ranging from digestible safety pins made of vegetable base that dissolve if swallowed to instant splints for unexpected bone breakings. Roger Shashoua, 27-year-okl . president of Patent Exhibits, Inc., of New York and originator of the exposition, estimated ' that 95 per cent of those participating in the show were inven- lecturers paid out about $6-5 million to buy various inventions and ideas,” be says. “This ydar we’re expecting the figure to hit 229 million.” Chymbur, a Santa Monica, Calif., waiter who uses his free time to invent^, says he spent four years developing his water shoes.' But the idea had been with,him since boyhood. Chymbur, who hopes to Interest a manufacturer in his invention, says the .water shoes are mud* of a buoyant material with louvers mounted Ifoneath it is convenient to empty it1. the surface to give fraction “so1 A machine that wUl punch out you’can slide along.” three dozen cookies or dough- Nad too far from Chymbur,« shaped and ready far foe Robert Iiv Thomas of East oven, is exfobtted by JMrles Point, Ga., is exhibiting a “per^ Downing of Janesville, Wfa sonal ashtray”—a device foatj permits a person to smoke with-' out having to look around for an ashtray. The device basically is a long tube into which a cigarette is inserted after being lit. As the cigarette is consumed its ashes M into the tube. When the smoker is done, a slide at the top of the tube is closed and thejdgarette puts itself out. The closed tube can be put info foe pocket and carried gee Pag* A7 about with its load of ashes WHICH . Way PONTIAC More I Cl MO! iuSo or ?AST*BTH 3§t r But It's Richer The principality of Monaco onj the French Riviera is only half; the size of New York’s Centraljcarpentere, "atoosT’anything, Park. 'Shashoua says, ‘‘who get an grow closer to normal heights. Anthropologists believe the One is that they were always small from the beginnings of their race, I.E. primordial | pygmies. The other is that they i re “a c h • n d r o p 1 a s t i c dwarfs,” meaning there is a deficiency which prevents them from attaining their real height. pygmies of eatral Africa are among the oldest iababitants of the continent and are racially distinct from the Negro tribes around them. They live deep in the rain forests and rely on hunting for food. They average about five feet in) The pygmies were not easy height and 100 pounds in weight’siibject to study. They are au-* for. healthy males and some- premely at home in the dense what less than that for females, forests and disappear into them Oddly enough foe tiny women-Ikedping in touch with each other folk are in jfreqt as by imitating bird and animal wives by other ^normal-sized ‘ caUs. tribes. ' I * * ■ + * * * The scientists said it was im- Recently four American and possible to discovei* whether one Italian scientist spent somejthey had eaten when they were time studying the pygmies in an rounded up for tests which might1 effort to determine Why theylhave been modified by the! don’t grow taller. They reported'presense of food in the stomach. I mm Exposition tors who never bad invented anything before in their lives ‘TTbey’rei plumbers, HEMOPEUNO 682-7440 2548 Elizabeth Lake Rd. — Behind The Mall — WALKIE TALKIE ELECTRIC ALL STANDARD S ZES 5 21” ADMIRAL TV. Beautiful Walnut Conaola, a brand now, out ot crate. Wes 219.95, a Now $tn. Large Capeeitiof, Whirlpool Wringer waihar. Brand new in eratas. Frew ML baaa. A give-away $191. DOORS - DOORS - DOORS ?-Ft. MAHOGANY FLUSH . . .....5.15 2 Ft, BIRCH FLUSH............7.94 S Ft. QRADE DOOR 20x24 LITE .... 19.44 3 Ft. MAHOGANY Bl FOLD UNIT..12.63 3 Ft. BIRCH Bl FOLD UNIT....15.75 2 Ft. WHITE PINE LOUVER.....10.43 CABINET AND DOOR HARDWARE MANY KINDS OF PRE-FINISHED PANELING CEILING TILE FORMIQA - FINISHING MATERIAL Pontiac Plywood Go. It ee. ft. deluxe 2-deer ftetpoM refrigerator in beautiful eappartena. Craft SALE SUNDAY 10 A.M. - 7 P.M. FRETTER'S PONTIAC FRETTER'S SOUTHFIELD S. Telegraph Rd., Y% Mile On Telegraph Road South of Orchard Lake Rd. Just South of 12 Mile Rd. 1480 BALDWIN AVE. FE 2-2543 Thjs Merehandtoi Available at FRETTER'S SWTHFIELD OHLYr What should you ask of a bottle of whiskey? We think you ought to ask for your money’s worth. And tous thatmeans three things. Taste that suits you. Quality you can be proud to serve your friends. And quality that never varies. Bottle to bottle. Year to year. k May De you’ve already found all this in one bottle. But if you have your doubts remember this: For the past 20 years" * Seagram’s 7 Crown has been the best-selling whiskeyin the nation. Last year alone l f it far outsold the f next two best-sellers combined/"' We haven’t built that kind of success by giving people less than the best. 1 Seagram’s 7 CroWit The Sure One $4.68 $2.96 $10.85 fragrant Distiller* Company, New York City, Btend-d Wbi«key. 86 Ptoof^GS^ Grain ’Neutifri"s^SST n Cod. N*. Ml CM. No. ,0*7 fgjjjs av.ll.M* .1 moil pilhlgi liquor ■* THE PONTIAC PRESS, FBJtPAY, SEPTEMBER 15, Ip67 ®=£ Now a tile that won't I cold! CHECK THESE FEATURES: i* Deluxe Aluminum Siding and Shutters A" Insulation Walls and Ceiling . ' ,, . .. k !#- Marble Window Sill$ u* Vi" Custom Drywall Birch Cabinets 3W? Formica Vanities CALL US NOW! FREE ESTIMATES and CONSULTATION COMPLETE FINANCING - LOW BANK RATES < with such features listed below: College Enrollment Pressures Easing their low average tuition rate of $240. 11 Easy access to the two-year^ LANSING (UPI) —The wave “The sharp increase in flh-i Nonetheless, moat have had of "ysf babies ’ that began rollments has passed,” says El-' to restrict their admissions in washing across college cam- liott G. Ballard, executive di- some fashion to keep from be- pusra 0V| years ago has so rector of the Michigan Coun-| ing inundated. , another factor * ‘^ “‘S'SS'hlSrel^pS'college, wJJteg According to official figures * * * thln irnnr will be merely magnified. Find- big birth rate Jumps in 1951, 1954 and 1955 will be felt, on college campuses ih 1969, | ri!l972 and 1974. And despite the fact that births have declined ! There will be 24 community with and increase of 244.3 per .colleges enrolling about 74,000 . sh£® cent—has grown the most since students mis rail as compared ^ WKC than they did in 1960. Bnt the fact remains enroll- 1 from *be Michigan Assoda-ments have not fattened as **®B 4 Oollegtate Registrars much in the hurt two years as j aM* Admissions Officers, there administrators thought they were I**>*®* students in 76 would in the desperate days Michigan colleges In 1940 When it looked like college seams would split by 1970. All told, there will be close * S’StreS^’ouK Kdmna-j "j* Slnfiii^st^S^Rt to 90 per. cent more students at mo. Four more are expected ®/" , n findin8 students to fit the state universities this fall to open within two years, bring-|the P,aces-, than in 1960, backed by 127.9 ing low-cost higher education Tbe sole difference may be Hi *“J- Be- into nearly evtaw area in Mlchi- “h* Michigan educators may mr- gan find their match-up program is not just desirable, but neces- . . .. . per cent mate state funds C«e of their facilities, ■ at 07 institutions; this year, lricula and prestige, they re- main the most popular and have sponged up most of the flood. ♦ ★ Yet public community cot •Private colleges—there are 54 of them in .Michigan—also have felt enrollemnt pinches and have grown as fast as their private funding Will permit. _ B . , 1MWW -—! 315,000 are expec- To narrow the embarrassing M at M lf all off^mpng„. gap between the ndpaber of] ^.lon students uncounted, freshman seats available and . , eager students to fOl them, the But th,s year’s , fell enroll- Michigan Department of Edu- ments are expected to be like leges have absorbed for the catfon undertook at the end of1881 year’s: modest; gains on top greater share. Their enroH-August to match school-lbss stu-nearly overwhelming ments soared 150.7 per centi Not until 1964 did community dents with student-shy schools iumPs that occurred in 1964 and from 1960-66; this fall it is esti- colleges surpass private ones in # 11965 when die post-World War mated that 43 per cent of first-1 enrollment; for the six-year •mow fn„nH ,UD„ , n/m II babies same of college age. time college students will enroll period, attendance at private * *•> hi community college,. have had only about 75 inquir- « is very likely thht this year, Robert Cahow, the execu- ,by _ext, ies from students, looking for as last, enrollments won’t be tive seertary of the Michigan ^"ere w,“ ". ' places to study. quite up to what was expected. Council of Community Col- !™,L._as “ucators^puzzung. places to study NO PUBLIC COMMENT quite up Only two stale universities— lege Administrators attrib- Vietnam veterans will soon be _ Eastern Michigan and Northern utes this to the “open door j v Ronald J. Jursa, who is di- Michigan — had more students policy” of the local, schools, recting the program for the de-'g^ow up last year than they: their wide range of academic partment declines public com- had planned and (budgeted for.' and vocational curricula, and ment about where the vacan-. —- ------------------i...-....t---------■ — I cies are. showing up for belated educa- r Give > NEW LIFE To Your Old HEARING AID With a ZENITH Customised Earmold PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL i HEARING AIO CENTER The Pontiac Mall Phone 682-1113 A SAVE *8°° FRIDAY & SATURDAY ISSN. Saginaw AUTOMATIC CLOCK RADIO WITH SNOOZE-ALARM Dependable GE wakes you with music, then touch button Soooz-Alarm allows you 10 minutes more rest (if you wish) before playing again. Attractively styled, with sweep second hand and fine Dynapower speaker. Comparable Value 22.951 NO DOWN PAYMENT-ONLY 50e WEEKLY! BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! He says, however that most are at private and community Colleges end practically none” at Michigan’! 11 itate- Dr. Ed Pfeu, director of special services for the department, in pa^t attributes the “study gap” 'to the fact that some kid apply to three or four schools and If they don’t get in, they quit trying and get a job. * * * “They don’t realize there are a lot of places where they could still go to college,” he says. TOO LATEjl Others say the match-up idea came too late; still others suggest it is because the available space is at institutions where prospective freshmen don't want -to go or simply can’t because of cost or transportation problems. "The draft has siphoned off s6me; tuition increases, Others. 'But all agree that no matter what the factors, enrollment pressures are easing. YOUR SOLUTION TO AIR POLLUTION... Protect your family and home from the mounting problems of dust, dirt and pollen. Install an ELECTRO-AIR electronic air cleaner ELCCTRC Contact; HAST HEATING & COOLING 580 Telegraph at Orchard Lake Rd. FE 8-9255 NOW Is the TIME to Get Your Home Ready for Winter! See us for all your repairing, remodeling, or new construction needs; We take pride in doing our work quickly and dependably. We also build new homes to suit YOUR TASTE j Ozite introduces the soli, warm, quiet tile that never needfs waxing or polishing... because carpet! Ozite Carpet Tiles are 12-inch squares of long-wearing Ozite Carpet, with a soft rubber back for extra tplushness. Use them in the kitchen,} rec-room, bath, den, nursery. Vectra fiber makes them amazingly stain-resjstant. And ',they're easy to vacuums clean. 16 colors. Simple to install; All colors • also available in broacBoom widths. Where will you use ndw Ozite Carpet Tiles? Use your imagination 1 V T mTL Ozite OfARPET HI TILES'made with OPIN MONDAY. FRIDAY* SATURDAY 'TIL 9* P.M. TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY HTIL 9:30 P.M. Don R#cina*a A-l CARPET SALES 4990 Dixfe Highway W” Phone 673-T297 )zit. is th. .xciusiv. iradaiiwrk of /.ctra Is th. ratisttrid trad Imark of B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. g&PTBft&BR 13, 1967 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIGS Sealed Proposal* Will be recelvw the Board of Education, School Oh of Wo City of Pontiac, MIoMten, 8:00 F.M, E.D.T., --- jH straa'ts ind alleys In on area bounded by Walton Boulevard, HlgtiwoodBoulevard, Balt Lina Railroad, and P~O.BN.. R*II-^M road. In accordance with the .following dance rapution adopted Iw the Pontiac City pared Commission, September 12, 1N7, being bach. Resolution No. (14. . Planni "By Comm. 0 Architectural. Mechanical and Electrical Trades 1................ Nona to Eastern Junior School. 25 , In atcor- spacifications pro- ComnTwood. wharea*', theCtty Ptajj ^"ySTiowIna _Lump Sum recommanded of the following described #raJ^^truction"”'worh,V' including ■■ Estates Subdivision. City *T'Kki. "“worr^"1”1 Sap, . Mi drawn between tM Ido i—,______________Q - . . ^ , „ of Lot » and the NW corner of tural Trades) only, at tr Lot M, and lying N. of a line drawn! chltact, *50 Norm Hunter between the NE corner of Lot 4 and mlnghem, Michigan on - PUN the NW corner of Ltd 371 tember 20, 1N7. i ehiirii street ivlno E of a line Two (2) complete sets of bidding drawn behmn th? SW corner of mental insisting of Architectural. Lot 11* and the NW corner of Let chanlcal and Electrical Trades Drawings 120 and lying W. of a line drawn and Speclflcaf between the SW coriwr of Lot MO bidder, and the NW corner of Lot 12* Deposits' on Sheffield Street lying E. of a line!follows: , drawn hetieeen the SW Corner Of. & W corner of Lot 15! per I Failing this, Williams said he’ll try to tack it to the admin- One Senate boot about 46 votes car mustered to support Lot U . General CohkfruCflon Work: 550:00 off Lot 16 of Lot 19 Street lying E. off • line the SW corner of 903 and tha NW cornar of Lot Una drawn between of Lot 192 and «ha cate, on -4orm* provided by the Archl teds, enclosed In *. sealed envelopes marked with the name of tha bldde I w. of a i Offices of i the SE corner of Lot 276 < and lying w. tween tha SE ------ ■ _ tha NE cornar of Lot 299. Tho alloy lying S. of a line drawn between the NE corner of Lot 45 and the NW corner of Lot 46 and lying N. of a line drawn from the SE corner of Lot 107 and tha SW corner of Lot 51 Tho alloy lying S. of a line drawn from tha NE cornar ft Lot 300 and tha NW corner of Lot 301 and lying N. of a Una drawn from tha SE Itlvared to the'Ot----- BP|....... I Education/, School District Administration BOildlng/ ^50 Wide Track Drive East, Pontiac, Michigan. • _ Tha Board of Education reserves tha right to relect any or all bids, to, award the contracts to other then the low bidder, to accept any or all alternates, to waive irregularities and/or Informalities and in general to make the award i§ any manner deemed. it, in Its sol discretion to be in the best, interest c the School District. - BOARD Of EDUCATION SW ( that i public hearing, notice be given in accordance With Section 2, Chapter XIII of the City Charter, as amended, of the proposed vacating. WASHINGTON UA — A new Johnson’s f^U for a 10 per cent! But Wiliams said battle is shaping up in Congress surcharge on corporate and h>*'trying and believes over the 27% per cent oil depie-! dividual income taxes—shpuld|he.^j tion allowance—a tax break de- the House eventually send that scribed as a sacred cow by its measure to the Senate, critics and a vital part of the REVISION national interest by its support-j ers. The provision, intact since itS igtrat|0n>8 tax revision package adoption by Congress , in 1926, whjcjj president Johnson prom-permits oil and gas producers to ^ to send t0 congress this deduct for tax purposes up tO| year 27% per cent of their gross in- ' come. Hie deduction cannot ex-j P*cka*®- ^esl8"ed t0 ceed half a producer’s net in-l ™°^y 80n,e tax breaks, ap-eoine parently won’t give Williams any encouragement, however. It’s unlikely to call for any change in the 27% per cent allowance which Johnson favored when be represented oil-producing Texas in Congress. Williams said he doesn’t want „ , tp eliminate the allowance but “As an optimist I always fig-1 merejy t0 reduce it and force ure I’m going to win until 2j0il and gas companies to pay lose,” Williams said in an inter- u„ ..nui their fair share Sen. John J. Williams of Delaware, senior Republican member of the Senate Finance Committee, said he plans to carry the ball again in hopes of reducing the allowance to 20 per cent over three years. . NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Account No. R1-W185-26 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by tbo undersiqned that on Tuesday, September above °d«cr?bed Shell'WSorvlc€?° 2&ClM»lnA'8L;' RochosiK* ,n ,h* ^^0"|ciCo«?" 2-Dw tei'rlno' l • WL21B61297089 WgL be held, 'der jof tha City Commission Saptamber 13, ,1967 -s* Olga Barkeley, City Clark Friday, Saptamber 15, 1697 ORDINANCE NO. 112 * Ordinance No. Ordinance) of the Township kdMgM es follows: To change from R-1 .to C-3; Lot • ' " Flat No. 14, of ea quarter, Section 34, T3N, R10E, Pontiac Township, Oakland County, Michigan, according M tha plat thereof recorded In Libor 21 of Plata, Page 46, Oakland County Records. la Ordinaries enacted by tha Town-Board of Pontiac Township, Oak-County, MKMpan, GRETA V. BLOCK NOflCE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT seesment heretofore made by the CHy Assessor tor Hit purpose of defraying that,, part of tha coat which the Commle-declded should be paid and borne East Sldt Park naet In the Commission CRy, on tho 2(th day D. 1*67 at I o'clock at which be given Dodge Coronal 2-Door beerli ----*— _________ may be made at 205 Main St., Rochester. Michigan, tha place of star ape. The undersigned reserves the rigid to bid. Dated: September 13, lt*7 National Bank of Detroit i A. J. Bailey, Asst. Cashier -----------15, 15, 1957 what he called their fair share vieW' . , _ i . of the tax load. His strategy will be to attach * * * his amendment to President The Senate defeated, 61 to 33, Williams’ attempt to tack his ' amendment to the 1963 tax reduction bill. A more .moderate change proposed by Sen. -William Proxmire, D-Wis., was rejected by a voice vote last April. 2,000 Greet Crippled Ship at Repair Slip NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Jaycee Confab No. Rt-31373-22 5 NORFOLK Va fUPIi — The Forrestal. PORTAGE