T/m Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 124 — NO. 277 ★★★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1966 -44 PAGES Home Edition 10® Area Braces for Snowfall 1-3 Inches Predicted; Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston said it received, nine dead from burns and four injured. Whidden Hospital in Everett said it received two dead and 10 injured. Chelsea Naval Hospital received one dead and two injured. One injured was taken to Chelsea Memorial Hospital. Police said at least two of the injured were not train passengers. One was a fireman, Nun-lio Iozza, and the other was a Navy corpsman, John Mann, 30, both overcome by smoke while helping to carry the dead and injured from the scene. Police said Mann, a passerby, made one trip to Chelsea Naval Hospital giving mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to Marine Sgt. David R. Cosgrove, 30, of Lynn, returned to the crash scene and was overcome. NEAR BOSTON Everett is an industrial community on the outskirts of Boston. Police said the driver of the fuel truck, Raymond Bouley, 29, of Billerica told them his brakes froze as he reached the crossing on Second Street and the Vehicle stalled. PONTIAC PLANS *- During 1966 ground was broken for Pontiac Motor Division’s new headquarters building. Checking a scale model of the multistory office structure are F. James McDonald, Pontiac works manager (left), and Charles H. Collins, plant engineer. The 300,000-square-foot structure, which will be four times as large as the current Administration Budding on Oakland Avenue, is expected to be ready for occupancy in the summer of 1968. Nearly 1,000 employes will move into the new building when it is completed. Pontiac GM Plants Top Record Payroll Freezing Rain Likely Michigan braced itself today for an expected heavy snowfall, the first of the winter. Thb U. S. Weather Bureau issued hazardous driving warnings, predicted snow ranging from 1 to 3 inches in southern sections, including the Pontiac area, and up to 8 inches in the Upper Peninsula, Freezing rain or rain mixed with snow was forecast for the P o n t i a c-Detroit area and southwest Lower Michigan. Strong winds of up to 30 miles per hour also were predicted. ★ ★ ★ men used their bare hands to extricate the passengers. A fireman said one door was blocked “because there was a body lying on the other side.” A ★ * Policeman Ralph DeVito said he and officer George Stewart “tried breaking the windows with our night sticks but that wouldn’t work. We couldn’t open the door because there was this guy trying to get out the door with his head stuck through the window. “We pushed him away but then there was so much smoke we couldn’t see.” Employe payrolls at the three General Motors plants in Pontiac rose to a record high of $33.8 million during 1966, an increase of $16 million over last year. ★ ★ ★ In addition, GM expenditures for services and goods pur-purchased from area companies topped the $100-million mark for the first time in history. ■* The year-end statement was released jointly today by Martin J. Caserio, GM vice president and general manager of GMC Track & Coach Division; John Z. DeLorean, GM vice president and general manager of Pontiac Motor Division; and Thomas F. Wieth-; orn, Fisher Body plant manager. Combined GM employment in Pontiac averaged 37,500 for the year, up 2,300 from 1965. ★ ★ ★ During the past year, local GM employes invested more than $8.1 million in U.S. Savings Bonds through payroll deduction. In addition, they were awarded $731,360 for ideas submitted through the GM Suggestion Plan, an increase of more than $279,000 oyer last year. ★ w ★ Employe contributions to the 1966 Pontiac United Fund totalled $617,747, compared to $483,256 a year ago. In addition, General Motors made a corporate gift of $165,000 to this yearns local campaign. In 1966, several new sales and production records were established at Pontiac area GM installations. On Jan. 2,1966, Pontiac Motor produced the one-millionth Tempest, just five years after its introduction. A new all-time monthly production record was set in June when 89,123 Pon-tiacs and Tempests were built. And, for the 1966 model year, Pontiac surpassed another milestone when 831,331 units were produced. * ★ ★ At GMC Truck & poach, a new single-order record was set during 1966 when the New York Transit Authority contracted for 682 air-conditioned buses, valued at $23 million. A second major order, placed by Greyhound Corp., called for 200 intercity buses worth $10 million. ★ ★ , ★ New plant construction in the Pontiac area during 1966 included Pontiac Motors’ an- nouncement of plans for a 280,-000 square foot manufacturing plant, and a new five-story administration building. ★ ★ ★ In September, Caserio, for- mer general manager of AC Spark Plug Division and rGen-eral Motors vice president, succeeded Calvin J. Werner as general manager of GMC Truck & Coach Division. Werner, a General Motors vice president, became general manager of Cadillac Motor Car Division. Pontiac has already received 23 inches of snow. Thirteen inches fell in November and 10 inches early this month. Only 23% inches fell in the area during the entire season last winter. TO LOW 30s Temperatures falling to the low 20s tonight will rise to the low 30s tomorrow. For the next five days, temperatures areexpectedto average near die normal high of 31 to 34 and low of 18 to 21. Minor day-to-day temperature changes will be indicated. Snow flumes totaling near one-half inch are predicted for tomorrow and again during the weekend. ★ ★ ★ A low of 17 and a light snow was recorded prior to 8 a. m. At 2 p.m., the mercury registered 27. LI’L ONES BURNED-OUT CAR - This is the interim* of Af> W'npMi* the burned-out Boston & Maine passenger train Mass. One fire official said most of the victims where 12 died in a fire early today following a were trapped in the train for 20 minutes until the collision with a stalled fuel oil truck in Everett, blaze was put out. (Other picture, page A-2.) Waterford Is Mopping Up the Water “It would go faster if it were .an eight instead of a six. Do you know anybody who’s eight?” Two working crews were expected to restore normalcy in the Waterford Township water supply system before going home today. A malfunction in the system early today caused several hot water pressure release valves to pop in homes, awakening the occupants who heard gushing water. ★ * ★ Despite the disorder, water s e r v i c e in the township was maintained, a spokesman said. At least 25 complaints were phoned in to the township police and fire departments and to the Detroit Edison Co* by affected citizens. Complaints ranged from broken water heaters, pipes and softeners to leaking water. Most of the calls originated from the Huron Gardens area in the southeastern part of the— township which borders Pontiac. A spokesman for the township water supply system said the trouble stemmed from a malfunctioning electrical switch which controlled the nine water pumps in operation last night. mm In Today's Press FREAK ACCIDENT—Three occupants of this automobile escaped injury today when a private plane landed on top of the car on the Baltimore-Washington Parkway in nearby Anne Arundel County, Md. The wheels of the Piper Colt crashed through the canvas top and came to rest in the back seat of the car. The car then went out of control and struck the side of a bridge. The two pilots were not injured. Huskies Romp l Northern cagers defeat f Central, 58-45 - PAGE | C-l. Road Project i City okays Moptcalm- | Oakland pact — PAGE Tight Money [ Home loan peak seen : near with easing indi-I cated - PAGE B-9. | Area News .......... A-4 ■ Astrology .......... C-4 | Bridge .............. 04 ) Crossword Puzzle ... D-9 Comics ......... ... C-4 Editorials ....... A-6 ! Markets ............ D-2 Obituaries ....... D-3 Sports ....... C-l-C-3 | Theaters .............C4 j TV-Radio Programs D-l | Women’s Pages B-l—B-4 Located at the system’s Tubbs Road facility, the switch was relaying a faulty signal to the pumps which, consequently, continued to operate when they should have stopped. DIRT ON SWITCH It was theorized that some dirt may have gotten on the electrical switch, which is about the size of a pin head. The whole township was under high pressure, said Alfred Beanblossom, an official of the water supply system, who shut down the pumps at 2 a.m. Pressure release valves should , mmm surpass all our ^ .very soon and “really tor of the Year award at the y - — He said that at presenl weather hazards kill between 1, 200 and 1,300 Americans, an cause more than 311 billion in agricultural said other economic losses every year. Some experiments, White in-- dicated, have already shown f capabilities of making forecasts .. , ------------ t- up to six days in advance. newsmen his support of U.S. [of u.S. policy in the war, plans But White and his colleagues | bombings in North Vietnam. > hearings on the subject. Ful- r j said that even with the help of I ' * * * j bright aides Said Tuesday they them fanned out over a wide American and Soviet weather- “Anyone who is an aggressor have no doubt he will call on area of western North Carolina eye satellites, only 20 per cent cannot be permitted to go scot .Secretary of Defense Robert S. and northwestern South Caroli- of the earth’s atmosphere is g-----— jjj na. 'adequately observed at present. banquet. Three Prisoners Escape in N.C. ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP)-Three men who broke out of Buncombe County Jail at gunpoint Tuesday night remained at large today. The search for! swinging” in a couple of months. He is scheduled to leave Jan. 4 for California. is impossible to avoid all damage” to residential areas dotted with military targets. The Pentagon response was to a story by Hairison E. Salisbury, an assistant managing editor of the New Yprk Times, who (reported from North Vietnam that he saw “block after block of utter desolation” in one town and learned of 89 civilian deaths in another. The implicit declaration by the U.S. officials that there is no Kennedy book dispute could end quietly now after Mrs. John F. Kennedy’s decision to withhold temporarily her suit to stop its publication, a family spokesman indicated today. * * * “I’m not going to guarantee it,” he said, “but much points to a resolution. There has been progress and I think things could well be resolved noiselessly and soon.” ★ * ★ Attorneys for Mrs. Kennedy and Harper & Row, publishers of William Manchester’s “the Death of a President,” an account of the Kennedy assassination, agreed Tuesday to put off hearings on her request for an injunction against the book until mid-January in expectation of reasonably quick settlement. WWW The parties, ordered to ap- Mean’Vhilelie plans to take itjreview of bombing policy pend-easy. “Let me show proper re- jug appeared certain to be chal-spect for my scar,” he said as henged soon after Congress con-he gingerly got into a limousine venes Jan. 10. for the short ride to the waiting Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., helicopter tor the trip home, i chairman of the Senate Foreign water running, adding that when thl book until Anril 1 °Look esa flat\«t Waterford Finds Water to Ford as Mains Break (Continued From Page One) r at a State Supreme Court ~ show cause hearing, said the arrangement would give them sufficient time for more discussion on passages to be trimmed from the 300,000-word text. Both sides characterized progress as steady.” IN HOSPITAL “That’s great,” said Manchester’s wife, Julia, learning of the decision. Manchester, recov-| postponed until after the holiday season. ;■■ i The project will consist of an underpound conduit originating at the transmission line at Ma-p^nds to defray the cost of wa-ple and the Grand Trunk West- ter mains in the township. ern Railroad and connecting to --------------------------- [the new substation on the south Iside of Brown east of Purdy. | i Construction is expected to New N-Blast by Red China Is Indicated WASHINGTON (AP) - US. ering in a hospital from a mild j monitors have picked up evi- ___ _ IMMa «a4 ; Jamaa A Drt/l PLirtACA nil. - School Project Planner Set (Continued From Page One) months for the initial work on the project. “First, they will develop a plan to utilize the maximum involvement of the people from the areas to be affected,” Whit- The two directors are to or- case of pneumonia, was not dence of a new Red Chinese nu-i available for comment |clear explosion sources said . e foe families in the enroll- today. No further lnformation Kment q( McConnell? Mrs. Kennedy and Harper & was avatiable immediately. Central and Wilson elementary .......... This would be the fifth Red Chinese nuclear test. The State Department had forecast a month ago that Red China soon would be setting off another nuclear blast. Row said in a statement that Manchester’s hospitalization Monday made’ it necessary to continue talks “over a longer period than was anticipated.” “We’re probably at a stage now where things depend more [on the doctors than the lawyers,’* the Kennedy spokesman said. “We just have to wait for the author, although well be U.S. officials said the blast had taken place at the Red Chinese proving grounds at Lop Nor, m Sinkiang Province. On Nov. 29 press officer Rob- toBctogTLt othT totoV for f J- McOosHy had saidI indie* next week or so.” |£*» P°intedif\a ne* *Iaat at that western Chinese test site. schools. Very early in the game the people will have a chance to think about and talk about the kind of educational program they’d like to have,” he said. The codirectors also are to sell the human resources center idea to community organizations. Their preliminary work is to result in a long-term study plan and a plan for funding the project, Whitmer noted. Harper & Row called the situation “hopeful” and indicated that an amicable settlement was thought possible soon. LATER PUBLICATION . The publisher also agri___ thought someone had left the ] foe statement not to bring out The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Hazardous driving warnings. Snow becoming mixed with or changing to freezing rain and rain this afternoon. High 30 to 34. Rain or freezing rain changing to snow tonight. Low 20 to 25. Thursday—Cloudy, snow flurries and colder. Chance of 1 to 3 inches of snow today, especially in northern portions. Winds easterly increasing to 15 to 30 miles this afternoon and becoming northeast to north late tonight. Friday’s outlook: Partly cloudy and cool. McCloskey said then the continuation of Chinese testy in the atmosphere would come in defiance of world opinion ex-. . sed by more than 100 nations, which have signed _the three-year-old Nuclear Test Treaty. The last Chinese nuclear test occurred Oct. 27, while Presi- free,” he said, adding that the McNamara and Secretary of bombings are aimed at military!State Dean Rusk for detailed targets. > I reports on the bombings. He said civilian casualties ofi The U.S. sources did say a such bombings are unfortunate I search is being made of govern-but asked, “Is there any place pnent intelligence information in the world where there are not concerning the bombings recivilians?” I ported by Salisbury. into about three inches of water. Lith Mrs. Kennedy on deletions * * * tin its 60,000-word extract of the Then, he said, he turned on text, the first installment of .dent Johnson was touring the the lights and saw some of his,which reaches newsstands Jan. Far East, furniture floating by him. He io. | in that test, the Chinese ,m.: Wind Vtloclly 15 Easterly Is Wednesday at 5:09 p.m. Weather: Partly sunn* I Escanaba 15 Gr. Rapid! 26I Houghton Tuesday's Temperature Chart i 23 -a Fort Worth 28 15 Jacksonville 33 21 Kansas City 'Evaded U.S. Radar' said pipes in his bathroom had burst, causing the flooding condition. Huron Gardens, an area bordered by Elizabeth Lake Road, M59, Voarheis and Telegraph, contains the oldest water lines in the township. Most of the [mains there were installed in >1928. [launched a nuclear-tipped mis-, .. ... 'sile which reportedly flew 400 to Pontiac Youth Hurt 600 and achieved an on- r UIIIIOL I UUIII I nuclear explosion. • II J A r L 14 was ® ^tow to tat*™*®- in Head'Un Lrastl iate-yield range and like the first III nvuu VII VIUJII :Chlnese explosion of a nuclear [device was rated at about the Red Spy Flights Allegedl Marooned Family Found 26 5 Phoenix 32 14 Pittsbur 55 42 St. Lou I Tampa This meeting was supposedly!! attended by attaches of the 1 North Korean Embassy and conducted by four officers of the 11 Soviet Ministry of Defense. || BETHLEHEM, Pa. (AP) - A Lehigh University professor, in a recently published book, says a nuclear-powered Soviet bomber may have made three unde- Soviet Ministry of Defense. || §an DIEGO, Calif, tected flights over U.S. territory * * * 1 _ a Coast Guard heli- -- 47two ^ears a?°’ “The Soviet officers disclosed I copter, searching for a 34 »i *n Washington, the Defense [that during the first week of I missing plane, brought HI’ Department said, however; that February 1964, a new Russian|| back the unexpected: a it had “no knowledge of any 1 bomber had flown over three I family of six who had such oenetration nor of any cirgiAffinoiiu imnnriant 01*000 of H knnn mnt.nnnA/1 (am** jane such penetration nor of any strategically important areas of II ■ateglHlii' * sP°*c^sman|the U.S. without being detected i| Ifltotel—’* " Carroll I said the story “just doesn’t by U.S. radar defense, wt-Lattc. n 1 make sense.” + y [writes. . , , , 1 “The Soviet officers," the if And a spokesman for the^ continueSt ..displayed re. | 35 J11 North American Defense Command at Colorado Springs, Colo., said the allegations made in the book “have no basis in cently taken aerial photographs II of specific objectives to prove jl that the planes had accom-j| , , _ , . . plished their mission of penetra- f ■ fact. To our knowledge, there I ^ have been no known or unknown overflights of our territory dur- OWN DETECTION ing or since 1964.” | The Soviets also claimed their I The story was told by John'new airplane had evaded their I Carroll in the book, “Secret[own radar detection in 23 of 25 I Electronic Espionage.” It says penetration missions over 10 1 the alleged flighty may have major Soviet cities, Carroll [I been made over San Francisco, states. Calif., New York, and Hawaii in | “Hiis plane was, they ex-[| 1964 with a payload equivalent.plained, a nuclear-powered[1 to a 30-megaton bomb and a j bomber with average speeds of “phantom instrument box" to;2,500 miles per hour and a top | ward off radar detection. speed of 3,500 miles per hour, i Carroll, an industrial engi- “It had a ceiling of 85,000 feet'! neering instructor, said he was,and the capability of remaining'! been marooned four days on an island after a storm wrecked their boat. The helicopter ferried Harold Carty of Chow-chilla, Calif., his wife and their four children, to a resort on the coast of Baja California yesterday. Coast Guardmen reported the family had been spotted by an Air Force search plane. The island is about 75 miles south of the village of San Felipe In Baja California. Planes were combing the area for a missing twin-engine, plane carrying San Francisco importer Richard Y. Dakin, seven members of his family and a crew of two. Waterford JCs Offer Aid in Scout Dispute The Waterford Township Junior Chamber of Commerce last night offered to enter the dispute between the United Fund and North Oakland County Girl Scout Council as a third party moderator. ★ * * 'We are hopeful that a meeting of Girl Scout and UF representatives will be scheduled as soon as possible so that differences can be resolved,” said Michael G. Patterson, president of the Waterford Jaycees. ★ * , * I “Our board of directors voted .unanimously to offer our services toward 'this goal,” he added. The Girl Scout Council leaves [the. UF program as of Saturday after a lengthy dispute over UF (supervision and requested com-SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) —jpliance with a UF study on the A 20 - year - old Pdntiac youth [power of the US. nuclear bomb was injured seriously shortly j dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, I after 9 this nfoming when his^ August, 1945. car and a truck collided head-on That was about the yield of on Walton Boulevard near Silver the initial Red Chinese nuclear “*1 Lake Road in Waterford Town- explosion Oct. 16, 1964. I ship. - --- --p -------------- I Hie victim, Robert Cushing of Call Me Joe I 52 Norton, was taken to Pontiac General Hospital. , --------------, ----- ... . ★ ★ ★ j Joachim Ludwig Schnitterbaum, needs and organization of the Driver of the truck was John a German immigrant, asked if agencies its supports. The coun-Kudray, 62, of 3521 Watkins he might change his name when cil will need about |70,000 to Lake, Waterford Township. Pon- he became a naturalized citizen, sustain activities in the coming tiac State Police are continuing He wanted his name to be year, according to Mrs. Elwyn their investigation. -Joe Ludwig Schnitterbaum. 'Tripp, council president. Road Section j chief of Staff Elected to Be Opened ! Of Pontiac Osteopathic NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow and rain mixed with snow Is forecast for the eastern third of the nation tonight. Colder temperatures are predicted for the midsection of ‘the country with ■ wanning trend in store for the northern and natytijllAtlangoCpa81 states. informed of the possible flights by a Korean expatriate in California who claims to be privy to the details of a 1964 meeting in Peking of the Red Chinese Mim istry of Defense. aloft without refueling” for as 11 The plane, which disking as 21 days. [| appeared on a flight to Carroll claims 20 years of ex-1 La Paz, Mexico, has been perience in electronics and says 1 missing nearly a week. spent three years re-l| searching and writing the book.!§^ The eastbound section ofi Square Lake Road between; Woodward and Opdyke is tentatively scheduled to open "to traffic tomorrow, the Michigan State Highway Department announced today. ' Construction of the six-lane divided highway from Telegraph to 1-75 began last December, and except for the one section, ; was opened in October. All traffic between Woodward and Opdyke has been carried on the westbound lanes daring construction. The opening of the new sec tion may be delayed by bad [.weather, according to a spokes-man for the highway department. |j Total cost of the project, including right-of-way, was nearly i$S million. A Lake Orion physician has been elected chief of staff at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital, Harry H. Whitlow, hospital adr ministrator, announced today. Dr. Gene W. Fredericks, 37, of 37 W. Flint, Lake Orion, will 1 serve a one-year term. He succeeds Dr. Ronald LePere. Other staff officers are Dr. Albert Stepamki, vice chairman; Dr. Samuel kawald, secretary; and Dr.1 William Crommett, treasurer. Dr. Fredericks, who resides^ at 157 Brookside, Oxford, with' hia wife and three , sons, is a graduate of the State University of Iowa, Des Moines College of Osteopathic Medicine. . He interned at Riverside Osteopathic Hospital, Trenton, and began private practice in Lake Orion in 1960. DR. GENE W. FREDERICKS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 88, ICBC Mao in Dilemma on Scorned leaders TOKYO (AP) — "Hie attitude of Communists toward any person win has made in his wprk should be one of persuasion in order to help Urn change and start/s^esh and not one of exdusiph, unless be hi incorrigible.’’^ Chinese Communist Chairman Mao The4ung made this statement in 1998. Today 98 yean later, Mao at 73 faces a dilemma*: Should he continue to try to persuade Ms former heir apparent, President Liu Shaochi, and Communist Pnrty Secretary Teng Hsiao-ping of the error of their ways? Or should he dismiss than as incorrigible and exclude them from the corridors of Chinese power. The white-haired Liu and the short, Napoleonic Teng were subjected Tuesday night to the scorn of 100,000 young Red Guards at a rally in Peking at which Liu was branded the “Khrushchev of China” and the “Boss of capitalism.” Wall newspapers in Peking disclosed that Liu and Teng abjectly confessed to anti-Mao sins before the party Central Committee last October, slightly more than two months after Mao had moved Defense Minister Lin Piao into Red China’ No. 2 spot and banished Liu to No. 8. QUESTION SINCERITY The Red Guards question the sincerity of the two men. Official organs have said they continue to resist the Mao-Lin purge. So the “persuasion" continues, its goal more and deeper self-criticism and slavish and unquestioning obedience to Mao and Lin Piao. The sins to which Teng confessed in October were of recent date, revolving chiefly around his incorrect direction of the cultural revolution purge in June and July, while Mao was out of Peking. Liu’s admitted mistakes go back to 1946. Their, number and seriousness raise the question: Was he forced cm each occasion to Indulge in self-criticism? Or has he, through control of the party majority, been able to defy Mao for two decades without being scratched? It appears that in 1946 he favored a coalition government with Chiang Kai-shek, and a long period of peace for China. The implication is that Mao did not and sparked the belligerent wing of the party which welcomed, if it did not encourage, tile breakdown of the talks over which the late U.S. Gen. George C. Marshall presided. OP INTEREST This bit of information will be of interest to American historians and politicans long at odds over whether the Communists plotted war while they talked peace. When all the facts are available, it may be seen that the United States got closer to success in the abortive coalition talks than anyone at the time realized. THE MUTTS CH0ICEI k FULL OF CHICKEN Perfect for any party tray,. and it's ready in minutes. 10 PLUMP IL PIECES FOR >1.69 RED mxt Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road TMs “mistake” by Liu Veal vent persons high hi the party being made during the time this I from disclosing — for the fist writer was in Yenan, the Ccen-ltime to a foreign newsman — munist cave capital In mctb-itat Liu was Mao’s designated west China. Yd this (fid net pie-'heir. 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THURSDAY Morning Be Here EARLY Tomorrow Morning for SIMMS Christmas Clearance ■mi Sapor Discounts in Every Department, On Every Counter, on All 3 Floors Bn Ran Whan Boon Span at 8 AS Thursday Hunting VALUES GALORE 1 IN EVERY DEPARTMENT SAVE on these DOOR-BUSTER VALUES Hf, of I Schick Double Edge Razor Blades 79c Volga, ganuin# Schick 'll* adja razor blodas d«a, gantl. »hovai. Drugs—Main floor This fomoue 3V4 Hour Solo is only at Simms and aa usual you are sotting extra discounts for this event . ..so plan to bo here Thursday morning with your friends end neighbors., .take a leisurely stroll through the store—picking up the advertised items—and keeping an nya out for the hundreds of un-advertised specials found ovorywhare in the stare. nights Rgsgrvsd to Limit all QuantHiss-AU prices suhjset ts stosks an hand. Sorry, no mail or phono orders at those low prices. All those specials for 3Vh hours only. PRICES SLASHED! TREM SAVINGS! ottortsd pictures. UmS X 57# 95c volua family i your favorite Cra Glaam tooth pasta. Drugs—Mein fleer Men’s Score Hair Groom Heir Spray 59s 1.00 Volga, 17-oz. irosof spray can of (uonat hair spray. Drugs—Mein fleer Hand and Body Lotion 77° 52.00 volgo, fragronrty tad hand and body Drugs—Main fleer 44* $1.00 value, your choice New Unfit Creme NO Mix Creme Rinse 44* $1.00 vatu*. Sex, Irenas Boys’ k Girls’ Size 2 Cowboy Outfits Choice of 2 Stylet Ladies’ Wool Dresses block vrMi front zipper. Sizes 10 to 20, 14V* to 2414. -Main Floor First Quality Ladies Chenille Robes I Poly Tub-Elaotno Ice Cream Freezer js£S? 10“ rff Makes 2 to 5 qte. HWmpoct IJI book inciuomo* — STORE OPEN THURSDAY 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 98 North Saginaw SIMMS"* I A—-4 • TIDE PONTIAC FEB98, WEDNESDAY, DBf.RMRER 28, i960 Residents Eye GOP Unit in Shelby Twp. SHELBY TOWNSHIP - Some residents here -long a stronghold of Democrats — are flexing their political muscles in an attempt to form a Republican party organization. Impetus for the move came last November when three knowns running as Republicans put up a race for the top township offices and one of them, Kirby Holmes, defeated longtime Democratic Supervisor Lorin Evans. 1%e other two, Thomas Pias-sa at m Brookside and Mrs. William Provencher of 3084 Lakeside, finished close enough to the winners to demand a recount, although the outcome was unchanged. They are currently forming foe nucleus of what they hope will be an enterprising and v getting group that will further! change Shelby’s political history. * ★ ★ Right now the drive is on for 11 money. The need is to pay legal and campaign expenses, and to organize sometime early next year, according to Mrs. Provencher, who is serving as the temporary secretary-treasurer. Piazza has the position of temporary chairman. ICE FUN—These youngsters trying out their new Christmas skates on Walled Lake yesterday observed the safety rules by staying close to shore. A short time later, in another section of the lake, a boy fell through the ice but was rescued by Novi policemen. The two skaters shown here are Barbara Roumay, 115 Arvida, and Terry Ifinkley, 122 Arvida, both of WaUed Lake. hare on the authenticity of figures used in a recent projection‘for the future of Oakland ; County. a The report, prepared by Dr. Albert J. Mayer, sociologist it Wayne State University, goes wrong particularly in its reflection of current end projected population, according to George Peek, city planner. The Mayer report shews Troy with a IMS population of 4I,5M and a forecast for Clarkston Clerk I Tells Deadline for Office Seekers CLARKSTON — Deadline for prospective candidates to file nominating petitions for village office is 4 p,m. Tuesday, according to Clerk Artemus M. Pappas. Petition blanks are available through Pappas. The primary election will be held Feb. 20, with foe general election to follow March 13. Positions to be filled are village president, clerk, treasurer, assessor and three trusteeships. * ★ * Petitions must be signed by at,least one per cent of the village’s voters. Kwintels to Play LAKE ORION - The Kwintels will play tot a New Year’s Eve dance from 8 p.m. to 12:3d a.m. Friday evening at the Boy’s Hut, 102 S. Broadway. It’s a girl-ask-boy dress-up affair, according to Debby Wheeler, Boy’s Hut president. Sewers Due in Oxford Area OXFORD — Sewers appear to be in the future for the village and township of Oxford. The Village Council last night confirmed a resolution adopted earlier by the Township Board in which the Oakland County Department of Public Works has been asked to make a study and recommendations for procedure. * ★ ★ Three separate s t u d i e s are asked: • The extension of the Paint Creek Arm of the proposed Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor along the creek to Lake Orion and Oxford. • The construction of a temporary disposal facility to be built and used by Lake Orion, Orion Township, Oxford and Oxford Township. • The construction of a temporary facility to serve Oxford and Oxford Township alone. ★ * * The engineering firm of Johnson and Anderson of Waterford Township is expected to begin preliminary work in the near future, according to village manager Robert Smalley. NOVI — In the wake near-drowning in Walled Lake yesterday, Police Chief Lee Begole has issued a warning to all would-be ice skaters and other sports enthusiasts. * ★ * 'Stay close to the shore,’’ he said, “and skate where you Farm Year in Review and Look Into Future ance rates and decide how seasonal workers and members of the fanner's own family should be covered. The preview of 1980 was MSU’s gigantic “Project ’80”— a look ahead to Michigan’s rural potential 14 years from now. About 100 scientists, with help. LANSING UR — It was a year in which Michigan fanners received a tax break, a preview — or warning — of what 1980 might be like, and-news of such startling developments t lag of cucumber patches. In 1966, as in most years, many farmers had reason to curse the weather, especially Western Michigan fruit growers. A spring frost cut cherry and peach porduction in half. ★ ★ ★ A drought hurt Northern Michigan producers of oats, grain corn and other crops. But statewide grain corn production reached 94.3 million bushels and a record average yield of 67 bushels an acre. FIELD PAVING The paving, which was tried In cucumber patches and potato fields, actually was laid down two feet under the soil. The asphalt layer doubled the soil’s water holding capacity and Michigan State University scientists said in September that this doubled the amount of food produced on the land in some trials. Tile tax break was ordered by foe 1966 Legislature. Lawmakers approved an exemption for agricultural equipment and instructed local property assessors to ignore growing trees, vines, bushes and other plants when assessing farm property. Farmers also won a one-year delay in minimum wage coverage and Workmen’s Compensation for farm hands. TRANSLATION TIME The delay on minimum wages was to give MSU’s Rural Manpower Center time to translate the wage Into piece work rates. The, delay on Workmen's com-pensation was to work out insur* Near-Tragedy Spurs Warning on Lake Ice know the ice is safe. Above all, don’t skate across the lake yet.” The near drowning occurred at 4:27 p.m. yesterday when 14-year-old David A. Hoffman, 230 Pontiac Trail, and his friend, Francis Peraino, 220 S. Pontiac Trail, both of WaUed Lake, were returning after a Rochester Okays Offer to Buy Land for Renewal Trom rural leaders, spent two years putting together more than 1,000 pages of detailed reports on various segments of agriculture. Some of their projections: Michigan will have only about half as many farms as at present, about one million fewer acres of cropland — but bigger crops. The state will have fewer farm laborers and fewer cows, but more horses and more horsepower — fh tractors and other machinery. The best selling items will be those that tickle the customer’: taste rather than those that merely fill his belly—less bread and potatoes and beans and more steak and ice cream and fancy salad. Weather cut the tart cherry crop from 120,000 tons in 1965 to 52,000 in 1966, the sweet cherry crop from 24,000 tons to 17,000 and the peach crop from 2.8 mil-Uon bushels to 1 million. Grape production dropped from 75,000 tons to 50,000. ROCHESTER - An offer of $18,232 to purchase 3% acres In the urban renewal area by Higbie Manufacturing Co. has beet) okayed by the councU and sent to Chicago for final approval. Hie land is adjacent to the Higbie plant which is situated on Water Street between Third and Fourth. Urban renewal director George Wilhelmi said plans are to use it for parking purposes at the present time. He reported foe offer exceeds foe appraised price. The village councU meeting last night was devoted largely to urban renewal projects with Wilhelmi giving a summary report pf what the council might expect in the coming year. * * *------------ The newly formed urban renewal rent supplement committee, organized to disperse some $7,500 of village funds over the next five years, was introduced. FAMILY AID Wilhelmi said nine to 12 families would probably qualify for such aid in order to find standard housing in other areas. The director reported on foe first house moving from the renewal area — it’s being relocated on Lounsbury, a half block south of Parkdale. He said the home would be sold at cost and at about $8,500 witT first priority going to retired couples from the renewal rea. In other business the council instructed the attorney to draw a contract with Texaco to provide water and sewer services foiMhe latter’s proposed service station outside the village limits. The attorney was asked to enclose with the contract a statement regarding the current impasse in building such facilities, and that the matter would have to be further discussed with the township. * ★ * A public hearing on a request from Robert and Richard Ten-niswood to rezone two lots on Quarter for duplex dwellings was set for Jan. 23. Reports from planning consultants and the planning commission recommended denial, according to William Sinclair, village manager. ; trip across the lake to the grocery store. The thin ice In foe channel, about 600 feet from shore, suddenly cracked and David fell through into the icy waters. A passing motorist, Mrs. Glen Harmon, 119 Lee d, Walled Lake, reportedly saw the inci-and stopped Patrolman Robert Starnes and his partner Sgt. Richard Faulkner. PUSHES BOARD Starnes crawled across the thin, cracking ice pushing a 10-foot long board in front of him to where David was struggling in the water. Faulkner and an nnidenti-(fled man helped pull the two back to shore. “The boy was lucky,” said Begole. “He had been warned by his parents not to cross foe lake. “Later on, the lake will be solid _ enough to drive a car across, but that channel is foe last to freeze and was only covered with about a quarter-inch of ice.” Troy City Planner Disputes Report on Growth Projections TROY- Some doubt baa been! 71,1M W0-ri,m by MM Wixom Hunting New Constable WIXOM - The city is still looking for a new constable and an additional patrolman for the police department. The constable would replace Harry Wimmer who served in that capacity for about two years. He resigned “for personal reasons” two weeks ago. ★ ★ ★ Police Chief D’ArCy Young is also seeking a patrolman to add to his four-man staff. The City Council has already given its approval for a fifth man. Avon Resident Earns Doctorate AVON TOWNSHIP - David H. S o u 1 e, 2152 Avoncrest, received a doctorate in education during Wayne State University’s ‘ n t e r commencement exer- Dr. Soule, a specialist in industrial education, received his bachelor’s degree from Eastern Michigan University in 1954. by MM. Peek says Troy’s actual population, based oh a 41.8 per cent increase over I960 census figures, lies closer to 28,4M. ★ * * He further stated that foe city could wen foO short of Detroit regional planning projection of 38,009 by 1970, let alone Mayer’s 70,1M. BUILDING SLOW Tight money and a slowdown in residential construction held iTToy to about 700 new bones this year, according to assessor Ernest Reacfake. Even that number, he points out, is np some 420 from laot year. Mayer reports that of all the people in the tri-county area (who earn oyer $25,000 a year, some 36.5 per cent live in Oakland County. ★ ■ , * Peek is not inclined to disagree, but he quiekly points out that those people still make up only 6 per cent of Oakland’s over-all population, as shown in a survey prepared by the Center for Urban Studies at foe University of Michigan. INCOME BLOCK That same survey shows foe biggest block of income to be between $10,000 and $14,999 and that’s where about 28 per cent of foe residents fit. Peek also notes that 51 per cent of foe people living in Oakland County work here, according to foe report. “This is a figure which would seem to dispell to some extent foe idea of a core city and bedroom communities,” he reported. The same report shows that about 28 per cent do go to Detroit to work and foe rest are scattered around in other communities. * * * In another breakdown, Peek reports that the figures for Troy show 6,500 single famjUy homes and about 1,500 multiple units with 24,700 of Troy’s population living in single residential homes and 3,750 in apartments. 4 Utica Teens Are Charged HHchhiktr Robbed, Hit With Tire Iron UTICA (UPI)-Police charged four Utica teen-agers yeeterday with robbing a hitchhiker and then beating him with a tire iron. ★ * * John T. Cummings, 17, of Utica, was reported in fair condition today at the Selfridge Air Force Base Hospital. He told pel Ice font four youths, all w e e r I a g Mack jackets, stele Ms coat, hat and watch and then beat Mm when he told them he had no money. He was dumped in a snowbank and was found by a passing motorist. Police said the coat, watch and hat were recovered when foe four youths were ar- They were arraigned by Harrison Township Justice Edmund Schmidt All pleaded innocent. * ★ * The four were identified as Samuel Breeding, 17, Roger Mu-lasky, 17, Gary Hannaford, 18, and John Breeding, 19. Bond was set at $10,000 for each on foe robbery charge and $5,000 on foe assault charges. School Board Post Is Filled BRANDON TOWNSHIP -Leary Wood, 565 E. Ridge, has been elevated to foe presidency * of foe Brandon Community Schools Board of Education. Formerly vice president, he was named to the new position following foe death fois month of Dale J. Fortin, former president. ★ * ★ Ronald Sutton, A member of foe board, has been named vice president succeeding Wood. ★ * -k A new appointment to the board is expected at the Jan. 9 meeting, according to Schools Supt. Henry Versnick. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare was established on April 11, 1953, with Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby as foe Department’s first Secretary. Church Schedules Special Service INDEPENDENCE T O W N-SHIP - Walton Missionary Baptist Church, 6013 Sashabaw, will conduct a special 'New Year’s Eve all-night singing and watch service Saturday night. ........ The service, featuring south- Apples, however, remained I eastern Michigan singing talent, steady at 16 million bushels, the will begin at 8, according to I. 6 million bushel pear crop and Rev- Feed Walden, pastor. II, 000 ton plum crop were signi- Slated to perform at foe serv* ficantly larger than the 1965 \ ice are the Happy Three Trio crops. The grain corn yield of bushels an acre was nearly six bushels above the 1960-64 average. Total production was up nearly 4 -million bushels from 1965, when widespread drought hurt the crop. of Detroit, foe Brown and Walker Quartet of Flint, Mary Smith-ling of Lake Orion and Brother Bob Gregory and Singers of Waterford Township. Local talent yriso will perform. The service is open to foe public, said Rev. Walden. Your Saving Years Are Now! Channel your savings into several types of savings accounts . .. shorter term and long range planning will give you the greatest returns on your money. m% 4V4% $10,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rale of 514% when held for a period of 12 months. $5,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Earn the rate of 5% when held for a period of 9 months. m% $2,500 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES .L*™ Ike rate of 4J4%' when held for • period of 6 months. PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS This rale is compounded and paid quarterly; which gives an annual yield of 4-.318 YOUR SAVINGS ACCOUNT IS INSURED TO $15,000.00 By an Agency of the U.S. Government Every Dollar You Save Is Matched With Accidental Life Insurance (Up to $10,000.00) DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - CL AR KSTON - DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER-WALLED LAKE-LAKE ORION-MILFORD THE PONTIAC ftlESS, WEDNESDAY, /DECEMBER 28, 1968 A—a Misses' and Half Sizes DRESS CLEARANCE Reg. 11.00 and 12.00 Reg. 18.00 and 20.00 $700 $]2oo Reg. 15.00 and 16.00 Reg. 25.00 $900 $1400 Reg. 30.00 $18oo l-> 2-, and 3-Piece styles in cocktail, evening, afternoon, and all occasion dresses. Large selection of colors and styles. Sizes 8 to 20 and 12V5* to 2416. Use your charge account. Dresses . Third Floor Clearance of Famous Brands WINTER COATS Rff Trim Coal* Rag. 69.99 $48“ Fur Trim Coats Reg. 99.00 • $68“ fvr Trim end Suede Reg. 140.00-145.00 *118°° Fur Trim Coats Reg. 155.00, *128“ Fur Trim Cools * Rag. 165.00- 175.00 GO oo o o Suede Coats Reg. 110.00 *88“ Fur Trim Suede Coats Reg. 130.00 $108“ Untrimmed Coats Reg. 79.99 *58“ Untrfmmed Cbots Reg. 85.00 - 89.99 *68“ Untrimmed Coats Reg. 49.99 • 59.99 o o CO CO -to- Coats ... Third Floor Important Reductions on Current Styles from Our Regular Stock n Choose from these Famous Brands Life Stride Air Step Joyce DeRoose Town Square Risque HIA oil eII $690 - *1490 ■mm Formerly Priced From $]0°° *18°° Fine pumps, high and mid heels, smart flats ... famous brand names you know and love f . . now at Wonderful savings. Come early for best selection. Buy several pairs and save, save, savel Women's Shoes . . Street Floor CHILDREN'S SHOES noo $4?0 Clearance of Nationally Advertised Children's Shoes. Styles for Boys or Girls. Choose from a wide assortment of styles and colors. Use your . charge account. Children's Shoes Second- Floor Kentfield Permanent Press DRESS SHIRTS Reg. 4.00 $io°° mmmim |.arge Selection MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS Reg. 4.50 $000 and 5-00 O Choose from wash and wear flannels, wash and wear broadcloth, or 65% Dacron, 35% Cotton blend permanent press shirts. Choice ol ivy or regular collars in smart plaids or stripes. Sizes S • M -1 - XL Use your Charge account. Men's Wear Street Floor Infants' Thermal BLANKET SLEEPERS Reg. 3.99 $000 Feather light for weightless comfort. Locks cold out, and warm air In. Full length nylon zipper. Sizes S-M-l-XL Infants* Second Floor 16-Dress JUMBO STORAGE BAG 2-Piece Colonial CUSHION SET Two-piece colonial rocker cushion set lit brown, red and green. Add the decorator touch to your home. January FOUNDATION SALE! ForHlfit RJ FORMFIT ROGERS DRESS-SHAPER FAVORITE gives you a '’naturally” lovelier look. In soft cotton broadcloth, with spun Dacron lined cups for subtle shaping. Great bra, great buy! Stock up now! White. 32-36A; 32-38B and C. Style 0544. Reg. 6.00 FORMFIT ROGERS PUTS "PRETTY” IN A PANTY GIRDLE and gives you the long, unbroken line you want under today’s fashions. Sleek shaping Lycra powemet molds and holds with firm,- lightweight control. The lace front panel makes sure your tummy keeps its place. White. P-S-M-L (Dress Sizes: 7-15; 8-16). Style 0879. Reg. 10.00 FORMFIT ROGERS SKIPPIES LONG LEG PANTIE shapes your shape with control plus comfort. 2" waistband gives you that all-important smooth midriff line and the zipper closing makes it a joy to get in and out of. In firming nylon powepiet with a lacy front panel, elastic back and side panels. White. S-M-L-XL-XXL. Style 0889. TRIC-O-LASTIC LACE WITH STRETCH ALL AROUNOt $3.19 B, C cupe D cup $3.49 Reg. $4 Value Reg. $440 Value TRIC-O-LASTIC LACE THREE-QUARTER LENGTH CONCERTINA GIRDLES WITH "ACTION-INSERT” $6.49—$8.99 Reg. $8-$11 Value WARNER’S The smooth getaway stafts with the smooth shaping of Delilah™ pantie. North, south, east, west—your figure looks best in this panelled, no-nonsense slimming, (panel: alt nylon; elastic: nylon-Lycra* spandex) S545, White, S-M-L Reg. $9. Now $6.99. Also: S544 Delilah™ girdle. Reg. $8. Now$5.99. S546, Delilah™ long leg. Reg. $11. Now $8.99. No clue is the first rule in robbery—and in covering up any figure deficiency. So get yourself a Little Fibber™ bra. You’ll never look padded-just naturally shapely-in fiberfill cupsL (polyester-nylon-cotton) S22-46, White, *B, C. Reg. $3. Now $2.49. foundations .2nd Floor § THE PONTIAC PRESS M West Huron Street *" Pontiac, Michigan 48066 • ' WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 28. 1966 Md MM Director 9smrsmf Close Look Taken at OEO Lease We are in hearty agreement with members of the City Commission in their critical attitude toward the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO). The opposition flared at last week’s commission meeting when the City’s continuation of the lease for local administrative space for OEO came up for discussion. A two-year extension of the lease, which had cost the municipality $10,000 for the current year, had been requested. Instead, the City Fathers voted a six-month renewal, reflecting the consensus that the antipoverty program represented unwarranted Federal invasion of local responsibility wasteful of taxpayers’ money. From the outset of OEO, The Press, while sympathetic with0 its objectives, has shared this view and has editorialized in that vein. We believe that if the programs of local agencies fall short of OEO goals they could be broadened or new ones initiated at less cost to taxpayers than the establishment of another Federal bu-reacraey. Another consideration that inclined the commission toward the short-term lease extension was that the new Congress might well take an analytical look at some of the Administration’s grandiose social programs and restructure them along more practical lines. Meanwhile, it felt, the City’s strained fiscal situation argued against commitment of city funds beyond the immediate future. The realistic attitude of the commissioners is most reassuring and further evidence that Pontiac’s government is in capable hands. Let’s Write ‘Finis’ to Kennedy Book Squabble The airing of the controversy between Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy and William Manchester, author of the book “Death of a President,” has reflected little credit on either, while pushing an onlooking public to the brink of boredom. For her part, Mrs. Kennedy, after commissioning a reputable author to write a definitive account of her husband’s assassination seems to have arrogated to herself the prerogative of historical hindsight. The author, on the other hand, appears to have deviated from his agreement to submit the manuscript to the Kennedy family before publication — an agreement that hardly enhances his stature as a historian. The coloration of the issue, like so many others involving human relations, is gray—neither black nor white—and as such precludes settlement on any basis other than compromise. It is to be hoped that such resolution is speedily agreed to and the regrettable happening given suitable burial. ★ By way of a footnote Mrs. Kennedy, unfortunately, stands to be the loser in the embroilment that publicized her efforts to suppress certain passages in the forthcoming book. Expurgation of the offending matter will serve ofily to whet the appetite of a morbid public eager to savor it in the bootleg form in which it is likely to emerge. Bureaucracy Proves Bane of British Railroads Not long ago, a foremost American railroad authority visited Great Britain to study the transportation problems of that country—a country where most of the transport system was taken over by the government nearly 20 years ago. Among other things, he reported that “Britain’s transportation problems have become so bad that even the most objective description of them sounds exaggerated.” Frequently cited as the No. 1 problem is the breakdown of internal morale —one of saddest casualties of political intervention. Rail managers, seeking to do a good job, find themselves squeezed between political administrators above and the transport unions below. ★ w In short, the history of na- Powell’s Pride By JOHN BECKLER WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Adam Clayton Powell’s pride appears to be in greater danger than his seat in Congress from the challenge being readied to bar him from the House when Congress convenes Jan. 10. Even if he is denied the right to be sworn in with his 434 colleagues — as seems most likely — there is almost no chance he will actually be excluded from membership at that time and his Harlem district declared vacant. Not since the Civil War, when three border state representatives were expelled for treason, has a member been kicked out of Congress. In 1900 a polygamous member-elect from Utah was denied a seat and in 1919 a member charged with favoring Germany in World War I was excluded, but eventually seated when his district twice reelected him. . And that is about the extent to which Congress has used its power to judge the fitness of its members. What is expected to happen Jan. 10 is that Powell will be asked to stand aside until a special committee investigates the case against him and makes a recommendation. That’s what was done in the case of the much-married Mormon, and Rep. Lionel Van Deerlin, D-Calif., who plans to make thef Jan. 10 challenge, says he is thinking of following the same course. t i o n a 1 i z e d transportation in Great Britain should make every American look with new respect on the fundamental soundness of our own rail system. In the United States, the railroads are self-supporting enterprises that contribute hundreds, of millions of dollars every year in taxes to Federal and local governments. They maintain payrolls, running into billions of dollars. Under the remorseless demands of (Competition, they work unceasingly to provide the kinds and quantities of equipment that can best serve the needs of shippers. ★ ★ ★ American railroads are subject to public regulation in every phase of their operation. But instead of be-7ng~a"national liability, they are "an indispensable national asset. in Prime Peril It could take six months or a year for such a committee to complete its work. Meantime Powell would be legally a member of the 90th Congress, entitled to his $30,000-a-year salary, his office staff and his free mailing privileges. All he would lose is his right to vote. If the committee should recommend that Powell be barred, approval by the House would cut off his salary and vacate his seat. But by that time Powell may have purged himself of the contempt of court in New York that is largely responsible for his current difficulties. ■k k * Because history, tradition and precedent all tend to blunt the effectiveness of the challenge to Powell’s seat, some of his opponents also plan to try to take away his chairmanship of the education and labor committee. MAJORITY NEEDED This could be accomplished by a majority of the Democratic members at their caucus Jan. 9. Rep. Sam Gibbons, D-Fla., who led the fight to reduce Powell’s powers as chairman last session, is planning the strategy for having him ousted. Powell’s preference for lolling in the sun in the Bahamas instead of facing the subcommittee’s questioning will be used to support the charge that he is unfit to continue as chairman. (Jtmtl Marlow It an vacation) ) Voice of the People: Back To Normal David Lawrence Says: Clergy’s Viet Letter Inexcusable WASHINGTON - Pacifism 1 theoretically may be tolerated as freedom of speech, but sheer ignorance of what happens in a bombing raid is inexcusable. Thus, twelve n a t ion a 1 c h u r c hmen, j without knowledge ofl the facts, de-" nounced — in LAWRENCE a letter addressed Monday to President Johnson — the military forces of the United States for having killed civilians in Hanoi, the capital of North Vietnam. The churchmen request the President to halt the bombing and make peace without any prior commitment by the Vietcong or the North Vietnamese. They also condemn, in effect, as unmoral the right of the American military forces to defend themselves against the enemy by bombing supply centers where some civilians may be killed. ★ * W Many thousands ffl American and South Vietnamese soldiers have been killed, and there have been wanton, in: humane and vicious attacks on people in hotels and in private homes in Saigon as the Communist guerrillas have waged a savage war. DISREGARDED But all this apparently is disregarded by the clergymen, who ittsist it is only the American pilots who must be humane and avoid any bombing whenever some civilians happen to be near a supply of guns that are later to be used to kill Americans. any way to distinguish between military or nonmilitary persons on the ground. Plenty of warnings have been given for civilians to withdraw from the area. If they remain, they must take the risk of being hurt. This is becoming the strangest war in history. To give aid and comfort to the enemy used to be called treason. Today it is described as righteous protest. ★ * ★ The American people are constantly being urged to ignore all the sacrifices that have been made for a moral principle — to repel the aggression of those who would enslave a helpless nation. ★ * + There are clergymen in America who evidently think that Communist commanders are humane, that their forces in Vietnam didn’t violate the Christmas truce this year or last year and that they never kill any civilians in their raids, skirmishes and midnight assaults in South Vietnam. This is an example of what has been called the “valor of ignorance." (Copyright, lMt. Publisher! Newspaper Syndicate) Bob Cpnsidine Says: Chiang Move Could Lose the Literary Pirate Vote Military t a r g e t s, to be sure, are always vulnerable, and it is customary for civilians to be evacuated from such areas during any fighting. So it seems strange that 12 churchmen now are accusing their own government of deliberate acts of inhumanity. The Defense Department is, in effect, criticized in the churchmen’s letter for trying to explain the complex problems involved in attempting to carry out bombing operations without hurting civilians. k k ★ The department, for instance, said that some civilian damage is especially hard to avoid when the “North Vietnamese deliberately emplace their air-defense sites, their dispersed petroleum, oil and lubricant sites, their radar and other military facilities in populated areas, and indeed sometimes on the roofs of government buildings.” REAL QUESTION The real question is whether there is in modern warfare Verbal Orchids Mrs. Robert Ross of 1061 Voorjieis; 94th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Garvey „ of Walled Lake; 54th wedding anniversary. NEW YORK - If C h i a n g Kai-shek dictates that publishers on Taiwan will not be permitted to steal William Manchester’s un-c u t Kennedy book, there are going to be a lot of outraged liter-ary pirates over there. C h i a n g will blow the pirate vote in the next election. CONSIDINE A number of nations which adhere scrupulously to pacts and conventions of all kinds assume the most cavalier attitude toward copy-righted literary material. These nations are not necessarily our enemies, though the Soviet Union and Com-munist China rank high among copyright scofflaws. Otherwise friendly publishers in Egypt, Turkey and even Venezuela filch from our literary stores whatever pleases their fancy. In a rare burst of conscience the Soivet Union once offered to pay Ernest Hemingway for books of his it had systematically stolen over the years and reprinted for its own profits. Hemingway said he would accept payment only if the Russians remimbuseid every other author they’d been stealing from. That might have broken the Kremlin’s bank, so nothing came of the wayward stroke of conscience. No. 1 BOOK In 1945 the number one book on China’s best seller list was “Within Four Seas, All Are Neighbors," by Wendel WiU-kie. It did very well in this country, too, under its original title, “One World.” Number two on the list was “I Bombed and Destroyed by Fire the Great Eastern Fire,” by Capt. Ted Lawson, one of the heroes of the Doolittle raid. In this country it was called “Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo,” I had had something to do with preparing Ted’s took for him, so it was interesting to meet the people who' stole it. Ran into them at a party in Chungking and found both of them quite charming. Two publishers had pirated Ted’s book and both reported that their competitive editions were selling very well. “My book is doing better than his,” the Chinese lady publisher told me, nodding at her rival. ^qie was stupid enough to waitSintil he could get hold of the Random House hard cover edition. I stole my text as it appeared from week to week in Colliers.” She seemed chagrined that I didn’t congratulate her very warmly. ‘Enjoyable Recreation Provided at City ’ As a Pontiac resident for forty years but never having played golf until retirement,! I was unaware how much good our tax money is doing at Pontiac’s municipal golf course. Now, a senior citisen enjoying free green fees, I wish to express my appreciation and gratitude; ★ ★ ★ As one who formerly scoffed at golfers, I am sincere when I recommend the game to any retiree as wonderful recreation providing the opportunity to meet old friends and mage new ones. I must also mention the' friendly golf course employes whose cheerfulness adds so much in making this recreation more enjoyable. JOHN K; PONUSHIS 180 E. IROQUOIS Assistance With Car Was Appreciated’ Two men from the Waterford water department helped me get my car home even though they were busy. It’s nice to find people who don’t just wajtch when others need help. s SANDRA PURSLEY WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Commissioner Wood States His Position I was present at the Commission meeting on Dec. 20. The Pontiac Press of Dec. 21 mentioned every commissioner except myself. To inform the public of my position on the poverty program—I voted for it with reservations, feeling that the other townships of Oakland County should share in paying the 8800 per month office rent charge. I asked City Manager Warren at the meeting if any effort by Mr. McNeeley had been made along this line and was informed that none had been made. Unless more money is available to the City at the end of the six months period I will vote against further extension. ★ ★ ★ While vacationing in San Francisco I visited the South-gate Shopping Center in Hayward, California, built by Mr. A. Alfred Taubman and another center under construction at Concord, California, and reported my enthusiasm for both projects to the City Commission on my return. No mention has been made of my report to the Commission in The Pontiac Press, but Commissioner Hudson had a front-page report. ★ ★ ★ I am taking this opportunity to give the people of Pontiac information which The' Pontiac Press failed to report. WESLEY J. WOOD CITY COMMISSIONER, DISTRICT NO. 6 (Editor’s Note: It was an oversight in both cases on our part in leaving your name out of the story. We apologize.) ‘Capable Teacher Gets Show on the Road’ One of the community’s finest teachers, Miss Patty Looman, Is a speech, discussion, reasoning, debate and play production teacher at Waterford-Kettering High School. She is also the encouraging sponsor of dramatics club and Thespians and directs any variety show or talent assemblies put on by Kettering students. We respect her talent, initiative and ability to “get tilt show on the road.” SUE BOOKER STAGEMASTER AND THESPIAN Compares Sentences Given Two Citizens What is the price for a school child? One of our bad boys stole a statue in Russia valued at $333, He got five years of hard labor. In our area one of our girls killed two school children. For this she gets only two years probation. This tells us why we have trouble with our young people. ★ ★ ★ I hope Judge Beer comes to my neighborhood when election time comes. I wonder what he will say in this community. BURNELL FRASER UNION LAKE Question and Answer How long have commercial airlines had scheduled around-the-world flights? JUST CURIOUS REPLY Pan American began regular global air service in June, 1947. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Costly Outlay Nashville Banner Back in 1945 starry-eyed representatives of 46 world powers met in San Francisco to establish the United Nations. The purpose was “to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war.” Since then the United States has pumped 156 billion tax dollars into the organization in an effort to achieve that noble goal. That amounts to more than $750 per man, woman and child in this country. That’s enough to pay off nearly half the national debt. It would be sufficient to pay all the federal government’s operating expenses (including veterans’ pensions and Social Security benefits) for a full year with some $20 billion left over for “incidentals!" Including the so-called “War on Poverty." k k k And what hafowe gotten? T w e n t y-one^Vears have p a s s e/d. But, unfortunately, there has not be$i a single day of peace. The years have been marked by many conflicts including Korea, and now, Vietnam. American fighting men are deployed over a big part of the world — some fighting — some waiting for a possible enemy strike. Our defense plants are working o v e r 11 m e, turning out armaments whiph cost taxpayers upwards of $45 billion a year. * ★ * New York City teas U.N. headquarters city—Is cluttered by satraps and attaches large and small, with appurtenances of rank and diplomatic immunity showing. For as security authorities have emphasized, with particular reference to Communist delegations, the presence of unscreened personnel opens wide the gate to espionage operations within the ranks of the organization, itself. „ These disturbing facts reflect the failure of the U.N. as a peace-keeping outfit — its incapacity to substitute reason for armed combat in the settlement of international disputes. Instead, it has sqrved as a forum ’for dissension, widening the breach between nations — a veritable Tower of Babel where divergent opinions confound the issue of world peace. Its penchant for ducking its prjknary responsibility for keeping the peace, Its preoccupation with trivia in no way related to its avowed mission, is as amazing as the fact that we put up with it. It was looking the other way when the Reds sacked Cuba, later served as a collection agency to raise “educational” t funds for Castro's so-called institutions of higher learning. Right now, as war blazes in the Far East, delegates to the U.N. are debating the merits of international birth control! Meanwhile, they express high hopes in last week’s successful negotiation of a non-military pact in the celestial reaches of space. If this is to be its sole achievement, U.S. taxpayers hSve paid a dear price for non-aggression in the void. k k k As we said before, $150 billion is a lot of moolah just to keep the peace on Mars or the Moon. 7, THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1966 A-~7 L SHEET SALE IRS Tax Forms African King Held Prisoner MASERU, Lesotho (AP)„ -The prime minister of the world’s second youngest nation put his king under house arrest at midnight Tuesday after months of feuding over their respective powers. ^ Prime Minister Leabua Jonathan ordered King Moshoeshoe II confined to his palace in Maseru following a day of disorder in which six persons were killed and more than 100 arrested. The dead included a police inspector. •' • ★ , * Jonathan, Lesotho's premier chief, and Moshoeshoe have been disputing the division of political powers made when Lesotho, formerly Basutoland, gained Its independence from Britain Oct. 4. llie tiny African nation has an w*a of 11,718 square miles and a population of about 880,000 and is surrounded by South Africa. BAD NEWS — Former UJS. Sen. Barry Goldwater was informed of his mother’s death in Phoenix, Ariz., after landing at Honolulu Airport yesterday. The former presidential candidates eyes brimmed with tears as he read a note telling him of the emergency travel arrangements made to get him back to the U.S. mainland within minutes of his arrival in Hawaii. The most trusted name in fine quality sheets for generations ... 72x108" or twin fit, reg. 3.19—florals, stripes, dots Brighten your bedroom with these crisp modern designs. Choose from "Solo Stripes," "Rose Romance" or "Polka Dot" motifs. Finest cotton muslin. Many colors, patterns. 42x36" pillowcase ........S.-.. ..: 79c 81*108" or full-fitted ...w,.t......2.99 2.69 63x99" regular 1.99 white sheets of finest cotton muslin Fine quality bleached white muslirr sheets with a wide JW hem and sides reinforced for extra long wear. Now is I the time to stock your linen closet. Hurry! I e Jm 72x108" or twin fit, 1.99 81x108" or full fit, 2.19 42x36 case .........49« Odds 4 to 1 Taxpayer Will Get Good News Washable calico chenille bedspread Twin or Ml size in tufted hi baby cotton chenille with ^ fill shag cuff. Many colors. fc| Sr*““- OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 Open New Year’s Eve to 6 p.m. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Unlikely as it sounds, the odds are four to one you will be receiving good news from the Internal Revenue Service next week. The IRS has begun mailing 1966 federal income tax forms and instructions to 65 million Americans. Nearly four times as many taxpayers will be entitled to refunds as will owe additional payments. But the knowledge that 34 million taxpayers are putting in for refunds isn’t likely to ease the pain for the nine million who owe more money. About one taxpayer in five will wait until the last minute before filing a return. This year, the last minute will be midnight Monday, April 17. ★ ★ ★ Since the April 15 filing deadline falls on a Saturday, IRS officials are giving late filers an extra two days. SEVEN-PAGE SURPRISE About 43 million taxpayers will receive the same two-page Form 1040 they filled out last year, and 22 million will receive the so-called “short form’’ 1040A, a small punch card. But 60,000 taxpayers will receive a seven-page surprise in the mail — an experimental new tax form designated 1040Q. The 1040Q is in the form of a questionnaire, and IRS Commissioner Sheldon S. Cohen says it is simpler than the other forms. ★ ★ * The 60,000 “highly representative” taxpayers who will receive it were chosen at random in Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas and Wyoming. MAY BE OFFERED -If enough of new form, it may be offered to all taxpayers next year. The tax rate for 1966 was the same as the year before. There were only a few minor changes on the 1966 tax forms because there were only a few changes in the tax law. Softest foam flaka pillows, regular price, 2.99 each 2 »« $5 21>t27" Guaranteed' washable! Softest pillow yet . . •. firm for healthful sleep. Cotton sateen cover. Vinyl plastic folding doors are lightweight, convenient 2.44 32x80" doors in a choice of white or beige. Ail hardware included. Use 2 for center door closing. Plastic covers for chairs a'nd sofas you just wipe clean 1.00 «h 42" chair cover or 84" sofa cover in sturdy vinyl with heat-sealed seams. Wipes clean easily. Big 79c to 1.00 values! Zippered pillow .protectors 2 f°r *1 2i*27" Zips on and off your pillow with ease Protects new pillows . . . makes old pillow look like new. You’ll sleep tight in daylight with room-darkening shade 1.00 •Tinted white vinyl shades will wipe clean in a wink! Spring tension wooden rollers. Buy several! Washable mattress pads have slight irregularities 1.99 tw|b Bleached white cotton, machine washable, can be tumble dried. Full sise mattress pad .2.99 Plastic mattress covers— hospital tested safeguard 1.29 Full or twin. 100% pure virgin yinyl. Dust- and waterproof, non-allergenic. Zipper close. Save! 24x45" miracle fiber throw rugs Durable throw rugs are ^ * % reversible for double £ * the wear. Washable. 4fc O FEDERAL DEPT. STORES DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON MAINS Patch print quilts add that fashionably “homey” touch 4.99 8°x84" Closely quilted cotton percale, cotton filled. All first quality! A choice of popular shades. Thermal woven blankets, have soft brushed finish 5.00 72x9°" Lowest price ever on this quality washable blanket. Cel I-1 ike weave lets it breathe. Shop how, save! Extra largt size 30x50" area rug or 24x60" runnei 1.77 Choose 30x50" area rug or 24x60" runner in hi-lo loop cotton pile. No-skid latex beck. Solid decorator colors. Save! Urge 22x44” no-pucker border Cannon towels 2 far *1 22x44" Extra weight, extra size and extra absorbent. Solid colors, double cotton terry. Savings! *' A—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 28, 1066 Pact for Montcalm-Oakland Work OK'd bids Feb. I for the intersec-! vide for a $1.8-million revenue Uon reconstruction. City commisstoners last night of the intersection work at $8,-1 Warren reported that the high-. Aba last Bight, ai ordi-approved a $79,530 contract withOM with the funds poming|way department plans to take nmee was iatnAMed to pr» r Z. I ki<4« VUk • Ia» IwtMMaa.f ttHa fne a €1 LmiiIHab mvmm the Michigan State Highway De- from the city’s gas and weight partment for reconstruction of tag funds, the Montcalm-Oakland intersect BALDWIN TRAFFIC „ .. . . . ..1 The city manager said some- However, city officials mdi-1 '. * , . ... cated that once the work slated ^ h8Ve to Jt ***** for this summer was completed, tbe next six months to take to that unit. Cass and Oakland would become care of the difficult problem of MEETING TODAY Baldwin traffic. In other business, the com- major trunk sewers, mission received formal notice! Final action is expected next from the county of the trans- week. The commission’s approver of Pontiac Municipal Airport jal would permit making an application to the State Municipal Finance Commission for the .Construction Co. of Detroit and referred for study and recom-$31,556 by Dale E. Cook Coo-i struction Co., were received on the range work. The bids were - Discontinued Stylet and colors in HUSH-PUPPIES CASUALS® •REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE one-way problem with southbound Baldwin traffic. The intersection work cads n for construction of several islands to channel traffic at that location, according to C3ty Manager Joseph A. Warren. Oakland is to become one-way north, while Cass is to become one-way south. Southbound Baldwin traffic will be forced to cross Oakland to Allison in order to continue southward. Warren put the city’s share BIT MOW IflW now in effect! Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson warned Oakland businessmen and Allison residents that they might look forward to having to find somewhere else beside the street to park Warren said details of the|totter’S (*»y to issue bonds, transfer remain to be worked * * * lout and he was to meet today A report was received last with county representatives. In night on bids received for coo-exchange for the airport, thelstraction of a new police pistol city is to receive two downtown range in the public safety build-properties owned by Oakland ing. County. | Two bids, $23,409 by Askenazy NO MONEY DOWN ... NO PAYMKNTS UNTIL '«7 BOUNCING BABY - It’s not the Flying Tiger come to life, but one of the Fresno (Calif.) Zoo’s four playful tiger cubs springing from a fence into a portrait with his siblings. The cubs, all 6 months old, were raised in the Fresno Zoo and are headed for Bremen in West Germany. N. Viets May Allow More U.S. Newsmen .IPUy si WASHINGTON (UPI-TCiere ported he personally observed workers' was speculation today that Ha-1 damage reputedly caused by; noi may further relax its policy 17 g L~“u"-gj| HR Talks Continue With Employes 2 - Year Agreements Being Worked Out Negotiations are (Smtinuing with two municipal employe groups on respective two-year working agreements, City Manager Joseph A. Warren reported last night. Warren told the City Commission that talks are continuing with the Pontiac Police Officers Association and the Pontiac Municipal Employes Association. The commission last night approved a working agreement with Local 100, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes. Essentially, the Local 100 agreement is the same as has been in effect since 1950, according to city officials. ★ * * Nicholas Santiwan, personnel director, reported only two changes in the proposed agreement. One of these changes, details of which are still to be worked out, is a union security clause whereby nonunion members would pay a service charge in lieu of monthly dues. WAGE PACKAGE Negotiations on the working agreements continue after settlement was recently reached on a wage package worth $527,000 for four groups representing city DETROIT (AP) — Mr. and Mrs. Carvel J. Mounce got a letter from Vietnam Tuesday from their son, Spec. 4 Barry M. Mounce. Their son said he was in combat, but he hadn’t killed anyone and he was glad. He didn’t want to MU, he said. #’ A Less than two hours earlier, the Defense Department had notified the Mounees that their son had been Mlled in action. The Defense Department said that another Michigan man, Spec. 4 Richard G. Wormdahl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Wormdahl of Ypsilanti, was also Mlled in action in Vietnam. against admitting American newsmen in hopes of propagandizing U.S. bombings of North Vietnam. I The commission, in separate | action, formally approved the i wage settlement last night. I Several commissioners Salisbury is one of only two; warned, however, that the wage U.S. bombing raids in civilian areas in communities in the Hanoi area. A U.S. official said today he American newsmen who h-a Ve;hikes heightened the city’s fiscal would not be surprised if North I received visas from North Viet-j crisis and local voters might be Call FE 5-9452 26400 W. Eight Mila Rd. 1 Vi Milo West of Telegraph Birminqhar Royal Oak iham-Southfield I CL 7-2711 I CH MIDI Vietnam loosened its restrictions on admitting American newsmen, but he refused to comment on whether Hanoi’s motive might be to discredit the United Sttaes. Such speculation has been rife since Sunday in reaction to a New York Times correspondent’s dispatches reporting U.S. bombing raids in the North hit nonmilitary i targets, including civilian hous-| ing. Harrison E. Salisbury, Times; 1 assistant managing editor, re-. About 50 American newsmen have secured passports valid for travel to North Vietnam from the U.S. State Department. prepared to do something to increase the city’s revenue. The commissioners warned that drastic cutbacks would be necessary if new revenue is not secured. Two State 61s Killed in Viet The commission, i slill other business, received ■ report on the city’s 1MB tree plaiting program. Some 15$ | trees were planted at a total -coot of $SAM» budgeted from I1 the capital improvement fund. A public hearing was set for I Jan. 3 on necessity for construction of a sanitary sewer in Durant, Pershing to Engle-’ wood. Total cost was estimated at $14,930 with $7,18 assessed and the city’s share totaling $5,216. US. to Increase Food to Schools WASHINGTON (UPI) - The government p 1 a n s to substantially increase its donations of food to school lunch programs during the last half of the ctar-rent school year. Agriculture Secretary Orville L. Freeman said yesterday he hoped the increased support would avert any further hike in school lunch prices. Men's !’« ^6W 6" HURRY AS QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED Women's ?£ now 5" SHOE STORE Opan Monday and Friday Until 9 Serving With Quality Footwear Sinea 1910 SIX DAYS OILY! MILLER S 30th ANNUAL PRE-INVENTORY SALE Quality Furniture at LOWEST PRICES Living Room, Bedroom, Dining Room, Dinettes, Chairs, Tables, Lamps, Mirrors, Pictures, plus Many More Items. Priced to sell before January 1st. Many pieces are one of a kind so shop early for best selection. Three floors of Modern, Colonial and Traditional Furnishings. Free Parking Lot off Oakland Along Clark St. Open Evening» Monday and Friday FURNITURE 144 Oakland Ave. TO ALL OMR foe* * teal /Ut&Awu derviny you! LUMBER & HARDWARE 111 OAKLAND AVE., PONTIAC - PHONE FE 4-1504 WKC HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 108 N. SAGINAW—FE 3-7114 • Brilliant 265-sq. inch COLOR TV • Magnificent Stereo FM-AM Radio • Exclusive Micromatic Record Player Give your family this magnificent All-in-One stereo combination and enjoy all of the spectacular color programs. Magnavox gives youi • Quick Pictures in just 12 seconds • Automatic Color makes pictures appear instantly, perfectly • Npw Cf|romotone adds depth and beautyi to pictures that are half-, again as bright as most otjiers • Plus the splendor of Magnavox solid-state (tubeless) stereo FM-AM radio and phonograph. INCLUDES $ZQC EVERYTHING Q /J No down poyment required U p To 3 Years To Pay SEE WKC's LARGEST' SELECTION OF -MAGNAVOX COLOR TELEVISION Guaranteed New Year's Delivery "In Time For Rose Bowl Viewing" 3-IN-l COLOR "STEREO THEATRE" Includes Everything—Delivery,- Installation, 90 Days' Home. Service and One Full Year Parts Warranty OTHER MAGNAVOX COLOR TELEVISION FROM 398.50 i TUB PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1968 HURRY IN FOR BIG SAVINGS ON SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY SmSHESl ik.____ M ONTGOMERY WARD Every pair brand new, first quality! Serve yourself-te make yeur selection easier, we’ve grouped these shoes by sine for this sale! Buy two pairs for the price of one! Net every size in each style or color, but great buys for all! lust say "Charge it”! WOMEN’S, TEENS’ SHOES FOR ALL OCCASIONS SPECIAL! DAYTIME SHOE CROUP Now, get all the extra pairs you want at half price! Pumps, ties, straps, slings, new rounded toes and every heel height! Smooth or grained leathers, suedes* calfs, combinations I Colors and blacks. SPECIAL! DRESSY SHOE GROUP Here’s your chance to buy those special occasion shoes and save half! Exciting selection of new styles and colors, leathers and fabrics, including suedes, soft leathers, kidskins, many more! SPECIAL! CASUAL SHOE GROUP Ydu can't have too many pairs of casuals and flats, so pick them up now at terrific savings I Soft brushed pigskins, suedes, smooth or grained leathers! Tiny heels, crepe soles, thongs, demi-boots! BOYS' Father sued E shoes 499 TO 5»* school i / nylon , SHOES Ijssar ?3t4 SAVE 1/3 ON THESE SHOES CHECK THESE SHOE BUTS FOR MEN BIG SAVINGS FOR THE CHILDREN ■VS MM SIFTHUMi WARDS POWERHOUSE LITTLE GIRLS’ DRESSY SPECIAL PURCHASE STUM im UIMBSM CUSHIONED, 6-INCH DRESSY - RED YOUNG MISS ASSORTED STYLES DRESS MEN'S WORK PATENT PATENT Children SHOES ' BOOTS' SHOES LEATHER LEATHER Slippers 12“ REG. 19.99 8“ 999 REG. 13.99 444 REG. 6.99 344 REG. 5.99 to 6.99 1 Ponte Mall is YY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.Mi TO <>:<>(> I'M. URDAY 9s30 A.M. TO ‘Mlri P,M. f 12 M)()Y TO 5 I'.M. • 682-'l>MO A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 88, 19M Needed; Substitute Teachers Ike winter flu - colds - bad lml and M far wcaodary I wiO catch the Pontiac School System in the iracarisai position of having too few substitute teachers to go around. The list ft those who can be called upon in the event regular teacher is absent is the shortest it’s ever been in the memory of Louis A. drew, director of instructional personnel services. h A ' A There are N names on the list — 41 at the elementary drew would like the total to be closer to 210. pit should be three times as great at the elementary level and twice as large at die secondary level,” he said. FIVE TO M A DAY The n u m b e r of substitutes needed throughout the system can range irom five to 20 a day, Crew noted. Although thepresdutlist would seem to be large enough to cover emergencies, Crew are not available every day. “Many of the elementary school substitutes are available on a limited basis,” ‘Some can teach only at schools in their own neighborhoods and some want to work just (Hie or two days a week.” One possible reason for the current shortage might be that potential substitutes are in a better financial position than they once were—they just don’t need the ftt to ffel a day, Crew suggested. Cuban Leader Starts 9th Year Castro Is Stronger Than Ever By ISAAC M. FLORES HAVANA (AP)—Fidel Chotro begins his ninth year in power more firmly in command of th' island nation than ever before. * His personal popularity may have dipped a bit since Jan. ' 1959, when the bearded mountain rebel emerged victorious over dictator Fulgencio batiste, but he has more than compensated for it with an iron-grip control over what he calls die “proletariat masses.” | Barring any violent Incident, political observers here see no alternative to Castro communism in this restless Caribbean island’s immediate future. They see little basis for persistent speculation outside the country 32 Viet Dead WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon has identified 32 men killed in the Vietnam war. The list included 15 Army, 15 Marines and 2 Navy men. Killed In action: ARMY CALIFORNIA - Spec. 4 Ronald J. Johnson, Santa Cruz; Pfc. Timothy D. Ewing, Freano) Pic. John 8. Wldener, Ventura) Fit. Jimmy Vasquez, Pico Rlvtra. HAWAII — Pfc. John lulu. ILLINOIS - Pfc. Kenneth e. Schultz, Crave Caeur. IOWA spec. 4 Mark L. English, Cedar Rapid*. LOUISIANA - Sat. Kenneth E. Grove, Many. NEVADA — Spec. 4 Jerry S. Wilson, Piocho. NORTH CAROLINA - Spec. S Robert Wymer, PENNSYLVANIA - Pfc. Curtis L. Jeter, AUqufcoe, SOUTH CAROLINA - Spec 4 Howard Chisholm, Rock Hill. TENNESSEE — Sgt. l.C. Lorenzo Clark, Memphis) Pfc. Harry Fisher, Memphis. V YORK - L NT. Newell, NORTH CAROLINA - Hospltalman Walter H. Janes II, Charlotta. MARINES CALIFORNIA - Lancs CpI. Walter E. Herrmann III, Buena Park) Pfc. Kenney R. Suzuki, Santa Monica. GEORGIA — Lance CpI. Albert Brigham, Sovehnah. ILLINOIS — Sgt. Stephen P. Jalloway, Oaklawn; Pfc. Laamon R. Ladd, Chicago. INDIANA — Lance CpI. Richard J. Hastrelter,' Rome City. IOWA — Pfc. Randall A. Vanatta, Thurman. MAINE — Pfc. Reland P. Gueretts, Lewiston. MASSACHUSETTS - Ptc. Thornes P. Jackson, Waltham. MINNESOTA - Pfc. Keith a Bllsdgs, St. Foul. MISSOURI — CpI. Robert Copeland, Berkeley. NEW YORK - Lancs CpI. David M. Mills, Mohawk) CpI. James R. Brink, Syracuse. TEXAS — CpI. R|0y Ratcliff, CpI. Roy 4 - Pfc. WASHINGTON eon, Seattle. Died of wounds: MARINES NEW ----- | that the 40-year-old “maximum counted. IBs powers of persua- leader’s” regime is teetering on the edge of disaster. There appears to be little chance for internal subversion. Attack from the outside looks unfeasible in this age of pushbutton global warfare. ECONOMY IMPROVING And, helping to solidify Castro’s position, the country’ economy seems on the verge of better days despite a commercial shipping blockade, low sugar prices and the creeping pace of industrialization. While there is discontent with the regime, no organized militant resistance against it is evident. Castro’s security system maintains a vise-like control over the country’s eight million inhabitants. It includes nearly two million neighborhood Informants, hundreds of thousands of militia men and women, young Communist and Communist party members, militant women’s groups, state employes, students, secret police and the toughest military organization in Latin America. This apparatus is reason enough for Castro Communism’s expected long life here, but there are others. HOPES FADING Perhaps the key lies in the slow but significant forward movement of the economy, Cuba’s chaotic status over the past eight years has given Castro foes reason to believe that it would be the cause of his downfalls Though still alive, those expectations are fading with the regime’s tottery dumb out of the economic gutter. Much of the credit is due to the huge injections*of money, equipment and technical aid from the Soviet Union. But Castro’s determination can’t be divi- sion are the country’s main driving force. Any mention of Cuba’s economic gains, however, has to be tempered with qualifications about the daily lives of its people. Economic improvement some cases has come at the expense of the masses. PARADOXICAL SITUATION Hie average Cuban faces a paradoxical situation. He is told —with some basis—that the fishing industry is booming, that cattle raising is now a major industry, that agricultural production is climbing and that imore coffee, tobacco and fruits are being grown than ever before. But he sees Uttle improvement in his lot. He has no more to eat than he had several years ago; in some cases, he has less. Shoes, clothing, consumer sand meat clothing, consumer items and household goods are rationed, or expensive and of poor quality when available. ★ * * The housing problem continues to worsen. Most of the economic gains go right back into expansion efforts in industry and agriculture. Inin agricultural and livestock production are exported for needed foreign currency. The Castro administration’s major advances have been in mass public education, agrarian reform and extension of medical care. BENEFICIARIES Hie main beneficiaries of the revolution have been the back-woods campesinos and poor people in the interior of the country. In many instances they have better housing, roads, education and medical treatment than ever before. These people constitute the backbone of the prime minister’s support. The requirements for substitute teaching are determined by the State Department of Education, he noted. Candidates for the job must have completed at least two yean or 60 semester boon at an accredited teacher training institution, although the class-work need not have been ia education courses. “They also, obviously, must have an interest and liking for working with children,” Crew added. * * * He admitted that pupil behavioral problems usually are greater with a substitute than with a regular teacher. UNINTERRUPTED We like to think the instructional program continues almost uninterrupted—but we know this n’t the case,” he said. ★ . *' * On the other hand, he commented that the rewards of substitute teaching can be great. ★ * * ‘It often serves as a springboard to encourage a person to return to college for full certification,” he said. Dodd Is Optimistic * on Soviet Evolution WASHINGTON (UH) ■— Sen.. The Connecticut Democrat, Thomas J. Dodd, D-ConB.,|whp is a member of both the yyprquMfd hope yesterday that Senate Foreign Relations Com-xjnn -- — nriuee ^ the internal lecur-ity subcommittee, made Ms remarks in an introduction to a 27-page study of Soviet literary developments since Stalin’s death in 1953. The study was prepared by Dr. Sergius Yakobson and Dr. Robert V. Allen, Russiaa specialists at the Library of Congress. Dodd said he personally requested toe inquiry. ( The work, entitled “Aspects of Intellectual Ferment to the Soviet Union,” traced the sometimes defiant development of Soviet totters through the trial of Russian writers Dmitri Sin-iaskii mid Yuli Daniel in February 1666. the Soviet Union would eventually turn Into a society with which the West would have “no dUficulty” achieving Standing and peaceful coexis-‘ snee. Dodd based his optimism on what he called “toe revolt of the Soviet intellectuals.” The revatt, he stod, “demonstrates that the Soviet peoples despite N years of Communist rule, cherish the same HIGH-SPEED EXPERIMENT - Hie aerotrain, a halfsize prototype of an air-cushion railroad car, races down its flange during a highspeed experiment near Paris yesterday. French engineers put a rocket on the tail of the vehicle, normally Mile to attain only about 125 miles per hour, and during the test, the car increased its ground speed to 18ft m.p.h. It is designed to combat urSan and interurbap congestion expected to peak by 1975 or 1960. ‘to this lies the best hope for the peaceful evolution of the totalitarian Communist society into a more open society which wili, by this very token, be more responsive topopular needs and the popular will, toss conspiratorial and less prone to engage in subversion and aggression abroad. ■k * * “With such a society the free world would have no difficulty In achieving that degree of basic understanding essential for peaceful coexistence,” Dodd said. Siniaskii was sentenced to seven apd Daniel to five years imprisonment for publishing “anti-Soviet propaganda” in the West. Desegregation first occurred ■ Georgia’s public education system when two Negroes were admitted to the State University in Athens, on Jan. 10,196L Changed from missing to captured: AIR FORCE M*|. James F. Young Died, nonhostile: ARMY RHODE ISLAND - Spec. S William L. NAVY KENTUCKY - Equipment Operator I.C. James H. Daulton. Sloans Valley. Fassstt, Denver. Changed from missing to dead, nonhostile COIN SALE at FINGER’S 20% OFF ON ALL COINS Deduct 20% from prices listed below and from our regular store stock! 1S53 51.00IU. 190) Louie Pur. McKinley ..$100,00 ____________________$100.00 1S39Ma(f*nS2M>............$70.00 1927 Ind, S2H..............$1.00 1929 Ind. SS. Veiy Rom..$1500.00 HALF CENTS .... $9.00 .... SS.SO si 2I00 ...$9.50 ...56.00 ...$13.00 1120.. 1134.. 1835.. URGE CENTS 1157.....................$65.00 . Flying Eagle A Indian Cents____ 1SS7Vf...................$15.00 1157 IF..................525.00 1077 G..................$115.00 1179 BU..................$25.00 1900 IU..................513.50 LINCOLN CENTS 1909543..................519.95 1909 VOS III...............55.00 19095 VDI t.............$130.00 19095VDBF................$160.00 19095 VDtAU:.............$210.00 191051.................. 54.50 191 IS G................ $7.50 I911SVG...................59.00 1914DO...................535.00 1922 F...................$70.00 NICKELS 1183 NC IU .......... 19)30IU............... 19395 IU.............. 19390 BU............. TWENTY CENT PIECE 1175$...................520.00 QUARTERS till Isabella EF....... $11.11 UBS laakella III........$19.00 II5ID IU.................$2tl.N ...................skm .............. .$10.03 HALFDOLURS 1307, ...................... wirrrrrrTrTrrTTrrrrrrTrjOT'’ 1513/17.................$12.30 1936S8U.................$30.00 1937 IU..................51.50 1937D BU................545.00 19375 IU................537.50 SILVER DOLLARS PEACE TYPE 1931....................$14.95 1926D...................$11.00 19370...................$14.00 1920.................... $60.00 19395................... ,55.50 1934.. .. .45.00 ..523.00 ..527.00 TAKE ADVANTAGE of THE MONEY SAVING VALUES SALE ENDS SATURDAY, DEC. 31 FINGER’S"-?.- ® 682-0411 brush up at night 'for a Better Job More Pay During the Day! e Businosi Organization and Mantfamtnt e Business Psychology e English e Speedwriting e Gregg Shorthand e Spalling nnd Word Study e Typing-All Envois Just think of the extra money you can command on your job now if you had the working knowledge anyone of these courses could give you. Get details on these night classes now by calling PBI at • FE 3-7028 Pontiac Business Institute 18 W* Lawrence Street-Pontiac, Michigan ft enneuf ALWAY8 FIRST QUALITY m m our once-a-year savings event! ALL OUR SUMPTUOUS FUR-TRIMMED COATS ARE SPECIALLY PRICED! 25.88 36.88 55.88 This is the coat event you've been waiting for all year at Penney'*. Our entire collection of fabulous fureollared coats at new prices that really bring important savings. These are coats to be beautiful in... to feel glamorous in . . . impeccably caTved in lush high fashion woolens and heaped high with the furs women prixe the most. For misses and half-sizes. Women's Jackets Value Priced! Don't miss the outstanding,savings now on our wide selection of jackets In the most wanted styles including pa Hoofs and suburbans. Fashion right for active use all winter. 14.88 17.88 21.88 Girls' Jacket Bargains! Hurry in for great savings on our entire collection of jackets for winter fun. Assorted styles in pile lined, hooded and shaggy models. All Value priced I 7.88 9.88 PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS: 9:30 AM. to 9 P.M. CHARGE IT! A—*11 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 28. 1966 [funnai 3 Look . ..here are great savings for your wardrobe budget. Your favorite ations by well-known Cupid,Figure Builder, Primrose, Corliss! ertss-cross control girdle 935-1. Figure Builder’s tummy control inner bends (inside picture' right). White; 16-in., 18-in. lengths. 26 to 36 (38 to 44 even go AA sices). SALE wiwlf permanent preee bra 935-J. Our own Corliss bra with criss cron front for better fit end comfort Two-section cups. White; A32. to 36, B32 to 38, C 34 to 40. W g*Q 2 for 3-22. SALE IwV CorUes long tine bra 915-L Our own-permanent press bra widi midriff comfortable control; wide bottom'band. Adjustable stretch straps. White; B 34 to 4(^ C 34 O QA to 42. SALE WOWW Corliss long leg pantg 935-E. Our own Corliss in three torso proportioned lengths ... to fit your figure best. White or black; short, average, tall, in sizes S, M AA M, L, XL. SALE NIGHT shopping Wednesday through till 9:00 (Closed Monday January 2nd.) stretch strap corselet 935-N. Pullon style by Primrose. Adjustable stretch straps; fiber-fill undercups. Favorite firm front-control panel. White; A 32-36, B g* QQ 34-40, C 34-42. SALE OetFU front, bach control pantg 935-<3. Our Corliss panty girdle with front, bade inner cross bands. White, black; small, medium, large, X-large. 935-H. Matching cross A hand girdle, 6.99 SALE WeJflF Corliss stretch strap bra 935-K. Our own permanent press bra always stays fresh. Adjustable stretch straps. FiberfiU cups. White; A 32 to 36, B 32 to 38, C * AA 34 to 40. SALE AmnWsW tummy control corselet 935-M. Primrose ’tummy - X’ pul Ion With criss cross inner bands for smooth line. Lacy-look front section. White; A 32 to 36, B 34 to 40, M AA C 34 to 42. SALE AmWsr SALE! long leg proportioned panty girdle by well-known Cupid 935-A. Measurette* panty with Ten-sion-eze’ front panel for extra tummy control. Rigid upper section, low V-gore, Stretchy back panel. S, M, L, XL in torso lengths short, average, tall. 935-9. Matching torso proportioned girdle, tummy control............11.99 935-C. Extra sizes in 3 torso-proportioned lengths; 32-40 (even size). Panty. 935-0. Gtrdle ................... 4J99 Foundations — Hudson's Budget Stora — Pontiae Malt in the Mail A—12 LUXURIOUS CASHMERES AT SALE SAVIHRS SUPERB PURE CASHMERE OUTERCOATS BY FAMOUS ALPACUNA . . . $108 Perhaps you'vt been waiting to add a particularly fine coat to your wardrobe ... or perhaps you're already a customer of long-standing with this excellent maker. In either case, these coats are among the finest we carry, and priced remarkably low during this clearance. Fine, imported cashmere, soft and velvety smooth, risS two beautifully tailored models: the classic dress box style or the more casual/ split raglan. Black, navy, vicuna, or brown shades, In an excellent size range. . .$101 PURE CASHMERE COATS, LAVISHLY HAND-DETAILED FROM OUR CUSTOM QUALITY COLLECTION . . . $88.88 This Is a unique opportunity to-buy a coat of unusually high quality at an unusually, ‘-row price. The cashmere js'most luxurious . . . carefully tailored In handsome dress or casual models with lavish hand-detailing. All with full Bemberg linings. Choose from shades of black, navy, vicuna and brown. Sizes 36-48 for regulars, shorts, and longs. You'll find them in our Custom Quality collection, which, we might add, was regularly priced at way more than this sale price. . .88.85 Owr Pontiac Mall Storo Open Every Evening to 9 P.M. 309 N. Telegraph Rd. Oar Birmingham Star* Open Fri. to 9; Sat. to 5:30 300 Pierce St. / • ' ' • . THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1966 { 'il 1 Duys you an elegant silk-and-wool sharkskin suit at a sizeable reduction during HHS semi- Obviously this isn’t a typical sale. For most every newsmaking suit of the season — suits you've been seeing at much higher prices—are featured here, and they’re substantially reduced in price. This superb silk-and-wool sharkskin, for example. The fabric is one of the most luxurious you can own: lustrous silk blended with fine wool, a perfect weight for now through spring. You’ll find it in carefully tailored 1- 2- and 3-button models: trim, sophisticated styles in the -newest shades: grey, azure blue, dark blue, brown and bottle green. And you’ll find it in a big range of proportioned sizes from 35-48. THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28. 1966 B—1 Lynda Bird Johnson and actor George Hamilton hold a news conference at the Home of former actress Merle Oberon in Acapulco where they refused to discuss the question of whether they will marry. The couple arrived Monday night and are the guests of Miss Oberon djftmg their Mexican vacation. 'No Comment on Romance' >■ i * Says Actor ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) -Actor George Hamilton > says whether he and Lynda Bird Johnson will marry “is a very personal question and we will it personal.” "We have never commented upon this and will continue to keep this policy,” Hamilton told newsmen in Acapulco, where he and President Johnson's 22-year-old daughter are vacationing. Hie actor and Miss Johnson held a news conference Tuesday at the home of former actress Merle Oberon, their hostess. Hamilton said they expected the press to leave them alone for the rest of their Mexican vacation. The couple arrived Monday night. Hamilton said they may spend New Year’s Eve hi Acapulco. , * *r j/k ■ *• ^ k . Lynda said, she likes the sun in Acapulco and plans to do some sunbathing. They Mean Well Only Want to Please ABBY By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I don’t want to sound ungrateful, but why do grandparents always buy cloth-for their Kgrandchil-lidren two and I three sizes too I big for them? Often these I items are needled for use im-Imediately, but ■they must hang in a closet or be put away in a drawer until the child “grows into them." Many a lovely gift has been stored away and forgotten, and by the time the child can wear it, it's out of style. Mention this in your cdutfm, Abby. But please don’t use my name. MBS. X. DEAR MBS. X: The reason grandparents buy clothing for children to “grow into” is obvious. It's a hold over from leaner years. However, gift-giving grandparents want only to please. So a word to the wise should bring the right size. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: While walking down the street yesterday, 1 saw a mailman emptying one of those sidewalk mailboxes. A woman was standing there screaming that she had just mailed a letter in that box and she wanted it bade. The mailman said he was sorry but it was against the rules and he couldn’t pve it to her. She yelled even louder that she could prove it was HER letter and she wanted it back, Then he tried to tell her what she would have to do to get it, but she refused to listen — she stormed off in a huff. Now I would like to know how a person can get his own letter back after mailing it if the mailman won’t give it to him. INNOCENT BYSTANDER . DEAR INNOCENT: Make a duplicate of the envelope of the letter you want back. If it was going out-of-town, go to the main postoffice. If it was a local letter, go to die postoffice in the zone in which you mailed the tetter and ask the postmaster for the appropriate form to fill out to retrieve your tetter. ★ it * If your tetter hasn't left the postoffice, and you can identify yourself adequately, they’ll give you your tetter. If die tetter HAS left town, they will telephone or wire the out-of-town postoffice (at your expense) and if it hasn’t been delivered, they’ll send the tetter back to you. Bid when it cornea, you will have to go to thepostoffice and pick It up personalty. This may sound like a lot of red tape, but it’s not too much trouble for one who has mailed a tetter in haste and wants it back. Hosts for Dinner Christmas day dinner was hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Wood of East Iroquois Road for sons, Jim and Jade; Mr. Wood’s sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. K vitek and their sons Rick and Rob. Also present were Mr.iand Mrs. A*. Floyd Blakeslee. CONFIDENTIAL TO “BIG DECISION IN BID D.”: I can’t think of a worse risk for marriage. If you “won” him, then what would you have? A two-timing husband who pulled every trick in the book to be with his girl friend while his wife sat at home alone. You have no guarantee that he would treat you any better than he treated his first wife. ♦ ★ ★ For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1.00 to Abby, care of Hie Pontiac Press. New Career as Actress Crowns Achievements By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK-The life of beautiful Marayat Andriane of Thailand is already about as glamour-filled as any girl could ask. But now the acting bug has bitten, and the tiny brunette is mixing movie roles with hers as wife of a diplomat She is married to Louis Jacques Andriane, French diplomat currently .director of administration for the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO), headquartered in Bangkok. “My husband is delighted that * I’m taking On this new responsibility,’4 said Mrs. Andriane. “My house in Bangkok pretty well runs itself anyway ... Tvs a wonderful house boy, cook, servants.” FAMOUS CROSS-SECTION Currently, die is on an International personal appearance tour to promote the first picture she’s been in, 20th Century-Fox’s “The Safid Pebbles,” starring Steve McQueen. Mrs. Ai]driaiie\p]a!ystthe rote of a Chinese girl. The actress is the daughter of a diplomat, Khnun Bid 1 dh Vireggakia, Thailand’s ambassador through the past several years to Western European and South American countries. ★ * ★ Although born in Bangkok, she spent her early years in London, -went to school in Switzerland, and because of her visits with riily during school vacations fluent in English, French, Italian add German. “Actually,” the said in an interview; “my husband had to teach me Thai.” He’s been many years in the Far East, and formerly was director of cultural affairs for SEATO. URGED BY FRIENDS Many of her friends, including the French directors Louis Malle and Ramil Levy, urged her to get into motion pictures. Why not, she decided, if those who should know thought she had acting potential. Eventually, she flew to New York for s c r e e n tests, on to Hollywood for more, and Fox signed her to a seven-year contract. More Gifts for Sisters Are Named By ELIZABETH L. POST I am most grateful for the following tetter and hasten to print the excellent suggestions it contains. Dear Mrs. Post: In a recent column, you gave some gift suggestions for a nun. I have a few filings I’d like to add. Usually, nuns have very little money, so small luxuries arc really welcome. Some lotion or powder or any kind of bath accessory is pleasing. If you faiow of any delicacy that Sister enjoys, or some special cookies or candy that she can share with the other members of her community, that would be a good gift. Select a good book for light reading — a mystery, suspense or romantic novel for relaxation. If a class or group of students want to get together and purchase a gift, a warm, new blanket is something that would be greatly appreciated. I hope you’ll find some of these suggestions a little different and helpful. Maryanne Graham Dear Mrs. Post: I have always written on both sides of single-sheet letter paper, but my girl friend says this is not correct. We decided to write you for the answer. Marge Kain Dear Marge: Certainly you may write on both sides of the paper — what a waste if you don’t. However, if it is airmail paper or a very thin sheet, don’t write on both sides because the writing shows through and makes it very difficult to read. CAKE DECORATIONS Dear Mrs. Post: I’d like to have a special cake decorated for my daughter’s engagement party. Is there any marking customary for such a cake, and if not, will you suggest one? Mrs. Martin Dear Mrs. Martin: Although there is no prescribed marking, the long favorite one is their two first names enclosed in a heart. What is your most puzzling etiquette problem? To the send-, er of the most interesting question that we receive each week, we'll send a free copy of Emily Post’s Etiquette, revised by Elizabeth L. Post. Send your question to Elizabeth L. Post, in care of The Pontiac Press, and don’t forget to include your name and address. A Holiday Reunion The Charles E. Freemans of Chandler Street had with them for the first time in 16 years, their daughter, Mrs. Warren A. Price of Indianapolis. With her were file Price children Cathi, Keven, Dean and Keith; Sgt. v Price is with toe U. S. Army in Vietnam. Election on Agenda y There will be an election of officers at Thursday’s meeting of the Fashion Your Figure Club of Pontiac. Members will gather at 7:30 p.m. in the Adah Shelly Library. Flints to Honor Karin Mr. and Mrs. Edgar B. Flint of West Long Lake Road will be hosts at an open house fids evening to introduce their son David’s fiancee, Karin Mary Walstrom, to their friends. /' it * * Her parents, Ml1, and Mrs. Ward H. Walstrom of Harbor Springs announced the engagement at a family dinner, Tuesday, in the Peninsular Club, Grand Rapids. * * * Miss Walstrom who is currently teaching in Bloomington, Minn, is a graduate of Michigan State University where she was affiliated with Alpha Xi Delta sorority. . * * ★ Mr. Flint Is presently completing his senior year at Parsons College, Fairfield, Iowa. A summer wedding is being planned. The Ward H Walstroms of Harbor Springs announce thi engagement of their daughter, Karin Mary, to David B. Flint, son of Mr. arid Mrs. Edgar B. Flint of West Long Lake Road. KARIN MARY WALSTROM OU Continuum Center Slates Seasonal Classes for Women The next counseling and testing session for women, a Continuum Center program at Oakland University, is scheduled to begin Jan. 5. Almost 550 women have already taken advantage of the opportunity to team more about themselves in this “Investigation Into Identity” course which has been designed expressly for the woman who is exploring the possibilities of education, volunteer service or employment in the complex work! outside her home. :' The first session is an In* formal one, free to anyone interested in learning more about the program. At this initial meeting, Director Priscilla Jackson describes the Continuum Center and what it offers. Hie group then breaks into tables of six for discussion, Hie tests, especially adapted to measure the aptitudes, interests and abilities of each woman, are administered by staff psychologist Gerald Self, Ph. D. ★ * | The course is an accelerated program of six sessions, held twice weekly. Members of the “Investigation Into Identity” class will meet from 1:00 until 4:00 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays on the OU campus. Following the introductory program, the next four class sessions will be devoted to taking the series of tests and meeting other Continuum staff members including the education ad-vjg«p Elizabeth B. Wright, volunteer placement adviser; Helen Zdeba, employment adviser; Mrs. Eleanor Driver, orientation interviewer, and Mrs. Margaret Twyman, registrar. The sixth and final session is devoted to a discussion of the factors which may Influence a decision. This is followed by a one-hour personal interview with"Dr. Self in which he interprets and explains the test results. ★ ★ ★ In addition to this course, women are welcome to consult at any time with* the staff advisers who include a trained social worker, an expert in the personnel field and an educator skilled in academic counseling. Hie nominal fee charged for this particular service is applied toward tuition if the individual decides to enroll later in an “Investigation Into Identity” course. For women in the Grosse Pointe and eastern Detroit area, a class will be held at Grosse1 Pointe War Memorial beginniiig Feb. 14. These “Investigation Into Identity” sessions will be held from 1 to 4 p.m., on Tuesdays and Thursdays, concluding March 2. Format and content of the program will be the same as the one offered in January. A third and final program for the winter, season will,be held at Presbyterian Church of Our Savior, Middle Belt Road, beginning March 7 and ending April 11. This ia an evening class which will meet once a week from 7:00 to 10:00 p.m. If a woman decides to investigate the alternatives outside the home after completing the testing and evaluation sessions, she will find the three Continuum advisers able to guide her more intelligently with the aid of the test information provided by the psychologist. Follow-up services of the advisers are available without further charge to those who have completed the testing program. The Continuum Center, supported by a grant from the Kellogg Foundation, is a unique pro- ject and is under the supervision of Dr. Lowell R. Eklund, Dean of the Division of Continuing Education at the University. It was created in the fall of 1965 as a response to the questions raised by over 1500 women who participated in discussion groups, planning sessions and conferences held at the University during a four year period. Located on the second floor of South Foundation Hall, the Center welcomes visitors during office hours from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p,m. weekdays. For further information, contact the Continuum Center, Oakland University. (mdOpening Sale CARPET 3 ROOMS 100% NYLON 99 Low Prices Because Of: • No Showroom • No Expenses • Xo Overhead is 260 Sq. Ft. \* Installed Includes Pad No Down Payment v* Payments s10 a Month CALL 334-0177 In The Home Showing Cal^ 334-0177 fona salesman Jo come to your’home to show samples. HoffAe/ of (kpet Pontiac, Michigan i-0177 Wy Are a Legally Registered Business With the County of Oakland J B—a THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER St, 1006 Mi ML to 9:19 ML MOW TWO LOCATIONS _ w ^ HOUR / SHIRT /namamls— REPAIR AND ALTERATION SERVICE ■Dry Chairing Special- TOES., WED. and THORS., DEC. 27, 28,29th NOW 2 LOCATIONS iaiH* cWl (Miracle Mile and 3307 Elizabeth Lake Rd.) Specials Good At Both Locations 1 or 2-Reeo $4 QQ Miracle Milt Store Dial 332-1122 Elizabeth Lake Shopping Center Dial 332-0884 PLAIN DRESSES $1 Ladies’or $109 Men’s SUITS Now Two Locationa to Serve You! Miraelo Mile and 3397 Elizabeth Lake Rd. at M-69 Jaycee Auxiliary Plans Program on Poisoning Ten members of the Water-font Jaycee Auxiliary are working on a new community service project, “The Accidental Poisoning Prevention Program. Those involved are Mes- tor the gala Holidays See our collection of porty and theater-goers in silks and eilvert, velvets and •uadee, featuring the newest straps, bows, buckles. SHOES dames: Whitney Carnahan, Richard Schwab, Tim Patterson, Kenneth Wright, James Curd, Michael Patterson, Kenneth Wright, Ray Freebury, Harry Hague, Jeffery Cornish and Charles Wood. The program of slides will be shown to groups on their request Further information may be obtained by contacting Mrs. Carnahan of Nancywood Court. MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Open Evenings THE PONTIAC MALL VANTAGE WATCHES 1A IT Jewel Br. ir USHER'S WATCH REPAIR . 42 N. Saginc g SALE FRIGIDAIRE CLEARARCE SALE FRIGIDAIRE CLEARANCE SALE 3 5 OUR ANNUAL FRIGIDAIRE YEAR-END CLEARANCE 5> 1 -ALL WS MUST GO- 1 g 2 “THIS BIG EVENT ENDS SATURDAY, 5 P.M. g S3 Our warehouse is bulging with Frigidaire Appliances! The new '67s are Q S on the way. We must make room. This is our sale of sales. All merchan- 5 £2 dise new-not scratched or dented. Some still in crates. Hurry for best ® selection! ^ FRIMMIRF FRIGIDAIRE li Mrs. Michael G. Patterson of Grace K. Court shows her daughter, Pamela, the dangers that hide in the broom closet. Mrs. Patterson, a member of the Waterford Jaycee Pantlac Oran Hula Auxiliary is working on “The Accidental Poisoning Prevention” program being sponsored by the auxiliary. Iodine Gould Be Help DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE B522: Billy J., aged 14, is very short and slender. “Dr. Crane,” his-worried mother began, “Billy is unduly sensitive because he is on}y ST’ tall and even most of the girls in hu fresh class at high |_______ school are tal- OR. CRANE ler than be is. “Besides,” he wants to be an athlete, but he is so short and slender, that I feel he doesn’t have a chance. “What would you advise?” GROWTH FACTS Our four Crane sons were also very short, for they didn’t start their major, growing till in the third year of Senior High. So I had them take a drop of Iodine in a glass of milk at least three times per week, from the time they were freshmen. Whether that helped, I can only say t h a t George and Philip passed the six-foot mark, and the two younger .boys reached almost six feet. Yet they didn’t have any tall ancestry to aid them. ■ ★ w ★ For example, my grandfather was only 5*3’% as an adult. And my fatlWr was about 57” as an adult. Mrs. Crane’s dad was also only5’6”. And,their grandmothers were short, too, so , for three generations behind them, there had been no tall ancestors! They used the ordinary Iodine from the bottle you get at the drug store to paint cuts. And the reason for trying this iodine strategy is based on a medical theory that when children start to make their rapid growth, a little extra iodine may help add an extra inch or more. The average child grows about two inches per year until he reaches 13. That starts the typical “shooting” year, when the average child adds three and a half inches. Then his growth dwindles till he may stop at 18 or HT, though occasionally children have added an Inch or two even after they left college. But some children don’t follow the standard pattern, so they shoot up early. A Minnesota mother t h u s wrote me recently because of „ her worry over her seventh grade son, aged 12, who was 6*10” tall and thus towered r like a giant over his five-foot » Many other children’s don’t start their “shooting” year till 15 or 16. Our four boys didn’t make their big growth until they : 15, though it is sup-to begin at 13 for most children. As regards Billy’s slight build, he can compete very adequately in track, especially in the distance events. ★ * * Some bf our world famous mile runners and two-milers have been both slender and short of stature. Gymnastics, weight-lifting and wrestling will also offer him plenty of opportunity to win athletic letters, for in wrestling you are matched on the basis of equal body weights. Regular exercise is good insurance for building a larger, more powerful heart, so Billy can begin the distance races, s t a r t i n g out gradually, of course, till his heart gets accustomed to the demand for power and endurance. * ★ ★ Exercise also stimulates more hunger, which may in-the ingestion of extra food and trace chemicals that may add height. Send for my booklet on “Trace Chemicals,” enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. (Always writs to Dr. Crant In ears of Tha Pontiac Prsss, anelpalna a long -----d, addressed envelope and 20c to typing and printing costs whan .JVr .1 ku k&ePNfWM /ohhha/ Even though you usually have your hair fixed at a beauty salon, there a)re times wben It b most convenient to have a little do It yourself knowhow! I am bringing you some today. WWW There are weeks which are so rushed that it b impossible to keep your appointment. Then thine are days when you are grounded with a cold or have been out in the wind so that your hairdo needs a little pickup in-between professional settings. ~ ♦ W - w A good haircut, which pretty much falls Into place according to the style you are wearing, is essential in any instance. However, it is even more Important when you are fixing your own hair. THINGS TO REMEMBER Here are a few things to remember. Section your hair. From past experience or observation you probably know just about how wide the sections should be and the direction in which they should go. Roll in the direction hi which your hairdo is going. The following are two important things to remember when putting your hair on rollers. Be sure that the hair is not twisted, but smooth on the roller. Otherwise, it will fly in all directions when it is combed out. w w w Also, be certain that die ends of the hair are even. If they are not, use the scissors to make them so. The size roller to be used depends on your hair style and the texture of your hair. If you have coarse, thick hair, use very large rollers. If your hair is fine, you will need smaller ones. In either case, large rollers are used at the top to give height and contour while small (Hies are used nearer the back hairline. DAMPEN HAIR If you do not have time for a shampoo, dampen the hair slightly before rolling it .up. Then after it dries, spray it with hair spray. Then brush it into shape. Some women spray the hair when it is damp before rolling it up, but 1 think the other method is much bet-' ter. It will be helpful if you will WigS by donnell MITZELFELD'S Year-End SALE! Store-Wide Reductions On All Quality Items 312 Main St., Rochester OL1-8171 wir mobile server.. .your private butler! it holds all your festive essentials, * comes in elegant cherry veneer 199. exceptional value j Other Bar-Servers ! from 69.95 Terms, ef cowrie Marvelous server for your New Year’s celebrating and serving anytime —»ft moves on hidden casters, looks like a server when not partying! Traditional styling with utensil drawer, glasssnck, locked door, adjustable shelf behind each door, and a flip top covered with black plastic. With top open 19x72”, closed 19x36”... and 33” high. Made of nut brown cherry. Decorating Service dampen your hair with a setting lotion instead of wafer. If you are taring your hair, you may want my booklet “Is Your Hrir Thinning?” which gives comprehensive information. If so’send IS cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for that tooklet Address Josephine Lowman in — tiac Press. i care of The Pon- Cellophane Lace Die rustle of spring shows in some new fabrics. Mollie Pamis of New York showed “cellophane” lace, a shiny, three-dimensional fobric in evening wear. Miss Pamis also does T-shirt dresses, these elegant and knee-length copies of the classic T, unbelted and often showing in white Still Doesn't Help Do you believe dry cleaning disinfects clothes? Microbiologists say this is not the case. Some germs live through the dry cleaning process. GULF KIST SHRIMP as you like ’em CLEANED! STAPPS the children's store The world is waiting to be walked in. Stride Rite baby shoes, and our experienced fitters give your young explorer a wonderful beginning. Priced from *6.99 Get Them at STAPPS STAPP'S The Home of Stride-Rite Shoes 931 W. Huron at 418 N. Mhin St. Telegraph, Pontiac Rochester For Evening Hour* Please Phone 332-3208 1 1 .....— FURNITURE ' Open Friday Evenings CHATELAINE A departure from the conventional design and one of the finest choices' you can make ... a Solitaire with open work. From $150 3o tfflememSeb Happiness Is a Diamond Ring GENEVA High-in-four prongs, a modern version of the engagement ring with all emphasis On beauty— and the diamond. From $150 A Very , Sincere Thank You and A Happy New Year to All Our Friends and Customers From the Entire Staff at Connollys For the young couple with a modern outlook, a smartly upswept design that should grace your third finger left hand. From $150 VICTORIA Orange Blossom designers hava a way with diamonds . . . effectively simple and beautiful with two diamonds to emphasize the center gem. From $200 Charge • Layaway • Michigan Bankard THREE LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU. JEWELERS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 16 West Huron FE 2-0294 Open Friday Til 9 BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE BIRMINGHAM 2203 S. Telegraph 162 N. Woodward FE 2-8391 Ml 6-4293 « Open Evenings Til 9 Open Friday Evenings v Y1 W*! 1 "-if* ji*’’'"-’ : LADIES' look for *11* and toko 3 OCULARLY All salt) TUB I-QNT1AC PltKgS. WEDttaaUAY. DECEMBER 8«. 1000 TI T. I T II f r , \ Your Built-In Couples Tell or en AMERICA'S LAWSKST FAMILY CLOTH INS CHAIM Dr. and Mrs. C. J. Bender of St. Louis, Mich, announce the engagement of their daughter, Arlouine Ann, to Robert Earle Kibbie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Kibbie of Dover Road. The spring bride-elect is an alumna of Cleary College, Ypsi-lanti, where her fiance is presently a student. He is a graduate of Northwood Institute. An April wedding is planned by Barbara Ellen Rofe, daughter of the Duane H. Rofes of Beach Drive, Orion Township, and Leonard Wayne Graf, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred E. Graf of Ann Arbor. She attended Oakland University and her fiance is an alumnus of University of Michigan. The Leslie Tomlinsons of Berkley announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda Ann, to Harold E. Leach, son of Mrs. George C. Leach of Melrose Ave nue and the late Mr Leach. He attends Oak land Community College. A June 24 wedding date is set., Mr. and Mrs. Julian J. Gloomis of Chippewa Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Judith Ann, to Richard Allen Chase, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Chase of Lake-ward Lane. May votes are planned by Sharon Ann Plawski, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Plawski of Beachland Boulevard, and Richard Hernandez, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hernandez of Seward Street. Iron and Roll to Stop Creases When laundering your white table linens, wash them in hot soapy water, rinse well then This Playboy Needs to Save for Old Age By MARY FEELEY Consultant in Money Management Dear Mary Feeley: Here’s the way I’ve set up my budget on $680 a month: Food, $60; rent, $150; clothes, $100; car, $100; insurance, $40; utili- to the maximum of $15,000, noticount with right of survivor-$10,000. ship.” Each of these accounts * * * has different rights and capa- Just recently Senate Bill sferit * * 3198 was put into law, authoriz-!.. .M. trier the. fTaarlaarol Tnenronno Pnr *M,UUU. ing the Federal Insurance Corporation and the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance ^ Corporation to increase insur-tag, $160. But I needhelp, Mary. |anc{r coverage. Of course, you Im a single playboy here m h,ye m£e than one insffied town. T.B., Chicago Dear T.B.: Here’s the way I’m setting up your budget. And I’m not playing: Take $32 off the allotment you’re spending on clothes. Then knock off $5 from the food bill. Save $5 on car operating expenses for the month --not much to ask, huh? Thai cut down on your social spending by about, say, $20 a month. That leaves a total of $61$. So look what yon have left at the end of the month, T.B. —$62 to pnt into a savings account, and you haven’t even missed enough fun to notice. I honestly wouldn’t want to slow you down any. But you can’t keep on being a playboy forever. Some day you’re going to be worrying over a retirement income instead of a ski sweater. So let’s both start worrying a little now, just to make things easier for you on the long downhill run. Sixty-two dollars a month save is $744 a year. Every year if this amount is invested at a favorable interest rate of say 5 per cent compounded semi-annually you’ll be mighty glad to have about $4200 five years from now. Dear Miss Feeley: I have an account in one bank for a little over $10,000 and another one in a branch of the same bank. Under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, am I covered with the required insurance? I also have accounts in other banks (different companies). Would all these bank accounts be added together, under the law, to make one sum and then have the maximum of, I believe, $10,000 only for them all? J.S., Brooklyn, N.Y.j Dear J.S.: Q j Since the main office and all! branches of a bank are considered as one bank, if your accounts are in the same “right and capacity"—which means if they are under the same name with each passbook reading! idottically—then the sum total' account in a bank if you transfer funds from an “individual pccount” to a “voluntary trust account” or even a “joint ac- Under the law insurance coverage is based upon* deposits maintained by a person at a single insured bank, and not upon one’s total deposits in other banks. Dear Miss Feeley: How much allowance should a girl of 13 receive? She Tireless Helpers Get Reward BJDIANAPOLIS, Ind. - It was hard to tell who was more excited at the naturalization ceremony in the Federal Building here — the Alberto Diaz family who became U.S. citizens, or Mrs. F. Noble Ropkey, who has been vitally interested and extremely active ih helping Cuban refugees for the last five years. ____ # ★ ★ The Diaz family was the first Cuban family sponsored by Mrs. Ropkey to take the citizenship oath. Referred to by the approximately 300 Cu- bans now living in Indianapolis as “our angel,” she has brought refugees here, helped them find jobs, given moral support and practical advice. makes her own bed, keeps her room clean, does dishes when I ask her, and babysits whenever asked. She goes bowling once a week. ($1), donates $1 a week to| church. Should re give her this money with her allowance and let her take care of it? Mrs. F.C., Lincoln Park, Mich. Dear Mrs. C.? Yes. Money management is part of her education — and this is a good age to turn over the entire responsibility of her allowance. Make it $3 a week, if you can. Then she can maneuver that third dollar, so that part of it can build up over the weeks for some major purchase she Wants. She sounds like a young lady to be trusted with her own funds. iron on both sides while still damp. ♦ ★ -k Wrap tablecloths round long pasteboard tubes, and napkins and smaller articles around shorter ones, to prevent creases while stored. Wrap in blue cellophane to prevent yellowing. Linens are then ready for company use at a moment’s notice. tion specialist of tbs Pennsylvania Stats University. Some people gain weight even if they set line food and others can’t gain weight no matter how much they eat, she said. 1 \ it it w In one study id this nutrition problem, a group of medical students kept trade of the food they ate. Ibe intake was 1,006 to 5,000 calories for the mas. jTeh top figure was 3,500 calories for the women. There was little relation between the weight gain of the student and the food he ate. Growing children seem to have the same variations, said Miss Hamilton. Children with similar ages, height, weight, and body surface show considerable difference in how much they eat. ★ * How much energy a person ses to do a certain job shows1 this to be true. When military men of the same age, size, and conditioning were measured for the amount of energy they used when marching, variations were considerable. Men were tested marching on a level surface at a little over three miles an hour. Men using the least energy burned up four calories a minute while some men used twice that amount of energy. Before freezing fruits, add some sugar. Ibis helps to keep the natural color and vitamin content. Announcing PONTIAC CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL RINGS Sunday Look The little girl look, in dresses goes on into the next season for big girls too. It’s the Sunday school look, topped navy skirts Willi red jackets, plus white blouses, Peter Pan collars in white, and big bows at the neck. * NEW! GENUINE BUCK ONYX STONE Pill OUR REGULAR 3.97 j LINED WOOLEN OR j CORDUROY WESTERNS! “College Type” EASY CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE WHITCROFT JEWELERS 7 N. SAGINAW FE 8-4391 2J5 Fully lined slacks of 90S reprocessed wool, 10$ nylon; black, grdy. 8 to 18. Cotton cordur-roy western jeans; fashion colors. 6 to 16. Beauty and Accuracy Q OMEGA you’ll say “off with the old and on with the new” when you see these exceptional Omega watches. The slim-silhouette Seamaster De Ville winds itself as you wear it, and is perfect for sports or evening wear, 1 he ladies’ wafeh features a facet-edged jewel-crystal. 1$K gold dial-markers, fully jeweled movements. Other Omega watches from S65 to over $1600. REDMOND’S Jewelry 81 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC Free Parking in Rear of Store 20% OFF REGULAR j 19.88 TO t 39.95 COATS JR5 . * MISSES SIZES Fur-trimmed, untrimmed, pile-lined, hooded, scarfed, and other style coats... •did colors, plaids. .3-11,8-18, in group. CHARGE ACCOUNT PONTIAC 200 N.'Saginaw CLARKSTON Michigan Bankard PAULI SHOE STORE 35 N. Saginaw St., Pontiac TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1966 B1 —3 OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUN. 12-7 THIS. FRI.. SIT. n IP m BlMllilllilllllW Special Year-End Stores Close 5 PM. Thursday to Take Inventory: Open SEAMLESS MESH Closed Sunday Our Reg. Comp, at Now Only! 32.88 $45 2630 39.8# $50 31.90 44.88 $55 35.97 49.88 $65 39.90 59.88 ! $75 to $8 o 47.90 Shoe Dept. 3 Days Only Wool worsteds, silk/ worsted, mohair/worsted, polyester/ .i rayon. “L” shaped, notched, clover leaf labels. Side, center vents. Plain front trousers. Sharkskins, irides* cents, solid and compound colors in many shades. Reg.-short-long . . . 3646. You Gan Shop Without Cash When You “Charge 99 at Kmart! 2-TIER BRASS RECORD CADDY 5.42 Gleaming brass-plated metal caddy is 21 Vs” high, 16”.long, 8” wide and holds 200 records. For convenience, charge it. WROUGHT IRON HI-FI STAND It’s a Hi-Fi table and record stand. 24V4” high .. . each shelf is 2014x14”. Rolls on tyro-inch polyestyrene casters. Savel Brass-plated Hi-Fi Stand........ f .11 • Expert Wheel BALANCING fFo Our Reg. 6.36. Save wear and tear on your car. All work per-formed by factory trained specialists. Save! off car GULFSAPHIRE MOTOR OIL m Our Reg. 29c GLENWOOD PLAZA-NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1986 State's Year-End Report Says '66 Crops Top '65 LANSING (AP) - The Combined output of Michigan’s 17 major field and fruit crops totaled 10.34 million tons in 1966 —a 3 per cent boost over 1985— the State Crop Reporting Service said today in its year-end report Although die total topped the 10.00 million tons produced last year, this year’rproduction was 1 per cent below the 196064 average, the report said. The weather in 1966 was described as generally more favorable for grain, dry beans, soybeans and hay than in 1965, but a (by spell reduced crop yields in northern Lower Michigan and much of the Upper Peninsula. average yield of 40 bushels per acre equaled the record established in 1064. Total feed grain production-corn, oats and barley—was 3.1 million tons, 2 per cent higher than the 1966 total The state’s corn for grain production totaled 94.3 million bushels—a 4 per cent increase over 1965. The average yield of I 67.0 bushels per acre set a state record. Oat production declined 14 per, cent from 1905 due to a delay in early spring planting caused by i wet soil. Dry weather in June and July plus hot weather in those months reduced yields sharply. i Barley production totaled _ IR 882,090 bushels, 2 per cent below Good-to-excellent yields were ^ 1965 crop. * Another Bugging Is Admitted WASHINGTON llt-Tta Jus- installed a microphone in M2 tice Department hat ofipatttodat the huMness establishment of another caoe of electronic eave*-1 a daw associate of Taglianetti dropping by the goveranM*. It and overheard soma of his cools the eighth admission since venations, last spring. In papers filed Tuesday night in the 1st U S. Circuit Quart of Appeals in Boston, the department said the FBI bad monitored conversations of Louis J. Taglianetti, who later was convicted of income tax evasion. * * * The department denied any evidence used in Tagbanetti’s case was obtained from the FBI tiling of (Taglianetti’s) case by the Internal Revenue Service, file Department of Justice and the US. attorney, that amr of the monitjond conversations were used in evidence or were the source of leads to toy evidence in fills cam.'; the W«* filed by file department said. The department’s first voluntary announcement of electronic SETTLES TO BOTTOM-The USS frigate Constellation, oldest ship of the U.S. Navy still afloat, settled two feet to rest on the bottom of the Baltimore Harbor in Maryland today after a seam apparently widened from ice formations and the vessel shipped trap 8 to 10 feet of water. Fire boats were called to pump out the ship’s holcfi FOUND GUILTY Taglianetti of Warwick. RJ-, was fond guilty last April of evading taxes tar the years 196% 1957 and Ml . He was sentenced to three years in prison and fined 13,010. The voluntary announcement of the latest bugging incident followed a Justice Department order last month to examine all cases to . determine whether bugging, but requested a lower,electronic eavesdropping was court review of the conviction to used to gather evidence illegal- ted bugging the suite of Bobby determine whether circum-ly. Baker, former Senate Demo* stances warranted a new trial. *' * * cratic secretary 0*0 is facing I A Justice Department spokes-1 “It does not appear from the:various charges including toman said the FBI reported it Jogs of our inquiry into the ban- come tax evasion. eavesdropping resulted in ■ Supreme Court order of a now trial for Fred Black, a Washington public relations man also convicted of Income tax eva- sidn. The department later admit; general to the southern Lower Peninsula, the report said. Combined output of the 10 major field crops was 9.8 million tons this year compared with 9.4 million tons last year. Fruit production totaled 578,000 tons, 19 per cent below last year and 6 per cent below the five-year average. ... The field crop value totaled 8380 million compared with $346 million last year, the reporting service said. The report said smaller crops of peaches, sweet and tart cherries and grapes more than offset larger crops of pears and plums. The year-end report said dry bean production totaled 8.1 million bags (100 pounds clean basis), 31 per cent higher than the 1965 figure and 9 per cent above the 5-year average. HEAVY RAINS Dry weather from the half of May through mid-July slowed bean development -but heavy rains in August supplied sufficient moisture to carry the crop through to maturity and dry fall weather aided harvest, the service said. The bean yield per acre ttf 1,260 pounds was slightly below the 5-year average. The service reported that: . The state produced 30.4 million , it wasn’t theirs. The banket had been mailed ! in as a project for a quilting - bee and accidently got mixed up with the bazaar goods. . Now the churchwomen are i trying to find the lucky buyer so bushels of winter wheat, 15 per they can return the quilt to its cent more than last year. The rightful owner. The year produced^ a record soybean crop of 10 8 million bushels—12 per cent higher than last year’s total. WWW Late summer potatoes totaled 950.000 hundredweight — up 15 per cent from last year. The fall potato crop is estimated at 7.955.000 hundredweight — down 9 per cent from last year. The year’s 1.1 million ton sugar beet production almost equaled the 1965 crop. An increase in harvested acreage was offset by a lower yield per acre. The report said the state’s 10 major field crops were harvested from a total of 5.7 million acres in 1966 compared with 5.8 million Acres in 1965. Medicare Fight to High Court l WASHINGTON (UPD-The first of several lawsuits challenging! the constitutionality of an anti-1 Communist disclaimer to the] Medicare law has reached the! Supreme Court. I Mrs. Aline P. Weiss, 70, mother-in-law of Dean Louis Poliak of Yale Law School, and her mother, Mrs. Alice K. Pol-litzer, 96, both of New York, yesterday asked the court to rule on the law and a clause in the Medicare application. Their appeal was filed by the American Civil Liberties Union ------------------- (ACLU). Wnmon \nlrl The question on the Medicare YY UIIICII JU/U application, which must be am . i . * .i, jSwered by 3.4 million prospec- YY rona \j(Ullt f*ve applicants not covered by1 & |Social Security, asks whether] WILLIAMSBURG, Mass. Wi-fi* enrollee was a member of] That was a fine-looking quilt the * Communist organization. The Congregational Church women [statute specifies that members sold at their bazar. Trouble of Communist organizations are not eligible for benefits. The song with the longest title Is “Green with Envy, Purple with Passion, White with] Anger, Scarlet with Fever, What I were you doing in her arms last1 night Blues,” written in 1961 by Springer and Jones. NATIONAL BANK OF SOUTHFIELD MICHIGAN’S PROGRESSIVE INDEPENDENT DANK offers a NEW LONG-TERM SAVINGS PLAN that GUARANTEES INTEREST OF % per annum 6.49 EFFECTIVE RATE, ON 10 YEAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES WHEN HELD TO MATURITY • Minimum amount $25.00. * Your funds will yield this NEW HIGH RATE of return because interest is compounded DAILY at the highest fbgal bank interest rate, and guaranteed for 10 years, regardless of Business or Market Changes or Interest Fluctuations. * You can withdraw your money af any time on just 90 days notice, and your funds will still accrue interest at the highest legal rate of 5% compounded daily. Deposits are Insured up to $15,000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation CUP AH WML C0UP0W TODAY! | NATIONAL BANK OF SOUTHFIELD 1 j 27100 Lahser Road, I | Southfield, Mich. 48075 | Enclosed is my check or Money Order in the amount of $ I Please issue 10 Year Savings Certificate with maturity valua calculated | - at 6.49% per annum, when held to full maturity. I I (N#f I i which Certificate is to be issued) I | (Address) (City) (Zip) j | (Signature of pfrfon requesting certificate) (Social Security No.) j Opet Each Saturday Until 4:30 F.M. issb NATIONAL BAHKiFSOtlTHHELO t/oukoCPCaf, Sndependext Bank, MAIN OFPICCi 27100 Lahser Road (at 11 MileJtcUTtl. 353-6400 ■RANCH OFFICES Southfield Plaza Northland Point 12 Mila • Evergreen. 17000 W. 8 Mila Rd. 15565 Northland Dr. 20000 W. 12 Mila Rd. 0 Tel. 357-1300 ^ Til. 353-5100 Tal. 3532000 GunninjjhamSsT"ou«cE P > B—7 THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28. 1966 Wants greatest SUIT SALE RHf of the year! PMITSSmB Our entire stock of regularly $65 Brenf suits priced to save you *17 FINK ALL-WOOL WORSTIDS WITH 2 PAIR OP TROUSERS Fantastic Wards value I Select firm, long wearing worsteds in lustrous sharkskins or subdued patterned weaves. Latest 2 and 3-button models with the most up-to-date detailings. And remember* every suit has an extra pair of pants—you get double wear I Regulars, shorts, longs. Hurry in I Get terrific savings at Wards I Pick from a huge array of fabrics, styles I All-wool worsteds, lustrous worsted-silk and worsted-mohair blends. Lean, trim-cut contemporaries in 1 and 2-button styles, conventional and natural shoulder 3-button styles. Medium, dark tones. Regulars,shorts, longs. M ONTGOMERY WARD Detroit Church Seminar on Draft Is Today DETROIT The U.S. Supreme Court upheld foe legislature’s right to elect the governor in a Dec. 12 decision. Attorneys for the state argued In a hearing on the Jonee’ suit that the high court considered foe Nov. 8 election “complete.”. ■ # ★ * Asst. Atty. Gen. Harold Hill cited foe Supreme Court’ cisiott that legislators would not be bound to vote for a particular candidate by a party loyalty oath became foe “election is over.' A new step or process is about to begin." • .. '^xkQUs Jt&JL fid l Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M, TO 9:00 P.M. . SATURDAY 9:30 A.M, TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 3 P M. • 682-4940 B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, ISM Serve something special WEAL FOX THEJiOLWAY Mixed Nets r MT. WHITNEY DELICIOUS _ _ Jumbo Ripe Olives K 39* Maraschinos * 29* AUNT JANE’S CANDIED—MIDGET Whole Gherkins St 49* NABISCO VERI-THIN-IDEAL FOX SNACKS . Pretzel Sticks - .1. 35* Pork & Beans 2' Hr sporty week Chip # Dip tinted a-l-A-N-T KRUN-CHEE Potato Chips UPTON—IDEAL FOX DIFS Onion Soup Mix w,. w, w ^ IDEAL FOX SANDWICHES—MEADOWDALE Mustard NO MESS — NO FUSS 7" VHITB Paper Plates DAIQUIRI, MANHATTAN TOM COLLINS _ . Mixes Ear K 89* NABISCO—PARTY FAVORITE Veri-Thin Pretzels && 39* Pixie Cold Cups gg « 39* SERVE MARIOS THROWN Stuffed Olives " " MARIO’S STUFFED Anchovy Olives ...for YOUR “Parly Tray”! ECKRJCH—4 VARIETIES . Smorgas Pac sir PEELED AND DETAINED mjfc. ^_ Top Frost Shrimp m *2" MRS. PAUL’S MINIATURE 4-. _ Deviled Crabs . s~ 59* .MEADOWDALB HICKORY SMOKED _ GORDON’S BREAKFAST LINK __■ Sliced Bacon **■ 69* Pork Sausage b.79* Fresh Canadian Style Pork Loin Z . So testy end so eesy t prepere. Then is hone to you get 1 Iton tender meetl HYGRADE or ARMOUR STAR Ball Park Franks Mich. 1-lb* Grade 1 pkfl* ' GRADE 'A* 10 to 14 b*. c J Coupon i CH ASE & SANBORN COFFEE 2- 49* Itatt W lIltM «m ttl, eaLb PASCAL HYGRADEV FANCY Mat feint re. a >v» ie >» **» MOUm Boot Briskets a* b. 79* caeib. 69* Honey Suckle Turkeys ih49* COUNTRY mCHEN Mich. 14b. Jt®, OMAR MAYER LITTLE Sliced Bologna a™* i Pka. 09* Wieners or Smokies vt.piw.43* xi*h« M iime FRESH GROUND "ALL BEEF* Hamburger EXTRA LEAN GROUNB ROUND £ 89* LEAN GROUND CHUCK ib. 79* Delmonico LOCAL OR RED Hawaiian Tender l Crisp I FRESH MILD Green Onions bunch 10* FRESH CRISP RED Bndlthm nko 10^ iiaaisiiuu p*b» iu FRESH Slaw Salad 2 dii.29* '0V ' kl® 59* 89* Egg Nog "tU.' 59* Holiday Dollgkt g.„ Baby Goudas wt. Pk«. 59* flthorAnortod __t I Snack Pack wt. Pk,i 55* f Cocktail Spread Jr «n 39* ; TomatoJuice3Q,cIn,°, T9‘ [Sh§|k ]]• VELVET ALL FLAVORS ICI CREAM Del Monte Drinks ' COUNTRY KITCHEN Foltlo Soldi Mscaraal Soldi Bokei Boom PARTY SALADS Cranberry Juice _ Ocean Spray 2 btii. 99‘ stakaly Bavarian Stylo vie Sauerkraut «n 19* i Pet Mfi From. . « . „ _ _ Cherry Wo / ^ 39* Kuby Bad frotoa i< JSSi" Hawaiian Punch 2 ^,39* Mnadawrfafn frotoa . _ Lemonade »'10* Maodowdalo Slltod , ___ Strawberries 3 Pk9.: T9* SWEET MILK BISCUITS Hl-Valu tiltad White Bread 2'11 Awruy Parkar Haata Fresh Sells Awruy Old fatMaaod Ol Kimmel Bread !.» Olnn.rN.pklu. Kleenex < Dinner'Napkins 3 Kraft', Quality Miracle- Whip Maodowdalo Margarine 4 j Maodowdalo ,» Soft Drinks 3tw Comet Cleanser 1-lb. JVa-oz. 25' 3-lb. 1-ox. , pkg. m 33* Top Job Cleaner 65' Pt. 12-oz. btl. Jvory Liquid K£T 49' Jo/ Liquid, 46* Pi., 4*ox pi. btl. F X THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1968 B—9 Record-High Interest Rates May Egse for Home Buyers WASHINGTON (AP) _ Tight money, * major weakness in a generally strong economy this year, is easing rapidly, but die potential borne buyer still faces the highest^ interest rates on record. But the tpine loan peak may be nsar, with more normal costs and greater availability of loans possibly just around the corner. p| * A Indications of the easing, and a prediction of further easing next yepr, came at a fast clip Tuesday, capped by an announcement from the Federal Reserve Board of an end to a policy begun last September aimed at restricting bank lending to business. The board said current credit, ever, nee only to IS from 6.49 conditions made its September ||„ October. Needy Indians Have Big Yule Dinner Final Touch to Effort of Good Will BAY MILLS (AP) - The Indians of Bay Mills, who were likely to be without Christmas goodies until a few days ago, put a tasty finishing touch Tuesday on an outpouring of good will. They had their Christmas dinner—a big one, turkey and all the trimmings. “It was more like Thanksgiv-ing,” said Alex Goldade, county supervisor from nearby Brim-ley. The good will was sparked by a hunter’s concern when he saw a barefoot Indian girl standing in the snow near the huge Chippewa reservation near Bay Mills last month. RALLIES CO-WORKERS • The hunter, Harry Mitchell of Port Huron, rallied co-workers of the Michigan Bell Telephone Co. and collected some 3,000 pounds of gifts, clothes and food for the Indians. Fire destroyed the gifts—and the church building they were stored In—the day after they were delivered. But people all over tiie country came to the Indians’ rescue. ★ * ★ Thousands of pounds of gifts poured fat, on airplanes from Minnesota, in trucks from Detroit, in letters from Wisconsin. Father Joseph Lawless, pastor of the Church that burned, said he has received several thousand dollars for renovating a community building to be used until a new church is erected. ‘‘I’ve received so many donations I haven’t had time to count them all,” Father Lawless said. There were so many gifts the 32 Bay Mills Indian families shared their Christmas. Joseph Sagataw, chief of the Hannahville Indians, arrived in Bay Mills Tuesday to take a van load of extra gifts and food to his tribesmen. policy “inoperative.” ON MORTGAGES Interest rates on mortgages generally lag behind the rest of the money market but one economist said today be mpectod a leveling off now and a possible downturn within the next few moths. the Federal Home Loan Bank Board reported Tuesday that Interest rates on conventional home loans increased again during November but the slower over-idl pace and a greater availability of funds indicated the peak pay be near. * * *| There were these other developments: — Secretary of Commerce John T. Connor, In his annual economic outlook, predicted a “somewhat easier credit situa-tion” during 1967 with an advance in home building from its lowest level since the end of World Warn. | — The Federal National Mortgage Association reduced sharply the' interest ratal on Ms short-term discount notes, the second drop ttys month after an upward trend which began in September 1965. 5 PCT. DROP The government’s short-term farrowing costs, usually the first to reflect easing In money markets, have already dropped below 5 per cent since reaching their peak Sept. 19. ★ ★ That day, tiie rate paid by the government on six-month Treasury Mils rose to 6.039 per cent, the first time that the rate exceeded 6 per cent on any Treasury issue. The Home Loan Bank Board, which regulates the savings and loan industry, noted that, in the past, interest rates on mortgages have tended to lag behind declines in the money market generally. Its monthly survey of interest rates showed a 6.4 per cent rate in November on conventional mortgages for new homes compared with 6.32 in October. The rate on existing homes, how- m SR M ispiracy Case Is Postponec GRAND RAPIDS (AP) — Municipal Court examination of eight persons and two firms charged with conspiring to violate state meat laws was postponed Tuesday when the attorney for two of the defendants withdrew. James M. Catchick, attorney for Peter and Gerrit Ritsema of Holland, told Judge John Letts his clients advised him they would be unable to meet future bills for legal service. Letts granted an adjournment until Jan. 24 after the Ritsemas asked for time to hire another attorney or obtain the services of a court-appointed lawyer. MORE MODERATE The Federal Reserve Board said the expansion of business loans — which eooodc blamed for much of the inflationary stress this year — has bees reduced to a more moderate level. In an attempt to restrict bank lending to business, the board in September said it would examine a bank’s over-all lending policies to business before approving any Federal Reserve loans to the bank. Business spending for new plant and equipment this year is forecast by a government survey at 16.5 per cent above 1966. Both government and private surveys predict a slackened growth next year. Little Leukemia Victim Sees Disneyland ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)— A sprawling land of fantasy from YIP TREATMENT — Six-year-old Susan Dewey, a leukemia victim from Grand Rapids, Mich., gets the attention of Disneyland characters as she and her sister and parents tour the huge Anaheim, Calif, amusement park yesterday as guests of a California businessman who asked to remain anonymous. Dotcors say the child may die within a year. Monde girl with sparkling eyes romped in the land of make-believe and personally met the Three Little Pigs. Susan Dewey, 6, a leukemia victim from Grand Rapids, Mich., was given VIP treatment Tuesday at Disneyland. She was met at the gate by the Three Little Pigs and a human-sized cartoon character named'Goofy, who — in the fantasy land of children — is a talking dog. ^ A crew of firemen in a fire wagon drove Susan to Snow WMte’s castle where she rode on the back of. the flying elephant Dumbo and was whirled around the Teacup and toured “It’s a Small World.” TOURS IN WHEELCHAIR She a£ed for a red balloon and some popcorn and they were hers. She viewed most of the wheelchair. Susan have much strength. Doctors say she may die from the blood disease within a year. ‘There were doubts she would be here to celebrate Christ- asked to remain anonymous. said her father, George Dewey, a used car salesman. Susan arrived Monday night with her parents and rister, Kathie, 4, after spending Christmas at fame. The trip was financed by ■ Los Angeles t who ‘‘She fad a wonderful time," said Mrs: Dewey. JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID We Pick Up FE 2-0200 i PONTIAC SCRAPB Including Specials for Your New Year’s Party! It costs so very little to "go first class" in a Tuxedofrom us. area's largest rental i, we fit each "After Tuxedo perfectly from our own huge selection. This service, Mutiaaab Clothiers-Uniform* 'After-Six" Tuxedo Rentals 908 W. Huron at Telegraph Pontiac Q—o DOWNTOWN TEL-HURON DRAYTON ROCHESTER / BLOOMFIELD PONTIAC * PONTIAC CENTER PLAINS PLAZA MIRACLE MILE MALL Shop without cash — "CHARGE IT" AT KRESGE'S — pay only once a month B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, i960 Dog Licenses on Sale at Animal Shelter V Dr. Frank R. Bates, director ef the Oakland County animal welfare division, announced to day that 1967 dog licenses are amenity on sale at the county animal shelter, 1200 N. Telegraph. License rates we $1 for males and spayed females and |2 for unspayed females. 2,700 Yanks to Leave Cuba? WASHINGTON (AP) - Cuba reportedly has agreed^ to let 2r 700 U.S. citizens leave that country. The first arrivals could fly. to New Orleans today, sources indicate. The State Department is making no immediate comment but is known to have been negotiating the matter for tfeeks with the Castro government through the Swiss Embassy in Havana. * ★ * * There we an estimated 880 U.S. families in Cuba, many headed by persons of Cuban descent born in the United States. There have been, however, past reports that repatriation might be under way and it has not developed. Deadline for purchasing licenses at regular prices is Feb. IS, said Dr. Bates. Starting March 1, licenses will sell for |5 and <7 90. Upon purchasing licenses, applicants should present a rabies vaccination slip for each dog. LAST CASE However, dogs can be vaccinated for 82 each at the animal shelter, Dr. Bates said. The shots are for a one-yew period. Dr. Bates recalled that the comity’s last reported case of rabies inflicting a dog occurred in 1954. A few cats and skunks have been inflicted with the disease since then, according to Bates. In addition to the animal shelter, a few northern Oakland County communities sell do license plates. Included in this bracket we Pontiac, Birmingham, Bloomfield Township, Waterford Township and Rochester. ★ ★ , * Licenses also can be bought at the county treasurer’s office. TO CONDUCT CLINICS Hours at the animal shelter we 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays. Beginning the last part of next month the county will conduct clinics in various Oakland County communities and nt the shelter for die pur- pose of licensing and vaccinat- I Dr. Bates warned that coun-ing dogs. jty dog wardens died several Clinics will be held in thepersons this yew for not having townships of Farmington, Avon, dog licenses. White Lake, Novi, Highland, * * * Oakland and Brandon and the One judge, Dr. Bates said, villages of Wixom and Orton-| fined violators $10 plus $5 court ville. .cost*. S. Vial Air Drop SAIGON, South Vietnam (AP) — Thirty-three planeloads Of South Vietnamese army paratroopers jumped into the Mekong Delta Tuesday in the font large-scale combat parachute, legislators, drop* over South Vietnam in al-most two years, the U.S. Air A House Republican-Demo-Force announced Wednesday, [cratic negotiating committee is 2 Trailers to Add State Capitol Space LANSING (AP) - Legislative lenders plan te attach two mottle trailer buildings to the ground floor of the Capitol next month to gain office space for to make ft final decision on foe plan this week. / Under the plan/ 1C House Democrats and secretaries would have office space in foe mobile buildings, which would be used untlL the jCUpitol Is remodeled 6r replaced by a new structure. "I think they’re going to bn very attractive,’’ said Rep. William Ryan, D-Detroit, chair-man of foe Democratic House negotiating team. "They’ll have a fustic appearance so they won’t clash too much with fop Capitol.” WHICH LADY Is A Holiday Health Club Member? Why of course, it's the lady on the right. Havo the figure you havo always aosirod. Lose pounds and inches, regardless of your ago, plus fool hotter and have mere energy the easy Holiday Health Club way. Call or come by today for frmm consultation. Stop putting it off. Call for your appointment today. OPEN DAILY. GAIN, LOSE or REARRANGE WEIGHT and IT'S FUN! HURRY . . . LIMITED Holiday Special JOIN TODAY FOR CALL 334-0529 NOW OR DROP IN TODAY (OPEN EVENINGS TIL 10:00) NO STNENUOUS DIETS. NO CUSSES TO ATTEND OR APPOINTMENTS TO MAKE Arrang* Visits to Suit Your Convanitncal OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. MONDAY thru FRIDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SATURDAY "Separatt Utplt. for Men" “OPEN II to 10” Fran Trial of all Facilities 1 N. Perry St. (Pika t Parry) THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1966 C—1 Huskies Lead Entire Gar Pontiac Northern Outguns. Pontiac Central, 58-45 The'victory lifts PNH to 4-1 mark this season while Central fe&to M. This was Northern’s third win in 21 city series games, all three coming on Its own court. The last one was 5M2 in the IMS district tournament title JUMPER — A standing room only crowd watched Pontiac Northern defeat PCH last night, much to the pleasure of the Huskies’ home crowd. Frank Russell takes a jump shot while Northern’s Dana Coin watches. Walled Lake Matmen Lead Defending champion Walled Lake leads the way with 14 sur-viors as the seventh annual Oakland County High School Invitational Wrestling Tournament moved into today’s final events. ★ ★ ★ The Vikings had U entries still battling for points among the top four finishers as the competition entered its quarter, final round at 11:30 a.m. The finals begin 7 p.m. tonight. " 8 Pontiac Northern indicated It has title ambitions by sending 13 survivors into today’s activity and Warren Fitzgerald had 11 still contending. Pontiac Central, who finished fourth between Fitzgerald and Northern last year, had right still bidding for the first place trophies. * ★ ★ Walled Lake’s entries includ: ed defending 145-pound titlist Dennis Fitzgerald.' Tim and Rick Russell, Ray Buffmyer, Jack Gardner; Carey Stevenson, Bob Hellner, Rick Hyde, Scott McKown, Steve Fogle, Dennis Brandt, Jim Thomas, Ron James and Greg Wencel. PNH LIST Northern's contingent was Leroy Gutierrez, Tom Kdl, Bill Green, Ben Moon, John Knibbs, Epifanio Gomex, Ron Washington, Bob Harris, Harry McPhail, Ken and Jim Corr, Frank Laf-ferty and Bill Ddtson. Representing PCH were Randy Johnson, N. Z. Bryant, Larry Craft, Ken VoUmar, Ben Rodriguez, BUI Gottschall, Charles Mason and Athie McGinnis. Other teams with wrestlers still contending were Royal Oak Kimball, RO Dondero and Warren Lincoln, each with 6; Farmington, Birmingham Seaholm and Hazel Park, 4 each; Berkley, North Farmington and Birmingham Groves, 3 each; Far-mington Our Lady of Sorrows, Bedford Union, Warren Mott and CathoUc Central, 2 each; Bloomfield Hills, Country Day and L’Anse Creuse, one each. The tournament had more than 20 teams and almost 500 wrestlers competing Tuesday before good-sized crowds. Spartans in Finals of Hockey Tourney ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - Defending NCAA champion Michigan State takes on Minnesota tonight in the finals of the St. Paul Collegiate Hockey Classic. MSU rtumped North Dakota 4-2 Tuesday night while Minnesota thrashed Army 12-1. Goalie Gaye Colley was outstanding for MSU, making 28 saves. Last night’s contest was an mmsual one in that the winning Huskies, while clearly Mtplaytng the PCH quintet, hit only 36 pur cent of their field goal tries and were ont- But seven first period turnovers by Central and five more in the next session to only four by PNH in the initial half dug a burial mound that was too much for the visitors to surmount NEVER LEAD Never leading in the contest the Chiefs fell behind by 10 prints in the first three and a half minutes of play. This deficit was cut to four at period’s mid, then grew to six prints at the intermission despite the fact PCH took command of the backboards. The invading Central squad, however, couldn’t put the ball in the basket After hitting four of ten in the first period with effective ball handling, it began taking more and less.effective shots from the floor. As a result the Chiefs hit only 24 per cent and scored their second lowest total in the Intracity rivalry. For a change, Northern had the tougher defense in the annual meetings. The Huskies’ hustling zone kept PCH gunning from the outside except fen1 the high-post work of Alton Wilson Quintets Lose in Motor City Broncs Are Losers in' First Round U. of D. Upset, 98-94 by Tulane; Miami, O., Defeats Western DETROIT (AP) - The University of Detroit’s hopes for hometown glory in the Motor City Classic basketball tournament were shattered by upstart Tulane. The Green Wave, with some hot shooting in the second half, turned the tide and upset the Titans 98-94 Tuesday night. ★ ★ ★ In the first game, Miami of Ohio whipped Western Michigan 51-45, earning the right to fade Tulane in the championship game tonight. Detroit meets Western Michigan in the consolation match. Down by 12 points at the half, Tulane hit 10 straight points in the first two minutes of the second half and came within two points of the Titans, 57-55. Johnny Arthurs, a sophomore forward} and A1 Andres, a Benton Harbor product, put the Green Wave back in the game-Arthurs hit 19 of his 33 points in the first half and Andrews pumped in 17 of his 21 points in the final 20 minutes. HOT PACE Tulane fired a blistering 68 per cent in the second half, sinking 22 of 32 floor shots. Maimi played a slow, deliberate game in topping WMU. Paced by the nearly perfect shooting of forward Fred Foster, Miami jumped to a 32-24 halftime margin. But the Broncos cut the margin to 46-43 with ‘ M to play on a jump shot by Pahil White. N ★ ★ ★ A pair of foul shots by Jerry Fisher with 1:44 remaining wrapped it up for Miami. Foster topped the Redskins with 24 points while Reggie Lacefiekl had 17 points to lead WMU. Central Michigan 5 Wins in First Round GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - Tri-State and Central Michigan posted -the better shooting percentages and the victories Tuesday night in the first round of the Calvin College Invitational basketball tournament. Tri - State dumped Wheaton College 86-83 and Central Michigan defeated University of Bridgeport 97-77. John Berends’ 14 points paced Central Michigan’s balanced attack. i MSU Handed Defeat in Quaker Tourney From Our News Wires Louisville merrily whistled its way through the “graveyard’’ of nationally ranked basketball teams while Michigan State was gently laid to rest. Second-ranked Louisville and seventh-ranked State were booked into the same Quaker city tournament which began Tuesday at Philadelphia’s notorious Palestra where more than a handful of highly rated clubs have gone to their reward. ★ ★ ★ The Cardinals, however, were not about to roll over and play dead for Niagara. With sophomore sensation Butch Beard and Junior Westley Unseld combining for 47 points and 36 rebounds, Louisville crushed the Purple Eagles 98-73. State, now 5-2, wasn’t that fortunate against local entry Vfllanova. The Wildcats hit the Spartans with a tenacious defense and three hot sophomores in scoring a 66-63 upset The victories sent Louisville and Villanova into Thursday night’s semifinals where the Cardinals will meet Syracuse and the Wildcats face 15th-ranked Princeton. Syracuse held off LaSalle 88-84 and Princeton pummelled Bowling Green 87-73 in other first-round activity. The Spartans meet Bowling Green of Ohio in a consolation match tonight. EIGHT TIES The game was tied eight times in the first half and the lead changed hands 13 times. The Spartans took a short-lived lead early in the second half but Villanova’s George May popped in a pair of 20-foot jumpers and the wildcats were ahead to stay. MSU closed the gap to two points, 57-55, with lesS than three minutes to play. But Villa-nova scored nine straight points to put the game out of reach. Johnny Jones topped Villa-nova with 21 points and May added 17. Steve Rymal, a guard from Adrian, was high for Michigan State with 18. The victory was the fourth for Villanova in seven games. Western Kentucky struggled to a 90-84 triumph over Holy Cross and reached the final round of the Hurricane Classic against Miami, an 82-78 winner over Pennsylvania.! Suspension — crippled Illinois and Southern California reached the second round of the Los Angeles Classic, Iowa State and Kansas State gained semifinal MICHIGAN STATE VILLANOVA OFT O 1 M II May 7 ! 4 5-8 13 Gillen 1 3 4-6 12 Jones 7 1 5 4-8 16 Crows 3 J oo-oo M'l'nnt 1 0 (Ml 0 Mctosh 3 oo-oo McCall 0 0 0-0 0 2218-25 63 Totals 2411 Michigan Stata............ 21 NBA~Sfahdings ____ York ...... 17 'l» > Cincinnati ........ 13 t» .< Baltimore ........ I 2» £ Western DWItlen San Francisco . 22 13 .< St. Louis ....... IS If ^ Detroit .......... IS 2f .. Chicago ........... 15 24 .1 \oe Angeles .... 12 22 Tuesday's Results Cincinnati 131, Detroit 123 San Francisco at Baltimors Los Angelas at Naw York Boston at Philedelphie Thursday's Games Lot Angeles at Cincinnati Boston at St. Louis SCORES PIN—Ken Corr of Pontiac Northern is In the process of gaining • pin over Scott McGowan in the 165 pound class of the Oakland County wrestling tournament con- tinuing today at Oakland University. PNH has 13 wrestlers in the finals, one shy of Walled Lake with 14. berths in the Big E1 g h ournament and defending Champ Oklahoma City and Stanford advanced in the All-Coliege tournament. Miss Fisher, Peaches in Net Finals MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Top-seeded Peaches Bartkowicz of Hamtramck, Mich., meets Marilyn Aschner of Holliswood, N.Y., today in the finals of the Orange Bowl Junior Tennis Championships. In the girls 18-and-under division^ Miss Bartkowicz defeated Maricaye Christianson of Los Angeles, 6-0, 6-2, in a semifinal match Tuesday. In a quarterfinal double match for girls 18-and-under, Miss Bartkowicz and her part-_ _ , Vera Lucia Cleto of Brazil, defeated Toni Locker and Carol Passage of Kalamazoo, Mich,, 64.9-1. Other games Tuesday found Linda Berry and Kathy Dombof of Kalamazoo, Mich., defeating Linda Tuero, Metarie, La., and Connie C a p o z z i, Middletown, Ohio, 64, 6-2, in a quarterfinal doubles match for girls 16-and-under. In semifinal matches for girls 16-and-under Emily Fisher of Bloomfield Hills defeated Vera Cleto of Brazil, 6-3, 7-5, while T.inH« Tuero won over Kathy Dombof, 64,6-0. In a quarterfinal match for girls 18-and-under Kazuk Sawa-matsu and Junko Sawamatsu of Japan defeated Petty Miller and Sherry Carlson of Kamazoo, Midi., 6-0,6-1. NHL Standings Boiton at Montrool Thursday's a Detroit at Naw York Fontlac Pram Pbaits by Bd Vandarworp PNH POSSESSION — Pontiac Northern handed crosstown rival Pontiac Central a 5845 lacing last night; and the Huskies did it by controlling much of the flow play. In the top photo Mike Clancy (30) dribbles past Alton Wilson of PCH and in the bottom picture Bob Traylor (4) gets possession as Gordon Hamilton (35) tries to stop a drive. Behind Hamilton is Northern’s Stan Allison. No Victory, but Wings Salvage 4-4 Tie on Road and some occasional tips that often didn’t drop in. Guard Craig Deaton especially proved troublesome to tfa« Chiefs’ top print producer, Prentice Hill. The 30.5-ppg marksman was held to seven shots land one basket. Don Hayward, PNH’a steady forward, was off In his shooting [but pulled down 15 rebounds. ADD PUNCH Dana Coin and reserve center Stan Allison, giving another fine performance as a substitute, picked up the scoring slack [with 20 points between them, [and also combined for 16 rebounds. Allison, particularly, was effective midway through the final haif with three baskets as the Huskies built their lead to 49-33. Guards Mike Clancy and Deaton, making their first varsity start as a unit, also contributed with their shooting and defensive hustie. * ★ * Although outrebounded, 60-53, PNH managed 76 shots to 65 for Central and made six more field goals than the losers. Wilson topped the backboard work-Gordon Hamilton had 15. Wil-era with 16 retrieves while son also hit 7 of 13 for the game's top shooting mark. But he wasn’t enough to prevent Northern from amassing an 18-point lead late in the game and adding 50 points in this year’s City All Sports Trophy competition before a noisy, standing-room-only crowd of 2,000. CUNTRAL (41) NORTHERN (») FO FT TF FQ FT TP Wilson 7 7-12 21 Hay word 3 44 12 Causey 0 1-1 1 Coin 5 2-3 12 Danltla 0 0-0 0 Traylor 0 OO 0 Jayvees Also Stage Battle There have been few struggle in the annual city basketball series to match the classic junior varsity struggle last night between Pontiac Northern and Pontiac Central. ★ ★ * The unbeaten PNH reserves entered the game confident of • their first win over Central and built a 10-point second-half lead before their over-anxiety cost them a 69-66 defeat. The yonng Chiefs (3-2) scored 27 points in the final period to poll out their 16th win in the rivalry. Lew McNeir tallied 22 prints, including two clutch 22-foot jump shots, to lead the winners while Ed Williams made 24 for PNH. Two technical fouls committed by Northern—one for an excess time out and one for failure to report by an entering substitute —cost the junior Huskies (4-1) three points and the ball game. BOSTON (AP) - Detroit has severed its 14-game losing streak on the road. But tiie Red Wings still aren’t back in the winning column. They tied the Boston Bruins 44 on Gordie Howe’s power play goal in the last five min-utes Tuesday night. ★ • * ★ In the only other NHL contest, the Chicago Black Hawks upset the league-leading New York “angers 3-2 at New York. The Boston battle found the Wings within two defeats of the NHL record for consecutive losses—16 by Chicago in the 1953-54 season. THREE RALLIES The Wings, who rallied three times to earn the tie, remain only a point behind fifth-place) Boston in the battle to stay out of tiie cellar. Howe tipped in a long shot by Norm Ullman at 15:42 to get the tie. Defenseman Leo Boivin scored his second and third goals of the season (or Detroit and Alex Delvecchlo got his eighth on a third-period power play. ★ .* ★ The Bruins outshot the Wings 45-34, getting two goals in each of the last two periods. Ron Stewart and Ed Westfall each scored for Boston, and Pit Martin got two Bruin goals. The Black Hawks surprised New York on third period i by Stan Mikita and Bobby Hull and climbed within two points of the Rangers. It snapped New York's winning streak at three. Hull got the clincher, slapping i his 14th goal after Phil sposito fed him from the face-off with less than four minutes to play*and the score tied 2-2. Mikita’s third-period goal, his second score of the game, had created the tie snapped by Hull. Local Boater Adds License Henry Ball of Union Lake has received his international racing driver’s license, the American Power Boat Association has announced. Ball is a member of the Marine Prop Riders Boat Club and is active in the annual Loon Lake Hydroplane Races each summer in addition to competing elsewhere in the Midwest. He races in the 48-cublc-inch hydro class of inboard motor-boats. He has 10 years’ experience in APBA competition. Big 'O' Sends Pistons * Loss, 131-123 CINCINNATI (AP)—They call Oscar Robertson the Big 0 because of his accuracy in putting a basketball through the hoop. He lived up to his nickname Tuesday night as the Cincinnati Royals dumped the Detroit Pistons 131-123 in a National Basketball Association tilt. In the only other NBA action Tuesday, St. Louis downed Baltimore, 113-111. Cincinnati took advantage of a slow Detroit start in the second period. Detroit missed its first nine scoring attempts ss the Royals fired is nine consecutive field goals. Robertson shot eight in the nine. The streak increased the Royals’ 28-25 first quarto- lead to a halftime tally of 6646. 8 6-7 22 Dterklng 1 0-0 Jk 4 4-5 12 Rgb'tt'n 12 9-10 W 6 8-8 20 Chappell 0 0-0 0 IN 0 Smith ♦ V* W . - Lewi* .... oo-oo Lev* Tretvant J 1-4 JMiWJMM TSS =‘»S _ „&i ?otaT*too?*—Detroit’ 2?,l1iinclnnetl 2». tBSStH C—I THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, Annual Honor Goes to in NFL Bart Starr Is Jim Thorpe Award Winner MEW YORK—(NEA)—Bryan Bartlett Starr «t Montgomery, Ala., and Green Bay, Wis., baa been on Just one toot to his life In 1969, the Green Bay Packers played a game In New York, and Bart Starr, who expected to play quarterback, sat on the bench all afternoon, though be was to perfect health. That night Starr and aid Ron Kramer, a fellow Packer also disappointed at his inactivity, didn’t drown their sorrows. They deluged them. ★ ★ ♦ The next week, Starr started at quarterback for the Packers, and seven years later he is still starting. The Packers have won five Western Conference titles to the National Football League, three NFL championships and are about to try tor a fourth. And this year Starr has won the highest honor that can come to a professional football player. Bryan Bartlett Star today was named the recipient af the 12th annual Jim Thorpe Trophy, awarded by Newspaper Enterprise Association to the most valuable player to the National Football League. The winner is determined in a poll of all toe league players. Now there’s a real cause for celebration, if Bart wants to try it again. The Green Bay quarterback will receive his trophy in a special ceremony to be telecast nationally by CBS-TV on Jan. 1 as part of a special half-hour program immediately preceding the National Football championship game between Starr’s Packers and the Dallas Cowboys. Presentation of the NEA All-Players All-Pro team will feature the program. Others who figured prominently to this year’s balloting conducted by NEA were Gale Sayers, the fine halfback of the Chicago Bears, who won the league’s rushing crown with 1,231 yards gained; defensive safety Larry Wilson of the St. Louis Cardinals; running bade Leroy Kelly of the Cleveland Browns, and another quarterback, Don Meredith of the Dallas Cowboys. 11TB SEASON The quiet quarterback waited until Us 11th pro season to be acclaimed top outstanding man to the NFL. His contributions have been veiled during the last decade by such glamor names among the quarterbacks as Norm Van Brocklin, Y. A. Tittle and John Unites. The acclamation is significant this year because all the other quarterbacks, including Unites, pinpointed Starr as the top man of ’66. it it it “Bart is the best to the business,” noted Norm Snead of toe Philadelphia Eagles, “and certainly deserves and has earned this award.” Among all the passing statistics that abound in the National Football League record manual, the name of Starr is found to two places only. There is a category called “passing efficiency”—it reveals Starr as the most efficient passer to history (for 1,000 or more attempts) with a completion percentage of 56.6 going into this season. There is another called “passes had intercepted”—Starr has the lowest lifetime percentage to history, at 4.2S per cent of his career attempts. This season, the Packer quarterback has exceeded himself in both areas. Starr completed 62.2 per cent of his passes with only three interceptions. But the Green Bay quarterback is more than just a flinger of passes. In fact, critics used to say he didn’t really have a good arm, that be couldn’t throw the long ball. No one has ever argued, however, about his'ubility to direct a team. “He has a lot of leadership ability,” said coach Vince Lombardi of the Packers, “and he knows exactly what I want Bart follows ready sheet for a game perfectly. We win cadae we make very, very few mistakes.” Starr makes virtually none, on a strategy level “His greatest asset,” said BID Austin, a former Packer assistant who now coaches Pittsburgh, “is picking apart the defense. Any defense has a hole. The trick is to know where-it is.” ★ -it And Bart can also get a team to respond. Recognition of Ms leadership qualities was delayed fay a natural reserve and politeness inherent to the quiet native Alabaman. Early to his career, he once admonished an unruly team huddle, “Hush tq>, y’ail.” And broke up the Packers. But when a tough enemy linebacker tried to push him around physfcaBy, he teH the other guy off, to the salty words of a first “Great leader!” noted Ron Kramer, to voting tor his edd teammate. Kramer now {days for the Detroit Lions. He was the man with Starr, remember, on that despairing night back to 1969. JIM THORPE TROPHY VOTING-TOP 16 (points tabulated on 3-2-1 bub) 1. Bart Starr, Great Bay 494 2. Gate Sayers, Chicago 368 3. Larry Wilson, St. Louis 205 4. Leroy Kelly, Cleveland 202 5. Don Meredith, Dallas . 152 6. Dick Bass, Los Angeles 115 1 7. Bob Lilly, Dallas . 93 8. Dan Reeves, Dallas . 73 9. Pat Studstill, Detroit . 68 10. Bob Hayes, Dallas 59 Jr. Skaters Lose WINDSOR, Ont (AP)-Leam-lngton, Ont., defeated Dearborn, Mich., 4-1, Tuesday in the championship game of the International Midget Hockey Tournament In the semi-final contest, Dearborn defeated Riverdale, Ont., 6-2. Dearborn earlier whipped Farmington, Mich., 8-1 and Chatham defeated Royal Oak, Mich , 3-1. First Round Play Completed Southfield, Berkley Win in Prep Tourney County prep quintets South-field and Berkley both advanced while Farmington and Walled Lake were shunted to the losers’ /NEW 1966 MODELS' MUST GO!! Prim Should Be No Problem! STOP BY AND SEE HANK NEWMAN'S ^855 OAKLAND AYE. FE 8-922^ bracket in last night’s Northwest | Suburban Basketball Tournament opening action. At Southfield High School, Lee Bjerk’s 30 points paced Redford Union to an 89-67 rout of Walled Lake; and Southfield’s Ted Simmons notched 28 in the Blue Jays’ 84-70 victory oyer Wayne. Berkley nudged Farmington, 67-58, aid defending tourney champ Livonia Bentley tripped Ypsflanti, 7149, in the Bentley HS phase of the quarter-finals. Marc Tannenhaus and Bob McNab paced Berkley with 13 each while Farmington’s George Grhnala hit 15 for game honors1 but high-scoring Greg Dorowi was held to 11 markers.. Both Berkley and Southfield, who now will play semifinal games Thursday night against Bentley and Redford Union, respectively, arie Southeast Michigan Association members. * * ★ Walled Lake, who plays Wayne tonight and Farmington, who meets Ypsilanti, are Inter-Lakes League foes. • In the Deerfield Invitational, the opening night action found Country Day of Birmingham whipping Erie-Mason, 89-71; and h o s t Deerfield tripped New Boston Huron, 73-59. Paul Miller scored 25 points, 12 in the third quarter as Country Day pulled away from Erie-I Mason after a 50-45 halftime lead. Steve Tarczy added 16, |Tim Baughman 16 and Jack Ross and Zwemer 11 each for the Yellow Jackets who now have a 26-game winning streak ova- three regular seasons. They play unbeaten Summer-field and Deerfield tangles with Britton in tonight’s semifinals. SEASON'S GREETINGS In The Spirit of this gladsome season, and with pride in the friendship of our customers . .. We offer our Si^cefe best wishes and warm thanks. TJiclcixiscmSs Saginaw at Lawrence Downtown Pontiac OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS ^il 9 P.M. 272 W. Maple Birmingham Adrian, Albion Suffer Losses in Tournament MARSHALL (AP) -Manchester of Indiana poured in 132 points Tuesday night to highlight a high-scoring first round of the Marshall Optimist Classic basketball tournament. Manchester dumped Adrian 132-76, paced by Joe Philips’ 28 points. Jim Ingledue had 23 for the losers. In other games, Taylor of Indiana whipped Albion 101-81 and Eastern Michigan blitzed Ferris State 113-64. Wildcats Must Stop Dribbler NEW YORK (AP) - Someone remarked to Larry Glass that he looked even younger than his 31 years. . Someone else suggested that if he feels as young as he looks, maybe he should guard Jim Walker when his Northwestern basketball team plays Providence tonight in the semifinals of the Holiday Festival tournament. * * * “I’ll pass this time," Glass said Tuesday. “I don’t want to embarrass him with my speed.” The Northwestern coach was, enjoying himself by making a little joke. He might as well have. There most likely won’t be anything enjoyable for him tonight. For his Wildcats, who squeezed by eighth-ranked St. John’s 62-60 in the Festival opener, must try and stop Walker, who is one of the most elusive dribblers and most phenomenal shooters in college today. * * * St. Joseph’s, Pa., meets Rhode Island in the first semifinal contest. Wi LP*1 W|IT StOi LANES Thursday SI. Michael's LMt HIGH GAMES AND SERIES - Puma iS------Hi MAI KMM 23»-45Oi AIRWAY LANES Friday Westside Merchants HIGH SERIES — Paul Maxlco, 257-211 PROPER BILLIARDS by Jim IAdey NO. 11—SHOT WITH ANGLE i with angle or cut-shots. Remem-This is a shot which must be| her practice makes perfect, hit at different angles, depend- HHHHNHH ing on the location of the object ball with respect to the pocket. For this - tape of -ahotrset yourself directly in front of your cue ball. * * * Next, walk over to your object ball and create an Imagin-ary line with your cue stick from the object ball to the pock-et (picture No. 1). Remember the exact spot that must be hit to successfully prick-et the ball. You then go back to the cue ball, aim it at the spot (No. 2) I / m nd stroke smoothly. AillwRI After a few practice shots you shouldn’t have too much trouble Aussies Keep Top Net Prize Roy Emerson Clinches Davis Cup Hubbard, 222.'’ Friday Pontiac Malar Tompast HIGH GAMES AND SERIES — Theron lllianru, 277-620; Robart Laila, 233-620. Thursday Ev.nin* Mlxad HIGH SERIES - Jerry Larsen, 212-215 -622. HIGH GAMES — BUI Beaty, 235; Jerry Williams, 224; Bill DaRoussa, 236; 'an Armstrong, 205-213. Wednesday Pint Ladlaa HIGH SERIES — Marla Reynolds, 212-217-620; Doris Boucard, 200-550. High GAME - Barb Plckelt, 221 (SISK Wodnosday Knights af Catumbu* GH SERIES — Ed Melllck, 224-211— 616. HIGH GAMES - Frank Dell, 236; Tom Sullivan, 230; Roy Tatham, 222; Dick Doll, 21S. HIGH TEAM GAME -Maurka Catering, 1017. SEASON HIGH GAME - Frank Doll, 276. MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Australia has retained the Davis Cup> the top prize in amateur tennis, for the third straight year after a determined bid by upstart India. Roy Emerson, the Aussies’ Ace, clinched the Cup by beating Ramanathan Krishnan 6-0, 6-2,104 in Wednesday’s opening singles match. Fred Stolle then completed the Australian triumph by outlasting game Jai-deep Mukerjea 7-5, 6-8, 6-3, 5-7, 6-3. The Australians, who have won the Davis Cup in seven of the last eight years and 14 of the last 17, were expected to clinch it easily after Emerson and Stolle had swept their opening singles matches Monday. BIG UPSET the Indians came back with a stunning upset to Tuesday’s doubles, beating Tony Roche and John Newcombe, possibly the world’s best team. Vikings Host Mat Tourney Walled Lake High School’s wrestlers will pit their strength against three opponents Friday afternoon in a quadrangular meet on their home mats. Coach Rick Schneider of the unbeaten Vikings has invited Battle Creek Central, Flint ^Northern and Owosso to compete in the four-way battle. The laction wilt commence at 1 p. m. SERVING OAKLAND COUNTY OVER 35 YEARS Lazelle Agency, Inc. ^ All FORMS OF ^ gj* INSURANCE 504 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. CLOSED SATURDAY — EMERGENCY PHONE FE 5-0314 Phone FE 5-8172 River Ruuga Toumty Ecorse 17, Dtarbom Hot*. RoMchaud 30 Rivtr Rouge 74, Tty tor Ctnttr 55 Detroit Thurston 72, Highland Park <7 UnM2,,2’.kSTM* * Detroit Redford Union 10, Willed Lika Miami at Ohio SI. Western Michigan 40 Tulane M, Detroit 04 Marshall Optimist Classic FIRST ROUND Manchester find) 132, Adrian 76 Taylor find.) 101, Albion SI Eastern Michigan 113, Perth State 64, Tri-stalk (Ind.) 06, Wheaton S3 Central Michigan 07, University el Bridgeport 77 Holiday Festival Consolation Round St. John'*, N.Y. »!, Duquesne 60 •rlgham Young M, St. Bonavonturd 14 HurncaWL Claaeic First Round Western Kentucky »#, Holy Cron 14 Miami, Fla. 12. Pamr 71 Big Eight Tournament Iowa St. A, OklaMma St. S6 Kansu It. Ok Nebraska II ioltoge T Find Ri city w, m_____ ^Stanford M. DePaul 75 Maryland St. 01, Clarion TO Westmlnlter^Fa. H SatonWt 0^FkstCRound*,IC Alabama It. Tcu 71 North Carolina lot, Furman 56 Chicago Loyola 114, Wlndaor, Ont. m Utah M, Texas Tocft W West Texas St. OS, Texes AIM 71 Utah St. 1W, Xavier, Ohio OS V TEtB PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1060 C-» Anchor Bay Anglers Out, but'No Fish' Along the Outdoor Trail Jfei The ice fishing report from Lake St. Clafr was short and to the point. Conservation officer James Lea of Algonac reported safe ice on northern Anchor Bay and about 190 fishermen out Monday, but “no fish.” The same can’t be said about the Mud Creek area of Saginaw Bay where perch fishing continued to be very good. There is six to seven indies on the Bay. Fishing on inland lakes in toe Pontiac area is Just getting under way. Last weekend’s results were rated as fair with a few perch being taken at Pontiac Lake and some crappies at Kent. Grouse and r a b b i t hunters were out in ]arge numbers Monday, but idled to put much of a dent in the game population. Rabbits remained holed up dins - tog the weekend and were very reluctant to run even when started. Pats were difficult to locate and those found had a tendency to flush wild. There was me bright note to pat hunting which ends Saturday in Southern Michigan. The repent from Deford game area in Tuscola county rates grouse hunting excellent. POPULAR FISHING SPOT — Cars have been jamming the parking areas along Saginaw Bay’s Sebewaing and Wildfowl Bay areas as fishermen take part in a good harvest of perch. Big perch are being caught off Muddy Creek near Game Habitat Packets, Trees Ottered tor Sale Sebewaing. The fish are running about average in Wildfowl Bay with some anglers going out a mile or more. Best action is in about four feet of water. For a Deal That?* Right See Gerald Hight at the only showroom in Oakland County where you can tee all three . . . Chevrolet, Pontiac, Buick. Homer Hight Motors, Inc., X60 S, Washington, Oxford, OA 8-2528 RADIO DISPATCHED TRUCK TIRE SERVICE FE 5-6136 CARTER TIRE CO. 370 South Saginaw—Pontiac SPECIALIZING JJY; —- • Engine Balancing • Engine Tune-Up WOHLFEIL-DEE ENG. Three Officers Get Honors Former Imlay City Supervisor Cited Special recognition has come to three law enforcement men of the Conservation Department for their performance of duties and leadership to community-conservation activities. Honored were Herman Hae-dicke, regional law supervisor for the southern Lower Peninsula, and conservation officers Ray Ankney of St. Charles and Robert Dice of Big Rapids. Haedicke, former law supervisor at Imlay City, received his award at a state directors’ meeting of file Michigan United Conservation Clubs for “Ms untiring devotion to the conservation of our natural resources. ...I The plaque also cited him for his “valuable sendees” to die officers, directors and members of MUCC’t District Ankney was given his award by the Chesaning Area Conservation Club “in recognition of service above self” to that organization. The Western Michigan Law Enforcement Officers Association named Dice as its Officer of the Year and then indeed him as its secretary-treasurer. Dice is the first conservation officer to win the Association’ award since it was established four years ago. Sol unar Tables HASKINS HAS ’EM 1967 CAMARO Caution Is Urged With Snowmobiles Archery League The Waterford recreation department’s winter archery league will get under way Thursday, Jan. 5, at the CAI Building. The Conservation Depart-offered game habitat planting for the first time last spring to compliment its coniferous tree program and found it had a tiger by the tail. The public response to both the tree and habitat offering was overwhelming and orders had to be turned bade before the announced deadline to April. * * ★ More stock will be available to 1967 to meet the demand that is expected to exceed the 1966 sales. Purchase application forms for habitat and coniferous tree packets are now available at Conservation Department offices, including the Pontiac Lake district headquarters, at Highland and TUll to Waterford Township. Landowners desiring both trees and habitat improvement packets must use separate forms. Prices to the hatotat stock remains the same at $7.59 to packets and one cent each for individual speides. There is minimum of 200 on the separate species. Increased production costs have raised the price of pine trees and average of $2 per thousand. MIXED STOCK The game habitat packets contain a mixed variety of hard-bushes, trees and pines and are designed for Use according to soil type and location above or below M55. 'Anyone wishing help to biologist at the Pontiac Lake office. The deadline to applying is April 15, 1967 and all will be made by May IS. Included to the various [tat packets of 400 bushes and 109 conifers will be autumn olive, honeysuckle, Siberian crab, Washington Hawthorne, sily dogwood, wild grape, fragrant sumac, arrowwood, nannyberry, coralberry, high bush cranberries and white spruce, jackpine, red and wMte pine trees. Some packets contain more species than others because of their soil designation. A HOLIDAY SEASON PLEDGE: Snowmobiles and ice don’t necessarily mix this time of year. This warning comes from Lt. Dm Kraat of the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department who points out that “a minimum of four inches of ice on a lake is needed to safely support snowmobile and one man.” * * ★ Several mishaps on Lower Peninsula lakes have been reported, including a double drowning Monday on Lake Pone-mah near-Fenton. “Atony of the lakes in our area don’t have sufficient ice to even walk on let alone ride a snowmobile,” said Kraat. Lakes with four inches can'be dangerous this time of year b* cause the new ice isn’t always uniform in depth.” * The recent boom to snowmobiles and other mechanized snow sleds has opened the door to new methods of travel over long distances where cars can’t be used. Snowmobiles are being usee more extensively for reaching ice fishing grounds are large Inland lakes and the Great Lakes. fice who spent several years working at Wildfowl Bay. “A fellow from Pontiac or Detroit who wants to go out beyond the seven • mile reef could drop through because he isn’t familiar with ice conditions out that far.” Kraat, who heads the Sheriffs Department water safety division, urged fishermen to be “extremely careful when walking on area lakes.” Spring holes, air pockets and river currents in lakes may be frozen over, but the ice will be much thinner than on other parts of a lake.” The snow covering ice also makes it difficult to see the weak spots, he pointed out. Even on Saginaw Bay where the ice usually reaches a depth of more than a foot, a snowmobile operator can get in trouble if he doesn’t know the danger spots. TAXI PILOTS “Ice taxi drivers who carry fishermen six and seven miles out know where the shipping toner and other weak places waterfowl i are located,” said Howard Greene, district game supervisor at tiie Conservation Department’s Pontiac Lake district of- Waterfowl Survey Slated in January Aerial and ground counts will be carried out in Michigan by the Conservation Department U. S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife during the week of Jan. 9 to take stock of wintering waterfowl populations to tiie state. As in the past, the annual post season survey will be coordinated with waterfowl check throughout the continent to get the first reading on next spring’s potential supplies of breeding ducks and geese. In addition to their regular inventory, game biolo -gists will again keep tallies on bald eagles to help size up current populations of the nation’s symbol. SPECIAL IHUMT R9KNM! Save on Complete Selection of Now, Used and Retreaded Tires is welcome to contact our office to assistance,” said Howard Greene, district game ENGINE OVERHAULING GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS I LOW PRICES 1 EASY TERMS | AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSIONS OUN SPECIALTY MOTOR EXCHANGE 405 S. fafhww St. H 3-7432 Make it None for the Road! Be sure of a Happy New/ Year if it isn’t quite what you had in mind..: Even if you're good all year, what you get from Santa isn't always what you asked for. Like a double-breasted orange cardigan with purple zigzag stripes, when V-8 (327 eu. in.) Automatic with Powor Steering, Radio, Whitewalls and Deluxe Trim. ’ TEST DRIVE ONE TODAY Phone MA 5-5071 6751 Dixie Hwy. gp USED TIRES >2*5“ ( TAKE-OFFS | ' Firestone — U.S. Royals — Goodyear 1 25% Off i Save on Now Tires NEW FACTORY SECONDS 20% OH DISCONTINUED TIRES Assortad Sizes LIMITED STOCK tit North Parry wumnwam Pontiac 'mmmmmmmmmmr fe 2-0121 what you wanted was a grey pullover... or a clothes brush that matches the other twelve you got... or a hat that was meant for the Jolly Green Giant. But if he got it at HHS. just bundle it up and bring it back. We want you to be delighted with everything that comes frpm HHS, and we'll be happy to exchange the gifts that goored for something you really like, j But remember; all Christmas gifts must be " exchanged by January 4th. OPEN WEDNESDAY TO 9 P.M. (Exceptions! Birmingham open to 5*3 r IP THK PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER «8, 19M ■■■■■■■■■■■Ml | Jacoby on Bridge NORTH M I . 4XJI2 ' ■ I. •' *TI* ♦ Q* + KJ93 WEST EAST (D) A«53 AAQ4 V6! TKQ1094 ♦ J10782 G63 4Q105 ♦ 862 SOUTH A 10 9 7 SAJI ♦ AK84 ♦ A74 East-West vulnerable West North East South SN.T. Pass Pass Opening lead—V 6 State's Banking Chief Renained for Fourth Term Oswald: "Ltt’s look at nor-[ that Bart's opening Mi was ANQfNr mal play. East probably lets' based on the ace ef spades, LANSlNG (AP)-SUte [South win the first heart lead king-queen ef hearts aad ing Commisaiener Charles D. with the jack. Then South leads queen ef clubs. [Slay of Detroit was reappointed ; his ten of spades and lets it “As far as South is concerned to a fourth term Tuesday by ^ the sp«le fmesse i, proved: He^ _ and clears the hearts. V, _ . Slay, 49, was first named “New South can May an- S TL °LS2I commissio^r June I. 1981, by toJSC 25 H,e lead* tblnjne^ sP*desand former Democratic Gov. John iner space ana coaceae p|ays tow from dummy. East - ^ - — ---------■ ■ down one or he can try the produce the queen and South’s “ **‘ "«** 'dreams are shattered. South wiD not need a spade trick for his contract. If it ' South will be down boo tricks instead of one bat the THE WILLETS By Walt Wetterberg ¥^CRRD Sente** CwnhanMi Ant **** ~~—■--*— -* .. . ... ___, Q—The bidding has been; gamble is certainly worth west North East Sooth while.” l* Pass lb Pass 14 Jim: Suppose East thinks pjSS j u.T. Fin ? way ahead at trick two. He can! You, Sooth, hold: visualize the four chib tricks. 4AKS7 RAZ 443 4AKiti j By OSWALD AND [He can also visualize three or! g This JAMES JACOBY [four diamond tricks and can see „ a fHfht puh hot two no-Oswald: “One of the standard!** ** win» **** sPadel bo -oco of an subjects for bridge articles is! »** ‘*ueen South I* going; nndorttd. the play of winning with the ace to abandon sPades make TODAT’« instead of the*** game with the minor suits.”) Instead of bidding one no- g iZ*n” i Oswald: “If East is smart trump your partner bida two fc ^i »>• ss; **“ • idea is sort of^eipert (Right to be exj*rt hackneyed but**? J? win J* *Pade here is a case J* “* *? Then he will clear the hearts as before.” Jim: “Sooth will see no danger hi continuing the spade suit He will assume BMiai "Tbe «lw own contrail Ml 0 . . . Astrology poind Ms wsy." ARIES (Mar. SI • Apr. Wt To----------I exists to bo over-extravagant. You want Id impress, to maka a mark ... but now youdo so bait through CREATIVE THINKING. Important to 1—| —*“ toot on ground. TMnkl TAURUS (Apr. 20 • May 20): Empha-ils on homo decorations, comforts. You could raeoivo favorable kpfert an business project. This loads to movo toward acquiring luxury Horn. Hood advice of CANCER (June 21 ■ July 22): You may bo slightly Irkad by details. But if you got thorn out of way early there I-reol benefit. Review finances. Good Urn tor discussion of CREATIVE BUDGET. LEO (July 23 • Aug. 22): Portonal convictions sxamlnad. You are able to maka tremendous Impact Favorable reaction result] creto proposals. Changes beneficial. VIRGO (Aug. 2) - Sept- -............■ -----'n calm . . . prefect of Importance CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan. It): You | hove graattr resources than you might ‘ — It thorough, you could find .....Hay comes your woy. Rev its opportunities. Member of ( LIBRA (Sept. 21 • Oct. 22): Emphasis do, fulfillment of desires. You ■waguMk tsr. . .... Don't reqi I ■HR handle. Day .IP9III outlook. Stress MATURITY. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 • Nov. 21): Pr rises. Profseilonal, added responsibility. __________ ottered by man of experience. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Doc. 21): The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): Floyd J. Lydlck, Rochester Junior J. Kadrovach. Troy William R. Kennedy Jr- Farmington Donald Z. Danny/Novi Dennis L. Westphol, 20 C Dennis. W. Williams, 47 H George V. Wood/ 4 Llberl. Silly D. Bradley, Holly Roy L. Copper, 3PM Fetor Garold L. Dupon, Oxford Harold C. Gearhart, 33 GUteM James R. Hula, 214 Woof Beverly Samuel J. Msynor, 1S1 North Johnson Stuert A. Cheats, Drayton Plaint Alex R. Fruytler, ft Souti Jessie Demis R. Gillespie, 753 East Tannyu Joseph Guinn Jr., 1023 East Wilton James W. Gustafson, s--‘- - Harry R. Holier, Ml C------ Thermen D. Nichols, 4030 Tubbs Brucs R. Ouayle Jr., 22 Benner Robert S. Stephens, Rochester Harold R. Bogner, Oxford Neel T. Ewing, 334 Prospect M. Cassatt, Farmington naroia l. Sweeney, Milford Lester O, Houston Jr,, U20 Orchid Robert N. Combs, BloomfldW Hills Rtx L: FurneV, Lake Orton, * Lawrence B. Temclp 232 Avery Paul E. Relchertrw* North Saginaw Andrew Thorpe, "Oxford _ , , Robert D. Tressel, Drayton P I a l n i (Twins) Edward D. Arner, Rochester David J. Kurko, Waterford Clarence R. Ooughtory,M44l McDonald Roger A. Hart, 43 Waldo Robert C. Henderson, Utica Richard J. Smith, Ml Clara Donald E. Sugden, Rochester George A. Gird ley, til Lenox J«m*« R. Hardimen, Mlltord J. Soring, 351 Lortoerta R. Cola, 3320 Grant Ronald R. Prod?. Ralph E. McKenney, ---- Eldon R. McMillan, 1471 Par Loon E. Bacon, Oxford John H. Cato. 204 Bassett John L. Hostler, Lake Orion Gerald A. Kosteckl, Utlce Theeutry Madklns. 404 Highland Roger H. Smith, 247 South Shirley William H. Trio loft, Rochester Robert E. Jonas, S44 Walled Like Gary P. Root, 2190 Pompey Michael I.. Burrill, 4041 Sparrow W 3. Moore, Mllterd est?e M. Secrete, Drayton Plains •n i. Stefanskl, Rochester A. Lafever, 31 Clark Lawrence D. Bumgardnar, 133 Glad- 1 L. Demoth, Rochester Alfred E. Huberth, 1029 Meedowlawn Roy Jones Jr., 343 Irwin Sheldon' G. Beaudry, 133 West Strotlv "Retort H. Houff, 74,Virginia Roland E. Korns, 434 Jordan Kenneth Lucas, 21 Putman Harold W. Hottls, 790 Corwin George C. Carpontor, Rochester William M. Hankins, 14700 Camphors William M. Pendygratt, 30544 Avondale Richard S. Messholder, 717] Monroe MlchMl T. Draz, Farmington , Harold G. Richardson, Farmington Charles A. Myers Jr., 334 North Wash ^"Sary M. Joyce, 444 Benson Kplth W. Huywanl, Rochester Frederick O. Smith, 243 West Princeton GM H. Talj, Ctoitaten Richard F, Cummings, 42 Unlock THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1966 C—5 Male Style-Setter Eyes Bare LONDON (AP) - Milady’s bard bosom is likely to remain popular — but it's unlikely toj become fashionable. Now who’s putting on that' front? * * * ' A A man, of course. He’s John Taylor, editor of the British magazine of male fashion, Tailor ft Cutter, the voice of Saville Row. In a book entitled /‘It’_ Small, Medium an^l Outside World,1'“Taylor says that he hhs done a lot of research into his subject. / NOTHING NEW / He says the topless dresses of the mid-1960s were really nothing new. He reports that in the year 1796, the Champs Elysses in Paris cape to an interested halt one afternoon as two interestingly unclad young ladies strolled beneath the leafy trees. One girl wore only a length of gauze, but tastefully draped. Girl No. 2 strolled beside her friend^ with her bosom entirely uncovered. Those who witnessed the pub-lip reaction to the topless dresses in 1964 will be less than surprised at the repercussions in the Champs 168 years before. PLAINLY HOSTILE Here’s what the author says happened: "Furious to see public convention so lightly disregarded, the surrounding populace caught its breath only deep enough to voice plain hostility. "It then advanced upon the pioneers in phalanxes of high dudgeon—or perhaps to obtain a clearer view—until the two ladies went in fear of their safety.” Taylor says the two girls were acting under the leadership of a pair of Parisienne fashion queens — Mesdames Recamier and Tallien, who had been, for the best part of a decade, encouraging the use of less and less, and more and more transparent clothing. On this subject he says: "Gossamer silks, muslins and a variety of other see-through materials, were quite unsupported by the proprieties; of derwear, and diamond bracelets were shifted from the traditional of the wrists and arms to encircle thighs and breasts and gleam seductively through the transparent materials which covered them.” FAD FADED But this fad faded. A student of manners as well as fashion, Taylor says that the reason Why the bare bosom will never become fashionable is because of middle-aged women. “The establishment reigns as supremely in female circles as it does in the male,”' he claims, "and as the age levels roughly correspond. Middle-aged women who establish feminine mores are bound to obstruct implacably a style which can offer them nothing but disadvantage.” Emphasizing that women are extraordinary persons, the author says they will accept fashion for its own sake—even when they basically disapprove of it.” He cites the modesty boards that appeared like sprouting forests in British offices during the mid-1960s. STRIPS OF WOOD Following the general acceptance of the thigh-high miniskirt in 1965 and ’66, a section of Blit-ish women office workers began demanding the erection of modesty boards on their desks. The boards—thin strips of wood nailed across the open spaces of the desks where female workers type—were to prevent male colleagues from being able to see female legs. “It was a typical piece of female illogic,” writes Taylor. "The modesty board had about as much senae or reason as those little strips of linen women fasten across their chests in order to hide from male sight the cleavage their decolletage was designed expressly to reveal.” With, a philosophical editorial [sigh he' concludes: 'Women will resort to almost [any trick in order to attract a man’s attention, and then they Will be morally affronted when he looks.” STRIKING DOCK WORKERS - Calling their layoff from their jobs At the new port facility in Saigon “unjust,” these Vietnamese dock workers sit under sign reading: "Down with the authorities of the 4th Transportation Command who are hurting VN-US friendship.” They are part of the 600 laid off from their jobs when U. S. military personnel arrived to handle the work at the port Officials Analyze Reasons for Light Yule Fatalities By The Associated Press Death bypassed the highways In five states during the Christmas holiday weekend, and traffic safety officials Credited the achievement to intense driver education, increased police patrols, bad weather and the spirit of Christmas. Fatalities dropped substantially in several other states. 1 ★ * * There were no traffic deaths [reported in Idaho, Alaska, Nebraska, Delaware or Rhode Island. Latest figures show that 584 persons lost their lives in the three-day Christmas weekend. Last year 720 persons were killed during Christmas observance. The 1966 Thanksgiving four-day holiday set an ail-time record for any holiday period when 748 persons died. A. E. Perkins, head of the Idaho State Police, gave credit to a pre-Christmas campaign which urged parents to have their children take more time reaching home for the holidays and asked partygoers to do their drinking after their driving. 'We had some inclement ! weather and that slowed people down,” he said. “And I think the spirit of Christmas prevailed a little. People are getting to be a little better drivers, a little more courteous.” I W&leocJt ALL INSTRUMENTS WeTleadb HARMONY & THEORY WeTfeack, RHYTHM & MELODY MUSIC CENTER 1^8 & 268 N. Saginaw — Pontiac FE 4-4700 or FE 4-4709 College Gefs $800,000Gift SOOTH HADLEY, Man. (AP)—Mount Holyoke Qollege has received an $800,000 gift from Elizabeth Ball Cowan of Amherst, a 1904 alumna. Mrs. Cowan made no restrictions on use of the principal except that the college make a monthly payment for life to her niece. WE’VEJMOVED 43 Nt. Saginaw SI. THIS IS IT 14 Days Only I WEDNESDAY • THURSDAY • FRIDAY SATURDAY AUTOMATIC WASHERS ... DRYERS .. .REFRICERATORS ... FREEZERS ... BARGES.... DISHWASHERS... WASHERS ... ALL REDUCED TO LOWEST PRICES! NOW do BIG LOADS with EASE ! • SOME FLOOR SAMPLES! • A FEW SCRATCHED! • ALL BRAND NEW! gglp with pj 18-LB. WASHING CAPACITY Washes any load from a handful to a giant 18-lb. tubful really clean! LRA 680-0 ]____________ • 2 washing speeds for regular And delicate fabric! • 4 cycles—normal, GENTLE, SUPER WASH and WASH *N wear • 5 water temp selections • Infinite water level selector ONLY $485 «4*CAaae«»rMi 21.3 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER 12.2 cu. ft. of room for fresh food plua giant 318-lb. “zero-degree" freezer • All No-Froat, so there’s I no defrosting ever • IceMagic* automatic ice I maker makes ice without iee tray bother. CLOSE-OUT SPECIALS • ALL HEW 1966 MODELS • MARY 0RE-0F-A-KIRD • EVERY ORE BRARD HEW • EVERY APPLIAHCE GUARAHTEED REG.. PRICE / ROW ONLY *279.95 14 Cubic Foot RCA 4 AQ95 Whirlpool REFRIGERATOR... *339.95 17 Cubic Foot RCA 4CC00 Whirlpool REFRIGERATOR... ftOO *229.00 30-Inch RCA Whirl- 1T100 pool ELECTRIC RANGE.... Ill *189.00 30-Inch RCA Whirl- 4 4400 pool GAS RANGE........ 100 *169.00 RCA Whirlpool 14000 ELECTRIC DRYER......... 100 *189.00 RCA Whirlpool IRQOO GAS DRYER.............. IUO *239.00 RCA Whirlpool 1QQ00 AUTOAAATIC WASHER .... IOO ROW DOWH PAYMERT! RO PAYMERT UNTIL FEBRUARY 15! LORG EASY TERMS! 14.1 co. ft. refrigerator with automatic defrosting fresh-food section! BUDGET TERM8I 145 • Handy glide-out shelf • Big 109-lb. "zero-degree" freezer with bookshelf ’door storage • Twin crispers hold a bushel • Super-storage door with butter keeper and egg racks." AUTOMATIC WASHERS Super soak cycle Rugged dependability • Magic-mix filter • Free-flow draining PAY AS LITTLE AS 2.00 A WEEK iMsM* BAR6AIN HOUSE FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES Baldwin Avenue, Corner Walton ,. . Open Daily to 9:00 P.M. - Saturday 'til 6:0Q P.M. Telephone FE 2-6842 f THE PONTIAC PRESS GRIND SPECIAL SSPJSJ FARM FRESH FARMER PEITS SMOKES HAMS With A Country Kitchen Flavor For that Now Year's Party or a wonderful 13*15 LB! family first meal and scrumptious salad / WHOLE and. sandwich moals to follow. Your best . . buy all the I M wav around. LUi 1249 BALDWIN RD. PONTIAC 8040 COOLEY LAKE RD. 685 EAST BOULEVARD PONTIAC 3415 ELIZABETH LAKE RD WATERFORD 2375 ORCHARD LAKE RD SYLVAN LAKE 48075 VAN DYKE ROAD UTICA OPEN TIL 9 THRU FRI. SAT TIL 6 See The Tournament of Roses “New Year’s Day Annual Spectacular by Makers of Hi-C e ORANGE e CHERRY e GRAPE e FRUIT PUNCH • ORANGE-PINEAPPLE 1 QT. I4-0Z. CANS MIX OR MATCH NOTICE Pure, that s Sure Hamady Bros. Markets will close at 6 New Year’s Eve and will be closed Jan. 1st and 2nd so that Hamady Bros. Employees may complete their Holiday festivities with their families and friends. Gains Grade T Seafood FANTAIL SHRIMP S w »1“ Frozen Breaded FISH STICKS 5. 37* Frozen Breaded FISH STICKS FISH STICKS In Pizza Sauce 10-O2. Pkg. Net Wt. Frozen Breaded PERCH STEAKS FILLET OF SOLE In Lemon Butter Breaded Frozen HADDOCKSTEAKS 11*02. Pkg. Net Wt. Frozen Breaded ROUND SHRIMP Frozen SHRIMP SCAMPI 7Vk-oi. Pkg. Net Wt. FRESH OYSTERS Standard 8-oz. Net Wt. 89° ,2«,c.P $|27 NORBEST GRADE “A” TURKEYS ir 39c PINE MANOR BROILER TURKEYS Poigds JESSE JEWEL CHICKEH ROASTS 2-LB. $449 m L DUDDIG SLICED SMOKED A 3-02. Net Aft CORNED BEEF. HAM. € Wt. Pkgs ▼ | ww TURKEY OR BEEF V Mix or Match | MCDONALD’S Carnival ‘ lee Cream POPULAR FLAVORS Vi OALLON CAROTN 39e MCDONALD’S Quality Checked Ice Cream DELUXE FLAVORS Vi OALLON CARTON 99' Miller Rd. Dairy THICK, RICH WHIPPING CREAM QUART CARTON 89' OSCAR MAYER Holiday Treats SANDWICH SPREAD LITTLE SMOKIES 5-OI. Pkg. A0c Net Wt. >111 LITTLE WIENERS S*/t-02. Pkg. 4Cc Net Wt. G|y BRAUNSCHWEIGER ROLL SLICED HAM AND CHEESE 8-02. Pkg. SLICED ALL BEEF BOLOGNA SLICED SUMMER SAUSAGE i-02. kg., CQc Net Wt. VV SLICED VARIETY PACKAGE 95c SMOKIE LINKS 12-02. Pkg. nittc Net Wt. f JJ sum PICKLED BOLOGNA ME 79' COOKED SALAMI KS.49' BRAUNSCHWEIGER111^0 69' THURINGER sliced V55?' 55e RING BOLOGNA FASHIONED BOLOGNA °d MINCED LUNCHEON. SNACK RINGS MEATS 39° SLICED JQe PICKLE & PIMENTO. MAC. AND CHEESE.. VEAL LOAF sliced 39c HEAD CHEESE SLICED wtf 42' LIVER RINGS i.65* BOLOGNA W X" 73° OLD FASHIONED POUND 79' GARLIC RING W 69' Danish Imported READY TO SERVE-NEED NO REFRIGERATION 2-Lb. Can 1-Lb. Can $|I9 3-Lb. Can 4-Lb. Can $469 TOM' THE 6IAIE' FRYERS 22c!28c PRICED EXTRA LOW AGAIN THIS VlfhoiB WEEK AT HAMADY BROS. pV.Tv Fresh, Meaty and Tender Top grade beauties especially eeleeted to III give you fryers at fheir flavorful beat.' ■ t Sat.. Dec. 31. 1966H WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1068 C—T Hi Hamady Bros. Foods that say Goodbye to '66-Good Buys for '67 RING OUT THE OLD ... RING IN THE NEW.. ivlth these rootin' tootin' buys for all ybur holiday fostivitios, spocial low prices on all your fayoritos for delightful dinners all week long .. . for bountiful party buffet thi| week-end for a Happy start of New Year's Savings! Campbell’s TENDER HEARTED PORK AND LB. CAN 12* BIRDS EYE AWAKE Frozen Orange Drink \ Concentrate 9 FI. Oz. Cant 3-77* Libby’s Fancy TOMATO JBIGE 1-Qt., 14-0z. Cans 3-89* Harvest Premium BROWN AND SERVE ROLLS 12-Rsll Pkgt. 2,w 47* HAMBURGER OR HOT 000 BUNS'1 . 8-Bun MgS. 21* 43' BEST VALUE Miller Rd. Dairy prone RICH CREAM CHIPS Product of Krun-Chee EGG NOG QUART PARTflM ; 39* 47* STIFFED OLIVES Utkin's Clik Crackers LB. PKG. VLASICKHS RELISH VLASIC SWEET RELISH PHIL. CREAM CHEESE ROLL GOLD PRETZELS "AW 3 WT?W«V *1*® SCHAFER’S SALTY, BAVARIANRRYE BREAD iuf 31c 12- 02. JAR 07c NET WT. Cl 13- OZ.JAR 77c NET WT. Cl 2S-0Z. NET CQc WT. FOILS 99 HARVEST w“«“rB“TBREAD HUNT’S TOMATO CATSUP 2 loaves 41C 3i-lb., io-oz. $100 BOTTLES I Kekitn's TOWNHOUSE CRACKERS Pound Package CANADA DIY America’s First Family be sure to of Fine Beverages enough 21-Pt. 12-0z. JPP Bottles Plus Deposit ■ 88 PALE DRY GINGER ALE, SPARKLING WATER, HI-SPOT, QUININE WATER, TOM COLLINS, CLUB SODA, VODKA MIX, GRAPEFRUIT SODA THE NATURAL ORANGE JUICE! California LEMONS LARGE,JUICY TIMATCES £ LB. TRAY 28* * 25c AillAilH extra large llliilllia SWEET SPANISH »8* FRESH LIMES ib. 25c W ■ m ■ vlW IDEAL FOR ONION RINGS FRESH, GREEN ONIONS Q With Tender, Green Tops V Bunches For 25* NEW UIBJME Arizona ° AA 1 INSTANT Crisp, Green Heads LB. Jw POTATOES !' 29° CELERY TOMATOES c.ii.rak 19“ ONIONS, COOKING..3-29‘ CARROTS . .... 2 '-»19e GR. ONIONS ... . BANANAS u.s.no. i.... 10c a GRAPES 19*ik m aJllMHlJ was. W Saturday 9 to 71 PRICES SUBJECT TO MARKET CHANGE 608 W. HURON ST., Near Webster School C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 88, 1006 MARHOEFER BRAND CANNED HAM. .10c&»7’» FROZEN PEELED AND DEVEINED PINK SHRIMP. U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY BOSTON ROLLER REEF IONIUM MU1___________.TT PEANUTS 39 49 FLAVOR HOUSE DRY ROASTED 9+-0Z. FT. JAR KROGER VAC PAC SPANISH PEANUTS m-OZ.FT. CAN ...1 KROGER FRESH ALL WHITE m ^ LARGE EGGS. GRADE’A’ m 49C KRAFT SALAD DRESSING MIRACLE WHIR................* 40 KROGER FROZEN FLORIDA ORANGE JUICE ,.6&99 CHEF’S DELIGHT CHEESE SPREAD...............2 * 59 FRESH BRAND - POTATO CHIPS................p.1.59 [BORDEN’S Iherbet OKI COUNTRY CLUB KROGER OR BORDEN’S PINT SOUR CREAM KRAFT'S PHILADELPHIA CREAM CHEESE 39 129 A KROGER ‘ BRAND __ 8-OZ. pkg,^w 27< DELICIOUS BORDEN’S EGG NOG «r. AM1 CTN* M10 ICE CREAM R35D FI^ST y2 0AL. 65 WITH COUPON AND S5 PURCHASE REGULAR. DRIP. FINE OR ELECTRA-PERK REGULAR SIZE MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE..........STTf* SWEETHEART SOAP..........4 i VALUABLE COUPON 1 VALUABLE COUPON 1 B WITH THIS COUPON AND E ■ S5.00 PURCHASE OR MORE m BOUDEN’S SHERBET OR Z COUNTRY CLUB ICE CREAM i FIRST - _ „ SECOND mm^SAVE ■ H-GALW9* %-GAL 356 30# ■ Valid thru Sat., Dae. 3 J, 1946 m at Ktofar Out. 4 Eaat. Mich. m Limit Ona Coupon. WITH THIS COUPON AND E SS.00 PURCHASE OR MORE | ASSORTED FLAVORS ■ BIG 'K* CANNED POP i 12-PL. 0Z CAN ME SAVE 124 ■ LIMITS 9 ON SIX Z Valid thru Sot.. Dae. 31, 1944 ■ at Kroger Dot. 4 Eaat. Midi. m Limit Ona Coupon. 2 C A TOP VALUE 3U STAMPS f A TOP VALUE STAMPS 2 WITH THIS COUPON,ON J a 2 PKGS CUT-UP FRYERS, b B 2 PKGS FRYER PARTS OR ■ B 2 ROASTING CHICKENS ■ ■ Valid thru Sat., Dae. 31, 1966 -J j at Kroger Dot. 4 Eaat. Midi. Q WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY 2 PKGS. 6 ■ FROZEN i SHRIMP OR SEAFOOD ■ Valid thru Sat., Dae. 31,1944 at Krogtr Oaf. 4 Eaut. Mid1. KCW CA TOP VALUE 3V STAMPS r A TOP VALUE 3v STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON i 6-FL.OZ.BTL. KROGER ■ • LIQUID ■ SWEETENER ■ Valid thru Sat., Dae. 31, 1944 J | at Kronor Dot. 4 Eaat. Midi. BE WITH THIS COUPON ON Z ANY 2 PEGS. KROGER ■ COUNTRY OVEN ZIPS ■ OR SNACK CRACKERS ■ Valid thru Sat., Dae. 31, 79M -J at Kroger Oat. 1 Eaat. Mich. ||] FOR DISHES A FINE FABRICS LIQUID TREND...... .. . sJHzJbtl. m BATH SOAP GAY BOUQUET............6,Y&3< REMOVES STAINS FAST DUTCH CLEANSER...2s-«Sui»45*1 PATIO FROZEN MEXION DINNERS.........^ 49* ASSORTED COLORS ' WALDORF TISSUE.........4ffik33* OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRY ccjSnK........& 4T SILVER FLOSS BRAND \ SAUERKRAUT 2*345 CHUNK TUNA...........A™99 ZESTYN’TANGY SNIDER’S CATSUP —15 SUGAR. .5 a 49 U.S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN POTATOES 2079 FRESH ICEBERG I NEW CROP TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON , | TWO LOAVES KROGER RYE BREAD J Valid thru Sat., Dae. 31. 1966 at Krofor Dot. 4 Eaat. Midi. 19 II 176 SIZE FLORIDA RUBY RED ZIPPER SKIN GRAPEFRUIT TANGERINES 5 59139 i THE PONTI AtTp^tESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1966 C-^ll ■w>dence regtoeed, purchasing Christmas sales were^ not : power next year should be am-great as merchant* had hoped, Ljg ^ support car sales of nine and some retail food prices fell, kinum OT more. Iparlly because of consumer re- .• «»' Atlas Consolidated Mining, Om-group, effective Sunday, dutron, Dennison, Edo Corp., Flying Tiger and Simmonds Precision. U.S. Radium lost 2. The New York Stock Exchange OBTROIT POULTRY DCTROIT (API—Prices paid per for No. I live pour— IS-20; reesters heev Cp 1.60 iavv" type 24-25;' "broilers I Address' 1.40 .. Whites 1*%-19; Berred1 Admiral .50 tMjjtjs 31; turk(y* ----MR......... Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (Including U.S.1S Whites Orach A Jumbo 45-47; extra lard* 41-43%; large 39-41%; medium 34-34; ----II 20-31 > Browns Grads A large 39- i medium 34-35; s------ “ If Vi; CHICAGO BUTTER, BOGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange—Butter steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; *3 score AA 6346; 92 A 6546; 90 B 6446; 19 C 42%; COTS 90 B 45Vi; 09 C 64. , Eggs about steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged to Vi higher; 70 per cent or better Grade A Whites 37%; mixed 37; mediums 34; standards 36; checks 33Vi. Jk —A— " 23 1746 17% 17% + V,; GenAnllF .40 7 28% irik 2746 — 46 Gen Clg 1.» 14 31% 37% 38% + %G*nDynam 40 53’6 52% 53V6 + 46 Gen BlK 2.„ 'SBbB^raSs 66 2046 WVi 2044 | “ 6a- II I „ WW»-) I x33 Vi Procter G 2 % Pubikind ,34t Pullman 2.00 1 63 63 A(iiP«p tJi Allied C ;1,NB Bfffflfr 141 Aim Chat V AmCrySug I AmCyan 1.75 AmElP 1.44b AEnka 1.30a AmPPw 1.14 AmHome 1.10 Am Hosp .50 AmtnvCo 1.10 . 56’6 MV4 HV6 H 34 2IVi 27Vi 26% H * u *» Wl t - _... _. ._ fih 1 •' Gen riiro .80 .. . - .... , ■ Gs Pacific tl> MVi 7944 OOVi +146 Gerber PC s 77V6 7744 77V, - V. Getty Oil Ml 37 7246 7146 72Vi + 4i> | Gillette UP 14 21 Vi 21 Vi 2146 + Vi Glen AM .70 12 .0346 03V6 03(6 Goodrich 2.40 31 47V6 4746 474* - Vi GoOdyr US 2 1446 1446 “ High Lew Last Ctig.1 (IMS.) High Law Loaf 2^ 25-6 25V6 -H PltnayB 1,20 ,6 gj |6 W- W ^ - gTROMBACK , i46v- iM4i 1046 +3v6| Baily will manage domestic, .b if* I $;marketing and manufacturing, **“ activities for the new group. He has been vice president of the *[Raistanp" i.» 6 4046 ffv* f»v6 - w equipment and systems market- ing division since 1964. DuRay E. Stromback of 4678 » 4146 4046 4046 - 46 Brightnwre will become vice n I* *p6-vi President 311(1 general manager A | of manufacturing and engineering of the business machines group, effective Sunday. sponds to electric current. He is more complex. * * * , The consumer’s intentions cannot, it seems, be placed in the same category as business intentions. Business plans are made formally, often In a hoard room. Consumer plans are made informally,.......oyer, the kitchen table. There’s nothing definite about them. S. Viet Troops Kill 89 Cong First Combat Jump —(I— 24 2246 2246 2246 11 1946 If 1146 ■ m *1 2046 M ■ i 1046 1046 1046 1( 51 5046 5046 • 105 0546 0546 0546 - 15 nw ~ f r 317 j *46 146 546 ,. 15 tm 3146 32 . . 55 4546 4446 4546 + V 21 34 M M-) 21 4146 4116 4146 - V 21 26’A 36 2644 + V 22 5346 53V- 5346 + 4 29 4246 4246 4146 - V (36 1046 946 10 ^ . 13 6146 6046 6146 +1 *f C i. * lx 1146?: I 1414 » 3 GrtnfWT 1.10 — 46'GfAliP 1.10b Reading Co Reich Ch .40 Repubtn til Revlon i M Reyn Met°?90 Reyn Tob 2 13 M 3246 3246 123 »46 S3V6 5446 I m ifit ifw I 2346 23 l roasters 23-25; 25 4746 «46 4746 + 746 746 746 — '4 446 *46 + 44 Safeway 4.10 I 1646 1646 1646 lit + V6'»t 10 2346 1346 23% T 8% §2 7 1746 1646 1746 —S— 2446 2446 2446 Stromback has been general | manager of Burroughs Pasade- Joe Kennedy 35 39 3446 g46 - 46 na, Calif., plant for the past two jr tt f ■f o r e i g i LONDON (UPI) — Another controversial book on the Kennedy family will appear in Britain in 1967, it was disclosed to- Its author said it has not been commissioned by nor approved by the Kennedys. The book, by British author and former diplomatic correspondent George Bilainkin, 63, will defend the policies advocated by Joseph P. Kennedy, father of the late president, during his period as ambassador to Great Britain from 1938 to 1940. UNCERTAINTY Ford’s statement shows a great deal of uncertainty now about the consumer mind, a contrast to the self-assured statements fran the auto people earlier in the year. ' Does the consumer ever admit to himself that he won’t buy the car he had intended to? ; w# • Tia._ yA«irc Does be admit it to a research-of War in Two Years , j,e ever make a clear-• [cut decision? Or does he just let SAIGON, South Vtetniun (AP) *be matter drift? ^ Recognizing this uncertainty, the National Bureau of Economic Research, a reputable private group, has borrowed a term from weather forecasting: Probabilities. Instead of referring to consumer intentions, the bureau attempts to determine the probability that the consumer will follow through on the stated intention. FIRST FINDINGS The multiregiment force ofi One of the first findings was Vietnamese infantrymen, para-i the most purchases in the group troopers, armored cavalrymen 0f households studied were What the consumer tells the — Thousands of South Vietnam-—— - - ese troops fanned out across • > canal-laced rice fields deep to .-1 the Mekong Delta today and Controversial wj5™*" Vl*to”‘ ■“ _ * . * | ■ The large-scale search-and- Rf)nV InVCllv&S destroy operation was launched OUUN mVUIVVd -Tugsday by ground troops, helicopter-borne units and the Vietnam war’s first combat parachute jump in at least two years. and Popular Force units descended on a Vietcong stronghold to Chuong Thien Province 126 miles west-southwest of Saigon. American troops reportedly will be deployed in parts of the delta in the near future. The paratroopers jutqped from 33 planes — 13 U.S. Air Force transports and 20 C47s of the South Vietnamese air force, NO OPPOSITION Vietnamese headquarters said Beaunlt .75 Btckman .50 BeschAr .60b Ball How .50 Ssildlx 1.40 49 12 11% 12 —-B-— 21 37% 3644 37 7 34% 34% 34% 25 12% 13 12% Boslno 1.20 BolSKIsl .25 Borden 1.20 BorgWar 2.20 BrlggsS 2.40* BucyEr 1.60* Budd Co .SS Bullard 1 iBulova .60b IllCenlnd 2.40 imp Cp Am .. IngsrRend 2 41 Inland Sll 2 * InsNoAm 2.40 interIkst i.B» IntBusM 4.40 IntHarv 1.80 Int Nick 2.80 Inti Packers int TBT 1.50 TqwePSv 1.20 ItE Ckt lb JphnMan 2.20 JpbnsnJ 1.40a JonLogan .80 Jones L 2.70 Joy Mfg 1.25 I 2844 28% 28% - 21. iMICel F 1 Peck 1 I 5,910,961,714.41 8 6,184,349.693.41 CalumH ... Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— , CampRL .45a 67,879.340,417.61 56,057,176,255.55 Camp Soup 1 Withdrawals Fiscal Yaar— Can Dry 1 81,853,316,429.58 67,0 0,001,110.02 CdnPac 1.50a x-Total Debt— .Canteen .80 330437,723,926.21 322,201,102,146.35. CaroPLt 1.34 Gold Aiiele— iCarrlerCp 2 13,159,184,266.60 13,809,006.408.15 CarlerW .40a: it Case JI .V CaterTf* * ¥ % KayaarRog.60 Kennecott 2 . ,! KernCLd 2 JO * Kerr Me 1.40 L iKImbClark 1 I 33% 33% -%,sparry, Rend 598 ,, 14% 1444 SquareD ,60a 2 76% 7644 76% - % Staley 1J5 72 5% 5% j% + %iStdBrand 1.30 15 39% 39% 39% f % Sid Kolls .50 41 31% 31% 31% + %(s»OIICal 2.50b 1 8644 06% 86% - %|StOlllnd 1.70 10 27% 27 27% +% BtOHNJ 3.30e # *?L ail.. +5%|8ldOIIOh 2.40 34 iM WA 3*% - % St Packaging 6 06% M% Om + SJ StauftCh UO 27 8% 8% 00 — W SterlDrub .90 26 74% 74% 7«{ T # StevenJP 2.25 1 25% *5% 25% + W.studebak ,25e 9 37% 37% 37% + % Sun Oil lb 1 Sunray 1.40a —“J—• j Swift Co 2 34 51% 50% 50% —1% 6 170% 179 179% + %l 24 40% 40% 40% + %, Tampa El .60 ,s ss s* as#a?ssErf& J 44% 44% 44% — % *rix a cyi jk + IS Texaslnst .40 x7i 41 39% 30% M% — % TexR Ld 35* U 12 sf’4 M Textron 1.20 33 *1% *' 2% + 5J Thlokol .35e j «ia Sa + ^.Tldewat SH . PPRR_____________ Miiintneq • Kennedy has been fiercely as-] the paratroopers ran into no \ is 85 t % ln Julv i965 Atkins was elect- !sailed in Brltain for “Hegedly opposition when they jumped, i 15% 9544 35% - % m July law AtKins was eieci j tbe Nazis wouic| ,je. Spokesmen declined to say if $5 hi 1 5 ed vice president of manufac- LTtS iZ to- taling and engineering firm. for th» feat this country and for urging I President FrankUn D. Roosevelt —T— 6 29% 29% 29% 60 91% 89% 91% +2% jy,,* 38 *| 20% 21 + % 25 74% 73% 74% +1% ----- 24 *0% 20% 20% 55 10944 108% 109 tn 102% 101% 10’% 11 14% 14 14% 42 *1% -51% 51% as w% io% ii% ” mi 73 73 Business Notes Fraser Scholes has been appointed to the newly created of manufacturing plans to withhold aid from Britain. any of the jumpers were injured^ In a previous large-scale jump in April 1964, 40 per cent of the paratroopers were jured to jumping. A Vietnamese spokesman said government forces killed 29 Viet cong in the opening phases of made by those that had told researchers they had no intention to buy. Another finding: Consumers who said the chances are greater that they would buy an object in the distant rather than the very near future often made the actual purchase in the near period. Another highly regarded survey, by toe University of Michigan, attempts to determine the consumer mind by putting the Emphasis more on cnofidenee than specific intentions. A confident consumer, toe theory goes, will spend. • / Other studies also are under way now to more precisely determine donsumer motivations. . It’s easy enough to say he will spend when econmnic prospects are good and mat he won’t spend when the^economy turns down. / I 50% .50% 56% 4 *iLt*r Slag .70 ; ,'V. LehPCem .60 *■ % 12«N ' EM [Lehman 2-'* sublsct to statutory II Stocks of Local Interest Fig urn altar decimal points art eighths OVEE THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from tha NASO ara repre-sentatlva Intar-dtalar prices of approxi- CelaneseCp 2 ChPneu 1.80b X28 29% 29 3 75% 75% 75% 14 13% 13% 1344 „IW„tl_, ... 45 30% 20% 20% - MLOFGIS 2.1™ 29 36% 36% 36%-%f5tagettBM/5 34 . 4044 41% 48% + %9Lltlpnln 1.541 11 34% 36 36% + % Uvfngsln Oil 11 46% 46% 467't + % LockhdA 2.20 49 31% 38 Wl-^ Udws Thaat 19 13% 1344 1 344 ■ „ LonaS Cam 1 44 38% 38 38 - 44 koneSGa 1.12 .10 37 37 37 .. . LondlsLt 1,4l 12 61% 61 61 — % Lorfllard 2.50 20 38% 37% 37% + %lLTV “ IS 2J5 2}5i:iTwncc.°nn,i:SSS 8 144 8% 8% < 4 30% 30% 30% .+ % UMc Ind .60 39 4046 40% 40% ,, Un Carolda 2 Bilainkin, who claims to have known Ambassador Kennedy well, told UPI: “I am writing this book because, knowing him as I did, I bitterly resented the the operation and by late today campaign of calumnies directed the enemy dead had risen to 89, manager for equipment opera- against him for reasons I couMjwith two prisoners taken and 48 tions, Ford Tractor Division, not fathom by every newspaper [weapons seized. Vietnamese Ford Motor Co. ,0f every political party in Brit-1 casualties were termed “very Scholes, who lives at, 10003jain during the past 20 to 25 light.” Dixie, Springfield Township, I years. S’'4" +’%was formerly production man- ITFT| TRlJTH. * 1?% 13% + % ager for Home-O-Nize Co., , , , , . „ .. . .. „ T contact this afternoon with a » . n ,i iiita |||T fy|| 9a 1 Vietcong force of unknown/v^l/nsnof L/eafn OUTLOOK UNCERTAIN But what does he do when toe outlook is uncertain? That’s the, = _ question, and it’s one of today’s The spokesman said a govern- biggest economic problems, too. ment infantry battalion reported! 22 35% 35% 35% —-U— - 35 14% 14% 14% - % Muscatine, Iowa. : % G. William Dowsiey has been % appointed general manager of “I plan to tell the truth as I vietcong force of unknown] / see it as a historian rather than sjze xhe outcome oftoe contact 1F444 AMT Corp. ................... Associated Truck Broun Engineering Citizens Utilities Class A Detrex Chemical Frank's Nursery ............. Kelly Services Mohawk Rubber Co. Monro* Auto Equipment North Contrsl Airlinos Units . Safrsn Printing . ........... Scrlpto . Wyandotte Chemical MUTUkL FUNDS Commonwealth Stock Keystone Income K;i. t-Key stone Growth K-2 r CltlesSvc 1.8 CocaCola 1.9 M Asked j Colg Palm 9 21% 2144 2144 - 200 33;% 31% 3144 - 101 29% 29 29% + 64 48% 47% 48% + 8 90% 89% 89% - ty Str .10 4 MeeyRH 1.60 4 Mad Fd 2.710 4 MagmaC 3.60 33 77V* 74% 10 16% 1544 34 35% 34% —M— 19 31% 31 m i 2 i 5us B°r . 53% 53’HMHVHi I- 31 37% 37% — HI | '8AJ J4% - %j Hooker Chemi- I - 82% 0144 02% -%j ■ 8% J% J%.—%|' .750 67 28% 2744 i 25% 25% 25% + irntr.7o34 US Linos 2b USPlywd 1.40 12 22% 22% 22% -^% }(| smelt U> ™ ■ !i ss sx Sj|- % ’112% — — ~ . : UnlvOPd 'li tnarn Growth lovition Electron illington Fund l CrownZe 2.20 ! Cudohy Co t- Curtis Pub ^ Delta Air OtnRGW 1 ToTs'to.” 134.88+0.06; 10 FwMIc utilities 10 Industrials STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by The Associated Press I. Ralls Util. Slocks , 192.0 147.7 355.7 I 149.3 163 4 306.8 954 stonYi 1.25 95.3 GAO JO _ 94.7 i (Bonds 1.72 — IPssoNG 1 3 32% 22% 32% + % | Marquar .250 91 26% 25% 24 + %! MartinMar I 19 41% 41% 41% - % MayDS.tr 1.60 114 3'% 31% 31% + % McDonCo .40 10 40% 40 40% + %'McKess 1.80 24 29% 29 29% MerckC 1.40a 11 48% 48% 48% + V+MerrChap le MlnerCh 1.30 ‘3 25% 25 25 — %'Mohasco 1 X12 47% 47% 47% + % Monsan 1.601 19 309% 307 308 + %|MontDUt 1.5 3 35% 15% 35% % MontPow 1.5 6 18% 18% 18% — % MontWard 1 , 32 3414 + % Nevada P i 80% 82% + % Newbery i 30% 30% - % >NEng El . 40% 40% - H.NYCent 3. 19 30% 30% 30% 15 11% 11% 11% £ 143 12% 60% 82 +1% 51 12W4 124% 129% +2% 20 OS’/* 24% 25% + % 160 30% 38% - juuj 63% 64 28% 285 i 39% + ' I 66% 66% 66% + 12% 12% . 116 22% S 19 32% I .5 29% 29% 29% J 26% 26% 16% 10 31 30% 30% + 1 44% 44% 44% - 37 77% 76% 77% + 3 22% 8% 8% - 34 8% 38 38% + ---- 12 25% 25% 25% + % WashWat 1.,, 9 27% 27% 17% | Westn AlrL 1 39 79% 70% 79 — % WnBanc 1.10 9 5% 5% 5% ... WnUnTel 1.4( 24 47% 46% 47% — % WestgEI 1.40 19 15 14% 14% .. Woyerhr 140 87 42 41% 41% + %'Whirl Cp 140 2 31% 31% 31% + % White M IN xl 31% 31% 31V, + Vs WIIson Co, 2 93 20% 20% 20% + % WlnnDIx 1.44 4 26 to 26 Woolworlh 1 40 99% 90 / 98% + % Worthing l.2< —V— 1.40a 15 33% ! Asso. 34 31% 31' Cor p.’s Coating Division in Cleveland, Ohio. Dowsiey of 6260 Commerce, + West Bloomfield 46% «% - %'j Township, was % field sales man- DOWSLEY m% ij ’ + % ager for Hooker’s Parker Division in Detroit. to please any audience.’! Bilainkin said be knew Kennedy as diplomatic correspondent for Britain’s Kensley newspaper group in 1938-40. He said a diary he kept at the time recorded at least 40 meetings with Kennedy during 1940 alone. was not known at last reports^ , The government sweep in the delta was the largest opemion reported by the Vietnamese and American military comi 7 SMALL SKIRMISHES U.S. headquarters/listed only small, scattered skirmishes in which American/ Marines re- Ruled a Suicide It 46% 46% 46% + % 89 31% 30% 30% + % | 19 30% 31% 30% - % 56 49% 40% 49 — % 9 35% 35% 35% + % American Stock Exch. NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP) - Am*rlc«n Stack Exchange selected noon prices: ■' Tale* Nat hds.) High Lew LeM CIm.i 19 MS 33% »% + % 2 19% 19% 19% + %! Bilainkin said, “Rather than ported killing/27 Communist advocating a policy of defeat-[soldiers and/u.S. infantrymen Ism, Kennedy asked me every killed 11 me | time we met, ‘What more can / we in the United Sates do to ^ help you? You tell me, George’.” fl The book will be published ||| in Great Britain next July or “ August, Bilainkin said. He said it also may appear in toe United Pontiac police have ruled as suicide the gunshot death of a city man whose body was discovered to his apartment yesterday. David Winburn III, 32, of 397 S. Paddock was found with a single bullet wound in the head. A 32-caliber pistol was lying next to him, police said. uccessfuhlnvesting "V'B States. , 81% + % YngstSht 1.80 41 27% 27% 27% - 45% + % ZenlthRad Is 74 50% 49% 50 i 23% — % Copyrlghtad by Tha Associated Press 1966 BrazllUPw lletG .500 ____cMag .10* AmPetro .40* ArkLGas 1.50 Asamera Oil AssdOII A G AtlasCorp wt News in Brief v Burglars took an electric/type-,■ writer valued at 8247 frqm the By ROGER E. SPEAR I (Q) “We have saved $40,000 and want to invest it to give us a good return. We won’t retire for 15 years but would like to use some of the income from investments now. We | 37 30% 30% 30% + 39 56% 55% 55% -32 42% 42 42% + 7 13‘Vs 13 13% 6 38% 37% 31% + 9 16 15% 14 - 5 27% 27% 27% 1, »a% 70% 70% -21%. 21% + i d«nds in the foregoing table art annual cdn j*y*nn 33 5% 5% 5% i disbursements based on the last quarltrly cinerama 16 3% 3% 3% i or semi-annual declaration. Special or ctrywlde Rlt 27 1% 1% 1% ■ extra dividends or payments not desig- creole 2.60* 27 31% 30% 31% i naied as regular ere Identified In the Date Conf | I *“■ |fe following footnotes. EquItyCp .05r , a—Also extra or extras, b—Annuel; Fargo Oils 11 rate plus stock dividend, c—LlqyldetlnglFsimont Oil dividend, d—Declared or paid In 1965 flying Tiger . plus stock dividend, o—Ooclarod •» mm «*.-• w-i (QJ “I hold Rockwell Standard; West Polnt-Pepperell, Libby-Owens-Ford; Colgate-Palmolive; Amstead and Jones & Laughlin. These show me a loss. In view of predictors for no recession to 1967, New Bethel Baptist Church, 1751 know nothin'rabout investing ! ,houW 1 lw,d th*m ,on8er to Branch, Pontiac polite were an(j woujg like your advice.” *et oot °* tte ^P “ perhaps told yesterday. / | B. W. ! even ^ for 3 wt 01 cheese? / , , i Or should I get out and stay Theft from his ho^ne of a tele- (A) I think you would be bet- out {or a while?” J. G. was report-[tier off in toe long run to put yesterday your emphasis on strong growth 7% - % vision valued at $lj ed to Pontiac rl of 363 Ferry. V 32 31% Goldfield Hycon Mfg t- JIOhloEdls - % OlInMath - | Otis Elov k Slocks of Michigan li CopRng 50b Dane Cp 2.20 Oen. Ani. .40 Gf’tfwn' I 35b Hep Choc .90* Hew*- i wRwCf wlcke* T ■R - 24%- 24% 12 11% 17% 10 ■ ■ —F— ' Pac llfl 1. 124 18% 119 120% +2% p*c Petrol to 16% 14% 16% + %!PacTAf 1 14 30% - 30 30 i pan Am .1 30 12% 12% <2% + % Panh EP 1. 10 54% 54 54 - % ParksDav 5 30% 30% : '• PennDIxIs .60 ’ 18% 11% 11% T <0 34% 36 36% + —P— •13 26% 26% 26% 20 10% 10% 10% . 169 22% 71 8'1 + 115 54% 55% 54% + 5 34% 34% 34% - 76 21 27% 27% + jus 41 41% + ing 1965, astlmated &sh value on sx-dlv dend or ex-dlstrlbutlon date. 0—Paid las year, h—Declared or paid After stock dlv dend or split up. k—Declared or paid thl year, an accumulative laeu* with dlv. , dends In' arrears, n—New Issue, p—Paid / this year, dlvldtnd omitted, deterred or Meeojonn .« no action takon at last dividend meeting. MlchSug .10* r—Declared or paM In 1966 plus stock Molybden dividend. 1—Paid In stock during 1964, NewPsrk Mn estimated cash vtlu* on tx-dtvktand or Pancoast Pat ax-dlstrlbutlon data. RIC Group z—Sales In full. Scurry Rain cId—Called. x-Ex dividend. y-Ex dlvl- Sbd W Alrlln dend and sales In (Oil. x-dls-Ex dlstrlbu-'Signal Oil A 1 tlan. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without war- Sperry R wt ........ ww—With werronts. wd—When dl*-|Statlwm Inst %[tributed. jut—When issued, nd—Next day | Synlwx^^ .40 f' v|—In'bankruptcy or roctlvarthlp or) UnCotltrol | being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Copyrighted by The Associated Press Act. or securities assumed by such em"-' panics, tn—Foreign Issue sublect to rarest equalization tax. 'i 2% m 2% + %| The larceny df a cable hand-13 1k w* 13% - %,saw valued /at $100 from a 55 *% 1% s + v/trailer at taeM°ntgomery Ward i? IcU liv + liand Co. construction site at toe 7 4 23% 3% — %]Pontial Mall was reported to “ *i% *2% *}% +1. | Waterford Township police by % 'the Bundy Construction Co., 1509 ''J p ir + %' Waterford Township police arelnient of capital. 2 74.a 7L 7iii 1 (J investigating a break-in reported] M Ugt would tocIude Mon. °f tana Power, yielding 4% per W Walton in which house- ^ standard Oil of New Jer-hold Items and appliances, ,,, fi t valued nt *4(10 were taken from . y! 8 11V® F* 06,11 instead of income, since these two elements are incompatible. If you have good reason to supplement your earnings now. I can suggest four quality issues of more moderate growth and better-than-average return:' These offer long-term protection [Inst Inflation, relative stabll-and a potential for enhance- rs- sik. *t roy- , „ Rets rtod R*c*rd ebi* her trailer./ Penney 1.50* 37 55% 53% 55 PePwLt 1.40 3 34% 34% M% rote i-i® ST*® !J» 1 '51. »i. — '^iPipiico i.eo ,r,o r-w. 8.*^ .w *1^4 73 73 -WlPffterC 1.20« rS Ps r $ r esa . . iF^dMot 2.40 151 40 39% 39% Phil Rdg 1.S 25 73 72% 72% W. .50 I 14% 14% |W - - - 1 FordMot 11% WS+WlForebe r 14% 14% - %' FreepSul alPhtllPet 2.20* + % Noon Wed. 70.6 + % Prev. Day 704 - % Week Ago 70.7 - % Month Ago 71.3 + % Ye*r Ago 79.6 + % 1966 High 79.5 + %l 1966 LOW 70.5 1965 High 13.7 Ujl 90.2 Penney, JC 03.7 Ha|oc Corp 94.3 RC Cen Co M.1 HUolly Eq I :r5^asi RIOULAR INCREASED NY .0625 Q Ml M 10 { Lodge Calendar 2-loj '•3t[ No meeting Thursday, Dec. a.i 129 for F.O.E. 1230 Auxiliary. 289 £i'|W. Montcalm St. Fidelia Hagle, tution until the market outlook 'Secretary. yleHRng four per cent; and General American Transportation, offering a 414 per cent return. I would divide $20,000 equally among these four stocks and leave $20,000 in a savings insti- ls clearer. (A) Your stocks are good from the standpoint of return, but they are cyclical and seem now to be poorly situated for gains — with the exception of Colgate, which itself Is rather slow. Recession or no, I believe there Is a chance of at least a slowdown in business to the latter part of 1967.1 would not at present hold cydicals for appreciation, nor Colgate for ' growth. If profit is your goal, I, would get out of the trap and forget about the cheese. To order your copy of Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Successful Investing, clip tots notice and send $1.00 with your name and addresa to Roger E.'Spear, care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1611, Grand Central Station, New York, N. Y. 16617. (Copyright, 1966) THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1066 D—8 Deaths in Pontiac Area Mri. Alexander Maginnis Former Pontiac resident Mr*. Alexander (Alice) Maginnis, 75, dMd this morning in Green Bay, Wia., where she her home with a son, Jerry. Her body will be brought to the toon Funeral Home Friday. Mrs. Maginnis was a member of All Safaris Episcopal Church. Surviving besides her son are three grandchildren and a sister;'';., ill Isidore Naud Requiem Mass for Isidore Naud, <7, of 2H8 Voorheis, Waterford Township, will be 10 a.m. Friday at St. Benedict Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery by the Donebon-Johns Funeral Home. The Rosary will be recited at I p.m. tomorrow in foe funeral home. Mr. Naud, a retired steam-fitter at GMC Truck & Coach Division, died yesterday after short illness. He was a member of SI Benedict Church. Surviving are his wife, Clara M.; a daughter, Mrs. Richard P a r k e r of White Lake Township; two sons, Maurice A. of Rockford, 111., and J. Paul of Birmingham; 13 grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; three sisters; and 10 brothers. Harvey H. Newell Service for Harvey H. Newell, 88, of 34 Stowell will be \:W p.m. tomorrow St the Huntoon Funeral Home. Mr. Newell, a former employe of Poole dumber Co., died Sunday following a long illness. Frederick O. Ramsey Frederick 0. Ramsey, 63, of 363 N. Saginaw died this morning after a long illness. His body is at foe C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. David Winburn Service for David Winburn of 592 Lfaida Vista was to be 4 p.m. ‘today at the William F. Davis Funeral Home with burial in Richmond, Ind. Mr. Winburn, a member of Central Methodist Church, died Monday. Surviving are his wife, Sue Ann; his parents; and two children, Leslie Carol and Jeffrey A., both at home. Dr. Russell A. Barnhardt BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-Service for Dr. Russell A. Barnhardt, 59, of 6510 Umber Ridge was Monday at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Burial was in Arlington National Cemetery, Washington, D. C. * Dr. Barnhardt died Friday. A physician with foe Ford Motor Co., he was a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, Du-quesne Lodge No. 546, FAAM, Pittsburgh, Pa; and Knights Templar No. 72, Pittsburgh. Surviving are his wife, Margaret; one sister, and one broth- James Campbell ROMEO — Service for James Campbell, 45, of 410 S. Main will be 1 p.m. Friday at foe First Congregational Chinch. Masonic memorial service by Romeo Lodge No. 41, F&AM, will be 8 p.m. tomorrow at Roth’s Home for Funerals. Mr. Campbell died yesterday. Owner and operator of Campbell’s Sunoco Station, he was a member of VFW Post No. 2052. Surviving are his wife, Lista; two daughters, Mrs. Lista Smiles of Kalamazoo and Karen at home; his father, James of Romeo; and five sisters. George W. Keding WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for George W. Keding, 83, 2480 Gillham will be 1 p.m. Friday at Richard-son-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Burial will U fat Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Keding, a retired pipe fitter, died yesterday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. peorgina Cheer of Union Lake; two grandsons; and four great-granddiildren. Mrs. William R. Keough BIRMINGHAM Memorial service for Mrs. William (Bonnie) Keough, 43, of 124 S. WH-liamsbury was to be 3 p.m. to-day at the Bell Chapel of foe William R. Hamilton Co. Mrs. Keough died yesterday. She was a member of foe First Church of Christ Scientist. Surviving besides her husband are a daughter, Patrice J. of BeltsviUe, Md.; two sons, Wil- liam M. and John R., both at home; her parents, Paul V. Streble of Paris, Calif., and Mrs. R. A. Wilkinson of Toledo, Ohio; apd one brother. Memorial tributes can be sent to foe Sunday School Fund, First Church of Christ Scientist. Gordon W. Lov® BIRMINGHAM m Memorial service for Gordon W. Love, Mt of M2 Abbey will be 5 p.m. fa* « at Christ Church Cran-brook. Funeral service will be at foe Grace Episcopal Church, Grand Rapids, at 11 a.m.‘Friday. Burial will he in Woodldwn emetery, Grand Rapids, by the S. H. Metcalf Fttneral Home. Local arrangements are by BeB Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Mr. Love died Sunday. President and general manager of Row Window Sales of Ferndale, he was a member of Rdyal Arch Masons No. 93, Birmingham Chapter, the University Club of Detroit, foe Harvard Club of Eastern Michigan and Detroit Commandery.No. Templar. * * . - Surviving are his wife, Mildred;' two daughters, Mrs. Charles Edmunson of Atlanta, Ga., and Mildred at home; three sons, Gordon W. Jr. of Atlanta, Ga., and Hal B. Armstrong Jr. and Theodore W. Armstrong, both at home; a brother, and his mother, Mrs. Alfred D. Love of Melbourne, Fla. Memorial tributes can be sent to the Michigan Heart Fund. Boy May Face Murder Trial Prosecutor Seeking Jurisdiction in Case The Oakland Comity Prosecutor’s Office filed a petition yesterday with Juvenile Qxirt asking that it waive jurisdiction of a 16-year-old Royal Oak boy so he can be tried on a second-degree murder charge. * * ★ At a preliminary hearing earlier in the day, juvenile authorities derided to detain Robert Quinn at the Children’s Center pending a further investigation into foe death of Gregory A. Barrett, 18, also of Royal Oak. Barrett died Monday in William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. Dr. John H. McLaughlin, hospital pathologist, saidBarrett's death was caused by pneumonia possibly related to spinal injuries he suffered la a fist fight with Quinn last Wednesday. The waiver petition was filed by Asst. Prosecutor John J. Davey. ★ * * Davey said it is uncertain what started foe fight but it appears to have resulted from an argument between Quinn and friends of Barrett the previous iy No hearing date on the waiver has been-scheduled but Davey has requested that it be held within two weeks. YOUNG READER - Little Michelle Robins, 34-month-old daughter of Mrs. Maurine Robins, Midland, Tex., pauses while visiting her grandparents in Paducah, Ky., to read an edition of the local paper. According to her mother, she hat been reading “just about everything she can get her hands on” since the age of 14 months. Weather Satellite. Likely to Aid Wildlife Studies WASHINGTON - The n e x t Nimbus weather satellite may draw a bead on wildlife as well s storms. ★ * ★ For a start, scientists hope Nimbus will collect useful data from a herd of African elephants. Eventually, if the experiment is successful, the satellite may zero in on sea turtles, polar bears, whales, and other animals whose day-to-day movements are difficult to trace. By monitoring wildlife, ecologists hope to learn more about foe mysteries of migration and gather data to protect species threatened with extinction, the National Geographic Society gays. A device called the Interrogation Recording and Location System (IRLS) will keep track Court Date Set in Holdup Case Circuit Court arraignment of Pontiac man charged with armed robbery was set yesterday for Jan. 4 after preliminary hearing before Municipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum. Robert T. McCullum, 24, of 95 dovese is accused by Pontiac police of tricing $10 from a 19-year-rid youth" last month with a sawed-off rifle. McCullum is held at foe Oakland County Jail in $15,000 bond. He also faced arraipment in Circuit Court today on a second armed robbery charge stemming from a jewelry store holdup at foe Miracle Mile Slopping Center in Bloomfield Township. of the elephants. The system will go aloft on the Nimbus-3, scheduled for launching late in 1967. The propam is to be coordinated by the Smithsonian Institute and foe National Aero-onautics and Space Administration’s, Goddard Flight Center. STRONGBACK The elephant was chosen for the Nimbus experiment because of its bigness. The IRLS system must home in on a 25-pound transponder, a portable station to receive and send radio signals, that will be strapped to foe animal’s back. Size of the apparatus must be reduced before foe experiment can be extended to smaller creatures. The IRLS will relay and receive data while passing over Africa. Information will be stored and transmitted to ground station. By Urban League Poverty War Changes Urged fa) a settlement released to- ices rather than contract with the local war on poverty was ‘‘Much of the GEO program day, the Pontiac Urban League called for a revised approach to the Oakland County War on Poverty by wider use of contractual arrangements with existing agencies. The Urban League encouraged local and federal Officials and interested citizens to examine the structural and administrative framework of the present Office of Economic Opportuni-(OEO) program in the county- A determination then should be made whether we could receive more from our tax dollars through contracture) health, welfare, community service, group work and recreation agencies, according to foe statement. Clarence E, Barnes, executive 1 director of the Urban League, emphasized that a continuation of efforts to stamp out poverty is necessary. * . * He feels, however, that attempts by the County Commission on Economic Opportunity recruit staff to provide serv- Robbery Trial for City Youth A Pontiac youth arrested at -downtown store when he allegedly presented a stolen credit card was ordered yesterday to stand trial on a charge of armed robbery. * * A Charles Threkeld, 19, of 10 Utah was bound over to Circuit Court for arraignment Jan. after preliminary examination in Municipal Court Judge Cecil B. McCallum ordered Threkeld held la bond of $5,000. Threkeld was apprehended by plainclothes patrolman Bruce Jarvis Dec. 17 at Sears, Roebuck & Co., 154 N. Saginaw. Policeman Revives Accident Victim existing agencies is a poor pro-jjust getting under way. cedure- j His resignation resulted Barnes resigned as a mem- from a disagreement with foe ber of the antipoverty commi*-! course of action planed by ak» nearly two years ago when) foe commission and his chief objection was that foe OEO program was earmarked to duplicate quay already available services. Waterford Girl injured in Area Auto Collision A 19-year-old Waterford Township girl was injured late last ‘Jin a two-car collision on Clarkston Road near Pine Knob Road in Independence Town-ship- / * ★ * ★ Listed ‘in satisfacotry condition at Pontiac General Hospital a concussion is Carol Ship-worth of 4846 Fenmore, driver of one of the cars. ★ • ★ it The other driver, according to Pontiac State police, was James M. Halt of Garden City. He was treated at the hospital and released. Slipshod Burglar Leaves His Loot PUEBLO, Crio. LB—A grocery owner happened to return to the store one night and surprised a boy with an armload of cigarettes, candy and ice cream: He locked the boy in a hack room, then went to a nearby telephone to call police. But the intruder picked lock and vanished, leaving behind the loot and his shoes. Arraignment in Wife Shooting Set for Jan. 5 Accused of shooting his wife in the leg, a Pontiac man is to be arraigned Jan. 5 in Circuit Court on a charge, of assault with intent to murder. Jimmie L. Day, 29, of 95 E. Howard is held at the Oakland County Jail in $10,000 bond. He was bound over for trial yesterday following preliminary examination before Municipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum. ★ ★ ★ Day was arrested Dec. 18 by Pontiac police after his wife, Patricia, 30, identified him as the man who shot her in the leg with a 22-caliber rifle. is a duplication of what other ‘ public agencies already are doing,” Barnes said at foe time of his resignation. The Urban League director said today that by making better use of local agencies, some of the expected tentative cuts in foe local OEO budget might Most of the cuts seem to be in the area of administrative overhead, Barnes said. Horse Shows Up ALAMOGORDO, N.M. (AP) -The Western movie at a drive-in theater here got a bit too realistic to suit some patrons. Dur-the film, a real, live horse started wandering around among the parked cars. Police caught foe animal and impounded him in the local zoo. A turkhen is a cross between a turkey and a chicken. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKING ON THI COURTHOUSE LOT (Corner Saginaw and Huron) Furnished by the Following Downtown Merchantit ARTHUR’S 48 N. Saginaw St. OSMUH’S MEN’S WEAR 11 N. Saginaw Si. B0BETTE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. A Waterford Township policeman may have saved the life of a 39-year-old West Bloomfield Township woman who apparently had stopped breathing after her car slammed Into W early today on Cooley Lake Road just southeast of Elizabeth Lake Road. Patrolman Carl Solden revived Betty J. Manes of 1779 Post by administering mouth-to-mouth resuscitation when he observed she wasn’t br^ithing and couldn’t feel her pulse. The victim was rushed to Pontiac General Hospital where she is listed in fair condition today with facial lacerations and a fractured hip. Solden theorized foe motorist lost control of her car on a curve after it skidded on wet pavement. ★ ★ ★ The accident occurred just after midnight. The soft felt hat was introduced in the United States in 1851 by a popular Hungarian freedom fighter, Lajos Jossuth, who visited the United States and was so admired by Americans that they adopted his head-gear. NEED HELP WITH YOUR INVESTMENT PROBLEMS? Call 334-2411 Watling, Lerchen & Co. 2 NORTH SAGINAW ST. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Members NewYorkSlock Exchange If your gas bill could talk... WHAT A STORY IT WOULD TELL! Natural GuhubKm an m I • put of aw daily livaa that tha aarvica houn thia MS raoorda rapraaant pricti- asampia ... over »Y3 million in raoarai, atata ana local ' c.lly tvery hour of every day and night. Only you, tha tone awn paid by Coneumet* Power Company laat cuetomer, are actually awart of tha many waya thia ailant year. Participation in 8chool Safety Proframa, Student aaTvant eHminatee drudgery and pravidaa convenience Scholarahip Funda, Foreetry and Conaervation Projeeta, and comfort for tha whole family. You know bow depend- Ana Development Proframa-to mention a faw, are of ably, efficiently and economically Natural Gaa doae your benefit to all. „ booking, clothes drying, water heating, home banting and 8a, taka a moment to evaluate your next Conaumara cooling ,.. even providao plenum /or outdoor living. Power Gaa bill. If it eould talk, imagine what a long. Your monthly gaa MO alao mpraaanta many lane obvi- , action-filled atory it would taiU When "C.P~tttnds for Continuing Progrow EFFECTIVE RATE AGAIN BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD PAYS MICHIGAN'S HIGHEST BANK INTEREST RATE WE PAY AN EFFECTIVE RATE OF 5V4% ON OUR NEW 5% SAVINGS CERTIFICATE. THAT'S BECAUSE WE COMPOUND THE INTEREST CONTINUOUSLY, 365 DAYS A YEAR. u Available in amounts as low as $100, it's issued to mature in 3 years and 10 months. And deposits are! insured to $15,000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. ■ Your funds, should you need them, are always available upon 90 days' written notice. And you still receive interest from day of deposit to day of withdrawal at the full 5% rate, u mis new Savings Certificate pays you the highest effective interest rate now being paid in Michigan on'amounts as low as $100 It's a great way to*put that permanent portion of your savings to work with security. ■ Stop in at your nearby Birmingham Bloomfield banking office and take a close look at our new 3 year 10 month Savings Certificate or fill out and mail the coupon below today. B%%—no bank can beat it. I | "growing bigger to servo you better" I BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD BANK P. O. Box 500, Birmingham' Michigan Gentlemen: Enclosed is my check for I______ Bloomfield B^nk. Please send me____________ certificate(e) in emount(s) of <• -.made payable to Birmingham 3 year 10 month savings Please issue the certificate(s) as indicated below. STREET ADDRESS— CITY Waodwiid-Miplo (opinini mm| D-4 _________ THE romi AS ntESS. WEDNESDAY, DBCBMBE& *8, 1999 is heated, it can by various methods be formed into any shape the worker wants. The shaping method runs from the automated variety used by many of today's glass manufacturers to the oldest and most hasic technique, used by the University. At the University they-begin with various sizes and shapes of glass already commercially produced, seal one end to make it air tight and place 0 hose in the other end. The part of the glass to be shaped is heated over a hydro-. gen burner to make it soft. When it is pliable the worker blows through the hose into the tube until the heated glass bulges outward. A paddle-shaped tool made of carbon it used to reform or take off excess glass. Under the direction of its manager, Marvin Dynaa, the University glass laboratory custom builds and repair* all specialized glass instruments needed by the school and does research and development on new glass products. The laboratory is student-staffed: Each student attends required University courses leading to a degree in glass technology. The more advanced students work on research and development, while beginning students learn basic glass techniques by working on smaller, routine glass orders. Modem man, insearch of new ways of doing his job quicker, constantly develops new methods to help him toward this goal. Even in the ancient art of shaping glass, new mass production methods like automatic mold?, drills and grinders help speed production* But not so at the Glass Technology Laboratory at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis where the 2,000-year-old method of glass blowing is still used for both instruction and production. Giles forming works on the principle that when glass J Using laths and carbon paddia, trainee cute long glass tube Into custom-size container. Laboratory Manager Marvin Dynes (left) Inspecting glass coll (made by winding studios drawings of special apparatus. heated tube around asbestos-covered rod). TIUs week's PICTURE! SHOW hu APate9 uhotegnrhsr B6h Walsh. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 88, 1M6 D—0 mmnm NOTICES Cord of Thanks . In f .. 1 2 s . .............3* Funtral Dinctors.........4 Cemetery L hnmi.......................44 Lost and Found..............5 EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Mol*..........6 Help Wonted Female........ 7 Help Wantad M. or F. .... 8 Sol** Help, Matt-female...8-A Employment Agencies.......9 Employment Information .. .9-A Instructions—Schools......10 Work Wonted Male .........11 Work Wanted Female........12 Work Wonted Couples ... .12-A SERVICES OFFERED Building Services-Supplies...13 Veterinary.................14 Business Service...........15 Bookkegping and Toxes.....16 Credit Advisors..........16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring.. 17 Gardening ................ 18 Landscaping..............18-A Garden Plowing...........18-B Income Tax Service........19 Laundry Service...........20 Convalescent-Nursing .....21 Moving and Trucking.......22 Painting and Decorating....23 Television-Radio Service...24 Upholstering.............24-A Transportation ........... 25 Insurance.............. .26 Deer Processing...........27 WANTED Wanted Children to Board. .28 Wanted Household Goods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous.......30 Wanted Money ...........31 Wanted to Renr.............32 Share living Quarters.....33 Wanted Real ^state........36 RENTALS OFFERED Apartments-Fumished........37 Apartments-Unfurnished ...38 Rent Houses, Furnished ....39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished...40 Property Management... .40-A Rent Lake Cottages____....41 Hunting Accommodations 41-4 Rent Rooms.................42 Rooms With Board ..........43 Rent Farm Property.........44 Hotel-Motel Rooms..........45 Rent Stores ...............46 Rent Office Space..........47 Rent Business Property.. ,47-A Rent Miscellaneous.........48 - . REAL ESTATE Sale Houses ......... Income Property ...........50 Lake Property .............51 Northern Property........51-A Resort Property ..........52 Suburban Property........ .53 Lots-Acreage ..............54 Sale Farms ................56 Sal* Business Property ....57 Sal* or Exchange ..........58 FINANCIAL Business Opportunities ..... 59 Sale Land Contracts ....... 60 Wanted Contracts-Mtges..-60-A Money to Lend..............61 Mortgage Loans ............62 MERCHANDISE Swaps .................... 61 Sal* Clothing .............64 Sale Household Goods......65 Antiques.................65-A Hi-Fi, TV & Radios ........66 Water Softeners..........66-A lor Sal* Miscellaneous .... 67 3 Detroit Area Banks Robbed DETROIT (UPI) - Bandits struck at three Detroit area banks yesterday. A Manufacturers National Bank branch was robbed of $8,-by a lone gunman who e» tered the bank, produced mi automatic pistol and a note, police said. la a second holdup, a Sterling Township branch of the of $1,447.24 by a gunman. Police said an accomplice remained in a car during the bold-up. * a a A branch of the Bank of the Commonwealth was the scene of a larceny. Police said a lone man grabbed $100 that was lying on the manager’s desk and fled. NOTICE OF PUBLIC BALE ttct Is hereby given by the under-id Met on December 3D, ’*•“ NOTICE CNF PUBLIC SALE Notice Is hereby given by the i gned that on December 30. ltd* at T ,m. at 1460 Rochester Roed, Troy. Ilchigen, public salt of a ltd* Chev-Chevelle, motor No. V3H7dF133tC4, wl| held lor cash to the highest bidder. BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD BANK December 27 and 2t, IN NOTICE, OF PUBLIC SAL Notice is hereby given by thi gned that on Decsmber 30, ltd* ---- _.m. at 14*0 Rochester Roed, Troy, Michigan, public sale of a 19*5 Rambler Classic, *Or. MT, . U 100672, NOTICE OP PUBLIC SALE lice Is hereby given by the um d Met on December 30, ltd* a.m. at 14*0 Rochester Road, Ti . .......igen, public sale of a 1963 Ford Mustang, motor No. 5F07A 367954 Will ■—| *or cash td the highest bidder. Birmingham Bloomfield Bi December 20 and 29, 1 Death Noticed NEWELL, DECEMBER 23, 1910, HARVEY H.. 34 S towel I, age gg, dear, unde el Mss. Mary (William) Ratlin, George Valks and Clifford Adame. Funeral service will be held TMfsdey. December 9, *» ):3B p.m. r — E|MN| “-----with Ibid. ..... ............ e at the funeral home. WINBURN. DECEMBER 26. ltd*. DAVID, 592 Linda Vista Drive; beloved husband at Sue Ann Whs-burn; djeer tefher at Leslie Caret and Jeffrey Allen Wtnbum. Funeral service wBt be held teddy at d urn. at Me William f. Davie WE WANT TO THANK AN ANNOH-ymeue giver of our Christmas present Christmas eve. The Burl IN LOVING MEMORY OF MUS-band and tbther, Maryland Wallace who passed away Dec. 20, Far pert of us went with y The day God called you hi -Sadly misled by wile B daughters dad wmHlee., ACID INDIGESTION? PAINFUL as liquids. Only IN. Simms Brea. Drugs. __ ANNOUNCING Another DEBT AID INC. office. 71* Rikar Building, branch of Detroit's well GET OUT d)F D E B T — AVOID GARNISHMENTS. BANKRUPTCY REPOSSESSIONS. BAD CREDIT -— HARASSMENT. YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT." Home appointment arranged anytime AT NOCHARGE. . . .. FOR WATKINS PRODUCTS, FREE delivery service. Cell 332-3033 or 332-1835. ____________ BOX REPLIES At M a.m. today there I 1 were replies at-The| | Press Office in the fol-j | lowing boxes: 2, 3, 7, 10, 22, 30, 32, ] 35, 38, 46^ 48, 60, 65, 66, | 72, 76, 82, 103, 105 Funeral Directors FUNERAL HOME NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING | Notice Is hereby given that the Annual! qrayTON PLAINS tht members of **" c,r** Meeti association P______________ the Main Office of tile Association, 741 West Huron Stroet, Pontiac, Michigan, on Wednesday, l 18M day of January, .19*7, at 2 p.m., S Tfor the purpose of considering d voting upon tho following; I. Election of Directors I. For Mo transaction of such other business as may legally come before the meeting. First Fedsrel Savings and Loan Association of Oakland By: JAMES CLARKSON President NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS To the Stockholders of Tschnlcal Educa-and Manufacturing! Inc.: a Is hersby given Mat Me Dlree-Mis corporation and tht Directors .. . ..hnical Equipment Company, Michigan corporations, have enter* m -greement, signed, by them end . corporate seals of corporations, providing for the merger b Mis corporation of Technical Equip- ____I Company, Me. and containing oth" provisions a* provided by law, and tl - *—lal Meeting oi the stockholders rporation is hereby called, to t the office of Mis corporate jsler Stroet, Ferndale,i Michigi on January 5, T9*7, at 1:00 p.m., at which eting said Merger Agreement si— considered end voted upon end ir adopted, all as provided by lew In ■Ph cases, and at which meeting such further business may be transected as may properly come before the meeting. A counterpart of said Merger Agreement Is on file at Id! Vaster street, Ferndale, Michigan, and may be there) examined by any. interested stockholder.! December 15, 19*d EDWARD D. BOBER Secretary, December 21, 2S, 1966 and January 4, 19*7i Huntoon DONELSONJOHNS Funeral Home ____"Designed tor Funerals" SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Service'* FE 8-928d Voorhees-Siple Cemetery Lets Personals 4-B ANNUAL NEW YEARS DAY OUT-. ing for your whole family and guests; $1 per person, for horse drawn sleigh ride, followed by hot chocolate or coffee, from. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., New Years Oey. UPLAND HILLS FARM follow si k Rd., ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING e friendly adviser, phone FE 2-5122 before s p.m., or If no answer, call FE 1-8734. Confidential, DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES Christmas Trees.. Christmas Gifts..........67-8 Hand Toois-Machinery.... 68 Do It Yourself.............69 Cameras—Service ...........70 Musical Goods..............71 Music Lessons............71-A Office Equipment...........72 Store Equipment...........73 Sporting Goods.............74 Fishing Supplies—Baits....75 Sand-Gravei-Oirt ........76 Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel ....77 Pets—Hunting Dogs .......79 Pet Supplies—Service.....79-A Auction Sales .............80 Nurseries..................81 Plairts-Trees-Shrubs —81-A Hobbies and Supplies......82 FARM MERCHANDISE livestock ................ 83 * Meats'...................83-A Hay—Grain-Feed ............84 Poultry....................85 Farm Produce .,............86 Farm Equipment.............87 AUTOMOTIVE ......88 ......89 .....90 .....90-A .....91 Travel Trailers ... Housetrailers...... Rent Trailer Space . Commercial Trailers Auto Accessories .. Tires-Auto-Truck ............92 Auto Service #...............93 Motor Scooters...............94 Motorcycles..................95 Bicycles ....96 Boats—Accessories ....... .97 Airplanes.......... • — ...99 Wanted Cars-Trucks ......101 Junk Cars-Trucks.........101-A Used Auto-Truck Parts ... 102 New and Used Trucks........103 Auto-Marin* Insurance ...104 Foreign Cars....... ........105 New and Used Cars ......106 Death Notices Aspmwell; also survived by tour nieces and three nephews. Funeral servlcs will be held Thursday. December 29, at 1:30 p.m. at the Sparks - Griffin Funeral Homs. Graveside service Pontiac Masonic ■NHL. . .. W. (Poes) Poach; dear sister of Mrs. Barbers Bakos, Mrs. Msrgarst Bsreci and Mlhaly O. Timon; alto survived by Mrs. Denial Moulton, Mrs. Joseph Shortall and Stephen Poet. Recitation of the Rosary will be today at I pm. at Donelton - Johns Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Thursday, December 29, at 10 r NWMP i ne iflHi the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) FRY, DECEMBER 25, 196*, ROBERT L„ *740 Coolldge. Troy; ago 77* beloved husband of Detphlne Fry; dear stepfather of Mrs. Herman Pravtl. Mrs. Willard Beauchamp, Mrs. Gordon SmIM, Mrs. Harvey Fyke and Richard Sargent; dear brother of Earl Ferrell and Clinton Fry; alto survived by 11 grandchildren end Mree great-grandchildren. Memorial service will be conducted by Brotherhood Ledge, today, December 28, at 8 p.m. at the Harold R. Davit Funtral Home, Auburn Heights. Funeral service will be held Thursday, Decern bar 29, at 11 a.m. at the funeral home. Interment in Elkton Cemetery, CSss City, Michigan. Mr. Fry will lie ' I hours 3 to 3 end 7 to 9 p.m.1 KEDINGl DECEMBER W. 1966, GEORGE W., 2480 Glllham Street, Union Lake; age 83; dear tether of Mrs. Georgina Greer; dear grandfather ot Roy Riley *nd tour*1greatgrandchildren Funeral servlet will be held Friday. December 30, at 1 p.m. at the Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Interment. In Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Ktd- Mra. Richard Parker, Maurice A.’ and J. Paul Naud; alto survived by thrat sisters. 10 brothers, 13 grandchildren and m MWta be Thursday at I I Catholic Church, fount Hope Came-tl will lie In state home. (Suggested ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, OE-cember 28, 194*. I v ”' ■* || sponsible for any dt IT: fiMale I BEAGLE, VICINI- L6grn»KT 6U) BtAOL«, BLACK REWARD FOR . INFORMATION toeMns to the recovery at tomato MHky, mlaatng about s weeks. « atee. eM. FE *7Se*l _______ a mo. ■wrgniM*. ( 4.7 p.m. SMBBl $400 DRAFTSMEN TRAINEES Ml School or Col tom !RNATIONAL FEES $500 MONTH UP HIGH SCHOOL GRADS Trebling programs In ell fields ot Midfy. 21-30, Mr. Moreen. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL IMP 5. Woodward B'ham 642-8260 $5000 AIRLINE TRAINEES 19-28 axe. future, no exp. necessary INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 ,W. Huron _____ 3344971 T* $£000 Electronics Trainees 21-26, electrical or mechanical background. Mr. Moreen. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL , 1080 W. Woodward, B'ham <42*261 $6000 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEES 21-30 Some College INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron_____ 334-4971 $7200 FEE PAID OFFICE MGR. TRAINEE 21-30 Degree. No exp. necessary INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME ______________B 8-045* ________ "HOUSE OF WIGS" Wigs starting at 859.95 For appointment In your home or mine, CALL FE 0421*. ON AND AFTER THIS DATE: DEC. 28. 196*, I will not be responsible tor any debts contracted by any other than myself. Harold Garfield Hale Sr., 4052 Lamont St., Drayton Plains, Mich. WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY tf Professional Color. Free brochure evellabto. 338-9079 anytime. WHEN T LIST A HOME - IT sells. During 19*4 I listed over S800.000.00 worth ot property and most ot It sold for C-A-S-H. I need more listings for cash buyers welting tor your home. Call me at *73-505* or 674-2222 tor quick, prompt, professional service. No Sale — No cost to you. Ask tor John Moss. RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 3520 Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-2222 or 673-5056 FOUND: SMALL WHITE PUPPY in downtown Pontiac area with collar. 334-4376, FOUND: HUSKY OR SLED-DOG, LOST: MALE BASSET HOUND, CO-lumbla end Baldwin, 4 mos. old, children's pet. FE 4-4360.________ LOST: VICINITY OF TWIN BEACH, black end ten 1 year old German LOST-MINIATURE COLLIE, DEC. 27, fawn with white collar, vie. Pdrry-E. Blvd. Reward. 335-2625. LDsf: GUN"SHY BLACK MALE Labrador, family pet, license 1715. Reward. *73-7990.__________ Lost — Silver charm bracelet, between Norton and Augusta on Florence, possibly near bridge at Clinton River. Young girl's Christmas gift. If found please call 625-4044. & THI 19*4 CIVIL EIGHTS *! LAW PROHIBITS, WITH -K ^CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS. X; DISCRIMINATION BE- X-K-: CAUSE OF SEX. SINCE ,V lIMVIlfB ■ IV riiBwn* Vi * OF ONE SEX THAN THE X; X;OTHER. AOVBRTIIt- X; <,;MINTI ARE PLACED » ‘X UNDER THE MALE OR § *¥ FEMALE COLUMNS FOR -X CONVENIENCE OP RRAD- % ERS. SUCH LISTINGS AREXv X; NOT INTENDED TO EX- v-X- CLUDB PERSONS OF -X << EITHER SEX. ■ car. Full time « dvancement. Exei ACCOUNTANTFOR i. Advancement oppoi ASSISTANT TRANSPORTATION DIRECTOR Full time petition In Rochetter School District, high school *du-cation desirable, bookeeping and typing skiffs ncc., mechanical sbtl-Ify helpful, exc. opportunity for responsible mature person, liberal fringe benefits, stc., salary open. Apply - Rochester Beetd of Education Fourth at Wilcox. Phone 6514218. ________________ ALERT YOUNG MEN W| need more men 11 ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A LIFE CONCESSION MANAGER, CONCES- Rd. Orchard Lk. T C H E N HELPER - ■- person the Ro-1 3230 Fin* Lk. mechanical — experienced. Gen Electric Co., 1080 N. Crooks 8 , DIE MAKERS DIE REPAIRMEN TOOLROOM HELP Must have lob shop exper- THOMAS DIE AND STAMPING INC. ■Ml I Walton Blvd., DRIVER WITH CHAUFFEURS l ENGINEERING STUDENTS Full and part time for local out-side work. Car required. GERMAN, KLEES 8, BLIVEN, INC. Detroit qosfel ^siwiRL^ihL departs LEADER FIXTURE BUILDER BENCH HAND SHAPER VERTICAL MILL JOOA INDUSTRIES. INC., 590 Wide M6TEL DESK CLERK; 3 6* I nights a week, over 35. 33*40*1. MAN OVER » tlmO LIKE! FI6-uring end wants steady etffce work, retirees eenaktotop. Send comptota resume to Pontiac Fran Ben 4*. MAN, 45 TO 40 YEARS OLD, #OR CAR WASHERS, FULL OR PART "1LOSE TO HOME EVENING JOBS ... SPACE DEVICES AND COMPONENT PARTS. CLOSE TOLERANCE SHORT RUN PRODUCTION. Test Technicians EXPERIENCE IN AERO SPACE, PNEUMATIC AND HYDRAULIC, COMPONENTS VALUED HIGHLY BUT NOT ESSENTIAL. An Equal Opportunity Employer COOK-GRILLMAN, TOP PAY FOR good man, 3 days, btneflts, vacations. Bltt’s, Telegraph at Maple (13 Mile). Excellent Opportunity tor a young man between tho ages of 21-24, draft exempt and interested in a promising career with last advancement with a local company In the consumer finance field. Salary, fringe benefits and working conditions excellent, if interested contact Mr. Austin «l 624-1584 tor an appointment. Evenings—Part Time 3 men needed Immediately for part-time evening work. Must be neat, mature, married end have good work record. Coll OR 4-2233, EXPERIENCED CANVASSERS FOR work with construction company, ■ | I Oakland County Area. .Jar—1----------- Call collect. FRY COOK, TOP WAGE?, OOOO working conditions, fringe benefits. Steak and Egg, Waterford. Apply betwoon II e.m. and « p.m.___ FULL-TIME DISHWASHER - AP-ply In person Town and Country Inn. 1727 S. Telegraph. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, EX- MAN, 45 TO 50 YEARS OLD. FOR day eerier. Steady employment. Apply Big Boy Drive-In. 3498 Dixie Hwy.________________________ OPERATORS. DAY SHIFT FOR ir: HAWK TOOL G ENGINEERING CO. CLARKSTON, MIS iff Dixie O'NEIL kKALTY HJIS OPINING tor experienced salesman. Must Guaranteed weekly Income. 30 per manager, OR 4-2222 or OL 1-0575 after 7 p.m __________ PLANNED PROMOTIONAL OPPORTUNITIES This position offers a career opportunity through planned advancement steps to managerial levels and high earnings. Ws require a college gradual* or a high school graduate with several years business experlenct, prtfor- Appucams musr neve pm am records—company car furnished. For an interview appointment—u.n Mr. Fred Pauperd; 71 ^TMr-on Shopping Center, Universal CIT Credit Corp. 333-7961 PORTER WANTED FOR NEWTtND used Csr sales. Must havt drivers Cross, many benefits. SUBURBAN OLDS. 565 S. Woodward. Birmingham. See or call Don Wilson, *47- stn. ________________________ Real Estate Salesmen Due to the expansion and expected extra traffic at tha Mall - we now have openings tor additional salesman. For Information coll Mr. Vonderharr 682-5800. VON REALTY H FOR i. Room RESPONSIBLE SINGLE-* and salary. 338-40*1.________ STOCKMAN - PORTER High school education, must bo dependable. S day wk. 875. Wigg's 4880 Telegraph Rd., Bloomfield Hills, *44-7370. SALARIES TO $10,000 DRAFTSMEN $ TOP RATES" DAYS, MANY FRINGE BENEFITS, [ OVERTIME AND STEADY EM-f* FLOYMENT. TOOL MAKERS TOOL GRINDERS HARDINGE OPERATOR PRODUCTION GRINDER FLOOR INSPECTORS LAYOUT INSPECTORS RECEIVING INSPECTORS TURRET LATHE TRAINEES M. C. MFG. CO. til Indianwood Rd. Lake Orion *92-2711 An Equal Opportunity Employes TAILOR Excellent career opportunity for on experienced tailor to •Ions * d e p t. Compensation .......... -II or part tl Telegraph end Maple.__________ General Maintenance Man We need e men with 3-S years experience In machine repair end maintenance who Is seeking a fulltime, year-around |ob. We can offer this men excellent fringe ‘“—m* plenty ot overtime end LAji1*- *g advance. Quell- :lty and suburban |ob openings. Mount Clemens, -Utica and Blr-ningham Included. Bonded Guard Services. 441 East Grand Boulevard, Detroit. LO 1-4152. UM p.m. Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL__ TOOL AND DIE MAKERS ALSO apprentices Good Wages, all trlnnee. Lake -Orlor ares. 5*4-13*0. ' TURRET LATHE * • i experienced peraior oniy. e p.m. to midnight. >ble to mike own work. Como In or hone: *5 S. Main, Clawson, 585-1970; HO Hilton, Farndele, 541-7070; 15*1 i. 10 Milo. Center Line- 755-9220. EMPLOYERS TEMP. SERVICE 2 MATURE LADIES SALES MANAGEMENT Interested In training tor so High guar rs. OR 3-85* $85 WEEK MATURE WOMEN W*%e Wtwlei Nweie 7 COOK NIGHTS. BOMB 6XPERI- CURB GIRLS No jKBorlence eeee 5TFull time. Ml ---- — Few heeaffeuienafi. InelirinT*. vocation end pension plan. Apply Ellas Brea. Big Boy. 9 1 Tele- Curb Waitresses Ted'e restourent hea openings ft ________Free Blue Cross and IHe insurance, uniforms and meals furnished. Top wage* and tips. Ve-cattonr and paid holidays. Apply In person only. TED'S BLOOMFIELD HILLS D*NTAL RECEPTIONIST — part time, some typing required. Please send resume to Pontiac Press'Box No. 28.______ Dining Room Waitresses Do you on toy mooting people and working with children? We will train you at • weitreu to work In the friendly atmosphere of our dining room. Day MG r—‘ DO YOU HAVE 2 YEARS OF COL- DRUG AND COSMETIC CLERK, full or part time. Russ' Country Drugs. 4588 Elisabeth Lake Rd. I least 3 years experlenct. Send resume to Pon- tlac Frets Box 3.___ EXPERIENCED W 0 130CaXl 332-9137. Help Wanted M. tr l. 8 APARTMENT MANAGER FOR 30-unit building In Pontiac, prefer middle-age couple with no children or retired couple. Apt. furnished plus monthly salary. ^Submit relume end references first reply to Pontlsc Prats Box 3*. VAL'S Kitchens, remodeling. No |ob too small. FE 8- HQUSEHOLM - *F§T CA8H FURNITURE AND AP- ConvolaKBnt-NHreing We'ii auction V or bay R. B & b Auction Dliile________ OR 3-2717 Building Servlcs-Suppliss 13 CUSTOM BUILDING ANDERSON-GILFORD, INC. Ivlldari^igwMd QUALIT\ COFFER. 35c AND UPi BRASS; radiator*; starter* end MMretora. 75c at, C. D lx son, OR OF # ICE FILES. DESKS. M*> chines, drafting equipment, etc OR 3*7*7. WANTED, ANTIQUES AND OUAL-ity furniture. Call Holly *.’7-5193. M. H. Bellow._____________________ Wim-fd to Rons 31 2-BEDROOM UNFURNISHED HOME — Pontiac-Water ford teres. Must accept welfare. lIMIff. RENTED HOUSE SOLD, DESPER-at*ly need 2-bedroom house by January ■ 15. Can give reference. 852-11*1._________________________ WANTED — BUILDING TO LEASE ______________J location- Pon- tlec Press Box 15.______________ WE HAVE QUALIFIED TENANTS with verified employment, credit checks end security deposits tor rental In the Pontiac area - Waterford and Drayton Plains ora*. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 33S-9294 33*9295 Short Living Qrarttrs 33 Work Wantad Famala t, j?l 2 EXPERIENCED MIDDLE AGED women will assume cere of your household during your vacation, Jan. Fob. Bondable, rets, ex-chenged. Mrs. Willard, *74-1885. IRONINGS WANTED. Cell 334-0129. _ Wantad Rtoi Estata 36 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PAR-CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROF-ERTIES. AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1438 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 Urgently nee" — Sslel Dali MULTIPLE ally'1 LISTI ING SERVICE 1-BEDROOM HOME NEEDED IMMEDIATELY, CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY. CALL AGENT AT: *74-1*9*. 18 MINUTES In payments or u , Agent, 527-4400. CALL FE 4-2533 A. Johnson & Son, Raoltors 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 CAI L OR 4-0363 or the best dssl of your property. An expending .company needs proparty In Drayton Plains, We-tsrford and surrounding gross. Prompt no obligation appraisals. We buy outright, no toes, no welting. Per test action b* sure YORK CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS-HOMES WRIGHT 382 Oakland Ay*. FE 2-9141 Any Condition CASH Small tnvesW^V^desi property. WHI pay I CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR 228 W. WALTON 338-4086 Multiple Listing Service HOME IN PONTIAC Le-BARON SCHOOL DISTRICT, IF AT ALL POlIWLi. CALL YORK REALTY AT *7*40*3. J. C. Hoyden Realtor We need listings, equities bought snd sold. 53-6*84 10735 Highland Rd. (M59) LOTS—WANTED IN PONTIAC REALTY, *2*95757 SPOT CASH FOR- YGUR-EQWtTY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR. OR 44351 OR EVENINGS Apartments, Furnished 37 Movingjind Trticidng 22 SNYDER BROTHERS Moving and storage, hourly or flat rotas. Plane experts. FE *49*9 Painting and Decerffting 23 » PAINT, PAPER ING . Tuppsr. OR 3-70*1 PAI NT) N G AND PAFBRINd. You're next,- Orvel Gldcumb, *73- TraRsportfltieR____ 25 CAR LEAVING FOR FLORIDA - 2 LARGE ROOMS AND BATH, 2 ROOMS AND KITCHENETTE, GA- 2 ROOM BACHELOR APARTMENT deposit and ret. required. OR *2462 from 3 to 7, 3 ROOMS ANO BATH. UTILITIES furnished, near Oakland University. Couple preferred, no drinker*. FE 2-1485. J ROOMS AND BATH. CLOSE IN. Suitable tor working couplo. No smokers or drinkers. No children or pots. 530 per wk. 150 dap. 33*27*9. __________ 1 ROOMS, UTILITIES. FURNISHED vicinity airport, adults only I1LS0 3 OR 4 ROOMS AND GaVH. NlAk ymca. Adults only. NO smoker* or drinkers. FE *43B* after 1. 3 ROOMS AND RAtH, CHILD WEL-come, *30 per week, 05 dap. In- D—• THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEJ SilBER 28, 1068 HjAaortRiaRts, ****** 3t Rant Haases, UeiaraWwl 40 Uk Haases 49[TIZZY By Kate Osann Sole Haases ■ 4f| ir jtaaaae 49 * MOM* AND BATH, OB WI1K. MMNmt FI B7WB. I 4 HbBitl ANb WtiH. ADULTS! mmm wkwli irnafeHCvT CONDITIONING. • llngMu**. ll. Welled KITClMM. LIVING ROOM. BATH. 3434741.'_______ IOWKR 4 BOOMS AND BATN. NO m».7wai n. Mum*. - i ■ Ulmli'Btf’lwCltNCY kPAfcf- BEAUTIFUL NEW CORAL RIDGE APARTMENTS Rochester, Michigan • MODERN HOUM IN COUNTRY. ?' smell' SSH*im *r52 plus sroTi required. |14t to 3135 T VERY NICE 2 ROOM APARTMENT. TO WILCOX. % ALL INCLUDtD IM LOW MONTHLY RENTAL) • I- AND SBEOROOM I COMPLETELY CARPETED . ___. . . M COMPLETELY CAI i, Unfurnished 31 custom drapes —------------------—~—------IHOTPOINTAiR■ 33M444. FOR PROFESSIONAL MAN. 583 V ROOM FOR 2 GENTLEMEN, NO ■drtohere. waftka mt~~ tlac Plant. FE 5-5544. ROOM AND 0R B6aRD. 13SW Oakland Ave. FE f145< SAGAMORE MOTEL. SINGLE OC cupancv. sao per weak. Maid service. TV, telephone, m South Wood SLEEPING ROOMS, living roam, belli. 1 trance. EM 3-2534. 441 REAL ESTATE CITY — S ROOM BUMOA-IMSt" ---* ment Mi mo. plus ti Ins. on land contract. JS44 Dixie Hwv ^ OR TOMS___________ . $125 KENNETH 0. HEMPSTEAD, REALTOR TBS Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 4W APARTMENT HUNTING? WE HAVE ONE AND TWO BED-1 ROOM APARTMENTS WITH1 THESE ADVANTAGES: | BUILDING FOR RENT, 1700 WEST SIDE — INDIAN VILLAGE; fl. with Inside loading facll One-bedroom apartment, carpet- Contact Gerald Ellett, 473-1277. ed, air conditioned, built-in crtn.1 » » n m . 471.3374. idaire appliances. Laundry ------fij 3 BEDROOM BEAUTIFUL ROOMS. EXCELLENT,BRAND NEW with fuN basamant, I meals. Lunches packed. FE 5-7*59. f close to union Lake, and College. | Niffe ‘AND CLE A'n/ PRIVATE, Only *14.900, terms. We trede. ■Ml f YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BUILT / Russell Young 334-3t30fl S3& W. Hurow_ _ _ ■ A VERY NICE CAPE £66 Brand new. Nice area, Simdown. GILFORD REALTY FE Mils AT ROCHESTER [ ’ Family room In this 4 bedroom. 461 ranch with full finished walk-out. basement. On large lot 100x210. .Q Near West Junior High. Possession J»n. TO. *20,500. Aft- Shepard's Real Estate j L__1 051-8503 ! y^^'Vd-U-Wayi TIMES kitchen, 1 at twin. NEAR ADAMS RD. oar* surround* this nice clean *• droem home with hill basement IRWIN ^■A.fwjsrwjs You must see this. HOLLY tut country rancher, 3 bed-lull bonmint with gee — —- MdlP kitchen end emlty tin living NOW That ChrMnap haa N4t the •cane, dart planning the new yeer in Mp 7-reem ranch. Clerfcs-r ton eiqg. Dear garage, garbage r dUgeyL targe belh,; CM Rf BRWRWyi of* RBf m j . you through On hi 111 PM. easy ■ HAPPY NEW YEAR Can have im tuHest maanlng * you and vaurt could obomI R.Oto toying this 4-badraam colonial In the Oakland fltNA. MlBdlvtslan. Built-In evan and rartga, caramlc bath. ITxJT family ngm an basamant, gas hast, large pantry atf kitchen. truly a mother's delight, Scar attachad garage, lake ■rMtogn. a aoallty home offered r ' ^^lcMtng costs, call tor roams. Canwtod living room, large kitchen and dtotaf area. ivf baths. 2 fireplaces and ttotolwd recreation ream. Other features art seal glass windows, tnarwa sills. Oak floors, plastered waits, gas and attachad Mar garage. pTkedmSoterm, er trade* , ^ j (DICK) VALUET 3-BEDR00M REALTOR FE 4-3531 WHO DDifK RANCH . . I Sny* you canT Full basamant. Attached Mar aJ PontlOC'S FHA Appointed rSS? JB* A Property Monogement and "■ - - l.i^i.'om' Saits Broktr ’’SUSSTtvxS Attar°t£S? PE*444«7 Or~C3B909 ANNETT “Of coarse I love you madly! I’m Just not ready to go steady with you yet!” 49jSfl!t Housts KINZLER SUBURBAN RANCH Hare la a beauty In n ranch ntol with attached 2 car pari new house area. * colorful ro drive, IVb-car garage, lake *s& leges, In an area or nlea homos, only SM3& we can arrangn the financing, call tor particulars. Times Realty D-l couple. Living room has or ledge rock fireplar* -----' —*------ tor family room Ing lavatory, alt. garage. spacious recreation room. Adults Ski Report mlnuti 1-75 only one mils Country living i from traffic not Stove Rent Houses, Furnished 39 Rent Offics Spued 47 OP AIR CONDITIONED I utilities ONEBEDROOM-J135 omeke Ions tor a family, b one child ever 12 years of ago. I now - 25-2081. : 425-4440 < FURNISHED 2-BEDROOM LAKE-front homo, fireplace, ctosa to Union Lake Village. *100 a month until Juno 1st. S10B security deposit. References. HAROLD A. FRANKS, REALTY. EM 3-3208.______________ CLARKSTON, 1-BIOROOM, STOVE and retrlgarator, adults, avanlngs. 425-1*45.___________________L, 1Ld4I»lY....MOPLt, i-BEb*io5M, °,n 1 dfipos«C|*rwdled Lake. "4MBASSY APARTMENTS l* Highland R utilities. 473-1012. Roy O'Neil, Realtor * ‘i. Rd. Beauty Rite Homes The Finest Custom Homes 673-1717 ST IN VALUE OF FINE HOMES Evenings after 7:30 Ll 3-7327 *t WEST0WN REALTY I _____FB S-2743 afternoon* 1 -! FORD WIX0M | Houses et $15,450. FHA $500 down, VDL0RAH BUILDING CO. GAYLORD1 SEMINOLE HILLS The location could not be bat sharp 3 bedroom home. Cod style. With a toll basi dan, natural fireplace, w wan carpeting, n— Mf| a numerous to mention.' rang* and hood. Only IS par ^eariTamerican Charm greets you at the II "— —0 extends throughout property cell: r luxury-^recreation1 YORK HILL RENT TO THE RIGHT couple — 5 bedrooms, booutlfully furnished heme, near Community College, lovely stone fireplace, (f —1 garage, large carpeted Zoned multiple dwelling. CALL EM 30703 ASK FOR BILL HACKETT — Hackett Realty. NOW LEASING Up to 4200 square tec. I—... office space. New Bulldtnfl ready for occupancy Feb. 1, located 2Vi miles North o» l-M ------- Rd. (44-24) In the growing Orion Township. For Information call • LADD'S OF PONTIAC FE 5-WW PE 502011 BARGAIN! Cute end cozy 5 rooms end bath — Newly decorated Inside end out — Paneled family room — Close to Pontiac Mall — $300 down to qualified buyer. WRIGHT REALTY CO. 302 Oakland Ave._____FE 2-tl41 ! BUSINESS OFFICES FOR With —Startlno at "* * .ocated In at LAKE OAKLAND MANOR APTS. 3610 W. Waltem Blvd. . Saturday Rent Business Property 47-AI Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 » c*r garage ^ for^ rent. ^as PONTIAC - -^11 BE BRIEF house hunting. Just lo .. ... new listing In Sylvan Cll that offers 12'xli' family rooi 22' carpeted living room, 3 sc clous bedrooms, lvk baths, 2 c garage. Paved drive, fenced be yard and more. CALL FOR A POINTMENT. », 473-57 _____________________ JTmo. plus Sols Houses utilities, lease, references. EM ! BEDROOM HOUSE ON LARGE RCA I TORS i Rd' 0rtMVm#'RtAU4,2W. HURON ST. EVES. CALL 425-2057 SMITH & WIDEMAN 334-4526 or MY 2-2021. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD 2 West Flint Street Lake Orion, Michigan MY 2-2*21 or FE 4-7493 It's a buy at *9000. Oh I sura It has a garage. Call OR 4-1805 tor appointment. Ask tor Ron. It* baths and room with ton site with ranch with native oat— . —. ------- and custom draporles. Bettor this on# soon. JOHN KINZLER, Realty 5210 Dixie Hwy. 47* uuc B, ,y wp Tuane Acres* tram Packers Store OR ^043 " or 1-0343 Multiple Listing Servtca Opei 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains START 1967 RIGHT j FOR HOME OF OWN See this 3 bedroom ranch out Drayton way, carpeted living room,1 separated dining area, unusual and no stopa to climb, closets galore, I toncod yard, paved straot. $13,-! 950, can taka over 5>A Gl tar .1 *3150. No closing cost — *40 me. Includes all tax and ins. HAGSTROM, Reoltor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE I sav"this'every ......... OR 4-0358 through. Lot's framed ■petlng house and contra! a Honing are lust a tow < tine features. Priced wi low reproduction Cost; si ARRO CASH FOR EQUITY-LAND CONTRACT HANDY MAN. Uadroom brick, lire- EQUITY TRADE NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION I'm going to quit paying rent I and start building an equity In el home of my own. Many people WE WILL TRADE »35 REALTORS 28 E. HURON ST. , o.| Office Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 338-0466 'BUD” Approx. 5 Acres j-Dedroom Home OR 3-4229 who < ovellal----- ---------- FHA diet requires ; down payment. P--------- 1 a fine selection -sell fast. Don't be a good deal t __i bedroom down, I..I lining room, automatic hi lot water, 18'x24' garage, a roxlmatety 300 small overgret rees. Priced at $19,000 - Lot a- action Tine* ' '""tjitSi Family Comfort lurenasw ot mis ciean *i- v-on ■••• action lint 674-H3? J sm homo with tun base- „ r » ' For little Money klt'hm tormlr*dl.nTn'S Want t0 An Equity? , Cozy 3-bedroom hon 0 qualified Gl. made today, - all newly carpeted, YORK Approximately | heat ic, and priced at only $13,950.1 itter^ caH^today on thls^^^r we buy we trade McCULLOUGH REALTY I-----• • . . . r^ygSle Mwv..Dr.yton°P.a1nr»“ Highland Rd.^MW)-MLS Everett Cummings, Realtor — ~i _ _._ - r SMTUCKER 'SCHRAMI Pull basement, gas it water, enclosed | garage. Priced at | lend contract. NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, inc. 4,fe,'5-uoi‘,m' After 6 p.nt. FE 2-3370 H HAYDEN New Homes-10 Per Cent Dn. tri-level finished family car garage 113,750 plus ranch with full baae-_ _ ir garage, alum, siding. 115,200 plus lot. bedroom brick trl-tovoL l'/j baths, 2 car garage, loads of closet and Storage. *177750 plus lot, _ TRADES ACCEPTED J. C, HAYDEN Realtor 343-4404 1(1735 Highland Rd. (M-59) HIITER K^caled.............■■ streets, curb, gutter, sidewalks | M fjm IB •» HUR°N^EwN,1h full basement,. . siding. $15,350. Terms. ST. JOE AREA — attractive 3 or 4 bedroom home, large basement, auto., heat. Immediate possession. Buy on FHA torms — ~ sonable dov tape. Locate 4 BEDROOMS — for only *190 down. Very attractive largo home, many extra features, located at 50 Gillespie, South side of Pontiac. VACANT 3 OR 4 BEDROOM HG44E come. Garage full basement, auto-, haat, neat and clean. Very large rooms. Taka over owners land contract — balance with payment of only 144 per mo. Jm-I mediate possession — et 279 Ree- EMT SIDE, VACANT EAST SIDE 3 bedroom older hoi ..........and 2 MM. 3-bedroom VMPMMMwith full bosoment ahd gas heat. Only '"■UNljUjMj mm liown1 to*move ^ |u‘’ ^iWaterford Areo Four-bedroom. brick bungalow. Living and dining area. Kitchen and utility. Family room, ‘ Attached parage. Va parai Aoout 12,000 required. 1,1 East Suburban list With SCHRAM brIIi?*ranc'h*vacant - 3 bed-' and Call the Van -ooms modern 1-story home, lust till Joslyn Ave. FE ■epalnted comes with oven .end.REALTOR •ange. Only S150 .down at 2M Var- --------- UNION LAKE — New 3-badroom-j non near tho Mark Twain School. alum, siding. $14,350, terms. I TUCKER REALTY CO. ' WE BUILD - 3-bedroom reached ^nttop St.t. Bank -.334-1545 will} oak floors, vanity in bath, f basements, gas heat. $11,550 your lot. To set the model cj B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3i_ Elfcabeth Lake Rd. FE 2-0179, attar 0 PONTIAC KNOLLS 3 bedroom brick rancher w full basamant, large fenced ya full price 113,750, with 12,i down, take over land contra quick possession. Two-bedroom bungalow. Living end dining area. Kitchen and utility. Oli HA heat. Vacant. About .1950 required. ... mortgage and save .. many dollars on the Interest cost.)West Side Full price *10,500. Three-bedroom two-story hpme. Living and dining coopts. Kitchen and den. Full basement. Gas HA heat. Vacant. Cash to mortgage. Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor PHONE 682-2211 5143 Cass-Eliza bath Road MLS OPEN DAILY 9-9 KAMPSEN HAPPY NEW YEAR" family room, flntahad recreation room In the basement; don't look iny longer because we have If right here. Priced at $237950 with $3,400 down plus mortgage costs. Wo will take your present home In trede. OLD ACQUAINTANCES Will surely visit you In this beautiful custom-built beauty . . . with features they will enfoy seeing . . . and you will en|oy using. This three-bedroom pink split rock rancher has a formal dining room, ground-floor laundry room, cherry Formica kitchen, clwrry paneled family room . with flre-place, 2Vk baths, full bastment, lifetime gas furnace, wet plastered wells. Insulated windows and screens, over-size two-car attached garage, 14' concrete driveway — rear patio — community wafer — lake privileges — Priced •t 132,950 - IMMEDIATE POSSESSION — We will take your old house In TRADEII BE FORGOTTEN id never brought to mind . gotten, of the* merkot" for"some™boautlfu acreage; HO acres^Just 30 mllei kept seven-room house with t barn and dther a^- ---- MLS ______________FE 2-3573. __________ HACKETT REALTY - CAN GET you cash for your equity. Free Information. EM 3-4703. HOUSE FOR SALE BY OWNIr, 2-CAR GARAGES, 20'X20', 8*75. WE i local builders end bull-* — a. Cement work. Free e«ti— tfy-Bullt Garage Co. OR 3-54 ADDITIONS—REMODELING ANDERSON-GILFORD, INC. Builders end Designers FE Ml 14 i CARPENTRY AND REMODELING fSSSTkrm u^VePNiTlTinN .0JcERAMICr YINYtr ASPHALT, IN-(473-2130 COMPLETE^MODERNIZATION. Ath, .tailed. Yours or min*. All workljREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL. 473-8494._______| Reasonable. 33441044 til R. G. SNYDER. FLOOR LAYING^ ' I sanding and finishing. FE S-0592. JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING. ' finishing. 332-4975. Floor Tiling DALBY & SONS' Stump, trees, snow—ram..... 3-3085 - FIREPLACE WOOD Lakes Tree Co., Trimming COMPLETE REMODELING Service Quality work since 1943 Additions—recreation rooms attic rooms—aluminum storm windows—siding and trim. 84 N. Saginaw GSM FE U! Fra* estimates Tarn.., DO YOURSELF A FAVOR. GET -our estimate on any home Im-provement at Big Bear Conetruc- MASTER CRAFTSMAN |i I do beautiful carpentry, from rought to finish, beautiful cabinets; HentiRg Sorvlcs FURNACE REPAIR Trucking^ TALBOTT LUMBER LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS, I garages cleaned. 474-12421 FE 5-3804 LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, ■ubblsh, fill dirt, grading and grav-H end (rent-end loading. FE 2-0403. lulldlng at IS Oakland and Hardwar* supplies. Moving nnd^Storage Carpentry Please cell after 5 p Metalcreft, 335-3442. MASTER CRAFTSMAN. BEAUTI-tul carpentry. Rec rooms, cabinets, custom framing, finishing. Price, work can't b* beat. 338-9430. Painting and Decorating IT INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR painting, free estimates, | 0620 *11 Piano Tuning Truck Rental Trucks to Rent| Vi-Ton Pickups IW-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Semi-trailers Pontiac Farm anu Industrial Tractor Co. 125 S. WOODWARD 4-0441 FE 4-1441 Open Dally Including Sunday 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains DRAYTON PLAINS, 3 BEDROOM ranch. Paneled family attk attachad car and MUM Large living room. Exc. kitchen with extra cupboards. Carpeting and drapas. Large fenced yard. *14,998; 413* Athene St, OR 3-9438. FIRST TIME OFFERED PLAYGROUND ACROSS STREET 3-bedroom brick 2-story home located across street from Oakland Park on North Sid* of Pontiac. ‘ eludes fireplace In living ro formal dining room, music ro full basement with new gas nace, 3-car garage and well I scaped corner lot. Full price, ! 908-terms. Call OR 4-0304. LAKE FRONT i ESTATE I IRWIN WE TRADE ok.***3 WEST SIDE FOUR BEDROOMS Charming brick two story beautifully landscaped - in Semlnol* Hills. . — — ......s, lW baths. Very large living room with fireplace. Two car garage. Near b|atortMM|f lary school In town, to many shopping a $24,50tf TIMES TIME to buy homes . . . farm property 9 join TIMES. GILES COMMERCIAL - Brick building excellent condition, designed tor professional office* with 1,000 t ft. each. Basement under appro 1-3 ot building. 3 furnaces and a conditioning units, plenty of nag parking a— “— **“ West Suburban Two-bedroom bungalow. Living and dining area. Kitchen and utiflty. Gas HA heat. Vacant. About 11,000 required. !vtS. call MR. ALTON FE 4-5334 Times Realty makes a profit" 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY (South ot Waterford Hill) OR 4-0394 REALTOR Open 9-9 D« VILLAGE, OF METAM0RA Basically sound spllt-lovai hon.. on Vh-acr* lot.-Needs work to mak* livable. Handy man can mak* — OWNER LEAVING CITY prlvl'eg 5Vi par ci ; added co living Frushour Struble in a land contract. Wa » your old house In toad* down payment or arrange DORRIS size kltch-, basement. Immediate possession. Call today. EXQUISITE BEAUTY — Immaculate rambling ranchtr located In pret-tige-pius Oakwood Manor, Tops in construction with brick exterior, 1V4 ceramic baths, 3 lerger-than-average bedrooms, a dream kitchen with all the latest built-in*. Cozy IMn^oom^wlth^masslvo car attached garage and over an acre of beautiful grounds tor the family bardener. BARGAIN HUNTERS, Your attention please! You'll have to see this one for yourself because you won't *14,750 w)A 10 ... -peauti-sided illowing k floors, spacious fam-ceramic bath with DORRIS S SON, REALTORS 2534 Dixie Hwy. 474-0324 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE |..... ................ GILES REALTY CO. ! eork. 17,000. Roosonablo forms. im Baldwin FE 5-4175 C. A, WEBSTER, Realtor LAKE FRONT. BEAUTIFUL 4 BED-roams, 2 baths, aluminum siding home, on Lake Orion. 1|||jl||| By owner. 493-1049 tor appointment LAZENBY $500 DOWN Is well kept bungalow Is on Tier lot in an excellent ares, s I bedrooms down and larg* i large kitchen with ample Wattr Softeners Lovely ranch home located at end: cupboards. The full basement has of peninsula on Oxbow Lake. In recreation room. Priced at $13,750, eludes approx. 1 aero of land I 1500 down on FHA forms, with over 300' of lako frontage: Home features 3 bedrooms, family | room, 2 fireplaces, lVh beths. Approx. 2,000 sq. ft. of living irta.l Priced for below duplication otl 131,500. terms to suit. Call OR' 4-0304. ROY LAZENBY, Realtor 424 W. Walton OR 44)301 (1 Block E. of Dixit Hwy.' ______Multiple Listing Service CEMENT WORK. Plastering Service CEMENT FLOORS FOR PARTICU-l*r-people Bert Commlns PE 3-0245 A ] pLAjyjR|N0 Cement and Block Work | n*w *ixt Repair, fe 1-2702________________________ Guinn s Construction Co 'PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES Wedding Invitations WEDDING INVITATIONS lour sort ice - UL'2- Wall Drilling J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY .4**1 Eitst*—Insurance—Building 7732 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 4-0304 i Eves. EM 3-9937 or EM 3-7544 FIRST IN VALUE Cease ,1 RENTING $78 Mo. Will NEW FINANCING 10% DOWN ... .novo you Into your ne •BEAUTY-RITE" homo a H'JNTOON SHORES $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION WcSTRIDGE OF WATERFORD 9 Models Visit our models let, Huntoon Shores West on M-59 - Right on Ai r port Rd. TV* miles, open dally end Sunday 2. to 4 ANO Wastokjga ot Wafer, ford North on Dlxla ,(U.S.10) to Our Lady of Lakes Church, open Sunday* to 4. Ray O'Neil, Realtor A 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd. OR 4-2222 Vacant-Keego Harbor 2-btdroom, living room, dining room, kitchen, both, gas space heater, close to school erJ ‘i 3025 Moss St. Full price: 51,000 down. JACK LOVELAND 2100 Cess/Lekt Rd. VON tronco. Your Onlym*lM50°Uw land contract. CLARK 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL THE PRESTIGE AREA of 11 .akos Village. This "Welnberj torn*" has everything to otto ho particular buyer. No ne* 1st the many extras Included "Buzz" ;t BATEMAN SUBURBAN HOME. FENCED PARCEL 140 X 120 FEET. Comfortable • 1-floor bungalow, aluminum siding, 2’/i car garage, living, room, nice kitchen, 11 ft. dining room, full hfse..._ oak floors, postered walls. *2,525 down, baianco on 4 per cent land contract. NEWLY DECORATED HOME IN INDIAN VILLAGE. *3,500 DOWN, BALANCE ON* LAND CONTRACT AT *120 MONTHLY, 4W PER CENT INTEREST. VACANT l> READY. 4-room modtrn brick homo, oak floors, plastered walls, nice kitchen with retrlg-erator Included, large dlnto room. 3 Urge bedrooms, h basement gas heat, 2-car garag *18,500 full price. Shown by ■ pointment. m* H82J5 LIVE RENT FREE ite already com- ™0 FAMILY; Llva I wim Lather* rent from the ott couldn't duplicate JJ* ""T!**9* F f $34,950. Call *tor j Y? _____ kitchen, gat haat, 2-car garage, newly decorated Inside. All of r------------ loo'xaoo' M m ___ .. "sioSB n lend contract. VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor in th* Mali- mls Roam na IS GOOD. But to Kmp the SmUts on our Facts, Wa need Many More Homos To Sail. A Fraa Appraisal and any Advice Netn-sary It at near at your Tolo- WEAVER phone. Call Day or Night, CLARK REAL ESTATE Rochester-Utica Area 3 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH, 1W 1382 W. HURON ST. FE 3-71*8 or 882-5433 Multiol* Listing Service 1 baths, gat haat, fireplace, 2'/, car attached garag*. Homa on 2 ocros. $22,988, torms. MEIER MILTON WEAVER Inc., Reoltor In th* Village of Rochottori -. Ill W. University 4Sl!dl4ll AARON: BAUGHEY REALTOR Waterford NEW BRICK RANCH.; 2 bedrooms, spacious HvlngVpom, (tmlly tlie kitchen wlth^fciltt-lns.^ iro tamj fireplace. 1W ceramic baths. Full I basamant, gas haat. Attached 3 Cell quickly o JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE Realtors ... ~r5 A 3181 Highland Rd. (MJ9) FE 0-4025____________ STOUTS Best Buys Today HORSE FARM- 1 tree. Mere parcel with moc 3-bedroom ranch homo, now! irated Inside, almost new hors 1 with I box stalls, fenced *> ring. Only 114,588 w WSMS'^ 9-BEDROOM HOME OAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA Ff 24111 .... RM „ w k mmiVNO MONEY DOWN TIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, Ranch or toHevel shell on your let, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. exterior complete. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROB-| LEMS AND RETIREES AREl OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY ANO SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 298 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 RANCH, TRI-LEVEL, Colonial, Split Foyer WALTERS LAKE AREA - n being built on beautiful larg* ruing hlllsida, trees, Clarkston School 425-1884—SYLVAN—224-1212 ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES - 3-bedroom home In Elizabeth Lako Estotosl Entertaining In tho finished hobby room in' the bosoment will bo a pleasure. It‘t Ilka naw inside and out. Just move In and onloy It. Extras gator* — carpeting, , drapas, double garage, lake privileges. S3,989 down. ENJOY IT ALL > Ing kitchen, bastment. Double rage. $3,500 down will handle, f price of S19.000. Sea It today. WATERFORD REALTY I payment to qualifying ----il substantial discount $450 DOWN FHA TERMS: 3 bedroom bungalow, — carpeting, full baaotnont and i*at. Will b* repainted outside .... lew eavestroughs. Already FHA approved and lust waiting tor a naw owner. Convenient city aast-sld* location. Mak* your appointment NOWI a '"talking" HOUISE? YES, INDEED - Liston - Enioy tho privato park and picnic area and th* scenic view of the lak* from th* fenced yard of this brick rancher. Full bastment, now carpet-ind decorating, _____, community water a ot all comparable homes. >r immediate sal* at S21408 coats If you quality. " LOTUS LAKE FRONT A WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY to ---------------------- *29,900 wlm easy torms. MIDOLE BELT area 4 bedrt 1 lek ranch. Beautiful naw i itlng, lovely kitchen - dim * ceramic bath. Larg* U aped and lanced lot. Much mort id only 117,900 full 3 BEDROOM NORTH SIDE RANCH Maturing wall to wall car an and dinette, carport, and lots. more. Only 11 181 payment*. 11,450 with NORTH SID with all c basement, ragaJPjus I conveniences.. Full i haat, m car aa mort. Only 111, L $1950 DOWN- Baiance on land contract, 3-bad-1 LEVELS pi room city ranchtr with carpeted Immediate occupancy, a price n m -------- IU ,emlly room, every pocket-book end SO per cent screens, 2W-cer garage, and 90 per cent mortgages available. Mi "",900 total Shown daily by appointment.' YOU MAY TRADE your present home equity. Meke your appointment TODAY! NATIONWIDE FIND-A-HOME ANOTHER BATEMAN "NO*eNI*RGE" SERVICE ” —BATEMAN FE 1-7141 OL 1-3518 REALTORrMLS 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 718 8. Rech. Rd. 5. Terms available. Warren Stout Realtor 58 N. Opdyke Rd. _ Ph. FE Ml45 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1066 B-* RHODES | NICE , 6-ROOM j§ Warden Realty ■ tot. 831.900. FHAor Si 1434 W, Huron. Pontine 33- PARTRIDGE ‘tS.tijf BIRO TO SEE" BAR —BOWLING, HOMESITES. tamo With MO front-go. Select your choice hometlte l«jSVcontroctr coat down, balance alberTTrhodes, broker FB MEM W W. Wotton FB 44712 MULTIPLE LISTING SBBVICB wants or rowvqtoacant homo. CLARKSTON ON MIS Cl*** to 1-71 Interchange, 240 I O'NEIL NEW FINANCING 10% DOWN CUSTOM BUILT If you're looking for eomethlng spt clol In the Rochester - Oakland Un brick rancher that features a large lustily carpeted living room with fireplace, m ceramic both*. The kitchen has all trap extra built-in*. Full basement, attached oversized garage, M59 acres near Pontiac Airport. Level and excellent dralr— ' - ■ " Possibly bo mad BATEMAN I alley. Iharp mmm on. very papular __ lari? full Time profit STEEL WELDING • excellent wohBng and steel i business. You can ba you «, equ ipment < w tio.ooo da. PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 W. Huron. FE A3501 Open *Ttt t.oo p.m. SEND FOR NEW FREE CATALOG mgular) tattles m V A and I pc. PEARtoS'l FURNITYAE j t. H Aft TlikllO NEyy EAREAlttS J Gas Ranges (chipped) W RCA Whirlpool auta, washer SMI. ! RCA WMrtaeol auto, dryer ties. Electric range Site. 1 _____ FE > CHROME DINETTE SETS. ASSEM-j bio youraaM, save; 4 chairs. taMfc S69.95 value, stt.fS. New 1967 do-| signs. Formica tops. Michigan Fluorescent, si Orchard Lake, FE 4440. - B IMF PR■ EZE S3S. CLOTMtfj RSefiprtfCOND LIVING ROOMS "TIS AMAZING" to find a home so i,____ . way from stem to storage. Brick construction for care-free maintenance. Tasteful decorations throughout with lovely carpeting and draperies Included. Full paneled and tiled basement, lust Meal foe holiday entertaining. Economical gas heat. En-closed back yard barbKue, 3 outdoor gas lights. Mg double garage, extra wide concrete driveway. Full price 120,500; pay down to a 414 pi cent mortgage and save hundreds < 55555. By KENT Established In 1914 ISC' Dixie Hwy. frontage. 550 p ft. Lot 425' deep, road at bock lot. Call for information. E 2-0)13 or FE 3-7343 Dan Mattingly CALL 'TIL 7 P.M. FE 5-9497 or FE 2-2444 Trots, shrubs ar slta In spring, « a couple with the retiree, If chlldran, or war to happl-115,900. NEAR METAM0RA 10 acres with 4-room partis If modeled form home end pi basement. Bern and large shed. 233,500 with 210,500 c By oppotnhwont, please. BRING YOUR WIFE ani family, whan you look or mis real sharp 3 bedroom homo, located In Pontiac Watkins Estates. Close to schools and the Mall. Large fencod-ln yard. Breeiewey to attached garage. Only 214,900 and E-A-S-Y financing ^available. Act foot on this one be-«ni Tracks Yeor End Closeout, New j “ Yukon Delta a-c _____ St«95 _ I _____________________, . _____r Driftwood Camper ......slots Terms. jAtfflirs Kqaiwta. FE sajj; !?■ Bao Lina k...........urn ta■ FB M549. ,___ _ -1 - AKC DACHSHUND PL ___MALE BEAGLE, WORMED, 1 235.0R3J2M- | AKC TOY POOOLE PUPPliSTtS Looking lor a good u) Our tntiro — Jacobson Trail ;Cs d end insulated 5315 lay, Waterford 4737043 SOUTH BOUND? Now In alack — rounded corner Layton's iso Holly's and, Corsair's. Ellsworth Trailer Sales AKC POODLES. SMALL mTnT- 4577 Dixie Hwy._____________9234444 ALASKAN MALAMUTE PUPPIES,' AKC 1 Black G white, 2 gray A white females, T dark gray A white mala, 4154 aa. yuk-atta KENNELS, 794-3593 alter 4 p.m. EXTRA. EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR. THAT EXTRA Sharp Cor "Chock the root, ttwn got the boar at Averill HELP! WINTER SPECIAL I vw camper with attached1 i. only 15.000 miles. Perfect l FE 5-5900 pe. SI595. --------- BODY-HARRISON EQUIPMENT CO. 151 S. Cass Laka Rd 3334004 market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave. E WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS ■ ' ‘aers. New and used, f“* “Of COURSE children today love their parents! That doesn’t mean we have to coddle them!" For Sal* Miscellaneous 67 Musical Gauds groomtd and clipped. 152-2449 a >52-5020.________________________ COLLIE MIXED PUPPlfcS. -------‘rl-cdlor. 3334664. FREE: NICE CAV GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, AKC, wormed, shots, heavy boned. Guaranteed healthy. Call Holly, MONEY Paid For Sharp Cars YOUR APACHE DEALER EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dixie Hwy.. Clarkston 423-1711_____________ GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Soles 1304 Baldwin FE 34535 ‘ ross from Pontiac Staid Bank attar f l 52100. : M-3 SPINET ORGAN, condition. 4700. OR 434-4707. 1940 GREAT LAKES. 10-X44'. EXC. condition, furnished, air conditioning, completely set up, immediate occupancy, 52,300. 3339579. 1945 RICHARDSON 10x50, 3 BED- Mobile !, $3500. I TRACT BUYERS j, w PIKE FE 32150 ?AoNrTEC?nfPoLrE^Et.^LL REALTY, [ mtn't oak wardrobe and Wanted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A i«nes matchi^ vanii^ FE Oiw^ -----"—LINOLEUM RUGS, MOST.SIZES, 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See ut befoi WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54145 Open Eves. Til 0 p.m. CASH for land contracts. H. J. Van Watt. 4540 Dixie Hwy. OR 31355- IMMEDIATE POSSESSION CASH For your equity or land contracts. Don't lose that home, smallest possible discounts. Call 623-1230. Ask for Tad McCullough Sr. ARRO REALTY 5143 Cass-Elliabeth Road NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL j discounts. Earl Garrets. AAA 4-5400. EMpIre 34086.______________________ ■ |_________Furnlturs. 210 r PIkt St- FE 4-7101 ■ matching leather inlaid end tables. Nylon couch. 4737130. MAYTAG WRINGER WASHER 035; NECCHl DELUXE AUTOMATIC 2ig zag sewing machine -2 cl net model — embroiders, blind hems, buttonholes, etc.ltWmodel. Take over payments of 55.90 PER MO. tor 9 mos. — **’ r,,“ *WL UNIVERSAL CO. ___________ NICE ROPER APARTMENT SIZE range, 139.95. Other good appliances. Michigan Appliance Co. 3322 - ’ .... 6730011. PFAFF AUTOMATIC ZlG ZAG xir LINOLEUM RUGS 13.25 EACM| AAAGNATONE GUITAR, ‘••v! Before you buy iK.iHome, call Michigan's larg-I >* est chain mobile home deal- ). FE 4-9957. 1075 W 1965 R. C. ELLEN CASH REGISTER ALL BRONZE SUMP PUMPS, SOLD, red. exchanged^ rented. Sheffield___________FE DECEMBER 31STCLEARANCE sale of ell used and new desks. fIMs, typswrIters, adding machines, drafting tables, etc. Forbes, 4500 Dixie, Drayton, OR 39747. DISHMASTER FAUCETS AT G. A. Thompsons. 7005 M59 *** HA25i Chickens, 627-3696. . . 1 MALAMUTE P~U F F I E S, EXCEL- ership. _ un, te |||| B“- J0WN & COyNTRY MOBILE HOMES 294-1520 non,. Stud Service. , , poodle beauty salon New and Used Bargains m Sail models and in all sizes poodles, akc, apricots, toys avo:lable to fit your budget. and miniatures, stud service, LI ' For Information as to the USED ORGANS sonable. M3-3333. ' irlilier spinet and Ltsli* speaker,'MAKE IT A MERRY CHRISTMAS big sound, low price. "T~Proclous Poodle puppies, bred for nn spinet organ, built-in Leslie good temperament. Black, AKC speaker, walnut, almost lust Hke| 175-1100. 637-7034, Don Jenes' of Year End Clearanct ON ALL BALDWIN > Pianos and Organs TERMS Smiley Bros. Music Co. FOR SALE STORM DOOR, dows with aluminum screen seris. Exc. condition, good quality — 1" wood stock, painted white. 1 Poor — 11 window combinetl FE 4-3160.______________________I FUR STOLE, 2 YEARS OLD, ! POODLES, 1 SACRIFICE. 2-YEAR OLD MALE. AKC Standard apricot poodle. FE 5-5249. location nearest you call 294-1520 Y MALE POODLES. LIGHT. 622-6430. TERRIER !' OUR OFFICE SPECIALIZE3 land contract collactiohs. ^mpu^WWgqBP FLOYD KENT, REALTOR |22'/> N. Saginaw______FE 54105' ] yr. guarantee. 61 UNIVERSAL CO. g machine — d Maple cabinet, " n design." features^ Pull length mouton coat. Kelvinatorj ill LOANS RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR I 3534 Pontiac Laka Road OR 4-2222 MLS EM 3-7961 j IncomdProperty 50 2-FAMILY INCOME/ Newly redecorated, rents 5200. Everything sharp- Ideal tar retired couple. Large lot. Garage. Blacktop 3 blocks ta Oxford main street. Only 511.500. farms. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 2461 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion k. SANDERS. 622-3013 NEAR M59 & U.S. 23 INTERCHANGE CASH Immediate cash for Your Income land Road, Pontiac. ___ WATERFORD TOWNSHIP^ 5 acres, approved tar 4«-unlt mul-tlpla dwelling, *»,500. Tarms. AL PAULY Salt Buiintii ProjMrty 57 . Tawas Motel 22 efficiency units with 220' of Lake Huron water frontage, all units -"connected to city water and sewer, fuperty Is over 300' deep on main highway and has room to expand. 3 year-around apts and a 6-room owner's living quarters Included. Requires 536,500 down. ANNETT INC., REALTORS _l E. Huron/St. 3330466 Office Open Evenings and Sunday*I-4 lake Preperty COMMERCE-WOLVERINE LAKES lot, prlvata bageh, "-*■ laka Ilyina, 4195, *14 r- --Bros. 4231333, FE 4-4509. Open eve. and Mod. KcATINGTON Beautiful late-front and tato-privi-lega lots avgllabto. Plan ta live to this baautlful new town to Orton Tov/nshlp. Models open 34 dally, Birmingham LAKE-FRONT HOMES LARGE WOODED .LAKEJEONT SeSrtTwjwrty____________ 52 CRANBERRY LAKE eSTATjEl. Clarkston at 1-75 •*Pressway.l00'x-150' lot, 230 a mo. Blacktop. Natural Gal. Beaches. Near Pontiac. Bloch Bros. 4231333. Open eve. and fenca with lights. Watt landscaped17 SF 3252. HOWELL Town &, Country, Inc. SWAP 1 ACRE OF L Plnewood acres 3 ml. V EM 34879._______________ FE 24234 Eves. Ml 7-4371 . INVESTMENTS IDEAL DIXIE HWY. ontage, AO'xSSO' located In Drayton Plains and zoned light mar--— luring 30'x40' cone rets bl building with oil furnace, water heater and 2 laval Call for details. ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor 244 Si Talegraph FE 37444 EVES. 623527 I, COMMERCIAL, AT TEGGEf Sale Heuseheld Geeds 65 W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY Brand New Furniture 3 Full Rooms - $276 22.50 PER WEEK Or, buy each room separately E-Z TERMS LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Baldwin at Walton FE 24442 -----------rsu ZONED FOR MULTIPLES. 44,004 square foot site — West Side near Central High - walking distance to General Hospital. Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor FE 5-8161 Businesi Opportunities 59 IOT.W.M., X —.™ 1 Ished home. Detalll FE 5-4475. | HIGHLAND-MILFOiO AREA, VENDING MACHINES, I 350 ACRES, WOODED RIVER frontage. Fowler, EM 39531, OR 3-0929. ______________________ 10-30 ACRES NEAR OXFORD-2450 10 ACRES FOR PRIVACY. PLt*-sure. Investment. FE 2-2144. L. 14 VACANT LOTS pArta&'tawwi h,BREWER REAL ESTATE Wltttam B. MHeheil. teles Mgr. 724 Rlktr Bldg. « IdlM v Rose Twp. -i will dl- LOCA- oid. Fenton 4237544 utter 4 p.m. BAR—LIQUOR—FOOD Between Pontlee and Flint, excellent building and equipment. Owners deceased, widow ailing. Approximately 57504 per mo., gross. Warden Realty 3436 W. Huron, Pontlee 3337157 If no answer call 3331194 - fo* Lease - service station i at 1.75 and M24.'Reas. rant.'FE 39444 att. 7 p.m. | INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER Form Equipment Dealer Franchise Available avallabto to start. Contact „PO I . 4235415 or 4233125; 517 445-2215 saga. Ode 313 474-7902 Acreage Homesites 1.10 ACRES. W road fronti mile northwest of Clarkston. $1,400 down. \y i MgffBStog r^.ig’M i ask B. N. Sr. Hackatt Rlty. LOANS TO $1,000 ly payment. Quick service courteous experienced ------ Credit life insurance ------- Stop to or phone FE 34121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. Perry St. PE 32121 “-5 dally, ........* LOANS 225 to 81,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER G LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 441 Pontiac State Bank Budding FE 4-1538-9 LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quick, frltn ly, helpful. FE 2-9026 , Is the number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 9:30 to 5:34 - Sat. 9:30 tel SINGER Used zlg-zagger and cabinet. Mates "vttonholes, r'ICHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER SINGER ZlG ZAG machlna. Cabinet i UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 166 DODGE POLARA FOR PROP-arty or 52100. Need older car. 6737138. rn SINGER DIAL-A-MAT1C Zlg zag sewing machine — modern wamut cabinet — mak designs, appliques., buttonholes, el Repossessed. Pay off 254 cash 56 PER MONTH payments._____ UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 SPECIAL 1966 Dressmater, head, 1. Zlg-zagger, for i holes, designs. Open Eves. ‘I BEDROOM SET, $50) NIGHT stand, 25) lamps, 22 couch, 265; chair, 815; ------- set, 524; dinette set, 220; refrigerator, 230; stove, 225; dining 265; china cabtnat. 245; chest;-dresser. M. C. Llppard, 559 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE I! $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 Weekly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-plect (brand new) living room 2-piece living room sul*e, Jwo ste tables, matching coffee table, tw decoretor lampt, all tor 210f. Onl 11 NEUMJ^DROOM BARGAINS 3placa (brand new) bedrooms: Double dresser, bookcase bed an chast, box spring and Innersprlng mattress, two vanity lamps. All tor 8129. 21.50 w«9klv- PEARSON'S FURNITURE _____FE 4-0905 REPOSSESSED GE STEREO 23.25 PER WEEK Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wldt Track Dr, West Pontiac REPOSSESSED ROTARY LAWNM0WER 11.25 PER WEEK TALBOTT LUMBER house paint No. 218, 26.95 gal. ranch housa whlta .No. 742. >5 gal.', „ ____-Dunn alum, root paint, 25.50 gal. Oil basa Interior, 54.04 gal. Mlsc. latex paint, 50 cants a qt. TOILETS, 142.50 VALUE, 117.95 AND 219,95. Lavatories, 514.95, complete. Stall showers, complete, 562.00 value, $32.50. Michigan Fluorescent, Orchar" ^ TORO SNOWBLOWER WITH erhandle, lawn mower, Halllcrafter | SX IIP. 3339953. Md__________ R $42.82 cash ■ 54.22 monthly on now con-act. Guaranteed. Call 3339283 r free home demo. RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER TWIN NEEDLE ZIG-ZAG Only 3 months old, designs, but-*-t holes, hems, ell your -"*l-d fancy sawing wlthou ________j or Tarms 2114 monthly, start fiab. 1st. Call 3632622. CERTIFIED SEWING USED FURNltURE. COMPLETE living room to good condition, and other pieces of furniture. Call 693 - WANTED TO BUY Leaded glass lamps or lamp shades. FE 4-9096. V ASHER 225, REFRIGI top freezer 549, Dryer 235, T\ $25, Ges Stove 235, Washer — Dryer Set 225) V. Herrls, FE 32766. I, TV 2e WASHING MACHINE, REFRIGERA- WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE M our 18 W. Plkp Store Only L d Chairs «. 2 6.95 t with mirror . 14.95 Walnut dress » pc. living WIRWPP elec, range Guar. elec, refrigerator Guar. alec, washer 259.95 Your Credit Is good at Wyman's EASY TERMS 4EW HOT WATER BASEBOARD, V length, $1.35 per toot. G. A. Thompson. 7005 M59 W. _______ ‘NEVER USED ANYTHING LIKE It," say users of Blut Lustre tor cleaning carpet. Rent electric shampooer, 51. Hudson's Hdwe, 411 I. Laundry tray, I THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs Clothing, Furniture, Appliance! WASHED WIPING RAGS, 19 CEI 300 lb. bales Blvd. Supply 500 S. Blvd. FE 37011 _______ WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS j discount prices. Forbes Print! and Office Supplies, 45M Dl> Hwy. OR 39476. YOUR WELDW00D HEADQUARTERS YOUNGSTOWN CABINET SINK, J model, $139.50 value, $49.95 scratched, several 42" endI s Hand Toals-Machimry 68 26' SEMI STORAGE VAN, A-l. Fork lift trucks, MOO up Blvd. Supply „ , 500 S. Bl BULLDOZERS - BACKH0ES All kinds of construction ewlp-ment, new or used — rent or buy. BODY-HARRISON EQUIPMENT CO. Ill S. Cass Late Rd. 3334000 AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE, A M-peg, Fender, Gibson—guitars, amp-IHI*rs, drums, cornets, trumpets, flutes, clarinets, saxophones, new-Peopte's. FE 4-4235. BALDWIN ACROSONIC Grinnells YEAR END PIANO Clearance Sale Downtown Store Only!. 10 Uprights Must Go $99.00 each, plus cqrtoge Restyled and Reconditioned PIANOS $188.00 GRAND PIANOS $139.00 Decorator Spinet Pianos $369.00 Floor Sample Pianos $399.00 Low and Easy Terms Grinnells Downtown Store 27 S. Saginaw St. I Door Prises Every Auction We Buy — Sell - Trade, Retail J Consignments welcome MB AUCTION 15089 Dixie Hwy.__________ OR 3 "Top Dollar” . 1960 thru 1965 Stop in—See Mr. Gilmer. (Spartan Dodge ■ 5 Oakland _FE 8-4531 STOP HERE' LAST 'e pay moro tor sharp, lata mod> *.M MOTOR SALES Now at our new location 1150 Oakland st Viaduct ■___3339261 FALL SALE SAVE HUNDREDS OP DOLLARS ---------jn. "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S Ope* 9 to 9*— 7 days a week MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. 3330772 1 block north of Telegraph | Junk Cars-Trucks •ALWAYS BUYING. JUNK CA : and scrap, we tow, FE 39940. I. Perkins Sale Service Ph. 435-9400, Swartz HOLIDAY SPECIALS and generators, l, OR 35049. HALL'S AUCTION SALES 05 W. Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion. Closed until February 4, 1967. LARGE PUBLIC AUCTION Thurs., Dec. 29, 7 p.m. Furniture, appliances, merchandise. Drayton Plaint chandlsa to avold^argt personal1 open d 12' Wide, 2 or 3 Bedroom 54288.00 - Only $788.00 down. Also many usad at bargain priei -J 75c ea. C. Dixt ______ JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS, FREE low. 6735224. Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 DETROITER-KROPF Dealer Bob Hutchinson Mobile Homes BEAUTIFUL PALOMINO GELDING, 'ears old, 17 hands, anyone handle, 2155. 6232318. DOUBLE ;D RANCH CONTINUING Hdy—Grain—Feed COW AND HORSE HAY. WE DE-! first Duality alfalfa brome OAT AND WHEAT STRAW-HOLLY DELICIOUS APPLES, I Forth Equipment MASSEY-FERGUSON pular. Classical, 6735071. Sporting Goods ■t Equipment, 4507 Dixie H ’s Radio and Appliance, li A-1 DINETTES 1 Splece dinette, 424, now 111 1 5-piece dinette, 239. now 224. 4 7-piece dinettes, 2(9, now 854. ZENITH 21" COLOR TV to beautiful, walnut cabinet repo, but In exc. working condltl May be had tor uhpald bal. of 5351 i Easy terms may be arranged. _ FRETTER’S WAREHOUSE OUTLET1 2 ISO S. Telegraph . FE 37451 piaSo, ■mu i.«w, brass, 299U or best offer. Cell Dan at EA 33285. ________________ ... BgAUTIFUL UPRIGHT PIANO RE conditioned, tuned, dtllverad, ouar an tea, 5165. 3330105.______ 1 ’ BUY NOW FOR CHRISTAAAS Lay-away Plan. Wurlltztr a n i Thomas Organs and Pianos. JACK HAGAN MUSIC 469 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332-0500 8192 Cooley Late Ed. 3635500 BARITONE UKES. 521 AND “STOWCLARK ORGANS 2525 and up MORRIS MUSIC ,.iij . Telegraph Rd. FE 2-05671 Across from Ttl-Huron D R AFT B 6, MUST SELL JtiW EXPERT PIAN0M0VINO " j PIANOS WAITED Sarrtci * SAVE $200 .... ,,ew player piano, electric pump with Rlnky-Tink, 25 rolls I bench. Long easy Open 4 nights ^a ALL GUNS REDUCED Fshanties. 2534644 JY OR TRAOt GUNS SKI DOO'S GUNS-CAMPERS CRUISE-OUT, INC. 63 Walton Petty 9 Ski-Doo Polaris Sno-Traveler FE 4-0566 Cliff Drc, n end Sport* r Rd. Holly, n Petty—1 eyer rtt Cant ;ond—urovel—Dirt Good condition. L 'April Specials In December, 1967 Models Immediate Delivery RICHARDSON — WINDSOR LIBERTY-HAMPTON-HOMETTE Colonial Mobile Homes 25 Opdyke . _ . 332-1457 (Corner of M-39 st Opdyke) I Dixie Hwy. m ■fit south of Waterford) MARLETTES m — .j, 12* to 20' wide. Early American, Traditional or moder- Space°ravallable In 4 Star Park, r extra charge. Also see the famoi light weight Winnebago Trail* OXFORD TRAILER SALES 50'-43' - TRANSMISSIONS -s, etc. Also buying — batteries, generators. PARTS FOR AIL Foreign, Rambler, Jeep New and Used Trucks 103 Oil), goad rubber. Priced at y $395. Jerom# Ford, Roches-'* Port P«»taf< OL 1*9711. s Landscaping. 801 Scott WANTED: GOOD USED TRAILERS. 1 Rd. FE 4-0351 or FE 6-3663. Pontiac Mobile Park. FE 5-9942. rRA GOOD HORSE AND COW I i, will d*llvr~ ““ ’ FOR SALE. 6235263 I Rent Trailer Space 90 VILLAGE GREEN MOBIL ESTATE, dew and different, 2225 Brown Rd. Near 1-75 and M-24. FE 2-5295. BOB BORST Lincoln Mercury 520 S.. Woodward, Birmingham 20 Per Cent Off rldgastone cycles prom 50 cc to 175 CC “PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. (PI.. T Rochester,' out Rochester Drayton Plains Lake4-04" Road. 425 Buell Rd._________ niu5**» m iS xom 1965 HONOA SUPER payments. MA 4-3268. 1967 HONDAS FSPPU-- • TRIUMPH, BSA, NORTON WRW .mm., blades, tiro chaws, Matchless, Ducattl, Moto-Guzzl and gardan tractors. Pony carts, An models and colors, and i»ny sleds. special Winter prices Hlllson Lawn 3 Garden E.,v <(r^ _ Buy now and save; H7 Highland 673-0330| /ndersON SALES 3 SERVICE J USED RIOING TRACTORS WITH; 1645 5. Telegraph________ “ MB ■■III prle,d ** ,nd| SUZUKI 1x6 SCRAMBLER-THEY'RE here I TUK0 SALES INC. 172 E. AUBURN — ROCHESTER UL 2-5363 1963 CHEVY 14-TON PICKUP, NEW premium tires# T snow blade and completely reconditioned . . $1,195 Autobahn MOTORS, INC. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vi mile north of Miracle Mile ■ Telegraph KING BROS. NEARLY NEW, FULLY AUTOMATIC, Culllgan water softener. TMt balance of 8160. 135-4069._________ - Fur Sale Miscellaneous_______67 l. 1 MEAT GRINDER, 275. 1 SUCER, ■Mf. rmoet block, 220. 1 Netlonel h Register, 2104. 1, 14 h p. ward motor, 4104, 3137470, Used Organs Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel $450 GRINNELL'S Downtown 1 27 S. Saginaw Home of the Pontiac Hammond Organ Society SEASONED FIREPLA 6235263 after 4 p.m. all day Sat. Sun. livered. 682-0836. Travel Trailers _88 1944-1947 TRUCK CAMPeRS AND > travel trailers, on display — some 1 will be heated every Saturdfy end Sunday during Decemberl W* car-, ry: STREAMLINES, FRANKLINS, ( CREES, FANS, and MONITORS to travel tr*lte*,_alM__ carry: SUZUKI CYCLES 5OCC-250CC. RUPP Mlnlblkes as tow as 5129.95. Take AA59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Rldg* Rd. to Demode Rd. Lett and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone MAIn 9-2179. MUST SELL 1966 TRIUMPH, 500 CC, *750 or take over psyments. OR 31001. 1 Truck Campers. Coma on out this weak to Holly Traval Coach, 15210 Holly Rd., Holly, ME 4-4771. Boats - Accessories 97 EVINRUDE SNOWMOBILES^ WE electric start. Also stogie and double snowmobile trailers. Coming soon II The new and different land and snow vehicle, the Scatmoblle.; Take M59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Lett and follow signs to DAW-SON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 629-2179. ' AIRSTREAM international, 24' • fully aqulppad. 53495. 332-4925. ' AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Sine* 1932. Guaranteed tor lit*. - See them and get e demonstro-tlon at Warner Trailer Sales, 3092 W, Huron (plan to loin one of ■ Wally Byam'a exciting caravans). BOOTH CAMPER ' ALUM. COVERS, CAMPERS, PARTS, ACCESSORIES FOR ANY PICK-UP. 1 7330 HIGHLAND RD.—PONTIAC OR 35534 , FOR WINTER FUN WE HAVE THE new T-Bird Snowmobile from $695. Kar's Boats 3 Motors. Lake Orion. MY 31600. Open weekends AT STACHLER'S INSPECT 1 CENTURY-MALLARD-SAGE TAG-A-LONG Also LIFETIME PREMIER motor Home I - 1964 MODELS LEFT STACHLER TRAILER .SALES, INC. , 3771 Highland: (M59) FE 3-4*24 1 Mon. and Tuas. 9 e.m. to 4 p.m. 1 Sal. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.) closed Sunday On Display NEW 22' Owens 6-sleeper exp. 26' Owens 4-sleeper exp. 25' Owens 4-sleeper exp. 27' Chrls-Creft fiberglass txp. 27' Cavalier exp. 11' Chrls-Craft Super Sport 17VY Chrls-Craft Corsair 19' Sllckcratt 150 h.p., 1-0 14' Sllckcratt 120 h.p. 1-0 CHECK OUR DEAL LAKE .&; SEA MARINA South Blvd.-Saglnaw — FE 4-9587 PIITTEffS '67PM0DELS . Starcratt, MFG, Johnson boats, motors. Carver Sea-Skiffs, Watres Pontoons. LAYAWAY NOWI . 1370 N. Opdyke (1-75 at Oakland Univarslty exit) HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS, j Pickup campers and covers. Reese and Drawtlte hitches. 3255 Dixie ; Hwy. OR 31454. PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS Over N Different models 1 On display at all times - BILL COllER r Camping Supplies i On M-21, Lapeer. Mich. fcy.Y'S MARINE FOR JOHNSON motors, boats, and canots. 6033660. WINTER STORAGE AND SERVICE Motors tuned, boats repaired. Phone In your reservation today. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1099 S. Talegraph Rd. 3331013 PICKUP COVERS. 1245 UP. 5 10*4" cabcovers, 11.2*6 bnd up. T 3 R CAMPER MFG. CO. 1110 Auburn Rd. >51-3334 i. pioneer Hamper sales '• BARTH TRAILERS A CAMPERS' TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS. merit Fiberglass covers <8"-27"-3$" covers) I. ALSO OVERLAND 3 COLEMAN 3491 West Huron F| 2-190* Aiificwut W PRIVATE PILOT GROUND SCHOOL course — Starting Jan. 3rt. <907. Sign up now — ADI - OR 4-0441. i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, backup lights, seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, padded dash and visor, traffic hazard lights, directional signals, inside rear-view mirror. $1828 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 INTERNATIONAL SCbUT 1964, 4 WHEEL DRIVE wad transmission, A-l condition ROCHESTER DODGE Always a fine selection of New *nNEW**<'*7r^DOD&E" PICKUP ** 11951. Taxes Included 651-6100 Special Units 963 CHEVY Mon stake wtth aerial ladder, A-l condition. Only 11495. 1965 FORD F-500, 13' dump State. Only 81,895. 1964 FORD F-600, 14' alum, van Only $2,795. 1944 FORD Pickup VWon, 299S. 1961 CHEVY VU-ton, pickup, 2492. 1951 FORD pickup. Only *94. . — -‘fCtfmllk unit. Only ItM. 30 Others to , ^ Choose from New W_ John McAuliffe Ford TRUCK DBPT THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1086 Ntw mi fcwl Tradn lM New mi fkU ttn SPECIAL $1175 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universol ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP TWT - W* FORD wi Vtoe PICKUPS 1 — * cylinder and 1 - •SSKSE-JS2S •HftrSKJa Wreckers Heavy Duty One Ton GMCs Complete — Reedy to go! From $1650 John McAuliffe Ford TRUCK DEPT. 177 West Montcalm FE 54101 roue AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR I _____ _JEEP I Fine Used Cars Are Found att STATE WIDE * AUTO OUTLET ' , 1H2 BUICK SKYLARK CON-VERTIBLE WITH VI EN-OINE. POWER STEERING, RADIO, HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE Sin. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly payments only SMI. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mf. Portia at HAROLD TURNER FORD, LLOYD 1963 BUICK LeSabre Sedan. Automatic, power, sandstone beige. Immaculate condition. One own- $1097 Grimaldi Jeep $45 Down LLOYD MOTORS New end Ihed Cert DON'S USED CARS Small Ad—Big lot so CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 106 Mew -d Deed Con LLOYD 1962 FORD XL Convertible. Beautiful equ with matching Interior, nrttadera, automatic, power 111 M ARMADUKE \KT TH1 VWfej A • By Anderson and Leeninf 1km mi ted Cm______IINew mi Nwd Cl Haskins Chevy-Olds On U.S. IS et Ml] I_ Clerfc.ton MA 5-M71 IM4 CHEVY MTOOR’. GOOD CON. _j_ CM^VV> TIGER $645 No Money Down UOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1H3 FORD . . . I4N. Opdybe Hardware. FE MRL E INS FORD FAIRLANl WAGOtiTJ IMS CHEVY VI. STICK. BEST OF- >61 CHEVY NOMAD WAGON, RA-dio, heater, power steering, brakes, >400. 887-3118. 104 1250 Ooklond 333-7863 TM3 CORVAIR, 4 TO CHOOSE FROM - As low as 5397 and up. C M purchased with no down pay LUCKY AUTO YOUNG BRAVE HAVE HEAVY FOOT ON MUSTANG , OR 6-TOt MANY HORSES UNDER HOOD? TROUBLE WITH AUTO INS.? CALL OUR TRIBE FOR INS. MANY MOONS TO PAY ON BUDGET PLAN BRUMMETT AGENCY Mlracit Mila __fe_a«» Fecelf Cert________IDS 1951 MERCEDES. REAL SHARP! car. S4?7 full price. No down pay-; mart required. LUCKY AUTO IfSI VW, GOOD CONDITION. 1»64 VW SUNROOF, ONE OWNER, must sacrifice - getting company car. 887-5598, Highland. ________i IMS VOLVO P1M0S. MICHELAN tires, ah’ Mower, radio end heater, I 626-W72 1964 BUICK Convtrtibl* LeSabre. V-l, automatic, double power, low nmha^^ Only — SHELTON Drive f new or used car from Kino Pontiac Satie. Cell Mr. Clay at t&mm: THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING rtKgSr«cm^HomfwT> ASpert PONTUuf catalin/TTBoor T_ I , Hydremetic. radio, tinted ^ h 1W2 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. R A O I O, HEATER, POWER STEERING, WHITEWALL TIRES, KteTS* ssrvi*;*cWi ra? MGR. Mr. Parks st HAROLD, TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. M4 S WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7SD0 INS FORD, LTD. 3-door HARD-|||Bwj;ndUsed Cow 106 Ntw and Used Cart ESTATE STORAGE tsz 651-8 1964 Pontiac Bonneville Hardtop 3-door, radio, hooter, automatic, power steering, brakes, almost like oewl Sava. Save HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. 9M9 TO" » W IWit. * VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-3900 NgwMdDiB^Cm^ PEEJi M-gW™ ^ 7ten_Flnencftp. C«R Mr rth Mctm; 3» Omend FI BW4B.. ■ ~ — 1964 AMERICAN MTPUrtUWt “"ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP M 5-4155 t** Mla NS AMERICAN WAGUN ~ a*dk>. heeler. Ilka new. Only gi.tvs -VILLAGE RAMBLER. MS t. Woodward. Ml *■***•-- LUCKY AUTO BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We *Con Finance You— SHORT ON DOWN PAYMENT Drive e new or used car trot Keedo Pontiac Sales, cell Mr. Cla at 682-7300._______________________ LLOYD 1963 CHEVROLET Impaia Station Wagon, power, luggage carrier, i LLOYD $1379 X 676-0745. 1965 KARMANN GHIA >t^*buick sport wagon, om ........ ‘ ' Wt officials car» best prk " 338-0958. ^ air conditioning, etc n. Only >1450, F6 I , p.m„ 893-8259 aval Cirkpatrlck. $79 Down LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 weekly payments. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml t-7500 « 1965 LINCOLN Continental. Metallic g ( with parchment Vinyl R $2697! LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 HAROLD TURNER I, BLUE, 1300 SERIES VI SKy light. Only 3,600 mi., driven; In Europe, 51,500. 663-1323. i 1066 SUNBEAM TIGER, BLACK1 See All the New 1967s TRIUMPH-MGs-SUNBEAMS AUSTIN HEALEYS—FIATS AUTHORIZED DEALER Grimaldi Imported Cars 1966 Cadillac Sedan DeVille, Gold with a White Top and Gold Interior. Goodies and Air Conditioning. Save ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Cadillac • Ml 4-1930 | - 1966 CADILLAC DEVILLE 4-DOOR 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA HARDTOP WITH VI ENGINE, AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING. RADIO AND MEATS A, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE 1995, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, W 9 • k I y payments only MM. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks et HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7$00. 1964 CORVAIR MONZA COUPE. A-owner new-car trede. Automatic, buckets. Nice color. Save, Grimaldi Cars 1965 FALCON 2-DOOR, F ard Shift, 6-cyl., r_‘* warranty, 11,075. O 1965 MUSTANG . gundy, excellent, .-JUSBH FE 5-7178, after 6 p.m. FE 5-0033, 1961 MERCURY 3 to choose from. Convertible, Station Wagon, and Sedan. Frier’1 to sell at only S475 each at BOB BORST LLOYD VW' CENTER 60 To Choose From -All Colors— -All Raconditioned- Autobahn irtp&s BUICK 544 S. WOODWARt, JEROME 1965 CORVAIR MONZA, BUCKET seats, air, auto, very clean *'UL Opdyke Hardware. FE 8-6686. 1966 CAPRICE WAGON POWER Stetrihg, 1‘"11" malic 327 engine, rm.» top, tinted glass, white fl HAROLD TURNER ; 1962 COMET 2-Door. This c FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM $399 No Money Down LLOYD MOTORS 75oo 1250 Ooklond 333-7863 1959 OLDS, LIKE NEW looking for. Bank financing. Only $695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 60 S, Woodward Ml J . $1095. Opdyke 1966 OLDS FIS 2 DOOR M CYLIN-der, Standard Shift, Radio, Heater, Low Mileage. Priced at only SI59S. Jerome Ford,. Rochester'! MIKE SAVOIE a!?P5S* *nB'T overlook 1104 S. Wood mi,be*U,V Save Ml 4-2735 WILSON Kessl*r'Hdm Cadillac Ml 4-1930 Now Is the ^ Time^to Save;... 631 OAKLANdTvE FE 4-4547 WBlURwA b mm CS?lesAend Service * LLOYD 1966 MUSTANG $1889 $89 Down | DECEMBER Transportation Specials IY HERE-PAY HER! NEW 1966 Olds Toronado FULL FACTORY EQUIPMENT Our sale price rto “ $3498.20 DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. AND HEATER, VI ENGINE, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE S1695, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly payments only 59.69. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Perks •I HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7S00. 1964 GRAND PR IX Radio, heeler, automatic, powi steering, power brakes, elr cond tlonlng and sharp! Full price on 51,695. VILLAGE RAMBLER, H 5. Woodward, M6 ’ —“ GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC Buy With Confidence Houghten New Year's Special 1962 Tempest 4-door. Radio and heater, automatic transmission $495 1963 Chevy II 3-seat wagon. Automatic transmission, radio, heater.$995 Ask for Leon (Goose) Robertson, Bob Mathews or Vern Sheffield, Sales Manager HOUGHTEN Olds OL 1-9761 Rochester 1964 PONTIAC V,ES!'V 1985 FORD Hardtop, tl -NO SALESMAN SALE-(Tues., Dec., 27th Thru Friday Dec. 30.) DEAL WITH OWNER DIRECT I 1964 TEMPEST LEMANS 2-DOOR VI auto, with power steering, 51,-297 full price. Can he ^purchased LUCKY TuTO! 1940 W. Wldf Track IfE 4 1006;, H^-or-!.^- 'FE_J LLOYD 1965 PONTIAC 1965 Tempest Custom 1964 Chevy I PONTIAC — RAMBLER On M24 in Inke Orion »n 9 to 9 Mon.- Fri. MY 3-4266 HAROLD TURNER Holiday Specials 1962 CHRYSLER ,,ee 1966 OLDS t^iTWlS LtfCKY AUTO _ FE 4-1006l,4° W' or*1* 3-7554 | REPOSSESSION SALE ^ &&SSI 2 YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 OLIVER BUICK SERVICE HOURS ¥-1 NEW AND USED CARS Holiday Savings! $1989 $89 Or Old Car LLOYD MOTORS 333-7863 “19661 $1789 $89 DOWN LLOYD MOTORS 1962 PONTIAC <=«•«"* A41^owS.arrdBI?mlnXm 1 trade *l'dMI°.econdcar. Bank fl "'"^BIRMINGHWVl CHRYSLER-PLYMOUW ^ tsnvtjsw 1965 Buick ....$2195 1964 Buick . ...$1595 pow:r 4-Door, power .fmrlng, breke: automatic. 1965 Buick ....$2295 1965 Buick . ...$1995 red«®.h*rd,op'power br*kei' Doubl* power, automatic, 1962 Buick' ....$1095 1965 Electra ...$2395 USibr. 2-door herdfop, eulometlc, double power. ConverliBle. Perfect condition end he. hill power, 1-96-210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9165 r LLOYD'"* )62 LINCOLN MRfi $1299 $89 Or Old Car LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1966: Lincoln Cominenttil. Full power. Factory air condition- ipMI Car Warranty, this is the Boss' own person- Only $4695 Trudell Ford 777 John R, Troy 5^522 BEATTIE •—Quality A-l Trucks— 1963 Econoline .....$ 895 1963 Willys .......$1395 1965 Jeep........................$1695 fffpf 1964 Ford F-100 ...$1295 196ij> Ford F-100 ......$1495 1966 Ford F-100 ...$1895- 1964 GMC Stake ....$1595 BEATTIE “Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie Hwy. in Waterford OR 3-1291. lfgs-1 PONTIAC-BUICK 651-5500 'THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1966 D—9 —Television Programs— Pro0romo furnishedby station* listed In this column or* subject to cheese without notice W ' 1 $ " » d'L: , -whoo-tv, Be-wtvT a-wjwcTv. 4-wwj-tv. y-wxtt-tv. ♦■.gaw-w. TONIGHT 1:89 (3) (4) News (7) Movie: “The Painted Hills” (U61) Paul Kelly, Bruce Cowling (I) Cheyenne (fa Pro-great) (50) 8upennan (56) Friendly Giant 6:15 (56) Art Studio 6:36 (9) Twilight Zone (50) Flintstones (56) What's New 7:16 (2) Truth or Consequences (4) Juvenile Court (9) Movie: “Huckleberry Finn” (1939) Mickey Rooney, Walter Connolly (50) McHale’s Navy (56) Smart Sewing 7:39 (2) Lost in Space (4) Virginian' (7) Batman (50) Alfred Hitchcock (56) Book Beat 8:99 (7) Monroes (50) Perry Mason (56) Great Books 8:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (56) Men of the Senate 8:55 (9) News 9:80 (2) Green Acres (4) Bob Hope (7) Man Who Never Was ' (9) Country Music (50) Movie: “Til We Meet Again” (1940) Pat O’Brien, Marie Oberon (SO) Nam 9:39 (2) Corner Pyle (7) Peyton Place (9) Festival 10:90 (2) Danny Kaye (4) I Spy (7) (Special) Year-End Review (56) N.E.T. Symphony 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News (50) Alfred Hitchcock 11:30 (2) Movie: “Hercules, the Avenger” (1964) Reg Park, Bya Sandri (4) Johnny Carson (7) Movie: “Anchors Aweigh” (1945) Frank Sinatra, Kathryn Grayson (9) Wrestling 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (9) Window on the World 1:30 (2) (4) News (7) Wanted TOMORROW MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester '(4) Classroom (7) Three Stooges 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Today 7:30 (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (2) Capt. Kangaroo (9) Romper Room 8:30 (7) Movie: “Adventures of Tom Sawyer” (1938) Tommy Kelly, Jackie Moran 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (9) Bonnie Prudden 9:30 (9) People in Conflict (56) American History 9:55 (4) News 1C:00 (4) Eye Guess (9) Hercules (50) Yoga for Health 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies ((4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Hawkeye (50) Peter Gunn 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Pat Boone —(?H3upermarketSweep -(9) Butternut Square (50) Dickory Doc 11:25 (9) Tales of the River Bank. 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (4) Hollywood Squares (7) Dating Game (9) Friendly Giant 11:45 (9) Chez Helene AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Take 30 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Swingin’ Country (7) Father Knows Best (9) Communicate TV Features Sandman, C TWILIGHT ZONE, 6*9 p.m. (9) Jonathan Win tar S appears as “Fats” in a poolroom story, rerun. BATMAN, 7:30 p.m. (7) The Catwomaa teams up wifa the Sandman to steal toe J. Pauline Spaghetti fortune. Guest stars are Michael Rennie, Jell* Newmar and Spring Byiagtoa. MEN OF THE SENATE, 6:30 p.m. (56) Debut of interviews with U. S. senators beginning with Thomas H. Kuchel, Republican of California. YEAR-END REVIEW, 10:00 pJB. (7) Top correspondents review biggest stories of tye year. (50) Movie: “College Coach” (1933) Dick Powell Ann Dvorak (2) Guiding Light (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie:“Flight Commander’ ’(1930) Richard Barthelmess, Douglas Fairbanks Jr. (2) News----- (4) Doctor’s House Call (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal (4) News (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Newlywed Game (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Dream Girl (50) Love That Bob (7) News (2) To Tell the Truth Ss*»36 / 4:00 4:39 (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper (*) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Johnny Ginger (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo (7) Dark Shadows (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action fa (9) Fun House (56) Grenoble Olympic* (4) Eliot’s Almanac (4) George Pierrot (7) News (50) Alvin (56) Probing Mind (9) Cheyenne (50) Little Rascals (66) What’s New (7) News (4) Caro) Duvall Cave-In Kills 1, Injures 2nd ADRIAN (AP)-The owner of a plumbing and heating firm was killed and his assistant injured Tuesday when a drainage ditch caved in on them. ♦ ★ * Joseph B. Nilan, about 45, of Adrian was dead when police and firemen dug him out. Nilan’s assistant, Otto Rae, 33, of nearby Clayton, suffered face and head cuts and possibly a fractured shoulder. The two were laying drainage tile in the 10-foot ditch wtyen the cave-in occurred. Store Founder, 87, Dies in Clare Home Policeman Gets Passerby's Aid DETROIT (AP) - An unidentified man saved patrolman Gerald Pastula’s pistol for him Tuesday. Pastula and his partner were setting an ambush for two men outside a vacant building when one of toe men jumped from window, lunged at Pastula and grabbed his pistol. ★ * 1 * At that moment a passerby ran: up, knocked Pastula’s assailant to the ground and handed the pistol back to the policeman. He walked away, leaving the officers to pick up the two men, who were held for investigation of burglary. Kelley Upholds Rejection Vote 'Smote Acted in Time on Romney Choice' LANSING (AP)—The Senate acted in time last May when it rejected the reappointment of Bisque Knirk to the State Agriculture Commission, Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley ruled Tuesday. Kelley’s opinion, requested by Gov. George Romney, held that appointee takes office as soon as he files the required oath of office. * * * The second portion of the ruling apparently paves the way |for Romney to oust a former political foe, George N. Higgins |of Femdale, from the Michigan Employment Security Commis-no. Higgins’ four-year-term expired last January, but he has remained in office because majority Senate Democrats rejected two proposed successors. PRIMARY FOE Higgins ran unsuccessfully against Romney in the 1964 Republican primary. The Michigan constitution gives the Senate 60 days in which to confirm or reject the governor’s choice. If toe Senate fails to take action in tone, the nominee is automatically confirmed in the office. * H i The attorney generat niled ttiat the day on which the Senate receives the nomination shall not be counted as one of the 60 days. Thus the Senate acted In time —on the 60th day—in its rejection of Knirk, a beef farmer from Quincy who opponents said brought too much partisanship to the agriculture commission. WAS REJECTED The Senate received Romney’ renomination of Knirk March 14 and rejected it, 21-11, on May 13. Romney’s other question, concerning when a nominee assumes his office, was believed prompted by his unsuccessful attempts to replace Higgins. ★ H H • Senate Democrats this year rejected first Frank C. Pad-zieski of Dearborn and then nine great-grandchildren. Mute in Death of Husband MONROE (AP)—An Ottawa Lake woman stood mute Tuesday on a first-degree murder charge in the death of her husband, Carl H. Grobes, 28. Mrs. Catherine Grobes, faces examination Jan. 5. H H H Police charged Mrs. Grobes with fatally shooting husband during an argument Sunday. SOWN 33 Capital of 1-— riynn ————P North Viat Nua 2 Mark mad* on 17 Rio do-- SO Tumi outwira 7Flym| 32 Ruuian river SMarteora S3 Irritite (coil) direction SdDoteiUd 38 French river _________ 38 Greek dime ' 20 City in Russia writer 21 ----Croshy 40 Bach 22 Greek letter 41 Promontory ** it ttfc niact 42 Young salmon loot 43 Roman moralist 44 Doll material 9S Bad 45,Dutch 27 Vend 29 Asseverate £ 3 r 5" r n r r lb h 12 IT” U 15 U ■ 16 1? 18 ■ ip 21 a 23 £5 £4 at sr" 37 ■ ■ 40 41 1 r 44 3F r vr W 48 50 51 NY Film Critics Give Awards NEW YORK (UPI) - "A Man for AH Seasons” won top honors yesterday in the annual balloting by the New York film critics. The picture, adapted by Robert Bolt from his own prizewinning stage play, won awards for Paul Scofield as best actor, Fred Ziimeman as best director and Bolt for best screenwriter. The best actress balloting ended in n tie between Elisabeth Tnylor for her performance in “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” and Lynn Redgrave for “Georgy Girl” The 14 critics, representing New York City newspapers and magazine, chose th Czechoslovakian film “The Shop on Main Street,” as the best foreign language picture. Award winners will receive plaques at a cocktail party at Sarai’s Jan. 29. Peter Fonda Dope Case Is Dismissed ‘Drop of Another Hat' Brightens Broadway NEWTON, N.J. (AP)—Tunis E. Conquy, 66, received a letter recently from a friend in Colorado. TJie envelope was addressed simply: Newton, N.J., and carried a picture of Conquy. The boys at the post office here just stuck it in my box, No. 127,” Conquy said. “They must have just taken it for routine.” By WILLIAM GLOVER Associated Press Drama Critic NEW YORK - One of the wittiest shows of any Broadway season, “At the Drop of Another Hat," arrived Tuesday night at the Booth Theater. Michael Flanders and Donald Swann are the whole show and the assortment of droll songs and shrewd nonsense which way of having a more delightful evening in the theater than to spends it with Michael Flanders and Donald Swann. Things look much brighter all over now that Flanders and Swann are back in town, and they should be cherished.” Frank D. Stella of Detroit as ^ have a^lJG form seems even better than the successors to Higgins. thought then that the rejections nieant Higgins, whose term- had expired, could remain in office. Kelley's ruling changes that policy. CLARE (0PD - William H. Bicknell, a long-time businessman, died last night at his home. He was 87. Bicknell, the founder of the Bicknell department store, also was a former director of the Doherty Motor Hotel and the Citizens’ Bank and Trust Co. ★ ★ * He was a lifetime resident of Clare!. Funeral services were s'heduleq for tomorrow. was survived by two sons, ______, __ daughter, 11 gomdcbildren «nd farce Saturday night after he Ionia Drops Two Police IONIA (UPI) - Two Ionia policemen were dismissed from the force yesterday after being arrested by Montcalm County Sheriff’s deputies on Christmas Eve. Patrolman Charles Hammond, 29, was dismissed from the was arrested and charged with being drunk and disorderly. He was a passenger In • car driven by a, fellow officer, Hugh Hecox, 34. Hecox was charged with drunk driving following the results of blood alcohol tests, frill* ★ Both men face . charges brought by the Montcalm County Sheriffs Department. Both were in civilian clothes at the tone of their arrest and were in a private car. Try to Launch Romney Set MILWAUKEE (UPI) - Fan clubs for Michigan Gov. George Romney are planning a public meeting for Milwaukee in late January or early February to try to launch a presidential drive for him in Wisconsin. Nick J. Santilli Jr., Milwaukee, chairman of the Wisconsin Youth for Romney, said his group would meet with the Wisconsin Romney in ’68 Committee and the Wisconsin Romney for President Club to discuss the meeting. * * ★ Santilli said the purpose of the public meeting would be to publicize Romney and to raise funds for a campaign for him. -He said the National Romney ir President group had promised to get a “name speak-' for the meeting. The Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company was founded In 1859 with one general store on Vesey St. in New York City. — Radio Programs— 1 WJB(760) WXYZQ 370) CKLW(»00) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WRONfl460) WJKO SOP) WHW-FM(94.7i 4:0#~CKLW, News WXYZ, N.wsoof WJ8K, News. I WCAR. Urn. ), .-_Newt. Stem-Spoilt wjr, But. ■orameter t:4S—WJR, Lowell Thomet 7:00—WJR, Newt, SpOTtt, WXYZ. Ed wroN, WCAR, WJBK. Ntwt, MUSK Newt, uihni whfi. Dinner Concert Till—WXYZ, Joe Rtynoldi 1:00—whfi, Curteln Cell WHFI, Curtain Call WJR. Newt, Mutle t.-oo—whfi, Mentage 1:00 WCAR, News, sports Mutk WWJ. Newt. Sports, Mutk WJR. Newt, Sportt, Mutk 711 Dawn Hits—WCAR. Medical journal !ti» WCAR, Ron Rote tlito-WJBK, Coneentut WATL AWT» rowBiw nw WCAR, NOW* PWMf „ CKLW, Newt, Bud DtvIet WFON. Neon, Arizona , Wettem WJBK, Newt, Books, nit 4i1S—WJBK, Sob Lee-Mutk 7idS—WFON, Newt, Bob LOW- filS—WJR, Ntwt, Htrrlt WCAR. Jock Senders WHFI, Uncm Joy WWJ, Newt, Neighbor tlilb—WJBK, Newt. Mutle FMrfck ■ ‘ ' I WXYZ, Breakfait Club. Den McNeill WHFI. SHI Beyle . WFON, Newt, ben Johnson WJR, Newt, Mutk TNURSOAY AFTERNOON IMS WWJ, Newt, Market, fempnatla WJR, Newt, Farm * CKLW, Newt, have Shfkr WFON, Newt, Ben Jonrtson WCAR, DavS Lockherl WHFI, Newt, Beyle WXYZ. Newt, Mutk WJBK. Newt, Eder. Mutk ItIB-CKLW, Newt, Oeve Shafer WHFI, Encore WWJ, Newt, Nilshboct WJR; Ntwt, Billet Field lidB-WFON, N»wt, Fete Ladd Shew wKvzTboys Frteee WJR, NeWt, Link letter I:M—WWJ, Newillne WCAR, Newii iicarella WJBK, Newt, Mutk, Tekt Drugstore Robbed of at Least $15,000 DETROIT (UPI) - Three bandits entered a drugstore yesterday and robbed a clerk of between $15,000 and $18,000. tile his companions waited on the sidelines, one of the men pretended to buy a pair of socks, police said. They said the1 man produced ta sawed-off shotgun while the clerk was ringing up the cost of the socks. -The three men tom forced the clerk into a bade room where he and three other clerks, who were counting money, were told to on the floor. Cuba/ Bulgaria to Increase Trade MIAMI, Fla. (AP)—A new agreement calls for a 22 per cent increase in trade between Cuba and Bulgaria, Havaha radio reports. The report said Cuba will ship sugar and molasses to the Eastern European country and will receive in turn farm machinery, canned foods and other industrial products. \ \ - x collection ^hich captivated audiences on their previous m°lt seven years ago. H i it, The British duo in the meantime has been off on global travels, casting a genially reproving eye at a good many matters,,upon which they now. report with suave deviltry. The revue briskly fathoms diplomatic dilemmas, into education, dismisses the cussword cult and pauses to carol the delights of toe upside-down world of a three-toed sloth. Always there is the unexpected epigrammatic twist, the rakish pun and, sometimes, “ salutary sting. GRUFFLY AFFABLE Flanders, confined to a wheelchair by polio, is the gruffly affable spokesman most of the way, while Swann boyishly beams along at the piano keyboard. Both kind-of sing with zing those tight-packed roundelays. For further variety, Mozart gets a short workout, Swann does an instant-translatior, time in Russian and Flanders scores with monologues anent olive-stuffing, or maybe bull-fighting, and a wacky yarn about SIMM henge. H H H | pair of latter-day Aesops, with an urbane morale for every piece, the two are fabulous fablists. “At the Drop of Anoth-R Hat” is announced for a limited engagement, a restriction that should be Immediately rescinded. What other press critics said: John Chapman, Daily News: “What may make these men so mjoyable is that they are so ill-matched. I am delighted that producer Alexander H. Cohen has persuaded these charming and mind-resting gentlemen to pay us another visit.” Walter Kerr, Times: “The two couldn’t be more welcome, they couldn’t be more delightful, they couldn’t be more wanted and needed in this naughty Vorld and this (so far) negligible) season. All out for thei Booth, where, the New Y/ear Is already happier.” ♦ * Norman Nadel, World Journal Tribune: “On stage or off, there just aren’t two more entertaining and affable companions of an evening than Michael Flanders and Donald Swann. Producer Alex H. Cohen is everybody’s good friend for having brought them back to New York.” Richard Watts Jr., Post: “The fact is that one couldn't find a He's Familiar Guy to Postal Workers LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actor Peter Fonda will not be tried a second time on charges of possessing marijuana. Superior Court Judge Mark Brandler said Tuesday he would dismiss the case against the 26-year-oid son of actor Henry Fonda and a codefendant, John Robischon, 23, “in the interest of justice.” ’Die judge warned Fonda to lead “a useful and productive life so your wife, children and j illustrious father will never again be shamed or humiliated.” TRIED EARLIER Brandler told the young ac-r: “R is inconceivable that you were uniware of the presence of marijuana in view of your repeated visits to the house” where police said thdV found marijuana. Fonda and Robischon were tried earlier this month, but the jury Was unable to reach a verdict. The jury convicted John B. Haeberlin HI, 25, and acquitted a fourth codefendant, Steven Alsberg, 22. Comic Going to Viet Sues to Keep Passport WASHINGTON (UPI) - Negro comedian Dick Gregory lias filed suit to prevent the State Department from taking any steps to lift his passport after he makes his planned trip to North Vietnam. He filed the suit in U.S. Dis-i trict Court here yesterday. Gregory, who plans to enter- Prisoners Offer to Fight in Viet HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP)-Rep. Clarence D. Long, D-Md., says he has received a letter from 386 of the prisoners at the Maryland Corrections? Institution, in which they offer to fight jn Vietnam. * Long said the Department of Defense has turned down the offers until the prisoners’ terms. have been completed. Truck Kills Child HAMTRAMCk (AP) - Police Said Ralph Masiwchuk, 9, was killed Tuesday when a truck went through a red light and struck him. Police were holding the driver of the truck, John H. Lewis, 67, of Mount Clemens. Detroit Youth Visits I O I Ir* Tav9c Tnilaii'tain U.S.'prisoners of war, asked' LDj in l6Xa5 IUUdy]the court to enjoin the State Department from conceling or revoking his passport and to declare invalid and illegal U.S. regulations forbidding travel to restricted” nations. North Vietnam is one of the nations considered restricted by the State Department. AUSTIN, Tex. (AP)-Tommy James Gordon, 17, of Detroit will visit the Texas White House today. Gordon is one of 13 young people from all over the country who were invited by President and Mrs. Johnson to ceremonies designating 1967 as Youth for Natural Beauty and Conservation Year. All the young people participated in the National Youth Conference on Natural Beauty and Conservation held in Washington last June. On Jan. 17, 1961, President Eisenhower, in a farewell address, warned the country of the dangers of continuing to maintain a large military establishment. Project Tonsil for 8 in Family KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) -Eight children in the James A. Baughman family were to hav6 their tonsils removed today. The children are sharing rooms in the pediatrics ward at Bethany Hospital. They are Joseph, 3; Genevieve, 5; Martin, 7; Delores, 8; Geraldine, 10; Thomas, 12; Christine, 13; and! James A. Jr. 15. MICHELOR Hubert Distributors, Inc. TV TECHNICIAN NEEDED IMMEDIATELY j SWEETS I RADIO t TELEVISION 422 West Huron FE 4-5677 i COLOR TV SERVICE 9 A.M. TO 1P.M. "We Service All Makmi” OBEL TV SERVICE PHONE 884-8811 D—10 THA PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28,1PM You Can Count on Us ... Quality Costs No More at Sears SEARS BATH and SLUMBER SHOPS ANNUAL check these low sale prices! 287 Regular $3.19 Twin, Prints say “CHARGE IT’ at Sears Fill your linen closet with colorful combed cotton percale sheets in fresh petit point or floral prints, vibrant dots and stripes. Elasto-Fit corners on sanforized fitted sheets. Colorfast. 190 threads per sq. inch after washing. Reg. $4.19 3.87 2 for $2.19 Pillowcases.. 2 for 1.87 | . 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Standard Mattress or Box Spring in Serofoam or Springs 58 88 each Standard 54x73-in. full size or 39x75-in. twin size. Choice of same deluxe foam latex or innerspring construction. Choiee of full dr twin sizes at the same low price. Shop at Sears for all your bedding needs! Regular $239.95 Queen Size Combination Set ............169.88 Regular $319.95 King Size Combination Set...............219.88 Furniture Dept,, Second Floor ^See Sears Kenmore fMG-ZAGi Sewing Machines m HQ ONLY X; In Portable Base Sew Zig-Zag and straight stitches . . . either forward or reverse, do applique work, sew on buttons, make buttonholes, overcast, baste, mend, darn and monogram. Make all these latest fashions in your favorite fabrics and colors, in the comfort of your own home. This Kenmore sewing machine comes in portable base. A value you want to tee at this low price. Sewing Machine Department, Main Floor Sale! Wide Window Draperies Richly Textured Boucle Draperies... Regularly at $44.99 Canister Cleaner A Sears Kenmore Priced Lower Now *24 Our finest rayon and acetate boucle draperies are cotton lined and lavished with expensive styling details. A full range of designer colors includes linen, copper and white. Regular $10.99, 50x63-inch Draperies . . . .... 7.9? pr. Regular $23.99, 100x63-inch Draperies......18.99 pr. ■Regular $12.99, 50x84-inch Draperies........9.99 pr. Regular $29.99,100x84-inch Draperies........24.99 pr. > Drapery Department, Main Floor 39?9 12 feet wide hy 84 inches long ^Complete with combination rubber floor tool, wqnd and hose v*15 foot cord easily wraps around gleaner for convenient storage *'"Handy disposable paper dust bags and built-in top carrying handle “Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Downtown ontiac Phone FE 5-4171 The Weather THE PONTIAC p^ifpry PRESS VOL. 124 — NO. 277 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1966-48 PAGES GM Plants in Pontiac Mark Record Payroll for Year Train Hits Fuel Truck; 12 Perish in Flames EVERETT, Mass. (AP) - A Boston & Maine one-car diesel passenger train smashed into a fuel oil truck stalled with frozen brakes on a street crossing early today. Twelve persons died as flames engulfed the train and the truck. Officials said there may have been up to 35 persons aboard the train. No definite check was available on the number aboard the local run. Chelsea Fire Chief Herbert Fothergrill said most of die victims were trapped in the train for 20 minutes until the fire was put out He said fire- men used their bare hands to extricate the passengers* A fireman said one door was blocked “because there was a body lying on the other side." ★. ■ * ★ Policeman Ralph DeVito said he and officer George Stewart “tried breaking the windows with our night sticks but that wouldn’t work. We couldn’t open the door because there was this guy trying to get out the door with his head stuck through the window . “We pushed him away but then , there was so much smoke we couldn’t see.” Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston said it received nine dead from burns and four injured, Whidden Hospital in Everett said it received two dead and 10 injured. Chelsea Naval Hospital received one dead and two injured. One injured was taken to Chelsea Memorial Hospital. Police said at least two of the injured were not train passengers. One was a fireman, Nun-lio Iozza, and the other was a Navy corpsman, John Mann, 38, both overcome by smoke while helping to carry the dead and injured from the scene. Police said Mann, a passerby, made one trip to Chelsea Naval Hospital giving mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to Marine Sgt. Da. vid R. Cosgrove, 38, of Lynn, returned to the crash scene and was overcome. NEAR BOSTON Everett is an industrial community on the outskirts of Boston. ★ ★ * Police said the driver of the fuel truck, Raymond Bouley, 29, of Billerica told them his brakes froze as he reached the crossing on Second Street and the vehicle stalled. FREAK ACCIDENT—Three occupants of this ** wl"ph0,° automobile escaped injury today when a private through the canvas top and came to rest in the plane landed on top of the car on the Baltimore- back seat of the car. The car then went out of Washington Parkway in nearby Anne Arundel control and struck the side of a bridge. The two County, Md. The wheels of the Piper Colt crashed pilots were not injured. Waterford in Water Several Waterford Township residents were awakened early today when the temperature pressure release valves on their hot water tanks popped because of a malfunction in the township water supply system. At least 25 complaints were phoned in to the township police and fire departments and to the Detroit Edison Co. by affected citizens. Complaints ranged from broken water heaters, pipes and softeners to leaking water. Most of the calls originated from the Huron Gardens area in the southeastern part of the township which borders Pontiac. * water supply system said the trouble stemmed from a malfunctioning electrical switch which controlled the nine water pumps in operation last night. ■it it it Located at the system’s Tubbs Road facility, • the switch was relaying a faulty signal to the pumps which, consequently, continued to operate when they should have stopped. DIRT ON SWITCH It was theorized that some" dirt may have gotten on the electrical switch, which is about the size of a pin head. The whole township was under high pressure, said Alfred Beanblossom, an official of the water supply system, who shut down the pumps at 2 a.m. Pressure release valves are geared to pop when the water pressure exceeds 125 pounds. ★ ★ ★ Township officials were busy checking for broken water mains and handling individual complaints today. , WATER MAINS A few water mains and house service lines were reported broken. Some basements were flooded. One complainant said the top of his water softener blew (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5), Area Braces for Snowfall 1-3 Inches Predicted; Freezing Rain Likely Michigan braced itself today for an expected heavy snowfall, the first of the winter. The U. S. Weather Bureau is. sued hazardous driving warnings, predicted snow ranging from 1 to 3 inches in southern sections, including the Pontiac area, and up to 8 inches in the Upper Peninsula. Freezing rain or rain mixed with snow was forecast for the P o n t i a c-Detroit area and southwest Lower Michigan. Strong winds of up to 80 miles per hour also were predicted. ★ ★ ★ Pontiac has already received 23 inciws of snow. Thirteen inches tefi in November and 10 inches early this month. Only 23% inches fell in the area during the entire season last winter. TO LOW 30s Temperatures falling to the low 20s tonight will rise to the low 30s tomorrow. Snow flurries totaling near one-half inch are predicted for tomorrow and again during the weekend. A low of 17 and a light snow was recorded prim* to 8 a.m. At 1 p. m., the mercury registered 28. U’L ONES “It would go faster if it were an eight instead of a six. Do you know anybody who’s eight?” A spokesman for the township | In Today's I Press | Huskies Romp f I Northern cagers defeat § I Central, 58-45 - PAGE g I C-I. Road Project I City okays Montcalm- 1 Oakland pact — PAGE 1 A-8. * I • I Tight Money I Home loan peak seen near with easing indicated - PAGE B-9. Area News ......... A-4 Astrology ........ C-4 Bridge ......... C4 Crossword Puzzle ... D-8 Comics ............. C-4 Editorials..........A-8 Markets .............D-2 Obituaries ,.....D-3 Sports —'...... C-I—C-3 j Theaters ......... ..04 | j TV-Radio Programs D-9 I Women’s Pages B-l—B-4 1 BURNED-OUT CAR — This is the. interior of the burned-out Boston & Maine passenger train where 12 died in a fire early today following a collision with a stalled fuel oil tru^ in Everett, AP Winphoto Mass. One fire official said mo6t of the victims were trapped in the train .for 20 minutes until the blaze was put out (Other picture, page ^-2.) PONTIAC PLANS — During-1968 ground was strUcturerwtuch will be four times as large as the— broken for Pontiac Motor Division’s new head- current Administration building on Oakland Ave-quarters building. Checking a scale model of the nue, is expected to be ready for occupancy in the multi-story office structure are F. James Me- summer of 1968. Nearly 1,000 employes will move Donald, Pontiac works manager (left), and Charles into the new building when it is completed. H. Collins, plant engineer. The 300,000-square-foot Expenditures Top $100 Million Employe payrolls at the three' General Motors plants in Pontiac rose to a record high of $33.8 million during 1966, an increase of $16 million over last year. In addition, GM expenditures for services and goods pur-purchased from area companies topped the $10Q-million mark for the first time in history. The year-end statement was released jointly today by Martin J. Caesrio, GM vide president and general manager of Planner Set for City Project To Work for Human Resources Center Development of a human re-, sources center for the southeast quadrant of the city was advanced today with the appointment of one of two persons who will do preliminary planning on the project. B. C. VanKoughnett, community action director for the Pontiac School System, was named codirector of the project. Appointed to the job on a half-time basis, he will work with a person yet to be named by City Manager Joseph A. Warren. VanKoughnett, 33, of 156 Dwight, has -served as principal of Mark Twain and McConnell elementary schools and as acting elementary education director for the district in 1964-65. Handling some of VanKough-nett’s present duties on a halftime basis will be Thor Petersen, Crofoot Elementary School principal. MOTT GRANT Preliminary planning for the multiservice educational park is being supported by a $10,000 grant from the Mott Institute for Community Improvement. Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer said the planning directors would have about six months for the Initial work on the project. .___________ “First, they will develop a plan to utilize the maximum involvement of the people from the areas to be affected,” Whitmer said. . The two directors are to organize the families in the enrollment districts of McConnell, Central and Wilson elementary schools. “Very early in the game the people will have a chance to think about and talk about the kind, of educational program theyyd like to have,” he said. The codirectors also are to sell the human resources center idea to community organizations. Their preliminary work is to result in a long-term study plan and a plan for funding the project, Whitiller noted. GMC Truck & Coach Division; John Z. DeLorean, GM vice president and general manager of Pontiac Motor Division; and Thomas F. Wieth-orn, Fisher Body plant manager. Combined GM employment in Pontiac averaged 37,500 for the year, up 2,300 from 1965. ★ * it During the past year, local GM employes invested more than $8.1 million in U.S. Savings Benda through payroll deduction. In addition, they were B. C. VAN KOUGHNETT awarded $731,360 for ideas submitted through the GM Suggestion Plan, an increase of more than $279,000 over last year. CONTRUBUTTONS Employe contributions to the 1966 Pontiac United Fund totalled $617,747, compared to $483,256 a year ago. In addition, General Motors made a corporate gift of $165,000 to this year’s local campaign. In 1966, several new sales and production records were established at Pontiac area GM installations. On Jan. 2,1966, Pontiac Motor produced the one-millionth Tempest, just five years after-its introduction. A new all-time monthly production record was set in June when 89,123 Pon-tiacs and Tempests were built. And, for the 1966 model year, Pontiac surpassed another milestone when 831,331 units Were produced. ★ it it At GMC Truck;* Coach, a new single-order record was set during 1966 when the New York Transit Authority contracted for 682 air-conditioned buses, valued at $23 million. A second major order, placed by Greyhound Corp., called for 200 intercity buses worth $10 million. New plant construction in the Pontiac area during 1966 in-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) 1 ! A Christmas Report i j - | 1 Viet: No Peace on Earth j (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the eighth in a 12-part series.) By BOB HOPE SAIGON (SpeciaDJEpj This column was written on Christmas Day. I’m mentioning the date more to remind myself of the season —because many of the things we see are far from Christmassy ... Our armed chopper was about to land, when the pilot gave us the weather report: “We are now landing at Di-An Outpost, the temperature is 96 degrees, and there is light-to-moderate ground fire .. .” Of course, once we weire on the ground, there were some reminders of the season: The tanks were decorated with holly, and on the gun turrets was scrawled, “Merry Christmas . . .” I- asked Billy Mitchell, a lanky Pfc. from Maysville, Ky., if there’s been any action nearby, and he said: “Just don’t take any long walks ...” ★ ★ ★ ' I must tell you about the guy who introduced me here at the home of “The Big Red One.” His name is Sgt. Kirk James, from Brooklyn, N.Y., and he just received the Distinguished Service Cross. BREAKS UP ATTACK He single-handedly broke up a Vietcong attack a few weeks ago, wiped out a couple of machine gun nests, and—although wounded in the face—crawled during the four-hour battle from emplacement to emplacement helping the. wounded, and shouting encouragement to his buddies. He typifies the new breed—a sort of Audio Murphy, model 66 ... ; Our second show on Christmas Day was a brand new spot for us, Ku Chi, which is a new home for the Tropic Lightning, which is what the 25th Infantry Division proudly calls itself. I’ve played to these guys since 1941—and wouldn't be surprised if some of the sons of my- original audience were among the guys who enjoyed the show here in Vietnam ... Before and during the show there was a battle going on,a few miles away, and the constant thump of artillery was uncomfortably close. All through the show I couldn’t help wondering what this place must be like when there Is no “truce.”1 I can’t recall seeing so many- armored half-tracks and tanks arouryl a show site, and we never appreciataji.lt more ... •. n -$39Vd U3A0 M THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1D66 Quake Jars Chile; Port Hit Severely SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)-A violent earthquake rocked northern Chile early today and heavy casualties were feared in the nitrate pert of Taital, the center of the upheaval. The Chilean news agency Qrbe said 80 per cent of the buildings in Taital were destroyed but the number of dead and injured was not known yet. The town, 700 miles north of Santiago, had a population of about 6,000. r * * * Hie earth shocks were felt over a wide area and were ra-ported strongest in the provinces of Tarapaca and Antofagasta. Panic was reported in the town of Incopiapo, and In Arica Antofagasta, northern Chile’s two largest cities. The quake was registered in Santiago at 3:20 a m. EST and by the IKS. Coast and Geodetfc Survey in Washington 10 minutes later. The latter said its observatory at Honohihi issued a warning of a seismic sea wave. Sr * ★ The University of California’ seismology station also recorded a strong earthquake hi South America. Forecasters Forecast Improved Forecasts WASHINGTON (AP) - Hie United States’ weather chief predicted today that! two-weeks-in-advance weather forecasts for any put of the work! will be possible within 10 or IS years. They would predict the weather, fair or foul, for each day over that span, and could lead to enormous dollar savings. President-day .capabilities of three-days-aheul forecasts even , in the- United States are”pretty Realtors Set Fete for Jan. 5 The Pontiac Board of Realtors will install its four new officers at the organization’s 51st annual banquet at 8;30 p.m. Jan. 5 at the Elks Temple. Bruce J, Annett will be installed as president; Albert J. Rhodes, vice president; Janies A. Cunningham, secretary; and Kenneth G. Hempstead, treasurer. Toastmaster for the dinner will be Edward A. Maier, branch manager of Lawyers Title Insurance CO., and. E b b y Halliday, founder and president of a five-office Dallas, Tex., real estate firm, will be the featured speaker. Annett will receive the Realtor of the Year award at the banquet. Three Prisoners Escape in N.C ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP)-Three men who broke out of Buncombe CXxinty Jail at gunpoint-Tuesday night remained at large'today. Hie search for them fanned (kit over a wide area of western North Carolina and northwestern South Caroli- “iffy,” declared Dr. Robert M. White, chief of the government’s Environmental Science Services Administration, Which includes the Weather Bureau. The improved prospect stems, White reported, from a recently launched international effort called the “World Weather Program” in which he said all nations, including Russia and Red China, are cooperating. NEW CONCEPTS The long-range effort — planned by the World Meteorological Organization, a specialized agency of the United Nations — aims at marshaling sophisticated computers, weather-eye satellites and new concepts in atmospheric probing in a coordinated effort. The program envisions not only improved and larger-range weather forecasts but possibly even breakthroughs toward weather control, Dr. White and several American associates said in reports to the 133rd meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. * * * “It may be conservative to say,” declared White, "that through a world weather program, our nation (alone) can realize economic benefits exceeding $1 billion annually. And, if weather and climate modification can be achieved on a substantial scale, the benefits to humanity will surpass all our imaginings.” He said that at present, weather hazards kill between 1,-200 and 1,300 Americans, and cause more than $11 billion in agricultural and other economic losses every year. Some ejfperiments, White indicated, have already shown capabilities of making forecasts up to six days in advance. But White and his colleagues said that even with the help of American and Soviet weather-eye satellites, only 20 per cent of the earth’s atmosphere is adequately observed at present. The Weather ' Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Hazardous driving warnings. Snow becoming mixed with or changing to freezing rain and rain this afternoon. High 30 to 34. Rain or freezing rain changing to snow tonight. Low 20 to 25. Thursday—Cloudy, snow flurries and colder. Chance of 1, to 3 inches of snow today, especially in northern portions. Winds easterly increasing to 15 to 30 miles tills afternoon and becoming northeast to north late tonight. Friday’s outlook: Partly cloudy and cool. TiMMlay In Pontiac Highest temperature h Wednesday at S:« p.m. sun rises Thursday at 1:02 a.m. Moon sets .Thursday at 10 a.m. Moon rlsas Wednesday at S:5% p.r Downtown Temperatures One Year Ago In Pontiac Highest temperature ............... Lowest temperature ................ Mean temperature .................. Weather: Cloudy Grf Rapids Houghton Marquette Muskegon Pellston Tuesday's Temperature Chart -♦ Fort Worth J IS Jacksonville ! 21 Kansas City : 12 Los Angeles t Birmingham Area News City Commission Delays School Crossing Action VICTIM OF TRAIN FIRE - Masked firemen hand out a victim through the shattered window of a Boston & Maine passenger train early today in Everett, Mass., as 12 died in 9 fire following the collision of the train and a stalled fuel oil trade. Flames swept the interior of the rail car. DWIGHT EISENHOWER Ike Leaves Hospital; Trip West Eyed GETTYSBURG,-Pa. (AP) -Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower has returned to his snow-covered farm home and is planning a trip next week to his favorite sun spot, Palm Desert near Palm Springs, Calif. The five-star general arrived Tuesday afternoon from Walter Reed Army Hospital where his gallbladder was removed Dec. 12. A spokesman at hid office reported “everything is fine.’ ★ * * Eisenhower told newsmen on leaving the Washington hospital that he hopes to be putting golf balls very soon and “really swinging” in a couple of months. He is scheduled to leave Jan. 4 for California. Meanwhile he plans to take it isy. “Let me show proper respect for my scar,” he said as he gingerly got into a limousine for the short ride to the waiting helicopter for the trip home. Eisenhower also repeated for newsmen his support of U.S. bombings in North Vietnam. ,* * ★ “Anyone who is-an aggressor cannot be permitted to go scot free,” he said, adding that the bombings are aimed at military targets. He said civilian casualties of such bombings are unfortunate but asked, “Is there any place in the world where there are not civilians?” 'U.S. Policy on Bombing to Continue' WASHINGTON (AP) - Top-level U. S. sources say there is no point in changing U.S. bombing policies in North Vietnam despite controversy surrounding a Pentagon admission that some civilians have been hit. The officials said it is necessary to bomb military targets in order to raise the price to North Vietnam of aggression against South Vietnam and to save lives of Americans and others fighting the Communists. JFK Book Suit Withheld; Dispute May End Quietly The Pentagon acknowledged Monday night that attacks on military targets have inflicted civilian casualties but said “ It is impossible to avoid all damage” to residential areas dotted with military targets. The Pentagon response was to a story by Harrison E. Salisbury, an assistant managing editor of the New York Times, who reported from North Vietnam that he saw “block after block of utter desolation” in one town and learned of 89 civilian deaths | in another, The implicit declaration by | the U.S. officials that there is no 8 review of bombing policy pend-1 ing appeared certain to be challenged soon after Congress con-'I venes Jan. 10. |§ Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-ArkJl chairman of the Senate Foreign 8 Relations Committee and critic II of U.S. policy in the war, plans 1 hearings on the subject. Ful-|§ bright aides said Tuesday they NEW YORK (AP) - The Kennedy book dispute tfxild end quietly now after Mrs, John F. Kennedy’s decision to withhold temporarily her suit to stop its publication, a family spokesman indicated today. “I’m not going to guarantee it,” he said, “but much points to resolution. There has been progress and I think things could well be resolved noiselessly and soon.” ★ ★ ★ Attorneys (or Mrs. Kennedy and Harper & Row, publishers of William Manchester’s “The Death of a President,” an account of the Kennedy as tion, agreed Tuesday to put off hearings on her request for an injunction against the book until mid-January in expectation of a reasonably quick settlement. The parties, ordered to ap- Marooned Family Found .SAN DIEGO, Calif. (A — A Coast Guard helicopter, searching for a missing plane, brought back tiie unexpected: a family of six who had been marooned four days on an island after a storm have no doubt he-will call onll wr®ckedu t?!eir iboat; . Secretary of Defense Robert S. 8 „Th« helicopter ferried McNamara and Secretary of § of ,F10W.‘ 1 State Dean Rusk tof detailed ! chi la, Calif., his wife and j reports onvthe bombings. 11 jjtofr *our children, to a The U.S. sources did say a search is being made of government intelligence information pear ataStateSupreme Court show cause hearing, said the arrangement would give them sufficient time for more discussion on passages to be trimmed from the 300,000-word text. Both sides characterized progress as “steady.” IN HOSPITAL “Hiat’s great,” said Manchester’s wife, Julia, learning of the decision.'Manchester, recovering in a hospital from a mild case Of pneumonia, was not available for comment. ★ * * Mrs. Kennedy and Harper & Row said in a statement that Manchester’s hospitalization Monday made it necessary to continue talks “over a longer period than was anticipated.’ * * ★ “We’re probably at a stage now where things depend more on the doctors than the lawyers,” the Kennedy spokesman said. “We just have to wait for the author, although we’ll be talking about other things for next week or so,” Harper & Row called the situation “hopeful” and indicated, that an amicable settlement was thought possible soon. LATER PUBLICATION The publisher also agreed in the statement not to bring out the book until April 1. Look magazine reached a settlement with Mrs. Kennedy on deletions in its 60,000-word extract of the text, the first installment of which reaches newsstands Jan. W. concerning the bombings reported by Salisbury. ‘Evaded US. Radar' Red Spy Flights Alleged ni Beach 70 67 55 42 St. Louis NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow and rain mixed with snow ’is forecast for the eastern third of the nation tonight. Colder temperatures are predicted for the midsection of the country with a wanning trend in store for the.qprtherfi and central Atlantic Coast states. BETHLEHEM, Pa. (AP) — A Lehigh University professor, in recently published bode, says nuclear-powered Soviet bomber may have made three undetected flights over U.S. territory two years ago. In' Washington,, the Defense Department said, however, that it had “no knowledge of any such penetration nor of any such aircraft.” A spokesman said the story “just doesn’t " make sense.” it it it i And a spokesman for the [North American Defense Com-jmand at Colorado Springs, Colo., said the allegations made [in the book “have po basis in factv To our knowledge, there have been no known or unknown overflights of our territory during or since 1964." The story was told by John Carroll in the book, “Secret Electronic Espionage.” It says the alleged flight* may have been made over San Francisco, Calif., New York, and Hawaii in 1964 with a payload equivalent to 6 30-megaton bomb and a phantom instrument box” to ward off radar detection. Carroll, an industrial engineering instructor, Bald he was informed of the possible flights by a Korean expatriate in California who clahnito be privy to tt\e details of a 1964 meeting in Peking of the Red Chinese'Ministry of Defense. II This meeting was supposedly | attended by attaches of the | North Korean Embassy and || conducted by four officers of the || Soviet Ministry of Defense. ★ . * ★ “The Soviet officers disclosed that during the first week of February 1964, a new Russian bomber had flown over three strategically important areas of the U.S. without being detected by U.S. radar defense,” Carroll writes. “The Soviet officers,” the book continues, “displayed recently taken aerial photographs of specific objectives to prove that the planes had accomplished their-mission of penetration.” 1 OWN DETECTION The Soviets also claimed their new airplane had evaded their own radar detection in 23 of 25 penetration missions over 10 major^-Sqviet cities, Carroll ^“This plane was, they explained, al nuclear-powered bomber with average speeds of 2,500 miles per hour and a top speed of 3,500 miles per hour. "It had a ceiling of 85,000 feet and the capability of remaining aloft .without refueling’,’ for as long as 21 days. Carroll claims 20 years of experience in electronics and says he spenf three years researching and writing the book. esort on the coast of Baja California yesterday. Coast Guardmen reported the family had been spotted by an Air Force search plane. The island is about 75 miles south of the village of San Felipe in Baja California. Planes were combing the area for a missing twin-engine -plane carrying San Francisco importer Richard Y. Dakin, seven members of his family and a crew of two. ★ ★ * The plane, which disappeared on a flight to La Paz, Mexico, has been missing nearly a week. Waterford Finds Wafer to Ford as Mains Break (Continued From Page One) off with such force it put a hole in a tile ceiling in his basement. * Another resident said he thought someone had left the water running, adding that when he got out of bed he stepped into about three inches of water. ★ ★ ★ Then, he said, he turned on the lights and saw some of his furniture floating by him. He said pipes in his bathroom had burst, causing the flooding condition. Huron Gardens, an area bordered by Elizabeth Lake Road, M59, Voorheis and Telegraph, contains the oldest water lines in the. township. Most of the mains there were installed in BIRMINGHAM - Action on providing i safer school crossing for children at Pembroke School has been delayed until the City Commission reviews • traffic safety report Submitted by the Automobile Club. W ■ * ' tk The Pembroke Manor Association had requested that sidewalks be extended to the curb at the Eton and Derby inter- section and that a crossing guard be located there until corrections are made. The commission last night was also informed that the Detroit Edison Co. has agreed to postpone all construction on an underground conduit until after Jan. 2. Residents on Yosemite had requested that the project be ‘ oned until after the holi- Missing Man Found; Had School Woe ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AF)-A St Louis University medical student, the object of an intense search after he was reported missing, turned up today after spending several days in a hotel room tiding to figure a way to tell his brother he was quitting school ★ it it Ronald Auclair, 24, of Shrews-[bary7"Nfass.7 walked into -hi* room at the St. Mary’s Hospital interns quarters in suburban Gay ton, Mo., while police were searciting the room for clues to his whereabouts. ★ ★ ★ 'He checked-into a hotel in St. Louis,” said Auclair’s brother, Ovila Auclair, 43, a Shrewsbury contractor. “He said he wanted to quit medical school and was trying to figure out a way to tell “ie,” he said. ★ ★ ★ The search began when the younger Auclair failed to return to Shrewsbury for the Christmas holidays as planned. He also had missed two tests in school Dec. 19. AIDED SEARCH The missing man’s girlfriend, Marilyn Richards, 21, of Shrewsbury, and his brother flew to St. Louis Monday to aid in the search. A check of Auclair’s room at the hospital showed the only things missing were his car and his doctor’s BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-A children’s Christmas program will be held at the public library from 10 to 10:30 a.m. Thursday. The special program will consist of holiday stories and Chirst-mas songs led by Mrs. Max M. Plumhoff. It is planned for children from three to f i,v e years W and parents are asked to pre-register with librarian Rebecca Lamb before Thursday. ★ it ★ Located at 4036 Telegraph, the library will be open from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. through tomorrow and from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday. # It will be closed Saturday and Monday and will reopen at 10 a.m. Tuesday. Waterford JCs Offer Aid in Scout Dispute The Waterford Township Junior Chamber of Commerce last night offered to enter the dispute between the United Fund and North Oakland County Girl Scout Council as a third party moderator. - Local Expenditures “We are hopeful that a meeting of Girl Scout and UF repre- lop $100 Million (Continued From Page One) eluded Pontiac Motors’ ai nouncement of plans for a 280 000 square foot manufacturing plant, and a new five-story administration building. * * * In September, Caiserio, former general manager of A C sentatives will be scheduled soon as possible so that differences can be resolved,” said Michael G. Patterson, president of the Waterford Jaycees. ★ ★ ★ ■■ 'Our board of directors voted unanimously to offer our services toward this goal,” he added. The Girl Scout Council leaves the UF program as of Saturday after a lengthy dispute over UF Spark Plug Division and a Gen-1 supervision and requested comer al Motors vice president, sue- pliance with a UF study on the ceeded Calvin J. Wertier as gen-[needs and organization of the eral manager of GMC Truck & agencies its supports. The coun-Coach Division. Werner, a Gen-1 cil will need about $70,000 to eral Motors vice president, be- sustain activities in the coming came general manager of Cad- year, according to Mrs. Elwyn iliac Motor Car Division. ITripp, council president. day season. ' ] it 1; * * The project will consist of an underground conduit originating, at the transmission ttae at Maple and the Grand Trank Western Railroad and connecting to the new substation on the south side of Brown east of Purdy. Construction, is expected to take about two and a half months. The Municipal Finance Commission yesterday approved $200,000 in special assessment bonds to defray the cost of water mains in the township. Dixie Home Blast Kills5 NORTH LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) — An explosion possibly caused by accumulated gas ripped a five-room brick house last night, killing a family of five. The blast, heard for a mile, broke windows in nearly every house in the block and littered the street and surrounding yards with lumber, glass, wall board and plumbing pipes and fixtures. The dead were: David Fortenberry, 41, a p r 1 n t e r employed by the Arkansas Ga-zette; his wife, Ode; their daughters, Liada, 12, and Susan, 7; and Fortenbery’s mother, Mrs. Nellie Fortenberry of Newport, Ark. “All the gas lines in the house were broken,” said Fire Chief John Finn. “Natural gas may have caused the explosion. But e just can’t say for sure yet.” It took almost an hour to find the body of Linda, Fortenberry beneath tons of rubble. HEARD BLAST Residents .in distant parts of North Little Rock and in Little Rock, across the Arkansas River reported hearing the blast. Mrs. Frances Hernsberger, a neighbor, said her house shook. She said she thought a plane 1 crashed. 'The explosion knocked us out of our chairs,” said Mrs. Willie$ Knowles, who Hves three doors up the street. She said it tossed an automobile across the afreet. Road Section to Be Opened The eastbound section of Square Lake Road between' Woodward and Opdyke is tentatively scheduled to open to traffic tomorrow, the Michigan State Highway Department announced tpday. Construction of the six-lane divided highway from Telegraph to 1-75 began last December, and except for the one section, was opened in October. All traffic between Wood-ward and Opdyke has been carried on the westbound lanes during construction. The opening of the new section may be delayed by bad weather, according to a spokesman for the highway department. Total cost of the project, including right-of-way, was nearly $5 million. ', i Chief of Staff Elected at Pontiac Osteopathic A Lake Orion physician has been elected chid of staff at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital, Harry H. Whitlow, hospital administrator, announced today. Dr. Gene W. Fredericks, 37, of 37 W. Flint, Lake Orion, will serve a one-year term He succeeds Dr. Ronald LePere. Other staff officers are Dr. Albert Stepanski, vice chairman; Dr. Samuel bwald, secretary; and Dr. William Crommett, treasurer. Dr. Fredericks, who resides at 157 Brookside, Oxford, with his wife and three sons, is a graduate of tire1 State University of Iowa, Des Moines College of Osteopathic Medicine. He interned at Riverside Osteopathic Hospital, Trenton, and began private practice in Lake Orio%in 1960. DR. GENE W. FREDERICKS jm m mu TBBB PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 38, 1006 Residents (ye GOP Unit in Shelby Twp. SHELBY TOWNSHIP-I residents bore —long a str hold of Democrats - are flexing their political muscles in an attempt to form a Republican party organization. Impetus for the move came last November when three un-knowa naming as Republicans put up a race for the top township offices and one of them, Kirby Holmes, defeated longtime Democratic Supervisor Lorin Evans. 1W ether two, IlMinMPiax-sa of MU BnoUde and Mrs. William Provencher of MM Lakeside, finished close enough to the tbmcss to de-mand a recount, altbeagh the They are currently forming the nucleus of what they hope will be an enterprising and Votegetting group that will further change Shelby’s political history. ★ ★ <* Right now file drive is on for money. The need is to pay legal and campaign expenses, and to organize sometime early next year, according to Mrs. Proven-char, who is serving ss the tera- ' Piazza has the position Of temporary chairman. Troy City Planner Disputes Report on Growth Projections TROY — Some doubt has been| 78,108 by 1870—87,000 by 1980 cast here on the authenticity of — *•* *“-*** 11 ICE FUN—These youngsters trying out their new Christmas skates on Walled Lake yesterday observed the safety rules by staying dose to shore. A short time later, in another section Of file lake, a boy fell through the ice but was rescued by Novi policemen. The two skaters shown here are Barbara Roumay, 115 Arvida, and Terry Hinkley. 122 Arvida, both of Walled Lake. figures used in a recent pro-| jection for the future of Oakland County. * * * The report, prepared by Dr: Albert J. Mayer, sociologist at Wayne State University, g o e s wrong particularly in its reflection of current and projected population, according to George Peek, city planner. The Mayer report shows Tlray with a 19(5 population of 49,500 and a forecast for Peek says Troy’s actual population, based on a 46.8 per cost increase over I960 cero ures, lies closer to 28,400. * * * He further stated that the city 4 Utica Teens Are Charged Hitchhiker Robbed, Hit With Tire Iron UTICA (UPD-Pollce charged /our Utica teen-agers yesterday [with robbing a hitchhiker and | then beating him with a tire (iron. John T. Cummings, 17, of Utica, was reported in fair condition today at the Selfridge Air could well fall short of Detroit Force Base Hospital. MSMKSMMNWi SMMWWSMpMKiS Clarkston Clerk Tells Deadline for Office Seekers CLARKSTON - Deadline for prospective candidates to file nominating petitions for village office is 4 p.m. Tuesday, according to Clerk Artemus M. Pappas. Petition blanks are available through Pappas. The primary election will be held Feb. 20, with file general election to follow March 13. Positions to be filled are vil-lagi president, clerk, treasurer, assessor and three trusteeships. ★ ★ ★ Petitions must be signed .by at least one per cent of the village’s voters. Sewers Due in Oxford Area Near-Tragedy Spurs Warning on Lake Ice -NOVI — In tile wake o£--wfcn6w file ice is safe. Above all.j trip across the lafce ia the Kwintels to Play LAKE ORION - The Kwintels will play for a New Year’s Eve dance from 8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. Friday evening at the Boy’s Hut, 102 S. Broadway. It’s a girl-ask-boy dress-up affair, according to Debby Wheeler, Boy’s Hut president. near-drowning in, Walled Lake yesterday, Pol 1 c e Chief Lee Begole has issued a warning to all would-be ice skaters and other sports enthusiasts. OXFORD — Sewers appear be in the future for the village and township of Oxford. The Village Council last night confirmed a resolution adopted earlier by the Township Board in which the Oakland County Department of Public Works has been asked to make a study and recommendations for procedure. * ★ ★ Three separate s t u d i e s are asked: • The extension of the Paint Creek Arm of the proposed Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor along the creek to Lake (Mon and Oxford. • The construction of a temporary disposal facility to be built and used by Lake Orion, Orion Township, Oxford and Oxford Township-. • The construction of a temporary facility to serve Oxford and Oxford Township alone. ★ * * The engineering firm of Johnson and Anderson of Waterford Township is expected to begin preliminary work in the near future, according to village manager Robert Smalley. ‘Stay close to file shore,” he said, “and skate where you don’t skate across the lake yet.' The near drowning occurred at 4:27 p.m. yesterday when 14-year-eld David A. Hoffman, 230 Pontiac Trail, and his friend, Francis Peraino, 220 S. Pontiac Trail, both of Walled Lake, were returning after a Rochester Okays Offer to Buy Land for Renewal Wixom Hunting New Constable WIXOM - The city is J still looking for a new 1 constable and an addition- J ai patrolman for the police | department. ** | The constable would re- I —place Harry Wimmer who I served in that capacity for 1 I about two years. He re- | i signed “for personal rea-t sons” two weeks ago. grocery store. The thin ice in the channel,j! about 600 feet from shore, sud- j denly cracked and David -felln through into the icy waters. f A passing motorist, Mrs. Glen § vp 0J Harmon, 119 Leed, Walled 1 *3 - SP I Lake, reportedly saw the inci-| four_man staff ^ City i regional planning projection of 38,000 by 1970, let alone Mayer’s 70,100. BUILDING SLOW Tight money and a slowdown in residential construction held Troy to about 700 new homes this year, according to assessor Ernest Rescbke. Even that number, he points out, is up some-420 from last year. Mayer reports that of all the people in the tri-county area who earn over $25,000 a year, some 36.5 per cent live in Oakland County. Peril is not inclined to disagree, but he quickly points out that those people still make up only 6 per cent of Oakland’s ov-er-all population, as shown in a survey prepared by the Center for Urban Studies at the uni- ce Chief D’Arcy seeking a Farm Year in Review and Look Into Future LANSING (B — It was a year in Which Michigan fanners received a tax break, a preview — or warning — of what 1980 might be like, and news of such startling developments as paving of cucumber patches. In 1966, as in most years, many farmers had reason to curse the weather, especially Western Michigan fruit growers. A spring frost cut cherry and peach porduction in half. A drought hurt Northern Michigan producers of oats, grain corn and other crops. But statewide grain corn production reached 94.3 million bushels and a record average yield of 67 bushels an acre. FIELD PAVING The paving, which was tried in cucumber patches and potato fields, actually was laid down two feet under the soil. The asphalt layer doubled the soil’s water holding capacity and Michigan State University scientists said in September that this doubled file amount of food produced on the land-in some trials. The tax break was ordered-by the 1966 Legislature. Lawmakers approved an exemption for agricultural equipment and instructed local property assessors to Ignore growing trees, vines, bushes and other plants when assessing farm property. Farmers also won a one-year delay in minimum wage coverage and Workmen’s Compensation for form hands. TRANSLATION TIME ..The delay on minimum wages was to give-MSU’s Rural Manpower Center time to translate file wage into piece work rates. The delay oil Workmen's compensation was to work out ** ance rates and decide how seasonal workers and members of the farmer’s own family should be covered. The preview of 1980 was MSU’s gigantic “Project ’80”— a look ahead to Michigan’s rural potential 14 years from now. About 106 scientists, with help from rural leaders, spent two years putting together more than 1,000 pages of detailed reports on various segments of agriculture. ) Sane of their projections: Michigan will have only1 about half as many farms as at present, about one million fewer1 acres of cropland — but bigger 30 S 2-2 -ROCHESTER ROCHESTER — An offer of $18,232 to purchase 3% acres in the urban renewal area from Highbie Manufacturing Co. has beof okayed tty the council and sent to Chicago for final approv-al. I The land is adjacent to the Highbie plant which is situated on Water Street between Third and Fourth. Urban* renewal director George Wilhelmi said plans are to use it for parking purposes at the present time. He reported the o f f e r exceeds the appraised price. The village council meeting last night was devoted largely to urban renewal projects with Wilhelmi giving a summary report of what the council might expect in the coming year. ★ ★ * The newly formed urban renewal rent supplement committee, organized to disperse some $7,500 of village funds over the next five years, was introduced. FAMILY AID Wilhelmi said nine to 12 families would probably qualify for such aid in order to find standard housing in other areas. , The director reported on the first house moving from the renewal area — it’s being relocated on Lounsbury, a half block south of Parkdale. He said the home would be sold at cost and at about $8,500 with first priority going to retired couples from the renewal to be further discussed with the township. A public hearing on a request from Robert and Richard Ten-niswood to rezone two lots on Quarter for duplex dwellings was set for Jan. 23. Reports from planning consultants and the planning commission recommended denial, according to William Sinclair, manager. dent and stopped Patrolman! Robert Starnes and his partner Sgt. Richard Faulkner. PUSHES BOARD Starnes crawled across the| thin, cracking ice pushing a 10-foot long board in front of him to where David was struggling in the water. Faulkner and an unidentified man helped pall the two back to shore. “The boy was lucky,” said Begole. “He had been warned by his parents hot to cross the lake. Later on, the lake will be solid enough 'to drive across, but that channel is the last to freeze and was only covered with about a quarter-inch of ice.” , He told police that four youths, all wearing black jackets, stole his coat, hat and watch and then beat him when he told them he had no money. He was dumped in a snowbank and was found by a passing motorist. Police said the coat, watch and hat were recovered when the four youths were arrested. They were arraigned by Harrison Township Justice Edmund Schmidt. All pleaded innocent. * ★ * The four were identified as Samuel Breeding, 17, Roger Mu-lasky, 17, Gary Hannaford, 18, and John Breeding, 19. Bond was set at $10,000 for each on the robbery charge and $5,000 on the assault charges. Council has already given its approval for a fifth | man. 1 Avon Resident Earns Doctorate AVON TOWNSHIP - David H. Soule, 2152 Avoncrest, received a doctorate in education during Wayne State University’s nter commencement exer- versity of Michigan. INCOME BLOCK That same survey shows the biggest block of income to be between $10,000 and $14,999 and that’s where about 28 per cent of the residents fit. Peek also notes that 51 per c e n t of the people living in Oakland County work here, according to the report. “This is a figure which would seem to dispell to some extent the idea of a core city and bedroom communities,” he reported. Hie same repot shows that about 28 per cent do go to Detroit to work and the rest are scattered around in other communities. The state will have fewer farm laborers and fewer cows, but more horses and more horsepower — in tractors and other machinery. The best selling items will be those that tickle the customer’s taste rather than those that merely fill his belly—less bread and potatoes and beans anti more steak and ice cream and fancy salad. Weather cut the tart cherry crop from 120,000 tons in 1965 to 52.000 in 1966, the sweet, cherry crop from 24,000 tons to 17,000 and the peach crop from,2.8 million bushels tp 1 million. Grape production dropped from 75,000 tons to 50,000. Apples, however, remained steady at 16 million bushels, the 1.6 million bushel pear crop and 11.000 ton plum crop were significantly larger than the 1965 crops. Hie grain eorn yield of 67 bushels an acre was nearly six bushels above the 1960-64 average. Total production was up nearly 4 million bushels from 1965, when widespread drought hurt file epop. « ; Ip other business the council instructed the attorney to draw up a contract with Texaco to provide water and sewer services for the latter’s proposed service station outside the village limits. The attorney was asked to enclose with the contract a statement regarding the current impasse in building such facilities, and that the matter would have Church Schedules Special Service INDEPENDENCE TOWN-SHIP — Walton Missionary Baptist Chiirch, 6013 Sashabaw, will conduct a special New Year’s Eve all-night singing and watch service Saturday night. Hie service, featuring south-eastern Michigan singing talent, will begin at 8, according to Rev. Gregory Harlan, son of the C. Allen Hqrlans of North Adams Road. -She is a junior at . Olivet College. Her fiance attends Michigan State University., F Mr. and Bin. Edgar B. of West Long Lake Road will be hosts at an open house this evening to introduce their son David’s fiancee, Karin Mary Wal-strom, to their friends. • ★ h it Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ward H. Walstrom of Harbor Springs announced the engagement at a family dinner, Tuesday, in the Peninsular Club, Grand Rapids. * * ★' Miss Walstrom who is currently teaching in Bloomington, Minn, is a graduate of Michigan State University where she was affiliated with Alpha Xi Delta sorority. ,\ * * ★ Mr. Flint is presently completing his senior year at Par-sons College. Fairfield. A summer wedding is being planned. The Word H. Walstroms of Harbor Springs 1 announce the engagement of their daughter, Karin Mary, to David B., Flint, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar B. Flint.of West Long Lake Road. KARIN MARY WALSTROM Oil Continuum Center Slates Seasonal Classes for Women The next counseling and testing session for women, a Continuum Center program at Oakland University, is scheduled to begin Jan. 5. Almost 550 women have already taken advantage of the opportunity to learn more about themselves in this “Investigation Into Identity” course which has been designed expressly for the woman who is exploring the possibilities of education, volunteer service or employment in the complex world outside her home. The first session Is an *in-„ formal one, free to anyone in- • terested in learning more about the program. At this initial meeting, Director Priscilla Jackson describes the Continuum Center and what it offers. Hie group then breaks into tables of six-for. discussion. ' The tests, especially adapted to measure the aptitudes, interests and abilities of each woman, are administered by staff psychologist Gerald Self, Ph. D. ★ ★ ★ The course is an accelerated program of six sessions, held twice weekly. Members of the “Investigation Into Identity” class will meet from 1:00 until ■ 4:00 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays on the OU campus. Following the introductory program, the next four class sessions will be devoted to taking the series of tests and meeting other Continuum staff members including the education adviser; Elizabeth B. Wright, volunteer placement adviser; Helen Zdeba, employment adviser; Mrs. Eleanor Driver, orientation interviewer, and Mrs. Margaret Twyman, registrar. The sixth and final- session is devoted to a discussion of the factors which may influence a decision. This is followed by a one-hour personal interview with Dr. Self In Which he interprets and explains the test results. it it ★ In addition to - this course, women are welcome to consult at any time with the staff advisers who include a trained social worker, an expert in the personnel field and an educator skilled in academic counseling. The nominal fee charged for this particular service is applied toward tuition if the individual decides to enroll later in an “Investigation Into Identity” course. For 'women in the Grosse Pointe and eastern Detroit area, a class will be held at Grosse Pointe War Memorial beginning Feb. 14. These “Investigation Into Identity” sessions wffl.be held from 1 to 4, p.m., on Tuesdays and Thursdays, concluding March 2. Format and content of the program will be the same as the one offered in January. A third and final program for the winter season will be held at Presbyterian Church of-Our • Savior, Middle Belt Road, beginning March 7 and ending April U. This is an evening class which will meet once a week from 7:00 to 10:00 p.m. If a. woman decides to Investigate the alternatives outside the home after completing the testing and evaluation sessions, she will find the three Continuum advisers able to guide her more intelligently with the aid of the test information provided by the psychologist. Follow-up services of the advisers are available without fur-, ther charge to those who have completed the testing program. The Continuum Center, supported by a grant from the Kellogg Foundation, is a unique pro- ject and is under the supervision of Dr. Lowell R. Eklund, Dean of the Division of Continuing Education at the University. It was created in the fall of 1965 as a response to the questions raised by oyer 1500 women who participated in discussion groups, planning sessions and conferences held at the University during a four year period. Located on the second floor of South Foundation Hall, the Center welcomes visitors during office hours from 8:00 a.m. to 5 :00 p.m.weekdays. For further information, contact the Continuum Center, Oakland University. . Sale CARPET 3 ROOMS 100% NYLON Low Prices • No Showroom • No Expenses • No Overhead 260 Sq. Ft. p* Installed v* Includes Pad v* No Down Payment \S Payments s10 a Month CALL 334-0177 In # The Home Showing Call *334-0177 for a salesman to come to your homei to show samples. -House/ of Cwtpet Pontiac, Michigan 334-0177 We Are a Legally Regiirtered ^ Buaine»» With the County of Oakland THE x-u___ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, B—1 mum awn THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, me es Tell of Engagements Dr. and Mrs. C. X Bender of St. Louis, Mick, announce the engagement of their daughter, Arlouine Ann, to Robert Earle Kibbie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Kibbie of Dover Road. The spring bride-electisah alumna of Cleary College, Ypsi-lanti, where her fiance is presently a student. Tie is a graduate of Northwood Institute. An April wedding is pldnhed by Barbara Ellen Rofe, daughter of the Duane H. Rofes of Beach Drive, Orion Township, and Leonard Wayne Graf, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred E. Graf of Ann Arbor. She attended Oakland University and her fiance is an 'alumnus of University of Michigan. The Leslie Tomlinsons of Berkley announce the engagement of their daughter, Linda„ Ann, to Harold E. Leach, son of Mrs. George C. Leach of Melrose Avenue and the late Mr. Leach. He attends Oak-land Community CoL lege. A June 24 wedding date is set. Mr.,aiid Mrs. Julian J. G loo mis of Chippewa Road announce the engagement of their daughter, Judith Ann, to Richard Allen Chase, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Chase of Lake-ward Lane. May vows are planned by Sharon Ann Plawshi, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John J. plawshi of Beachland Boulevard, and Richard Remandez, son of Mr. and Mrs> Ralph Hernandez of Seward Street. Iron and Roll to Stop Creases When laundering your white table linens, wash them in hot I soapy water, rinse well then This Playboy Needs to Save for Old Age By MARY FEELEY Consultant in Money Management Dear Mary Feeley:. Here’s the way I’ve set up my budget on $680 a month: Food, $60; rent, $150; clothes, $160; car, $100; insurance, $40; utilities, $20; furniture, $50; spending, $160. But I need help, Mary. I’m a single playboy here in town. T.B., Chicago Dear T.B.: Here’s the way I’m setting up your budget. And I’m not playing: Take $32 off the allotment you’re spending on clothes. Then knock off $5 from the food bill. Save $5 on car operating expenses for the month — not much to ask, huh? Then cut down on your social spending by about*, jay, $20 a month. That leaves a total of $618. So look what you have left at the end of the month, TJB, —$62 to pat into a savings account, and yon haven’t even missed enough fun to notice. I honestly wouldn’t want to slow you down any. But you can’t keep on being a playboy forever. Some day you’re going to be worrying over a retirement income instead of a new ski sweater. So let’s both start worrying a little now, just to make things easier for you on the long downhill run. Sixty-two dollars a month save is $744 a - year. Every year if this amount is invested at a favorable interest rate of say 5 per cent compounded semi-annually you’ll be mighty glad to have about $4200 five years from now. Dear Miss Feeley: * I have an account in one bank for a little over $10,000 and another one in a branch of the same bank. Under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, am I covered with the required insurance? I also have accounts in other banks (different companies). *' 1 Would all these bank accounts be added together, under the law, to make one sum and then have the maximum of, I believe, $10,000 only for them all? J,S„ Brooklyn, N.Y. Dear J.S.: Since the main office and all branches of a bank are considered as one bank, if your accounts are in the same “right and capacity”—which means if they are under the same name with each passbook identically—then the sum total of these accounts is now insured to the maximum of $15,000, not $10,000. * * * Just recently Senate Bill S 3156 was put into law, authorizing the Federal Insurance Corporation and the Federal Sav-and Loan Insurance Corporation to increase insurance coverage. Of course, you can have more than one insured account in a bank if you transfer funds from an “individual accoOnt” to a “voluntary/ trust account” or even a “joint ac- count with right of survivorship.” Each of these accounts has different rights.and capacities and can be separately insured to the maximum of $15,000. Under the law insurance coverage is based upon deposits maintained by a person at a single insured bank, and not upon one’s total deposits'll other banks. Dear Miss Feeley1: ' How much allowance should a girl of 13 receive? She iron on both sides while still damp. * Wrap tahleclpths round long tireless Helpers Get Reward INDBUNAPOLIS, Ind. - It was hard to tell who was more excited at the naturalisation Ceremony in the Federal Building here — the Alberto Diaz family who became U. S. citizens, or Mrs. F. Noble Ropkey, who has been vitally interested and extremely active in helping Cuban refugees for the last five years. * * * a The Diaz family was the first Cuban family sponsored by. Mrs. Ropkey to take the citizenship oath. Referred to by the approximately 300 Cu- bans now living in lis as “our angel,” she has brought refugees here, helped them find jobs, given moral support and practical advice. makes her own bed, keeps her room clean, does dishes when I ask her, and babysits when-i ever asked. She goes bowling once a week ($1), donates $1 a week to church. Should we give her this money with her allowance and let her take care of it? Mrs. F.C., Lincoln Park, Mich Dear Mrs. C.; Yes. Money management is part of her education — and this is a good age to turn over the entire responsibility of her allowance, Make it $3 a week, if you can. Then she can maneuver that third dollar, so that part of it can build up over the weeks for some major purchase she wants. She sounds like a young lady to be trusted with her funds. pasteboard tubes, and, nap-” kins and smaller'articles around shorter ones, to prevent creases while stored. Wrap in blue cellophane to prevent yellowing. Linens are then ready for company use at a moment’s notice. Your Bu Thermostat Sets Habits university park, p«. (UP!) — People have their own built-in system of > responding to food, reports Louise W. Hamilton, extension foods and nutrition specialist of the Pennsylvania State University. Some people gain weight even if they eat little food mid others can’t gain weight no matter how much they eat, she said. * + * In one study of this nutrition problem, a group of medical students kept track of the food they ate. The intake was 1,000 to 5,000 calories for the men. Teh top figure was 3,500 calories for the women. There was i 111 e relation between the weight gain of the student and the food he ate. Growing children seem. to have the same variations, said Miss Hamilton. Children with similar ages, height, weight, ^ body surface show considerable difference in how much they eat. ★ ★ How much energy a person uses to do a certain job shows this to be true. When military men of the same age, size, and conditioning were measured for the amount of energy they used when marching, variations! were considerable. Men were tested marching on a level surface at a little oVer three miles an hour. Men using the least energy burned up four calories a-minute while sdme men used twice that amount of energy. Before freezing fruits, add some sugar. This helps to keep the natural color and vitamin content. Announcing PONTIAC, CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL RINGS OUR REGULAR 3,97 LINED WOOLEN OR CORDUROY WESTERNS “College Type** EASY CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE WHITCROFT JEWELERS l N. SAGINAW FE 84391 2J5 Fully lined slacks of 90* reprocessed wool, 10% nylon; black, grey. 8 to 18. Cotton cordur-r&y western jeans; fashion colors. 6 to 16. Sunday Look The little girl Mynjfeess-... es goes on into the next season for big girls too. It’s the Sunday school look, topped navy skirts with.red jackets, plus white blouses, Peter Pan collars in white, and big bows at the neck. 82 N. Saginaw Beauty and Accuracy o OMEGA vou’i.l say “off with die old ind on with the new’’ w hen you see these exceptional Omega watches, * The plim-silhouette Seamas ter Dc Ville winds itself as you wear it, and is perfect for sports-or evening wear. The ladies’ watch features a facet-edged jewel-crystal. 18K gold dial-markers, fully jeweled movements. Other Omcga watdicsfrom $65 to over $1000. RfiDMOND’S Jewelry 81 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC Free Parking in Rear of Store wmmPP k..'2SH&SL. i PAULI S 35 N.. Saginaw St., Pontiac irawranwr B—fl TUB PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY* DECEMBER 28, 1966 Stale's Year-End Report Says '66 Crops Top '65 LANSING (AP) - the Combined output of Michigan’s 17 major Slfidd and fruit crops totaled 10.34 million tons in 1966 —a 3 per cent boost over 1965-the State Crop Reporting Service said today in its year-end report. Although the total topped the 10.06 million tons produced last year, this year’s production was 1 per cent below the 1960-64 average, the report said. The weather in 1966 was described as generally more favorable for grain, dry beans, soybeans and hay than in 1965, but a dry spell reduced crop yields in northern Lower Michigan and much of the Upper Peninsula. Good-to-excellent yields were [sufficient moisture to cany the ■crop through to maturity and dry fall weather aided harvest, the service said, the bean yield per acre of 1,269 pounds was slightly below the 5-year aver-age. The service reported that: The state produced 30.4 million bushels of winter wheat, 15 per cent more than last year. The average yield of 40 bushels per acre equaled the record established in 1964. | Total feed grain production-corn, oats and barley—tfas 3.1 million terns, 2 per cent higher than the 1965 total. ★ * The state’s corn for‘ grain production totaled 94.3 million bushels—a 4 per cent increase general in the southern Lower over 1965. The average yield of Peninsula, the report said. |C7.9 bushels per acre set a state Combined output of the 10[record, major field crops was 9.8 million J Oat production declined 14 per tons this year compared with 9.4 cent from 1965 due to a delay in million tons last year. Fruit early spring planting caused by' eduction totaled 578,000 tons,[wet soil. Dry weather in June 19 per cent below last year and and July plus hot weather in SETTLES TO BOTTOM—The USS frigate Constellation, oldest ship of the U.S. Navy still afloat, settled two, feet to rest on the bottom of the Baltimore Harbor in Maryland Medicare Fight to High Court AT Wlrtfftato today after a seam apparently widened from ice formations and the vessel shipped from 8 to 10 feet of water. Fire boats were called to pump out the ship’s hold. Anqtber Bugging Is Admitted -The J WASHINGTON « tice Department ha another case of electronic eavesdropping by toe government. It is the eighth admission ■fax** last spring. In papers filed Tuesday nitfit in the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston, the department said the FBI had monitored conversations of Lsdb J. Taglianetti, who later was coin victed of income ta* evasion. ■ * , * # The department denied any evidence used in Taglianetti’s case was obtained from the FBI bugging, but requested a lower court review of the conviction to determine w h et h e r circumstances warranted a new trial. A Justice Department spokesman said the FBI reported it installed a microphone in IMS § close anodate of Taglianetti and overheard soma of Ml con- FOUND GUILTY Taglianetti of Warwick, RX, was found guilty last April of evading taxes for the yean -1966, 1967 and 1968. He was sentenced to three years in prison and fined $3,090. Tim voluntary announcement of the latest bugging incident followed a Justice Department order last month to examine all cases to determine whether electronic eavesdropping was used to gather evidence iUegal- Tt does not appear from the logs of our inquiry into the han- dling of (Taglianetti’s) case by the Internal Revenue Service, the Department of Justice and the U.S. attorney, that any of the monitored conversations were used in evidencp or were the source of leads to any evidence in this base,*’ the papers filed by the department said. The department’s first voluntary announcement of electronic eavesdropping resulted in a Supreme Court order of a new trial for Fred Black, a Washington public relations man also convicted of income tax eva-pion. The department later admitted bugging the suite of Bobby Baker, former Senate Democratic secretary who is feeing various charges including income tax evasion. 6 per cent below the five-year average. The field crop value totaled $380 million compared with 6346 million last year, the reporting service said. The report said smaller crops of peaches, sweet and tart cherries and grapes more than offset larger crops of pears and plums. those months reduced yields sharply. Barley production totaled 882,000 bushels, 2 per cent below the 1965 crop. The year produced a record soybean crop of 10-8 million bu&els—12 per cent higher than last year’s total. Late summer potatoes totaled * The year-end report said dry J 950,000 hundredweight — up 15 bean production totaled _ 8.1 per cent from last year. The fail million bags (100 pounds clean basis), 31 per cent higher than the 1965 figure and 9 per cent above the 5-year average. HEAVY RAINS Dry weather from the last half of May through mid-July slowed bean development but heavy rains in August supplied Arab Leftists Start Drive to Oust Hussein CAIRO (UPD - Arab leftists embarked on a new campaign today to overthrow Jordan’s King Hussein and undermine his lonely crusade for moderation in the Middle East. Ahmed Shukeiry, head of the extremist Palestine Liberation Hussein’s foremost critics, announced formation of a secret Organization (PLO) and one of revolutionary council to for the overthrow of the 32-year-old king. Shukeiry’s announcement yesterday was meant to fan discontent within Jordan — where a civil conflict could upset the entire delicate political and military balance in the Middle East. Shukeiry said the revolutionary council — whose members arid meetings would be kept secret — would “undertake the preparation, of the people to wage battle for liberation with the Palestine liberation army in the vanguard.’’ potato crop is estimated at 7,955,000 hundredweight — down 9 per cent from last year. The year’s 1.1 million ton sugar beet production almost equaled the 1965 crop. An increase in harvested acreage was offset by a lower yield per acre. The report said the state’s 10 major field crops were harvested from a total of 5.7 million acres in 1906 compared with 5.8 acres in 1965. WASHINGTON (UPD-The first' of several lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of an anticommunist disclaimer in the Medicare law has reached the Supreme Court Mrs. Aline mother-in-law of Dean Louis Poliak of Yale Law School, and her mother, Mrs. Alice K, Pol-litzer, 96, both of New York, yesterday asked the court rule on the law and a clause in the Medicare application. Their appeal was filed by the! American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). ■ The question on the Medicare application, which must be answered by 3.4 million prospective applicants not covered by Social Security, asks whether the enrollee was a member of not eligible for benefits. It tick tf yti...« btthfcy aid prosptrois NIW YEAR...fro* CUNNINGHAM’S MAN IN WHITE \0i dtfy EVERYDAY throMf ho«f tba holidays ft wvt ytil DOWNTOWN Gunningliam*s?TouRcE THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1966 Huskies Lead Entire Game MAKE OVER PAGES Pontiac Northern Outguns Pontiac Central, 58-45 By JERE CRAIG Pontiac Northern literally ..played Pootiac Central’s Chiefs off their feet Tuesday night and outgunned the visitors for a SMS city series victory. The Huskies driving tactics on the attack repeatedly faked the PCH defenders into leaving their feet too soon and giving Northern easy shots in close as the winners aided an eight-game losing streak in the annual cage dashes. The victory lifts FNH to a 4-1 mark this season while Central fell to S-l This was North. fs third win in 21 city series games, all three coming on its own court •> The last one was 5842 in the 1963 district tournament title ime. Last Bight’s contest was an JUMPER — A standing room only crowd watched Pontiac Northern defeat PCH last night, much to the pleasure of the Huskies’ home crowd. Frank Russell takes a jump shot while Northern’s Dana Coin watches. Walled Lake Matmen Lead Defending champion Walled Lake leads the way with 14 sur-viors as the seventh annual Oakland Coiihty High School Invitational Wrestling Tournament moved into today’s final events. t' - * * * ! The Vikings had U entries still battling for points among the top four finishers as the competition entered its quarterfinal roun^«trEU30 a.m. The finals begin 7 p.m. tonight. Pontiac Northern indicated : it has title ambitions by sending 13 survivors into today’s » activity and Warren Fitzgerald had 11 still contending. Pontiac Central, who finished fourth between Fitzgerald and Northern last year, had eight still bidding for the first place trophies. * * ★ Walled Lake’s entries included defending 145-pound titlist Dennis Fitzgerald. Tim and Rick Russell, Ray Buffmyer, Jack Gardner, Carey Stevenson, Bob Hellner, Rick Hyde, Scott McKown, Steve F ogle, Dennis Brandt, Jim . Thomas, Ron James and Greg Wencel. PNH LIST Northern’s contingent was Leroy Gutierrez, Tun Kell, Bill Green, Ben Moon, John Knibbs, Epifanio Gomex, Ron Washington, Bob Harris, Harry Mcfhail, Ken and Jim Corr, Frank Laf-ferty and Bill Dotson. Representing PCH were Randy Johnson, N- Z. Bryant, Larry Craft, Ken Vollmar, Ben Rodriguez, Bill Gottschall, Charles Mason and Athie McGinnis. Other teams with wrestlers still contending were. Royal Oak Kimball, RO Dondero and Warren Lincoln, each with 6; Farmington, Birmingham Seaholm and Hazel Park, 4 each; Berkley, North Farmington and Birmingham Groves, 3 each; Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows, Redford Union, 'Warren Mott and Catholic Central, 2 each; Bloomfield Hills, Country Day and L’Anse Creuse, one each. The tournament had more than 20 teams and almost 500 wrestlers competing Tuesday before good-sized crowds. Spartans in Finals of Hockey Tourney ST. PAUL, Minn. (Af>) - Defending NCAA champion Michigan State takes on Minnesota tonight in the finals of the St. Paul Collegiate Hockey Classic. * MSU dumped North Dakota 4-2 Tuesday night while Minnesota thrashed Arqtiyl2-1, Goalie Gaye Colley was outstanding for MSU, making 28 ^aves. unusual one in that the winning Huskies, while clearly outplaying die PCH quintet, kit oafy 30 per cent oi their field goal tries sad were out-rebounded. But seven first period turnovers by Central and five more in the next session to only four by PNH in the initial half dug a burial mound that was too much for the visitors to surmount. NEVER LEAD Never leading in the contest, the Chiefs -fell behind by 10 points in the first three and a half minutes of play. This deficit was cut to four at period’s end, then grew to six points at the intermission despite the fact PCH took command of the backboards. The Invading Central squad, however, couldn’t put the ball in the basket After hitting four olf ten in the first period with effective ball handling, it began taking more and less effective shots from the floor. As a result, the Chiefs hit only 26 per cent and scored their second lowest total in the intracity rivalry. For a change, Northern had the tougher defense in the annual meetings. The Huskies’ hustling zone kept PCH gunning from the outside except for the high-post work of 'Alton Wilson State Quintets Lose in Motor City Titans, Broncs Are Losers in First Round U. of D. Upset, 98-94 by Tulane; Miami, O., Defeats Western DETROIT (AP) - The Uni-versity of Detroit's hope? for hometown glory in the Motor City Classic basketball tournament were shattered by upstart Tulane. The Green Wave, with some hot shooting in the second half, turned the tide and upset the Titans 98-94 Tuesday night, ,, ★ * ★ In the first game, Miami of Ohio whipped Western Michigan 51-45, earning the right to face Tulane in the championship game tonight. Detroit meets Western Michigan in the consolation match. Down by 12 points at the half, Tulane hit 10 straight points in the first two minutes of the ond half and,came within two points of the Titans, ! Johnny Arthurs, a sophomore forward, and A1 Andres, a Benton Harbor product, put the Green Wave back in the game. Arthurs hit 19 of his 33 points in the first half and Andrews pumped in 17 of his 21 points in the final 20 minutes. HOT PACE Tulane fired a blistering 68 per cent in the second half, sinking 22 of 32 floor shots. Maimi played a slow, deliberate game in topping WMU. Paced by the nearly perfect shooting of forward Fred Foster, Miami jumped,, to a 32-24 halftime margin. But the Broncos cut the margin to 4643 with 4:32 to {day on a jump shot by Pahil White. * ★ ★ A pair of foul shots by Jerry Fisher with 1:44 remaining wrapped it up for Miami. Foster topped the Redskins with 24 points while Lacefield had 17 points to lead WMU. Central Michigan 5 Wins in First Round GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - Tri-State and Central Michigan posted the better shooting percentages and the victories Tuesday night in the first round of the Calvin College Invitational basketball tournament Tri - State dumped Wheaton College 86-83 and Central Michigan defeated University of Bridgeport 97-77. John Berends’ 14 points paced Central Michigan’s balanced attack. MSU Handed Defeat in Quaker Tourney From Our News Wires Louisville merrily whistled its way through the “graveyard” of nationally ranked basketball teams while Michigan State was gently laid to rest. Second-ranked Louisville and seventh-ranked State were booked into the same Quaker city tournament which began Tuesday at Philadelphia’s notorious Palestra where more than a handful of highly rated clubs have gone to their reward. The Cardinals, however, were not about to roll over and play dead for Niagara. With sophomore sensation Butch Beard and junior Westley Unseld combining for 47 points and rebounds, Louisville crushed the Purple Eagles 98-73. State, now 5-2, wasn’t that fortunate against local entry VOlanova. The Wildcats hit the, Spartans with a tenacious defense and three hot sophomores in scoring a 66-63 upset; The victories sent Louisville and Villanova into Thursday night’s semifinals where the Cardinals will meet Syracuse and the Wildcats face 15th-ranked Princeton. Syracuse held off LaSalle 88-84 and FHnceton pummelled Bowling Green 87-73 in other first-round activity. The Spartsns meet Bowling Green of Ohio in a consolation match tonight. EIGHT TIES The game was tied eight times in tiie first half and the lead changed hands 13 times. The Spartans took a short-lived lead early in the second half but Villanova’s George May popped in a pair of 26-foot jumpers and the Wildcats were ahead to stay. MSU closed the gap to two NBA Standings Philadelphia .... 33 3 .1 Boston . ........ 25 7 i Mew York ........ 17 1* . , Cincinnati ...... 13 19 , Baltimore ........ * 29 Western Division San Francisco ..22 13 ^ St. Louis ....... 15 11 .< Detroit .. ... .. IS 21 .. Chicago ......... 15 24 5j oa Angelas .... 12 22 Tuesday's Results Cincinnati 131. Datrolt 123 St. Louis 113, Baltimoro ill Today's Camas San Francisco at Baltimore Lot Angeles at New York Boston at Philadelphia Thursday’s Camas Los Angeles at Cincinnati Boston at St. Louis SCORES PIN—Km Corr of Pontiac Northern is In the process of gaining ft pin over Scott McGowan in the 165 pound cla?s of the con- Oakland County wrestling tinuing today at Oakland University. PNH has 13 wrestlers in«tbe finals, one shy»of WalH Lake with 14. points, 57-55, with less than three minutes to play. But Villa-nova scored nine straight points to put the game out of reach. Johnny Jones topped Villa-nova with 21 points and May added 17. Steve Rymal, a guard from Adrian, was high for Michigan State with 18. The victory was the fourth far Villanova in seven games. Western Kentucky struggled • a 90-84 triumph over Holy Cross and reached the final round of the Hurricane Classic against Miami, an 82-78 ner over Pennsylvania. Suspension — crippled Illinois and Southern California reached the second round of the Los Angeles Classic, Iowa State and Kansas State gained semifinal MICHIOAN STATS VILLANOVA C F T C Rymal I 2-3 II May 7 ! L'f'tfe 4 54 13 Gillen 1 Bailey * 1 * “ ..... berths in the Big Eight tournament and defending! Champ Oklahoma City and Stanford advanced in the All-College tournament. in Totali 2411-30 «6 Michigan State................ 21 35-43 ''Ulanova..................... 22 37-44 Personal fouls • Michigan Stata 25, Attendance - 4,714. Miss Fisher, Peaches in Net Finals MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Top-seeded Peaches Bartkowicz of Hamtramck, Midi., meets Marilyn Aschner of Holliswood, N.Y., today in the finals of the Orange Bowl Junior Tennis Championships. In the girls 18-and-under division, Miss Bartkowicz defeated Maricaye Christianson of Los Angeles, 64), 6-2, in a semifinal match Tuesday. In a quarterfinal doubles match far girls 18-and-under, Bartkowicz and her partner, Vera Lucia Cleto of Brazil, defeated Toni Locker, and Carol Passage of Kalamazoo, Mich., 64, M. o Other games Tuesday found Linda Berry and Kathy Dombof of Kalamazoo, Mich., defeating Linda Tuero, Metarie, La., and Connie C a p o z z 1, Middletown, Ohio, 64, 6-2, in a quarterfinal doubles match for girls 16-and-under. In semifinal matches for girls 16-and-under Emily Fisher of Bloomfield Hills defeated Vera Cleto of Brazil, 6-3, 7-5, while Linda Tuero won over Kathy Dombof, 64,64). quarterfinal match for girls 18-and-under Kazuk Sawa-matsu and, Junko Sawamatsu of Japan defeated Patty Miller and Sherry Carlson of Kamazob/* Mich., 84), 6-1. NHL Standings York ......... 1 Chicago . .......... l Toronto ............ 1 Montreal ........... l Boston ...... ...... Detroit ............ .Tuesday's Chicago 3, New Yort Detroit 4, Boston 4, at Montreal Thursday's l Pontiac Proa* Photos by Ed Vanddrwarp PNH POSSESSION - Pontiac Northern handed cress-town rival Pontiac Central a 5845 lacing last night and the Huskies did jt by controlling much of the floor {day. In the top photo Mike Clancy (36) dribbles past Altai Wilson of PCH and in the bottom picture Bob Traylor (4) gets' possession as Gordon Hamilton (35) tries to stop a drive. Behind Hamilton is Northern’s Stan Allison. No. Victory, but Wings Salvage 4-4 Tie on Road and some occasional tips that often didn’t drop in. Guard Craig Deaton especially proved troublesome to the Chiefs’ top point producer, Prentice Hill. The 26.5-ppg marks-man was held to seven shots and one basket. Don Hayward, PNH’s steady forward, was off in his shooting but pulled down 15 rebounds. ADD PUNCH Dana Coin and reserve center Stan Allison, giving another fine performance as a substitute, picked up the scoring slack with 26 points between them, and also combined for** 16 rebounds. Allison, particularly, was ef*. fective midway through the final half with three baskets as the Huskies built their lead to 49-33. * Guards Mike Clancy and Deaton. making their first varsity start as a unit, also contributed with their shooting and defensive hustle. * ★ Although outrebounded, 66-53, PNH managed 76 shots to 65 for Central and made six more field goals than the losers. Wilson topped the backboard work-Gordon Hamilton had 15. Wil-ers with 16 retrieves while son also hit 7 of 13 for the game’s top shooting mark. But he wasn't enough to prevent Northern from amassing an 18-point lead late in t h e game and adding 50 points in this year’s City All Sports Trophy competition before a noisy, standing - room - only crowd of 2,600. CENTRAL (45) FO FTlr ilson 7 7-12 21 Hoywi I 0-0 0 Brown 10-0 4 Clancy 0-0 2 Aulgur I 0-0 0 ..Deaton 17 11-22 45 Total! 23 12-24 SB SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 .............. 12 It * 14-45 •» .............14 12 15 15—SB Junior Varsity Central 49, Northern 44 Jayvees Also Stage Baffle There have been few struggles in the annual city haskwthnii series to match the classic junior varsity struggle last night between Ppntiac Northern and Pontiac Central. The unbeaten PNH i entered the game confident of their first win over Central and built a 10-point second-half lead before , their over-anxiety cost them a 69-66 defeat. The young Chiefs (3-2) scored 27 points in the final period to pull out their 16th win in the rivalry. Lew McNeir tallied 22 points, including two, clutch 22-foot jump shots, to lead the winners while Ed Williams made 24 for PNH. Two technical fouls committed by Northern—one for an excess time out and one for failure to report by an entering substitute —cost the junior Huskier (4-1) three points and the ball game. BOSTON (AP) - Detroit has severed its 14-game losing streak on the road. But the Red Wings still aren’t back in the winning column. They tied the Boston Bruins 44 on, Gordie Howe’s power play goal in the last five Inin-utes Tuesday night. ★ ★ ★ In the only other NHL contest, the Chicago Black Hawks Upset the league-leading New York Rangers 3-2 at New York. The Boston battle found the Wings within two defeats of the NHL record for consecutive 16 by Chicago in the 1953-54 season. THREE RALLIES The Wings, who rallied three times to earn the tie, remain only a point behind fifth-place Boston in the battle to ?tay out of tiie cellar. Howe tipped in a long shot by Norm Ullman at 15:42 to get the tie. Defenseman Leo Boivln scored his second and third goals of the season for Detroit and Alex Delvecchio got his eighth on a third-period power play. The Bruins outshot the Wings 45-34, getting two goals in eaich scored for Boston, and Pit Martin got two Bruin goads. The Black Hawks surprised New York on third period goals by Stan Mikita and Bobby Hull and climbed within two points of the Rangers. It snapped New York’s winning streak at three. Hull got the clincher, slapping in his 14th goal after Phil Esposito fed him from the face-off with less than four minutes to play and the score tied 2-2. Mikita’s third-period goal, his second score at the game, had created the tie snapped by Hull. Local Boater Adds license Henry Ball of Union Lake has received his international racing driver’s license, the American Power Boat Association has announced. Ball is.a member of the Marine Prop-Riders Boat Chib and is active in the pnnual Loon Lake Hydroplane Races each summer in addition to competing elsewhere in the Midwest. / He races in the ,48-cubic-inen hydro class of inboard motor- of the last two periods. Ron boats. He has 16 years* exper-Stewart and Ed Westfall each Big 'O' Sends Pistons to Loss, 131-123 CINCINNATI (AP)-They call Oscar Robertson the Big 0 because of his accuracy in putting a basketball through the hoop. He lived up to his nickname Tuesday night as the Cincinnati Royals dumped the Detroit Pistons 131-123 in a National Basketball Association tilt. In the only other NBA action Tuesday, St. Louis downed Baltimore, 113-111. Cincinnati took advantage of a slow Detroit start in the second, period. Detroit missed its first, nine scoring attempts) as , the Royals fired in nine consecutive field goals. Robertson shot eight in the nine. The streak increased the Royals’ 28-25 first quarter lead to a halftime tally of 6646. CINCINNATI 11 4-7 21 Hairston 7 4-5 II Lucm t 4-7 22 Oiorklng 0 0-0 0 rwr. Trosvant 1 1-4 3 M'gl'klln Vaughn 1 0-0 2 Rdbinw 12 t-Tfsf o i-o jl son-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Burial will be in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Keding, a retired pipe fitter, died yesterday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Georgina Greer of Union Lake; two grandsons; and four great-grandchildren. Mr*- William R. Keough BIRMINGHAM - Memorial service for Mrs. William (Bonnie) Keough, 43, of 124 S. WU-liamsbury was to be 3 p.m. today at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Mrs. Keough died yesterday. She was a member of the First Church of Ctyrist Scientist. , Surviving besides her husband are a daughter, Patrice J. of Beltsville, Md.; two sons, Wil- The Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office filed a petition yesterday with Juvenile Ctourt ’' Jg that it waive jurisdiction of a 16-year-old Royal Oak boy so he can be tried on a second-degree murder charge. ★ ★ k At a preliminary hearing lier in the day, juvenile authorities decided to detain Robert Quinn at the Children’s Center pending a further investigation into the death of Gregory . Barrett, 18, also of Royal Oak. Barrett died Monday in William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oate Dr. John H. McLaughlin, hospital pathologist, said Barrett’s death was caused by pneumonia possibly related to spinal injuries be suffered in a fist fight with Quinn last Wednesday. The waiver petition was tiled by Asst. Prosecutor* John J. Davey. ■* * » Davey said it is uncertain what started the fight but it appears to have resulted from an argument between Quinn and friends of Barrett the previous day No hearing date on the waiver has been scheduled but Davey has requested that It be held within two weeks. The soft felt hat was introduced in tbe United States in 1851 by a popular Hungarian freedom fighter, Lajos Jossuth, who visited the United States and was so admired by Americans that they adopted his head- NEED HELP WITH YOUR INVESTMENT* PROBLEMS? Call 334-2411 . Watling, , Lerchen & Co. 2 MOTH SAGINAW ST.' PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Member* NewYork Stock Kxchan& YOUNG READER - Little Michelle Robins, 34-month-old daughter of Mrs. Maurine Robins, Midland, Tex., pauses while visiting her grandparents in Paducah, Ky., to read an edition of the local paper. According to her mother, she has been reading “just about everything she can get her hands on” te»ce the age of 14 months. Weather Satellite Likely lo Aid Wildlife Studies WASHINGTON - The n e X t Nimbus weather satellite may dnrar a~bead on wildlife aswell as storms. ★ ★ * For a start, scientists hope Nimbus will collect useful data from a herd of African elephants. Eventually, if the experiment is successful, the satellite may zero in on sea turtles, polar bears, whales, and other animals whose day-today movements are difficult to trace. By monitoring wildlife, ecologists hope to learn more about the mysteries of migration and gather data to protect species threatened with extinction, the National Geo-, graphic Society gays. A device called the Interrogation Recording and Location System (ERLS) will keep track of the elephants. The system will go aloft on the Nimbus-3, scheduled for launching late in 1067. The program is to be coordinated by toe Smithsonian Institute and the National Aero onautics and Space Administration’s Goddard Flight Center. STRONGBACK The elephant was chosen for the Nimbus experiment because of its bigness. The IRLS system must home in on a 25-pound transponder, a portable station to receive and send radio signals, that will be strapped to the animal’s back. ★ ★ -k Size of the apparatus must be reduced before the experiment can be extended to smaller creatures. ★ ★ The IRLS will relay and receive data while passing over Africa. Information will be ami transmitted to ground station. By Urban League Poverty War Changes Urged settlement released fo-ilces rattier than contract withithe local war on poverty was objection was that tbe OEO PH----------, day, top pontiac Urban League j existing agencies is a poor pro just getting under way. called for a revised approach! cedure. His resignation resulted to tile Oakland County War on Barnes resigned as a mem- from a disagreement with the Poverty by wider toe of con-her of the'antipoverty commis-j course of action planned by brachial arrangements with ex-'skm nearly two years ago when1 the commission and Ms chief is ting agencies. The Urban League encouraged local and federal officials and interested citizens to examine the structural and administrative framework of tbe present Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) program in the county- A determination then should be made whether we could receive more from our tax dollars through contractaral health, welfare, community service, group work and recreation agencies, according to the statement Clarence E. Barnes, executive director of the Urban League, emphasized that a con- tinuation of efforts to stamp out poverty fa He feels, however, that attempts by the County Commission mi Economic Opportunity to recruit staff to provide sery- Court Date Set inftoldupCase Robbery Trial Circuit Court arraignment of Pontiac man charged with armed robbery was set yesterday for Jan. 4 after preliminary hearing before Municipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum. Robert T. McCullum, 24, of 95 Clovese is accused by Pontiac police of taking $10 from a 19-year-old youth last month with a sawed-off rifle. McCullum is held at the Oakland County Jail in $15,000 bond. He also faced arraignment in Circuit Court today on a second armed robbery charge stemming from a jewelry store holdup at the Miracle Mile Shopping Center in Bloomfield j Township. Waterford Girl Injured in Area Auto Collision A 19-year-old Waterford Township girl was injured late last night in a two-car collision on JClarkston Road near Pine Knob Road in Independence Township. ■k k k * Listed in satisfacotry condition at Pontiac General Hospital with a concussion is Carol Ship-worth of 4846 Fenmore, driver of one of the cars. The other driver, according to Pontiac State police, w a s James M. Halt of Garden City. He was treated at the hospital and released. propain was earmarked to duplicate many already available services. “Much of the OEO program is a duplication of what Other public agencies already are > doing,” Barnes said at the time of his resignation. The Urban League director said today that by making better use of local agencies, some of the expected tentative cuts in the local OEO budget might have been avoided. Most of the cuts seem to be in the area of administrative overhead, Barnes said. A turkhen is a cross between a turkey and a cMcken. • A Pontiac youth arrested at a j downtown store when he al-ll legedly presented a stolen cred-1-it card was ordered yesterday j to stand* trial on a. charge of armed robbery. k k ★ Charles Threkeld, 19, of 10 Utah was bound over to Circuit Court for arraignment Jan. 3! after preliminary examination' in Municipal Court.. . Judge Cecil B. McCallum ordered Threkeld held In bond pf $5,000. Threkeld was apprehended by plainclothes patrolman Bruce Jarvis Dec. 17 at Sears, Roebuck & Co., 154 N. Saginaw. EFFECTIVE RATE AGAIN BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD PAYS MICHIGAN'S HIGHEST BANK INTEREST RATE WE PAY AN EFFECTIVE RATE OF ON OUR NEW 5% SAVINGS CERTIFICATE. THAT'S BECAUSE WE COMPOUND THE INTEREST , CONTINUOUSLY, 365 DAYS A YEAR. ■ Available in amounts as low as $100. it's issued to mature in 3 year$ and VO months. And deposits sire insured to $15,000 by tire Federal Deposit Insw3frcfe~ Corporation. ■ Your funds, should you need them, are always available upon 9(r days' written notice. And you still receive interest from day of deposit to day of withdrawal at the full 5% rate. tiTftis new Savings Certif icate pays you the highest effective interest rate now being paid in Michigan on amounts as low as $100 It's a great way to put that permanent portion of your savings to work with security. ■ Stop in at your nearby Birmingham Bloomfield banking office and take a close look At our new 3 year 10 month Savings Certificate or fill out and mail the coupon below today. 554%—no bank can beat it. "growing bigger to serve you better" BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD BANK P. O. Box 600, Birmingham, Michigan ' Gentlemen: Enclosed ii my check for ♦ Bloomfield Bank. Please'send me__________—■ , certificate(s) in amount(s) of $................ Please issue the certificate(s) as indicated below. _made payable to Birmingham _______3 year^JjD month savings STREET ADDRESS— CITY • ...'..- Woodwaid-Mipla (opinins soon) Policeman Revives i I Accident Victim A Waterford Township policeman may have saved the life of a 39-year-old West Bloomfield Township woman who apparently had stopped breathing after her car slammed into a tree early today on Cooley Lake' Road just southeast of Elizabeth Lake Road. _ Patrolman Carl Solden revived Betty J. Manes of 1779 Post by administering mouth-to-mouth resuscitation when he observed she wasn’t breathing and couldn’t feel her pulse, The victim was rushed to Pontiac General Hospital where she Is listed, in fair condition today with facial lacerations and a fractured hip. Solden theorized the motorist lost control of her car oh a curve after it skidded on wet pavement. . ★ ★ ★ The accident occurred just after midnight. Arrbignmenti in Wife Shooting Set for Jan. 5 Accused of shooting his wife in the leg, a Pontiac man is to be arraigned Jan. 5 in Circuit Court on a charge of assault with intent to murder. Jimmie L. Day, 29, of 95 E. Howard is held at the Oakland County Jail in $10,000 bond. | He was bound over for trial yesterday following preliminary examination before Municipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum. Day was arrested Dec. 18 by Pontiac police after his -wife, Patricia, 30, identified him as the man who shot her in the leg tth a 22-caliber rifle. Women Sold Wrong Quilt , WILLIAMSBURG, Mass. »-That was a fine-looking quilt the Congregational Church women sold at their bazar. Trouble was, it wasn’t theirs. The banket had been mailed In as a project for a quilting bee and accidently got mixed up with tiie ^bazaar goods. Now the churchwomen are trying to find the lucky buyer so they can return the quilt to its rightful owner. NATIONAL BANK OF SOUTHFIELD MICHIGAN’S PROGRESSIVE INDEPENDENT BANK oilers a NEW LONG-TERM SAVINGS PLAN that GUARANTEES INTEREST# 6.49 2 EFFECTIVE RATE, ON 10 YEAR SAVINGS ' CERTIFICATES WHEN HELD TO MATURITY • Minimum amount $25,00. * Your funds will yield this NEW HIGH RATE of return because interest is compounded DAILY at the highest legal bank interest rate, and guaranteed for 10 years, regardless of Business or Market Changes or Interest Fluctuations. * You pan withdraw your money at any time on just GO days notice, and your funds will still accrue interest at the highest legal rate of 5% compounded daily. Deposits are Insured up to $15,000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation CLIP AND HAIL COUPON TODAY! j NATIONAL BANK OF SOUTHFIELD I 27J00 Lahser Road, Southfield, MiJh.|48075 * Enclosed is my check or Money Order In the amount of % I Please issue 10 Year*Savings Certificate with maturity value calculated j at 6.49% par annum, when held to full maturity. * (Name in which Certificate is to be issued) (Address) ^ “(Clty)^ (Zip) I ,...___________._________________________, , ..............____________!_______, i I (Signature of person requesting certificate) (Social Security No.) | Open Each Saturday Until 4:30 P.M.^ BEB NATIONAL BANKaf S8UTHHEID tfou/tr oCocaf, S*depeHcle*it MAIN OFFICE: 27100 Lahser Road (at U Mil* JdJTel. 3534400 BRANCH OFFICES A/ i y t Southfield Plaza Northland Point 12 Mile-Evergreen 17000 W. 8 Mile Rd. 15565 Northland Dr. 20000 W. 12 Mile Rd. Tel. 357-1300 * Tel. 353-5100 • Tel. 353-2000 THE E0NTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1966 SEARS BATH and SLUMBER SHOES ANNUAL check these low sale prices! Sears Mattress Specials Quilted 432-Coil Innerspring Unit or 6-in. Serofoam HKHmI ' Mattress Sale Regular $3.19 Twin. Prints say “CHARGE IT” at Sears Fill four linen closet with colorful combed cotton percale sheets in fresh petit point or floral prints, vibrant dots and stripes. Elasto-Fit corners on sanforized fitted sheets. Colorfast 190 threads per sq. inch after washing. Regular $49.95 Each' 6-in. Serofoam polyurethane foam mattress gives firm support and has elegant rayon satin cover. 432-coils in full size box sprints: 297 coils in twin size. Buy mattress,and matching box springs and save! Regular $1.19 Fall, Prints 3.8? 2 for $2.19 Pillowcases 2 for 1.87 Regular $2.79 Twin, Pastels 2.57 Regular $3.09 Fall, Pastels 2.87 2 for $1.59, Pillowcases 2 for 1.37 choice of innerspring or 6-ineli Serofoam Save on Sears Duo-Tone Dot Regular Q37 $419, l4ll O Regular $59.95, Full or Twin Size Save on White Percales New sleeping luxury! Dacron polyester is quilted to top. Firm polnrethane foam core. Lovely rose panel print cover, or matching box springs. Buy this matched set and save during this white sale!. A shower of pale and medium tones on white Solid color borders. Reg 83 Twin Size 2.87 Reg. $2 19 Pillowcases pr 1.82 Reg. $2.69, Full Size Reg. $1.39. Pillowcase* Standard Mattress or Box Spring in Serofoam or Springs Regular $79.95 Full or Twin Size Sears For Ail Your “White Goods” and Save! Standard 54x75-in. full size or 39x75-in. twin size. Choice of same deluxe foam latex ir innerspring construction. Choice of full or twin sizes at the same low price. Shop at Sears for all your bedding needs! Regular $239.95 Queen Size ** -Combination Set 169.88 Regular $319.95 King Size Combination Set 219.88 FumitureJDept.. Second Floor OPEN Til 9 Tonite, Thurs.. and Friday! Sears will Close at 5:30 Sat See Sears Kenmore Sewing Machines « MO ONLY In Portable Base Sew Zig-Zag and straight stitches either forward or reverse, do applique work, sew on buttons, make buttonholes, overcast, baste, mend, darn and monogram. Make all these latest fashions in your favorite fabrics and colors, in the comfort of your own home. This Kenmore sewing machine comes in portable base. A value you want to see at this low price. Sewing Machine Department. Main Floor' Canister Cleaner A Sears Kenmore »JBSpSpi Priced Lower Now 1 Window tenes Regularly at $44.99 Our finest rayon and acetate boucle draperies ere cotton lined and lavished with expensive styling details. A full range of designer colorsincludes linen, Copper and white. Regular $10.9|, 50x63-inch Draperies 7.99 p Regular $23.99,100x63*inch Draperies 18.99 p Regular $12.99, 50x84-inch Draperies > 7.-i 9.99 p Regular $29.99,100x84-inch Draperies . 24.99 p ", . Drapery Department, Main Floor, •^Complete With combination rubber floor tool, wand and hose • *"15 foot cord easily wraps around cleaner for convenient storage •'"Handy disposable paper dust bags and built-in top carrying handle 12 feet Wide-by 84 inches long You Can Count on Us Quality Costs No More at Sears Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171