FASCINATION — Five-year-old Robbie Patrick, son of The Weather --------1 THE Home Edition • NTIAC PRES \ • ; PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DE£EMB£R 5, *960 V#'3 i. » * 'x jj 1 - VOL. 127 — NO. 259 ★ ★ ★ ★ rED PRESS at A OTB'C INTERNATIONAL ----A nlrt/S State Senate Okays School-Aid Measure From Our News Wires LANSING—The Michigan Senate gave final approval today to Gov. William G. Milliken’s $1-billion state school aid bill, including $25 million for parochiaid schools, and sent it to the House. The actidn, accomplished by a negative vote refusing to reconsider and overturn the earlier favorable vote, ended a lVi-day effort by parochiaid foes to block the bill, which is a major part of Gov. William Milliken’s educational reform package. ★ ★ 5r. Today’s vote was 20-14, a bare majority, against reconsideration. The Senate originally gave its approval in- a 22-15 vote in November, but rar. aim mrs. cm rairicK, L>exingion, waieriora xqwn- ship, seemed delighted yesterday by the Marchris Marionettes at the Pontiac Mall. Robbie, who has cerebral palsy, was one of some 25 children from the Oakland uounty society for Crippled Children invited to attend the marionette show presented by Marc (left) and Chris Chandler. School Center Stall Ending By MARY SUNDSTROM With a cut in educational facilities, reshuffling, of construction Rinds, and cooperation of the State Legislature, construction of Pontiac Schools’ Human Resource Center can begin nett month. The cue and reshuffling were accomplished last night as the Pontiac School Hoard expressed its intent to proceed with construction of the center. The legislatives cooperation has been partly provided. ★ w ★ The board adopted the changes in a plan proposed by administrators and the center’s designers. Board members Russell Brown and Christopher Brown were" absent. Under this plan, portions of the two elementary school wings will be left uncompleted until more funds are available. This will cut enrollment by400 pupils. PLAGUED WITH TROUBLE The center, originally, planned to house 1,800 elementary pupils mid community facilities, has been plagued with finan- Other School Stories, Pages B-10, D*10 rial troubles, namely, high bids and the threatened loss of a $l.l-million federal grant. Designers of the project have been going over bids since they were opened Nov. 4 and found to be about $2 million above available funds, to determine where costs could be cut. David Lewis of Urban Design Associates, Pittsburg, Pa., suggested to Carryover Surplus Is Likely to Put Budget in the Black Revenues in the Pontiac School District are expected to exceed **• ' penditures this year, due to a surplus carryover from last year’s budget of about fli million. An interim operating budget for 1969-70 of $20.1 million was unanimously adopted by the Pontiac Board of Education last In Today's Press Groveland Township Citizens’ group seeking to obtain fire equipment — PAGE . A-3. Tate Murders Woman suspect to testify before grand jury today — PAGE A-4. * Jackson Slaying Black publisher is murdered - PAGE B-8. Area News ..............ITA-S Astrology .............. D-6 ’ Bridge . Crossword Puzzle ..... Comics I............ Editorials .1....... Farm and Garden .... High School ... night. Board members Russell Brown and Christopher Brown were absent. *■ . ★ ★ About $21.3 million is expected to be available for operation this year, according to Schools Business Manager Vernon Schiller. The carryover was planned at the time of voter approval of a 6.25-mill increase in March 1968, in hopes of extending use of the inillage for five years, said Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P, Whitmer. ANTICIPATED DEFICITS He explained that the plan was to build up a balance during the -first two years of millage revenue to pay for anticipated deficits in the fourth and fifth years after millage approval. The millage is in its second year. The record budget adopted last night — $2.4 million higher than last year’s — is not the final operating budget, Schiller explained. NOT YET COMPLETED He said the final budget will be presented to the board.when salaries and wages for all employe classifications have 'been determined. Contract negotiations with administrators and scretaries have not yet been completed. The largest, budget increase — $2.1 million over last year — is in instruction, including teacher salaries. ') , i for ail personnel in the school1 district amount to 86.8 per cent of all expenditures. All other expenditures for operation total only 13.2 per cent. -Salaries - for instructional personnel itfll 77.1 per cent of all costs. * * * Transportation costs total one per cent; flxpd charges, 2.2 per cent; ad-ministration, 3.95 per cent; operation and maintenance 13.9 per cent and other (attendance, health, food services, etc.) 1.86 per cent of ill expenditures. the board that the entire project could be built foir $8.5 million, except for part of twb of the mdUBng*s wings. The board approved this plan, including the stipulation that the elementary wings be completed for the additional 400 pupils when funds ($400,000 at today’s prices) are available. DEVISED A PLAN Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer said school officials had devised a plan to make $5.6 million available for construction. He said about $4.6 million is available now from the October 1967 bond issue, the March 1968 bond issue, a $1.1 million grant from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and Oakland Schools reimbursements for special education facilities in the center. ★ ★ * An additional $1 million could be added to the available amount by borrowing funds from the March 1968 bond issue, now earmarked for other purposes, Whitmer explained. He said $500,000, tentatively reserved for elementary school rehabilitation and another $500,000, tentatively reserved for equipment, furniture and “contingencies for the planned new Central High School, could be borrowed for construction of the center. SMALL BOND ISSUE? Whitmer said these two $500,000 fund additions could be replaced for their original purpose either by presenting voters with a small bond issue in. the next year or two; or by selling $1 million worth of bonds, in 1973. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) Bookstore Clerk Found Guilty in Magazine Sale A Pontiac mao faces a one-year jail term after being convicted today of selling an obscene magazine to a 15-year-old girl in a downtown bookstore. George M. Williamson, 25, of 784 Auburn was found guilty by Oakland County Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem. ■k -k it Williamson, a part-time employe at the Adults Only Bookstore, 12 N. Saginaw, sold the magazine to the teen-ager last April. State law prohibits the sale of obscene material to anyone under 18 years of age. The girl, now 16 and an 11th grader at Pontiac Northern High, purchased the magazine on the instructions of Pontiac police who had asked her assistance in making a case against the sale of such material. SUSPICIOUS During his trial, Williamson testified that he was suspicious of the girl’s age but did not ask for identification after being told by another clerk that she was “all right.” In his closing statement, Assistant Prosecutor Charles Cooper pointed out that Williamson had stated on the witness stand that he knew the contents of the magazine and that it was his job to ask for proof of age. Williamson, employed full time as a press operator at Pontiac Motor Division, will be sentenced by Judge Ziem Jan. 6. He was released on $1,000 bond. Ziem decided the case after Williamson had waived his right to a jury trial. * * it Cases are still pending against two other clerks from other Pontiac stores where the girl purchased similar magazines while Working for police. Police have requested that the girl’s name be withheld. opponents of the parochiaid section had the bill held over for the second vote. A defeat for the bill, considered the keystone to Milliken’s package, would have killed any chances of passage of any portion of it this year. Parochiaid opponents, who had successfully blocked a final vote on the bill last night, staged a number of delaying tactics during the morning in an attempt to stall a vote today. ★ ★ ★ At one point, State Sen, Basil Brown, D-Detroit, began reading from the Book of Genesis in what he said was an attempt to explain his position on the matter. Brown is a vigorous parochiaid opponent. After Brown had read for five minutes, he was stopped by presiding officer Thomas A. Schweigert, R-Petoskey. Schweigert said Brown was merely attempting to filibuster. The decision was upheld by the Senate. Today’s vote also was a victory for Senate Republican leader Emil Lock-wood, R-St. Louis, who had been out-maneuvered by parochiaid' opponents last night when he attempted to get the bill moved. Anxious to get the bill out of the Senate once and for all, Lockwood surprised his colleagues by securing a “call of the Senate,” a maneuver in which all the lawmakers are locked in the chamber. Parochiaid foes immediately launched a filibuster which ended two hours later in a 17-16 vote to adjourn. WAS IN LOUNGE Lockwood, expecting the filibuster to last into the night, had retired to a Senate lounge and was himself surprised by the unexpected move to adjourn. The vote was taken before he could move to keep the votes he was counting on his side. , it- * * ' Sen. James G. Fleming, R-Jackson, cast the deciding vote to adjourn. Fleming said he voted for adjournment because he “deplored” Lockwood's strategy and felt Lockwood was being “unfair.” LEADERS OF FILIBUSTER Sens. James D. Gray, D-Warreq, Roger Craig, D-Uearborn and L. Harvey Lodge, R-Waterford Township, led the talkathon. Lodge lambasted Lockwood and his followers, saying, “The stench of tills permeates the Senate. You’ll answer for your perfidity.” Ex-Hospital Chief Sues Trustee Board By DICK ROBINSON A $300,000 suit was filed this morning against the Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees by former hospital administrator Harold B. Euler, fired last June. Euler of 133 Ottawa and his wife Genevieve are seeking the damages in Oakland County Circuit Court stemming from the fact the 11 trustees wouldn’t tell Euler specifically why he was tired. ★ it it The Eulers allege that the trustees’ actions and statements after the firing were “false, libelous and defamatory,” caused Euler “loss of financial gain as a businessman” and resulted in “great mental anguish, pain, suffering and humiliation.” Mrs. Euler, semi-incapacitated, claims she suffered a relapse of medically unexplainable blackouts following the “shocking” .dismissal of her husband June 19. DEFENDANTS NAMED Named as defendants in the suit are trustees Lynn >D. Allen Jr., Aleck Capsalis, John L. Duke, John W. Emerson, Robert P. Grant, Harold S. Goldberg, John Munro, Mrs. B. B. Roush, Isaac Smoot, Elwood C. West and Victor Woods. Euler was unanimously fired by the board 11 months before he could have retired at age 65. The former administrator says he “watched in amazement and shock” as “the defendants refused twice to discuss the matter” with him. They 1 him to have his desk cleared out by n the following day.” The suit contends the trustees’ “conspired to injure Euler’s reputation” and on several occasions denied him a hearing, an opportunity to resign or a satisfactory explanation of why he was fired. ‘LACK OF COMMUNICATION’ At first, board chairman Capsalis offered the reason that the firing was “in the. best interest of the hospital.” Later the board said Euler was fired because of a “lack of communication” with the board. 5 Euler’s attorney, Clarence K. Patterson of 804 Community National Bank Building, said the board refused to “acknowledge ‘lack Qf communication’ was the only reason.” k * * Patterson explains that he sent a letter to the trustees Aug. 28 demanding that they make public the reasons Euler was fired, to clear him of the inference that he was “guilty of gross impropriety” or he “wasn’t qualified to hold that office.” The trustees replied Sept. 18 through their lawyer, City Law Director Sherwin (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5) Woman Heads Church DETROIT (AP) — “Our old ways of doing things are not adequate,” says the first woman president of the National Council of Churches. “There must be big. changes and they must be made faster than we think possible.” One of the first changes recommended by Cynthia Wedel, elected to the church post yesterday, is the granting of a great deal more power to blacjts in the organization. , Related Story, Page B-l She predicted th&y would get more power in high 6ouncil posts and pledged that she would be open to guidance from them and from the young and poor. Mrs. Wedel, an Episcopalian from Alexandria, Va„ was elected near the close of the interdenominational or-ganzjtion's triennial general assembly. STEP TOWARD CHANGE She suceeds Dr. Arthur Flemming, a Methodist; as head of the council which includes 33 Protestant and Orthodox denominations with 42 million members. In a step toward change aimed at broadening council membership, the assembly authorized council leaders to explore with nonmember denominations their possible, participation in a more flexible organization. In it, members could choose what programs they wanted to share or avoid. Mrs. Wedel won election yesterday over a Negro clergyman, the Rev. Dr. Albert Cleague, pastor of Detroit’s Church of the Black Madonna, by a vote of 382 to 93. In reaction Dr. Cleague called the council “a white racist ihstitution” that lacks sensitivity to the “fires Of anguish ' in people” and the plight of blacks, Indians and the poor. BLACK CANDIDATE LOSES Another black candidate, the Rev. Leon Watts of New York, an African Methodist Episcopal Zion minister, was defeated in a bid to become the council’s general secretary, its top administrative post. He lost to the incumbent, Dr. R. H. Edwin Espy, a White Baptist, by a vote qf 100 to 382. , Rain Possible on the Weekend Rain, rather than snow, may hit the area by Sunday, according to weather predictions. TODAY — Mostly sunny and warmer. High 34 to 39. Increasing cloudiness tonight. Lows 25 to 30. TOMORROW — Mostly cloudy and warmer. High in the mid 40s. SUNDAY — Cloudy and warmer with a chance of rain. Probabilities of precipitation are 5 per cent today, 5 per cent tonight and 20 per cent tomorrow. The low temperature before 8 a.m. was a brisk 21 jp' downtown Pontiac. By 12:30 p.m. the ihercury had climbed to 32. A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER & 1969- Vietcong to Observe 3-Day Holiday Truces SAIGON , (AP) - The Vietcong announced today that its forces would observe Christmas and New Year’s truces of three days each, two days longer than those proclaimed yesterday by the Saigon government. / The Vietcong radio said the Christmas truce would start at 1 a.m. Dec. 24 (noon Pontiac time Dec. 23) and end at 1 a.m. Dec. 27. It said the New Year’s truce would run from 1 a.m. (Pontiac time) Dec. 30 to 1 a.m. Jan. 2. President Nguyen .Van Thieu pro* claimed 24-hour cease-fires'to start at 6 p.m. Christmas Eve and 6 p.m. New Year’s Eve. The U.S. Command said American forces would join in the truce proclaimed by Thieu. A h ■ • The U.S. Command said today it had received reports for the first time in the war that North Vietnamese army officers executed at least a dozen of their soldiers who tried to desert. In a special memorandum to newsmen, thp command said armed guards to prevent desertions were reported accompanying North Vietnamese units' infiltrating Into the South. Desertion has been a problem in the South Vietnamese army for years, i Sr A * "• The U.S. Command said Its reports came from three North Vietnamese defectors who escaped last August and September. Two of them said they were pirates, both bom in Ha Tay Province and both with the North Vietnamese army’s 3rd Division. (( . ■■ Of • 0 ■ A One, 17 years void, arrived in South Vietnam last March. He reported that “a number of men from his battalion deserted in North Vietnam while moving south and that 10 soldiers who attempted to desert were shot by the unit’s officers,” the U.S. statement said. The other private, 32, said he arrived in the South last April and that his pnit was under guard on the way doom because 35 men had deserted. The third defector, a 16-year-old guerrilla, told interrogators that he saw the bodies of two soldiers who had deserted from their unit near Hue in September and were captured by a North Vietnamese sapper battalion. Talks Reportedly Proposed U. S. Contacts Red China ■ I RELEASED YANKS BACK—Spec. 4 Herman E. Hofstatter (on stretcher) wears a big smile as his mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hofstatter, greet him aboard the plane at Glenview Naval Air Station, 111., yesterday after his arrival from Korea. Behind Hofstatter are the other two helicopter crewmen released with him, Capt. David H. Crawford (1ft) of Pooler, Ga., and WO Malcolm V. Loepke • of Richmond, Ind. The three were released this week by North Korea where their helicopter was shot down Aug. 17. Hofstatter has a wound in his right knee. WASHINGTON (UPD - The United States has made a high-level contact with mainland China — and may have urged that the two nations resume ambassadorial talks. The State Department, adopting an extremely cautious attitude, acknowledged only that the U.S. ambassador to Poland, Walter J. Stoessel Jr., and “Chinese officials” met Wednesday at a Yugoslav reception in the Palace of Culture in Warsaw. ★ A ★ Privately, State Department officials said Stoessel conferred briefly at the reception with an aide of the Communist Chinese charge d’affaires, Lei Yang. They characterized the meeting as a “chance encounter” but gave the impression the two diplomats did more than merely exchange pleasantries. U.S. analysts, however, remained cautious on the pros-. ’ pects of renewing the talks. They said they detected nothing ' in Peking’s public posture to indicate China was ready to talk again. Probably further quiet diplomatic exchanges will be required to set in motion the machinery for renewing the discussions. Secretary of State William P. Rogers is on record in favixr of renewing the U.$.-Cammtinist Chinese ambassadorial talk? in Warsaw or in another mutually acceptable city. The 135th meeting of these talks, which started in Geneva in 1955, Was postponed suddenly by Peking Feb. 18. Peking denounced the United States then for having granted political asylum to a high-ranking Communist Chinese diplomat two weeks earlier. 1 - rSjwftvI A A ® A Since the postponement, the Nixon administration has waited for an appropriate moment to try to get the talks going again. On Aug, 8 Rogers told the National Press Club in Canberra, Australia, the United-States would “soon be making another approach to see if a dialogue with Peking can be resumed.” At a Washington News conference 12 days later, Rogers said the approach would be made “at the appropriate, time.” On a CBS program Nov. 18, Rogers said, “We, Somewhere along the line," will -make a suggestion to renew the talks. ' - ,Tax Reform Passage Seen in '69 ! WASHINGTON (AP) - The chief House tax architect says despite major alterations made by the Senate in the tax reform bill, Congress will agree on legislation and send it to the President before Christmas. Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, said in an interview: “We simply have to finish it. . ★ A .★ . . “There would be too much confusion if we did not—for example on withholding the surtax after Dec. 31,” the Arkansas Democrat added. One provision in the massive bill continues the income surtax at 5 per cent through June 30,1970. Hie current 10 per cent surtax expires Dec. 31. " l ! Sr A ★ The Senate is scheduled to finish its work on the bill not later than next week. This would leave only a week and a half for a conference between the two bodies to reconcile the differences and for final action in both chambers before Christmas. ★ A ★ “We’d have to work late, but we could do it,” Mills said. The principal difference so far between the two bills results from adoption of an amendment by Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn.', to raise the personal income tax exemption from $600 to $800. This substitutes for a system of rafe reductions in the House measure. POSITION WELL-KNOWN Mills followed his usual rule of declining' advance comment on what stand he will take in the conference, where he will be chief House spokesman, but his general position is well-known. He thinks raising the personal exemption is a poor way to reduce taxes because it means more saving for a high-bracket than a low-bracket taxpayer. Moreover, he advocates a tax system with the fewest exemptions'and deductions and the lowest rates. But Mills also knows sentiment is strong in the House for the easily-understood increase in the personal exemption. A possible compromise would be a smaller increase in the exemption, coupled with t. an adjustment i n rates—especially the top rates on earned income, which Mills wants to reduce as provided in the House bill. ‘ALL THINGS POSSIBLE’ Mills’ only comment on this suggestion was “all sorts of things are possible.” The drive to enact the tax bill this year picked up even more steam yester- day when Sen.' Russell Long, D-La., who is handling the bill in the Senate, moved to add to it the 15 per cent Social Security benefit increase already approved by the Ways and Means Committee. A. a a The House is expected to pass the increase, in the form of a separate bill, next week. After that, Mills is expected to put aside his usual objection to irrelevant Senate amendments on House bills and accept the provision in the tax bill conference on the ground it is identical with legislation already approved by the House. Leaders Discuss Nixon Funding-Bill Threat 'Congress Won't Need ' WASHINGTON (AP) — Chairmen of the House and Senate appropriations' committees say Congress can complete work on money bills this year without a post-Christmas special session threatened by President Nixon. The President, meeting yesterday with Republican congressional leaders, warned he might call a special session for Dec. 26 unless all appropriations bills were acted on. A ■ A A “The President is very firm that action must be taken,” Senate GOP Leader Hugh Scott told reporters. The Weather ' Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Today mostly sunny and warmer. High 34 to 39. Tonight slowly increasing cloudiness. Low 25 to 30. Tomorrow mostly cloudy, warmer. High mid 40s. Sunday’s outlook cloudy and warmer with chance of rain. Winds north, 5 to 10 m.p.h. today becoming light and variable tonight. Probability of precipitation: 5 per cent today, 5 per cent tonight, 20 per cent tomorrow. Tada? In Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding l^a.m.: Jl Direction: North Sun ictt Friday at S:01 p.m. Sun rlaaa Saturday at 7:47 a.m. Moon tats Friday at 2:17 p.m. Moon rltat Saturday at 4:31 a.m. ' Downtown Temperatures s §.m. .........ss 11a.m. ........a 7 a.m........ n 12:30 p.m......3J Lowest temperature Weather: Snow. W Board Ready to Go on School Center (Continued From Page One) The school district can issue that amount in 1973 under state law because the total school district debt will be , under 5 per cent of the state equalized valuation, explained Whitmer, ★ ★ w ■ Lewis said his firm’s investigation of the bids also brought to light some discrepancies. H® said chalkboard bids were incorrect and about $100,006 too Congressional leaders had been planning to adjourn the current session before Christmas. SEES NO PROBLEM Although only five of the year’s 13 regular money bills have cleared Congress, Rep. George H. Mahon, D-Tex., chairman of the House committee, said “I see no serious problem. It’s our responsibility to do it and we will.” Sen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., chairman of the Senate, committee, said later during debate on a continuing resolution to keep federal agencies in operation until Congress adjourns, “I think we will get the bills through before ■the end of the session.” AAA But the usually optimistic Mike Mansfield, Senate Democratic leader, told a reporter “it’s going to be nip and tuck.” The keys, he said, are the $70-billion defense appropriations bill, scheduled for House action early next week, and the bill covering the departments of labor, and health, education and welfare, scheduled tube marked up by the Senate committee next Tuesday or Wednesday. 'No State Stress on Crib Deaths' Oakland County’s health director today discounted published reports . on the significance of new state assistance into the probe of the county’s crib deaths. “What we’re doing new since November, simply, Is using state facilities — Wayne State and Michigan State universities — to conduct tissue and blood samples of crib death victims,” Dr. Bernard Betpian explained. “The state has made certain facilities available to use all along,” Dr. Berman said. Earlier this week, Berman disputed a report by his deputy, Dr. Richard E. Olsen. Olsen had termed the 20 crib deaths from July through November “an epidemic.” t % “I believe Dr. Olsen and I differ on the word epidemic,” Berman said. “Epidemic means ‘sudden outbreak’ and I do not consider 20 crib deaths over five months a sudden outbreak.” “We’re concerned about crib deaths, of course, because we can’t yet prevent them. But next month we will have more than a dozen child deaths due to fires, falls and poisoning, and I would rather have parents more concerned about things they can prevent,” Dr. Berman said. Birmingham City, Po 'Salary Talks Stalemated BIRMINGHAM - The salary battle between the city and the Birmingham Police Officers Association still is stalemated. ^ No significant progress was made this week tow&rd resolving the Salary issue reportedly both sides a^e about $300 apart. , A A' * The BPOA’s current demand calls for a $10,600 maximum salary after 18 months service. The city’s latest counterproposal reportedly is $10,300. Noel Gage, the BPOA attorney, said some “clandestine” negotiations were held this week between some city officials and two oif the policemen in an attempt to work out a solution. * * . A ★ No fdrtnal negotiations with a mediator were held this week. Gage could not. say when the next formal negotiation would be scheduled. BLOOMFIELD HILLS — For the seventh consecutive year, a principal of the architectural firm of Tarapata-MacMahon-Paulsen Associates Inc. has earned an honor award for building design from the Detroit Chapter, American Institute of Architects. . A -A ★ |p Maurice B. Allen Jr., vice president of the firm and chief designer of the winning project,-accepted the award at a dinner at the Whittier Hotel in Detroit last night. A " A - . A The award was in recognition of the Campus Center building and residence Hall at General Motors Institute in Flint, the first phase of a GMI campus development prograip for which Tarapata-MacMahon-Paulsen Associates also prepared the master plan. 34 14 Jacksonville « 34 if Kansas City 4 l Miami Beach 74 32 I Milwaukee 30 14 i New Orleans 62 40 34 20 Seattle Ex-Hospital Head, Sues T rustee Board (Continued From Page One) M. Bimkrant, that they felt they didn’t defame Euler. The trustees asked for specific defamatory words. STATEMENTS CITED In a letter to Bimkrant Nov. 12, Patterson cited four statements. Bimkrant replied in a letter Nov. 24 which said, according to the suit: “Htere was no understandable basis for the trustees to give any further consideration to this matter ... it was never the intent of the board of trustees to, at any time, defame anyone.” Watchdog Panel Set for Judges WASHINGTON W) - Chief Justice Warren E. Burger today appointed 10 federal judges to oversee the off-bench activities of all federal judges. Three of the 10 judges, working together as a review committee, are to receive reports every three months of payments of more than $100 any federal judge acquires for out-of-court activity. ★ A A A second, seven-man committee will function as an advisory panel. This group will pass judgment on teaching, lecturing, writing, work with charitable organizations and. service on boards of colleges, churches and other nonprofit institutions. Burger’s announcement said this committee will give its opinions “upon request.” Presumably this means unless the seven review judges are asked what they think about an off-bench job they will give no advice nor render an opinion. Last month the U.S. Judicial Conference, sitting under Burgers’ leadership, decided to reverse a ban on most off-bench compensated activities that had been recommended in a spring meeting when Earl Warren was chief justice. The conference decided, while doing a turnabout, to have a three-judge panel receive—and keep secret—reports on any out-of-court job that paid more than $100. Burger said the two .committees will serve until the American Bar Association completes its current study of revising the canons of judicial ethics and until the new canons are adopted by the judicial conference. NATIONAL WEATHER—Rain or snow are forecast for tonight from the Mississippi Valley to the Rockies. Snow flurries will continue in the Northeast. Sunny and dry weather will prevail in the far west and from the eastern Mississippi, Valley to the Southeast. - j . , Also he said some miscellaneous metals were bid twice, adding about $50,000 to bids. . t ^ STATE RULING The other recent financial threat to the resource center was an attorney general’s ruling that a school district may not receive direct grants from the federal government, as was the case of the HUD grant. A A ■ A Legislation to rectify'the problem has passed the State House and is expected to pass the Senate sometime next week, Whitmer said. The bills must pass through both houses and be signed by the governor by Dec. 19. > A | ,A ■ -A- If the deadline i$n’t met, the project will have to be rebid, cabling, further delay in starting construction. A A. A Lewis said the outside walls of the entire center will be constructed, but the area for the additional 400 pupils will not have the inside walls constructed and completed until the funds are available. A ♦ ■ A . The projected center, to be built just east of City Hall, will accommodate all .pupils from. McConnell and Central schools and parts of Wilson and Baldwin,. It was designed with integration of pupils as a primary goal. I Did Not See Any Massacre' From Oar News Wires WASHINGTON (UPI)-Capt. Ernest L. Medina the man who was in charge and at the scene for nearly two hours when the alleged Song My massacre took place, has denied seeing or ordering a mass murder of Vietnamese civilians. With combat medals on his chest and criminal lawyer F. Lee Bailey at his side, Medina told a Pentagon news conference yesterday his version of the March 16,1968,-assault on Song My. CAPT. ERNEST MEDINA “No, I did not shoot any child in My Lai, and do, • I did not order any massacre in My Lai. I did not see any massacre in My Lai,” the 33-year-old Army captain said. “I did not see any civilians shot at My Lai. I did see some bodies of women and children that had been killed in My Lai ... there were approximately 20 to 28 civilians.” Medina’s comments were his first public statements about what happened at My Lai 4, a hamlet in Song My village, since the case fell into the world spotlight last month. \ ■ , Medina has not bpen charged/ but one of his subordinates, Lt William L. Galley Jr.,, faces court-martial in the deaths of at least 109 Song My civilians. Medina met the press in uniform and wearing the Silver Star and Bronze Star for gallantry, after appearing before a Pentagon panel which is trying to determine if the Army’s original investigation of the incident was proper. Calley was to appear before that panel today. Medina was critical of the nation’s news media for coverage of the affair, calling it “very biased and unfair." , He said some of those who were at My Lai and later released pictures or at counts of what happened did so, in somi cases, to make money. Some of the men who have voiced ac cusations about alleged killing o civilians at My Lai Were those “I’ve ha< certain disciplinary problems with,” hi said. 8 People Cabled for Upright Piano . . , “Eight calls from our Press Want Ad and a very quick safe at «/ good price.” Mr.’R. G. > UPRIGHT PIANO . PRESS WANT ADS are the marketplace for hundreds of sellers and buyers every day. Quick action, profitable results and low cost are reasons they are so satisfactory to use. Dial ' 334-4981 or 332*8181 b Won't Be a Jet Facility, Vows One Supervisor Airport Development Is Finally off Orion Twp. Airport development is finally under way in Orion Township. ★ yk * A matter of contention between county officials and area homeowners since its purchase by the county in 1982, the Oakland-Orion Airport s intended as a general aviation facility. 'This will be no 2,000 acre development, no jet facility,” promised Chris- tian F. Powell, R-West 'Bloomfield Township. Powell presented the finance committee’s recommendation that $250,000 be placed in a special contingency fund for airport development with $25,000 appropriated immediately tor engineering ' and topographical purveys, and investigation of land acquisition and development costs. The appropriation cleared the board on a 15-9 vote following considerable political maneuvering among board members. Even after the vote had heeo passed, there were supervisors who claimed confusion oh the issue. Lee Walker, D-Madison Heights, was one of those who said he believed he was voting on a mo- tion to end debate, rather than to approve the appropriation. Charles Edwards Jr., board chairman, had been heard to state however, that the roll call vote was on the main motion. ' A Prior to the final vote,' an attempt \io dii/ide' the Question arid vote on the $25,000 separate from the $250,000 appropriation was ruled out of order. Another attempt.to amend the $250,000 figure to $25,000 went down to defeat on 13-11 vote. WWW Republicans held the fine in favor of the $250,000 appropriation, they were joined on bQth votes by William Ej. Mainland D-Milford. Edwards and Thomas O’Donoghue, D-Femdale, joined on the final vote. The $25,000 will determine what actual development will take place. However, a paved 3,500-foot runway running east rad west, north of the present strip is a prime matter for consideration, it was said. ■' * ' f V'f' V" ' Development of the field was termed an invitation to commerce and industry to move into Oakland County by Powell. Supervisor Seeks Crib Death Probe meetings four times a year so that the public might attend. Two of the meetings will include hearings on both the tentative and final county budgets, w. w w . An extension was granted in the lease agreement with the U.S. Army Reserve so that it might have more time to draw up plans for a combined Army-Navy Reserve Training Station on property it has leased at the County Service Center. Construction is expected late next year. Supervisor Carl O’Brien offered a resolution referred to the equalization committee which called for a %-mill tax reduction in the 15-mill allocation. He asked that the Tax Allocation Board initiate procedure to provide for a vote of the people. w w .w The allocation board which earlier this year had considered seeking a hike to 18 mills and setting up fixed allocations for the county, the schools, townships and the Intermediate School District has abandoned its intent to proceed. Henry Schiffer, chairman, recently reported that action had been called off in view of Gov. Milliken’s proposed education reform program which could significantly change present methods of school funding. COMPUTER ACCOUNTING A more detailed county accounting procedure using computers was requested in a resolution presented by Supervisor George Grba, D-Pontiac. The matter was referred to committee. w w w ' 11 An attempt to end any influence ort‘ supervisor voting was offered b y Supervisor Lew Coy, R-Wixom. Coy asked that roll call votes be rotated, each vote to be initiated within the next name on the alphabetical list. This, tool was referred to committee. Owner of Junkyard Wins Extension on Cleanup Time . COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — An extension through Jan. 7 has been granted to junkyard owner Harold Rayberg for removing old cars from part of his property. “There’s been a big improvement,” said township supervisor Robert Long. “There isn’t too much actual junk left in the front.” ★ ★ “If he keeps at it this is all we can ask. He can’t do it overnight,” he added. , Last Oct. 22 Rayberg had been given 30 days to clear the mounds of old autos from much of his 15 acres of property bordering Pontiac Trail. ORDERED TO COMPLY Circuit Judge 1 James S. Thorburn had told Rayberg to comply with an order originally made in 1964 but apparently not followed, to place all operations for tfip sale, dismantling and storage of cars on'the back 720 feet of his land. He was told to dear up and no longer use the east five acres and the first 600 feet for any other purpose than residential. Rayberg said, “I’rh working very hard to clean up the front and beautify it. The biggest problem is labor — I can’t find any help — and also the cold and Vehicle maintenance. I’m working ,15-17 hours a day/ seven days a week. I’m trying my best.” . k k k The fight between Rayberg andrthe township started in 1960 when residents first complained, according to Long. Complaints were filed in Justice Court and Rayberg was found guilty of illegally holding used cars and junk and displaying used parts for sale. ★ ★ He was fined and sentenced to 30 days in jail but neyer went because his attorney filed a series of apeajs. The township returned to court in 1964 and received toe ver-diet reissued by Judge Thorburn. When Rayberg aparently didn’t comply, the township returned to court last October. Injunction Sought on Sewer WIXOM — Irate residents of Birch Park Subdivision have filed for a temporary injunction to prevent further construction of a controversial storm sewer. Circuit Judge William R. Beasley granted a temporary restraining order this week. The court will hear the motion for toe temporary injunction at 9 a.m. Wednesday. ★. rk k The City Council had ordered resumption of work on a 36-inch drain, which empties into Loon Lake near a bathing beach, at a meeting last' month. Previously, work had been stopped pending meetings on possible pollution of the lake from waters entering through the drain. ’ , , — Attorney John McGrath explained “My clients are not opposed to the “Basically we sued alleging that toe 12- paving project itself nor really to the inch drain already in, plus the proposed drain provided that it can be constructed 36-inch storm sewer, would cause pollu- without pollution to the lake,” added tion In toe beach area. N McGraff. nsonerDFI?s' * , Leaving Police to Obtain Fire Equipment with Red Faces available to local government bodies on a loan-type basis. He added the “excess” equipment is not given outright to townships. “It would amount to t? loan, and the township would be responsible for the housing and maintenance of the equipment while using it.” Betts said the housing factor could ( present problems, since erection of a fire station would be expensive and entail a tax increase. SHERIFF SUBSTATION Inquiries have been made, he said, regarding use of garage space in the county’s sheriff substation at the Grange Hall-Dixie intersection. Betts noted that he was advised by a Natural Resources Department official that the' township is now high up on the priority list for obtaining the government equipment. k ' k k Tho township’s financial responsibilities for the maintenance and housing of the equipment would probably be met by converting the funds that are now used to pay the cost-per-call fees to the other townships to the maintenance and housing needs. Several township men are now un- Bishop Emrich to Talk on Viet Massacres UTICA — The Rt. Rev. Richard S. Emrich, Episcopal- Bishop of Michigan, will speak on “The Deepest meaning of the Vietnamese Massacres” at Utica High School auditorium, 47255 Shelby at 8 p.m. Monday. Bishop Emrich’s appearance is part of the Utica-Shelby-Sterling Human Relation Council lecture series. Previously scheduled to talk on the lecture series’s general theme of community involvement, the bishop requested to change the topic to the Vietnam massacre situation because of the timeliness and importance of the topic, according to a Human Relations Council spokesman. pole (left); the rear stopped 42 feet away. Campbell, thrown to the sidewalk by the impact, was reported in serious condition. Fire Station Invitation COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — Residents are invited to inspect the new Fire Station 3 facilities at 2150 Welch, 14 p.m. Sunday.1 By NED ADAMSON GROVELAND TOWNSHIP - A citizens’ committee is attempting a grass-roots drive to obtain fire protection equipment for the township. Currently the township’s firefighting needs are serviced by volunteer fire departments from Holly, Springfield and Brandon Townships on a $150-per-call basis. k k k Howard Betts, 12605 Hawley, citizens’ committee chairman, said the increasing work load of the neighboring fire departments and expenses involved to acquire their services make it imperative that Groveland establish its own fire-fighting operation within the township. k k k He noted that Groveland is the only township in Oakland County that doesn’t have its own fire-fighting equipment and facilities. PETITIONS CIRCULATING Betts said petitions are now circulating throughout the township in order to measure citizen thinking on the fire department situation. “We are trying to establish what the honest opinion of the pople is regarding having their own fire-fighting capability. We certainly don’t want to make an issue of this situation if the people don’t want it k. k k “Generally we have tound that the residents do not seem to get aroused about fire protection needs. However, the committee and, we hope, most of the citizens feel that as property owners, we should have some type of our own fire protection,” Betts remarked. He said the project does not call for a tax increase. ‘EXCESS’ EQUIPMENT Betts explained the township is attempting to secure “excess” fire equipment through the Michigan Department of Natural Resources and the federal government. He said most of this type of firefighting equipment was formerly used on military installations and Is made dergoing training in fire protection firefighting and first-aid under the assumption that the equipment will soon be forthcoming.'Fire Marshal Ted Schmidt is directing the training. SPRING COMPLETION Betts could not speculate when fire equipment plight be available, but he said the committee hopes to have the project completed by spring if the Township Board and citizens show full interest and cooperation in supporting the drive for fire equipment. k k k Betts indicated the Township Boartl has reacted favorably regarding the fire equipment drive and has assigned one of its members to work with the citizens’ committee on the project. Lapeer Man Dies as Truck Hits Tree LAPEER — A Lapeer man was killed last night when he lost control of his pickup truck and crashed into a tree. Lapeer County sheriff’s deputies said Ronald Rdssell, 41, of 1646 W. Genesee was killed when his truck went off the road six miles east of Lapeer on M21, just west of Force Road in Attica Township. k k k Russell was taken to Lapeer County General Hospital by deputies, where he was pronounced dead on arrival at 10 p.m. BIRMINGHAM — Some Birmingham policemen are wearing red faces today. Earl Prather Jr., 24, a police prisoner, had been brought to the local police station to testify in a burglary case. He has been serving a 10-year sentence for a burglary offense in the state prison in Ionia. __ . ★ ★ * While in the Birmingham station, Prather had visitation rights with his parents. Following the visitation, Prather was left unobserved for what police described as “a short time.” Prather took the opportunity to escape through a lavatory window. LECTURE ILLUSTRATED The prisoner was left unobserved when the two officers on station duty became occupied in a lecture to a group of citizens. The lecture was reportedly on “How to Run a Police Station.” Officials planned no disciplinary action against the two duty officers. Prather was still at bay as of this morning. Police described him as white, 6-1,160 pounds with hazel eyes and light brown hair. Police are asking anyone seeing a man of this description to notify .the police headquarters. Sniper Flushed After Hitting 2 In a followup barrage of tear gas, the man’s room caught fire. He fled and police made their capture. Chief Inspector Robert Kroner said the man smashed through the bedroom door and tumbled . down the stairs, where Kroner said he subdued him. * * * Police identified the suspect as Ohan-nes J. Dersarkissian, about 46. They said he had lived in the building one month. Dersarkissian was charged with murder, assault with Intent to kill and violation of the firearms law. The dead man, tentatively identified as Nathaniel Brown, was lying at tl?e third -story landing when police entered the building, i , t , : The wounded man, William Miller, 38, was found lying on a sidewalk outside the building. Police retrieved him shortly after the shooting began. Miller was reported ih satisfactory condition with a back wound. Nonresident Tuition Up in West Bloomfield WEST BLOOMFIELD - Tuition rates for nonresident students have been raised considerably by the school board. Elementary school students will pay $370 tuition and secondary students $400 the board decided this week. Rates were $280 and $380 last year. PITTSBURGH (AP) A sniper killed one man and wounded another last night before exchanging- fire with policemen for nearly three hours. He finally was flushed from a rooming house. The gunman fired sporadically into the street even though police hurled barrage after barrage of tear gas into the building. He hurled back several tear gas cannisters. Police were summoned to the building, in the city’s Hill District, about 10 p.m. At one point, police opened up on the building for 30 seconds with machine guns, rifles, pistols and tear gas. The man withstood the fusillade. DRIVER LIVED - Curtis L. Campbell of Atlantic Mine, Mich., survived the smashup of his small sports car near Hancock earlier this week. The car was torn in half when it slammed into a utility pole. The front rests against the Open til 9:30 ^Kl CMtftnat Dresser, Framed Mirror, Chest, Bed, Mettrass, and Bex Spring, Sofa ' and Chairs, 2 Step Tables j Coffee Table, 2 Lamps, 5*Pc. Dinette 36 Months to Pay Plenty of ladies1 Matching Skirts, Stacks, Sweaters and Dresses. Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center 'bookcase IF 2135 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph Rd. FURNITIH PH 324-493/ GLOBE A—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. DECtBMBER 5, 1969 "wore Gfcmd Jury Today Woman to Testify in Tate Murders nippie-siyie cian wun conspiracy to commit murder. Attorney Richard Caballero • said Thursday night that Susan T Denise Atkins, 21, will waive v rights against self-incrimination and “tell the grand jury what happened” in a that her voluntary might save her from ^he - chamber. ★ * * ~ Miss Atkins, charged with murder in a separate case, accompanied members of the clan as they killed Miss Tate, actress-wife of Polish film director Roman Polanski, and the others last summer, Caballero said. ' But he said she was temporarily insane, under the clan leader’s S “hypnotic spell” at the time and ■" “had nothing to do with the murders.” Miss Atkins’ jail cell conversations led to arrests in the Tate J case. But the Los Angeles Times, to which Caballero made % his statements, said prosecutors ' were expected to seek her in-dictment anyway. MELCHER TO TESTIFY Also among the 18 scheduled witnesses was producer Terry Melcher, 27-year-old son of singer-actress Doris Day. Melcher has declined comment. - Miss Atkins’ attorneys said . Melcher was visited by Charles ; M. Manson, 35, known as the leader of a quasireligious clan ' of hippie types who knew Man-son as “Goa” and “Satan.” ★ * * Manson was unsuccessful in ; seeking Melcher’s help to' - record some songs when Melch-; er lived in the Tate home in v fashionable Bel Air before Miss £ Tate and her husband moved in, ?the attorneys said. " Deputy Dist. Atty. Aaron : Stovitz said Thursday he would ask the grand jury to Indict Mobile, Ala,; Charles D. Vat-son, 24, jaHed in McKinney, Tex.; and Linda Louise Kasa-bian, 20, arraigned here Thursday. Police said they were arrested on murder warrants in the Tate case and were involved in the LaBianea slayings. In addition to them and Miss Atkins, the Times said, others against whom prosecutors are expected to seek indictments Steve Grogan, 18, also known as Clem Tufts, and Leslie Sankston, about 20, a young ""'man. The newspaper identi-them as members of Man-son’s hippie-style “family.” Stovitz said Atkins, SOUGHT KILLERS - Paul J. Tate, father of actress Sharon Tate, is shown in this recent Defense Department photo before he resigned as an Army intelligence lieutenant colonel to search for his daughter’s killers. Tate, 46, said he grew a mustache and beard to masquerade as a hippie during his four-month search. He declined to say how successful he had been. Manson on a charge of conspiracy to commit murder, and would seek murder and conspiracy indictments against at least five other persons. THEFT SUSPECT It was the first word that Manson, held for trial in Independence, Calif., on charges of possessing stolen property, and driving a stolen vehicle, would be a target for prosecution in the Slayings. Shot or stabbed with Miss Tate, 26, at her rented 8200,000; home last Aug. 9 were Hollywood hair stylist Jay Sebring, coffee heiress Abigail Fol-, 26, Polish playboy Voityck Frokowsky, 37, and Steven Parent, 18, a friend of the caretak- Case Histories Go Way Back CUMBERLAND, Md. (AP) -' A casual reader of the records at the Sacred Heart Hospital . recently might have wondered v what year this is. ★ ★ ★ Two of the patients were named John Hancock and , Daniel Boone. charged v _ „ musician Gary Hinman, with whom Manson is said to have lived for a time, told a cell mate about the Tate and LaBianea killings. The cell mate — Shelley Joyce Nadell, 31, of nearby^North Hollywood, charged with forging prescriptions to obtain narcotics —told Miss Atkins’ story to police, Stovitz said. According to her account, clan members kjlled some persons in addition to the Tate and LaBianea victims, Stovitz said, but Mrs. Nadell did not specify how many or who they were. Wesley Russell, attorney Mrs. Nadell, said she told him she learned clan members “felt the stabbings and the brutal cuttings would help release the souls of the victims.” ★ •• W “They were all on add and the more they stabbed, the more they enjoyed it,” Russell, a former deputy district attorney, said he Was told. He said Mrs. Nadell “broke the case” by telling police about Miss Atkins’ statements. But Stovitz said: “The Atkins girl talked to others and we have a statement from one other wit- Stovitz said Miss Atkins could become one of the prosecution’s “principal witnesses” if she waives her privilege against self-incrimination. Neither she nor any of the other witnesses would be granted immunity, Stovitz said. * * * An attorney for Mrs. Kasa-bian said she “definitely” had nothing to do with any of the slayings and has only “scuttle-but” knowledge about them. But the attorney said he would seek to keep Mrs. Kasa-bian separate from others in custody because “That jail is full of people involved in this thing.1' A wealthy market executive, Leno LaBianea, 44, and his wife Rosemary, 38, were stabbed death at their Hollywood home the next day. Miss Adkins’ lawyers said she told them that members of Man-i’s group, who dressed in black for the occasion, committed the Tate slayings, then killed the LaBiancas to prove their nerve. They reported said Manson was not with them. OTHERS CHARGED Police have said three of the indictment targets are Patricia Krenwinkel, 21, in custody in OPEN SUNDAY 12 - 5 P.M. 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Patch pockats, shirt cuffs, 3 leather but- THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, I9B9 r—is. | jSl Ex-Army Rebel Sticks to Radical Path I jjp^ Q^||y g ^ g NEW YORK (UPI) - Dr. Howard B. Levy,1" the dermatologist who as an Army captain refused to train Green Beret medics headed for Viet* nam, is out of prison now and remains ardently opposed to the war.' \ j But instead of leading antiwar protests, the Brooklyn-bom physician is energetically! working within a health research group that demands j radical changes in the American system of medical care. He’s confident that a major revolt is brewing among the professionals. Levy, 32, began working for'sentence was to expire, so that the Health Policy Advisory the case could remain active Center (Health PAC) this fall and his American Civil shortly after he finished serving Liberties Union lawyer could 26 months in prison. pursue ah appeal through the ★ ★ ★ , > 'courts. 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T: ,. ★ ★ ★ The jurist’s plea for institutional provision short of jail commitment for such unfortu- MOORE nates, however, faces opposition on the part of County authorities who have approved a comprehensive program for treatment of drug addicts. The organizational plan, after many months delay in creation at a cost of $6,000, would take six months to implement. ' ★ ★ ★ But in the drug-abuse area, time is of the essence, and immediate action to deal with it is imperative. It would seem that Judge Moore’s call for remedial facilities for those in the grip of narcotics could be synchronized with the County’s long-range approach to the problem-—a problem that has grown to emergency dimensions and should be so viewed. Voice of the People: . ‘(htr Tax Money Wasted | Lighting County Offices’ Our , County courthouse and the, new school administration building are beautiful*, structures. The citizens of Oakland County should he most proud to have these facilities. Rut with inhdhquate funds from our tax dollars ho provide bhtter school conditions, better facilities for the people at the Pontiac State Hospital, and numerous other worthy causes, is it necessary to burn all the- lights oh. all the floors in both buildings far into the nightf lt’s a waste and unnecessary. ★ ★ ★/;. Instead of oiir public officials demanding more mdiiey and more ways in which to spend it, they might try to conserve a few wasted dollars and put them to better use. . BURNED UP AND TAXED OUT Winter Here for Yearly Visit Haynsworth|luiiiiI^ation Unfair The metabolism of nature is so finely balanced that not a living creature escapes the influence of the seasons. As winter approaches, the sap recedes from the trees, small creatures burrow into the ground and store up stocks of food, animals put on their winter coats and man surrounds himself with a thousand and one wondrous contrivances of technology that make winter one of the most enjoyable periods of the year. ★ ★ ★ Yes, winter is nearly here. It arrives December 21 (the shortest day of the year)—-just one jump ahead of Santa Claus. Whatever man’s other accomplishments, it is doubtful if he can ever change the march of WASHINGTON — When the Senate of the United States, in all its august dignity, voted' down Those who wish to beat Old Man Winter have but one recourse. They can follow the sun, as it moves south. For those who remain in the North, the time has come to get out the Christmas tree trimmings, sleighs and popcorn poppers, as well as the more high-powered devices of winter sports and settle down to enjoy the days of the new season. man in j public life have no interests — i< cal or financial. He wall ^refused a because 1*} had extol stock holwtgs. Slice Several Viewpoints on Money for Schools Many never pay their fpir Share of school taxes. If “Mother of Six Children”' sends them all to school, at the known expense of $700 per child, her family is costing the taxpayer $4,200 per year. HoW much school tax does she pay per year?’ Mrs. “Mother of None” pays $400 per year, for what? I am in faVor of an increase in state income tax to pay for education. . * * ★ If people want good schools with full-time teachers and high taxes, let them . move to the Utica Community School District where teachers- are among the highest paid and the school bus drivers are paid $3.25 per hour. They just voted a $9 million bond issue. , W. H. WAGNER 4150 MORNINGVlEW, UTICA All school districts crying for more school money should look into the reason for need and sort out the corruption in. elected officials, misuse and misappropriation of funds. Parents should teach their children to make the most out of the schools they have and quit setting bad examples for their “Unfortunately/’ he said, children td follow. Teachers striking, vandalism, etc., do not "the zeal of Congress to make for a good education. disclose private holdings and thereby prevent a Conflict of interest in the executive and judicial branches does' not however yodJtoish> that was extend to itself.’ the sense of fHe Senate When it humiliated pt ju^ge. v Sen. Charter (Percy,1 a \ millionaire Reputyifcan from Illinois, saw this potoM-and he has had the decency to put , w. tt.-it w - all of his fortune totow “blind said, to truth, De TOLEDANO trust” to avoid thejpoasible was that any „ censure of his constititei^y. Arthur Hoppe „ V IT’S TRUE, OF COURSE This is, of course, true, and as readers of this column know. -■ But this is only the beginning of the story. Even if the entire Congress put i,ts holdings into blind SENNATE MARTIN 6868 OAK HILL, CLARKSTON We so-called stupid, pig-headed, selfish property owners of Waterford are of. the opinion that Mr. Henderson sounds like a man with seven kids, who rents and has lost an election bet. WILFRED BIRRELL* 4496 SEEDEN, DRAYTON PLAINS ‘True Meaning of Christmas Is Ignored’ _ i feel that someone should bring to the attention of the trusts—that is to say, trusts public .that the hue meaning of Christmas is being ignored, whose investments they may Christmas is so commercialized and isn’t spent to tile way it not know—will it remove the should be. So many Am*ri«>n* take such little time for Christ real conflict of interest? , ★ *★' * The answer, of course,.is a Tom-Tom Talk Off the Air “Darkest Africa” is turning pale. “(Africans) have not yet adopted electric signals but possess, however, a system of communication quite as effective,” famed explorer Henry M. Stanley could write some 90 years -ago. “Their huge drums by being struck in different parts convey language as clear to the initiated as vocal speech.” ★ ★ ★ Today, most Africans are no more able to interpret a tom-tom message than visiting Americans, reports the National Geographic Society. Once the mainstay of primitive communica- tion, village drums have grown silent. Tribes that once relied on drums now use the mails, despite the fact that the old way was cheaper and faster. The same is true of tribesmen around the world. In India, says the Society, relays of drummers could once send a message 300 miles in just 17 minutes. ★ ★ , ★ The U.S. Post Office, which is not exactly famed for delivering communications at the speed of sound, could do worse than to take a look at' this art before it vanishes completely. Our Security Won't Slip With Banana Umbretm David Poling 4 Fund Raising Keeps Churches Busy By DAVID POLING Written for Newspaper Enterprise Association Every organization 1 know has its fund-raising problem. As soon as the PTA gets down to business, it wants to collect dues. When my son starts playing Little League baseball, the' p e o pi e In charge let me - know that I am now a -toemberof POLING the Booster Club and that is $2 by return mail. Even the peace groups won’t let me protest the war without writing a check for some treasurer who is acting^ rather hawkish at my slow purchase of a dozen tickets for their play—my boy is a senior. (He justs tells me it-will be two dozen—he’s also to the play.) And we have not mentioned the church, where hind-raising has become sacred, computerized and the most time-consuming,, energy - draining activity around. IN NEW BOOK In his new book, “Funny, You Don’t Look Christian” Weybright and Talley, $3.95, Robert Herhold bits the nerve like an untrained dentist probing for a cavity. He has an essay called, “The Religion of Fund Rais^ ing,” which describes the ordeal of the saints: “One fund-raising firm instructs callers to pray three prayers. - (Printed prayers are furnished U needed.). A prayer is said before getting put of ............... *'' beta I hate to stir up the ABM controversy again, but I fear Mr. Nixon’s $10-bfllion Safeguard system has been rendered obsolete while Still in the planning stage. This will come as a blow to many experts who had hoped it wouldn’t become obsolete until it had been completed. Like most modern weapons it has been rendered obsolete by a superior system — this one developed by my friend, Mr. John Chase Lewis, the noted industrial designer and sculptor. As Mr. Lewis points out, the prime function of any missile system is to instill feelings of security to a nervous populace. BETTER SYSTEM H0,fE Drawing on modem technology, Mr. Lewis has created a better system. He calls it the Activated Banana Missile. > Mr. Lewis’ ABM system contemplates deploying thousands of giant plastic bananas around our cities. Each would be installed to a prominent position as constant reassurance to paSsers-by. As these ABMs would contain neither dangerous explosives nor inflammable fuel, the all-too-prevalent worry of an accidental disaster would be eliminated to a twinkling. In the more nervous areas, such as the suburbs, Mr. Lewis says, towering bananas would throb or hum day and bight, creating an atmosphere of purposeful power: LOW-LEVEL BANANA The plans also call for a low-level banana for coastal defense. Cuban MIG that recently slipped through our present multibillion-doliar defenses into Florida, Mr. Lewis agreed that the low-level banana would not have stopped the intrader either. “But,” he accurately points out, “it would’ve been a hell of a lot cheaper.” • There will be some, of course, who .contend that bananas have little to do with the reality of thermonuclear war. But I say a nation which can accept that reality can wholeheartedly accept the security proyided by a banana umbrella. > (Chronlcl* FMturei Syndicate) ____________ duct of his experience. Sen. Percy may sell all of his stock in Bell & Howell,’the corporation he ran before he went into public life. But he * will never forget the I photographic industry. He ; | can’t. - SHOULD INCLUDE PRESS I if it is correct to assume tat. a man’s stock portfolio ill determine his political ind economic views, however, diming the rest of the year, it wouldn’t hurt if they would celebrate f!hHstma« at church and devote a few hours to the fact that Jesus was bora to a stable in Bethlehem. DEBBY FRTTCH 5015 GREEN VIEW, CLARKSTON Answer Critic of Aid to Private Schools A letter from Erich H. Werner implies that Catholics are so wealthy that we have no right to expert help from the State to continue our schools. I Has he ever considered the large tax portion allotted for schools and education? Did it ever occur to him that Catholic taxpayers have paid the same public school tax he has? We ask some State help now rather than turn our children over to the already overcrowded public schools. Mr. _____ Werner wrote Of the vast wealth of the Vatican. There is „ien why limit it to the three wealth there, but people will never know the tremendous turn-branches of government. Why over of money to that treasury. The Vatican is responsible for the whole world. We cannot fathom or understand all that has to be done With that money. T MRS. SUSAN CARRY . | , 18 CAMLEY imt include toe press? jUnder the First Amendment, the pres* is granted certain privileges and held to b^i above the commonality of anti. ... . & Should a reporter, every tijme he writes a story about the Federal Communications In answer to Erich Werner’s letter concerning Educaid, toe State of Michigan and the public school system tell us they are in trouble. Do they expect parochial ^chool parents ’ Commission, Ipprfld a note to be so gulUble as to believe todr tale of woe? Thpy have toat he owns hr does not own built elaborate schools with carpeting, swimming pools, gym mat ne owns pr uoes iww im ^ conditioning, etc. Now they haven’t enough money. Their wailtogls aimed at getting more tax money from parochial school parents while giving nothing in return. “■No group is exempt or free the car, another just -from this chore .The senior the member fills out his ___ uo. «»stf nlorioA >apH. and a final -class at high school will Shortly shame me 1 n t o jaM f,h* 2nd «om tote at Pontiac, Michigan. Monitor of ABC. pledge card, and a final clincher before the caller leaves. The member doesn’t have to worry only about appearing cheap before a fellow member; he also has toe Almighty frowning over his shoulder.” : ■ # ■ t In, an even more critical tope, J, Elliott Corbett creates “^ paraphrase of Jeremiah in his hook, “Prophets on Main Street” (John Knox Press, $4.95): * “Thus says the Lord: O, you Christians, strength of my arm, voice of my mouth, compassion of my heart, Step off your merry-go-round! Break through your monotonous cycle! You who raise money to erect buildings, so you can expand your program, you need more money to erect more buildings. “O, when will you start being the church: Stop making the church a place to go, and make it BERRY’S WORLD—By Jim Berry something to be.” PERMANENT PART Money and budgets and fund-raising will always be a part of the religious community. These little chores run straight through the Bible but this dare not become an end in itself. If it does, we will indedd / have; a religion of FUnd-Raising and its chief opponent will be the follower of Christ.' ■)_______i tp stetek in American Telephone & Telegraph? When, he covers the oil industry, should he be compelled to disclose how many shares of ojU stock he lias to his safe deqosft box? , ★ . $# * If toe PercjS theory were to become the Pircy law, then certainly a reporter or a ,columnist, to be honest, should let his reader! know the nature of ids owp interests. To be reaiistid about it, divestiture of stocks and bonds makes no: (Distributed by K If pnblic schools are to such dire straits, why not tap the Federal Government? What is spent to one year for foreign aid, space programs and ABM would make the Vatican look like a poor relative. r-j—' ■ _ ■ '-v ■ ’ -*■ it ■ it ■ p i .*. I do not resent paying school taxes. I do resent those who would gobble them up without sharing a small slice with my children. MRS. MARGARET'DOLL 123 OLIVER (Editor’s Note: All letters to the Voice of the People must be signed and an address giben. In some instances a pen name * irmtirttri may be used in the paper.) Verbal Orchids Harry C. Armstrong \ of 152 Beach; x -53rd wedding anniversary. ' Mrs. Etta Lee of 2300 Watkins Lake Road; 95to birthday. Mr. and Mrs. George L. Howell of 72 Gillespie; 61st wedding anniversary. Questions and Answers iwmti XeroZ ms die fyes 'to? p#. Tmi '(G) With toe conepm these days about rays from TV, I’ve ^wtoieced^tf toe green light from the Xerox machine at toe office will harm toe fyes if used without toe rubber covin? 17370 Meyers, Detroit, 48235, phone UN 4-8400. Albion and Adrian Colleges are both Methodist-connected and have an accredited curriculum. (A) Xerox people teU us the light is just an ominary GE fluo- toill cause no ir of fact, iff* easier on your ft INS Hr Ntt, tec rescent light hark. As a matt green so it Will bi eyes. (Q) My daughter would like to attend Bible college, so could won please giVe me -t)ie name and address of toe closest one around? We’re Metoodlkt. MRS. R. E- HURST 4 | 1 . (A) Midwesterri Baptist Colfegt, 825 Golf Drive,! Pontiac is the closest. Call FE 4-0961 to have a booklet s^nt. Thd closest one that’s accredited^ is Detroit Bilile College, (G) When Pm, talking on toe phone I pan hear ringing sometimes. My girl-frfead says It's someone trying to call. Is this true? R. M. ■(A) Telephone repair service says'ft’s: more likely to be just background noise from some slight problem on the line, if you will report it, the ringing can be eliminated. Editor’s Note: Will the lady who wrote about “Memorial Obituary” please send us your phone number? We need more information and toe operator could find no listing for you. m i THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1969 A Patrol Car In A Controlled Braking Test Was Benito a Bigamist? Briton's Claim Is Disputed A County Sheriff's Deputy Maneuvers Among Pylons At GM Proving Ground * By JIM LONG Deputies of the Oakland County Sheriff Department’s road patrol rack up more than a million miles a year. t also wreck a couple patrol cars and ire than a few fehders in the process. may have been found, however1, iA-a driver improvement program conducted recently at the General Motors Proving Ground fair 35 deputies, a third of the department. The idea behind the weeklong course at the facility hear Milford was to train deputies in coping with emergency road situations that face them daily. . “Theft's a lot of guys who no' longer thing ■ 1.... > ~ " they’re Barney Oldfield,’’ said Undersheriff Leo Hazen, referring to the famed racer from die turn of the century. A year from now, the results of the program will be assessed to see, if the deputies have retained wha^ they learned. . . b y.\* ' ★ '\ - \ though tile irome continued, Miss Dalser had him sign a statement before a notary saying he was the father of her son. Later, while Mussolini was fighting in World War I, Susmel said, Miss Dalser got the Milan authorities to release the two statements entitling her to assistance payments as the wife of a soldier. But he said these were based on Mussolini’s acknowledgment of Lake Superior State College [her child, not any record of a‘ Alumni Association President marriage. Cory Somes, replied, “Yes, sir,| * * * a three-ton anchor.” ! Miss Dalser died Dec. 13. Somes Was transporting the 1935, in Venice and her son diedl Customs Claim Weighty Airlines7 Holiday Warning anchor, complete, with 30 feet of chain, to a site on the campus ending a three-month effort to find an identifying symbol for the new) four-year school. Aug. .2$, 1942, in Mombello. Donna Rachele, now 77, is recognized as Mussolini’s official widow and revives a government pension, Student Standbys May Wait mmumwi) mj i' - MAST SIT-IN — Jon Tsaousis, 26, of Komotini, Greece, Climbed the mast high above his ship, the Aristides Xilas, ! Wednesday and has remained perched there following a dispute with his captain, Aristides Livanios. “He broke the rules so I fired him,” said Capt. Livanios. Crewmen, however, indicated that working conditions led to the dispute. mmrnrnmm Death Gets New Look in Avon To stand by or not to stand by? For students traveling during '"•fcw-'Tio* br^a1’ it’? a rnekton of where they want to spend the greater part of their holidays;-** at the airport or at their final destination, according to ticket officials at Detroit Metropolitan1 Airport. In an effort to avoid the clog’ at ticket counters, most major airlines are advising all passengers, students flying discount included, to make reservations well ahead of travel time. In addition, a recent telephone survey shows that among regional and national airlines, a majority now require confirmed reservations for student discounts — a switch from the original standby policy. Also, among those still of-j fering standby student rates,] which were half-fare when introduced in 1961, all have increased rates to 60 per cent of the fare. And those that offer confirmation only have boosted their price from 75-80 per cent the full cost. Those with confirmation only include Braniff, Eastern, Delta, North Central and Allegheny. Northwest Orient, which nV ws both standby and confirmation nlans to discontinue confirmation at student rates effective Dec. 17. American, United and Trans World Airlines are the other standbys. AGSS 12 TO 22 [ Student discount cards, which can be obtained at almost any ’ticket counter, are effective for ! those 12 up to 22 years of age. Proof of identification, such as a birth certificate or driver’s license is required. Although the majority of airlines charge a standard $3, a few charge up to $10. Policy regarding weekend orbotidav traveling may differ, j According' to most airline officials. the biggest onrush of students is expected the 1 weekend of Dec. 19, 20 and 21, | jqst prior to Christmas. Most students return by the first weekend in January. NO RESTRICTIONS “We have no restrictions on ] using dsiscount cards over the I holidays, but we still advise against standby,” said a ticket clerk at American Airlines. I i However, for those who do! prefer to take their chances, American tries to avoid an unnecessary trip to the airport by having them call several hours before denarture time regarding available seats. ★ ★ ★ An official at the Alleghany counter was more emphatic: “Students should save their money and get confirmed seats, believe.me it’s worth the extra money.” “Even if they could get out of Metro on the first try they could vary well end up stranded for hours at the next stop. For parents it’s one less problem to worry about if they know their kid has a reseryed seat,” she said. WINCING AT HOUDAYS An Eastern Airlines official winced at the thought of the holiday congestion during times when flights are filled with confirmations. w ★' ★ “This place gets filled with young people ■ every y e a'r. Around the holidays it’s hard, to travel any other way except by reservation,” she said. Aside from luck, is there any hope for standbys trying to beat Santa home? I You guessed it. The consensus is that you’ll probably have the plane to yourself on Christmas Day. By TIM McNULTY Plans for the 166 - - acre Christian Memorial Cultural-Center in Avon Township are grandiose weddings in carpeted mausoleum, baptisms in reflecting pools, and 200 original artworks to be positioned between crypts and graves. After the recent name change, when Christian Memorial Cemetery on Hamlin became a “Cultural Center,” plans and lot sales went into high gear. ★ ★ * The principal owner, Bernard E. LePage, 37, of 38 Avonwood, said, “We’re doing exciting things in the cemetery business.. i We’re undertaking a novel concept in- cemetery development. “Specifically, our intent is,.to create for the first time in the history of man a cultural center out of a cemetery,” LePage said. 500,000 BURIALS When complete, the center will have room for 500,000 burials, said Frank Coffey, the center’s vice president. He estimated completion w o u 1 d take 20 to 80 years. “We’ll rival Forest Lawn -in California as a tourist attraction,” Coffey said. “Our pieces of sculpture will be much more spectacular.” He said there are 400 persons buried at the center and that more than 12,000 .have . already purchased lots a(, “preheed” prices: EXPENSIVE FIRST Coffey daid ground lots per person run between $250 and $1,500, and mausoleum tombs between $2,000 and $2,750. “The higher priced property always sells first. People are willing to pay more to be surrounded by beautiful things (the higher-toe price, the closer to a monument or sculpture). Of course, it’s really • a status symbol.” ★ * ★ Special emphasis is placed on a pay now, die later plan. Payments may. be made through three monthly installment plans. Coffey said the center is open to all races and beliefs. “Presently there are no Negroes buried here, though we have no restrictions. And it isn’t likely a non - Christian wobld Wcjjgt to be buried here, because of the name.” There is an houg and one-half sales presentation for Cultural Center customers. Plans for the future include: • An $8-million mausoleum, complete with carpeting, a main and four secondary chapels for weddings and funeral services with an allglass elevator as a “special feature.” • More than 200 original art works, including religious statuary, a 17-foot high “Dove of Peace,” and a $150,000 “Baptism of Christ” monu-1 ment. • Sidewalks surrounding each of the “gardens.” • Three - dimensional bas-relief artwork permanently carved in the crypt units and each crypt front done in imported marble with walnut side panels. • Special reflecting pools, available for baptisms in any denomination. • A Children's “Slum-berland.” The Christian Memorial: brochure states the center will] “utilize flush ground me-' morialization.” The marker I has a name, two dates, and is! flat against the ground to ex-1 pedite grass cutting. OFF TAX ROLLS Cemetery land is not taxable. In this case, the 10 acres already developed has been taken off the tax rolls. The other 156 acres has an assessed valuation of according to township records the cemetery’s artist nd after he and made a “careful study” of Forest Lawn in California. Romanesque Statues For Culture Buyers Can Plot For The Future “We have gone several steps beyond Forest Lawn,” he said.. “Though Forest Lawn was way ahead of its time when first I conceived, it doesn’t have the I feature artwork for individual gardens. Forest Lawn is more of a parklike cemetery while we’re a garden cemetery.” 1 Standby Student Plays Waiting Game At A—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, I960 Couple Escapes City Woes Fade in Woods \ By KI5N HARTNETT N WASHINGTON (AP) - JThej yeW before; Marta spent each: day yawning and for her hus-1 band, Jim, anger was a way of! life. * * * They were in the city then, two struggling artist-radicals— young, vaguely in love, and talented. * * * But, he hated the fawning patrons who came to Judge and occasionally—only occasionally— buy their paintings. He hated the bills and the bill collectors. He hated the television set and the concrete cubicle that was their apartment. ♦ * * And, most of all, be hated his job with its formalities and routines. YAWNS ANQ HATE And she feared the competitiveness of her work against his and feared that Ids seething anger would sooner or later seize on her:'And she also hated the city with its congestion and rules and distractions. So, she yawned and he hated her yawning. ★ * * So one day, this past summer, he quit his job. She quit hers. They gathered the posseissions they loved, which were few, and packed them into a rented pickup truck and headed for the great forests of the Pacific Northwest. WWW They found a little cabin by a remote lake. The owner rented it to them for a fraction of what they had been paying in the city and they settled down. w ★ ★ She began baking bread and learned how to clean the trout that he found in the lake. And he began cutting lumber for1 their wood stove. HAIR GROWS LONG He let his hair grow long so that It tumbled down his shoulders and he threw away his razor. His muscles grew hard. He stopped smoking cigarettes. WWW Their few neighbors let them1 alone or wh'en they dropped by did so to drop off a grouse 0 pheasant. Ho one seemed to care that they wore their hair long or decorated their home With piusty old portraits and pop bottles or that his only job! was pumping gas> down on thej highway when a few dollars could come in handy. ; ★ w w ■ They know it can’t last, that sooner or later the population surge will find them, their cash reserves will run put completely or they may even get bored, f , But, '‘they don’t cate about what will happen, only what’s happening. And they say that for now they have found paradise on earth. He isn’t angry anymore and she yawns only when she is tired. ONLY MORE SHOPPING DAYS mmsm V x 8r PREFINISHED RANKLING GOOD QUALITY each (5 COLORS) OTHER BARBAINS - CEILING TILE, DOORS,.PREFINISHED TRIM, ETC. PONTIAC PLYWOOD NOTICE OF TAXES CITY OF PONTIAC The 1969 County taxes in the City of Pontiac will bo duo and payable at tha off lea of tho Pontiac City Troaaurar, December 10, 1969 through February 14, 1970, without foot. On February 15, 1970, a collection foe of 4% will be added to all County tsMspald through Fabruary 28, 1970. On March 1, 1970, all unpaid County and 1969 City and School taxes will bo returned to tho Oakland County Treasurer's office and muit bo paid there with additional fata. Payment* made by mail must bo postmarked not later than February 14, 1970, to ovoid penalties A. G. Lebert City Treasurer 450 Wide Track Drive, E. Pontiac, Michigan 48058 FRIGIDAIRE 20 Ci. Ft. REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER ADWAY BAR WICK ARMSTRONG SEQUOIA LANCASTER ROYAL TREND MILLS VIKING CARPET INSTALLATION COMPLETED NT CHRISTMAS BEDROOM CARPET Vo Nylon Toxti or* to Choose «3Ti 100% Nylon Textured 6 Colors to Choose From NYLON-SHAG Super Heavyweight Luxury Carpet Tweeds and Solid Colorsl 9 Colors la Reg. $£49 10.95 9 YARD 1075 W. Huron St. Phone r.fllBIiWfl If You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! FRIGIDAIRE M BAYS SAME AS GASH DISHWASHERS FRIGIDAIRE 3-WASH—4-CYCLE Sapor surge waih action to get dishes shower dean. No installation Beaded. No spe-cial wiring, " Lower front for easier loading WHIRLPOOL Portable DISHWASHER Twin lift-up recks in lid, full time self-clean filter, 4-cycle pushbutton, large capacity. GENERAL ELECTRIC MOBILE DISHWASHER Fully automatic, fully portable, E-Z roll eaetort. MAYTAG Portable—Antomatio DISHWASHER For families with a lot of living to do. No need for pre-rinsing. Separate cycle for every dishwashing job. Available in choice of colors. *26995 1970- 4-Speaker 4-Speed Distinctive contemporaryetyled cabinet in genuine oil-finished wahmt veneers. Lift-up lid and record storage space. Solid state amplifier, 4-speed record changer, plus 4 big Zenith, quality speakers. Free, speedy delivery! Free 90-day ex. pert service! Fall guarantee, too. Long, easy terms. 90^iays same as caah. with. Coolerator HUMIDIFIER . AND PROPER HUMIDITY YOU NEED less heat- ADD COMFORT—SAVE MOM • Encourages restful sleep — o Lowers Heating costs — • Prolongs life of furniture — o Automatic shut-off — • Two speed fan — • Evaporates up to 16 gab. daily ALSO AVAILABLE THIS YEAR IN FURNITURE STYLED CABINETRY AT SUGHTLY HIGHER PRICES CONSOLE COLOR TV NEW 1970 227 square Inch walnut finish Guaranteed Christina* Delivery Free Delivery, Service and 2 Year Picture Tube Warranty Freezer Completely “FROST PROOF** in Both Unite SELF- CLEAN 22-Inch (liag.) com W Top deluxe, with furniture crafted wood cabinetry, super video range. UHF/VHF tuning. Big Zenith quality speaker. 282 sq. In* Image 30” Electric Rage No More Messy Oven Clean-up L/TE/U What a wonderful gift to the family — the end of a messy oven to clean. Completely, an* toma tic. Lots of storage. ‘Infinite heat switches, flock and timer. 90 DAYS CASH *259 GOOD HOUSEKEEPING of PONTIAC 51W. HURON FE 4-1555 FREE PARKING OPEN EVERY VIGHTTILL 8:30 Tlfe PONTIAC P^ESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER B, 1969 A—0 ' ' TRIUMPH Thrifty clock radio will wake you with soft music This smartly styled clock radio is dependable and attractive . .. /a pleasant way to start each day. The clock is large and easy to read, with an accurate, reliable movement. 12s8 PANASONIC Power-packed value-full AM portable radio buy Travels wherever you go. Modem design with art easy-carry Wrist strap. Complete with earphone, battery and gift bag;this is a great gift ftBB Wide* Bi*Z$T speaker. Solid-state AM/FM radio with built-in tape recorder Versatile! Portable! Soljd-stete cassette.recorder and FM/AM radio combined. PlJays op AC or batteries. Play prerecorded cassettes or jgr 4*95 record "live" your radio. . or from 69’ MASTBtWOBK AM/Police Band radio runs on AC thrifty batteries Solid-state 10 portable radio receives long-range AM broadcasts, as well as police and weather calls. Slide- ^ . rule tuning. Telescopic OM antenna. AFC stops FM drift. * * ZENITH Handcrafted Color TV is thrartly styled ... thrifty A big screen (18" diagonally measured) is completely tilled With a picture of unsurpassed brilliance, detail and color. Automatic Fine Tuning control to "lock in" the picture'electronically for perfect viewing all the time. Color TV with transistorized circuits for top performance A.C.T. (automatic fine tuning) locks in the picture electronically. All-channel tuning.. Automatic color purifier keeps colors clear and bright always. Big roll-about stand is included. We make a "Federal case" out of credit.. . why don't you? Table-top TV with its own easy-rolling mobile stand ' | ■ f f 1 - _ *_ /{1 » n % ■ The powerful 20)000-volt chassik provides a 282-square inch picture of great brilliance and clarity. Quick-on picture and spund. SMI-channel tuning. Tele- 00088 scoping dipole antenna. "B 3 jt Front facing FM sound. DOWNTOWN OPEN 9:30 to 9; DRAYTON OPEN 9:30 to TO k A-lOi THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER fi, 1869 WASHINGTON (UPI) payers who profit from charities are major' the tax reform bill debated in the Senate. But not as much as Ifouse - passed measure. * \ * IWltere his charity will not only Maybe you don’t' know it, butjcost him nothing, but he’ll profit there are ways of giving to ] from it. charity and finishing up with| * * > more money than you startedl Here’s how he does It: Tax- every $100 of individual income, their he keeps only $30; the Internal ts of Revenue Service (IBS) gets being $70. | He plight just as well be n the'charitable, so with his tax ' |eF t^ie^ wor^ oht a deal , If he had sold that inventory , and given the cash to the charity, he would have had to pay $35,000 in taxes, 70 per cent of the $50,000 gain. ,So he saves that $35,000 in individual income;* taxes. \ SECOND BENEFIT \ < j But that’s not all. As a second .benefit, he is allowed to deduct the full $100,000 the charitable organization will get from the fair market of the inventory. And that means he saves $70,000 more in taxes on othef income he acqufred just so long as he hasn’t gone beyond a 30 per cent celling on his gross in- Now add those two figures together: It comesvto $108,000. The charity gets $100,000. The businessman saves $105,000 in taxes. Result: He has made a profit of $5,00(1 by giving away $100\000. v ; Ar 'ie|1." ’,; There’s no question it has worked-that way. The Senate Finance Committee, in its report on the tax reform bill, noted somewhat caustically that: “In Oases where the tax saving is 1S0 large, it is not clear how much charitable motivation actually remains,\ Itf appear* that 'the government, in fad, is Clock Repair. I • Antique Clock " almost thp sole contributor ^ the charity.” Nevertheless, the . committee 1 did not go as far as the house in ending those gimmicks, The House plugged five loopholes used by donors to' profit from their charities. The Senate committee went along with two' of them — the most important. g«l«s & Service aJtmrS’Ijdp 151 9, Bale*, Birmingham 646-7377 The businessman gives, say, $100,000 of his inventory to some favorite charity. It’s a bone fide! deal. The inventory is worth! $100,000 on the market and the j charity can get that amount fori it. The merchandise or .pro-! with. ★ * * You heard it right the first time. There are gimmicks in the tax law so that some wealthy people can give whopping amounts to charity and be left with more cash in the bank ^ or whatever it happens to to” toint bee n ^ on]y C0S£ ^ businessman charitable at all. qqq 70 PCT. BRACKET 1....... ................... For example, a businessman finds he will finish the year the 70 per cent income tax bracket. From there on, for Stone-Age Art Found in Africa CHICAGO cm — An African rock painting 2,400 yegrs old - has been discovered by a University of Chicago anthropologist. ★ ★ ★ The university announced Saturday the discovery by Prof. Ronald Singer and his research team of the painting, done by a Middle Stone Age artist. ★ * ★ It is said to be the oldest ac- curately dated African rock! painting ever found. The painting depicts a stone age man or woman swimming above four dolphins. It was among 250,000 stone artifacts found in a group of caves near the mouth of the Klasies River in Southern Africa. | ★ * ★ The site of the discovery “is beautifully stratified and com-j pletely untouched,” Singer said.; '"Ibis aUows us to date the art, accurately for the first time. It is possible that some o fthe thousands of rock paintings] discovered in southern Africa, may be older, but we chnnot be sure about their age.” Interstate Alarm Now Offers Oakland County Residents A New Home Alarm System Designed To Guard Against Intruders and Also Protect Your Home and Family Against Fire and Pilferage. "I Didn't Know They Had Interstate!!" . Financing Available Security by Professional Security People 4 Interstate Alarm System G ft M & ELLIS Sines 1945 CEMENT WORK • PATIOS CARACES • ADDITIONS COMPLSTB BUILDING SKRVICH TERMS PE 2-1211 Hidden Radar on Pennsylvania Turnpike Ended HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) —] The days of hidden radar are over on the Pennsylvania Turn-, pike. "Commiss toner Frank McKetta has decided that all radar must be visible to the public,” said Capt, C. S. Graci, commander of the turnpike, police detail. “It must be placed in an area where drivers can see it for 120 feet in either direction.” * ★ ★ “I don’t care if we never! make an arrest providing wej| can reduce fatal accidents.” * * * Such a reduction has token place this year. From January through October, there have] been 64 fatalities — 30 fewer, than in the first 10 months of 1968. I STRQH’S OLD FASHIONED | Ice Cream ft Candy Store } "Pumpkin Pie lee Cream” Special: Cream Puff Desert 45e : Tower Shopping Center | (Corner M-59 and Airport Rd.) j WATERFORD 674-242 f AUTEN FURNITURE 6605 Dixie Hwy. . Clarkston > FURNITURE » CARPET ► DRAPERY PROTECT YOUR HOME AGAINST THE INVADERS... DUST, DIRT AND POLLEN! install an ELECTRO-AIR electronic air cleaner Removes up to 90% of the dirt particles that pass through your forced air heating or cooling system. e Information; iSf Heating and Cooling jjjOJTelc^ph Rd, ar Orchard Lake 338-9255 CHRISTMAS APPLIANCE, TV SHOPPERS: DON’T EVER FORGET 3 DATS ONLY! FRETTER’S PONTIAC STORE ONLY! 1660 S. TELEGRAPH Fretter is bombing prices! If you sincerely want the area’s bast bargain in appliances, TV’s, stereos or radios m ______________Hurry to Frottor’s New. We’ve get what yen want at the price you want to pay! GENERAL ELECTRIC FM-AM CLOCK RADIO SALE TODAY, FRIDAY ’til 9 P.M. SALE SATURDAY 10-9 SALE SUNDAY 10-7 COLOR TV BARGAINS! $08* a PHONO vt*ss ^ *18” PORTABLE TV’s Top Brands, All seropn sizes IWASHERS-DRYERS Automatics, Gas or Electrics FRETTER’S PONTIAC FRETTER’S PONTIAC LJIRGESElfCnON OF FACTORY FRESH 23” Censele Color TV take your piek of the country’s top name brands • RCA* ZENITH • ADMIRAL • WESUNGHOUSE, ETC. all with UHF-YHF! $139 itr and fruit Me KEL. REFRIGERATOR, Copp.r 21 cu. Dido 114. Automatic d.frost. larg. porc.lain crispar, m.at tray. Floor medal. $349 Frantloadar ample tup. Oual $140 YOUR CH0IC6 *169 Who else but Fret-ter make* an offer like this? Huny in today, check our Color TV deal. You will find it's the very best in town. *379 Admiral CONSOLE STEREO *179 WHIRLPOOL DRYER, MS Stationary drum, automatic dr. hamper door. Coppor $159 REFRIGERATORS 2-D00RS, NO-FROST, SIDE-BY-SIDES Wood, 4-ip..d r.cord changer. Built-in record storage. Light.d Mortar Contra) Ctnrarl HOTPOINT IS PD WASHER $169 ADM. FAMILY SIZE FREEZER ft if «|#| 350 pound capacity. ▼ 1 jf |l New in carton I Uv Push button dofroot, (lido ou shelves, porc.lain ertarar, moat tray, 2-door ADM. 28” COLOR TV Lighted dial!, UHF VHF. *149 *299 *299 19" walnut finish, UHF VHF. ZENITH 21" BLW PORT. ft 4 Wal. grain, full power R m If trans. Lighted dill ■ «plf RE ELECTRIC PORTARLE PHONOGRAPH 4-spuod record player In blue plastle case. 14“ ZENITH CONSOLE STEREO S-speaker. AM/FM stereo radio. Maple finish $159 WEST CONSOLE 23" *349 ZENITH 1S*BL/WH Dipole antenna. 82 ohannel. *89 DISHWUIERS TOP LOADERS, FRONT LOADERS mm If &£fi Conv.rtibl.t and built, in* feat Hot point, GE, Whirlpool, Waiting houM. ate. W.'v. got a dithwaihar to Mitt tray ntrd, May pocketbook. Priced THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1969 ____________ _____ A—y REG. 79c IA. • Cashmere-soft crew styles — our finest' • Deep ribbed tops tie really stay in place • A wardrobe of colors in light, dark tones Orion* acrylic blended with stretch nylon — re* inforced at heel, toe for Tong wear. Available in large or small. toys'Dept. \ CHRISTMAS'STORE HOURS: w 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Saturday 9:30 UR. te 9:30 p.nt. Sunday Naoa fe e p.m. SALE-PRICED! Girls" playtime pants and tops • 2*way nylon stretch for comfort, fit • Neat solid slacks and striped shirts • Bright dyed-to-mix or match colors An unbeatable combine* tion — perky playtimers and a great low price! Popular turtleneck styling. Fits sizes 3-6X. Tots* Dept. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1969 SAVE SI Comfy cotton terry scuffs *2 KEG. |3 • Soft and absorbent ,f cotton terfy.cloth • Foam rubber cushion innersole lining • Choose in white or in delicate pastels These comfy scuffs, will keep her toes toasty warm. Like walking on a cloud. A gift she’ll really appreciate. I n misses sizes S, M or L. Hosiery Dept. SAVE 2. It Beys’ Cardigan Swaatars 488 Reg. 6.99 The ultimate in classic top fashion. Cnbpse from today's shades. All i0'0% virgin acrylic. Choose from prep sizos 14-20. Priced now, shopper*, for yob to please your boy at Christmas, Hurry, though, white selections are at their best! lays* Dept. AAOISTTGO/VIER WARD INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPETING Choose with foam or Dura- A99 gon* backing. Ideal for kit- m(p *9. td. chen, rec. room. 12" width. REG. 6.99 Carpet Dept. REG. $8 Berely-flered slacks tailored of washable acrylic. Bonded with acetate tricot for sure shape. Iri power plaids. Misses' sizes. Sportswear Special! 74-SQ. IN. PORTABLE Twi-lite shield blocks out. glpre! Slidf rule tuning, earphone with 15-ft. cord* U-in. diagonal MM TV-Racffo Dept. *94 i ----------------------------------------y Save $10! HANDSOME 5-PC. BRIDGE SET Just in time for the holidays! Mk 99 Round table, 4 chairs cov- ■91 JF ered in fine olive fabric. REG. 59.99 ' China Dept. Save 20.07! ZIG-ZAG SEWING CONSOLE Handles any weight fabric! QOfl Built-in buttonholer, light, Cw Jr blind hammer, much more! REG. 109.95 Sewing Machines Sale-Priced! 9-PIECE SALAD BOWL SET Makes a lovely gift! Green plastic bowls are unbreakable. Fork, spoon in orange. Housewares Save $12! CLUB-SIZE POKER TABLE Seats 8 poker players com- $ *7 fortably! Padded in brown m leatherette. Folding legs. REG. $79 Sporting Goods M big 17x14-inch blade! REG. 2,99 Garden Shop \ v Save 2.11 4-FT. PINE TREE, STAND Fie me-resistant, like-teal A88 tree! Quick and easy-to-' mjp assemble. Coded branches! REG. 6.99 • Pontiac Mall Special! ' 12-02. CAN GAS ANTI-PREEZE Stock up now! Clean-burning B* # C■ * ★ ★ * Twenty-five of 46 women considered1 for the exclusive ranks were formally elected Wednesday by an all-male committee headed by chairman Harry ■ Mattce. » ’ • • Among their privileges: The right to lose their money down to the last blade of grass at their country estates, and the right to eat in the captain’s dining room. The women are entering a unique organization. Lloyd’s 3,0 0 0 - p 1 u s underwriting members joined as in- dividuals and are personally liable for losses. Corporations cannot belong. They accept almost any kind of risk, barring life insurance. They will insure against the possibility of a multiple birth as readily as hurricanes in the United States or disasters involving giant jets and ocean liners^ . * * * Losses have been heavy recently. Lloyd’s latest figures, for 1966 — accounts are closed after three years — gave losses of $44.4 million, $48 million Jess than in 1965. A year ago, the organization opened its doors to foreign members'to spread the risks and cater t6 the rise of international companies among its customers. ' CALM ACCEPTANCE But the ladies elected Wednesday had apparently no trepidation over the future of their independent means. “I’m merely fcJdng advantage of something which wasn't open to women before,’’ ' said Margery H it r a t, millionairess head of Mdyfair’i Brook Street Bureau, reputed to be the world’s largest secretarial agency. “ft’s useless to me,’’ she said. “In my income tax bracket it would all go in tax.” Lady Cathleen Hudson, 48, applied out of loyalty to her husband who has battled arduously for female membership. She complained that all the barriers had not been removed. “If I were 20 years younger,” she asserted, “I’d certainly campaign for women to take part in the business side.” There was no explanation of why they couldn’t Lloyd’s has its secrets. Someone once said it would be easier for a spiritualist to define ectoplasm than for anyone to define Lloyd’s true nature.* . / ■ 1 T it *; ★ .) , ' Lady Dashwood joins her' husband, Sir. Frahcis Dashwood, the premier baronet of England, in the ranks. Lady Scott, Wife of ex-soldier Sir James, declared: “It’s a gamble and I’m looking forward to.it.” The Countess of Indiape, her shooting dog Sheba at her side,' said in her Mayfair residence: “I’m not a businesswoman. I like’ the country best. But it is nice that IJoyds have opened their doors to women.” She leaves for Kenya on an elephant hunt next month. Weighty Problem Besets Towns Top Administrator DEAR ABBY: I’m sure yoO get a lot of letters from kooks, and this one will probably, go into that pile, but believe me, this inquiry is sincere. My husband is a large man and noticeably overweight. He is particularly flabby in the region of his chest. To get to the point, Abby, he could use a brassiere! Is there a place where they sell brassieres for men? I am not going to mention this to him until I can find one. He is aware of his problem, Abby. He’s Accident Calls for Apology to Hjs Hostess By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs. Post: The top back of an antique chair was accidentally broken during a dinner party recently at my home. The occupant of the chair was a tall, heavy man who had tilted it back, and it broke. He apologized jokingly to my husband. I was out of the room when it happened and he did not apologize to me. * I would like to know how one should act if one should accidentally break an antique in someone’s home. — Mrs. J. T. Deaf Mrs. T.: Youf guest misbehaved. His apology to your husband should have been serious, and it should have included an offer to have the chair repaired himself or to pay the bill if your husband took care of it. Furthermore, he should have apologized to you. QUEEN’S CARDS Dear Mrs, Post: I learned from your Etiquette book that I should sign our Christmas cards as I did last year. John and Mary Hill Sarah, Mary, Timothy and Bill However, I noticed recently the Queen of England lists the male children first: /Charles, Edward,' Andrew, Anne (the hoys are listed respective to age) but Anhe iS' obviously pfaefed last' being' female. Would you advise me?—Mary' Hill Dear Mrs. Hill: The Queen of England writes her children’s names in that order because it is the order of succession to the throne, and therefore the order of importance. In America, and undoubtedly in the rest of England gifts’ names take precedence over boys’ and are listed that way, With the oldest girl’s name first, and the older bby’s name before the younger’s. not an unreasonable man and I think if I brought one home he might wear it. Please don’t use my name or town as my husband is the mayor. Thank you. MRS. BLANK FROM BLANK DEAR MRS. BLANK: Sony, but I’m blue in the face from looking in the yellow pages, and I can’t find a shop which sells ladies’ lingerie for gentlemen. Buy a large brassiere in a women’s shop, and if “His Honor” doesn’t have a “fit,” alter it to fit him. DEAR ABBY: I have been married for 22 years to a woman who is 43 and here is my problem. Three years ago she had all her teeth removed and was fitted with dentures. She wore them home from the dentist’s office and promptly removed them, and placed them in the medicine cabinet where they have been ever since. She refuses to Wear her dentures, and she won’t go back to the dentist who made them although he has said that he By United Press International DETROIT - Mrs. Cynthia Wedel, first woman president of the National Council of Churches, is living evidence that femininity and forcefulness can go tth gether. Although she is every inch a woman — in apparent speech, manner and attitudes — she is also a highly competent executive and can preside over large gatherings with aplomb. MRS. WEDEL woman and would look 20 years younger if she would put her teeth In. She says she doesn’t care how she looks. I have begged and pleaded with her, apd even threatened to refuse to be seen with her until she puts her teeth in, but still no results. Can you help me? LIN IDAHO DEAR L: If she refuses to go back to the dentist who made them, insist that she see her physician for a thorough check-up (mental and physical). Her trouble could be higher up. Three years is a long time for a pretty 43-year-old woman to remain toothless. ★ * * CONFIDENTIAL TO “UNEDUCATED BUT SUCCESSFUL:” Experience is the training that enables people to get along without education. ■k it it For Abby’s new booklet, “What Teen- Agers Want to Know,” send $1 to Abby in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Her leadership abilities were demonstrated in two previous council posts, as vice president and associate general secretary and during a three-year term as president of Church Women United. She has also held high office in her own denomination, the Episcopal Church. During her three years as council president, a non-paying job, she will retain her salaried position as associate^ director of the National Resource Center for Voluntarism in Washington, D C. She is a professional psychologist with doctorate. In private life, she is the wife of Dr. Theodore O. Wedel, a prominent Episcopalian theologian who was for many years warden of the College of Preachers at Washington Cathedral.1 ■ / VITAL At 61, Mrs. Wedel has the vitality of a much younger woman. Her figure is matronly but her hair is still reddish-brown, with only a few streaks of grey.. ★ * J - She is a warm, friegtflg, M rious person with a quick Wit and the ability to get along with almost fmybce. Hdl hobbies, when - khV has time tot theft ate cooking and reading^- ft would make them fit. She is a pretty National Council of Churches Elects Lay woman President THE PONTIAC PRESS, . FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1969 By ANNE TAYLOR < AP News Feature Considering that prices are climbing and that the value of the dollar is diminishing, many Winners of the DAR Good Citizens award, 10 area girls were honored Thursday evening by the General Richardson chapter. Admiring Christmas decorations on the dessert table in the YWCA are (from left) Beth Brown, Waterford; Connie Morris, Pontiac; and Kathy Hauxwell, Lake Orion. Jewish Youth Different Attitudes Are Changing By JUNE ELERT "We are living in a time when Jewishness has never been more exhibited in America," said Dr. arshall Sklare* Marshall Sklare, sociologist and a u t h o r i t y p n contemporary Jewish life, in his keynote address this morning before the Women’s Division, JUNE concept upon which the upward Jewish mobility was based.” This is that reward is on the basis of merit or the establishment Of an upper strata 'meritocracy" which took the place of the old concept of aristocracy. Anti-Semitism has reared its head, though its extent is debatable. Jewish youth is saying that anti-Semitism is not the result of Gentile attitudes, but is rather created by those Jews who exploit Negroes. This, said Of-, Sklare, is a serious charge I which is causing division in the Jewish Welfare Federation of|Jewish community, causing Detroit’s forum on "The Chal- Jews to look askance at friends, lenge of Change." relatives, coworkers. Dr. Sklare, of the faculty of Among youth there is also a Yeshiva University in New new hostile attitude toward York, traced the history of Jews Israel. The old anti-Zionists in America, noting their success thought Zionism would make Oi establishing themselves as a Jews less acceptable in pfjrt of the nation without America, sacrificing their Jewishness. | The new anti-Israel attitude is Irhis, he said, was all the based on anti-capitalist sen-more remarkable since thejtiments and the idea that to " achievements of the last 25 support Israel is to support years have come about against)America which supports Israel, the background of the all interwoven with anti-“holocaust,” after which it was Imperialist ideas, assumed that “all decent men members of a minority group; they share an emotional sensitivity; they have little concern with controlling their personal impulses; they come from affluent backgrounds, from permissive and supportive families. ‘■k ★ w Jewish- youth, he said, abundantly possessed of these qualifications for campus militancy. So there is among Jewish youth a militancy which is not concerned with a Jewish , Another problem facing Jewish parents is inter-marriage. Dr. Sklare said, “We are feeling the'press of this problem more now than ever before and we are relatively inexperienced in dealing with it,” Young Jewish children are asking their parents, “Why isn’t the whole world Jewish?" and older youngsters query, “Why iS| it so important to be Jewish?” * | . ........................... Job Raises Needed to Meet Living. Costs people think they are due for a raise- Here’s what Mrs. H. E. of Madison, Wis„ has to say on the subject: were on the side of the Jew and that anti-Semitism had been relegated to an indefensible position." ★ ★ ★ "Recently," he noted, “the Negro revolution has upset some of these smug presumptions. Negroes have challenged the Student revolutionaries share some traits in common, he said. ‘They have weak identification with an historical religious tradition; they are largely the offspring of second-generation Americans; they are Fetes Parents on Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Gordon A. Reynolds of Alpine Court, Avon Township will'be honored at a dinner party Saturday marking their golden wedding anniversary. Daughter, Mrs. Richard D. (Gloria) Raddant of Southfield has invited guests to her home for the celebration. •Sons, Raymond, and family of Lombard, 111., and Richard of Cprpentersvllle, 111., are also 'tasting the party. Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds, who were married Dec. 10, 1919, have been Rochester residents for five years. They have 12 grandchildren. Before Hemming When making a dress of sheer fabric, allow the garment to hang uncrowded where it can fall into its own natural lines for at least two or three days. Then measure the hem, and you will have an even hemline with no sagging. DAR Fetes Good Citizens Women of the G e n e r a t Richardson chapter of t h e Daughters of the American Revolution met Thursday to present their annual Good Citizen awards.* Ten area young women, nominated by their respective high schools, were honored at the meeting in the Pontiac YWCA. ★ ★ m •k , DAR Good Citizens for 1969 are: Anne Richards, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Richards of Keylon Drive; Kerry Jergovlch, daughter of the Rudy Jergovicha of . Crescent Lake Road, and Susan Lynn Griffiths, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Griffiths of darkston. Other winners and their parents are: Melanie Grantors* daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Grantors of Oakbeach Road* Katherine Hauxwell of Lake Orion, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hauxwell Jr., and Elizabeth Brown of Sylvan Shores Street. Her parents are tiie James Browns. ★ *. ★ Also Constance L. Morris of Argyle Street; whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. George Morris; Lisa Kjolhede of Rochester, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Kjolhede; Diane Eldon of Troy, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. John D. Eldon, and Jeanne L. Mclnally of Rochester. She is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. George Mclnally. ★ * ★ ★ Mrs. Roy Barnes of the Royal Oak chapter, spoke to the honorees about the history of the DAR and its founding principles. - . Selecting Notions For a better match and more satisfaction in sewing, buy,all necessary notions at one time. After Selecting the pattern and fabric for a new garment pick out the matching thread, zipper, buttons and whatever you need for It. “For the past eleven, years I’ve baked for 'a private girls’ dormitory . . . and my work includes plain baking and fancy cakes, etc. I’ve been making $2 an hour for the past two yeairs and want to ask for a raise. 'With the increase in the cost of living, what do you think would be a fair wage for me to ask?” Teen Girls Spend Half Their Funds for Cosmetics Teen-age girls spend at least half of their allowances and earnings on cosmetics, according to a recent survey. But, once they have blown it oft a nest shade of lipstick, modern eye makeup, etc., there is little 'left over for basic skin care. ♦ t Actually, inexpensive soap and baby lotion will fill a teen’s needs beautifully. Soap, of course, is a teen-ager’s number one cleaning, requirement, Baby lotion is ideal tor most young Skin because the hex-achlorophene in it discourages blemishes by fighting bacteria, p vS; • * •. It also protects a teen’s skip from chapping winter winds while they engage in outdoor activities. It serves just as well on face, hands, legs. It is, ip fact, the ideal all-over akin lotion for teens, and some even i, to add a little to their bath water instead of bath oil, which is not the best thing for teen skin. Dear Mrs. H. E.: t . I would hesitate to name a specific figure without knowing more details. I can, however, I provide you with some - guidelines to help you in setting a figure. V\, ★ .*. ★ Remember, the average worker has had a decrease in take-home pay in the past year, largely the result of inflation and higher taxes. For example, the buying power of an average nonfarm worker with three dependents was $78.23 in May, but a year earlier it was $78.47, despite low pay. You must also take into account tiie national average of wages for unionized bakers, which is roughly $3.30 an hour in your area. We’ll leave the amount up to you, but certainly you are entitled to broach the subject with your boss. HOUSEWIVES Mrs. D. K., of East Moline, 111., claims that she needs a raise from her husband to meet the rising cost of living, but that her husband “explodes" over the subject. I have six children at home to feed and clothe," Mrs. D. K. writes. “1 have three teenagers—two girls and boy—plus two girls and a boy who are younger ..... My husband keeps telling me I should $x well-balanced meals, and believe me, I’d love to - but tsy fixing balanced peals on $75 to $80 everjTtwo weeks.' "’■> -★ * . . ‘How do you ask your hiis-band for a raise when he thinks you are already overpaid? • Dew Mrs. D. K.: v$jfi Facts, and figures, we like to think, can kettle any argument. Here? then is some support for a raise. After studying recent'surveys, I estimate that for a family at your size in your area of the country it would be necessary to spend close to $100 every two weeks for a minimum food plan, f . ^ Let me point out that it is possible but difficult to achieve well balanced meals with ipinimum budget of the type describe. It is a bit easier, of course, on a moderate budget of $110 every two weeks. ★ ★ ; However, it doesn’t do you tuch good tp obtain a raise from your husband if he is stymied in obtaining one from his employe;. You c a n n o I scrimp anymore on your food budget. A pay raise for your husband — then you — is really the answer. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Stratton of Beachland Boulevard announce the engagement of their daughter, Kathleen Yvonne, to Michael M. Cogswell. He is the son of Mrs. Frances Cogswell of Lansing and Maurice Cogswell of Nashville, Mich. Miss Stratton attended Central Michigan University, the school from which her fiance will graduate in January. Make Your Holiday Party^ a Success... . See Our Fine New Chin* Silverware — Glattei — Candelabra — Silver Tea Service -Large and Small Chafing Ditfce* — Coffee Maker* — Punch Bawl* We Deliver: Baby Beds — Hospital Beds Walkers — Commodes Wheel Chairs — Adults & Child's BEER TAPPERS & BARS! ^'PoSfiae^ CiuuAs l^eatol., 140 OAKLAND AVE'.. Jut! North of Wido Track Drive ’ 334-4044 - If Busy - 334-3989 EXTRA KWIK FOOD MART EXCLUSIVE: You Can Charge All Your Purchases On Your Gulf Travel Garde FREE GIFT With Your Returned* Completed Application. 2 Pontiac Area Food Mart Locations To Serve You. I €971 Highland Rd. 865 S. Lapeer Rd. Pontiac Lake Orion Hammond Organ Society Program Is Announced In addition to a special Donald W. Button of Oxford, 'member of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra and organist of Second Church Of Christ, Scientists, Detroit, will perform at the organ. , , Organ Society members and guests will be addressed Tuesday by Mayor William H. Taylor on “Our Time Is Now.” Gabriele Settembrini, a Neapolitan with considerable experience in the opera houses of Italy, is also scheduled to entertain. ★ ★ ★ Winding up the program list is Mrs. Loyal Nancarrow of Troy, who will display her musical talents in A rendition of some of the organ tunes she used to play in the Royal Oak Theatre as accompaniment for the old silent films. Hie event in downtown Grin-nell’s will start at 7:30 p.m. and is open to the public. MAYOR TAYLOR DONALD W. BUTTON MR. SETTEMBRINI Conservation experts estimate | that there are more deer in the United States now than when the Pilgrims landed. nrorrrm^-y8Tnrvym"rminfTmyrmTmTmTrmTrminrmTnrrifTTTYTmnnrmTYYrrrymTyTmTTYrmTr^ Ou/pJMf 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST., Downtown Pontiac “You Must Be Satisfied- j This We Guar Free Delivery— FE 2-4231 i Fashionable and flexible ammoo Framed Landscape Mirror $49.95 4&*x45* Full-Size Panel Bed $79.95 —**1 Night Stands, each $69.95 9-Drawer 64* Triple Dresser BROCADO combines old-world charm with new-world adaptability In a fabulous collection. Offers a wide choice of pieces you can use individually and in space-saving correlations. All modestly priced for so much luxury. Styled in the grand Spanish manner, With exquisite carved effects* In Antiguo finish bn Pecan veneers, selected hardwoods, and polystyrene components. Accented by antiqubd brass finish pulls. Crafted throughout with exacting care. Let us show you. FREE PARKING Directly Across. Saginaw Street from Qur Store TERMS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET OPEN MONDAY THRU FR1. ' M 9 PM , MAR-RESISTANT MATCHING TOPS High pressure laminated plastic fops resist heat, cigarette burns, solvents such as nail polish remover, alcohol, water. 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS—ELEVATOR SERVICt TO iUCH flOOt • PROVINCIAL • COLONIAL * TRADITIONAL • MODERN All By America's Leading Manufacturenl tm.uj.un m» ».».tijLum tt ».u mitt mi umumiirnuui»m.t o i.ui.mtiO^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, i960 The gift that gives constant pleasure. Choose from the fashionable styles of Rolex. Bulova, l niversal Ceneve and Croton — Wdoomed by Him and Her. Styles Fgom $ 19.95 Give him the gift he will never, ' ‘ buy. Jewelry, that he will wear and enjoy for '.all Sm. days after ' | Christmas — Cufflinks that ' cross, pen or pencil, tie tacks, plain or diamond, and Men do like rings - Tiger Eye, Onyx Signet and Star Sapphire. Item* From $5.00 A lifetime of pleasure the gift of silver. Her choice: that wished-for silver Tea ~or Coffee Service, a service for eight in ail-verplate. You still have time to add to her service in Sterling Tableware. The most beautiful designs. All from the famed / Silver Smiths of Apieidca. 1 . 1 From $&00 M ! 1 , ■? ■ y , ' / yj OPEN MONDAY AMD FRIDAY EVENTS Corner of Huron * And Saginaw Streets DOWNTOWN PONTIAC FE 2-0294 when you want to give a person of prime importance a gift of prime importance, the spirit of the Season is beet expressed by presents of enduring beauty and worth. Forthrightly handsome and of timeless appeal are precious gems - heart’s desire of every one. There is no finer, more eloquent way to give pleasure on Christmas day. beautiful jewelry - heart’# desire of every one and the one gift that Will mark this holiday in splendor, from our treasure chest of precious gems, these truly beautiful pieces to create treasured memories • to say “Merry Christmas’’ the breathtaking way. For the bride-to-be — She would still love a diamond. Choose the icy brilliance of the Emerald cut, or the fire of a Marquise and Pear shape, perhaps the conventional round cut. Each has grace and infinite appeal and beauty. Styles From $100.00 June wedding vowt ate being planned bp Joanne*Marie Roach of Cameron Street and Raymond Erwin of AVr gusta Avenue. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Roach of Canter-, bury Drive. Raymond is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Wamey G. Erwin, ' Ashland, Ky. Joanne has attended Oakland Community College and Pontiac Business Institute. Her fiance was a student at the University of Kentucky. / The engagement is announced of Michele Lee Higgins and John Charles Rebholz. ' Par-of the bride-elect are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth H. Higgins of Up-long Cot^rt^West Bloomfield Township. He is the son, of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Rebholz of North Adams Road, Avon Township. May 2 wedding vows are being planned by the couple, who are students at Oakland University. Clothfer Wants Men to Consider Fashions 8 ✓''ITMfflj’ ier, mi Now is the time for all good, shoulders, gives women to come to the aid of j neater, trimme their men — for the boys need] * encouragement assistance-^ of masculine look. tl^r wardrobes P' •"lE And now is Ume ute r wararoDes. him ■ “ we were trying to get a t Mrs. Hawkens finishes her studio," Sonny began, “that is a monologue Mama is dad and followed it up with “I Got You, Babe" (another Sonny original) and they became teeny-bopper hearththrobs. That was in 1965. “We were known as perennial teen-ages for years,’.’ said Sonny, who is 34. ny, has been her sheepskta-dadjwith a SvengaB. '"Baby, daughter is now speaking to her daughter, Amy, who is leaving after a visit. Have You Tried This? Fru/7 Tops , By JANET ODELL Food Editor, The Pontiac Press The first response to our request for favorite holiday recipes of readers comes from Mrs. Frances Wheeler of Pontiac. How about some more from all you other good cooks? Mrs. Wheeler says her dessert, which she has made for yeirs, can be very pretty for Christmas when red and green (Cherries iare used. HEAVEN’S DELIGHT ' By Mrs. Frances Wheeler l lar^e angel food cake 1 cup chopped 1 smail package maraschino cherries lamon gelatin 1 cup chopped pecans 1% ^ups milk 1 flat can crushed 2 eggs, separated pineapple, drained % cup sugar % cup boiling water 1 pint cream, whipped Ip double boiler, place egg yolks* milk and sugar. Cook; until mixture is consistency of’.thin custard. Cool. Add gelatin which has been dissolved in boiling water. Cool until thick and syrupy. Fold in whipped dream and stiffly beaten egg whites. „ ★ ★ ; *•; Line a greased 9x13 pan with slices of angel food cut Stout %-inch thick. Cover with layer of pudding. Repeat, ending with pudding layer. Top With cherries, drained pineapple and nuts. Chill un(il sarvtag time. Makes 15-16 servings. sub . . .sub . . ! sub ...” His voice trails off, as he searches for the wrod. Cher, who is examining the ends of her hair in murmurs, ‘‘Subsidiary, you] r Victorian know, like an annex." oew v,cror/on DAUGHTER I Chastity is mentioned. “Chastity" is the name of the movie starring Cher, produced -by Sonny. It is also the name of] their baby girl, born last] Today, the young crowd likes March. the “old” look — fashions with “She is a groovy baby,” says a quaint Victorian air. for Young Girls vn'Your Gift List Cher. The baby is nine months old. As part of your Christmas sewing, give the young miss with old-fashioned tastes a dainty lace-embellished petticoat. Make it up in a fine cotton lawn. Sonny says gently, “Oh come on, honey." “She is,” says Cher, still examining her hair. “She’s a hip, colossal, super baby. She’s notj A dirndl half-slip in a mini-like other kids.” An o t h e rlength is an easy style to make, silence. lit takes only about one and one- Sonny talks on about Cher’s half yards of fabric. Make an career plsihs. “She is great in'elastic waistband and edge the ‘Chastity,’"lie says. slip with a deep border of Sonny wrote the script and crochet-type cotton lace, music for the movie about.“a * * * girl in search of herself.” Hie Instead of white, choose pair financed land produced the lace in a rich ecru color. For jnovie themselves. the slip, use pale beige cotton. UNIVERSAL GENEVE HeRfi'S 1 ec m foK Creations for your horn* or giving that rival nature's own ability for the beautiful. Each one distinctive, .each one colorfully bringing the Cheer of This Gay Season. PERMANENT CHRISTMAS ARRANGEMENTS A rich arrangement in Italian stemmed goblet of green holly, cedar red velvet poinsettias and red twisted candles. Accented by 3 apples and a large bunch of grapes and green velvet bow. For mantle or TV. *10°° Bright red and blue drummer boys, set in colorful holly and greens with bright Christmas ball and glitter stems. Velvet bow and red twisted candle complete this' arrangement in a stemmed , crystal - candle vase. An original centerpiece in white and gold California ceramic footed bowl. Long needle pine, boxwood, holly and glittery bolls form the background for* 3 twisted candles and cute felt pixies. m |00 A clever centerpiece made on imported reed mat. Boxwood and holly base accented by frosted gum drops, pine cones, Christmas balls and twisted candle. *600and*75° Boxwood Christmas tree on gold metal base. A very, impressive arrangement decor-' ated with colorful fruit, bright bows and finished at the top with glitter stems. About 30 inches high. Ideal for table, mantle or TV. • *3000 This Christmosy centerpiece is in a gold footed bowl. Boxwood, holly and pine form the background for bright fruit and Christmas balls.' 3 tiny tapers complete this unusual arrangement. INTRODUCING THE UNISONiC Also unusual gifts in lead crystal, imported Italian glass and pottery. Brass and copper planters — large green plants. See our gift display for something differ^ ent. Wm •••£ 0 «W» ^ yoor t»°rt- I oi^frv«;»w> wy; diamond’ both ring* for Charge it Exciting Gifts That say "Merry Christmas’ The Christmas gift that will be prized for a lifetime* Choose now from our great selection. I All This Included: 1 • COFFEE POT & COVER i • SUGAR BOWL & COVER 1 • 4 STACKABLE CUPS I • MATCHING CREAMER I • METAL CUP STAND Give a gift both enduring and endearing. The Unde 1 Star will delight their hearts and put stars in their, eyes. Select from shimmering rings, pendants, earrings, tie clasps — Many accented with 10K geld filled com. Chois. Of color- Charge it Christmas Special 5-PC. SILVERPLATED SET By International Silver Co. Arn&fi 69,5 h & T**e P*dM gift for a 9roc'ous hostess. 3v rfCoffee and tea set r> . beautifully de- T^iM:3f signed at an ■ unbelievable ab tew .holiday TLX m M 1 ft r**0** & price. . TAPE RECORDER WITH AM-FM RADIO Big solid performance. Playback JT Jr , pre-recorded-' cassettes ... or record radio or "live- up to one 1 1 Charge it hour Radio-tape ewitch. Christmas Special SCHICK ELECTRIC SHAVER *8.88. Christmas Special CULTURED PEAK HECKLACE *15.88 ' If ''she's a gal with a flair far fashion, gift W with these lovely pearls. Styled with 14K gold clasp. Deluxe -and to easy ^7 to operate. \ Simply snap in *> T*** cassette, push button, then sit back and 24 N. SAGINAW 332-6022 MICHIGAN'S FINE JEWELERS FREE PARKING IN FRONT OF OUR STORE ’ IN THE NEW AAALL PARKING LOT iniChriehnc Open An Account Convenient Terms Arranged BAiL: _____j_ ___________________» / Exquisitely Matching Wedding Bands tyLove Song Diamond bands. Engraved bands. Beautiful matching wedding bands in 14K white or yellow gold. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3,1909 ~ both rings for both rings for *59.95 Earrings 88C to $495 Plain, diamond and genuine stones in tfbld and sterling. -Christmas Gift Favorites SHARP RADIOS 5 v Charms $l*00to $99.50 Wallets *2*69 Sterling, gold filled and 14K Genuine leathnf wallets to gold creations. . make any men happy. Christmas Special Seth Thomas Clocks Regularly to $39.50 £14.95 Save mere than HI'Chalet of popular stylet. Operates on battery. Christmas Special*1 24-Piecfe Flatware $4.95 Stain lest steel — service for 6. NevZr needs polish-4ng«Save new. Men's Jewelry *1.95 > Matching cuff links and tie clasps far every man,'. Gold Lockets from $3«95 Gifts shell appreciate in exciting new styles. Cross & Chain from $2o9S Beautiful engraved designs. Many set with diamonds. FM-AM CLOCK RADIO The newest, most wanted clock radio - Tells time by the numbers instead of hands! Plays $59 ii Charge it Christmastime! A time to remember with a LONGINES THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1069 B-»T Man Beats Boyhood Idol in Checkers Showdown DETROIT (UPI) — Kenneth M. Grover’s moment bad come after 28 years of waiting, \, and he wasn’t about to blow it with a riwy ' . V move. . >;N/ \\ *jij • < Soe he played it “more or less safe” In the final three games with his boyhood Idol, 82-year-old Newell Banks ef Detroit. The strategy worked, and yesterday Grover became the world champion of 11-man ballot checkers. . “I’Ye been waiting tor 28 years to beat him,” said Grover, 61, of TahOlah. Wash. “It makes me world . champion. I defeated Newell Banks, champion of the world for 54 years,” i f \ Final victory for Grover came by playing Banks for three straight ties after winning the fir# game of a four-gamp playoff. It was a quiet ending to more than 30 hours of intense concentration “of looking at that board every second of the time, no smiling, no ‘hello John how are ya.’ ”, ONE LESS MAN Eleven-man ballot checkers differs from regular checkers in that the players use (me less “man,” thus opening up the number of possible moves and countermoves. “It's all natural ability from the beginning,” said Grover. “You can’t memorize ttnoven liice you cap in regular checkers.” 1 N >! The championship, played at a Detroit hotel, started Thanksgiving Day. After 20 matches, Grover and Banks each had won two gahies apiece and tied 16. In the first game of the four-game playoff, Grover decided to gamble. “In the midpart of the game I saw something — and I said to myself I go here and simplify it and take a tie — but then I said to myself I better go for broke.” He did, won the game and went one up on Banks. COME TO HIM « “With one game ahead I decided to play it' more or less safe for ties and let Banks come to me," he said. For Banks, the championship match might be his last. For after 54 years as world champion, he plans to retire. ★. ★ ★ “He was my star in my mind when I was a kid,” said Grover. “Banks had been a boy wonder at 5 years old. If you know anything about checkers, you’ve heard the name.” Mental Health Effort Urged by Mlfliken EAST LAjNSING (AP)-Gov. William Milliken says the public is aware of mental health problems but has not given enough •support to mental hqalth,programs.' In remarks to the annual meeting of the Michigan Society for Mental Health, the governor said Thursday “We.«ore still looking far the key—the key that can unlock the public conscience and transform talk into action.” ■ ♦ ’ 'dr He added that money alone Is not enough. • ' ★ . • * ★ ' “The sad fact,” the governor said, “Is that in some cases, mqre money has wily been used to extend programs that were ineffective or inadequate in the first place.” However, he followed that comment with an outline of various improvements in Michigan mental health programs. “Despite these improvements,” he said, “the demand for admsisions has continued; to increase, and We cannot accommodate all of those who should be accommodated.1’ Blind Teacher Gets Dearborn Job Back DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) -'Oh': It Mil be one of my happiest days,’’ Pauline Fucinhii says about next Monday. if "★ '■ At ■ Not everyone feels that way about going^ back to school, which is the pause of her excite ment. discipline Cited But Miss Fucinari is blind and 24 years old, and she’s going back to Fordson High as a 10th and Uth grade social teacher. A court order' she sought is sending her back. it *■ * Miss Fucinari, blind since birth but holding a master’s degree in social science from Eastern Michigan University, was fired as a teacher last spring. Her dismissal came one day before she would have attained tenure and been subject to removal only for proven cause. ' Afe> ' * ' f| The Dearborn Board of Education said Miss Fucinari Iras unable to maintain discipline in classes and stressed reading too much. Misk Fucinari went to court, and Circuit Judge John M. Wise ordered the board Wednesday to return hen^to her job. % . * insists she had no disciplinary problems with her pupils, despite her blindness. .. ★ ic. ★ “When they come into my classes,” she said. “I tell them the rules. There aren’t many. For instance, I don’t mind if they chew gum, but if they pop it they’re thrown out. No one ever walks out without telling me where they’re going. ★ t it -k “You don’t have problems as long as you keep |hem interested and keep things moving, ” she said. (MvwUIMMM) More Security With FALSE TEETH While Eating, Talking inner longer. Makes eating JASTKKTH is alkaline. No gummy, pasty taste I Dentures that fit ale essential to health. See your dentist regularly. Oet fasteeth. With a•. LAST WEEK SALE ENDS .SATURDAY, DEC. 6th CALCINATOR CAS INCINERATOR! NOW AT SPECIAL INSTALLED PRICES Stop that endless struggle of getting rid of paper cups, cartons, bones, old magazines and garbage. Get rid of all your burnable trash with a modern Caldnator gas incinerator. Conveniently placed in your basement, garage or utility room, a Caldnator gas fndneratar frees you from that daily dash to the outdoor trash can, the problem of accumulated garbage and complaints about odor and smoke. The Caldnator gas incinerator con-sumes all burnable Items indoors, without smoke — without odor — and it costs just pennies a day. NOW 95 INSTALLED Mail Coupon For Mora Information ilAHWiim niii ^ ~ Consumers Appliance Dept, ® consumers i UNf 1.. • 1, ' - Mploin your Go, Incinerate, oH«t. I und.r- Power .■ 1 , ! STREET,...........I I ...,... ' | RELAX IN TOTAL COMFORT! SB I IhmJf ^RECLINE -Chase Tensions with SOOTHING CHOICE OF COLORS BLACK, GREEN, GOLD Come running . . . this without question is the greatest buy in luxurious comfort you’ll ever find. A big, sumptuous man-size recliner that vibrates-reclines-even has a built-in heating element. That’s right... a built-in heating pad so you can lounge, recline, or stretch-out ail the way and enjoy a marvelous massage with soothing, body-penetrating heat. Here’s relaxation so incomparable, so complete, you’ll find tensions, tired muscles and fatigue fade like magic in moments. But hurry. We have only a limited stock of these great chairs at this special price ... and when they are gone no more are available. Choose from glove-soft, easy to clean Vineile In colors. stratorocker'rockerrecliner Or if you prefer a rocker, this chair has no equal. Not only featured is custom, “extra-long” rocking action ... but it, too, also vibrates-reclines-and has a built-in heating element for matchless relaxation. Whether you want to just sit and rock, partially recline and watch TV, or stretch-out for a refreshing nap. Choose frpm carefree Vineile in colors, IMMEDIATE DELIVERY LAY AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS NOW SPECIALLY PRICED *11995 Give Your Home That FESTIVE XMAS SPIRIT WITH A tteslr LIFE-SIZE ELECTRIC FIREPLACE MEDITERRANEAN 4-PIECE BEDROOM SUITE WITH BQ0K0ASE BED • DOUBLE DRESSER • MIRROR • CHEST • BOOKCASE BED All 4 Pieces $16995 OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. LIFE SIZE 38l/*wx41%”x9,/iw WITH YULK LOOS THAT GLOW AND FLICKKR LUCK A REAL FIRE! • Realistic Yule Log Set • 8-tt. Cord, Socket and Plug • Light Bulb • Revolving Fan Attachment • Imprinted Fireplace . N ’ V Accessories Limited Quantity E DELIVERY E PARKING ► DEAL DIRECT • PAY AT THE STORE NO FINANCE CO. INVOLVED $|99 ORCHARD Phone FE 58114-5 FURNITURE COMPANY 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENU£^PO^ 2 Blocks West of South Wife ftacltlfrive Mohawk Hereulon& Light Gold, $3.00 sq. yd. Camper Specials from 2'x2' to 6'irfr 5 Colors Open Mon., Fri. ’til 9, Sat. ’til 5 P.M. draperies Custom Mode See One of the Largest Selections in the Area FLOOR COVERINGS B—« THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1069 Black Publisher in Ja Murdered I JACKSON (AP) - Crime lab experts pored over the blood-apattered Jackson apartment t of a slain Negro publisher tor II day, searching for a key to his | violent death. > The body ot Charles Cade, 45, teas found Thursday evening in 1 his bachelor apartment near this southern Michigan city’s downtown shopping mall. On a the walls of an entrance hall ’ were scrawled the words “Black Niger,” said an associate who confirmed the misspelling of the ; second word. ★ * A J James J. Murphy, editor of _ Cade's Jackson Blazer, said his I employer’s death was racially I motivated but apparently unre-; iated to recent reports of gun-- fire and two shooting deaths in Jackson. Murphy said the derogatory words were written in blood, presumably Cade’s. Cade was reportedly shot to death, but police declined to confirm the cause ot death pending the State Police crime lab examination of the apart-ment and body. WAVE OF CONCERN The death triggered a wave of concern throughout the city of 50,700 which has suffered through uneasiness and tension in the past few months over two unsolved shooting deaths which appeared tp be the work of a sniper. . ’■ y During, the past week,' there have been humerous reports of gunfire, and Gov. Witylam Milli-ken sent two representatives to investigate ptlcgatiohs that the city was becoming “virtually an armed camp.” , AUTEN FURNITURE * 6605 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston ► FURNITURE ► CARPET ► DRAPERY Frozen Ponds Hold Dangers for Sitting Ducks DEARBORN (AP) — Ducks that don’t go south shouldn’t rest on frozen ponds. That was the conclusion reached Thursday by Jim Yard-ley and Booker Bryant of the Michigan Humane Society. They were,called to a frozen pond in Henry Ford’s Greenfield Village where a noisy wild .duck was frozen by his tail feathers. The duck was one of a small flock which has remained at the pond, occupying a small corner which remains ' because of moving water. 'He just must have got out in the middle overnight and _ stuck,” said Bryant. The men took him to an animal shelter on the grounds for recovery. 'He seems to be doing very well,” Bryant observed. The Blazer’s editor, Murphy, applied that description! to the city to asking foe help upm the governor. Mayor Maurice Town* i send, said he shared concern ' ahput “growing Jtonsto^p." g| “We’re all hopeful that this latest incident is unrelated (to earlier shootings) and that it is not a racially motivated matter at all,” Mayor Townsend said today. “We’re all hopeful that this will be proved to be something completely independent of all the other problems we’ve j ad.’’ ■ „ Towhsend said he knew Cadei casually and said he could pot' be classified as controversial, j 'mom of a businessman and! enterpreneur.” Cade also pub-' lished a black-oriented weekly in Kalamazoo, the Ledger. Freeway-Lighting Maintenance State Legislator to Seek Probe LANSING (AP)-A state legislator says he will ask Atty. Gen. Frank .Kelley and the Public Service Commission to investigate “fantastic” rates charged by private utility companies for maintenance of freeway lifting systems across the state. Rep. Jett Sietsema, D-Grand Rapids, says his estimates show the State Highway Department’s I practice of contracting with may raise the It has decided to hire contractors to do the actual work, Sietsema said. * ★ ★ ’ According to his figures, a $525,000 bill for maintenance of cost by as much as 80 per cent. * ’ ★ t •' Under a bill which becomes effective Jan. 1, the highway department assumes responsibility for maintaining freeway and major highway light poles. coy* Gompufep Grafted (Mop Coldr Television So Suportor That It Challangaa ComparisonI Check these Advanced Features ! • Big screen, 20* dlegonal 227 Square-lnehviawabla picture. s • Tilt-out control panel for easy stsnd-up tuning. • Advanced 26,000-volt Now Vista Color TV chassis. • Super Bright Hi-Uto Color picture tuba. • Transistorized NeW Vista VHP, Solid State UHFtUnars. • Balanced color demodulator aystem. • One-tot VHP flna tuning; atay-sat volume control. • Fine All-wood Walnut-grain cabinetry. Special Introductory Pricing— TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE ItGil Suy Now 1st Installment Payment Due Feb. 12.1970 Now You Can Buy COLOR TV Brand \ OQ95 Name For | tfC LIMITED SUPPLY Large Selection STEREOS 39” Prices Start At > Immediate Delivery • Easy Credit a ALL-CITY TELEVISION 2363 OiCHARO LAKE ROAD 682-6670 m SYLVAN SHOPPING CENTER 4350 N. WOODWARD some 15,000 light poles across the state will soar to 0075,000. He estimated toe present (35 maintenance cost of a single light pole would be (65 under toe Contract system. ATTENTION —rlberm OaHasd Co—*y Christmas Clearing House Those feeling the need of 'Christmas Assistance \ MUST MAKE PERSONAL APPLICATION AT V 29 W* Lawrence St. Application will be taken from Dec. let thru Dec. 15th \ Mon; thru Fri. from 9:30 to 4:00 P.M. NO CARDS WILL BE SENT OUT THIS YEAR CHRISTMAS COMMITTEE Lower Level Another Service of the United Fund, . BUY I SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! REMNANT SALE Buy practical carpet SOI NYLON PATTERN 4 Colors $^|95 1 Reg. 7.95 sq.yd. LEE’S WOOL TWIST Discontinued Pattern 3 Colors $795 Reg. 8.95 Hsu. yd. NYLON CANDY STRIPE $095 V ***■ Yd* Reg. *6.95 1 BIG SAVINGS SIZE COLOlt aaMBianau REGULAR DESCRIPTION PRICE 3 12x16-6 Avocado Sculptured Acrilan 242.00 1*9.001 12x9 . Bronze Tip-sheared Aerilan 132.00 69.00 h 9x20 Multicolor Acrilan candy stripe 140.90 70.00 -11x9 Redtweed two level nylon 89.50 49.00 12x13-2 Rust Sculptured nylon 158.40 t9.00 12x13-6 Ant. Gold Indoor Outdoor 126.90 79.00 12x9-5 Bright Gold Patterned nylon 88.20 05.00 12x15-5 Olivo ; Wool twist 244.90119.00 I 12x12-9 Turquoise Heavy nylon plush 119.00 99.00 12x12 Rose Beige Sculptured nylon 128,00 59.00 12x12-9 Green Patterned acrilan 111.00 09.00 j 12x15-9 Sage * Patterned! acrilan 189.00 99.00 12x14-10 Pale Lime Sculptured polyester 160.00 99.00 12x7-1 Purple Patterned nylon 41.00 26.00 j 12x8-6 Aerilian Plush Candy stripe 66.00 30.00 12x10 Gold Sculptured nylon *1.00 59.00 12x7-9 Wodgewood Blue Carved nylon 89.50 49.0IP 12x13-8 Green tones Sculptured nylon 162*00 79.00 I 12x9-5 Off White Random sheared acrilan 120.90 59.00; 8x8 Red-Black Commerieal nylon 83.00 29.00 12x134 Avocado Nylon mini shag 180.09 M.00 12x7-6 Ico Blue Polyester shag 80.00 45.00 12x16 Gray Tonas Commerieal acrilan J 96, 4o;oo 8x8 Bright Orange Nylon super shag Iff 36.00 12x6 Green Rubber back Ozite 40.00 ’ 24.00 1 15x12-8 Olive Tip-sheared polyester 227.00 109.90 | Here are a few more examples of our tremendous buys UlYLON TWIST By Burlington ’ 3 Colors eBSP Reg. 8.95 HEAVY ACRILAN LOOP PILE By LEE'S .. $095 Reg^ 9^rg*%.n. NYLON SHAG 5 Colors" $C95 Left 6v sq. yd. f TTTTO PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1969 HOW WYN SOCK SAVED CHRISTMAS By Paul Gringle Joined U.S. Cabinet in 1905 One Bonaparte U. S. Success PARIS (AP) — The story of a Bonaparte who made good in America is retold this month in a semiofficial military publication called Revue de Defense Nationals. Charles - Joseph Bonaparte, grandson of Napoleon’s youngest brother Jerome, accepted on May 21, 1905, ah invitation to Join the U.S. Cabinet. The invitation camh h hcrn inereas. It ended, when police swept in Two young people were found month-old offer to talk troop> re- uttje better with a .substantially , , h tj the Harvard 811(1 "rested nearly 200 persons nnriir »~io,r in an ductions emerged at the wind-up, ]ower channel because the “ ~ y . . , on trespass charges in an early session of the NATO Council of! tuners on older sets are more c ^ . * , . morning melee that left several Foreign Ministers. The minis-Ljngitjye to the lower fre-1 K has made 8 y3"®*? of de‘ persons injured. ters were completing a joint Lpency ” he said. mands ranging from greater F _____l declaration on East-West rela-1 ibe^ FCC also announced Negro ^ enrollment at the^ 353- unconscious early today in an automobile that; was destroyed an accident a West Wide Track and Lafayette. in the country. Some 20 units were l with federal funds given to the school system’s Indocom project. There to admire the equipment were (from left) seniors Christine Childs, Jim Durnbaugh and Stephen Stuk. Lemalie Holmes Jr., 23, of 288 Ferry is in good condition at Pontiac General Hospital under for facial lacera-paSsenger, Marley 0, of 238 Fefry was treated and released after he gained consciousness. tions and on the Soviet bloc calljreceipt of application for the ye«r old ^ League institution pL:/:-/. Kill Dies - Pan-European security; transfer 0f licenses of Jackson, I to improvements for Negro la- ° ■*V. for conference in toe next months. Foreign Minister Maurice Schumann of France also objected to a West German, proposal that the alliance reject toe Soviet bloc demahd at its Moscow summit meeting Thursday Mich.,, radio statical WKHM arid borers employed by the school. LONDON (AP) , — Prince WKHM-FM, from Jackson| The university has an enroll- pm mother prin^ss An. Broadcasting Corp. to WKHM raeqt of about 15,000. of Greecei died in her Inc. TURNED AWAY 'sleep at Buckingham Palace -------- —— The demonstrators moved'earjy today. She was 84 and. -had Fit for Rposis? into the building before the start been in poor health for some I of the business day, and em-'fi^, According to police, Holmes for international recognition of MASERU, ^es?^° (APi | turned away * | [lost Control of the car driving,the East German regime, Schu-j^8anlzers of this southern y\ 'on an inside lane of West Wide mann said such 4 rejection .African kingdom s first ammal| They made no immediate at-, [Track, skidded and rolled 40 vfoufd imply acceptance of the[welfare society say the group tempt to communicate with uni-j feet over the embankment on principle of negotiations be-will try to Check on the treat-versity officials. The adminis-l the extreme east side of the [tween two blocs, and France op- ment of impounded beasjp andtration said shortly after the Street and slammed into the iposes toe division of Europe into provide food and water for pack takeover that it was uncertain Lafayette curb. j blocs. $ , ) animals. : about toe blacks’ demands. I CONSTIPflTEDO mir m ■ iav ait MAH ® Mrs. Charles H. Bradley ^aktl?™ship, ^denLK\d H*l ■ ’ Monfort, 84, of Alma will be 3 Mrs. Charles E. p.m. tomorrow at Richardson -| Baumgarten Bird Funeral Home, Milford, with burial in .White Lake COMMERCE TOWNSHIP Cemetery. The Davisburg F & Service for Mrs. Charles E. ... ... i u ______■ 1 (Pn«.|A f \ Dnnmiroeion OO nl Service for Mrs, Charles H. (Loretta M.) Bradley, 89, of 162 E. Iroquois will be 11 a.pi. Monday at Donelson-Johns Fu- HI ———„ - - , neral Home, with burial in AM will hold a memorial (Carrie L.) Baumgarten, 82, of Perry Mount Park Cemetery, service 8 tonight at the funeral 4645 Broadway will be 1 p.m.[ Mrs. Bradley died this morn-home. tomorrow at Will and tog. I Mr. Monfort died Wednesday. Schwa^zkoff Funeral Home, Surviving are three daugh- He was a life member of the Mount Clemens, *lth “"“ to ters, Mrs. Orley E. Hill of Oscoda, Mrs. Ben A. Ronan of Pontiac and Mrs. Donald E. Rohm of Royal Oak; three sons, James and Donald, both of Port- 5 law, Mrs. Josephine Monfort of [' Fcrt Lauderdale, Fla., and two * grandchildren. tiac, and Robert of Detroit; two sisters; one brother; 18 grandchildren; and 22 great-grandchildren. The body may be viewed1 after 7 p.m. tomorrow. [ Davisburg F & AM Lodge 48 Oak^ood Cemetery, New and a life member and past Baltimore. 1 patron of the OES 396 of Mrs. Baumgarten died Davisburg. » Survivinga re a Joseph N. Morris Wednesday. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Donald Newkirk of Cleveland, Ohio, Mrs. Howard North of Union] Lake and Mrs. Vern Mason of: Bloomfield Hills; two sons,] Charles of Marine City and. Harvey of New Baltimore; Service for Joseph N. Morris, seven grandchildrefl; and four 51, of 724 Wing will be 11 a.m. I great-grandchildren. Service for Richard R. Cullen, I Monday at Huntoon Funeral I 55, of 219 Oakland will be 130 [Home with burial in Flint Mrs. Sherman Crawford j p.m. Monday at Donelson-JohM Memorial Park. . < i -----1 — —uu 1—«— Mr. Morris died yesterday. I BLOOMFIELD HILLS — j He was employed by Arco Service for Mrs. Sherman M. Manufacturing, Oxford. Surviving are his wife, Goldie; two daughters, Mrs. Bonnie Robinson of Clyde and Mrs. Shirley McDowell of Pontiac; eight sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth K o v a i c k, Mrs. William Ledger, Mrs. Geneieve Dunny and Mrs. Mary Bamowski, all of Pontiac, Mrs. Thomas Collins of Oxford, Mrs. Josephine McCaffery of Waterford Township, Mrs.1 band and three brothers. Thomas Turner of Utica, andj Mrs. Dorothy Longtine of North Branch; two brothers, Charles) TROY — Service for William Morris of Metamora and A Stewart, 77, of 2875 Miner Theadore Morris of Pontiac; • bg \ p tomorrow at and four grandchildren. L- ,« ■— > - Richard R. Cullen Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Menjorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Cullen died yesterday. He was employed by Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Marlene Payne of Waterford Township; one son, Russell Foote of Pontiac; one sister/ Mrs. Clarence Tank of Pontiac; one brother, William H. of Pontiac; and four grandchildren. Hie body may be viewed after 7 p.m. tomorrow. Mrs. Margaret Darnell Service for Mrs. Margaret Darnell, 43, of 79 Lincoln will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at toe Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake, with burial in Commerce Cemetery. Mrs. Darnell died yesterday. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Darrell House of Lake Orion and Mrs. Anthony Sauro of Pontiac; three sons, Ronald of Arkansas and James and Timothy, both of Pontiac; her father, Roy Jones; one brother; a sister; and two grandchildren. Fred H. Monfort Service for former White (Grace L.) Crawford, 59, of 511 Whitehall will be 8 p.m. today at Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with burial Monday in Rosehill Cemetery, Akron, Ohio. Mrs. ,Crawford died Wednesday. She was a member of the Birmingham Newcomers Club and the Edgewood Country Club. She is survived by her hus- William A. Stewart Baby Boy Axler PONTIAC TOWNSHIP — Service for the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. William Axler of 3050 Dutton was recently. The infant died at birth Nov. 21. Surviving are the parents; three siOters, Kim, Cindy and Vicki, all at home; one brother, Mark at home; and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. William Axler of Florida. Gramer Funeral Home, ClawSon, with burial in Cadillac Memorial Gardens East, Mount Clemens. Mr. Stewart died Wednesday. He was a retired warehouse foreman for Potter Mdving andj Storage Co., Royal Oak. Surviving are his wife, Ellen; a daughter, Mrs. Marvin Carpenter of Lake Orion; two, sons, William W. of Sylvan Lake and Thomas A. of Royal: Oak; 10 grandchildren; and a sister, Mrs. Olga Schafer of Royal Oak. Police Counselors OK'd The addition of two police counselors to serve two junior high schools each was approved by a 4-1 vote Of toe Pontiac School Board last night. Police counselors work in secondary schools to cooperative arrangement between the school district- and the City of Pontiac, to serve ’as a resource person to school personnel in preventing juvenile delinquency and