^SaysThi leu SAIGON (AP) -- President Nguyen Van Thieu said today the South Vietnamese army now “has the capability to replace sizable American troop units in the war.” Thieu’s appraisal of his troops’ capability, made at a news conference, was not detailed, but it was by far the most ambitious Saigon statement to date. He confirmed earlier reports that the South Vietnamese command is conferring with senior US. officers on preliminary plans for withdrawal of some American combat troopjs this year. Thieu did not Indicate a withdrawal timetable. He also did not make the expected announcement of dates for a cease-fire for the Tet lunar new year celebration in the middle of this month. "It is still too early,” he said, but he added; “Up to this date, in principle we will havf! a Tet truce.” The lunar holiday this year falls on Feb. 17, and the Vietcong has proclaimed a seven-day cease-fire for Feb. 15-22. Thieu said he would like to meet with President Nixon sometime this year and that he also plans to visit South Korea, Formosa and Thailand. He suggested a summit meeting of the seven allied nations fighting on his side in Vietnam, if the Paris peace talks come to a “decisive moment on substantive matters," In a preliminary statement, Thieu reviewed pacification efforts during 1968, particularly a recent three-month special accelerated program. “I am greatly encouraged 4>y the results obtained,” he said, adding that ^ the end of last month “the government of Vietnam controlled 89 per cent of the population throughout the country." This figure contrasts sharply with Vietcohg claims that they control most of the population. Thieii said that his goal in 1969 would be for the government “to control IM per cent of the population ” To accomplish this, he laid out a four-point program Including improving local adm.inistratibn, improving personnel, organizing elections in all villages and hamlets where the government has extended its control, and finally a "really vigorous and revolutionary land reform program." » Th# Wifiath^r Mawiiwr Wntmet, frmke Rais ^ (OMUHriMU Ta/ks Are Stalled, Saigon Assailed PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1969 I3id — NO. 318 ★ ★ -70 PAGES Nixon to Begin 5-Nation Trip to Europe Feb. 23 PARIS UPl — The United States appealed to North Vietnam and the Viet-cong’s National Liberation Front today to “come to grips" with basic problems of peace. But the Vietnam talks bogged down into solid deadlock, sealed by violent attacks on the government of South Vietnam. The third session of the full-scale talks opened with an NLF blast declaring peace impossible so long an the present South Vietnamese government remains in power and the Americans refuse to negotiate directly with the front. WASHINGTON OP) - President Nixon announced today he will begin a five-nation trip through Western Europe on Feb. 23 and confer with government leaders of Belgium, Britain, West Germany, Italy, and France. He told of his pians at a news conference, the second he has held as This, plus a North Vietnamese statement echoing the sentiments, suggested a distinct hardening of positions. In Rome he will confer with Pope PaUl VI. During his trip to Germany he will pay a visit to West Berlin. His talks will include discussions with NATO leaders. Nixon will also confer with Ambas- The other side of the deadlock came from Saigon, where President Nguyen Van Thieu said South Vietnam “will not make any concessions detrimental to the national sovereignty or interest.” This news conference statement was a clarification of one in Paris by Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky. As the American, North Vietnamese, NLF and Saigon delegates gathered for the third time around the enormous round table in the International Conference Center, the atmosphere was one of pessimism for any positive result in the near future. U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, heading the U.S. team, sought once again to bring up military matters, although he declared that "we do not, thereby, set aside the importance of political matters." Ambassador Xuan Thuy of North Vietnam, however, insisted that the Vietnam problem must be solved as a whole in both military and political aspects, "the political aspect being the more fundamental.” This is a basic element of the deadlock. Lodge indicated this when, in his formal statement, he said: "We do underline two things in this regard: First, as we have repeatedly said, we consider that the settlement of political affairs must be a matter for determination by the South Vietnamese themselves; second, that the separation of the contending military forces will help to create a climate in which the political process can go forward without external interference.” TAKING TURNS - Pontiac Press Ski School instructor Neal Moore demonstrates tummg on skis to a class of beginners. The first class of the school’s second session was held last night. Subsequent classes will be held the next three Wednesdays at the Mt. Holly Ski Area, 13536 S. Dixie, Groveland Township. Some 700 beginners are enrolled. Kelley Ruling Hits Schools, Too County Building Periled? sador Henry Cabot Lodge, the U.S. negotiator in Paris, but has no plans to talk with South Vietnamese representatives unle.ss Lodge recommends that. He does not expect to see representatives of either the Vietcong or North Vietnam now but added: “perhaps at some later time.” Nixon described the purpose of the trip as being to strengthen the Western Alliance. He said such a mission was necessary before any meeting with the Russians. On other fronts he said: • Some American troops will be brought home from Vietnam as soon as South Vietnam takes over more of the fighting 6r the Paris peace talks progress justify such action. The timing, he said, will depend on expanded training of South Vietnamese forces, events at the Paris peace talks, and other developments. • He favors “a massive infusion” of federal financial aid to the nation's schools, with emphasis on the elementary and secondary levels. He said also he believes federal money should be denied school districts which perpetuate racial segregation. \ County Supervisors Pay Becomes Statewide Issue (EDITOR’S NOTE — Every county in Michigan has a newly formed board of supervisors. Since they took office the first of the year, the No. 1 problem facing most of the' boards has been how much they should pay themselves.) of $7,500 a year and payments of $20 a meeting, charging they amount to “a high price for a public trust." The Jay-cees consider the supervisory jobs in the county of 419,000 as part-time positions. (Continued on Page A-9, Col. 1) By KARL MANTYLA and A. F. MAHAN Associated Press Writers A storm of controversy sparked by angry taxpayers has broken about the heads of many of Michigan’s new county boards of supervisors. Pay scales form the vortex of the storm, but controversy also §wirls over whether the jobs require full-time or only part-time attention. Temporary Half on ABMs Ordered By JEAN SAILE A formal opinion issued by Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley may have placed Oakland County’s building program and the financing of the intermediate school budget in jeopardy. Kelley ruled yesterday on a request of Rep. Clifford Smart, R-Walled Lake, that taxing beyond the 15-mill limitation for long-term lease contracts with the building authMity is illegal. * * * Also he ruled that the Oakland County Intermediate School District which depends on the use of two-tenths of a miil of its .22-mili budget from nonvoted monies is doing so illegally. f ’ In Today's I Press '’,'1 I ■ f. Drug‘Us9 Foruttt ] f ’ Taking dope likened to “play- ^ s ing Russian rotdette with your; ' mind" — PAGE A-4. Romney Opposed ft , E- Senate again weighs bin to. i pa-mit local curfews — PAGE V B-l PolHkal PIm? Don deal adfh Nixni’s friend , I stirs controversy — PAGE \ Area News....................t Astrology....; 5;}® Bridge ........D-10 Crossword Puzzle ■J, Comics Editorials . V, A*f I I Food SectioB ... C-*, C-3 “ Markets Obitoarles ^ C-l Sports ............ &1—E4 Theaters ............. TV aad Radio Programs . E-17 1^. Vietnam War News , .... . A4 '4* ytwW “The 15-mill tax limitation controls,” Kelley ruled in regard to the intermediate school budget. The mac fact that the district extends beyond the county line does not justify the intermediate district to exceed the limitation he said. Dr. William Emerson, superintendent of the Oakland County Intermediate School District, said he would have no comment until he had had an opportunity to read the opinion. Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the county Mard of auditas, said he did not believe the ruling would affect the financing of the east wing of the courthouse. assessments and the lease payments to the building authority for the east wing. Where the ruling is likely to have more effect is on the construction of the county’s proposed $9-million jail and law enforcement complex. Kelley ruled: “Notices of sale of building authority revenue bonds will not be approved by the Municipal Finance Commission, unless a showing is made 4hat the annual rental payments can be made within the millage authority of the county.” Murphy said he had not received a copy of the attorney general’s opinion yet, but that in his opinion the ruling would have little application in that the county’s decision to exceed the limitation is made on a yearly basis and not on a long-term agreement. The county’s current tax spread, approved last year by the Board of Supervisors, provides for the raising of some $300,000 by a levy of .112 mills beyond the limitation. The money is used to pay drain COMMITTED By lease and lease-back agreement approved in board of supervisors’ committee, the county is committed to annual payments of $641,000 for the jail. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) The problem is difficult, he said, embracing a desire to keep the schools open and also to bring about desegregation. “Before using the ultimate weapon of denying funds,” he said, everything should be done to induce school authorities to comply with the law. • Of the Paris peace talks, “I think we have made a go^ start.” • The United States is assuming the initiative in Middle East peace efforts by accepting talks among four power representatives at the United Nations. The area, he said, “might explode into a major war.” • Of the case of the spy ship Pueblo: “I will examine the whole record myself with regard to this incident and with regard to seeing that the whole thing can be avoided in the future.” • He is in favor of long-range, very (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 2) The salary squabble has swept to the .State Capitol. State Sen. George Kuhn, R-West Bloomfield Twp., has threatened to offer a bill under which the Legislature would fix $5,000 a year as the absolute maximunii compensation for any supervisor. WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird has ordered major work on the $5.5-billion Sentinel antiballistic missile system halted temporarily pending a high-level review of antimissile plans, the Pentagon announced today. The move comes In the wake, of grow- Earlier Story, Page A-4 Gov. William Milliken said he wished some county boards had acted “with a greater sense of responsibility” in setting their pay. RECALL DRIVE STARTS A drive to recall 14 of the 26 Wayne County supervisors from office is being staged by Detroit’s Jaycees who oppose the board’s new salaries of $12,500 a year plus fringe benefits and payments of $40 a day for attending meetings. The prospect of a similar recall drive against nine of the 17 Genesee County supervisors is being investigated by Flint Jaycees. They oppose newly set saTaries ing congressional criticism about plans for the controversial Sentinel defense. Chairman L. Mendel Rivers -of the House Armed Services Committee has told the Defense Department his group will approve no construction plans for Sentinel sites until the Nixon administration makes known its intentions about the program. The Pentagon said “certain aspects” of the Sentinel program are being deferred. These include the selection and buying of land for antimissile complexes as well as construction of Sentinel facilities. “The Sentinel system is being reviewed as part of our over-all look at major ^TOapQDs..5ystems,” a defense statement ’said. “That "FiView^r-continuing on a priority basis. Waterford Legislator Hits Plan for Costly New Capitol Thorough Study of State Hospitals Urged Chance of Snow, Drizzle Tonight There’s a chance of light snow late today, possibly mixed with fr^king drizzle, acceding to the weatherman. Tonight will be partly clotidy and somewhat warmer, the low 16 . to 21. Partly cloudy with a high of 30 to 35 is the fcM-ecast for tomorrow. Clouds rolling in Saturday are expected to drop some rain on the Pontiac area. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are 40 today, 30 tonight and 20 tomorrow^ Thirteen was the low temperature In dowatiwra Pontiac prior to 8 a.m.. The ■ 1 at 2 p.m. “I don’t see how I could in good conscience vote for any new (state) capitol involving $49 million to $70 million when we have conditions such as we know exist in our state mental institutions,” said Rep. Loren D. Anderson, R-Waterford Township. Anderson yesterday introduced a resolution to the State Legislature in which he asked that a special committee be set up to conduct “a thorough reevaluation” of Michigan mental hospitals. Anderson said the Mental Health Department “is the third highest agency in the state in the amount of money it gets. What is needed is better handling of finances.” During the 1967-68 fiscal year, the department was allocated about $152 million in operating funds. Another $6 million was budgeted for capital im-provement.s. REP. LOREN ANDERSON Anderson a member of the House Mental Health Committee last year, said he had been assured of the support of House Speaker William Ryan, D-Detroit. “Ryan told me,” Anderson said, “that as soon as the resolutkm is reported to the mental health committee he will appoint 8 group to meet and develop some sense erf direction.” "Some of the conditions under which patients at the Pontiac State Hospital live are atrocious. I am assured by other legislators from other areas that there's much to be desired in their mental facilities. Most of the buildings are old and antiquated and should have been tom down years ago,” Anderson said. “Two of the most basic responsibilities anyone has who serves the people is th« provision of health and safety. Whatever V else we give them isn’t very much,” Anderson added. NO CAPITOL OFFICE Anderson said he had no office In the present state capitol and That he shares a secretary with another representative. “I get along very well,” said Anderson. “If we have the money to spend that promoters say we have who are pushing the new capitol, let’s give some relief to people who need it so desperately.” “At Pontiac State Hospital 1 stood in a patient's cold room, dependent on heat from the hall, and I could see right outside through cracks in the Wall,” Anderson kaid. “If we can’t provide the basic otenfort of warmth, then we’re comfitetely derelict in our judgment.” 7 ' A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY^ 6, 19(J9 FCC Eyes San of Cigarette Ads From Radio, TV Postal Patronage Stand Is Hailed WASHINGTON TAP) The Federal Communiccttons Commission's plan 1969 NOTICE TO City of Pontiac Dog Owners 1?*?. ar* now du« and payablo ot th« City at* t Offic, Firtt Floor, City Hall. 450 W)do Track Driva, Eotf, Pontiac, Michigan. FEE; Up to March 1 »t ^2.00 After March 1 st .*3.00 It I* nocoitoiy that all dog owmora In Oakland County pioduca a coitificata that thoir dog (or dogt) ho* boon voccinotod ogoinit rabiot within tho la«t 12 months with Tissuo Vaccino or within 24 months if voecinatod with Modifiod Livo Virus in oidorto socuro a 1969 dog liconso. If such ownors do not possoss such 0 cortHicoto, OM may bo obtoinod from thoir local VETERINARIAN ar at bno of th# County or Township oporatod clinics which will bo hold at tho abovo locations. Olga Barkalayr Publish; Fob. 6,18 and 24 City Clark |p// Slick Continues Its Disastrous Onslaught \ SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) ~ 1116 penetrating smell of crude oil seems to be every-whN*e. BeautlAil beaches ai-e blackoi^ for nolles. The once spariding blue harbor of this sceidc resort dty is covered with thick, gummy slime. A wildlife expert calls it the worst disaster ever to hit California blrdlUe.. That was a capsule picture today as a runaway undersea well six mile$ off the Soudiem California coast continued to spurt oil at 21,000 gallons a day, A A * The oil slick extends 40 miles eaward, encircling several Oews trying to check the flow had to abandon the drilling platform for a time Wednesday after natural ga; fumes bubbled to the surface along with the oil. And about 60 persons living on some of the 700 boats in the harbor here were evacuated because of noxious fumes and the danger of fire. RELENT!^ ADVANCE But mainly it is a case of a slow-movidg, relentless advance of tons of crude petroleum. Easterly winds had held the slick away from a shore for days. But a change in wind, plus the action of the tide, began pushing it against Caches, breakwaters and boats in mas-cMicentrations. e well began leaking uncon- trollably 10 days ago. Union Oil Co., the driller, said it is hoped that continued injections of mud into the well and adjoining Undersea strata would check the flow in another day or so. ★ * A In Washington, the company president, Fred Hartley, told a U.S. Senate subcommittee 4,000 barrels^ driliing mud were injected into the Well. In the opinion of experts, he said, this should have stopped the leak. YOUR CHOICE OF TWO GREAT COLOR TV CONSOLES MITH $49095 23.^ or RCAl ZENITH CONSOLE Full Range 82 Channel UHFA^HF Reception 23-Inch (diag.) 295 Sq. Inch Picture IMMEDIATE DEUVERY-SAVE NOW! 17^ (16.6 Cu. Ft.) FROST PROOF Refrigerator Freezer 2 SPEEDS - 3-CYCLE HEAVY DUTY Automatic Cycle — Shuts Off When Load is Properly Dry — Either Damp Dry, Ready-to-lnm, or Ready to Fold and Put Away — Wnhichever You Choose. No Money Dowh — 90 Days Same As Cash. ^GOOD H0U5EKSPIN(f » Dratunra 44? of PONTIAE 51 W. HURON FE 4-1555 FREE PARiQNG OPEN MON., TOURS, and FRl. TILL 9:00 Hartley said another 8,000 to 10,000 barrels of mud would be pumped “to plug the hole solid with cement.” If this doesn’t work, he said, a relief well—to relieve the pressure—was the next hope, but this, he estimated, could take a couple of weeks. Santa Barbara, with its many Spanish-style buildings and palm trees, long as been regarded as one of the state’s most beautiful communities. It is 90 miles northwest of Los Angeles, framed by purple mountains and overlooldng a crescent strand of beaches. Efforts to cleanup the mess ranged from scattering straw on beaches, hoping it would soak up the oil, to using giant cuum machines to skim the ooze from the water and load it into barges. A ★ 4 Floating layers of gunk were six inches thick in places. It clung to boats, decks and bulk-■ eads. Despite fish and game department efforts to save them, sei birds died by the hundreds. Cormorants, their plumage black with oil, tried vainly to dean one another with their beaks. They succeeded only in clogging their beaks and eyes. 'Iliey staggered toward what they thought was the safety of the sea — oniy to find a seething black trap. SOAKING UP THE OIL—Workmen (right) spread water-repellent oil absorbent upon thick oily water on the beach at the Santa Barbara, Calif., harbor yesterday. Straw was also AP Wlraphol* used in an attempt to soak up the oil which is coming from a leak in an off-shore oil well. Man at left is raking oil-soaked straw. ' People in the News By The Associated Press Gina Lollobrigida, who is growing old curvaceously, announced today that she’s 40, proud of it and looks better than ever. Holding court after a movie premiere, Gina was frankness itself. “I have become more beautiful,” she said. Not a man in the room would deny it. “If this is what age does to me," she said, “let’s have more of it.” Good idea. “As I get older,” she said, “I simply photograph better. I am still all good angles.” Gina, who lately moved from Rome to London for her movie making, has one regret. Men are nervous about her. “It’s very sad,” she sighed. “Young men seem scared of a star. And I don't know why they are so afraid. I am sweet and I am gentle.” Gl Gets Full Head of Hair, Thanks to Army Pvt. David McKibben of Gratiot, Wis., now has a full head of hair, thanks to the Army. McKibben, stationed at Ft. Lewis, Wash., said he has had a bare patch of scalp as the result of a scalding suffered as a child and .that skin grafts and other treatments proved of no avail. When the Army noticed his problem, it sent McKibben to the dermatology clinic at neafby Madigan General Hospital, where transplants were tried. In a few weeks McKibben sported a full head of hair. Then the Army trimmed it to a military cut. Grieving Walter Winchell Giving Up Column Walter Winchell, bereaved since his ton’s suicide at Christmastime, said yesterday he is giving up his Broadway colamn after 49 years. Winchell, who stopped writing the column several weeks ago, said, “We’ve had a lot of heartaches and this is the time for me to step down. It’s too much of a load to idck np again. “I’ve been doing the column since 1920, and I’ll be 72 in April.” Winchell, a former song-and-dance man, started writing for Vaudeville News. His column once appeared in nearly 1,000 papers, but recently has been down to aboat 100. Winchell has been living in Scottsdale, Ariz^, for several years with his wife, former Ziegfeld Follies girl June Magee, who suffers from a respiratory ailment. Man Attributes 105 Years to 'Hard Work' George Washington Pierce, celebrating his 105th birthday yesterday in Chester, Pa., attributed his longevity to “hard work and plenty of rest.” His daughter-in-law, Mrs. 'Thomas Ford, then chimed in with “he doesn’t work too much any more, but he really rests.” But he does walk the dog around the block almost daily. Couple Happy to Be Drummed Out of Club James Hill and Mary Winston of Philadelidiia have been drummed out of PWP — bnt happily. The two marired recently and that antomatically disqualified them from membership in the group known as Parents Without Partners. Jim, at 34, had two sons and five daubers, Mary, 39, bad a daughter and four sons. Now, together, they have 12. The eldest is 21, the youngest seven. They met at a Parents Without Partners dance last August and got along well together right from the start. But it was the children who pushed the marriage bit. Mary says one of her boys looked at Jim one night and said: “I wouldn’t mind having you for a father. Then, another time, one of his daughters looked at Mary and said: “Dad, why don’t you marry her?” So he did — at the Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd in the Philadelphia suburb of King of Prussia. The girls were bridesmaids, the boys ushers — including two of Mary’s sailor sons. t COURAGEOUS SKIERS—Spec. 4 James Baczkowski, 21, of Denver (top) was a ski enthusiast before he went to Vietnam. A Vietcong suicide attack resulted in the loss of his right leg. Baczkowski along with other amputees from Fitzsimmons Army Hospital in Denver spend a day each week on the ski slopes as part of their therapy. Spec. 4 Edward Herring, 19, of Aurora, 111. (bottom), is all determination as he sets out to make his run down the slope. Herring 1( legs above the knee when a Vietcong booby trap e Vx- , THE PONTIAC PEESS 48 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 4 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 196^ Howiw* S. FitnniM*, n rrnMtnt and Pu^lUbar John Sittout itlva Vloa Praildenl •ooratatT and Advartlalnf OIraator RtOHAiB M. r>naaa«t.a Traaaurar and nnnnoa Ordctr I. MABtntu. JoaaAN GM Shifts Top Execs Pontiac, Michigan: Attention! GM shuffles the deck. It happens here periodically, because Uiis city is invariably favored with exceptionally capable and outstanding top executives. They’re seized continually by the upper echelon and moved along to even more exalted positions than they were already occupying. ★ ★ ★ Here’s another deal! We lose John Z. DeLorean. Our boss for the past four years becomes the Gener-1 al Manager of Chevrolet, suceeding E. M. Estes who is whisked down to the General Motors Building and given I charge of practical-1 ly everything in I sight. He will over-1 fee the Truck and Car Group of Gen- DeLOREAN eral Motors and if that doesn’t keep him up nights he’s permanently immune. F. James McDonald becomes the reigning boss of Pontiac Motor and all he has to do is maintain the whirl-■wind, dynamic and ■all-out pace set by Ihis illustrious prede-Icessors. Either Pon-■tiac has been favored during the ■past many years or ■this is an all-around |lucky spot. Perhaps t’s both, for giants ■of the industry who headed t h e local plant have gone on to even greater gloiy and bigger assignments. They always succeed. ★ ★ ★ Mr. McDonald is no stranger in Pontiac. He was here a few years ago as Works Manager and he went from that to a big- ger calling in Chevrolet. Now he’s back as the Head Man and he’s welcomed with ringing applause from ail of us. Mr. Mc-l)onald is built along the successful lines of our previous general managers and the community welcomes him with open arms. ★ ★ ★ “Pete” Estes is one of the most personable individuals in this or any other corporation and has made friends all over the industry and throughout the area. Without question, long John De-IxjREAN is one of the most brilliant engineers in the entire automotive world and thus Chevrolet continues to be in the hands of an exceedingly competent administrator. Mr. DeLorean’s continuous upswing in volume sales has McDonald staggered the entire industry for several years. The man’s a magician. The whole situation recalls a pro-nouncement by the late W.A.P. John. Once when he was commenting on this giant operation, the sagacious “Wap” said; “General Motors is lousy with brains.” So be it. ★ ★ ★ Pontiac, Michigan, and Pontiac Motor Division unite in echoing this reassuring declaration. And over a period of years Pontiac Motor Division has been the most energetic, the most forward bounding and the most assertive unit in this great, gigantic setup — the largest corporation in the world. We’re in the hands of the mighty. What a nice spot to be. CED Eyes Election Costs The sixth of a series of studies on national and local government conducted by the Committee for Economic Development deals with “Financing a Better Election System.” This editorial is concerned with one of the study’s three-phase ap-pi^oaches, “Eliminating Needless Campaign Costs.” The study stresses the superfluity of state and local officeholders, pointing out that nationwide a total of 514,000 local and 12,000 state officials hold elective office. Through modernized concepts of government and resulting streamlining these numbers could be vastly reduced. In doing so, 80,000 units of local government would be reduced by 80 per cent, and on the state level the total of 8,300 legislators would be cut to about 4,000. ★ ★ ★ Substantial reduction in heavy election costs could be effected by electing all governors and state legislators for four-year terms. Currently, 10 states elect governors for two-year terms while two-year terms are set for state legislators in 45 lower houses and 12 upper chambers. Nationwide standardized voter registration practices would reflect considerable dollar savings by elimi- nation of excessive manpower now required to staff diverse qualification and registration-period systems from one state to another. With state primaries for major offices frequently costing candidates from $100,000 to $250,000, a revamping on uniform lines of the state primary structure would save not only candidates but the government establishment a tremendous outlay of taxpayers’ dollars. State presidential preference primaries and the national nominating conventions have become a hodgepodge of dissimilarity in the case of the former and in that of the latter an outmoded exercise in profitless expenditure of time and money for delegates and an expense bordering on the prohibitive for the campaigning nominees. ★ ★ ★ Finally, the campaigns—particularly those for president— run much too long, with expenditures for news media — both print and electronic->-and other accruing campaign expenses as-suming astronomical proportions, while a bored public reacts apathetically, if at all, to repetitious platitudes and empty governmental panaceas. Editorials on two other aspects of Political Finance will appear. Legalize Organ Donations If you want to give your heart away—or your eyes or kidneys or other vital organs—see a lawyer. According to R. C. Page, senior vice president of the Wachovia Bank and Trust Company of Winston-Salem, N. C., and a leading national authority on wills and trusts, legal authorization is as' vital as the vital organ itself. Since transplants must be made immediately after death, any delay could make the organ no longer usable. The bank has distributed to North Carolina attorneys a suggested legal form for dealing w^ anatomical gifts. ^ ★ ★ ★ Unfortunately, in some states at the present time, the law has not caught up with medical science and the wishes of next of kin can override those of a deceased. But having your intentions down in black and white is certainly not a bad idea. David Lawrence Asks: Is Cigarette-Ad Plan Legal? WASHINGTON - Although the Federal Communications Commission has proposed that a ban be placed on cigarette advertising over television and radio, there is doubt whether any such step c a n be legal unless a new constitution a 1 amendm e n t, LAWRENCE covering such a prohibition, is adopted by both houses of Congress and three-fourths of the states. The FCC has jurisdiction over communication facilities, but it is primarily for the purpose of regulating their operations through the allocation of channels and frequencies. ★ ★ ★ It has no authority to tell either television or radio stations what they may says in their programs. This is protected under the First Amendment of the Constitution, which guarantees the right of free speech and freedom of the press. When public opinion in America recognized that excessive drinking of alcoholic beverages could be injurious to health, a constitutional amendment forbidding the manufacture and sale of such products was adopted in 1919, and-then repealed in 1933. INJURIOUS TO HEALTH There are many things being sold today which could be injurious to the health of the citizens if used unwisely. The argument being made against cigarette advertising is based on a detailed report by the U.S. surgeon general issued in 1964 declaring that “cigarette smoking is a health hazard of sufficient importance in the United States to warrant a.ppropriate remedial action.” ★ ★ ★ He told a Senate committee in 1965 that, “in general, the greater the number of cigarettes smoked daily, the higher the death rate.” But it the executive branch of the government or any of the independent agencies or the Congress has the power to prevent the advertising of cigarettes by radio and television, it also could conceivably attempt to prevent similar advertising from being presented through the printed word. ♦ ♦ * Likewise, the prohibition could extend to all potentially harmful instruments or artiefes, Including ammunition or' medicines of certain kinds. If the federal government, without any c(Histitutional amendment, can lawfully exclude the advertising of any article which might be injurious, then the sale of a Verbal Orchids Mrs. Goldie M. Crelly of 92 Moreland; 83rd birthday. Willet Hazard of 2942 Old Orchard; 95th birthday. variety of things could be barred by a simple edict from Washington. Whether cigarette smoking is or is not dangerous to health is not the prime issue. What is actually involved is the power of Congress or the Federal Communications Commission or any other agency to issue regulations which determine whaf may or may not be advertised for sale to the public. * ★ ★ If it is lawful to manufacture and sell the article itself, then the advertising is a pr(^ er dxercise of the right to conduct a business through the sale of such products by any of the available methods of marketing. Voice of the P^le: ^ ____________—---------- New Resident Questions Coverage of Local News I read a big news story aboilt The Pontiac State Hospital in another newspaper and also one about our jail. Why weren’t these in our local ' paper? NEW RESIDENT (Editor’s Note: You answer your own question with your signature. Both ran here, one several weeks ago and the other several months ago.) Letters Discuss Possible MSU Presidents After John Hannah’s great record as president at MSU, how could anyone even think of Soapy Williams As the next president? His record as governor cost us payless paydays and millions and millions of dollars In unpaid debts and bills, ONE OF THE VICTIMS What’s wrong with Dana Whitmer as the next president of MSU? PONTIAC TEACHER ‘Cheers Citizens Who Cleared Sidewalks’ Three cheers for the writer in the Voice of the People who pointed out the northeast corner of Orchard Lake and Ottawa had bushes sticking clear across the icy sidewalk. And nine louder cheers for the people that live there. They did, a swell job cleaning up the mess very quickly. They must be real swell citizens. OBSERVER ‘Can City Qean Walks and Bill Residents?’ If people won’t shovel their own walks, why doesn’t the City do it and put it on their tax bill? HOPEFUL Reader Gives His Views on Discrimination All I see In the paper, on the news or television are different cases where the Negro feels he is being discriminated against. About every time a colored male, female or family think they have some legitimate gripe regardless of what financial s^tus they are in, they always manage to make the news media .through the Civil Rights Commission or the NAACP. Where do the white or Caucasian people file their complaints? I wonder if the Negro has ever stopped to take a look at the prejudice and discriminatory actions being taken against 98 per cent of the white people and 100 per cent of the Indians. GEORGE C. SCOTT 1029 Cherrylawn (Continued on Page A-8, Col. 1) Bob Considine Says: Story of Late Newsman Is a Cut Above Hollywood CONSIDINE NEW YORK — No Hollywood scenarist would have modeled his newspaper character after Bradley Kelly. As any moviegoer or TV addict knows, newsL paper char-a c t e r s are heavy drink- , ers, great lovers, tough and they can always solve crimes that baffle the FBI. Brad was a gentlemanly newspaper character, as a couple of generations of publishers and editors throughout the U.S. would and will attest. He was as humane and soft-spoken as a good priest, a selfless Samaritan to countless younger writers and artists who sought his counsel during his years as an ex-. ecutive of King Features Syndicate. ★ ★ ★ Kelly’s range of interests was phenomenal, his total experience as far-reaching as a satellite. In the early 1920s, as a Red Cross director, he established a vocational school for boys in Albania. CORRESPONDENT’S AIDE In 1923 Brad became an assistant to Frank G. Carpenter, the Washington correspondent, lecturer and well-known travel writer who was among the country’s first nationally syndicated writers with a Washington dateline. The following year Brad became a feature writer on the New York Evening World, moved on to the North American Newspaper Alliance, and then helped form a short-lived news syndicate called Imperial News Service. no help from any office ghost. It was the Golden Age of the literary spooks, particularly in sports. Virtually every well-known athlete was appearing in print, notably Babe Ruth and Jack Dempsey. But most of them never wrote a word of the material that appeared under their bylines, and some of them didii’t even deign to glance at the stuff the ghosts turned out for them. ★ * ★ As their enduring friendship bloomed, 'Tunney, the great fancier of Shaw, Shakespeare and Santayana, permitted Brad to “touch up” his work. Brad used to say with the faintest trace of a smile. As a Knight of Malta, he and Mrs. Kelly were granted audiences with Pius XII, John XXIII and Paul VI. Yes, my friend Brad Kelly had range. He was too true to be good Hollywood material. Question and Answer We want to move to Texas and would like to know tho comparison in living standards (employment, housing, all-around monthly living cost) between Michigan and Texas. LARRY H. SMI’TH UNION LAKE REPLY We could give you a lot of statistics, but they wouldn’t help you much. We don’t know what type of employment you’re looking for, what type of housing you need, or any of the specifics for the information to be meaningful. And it would vary from area to area within the state. We suggest you select some cities you’d be interested in, and write to the Chamber of Commerce in those places. Give them details about your family and the type of work you need, your training and experience, and they will be able to advise you on any questions you have. Question and Answer Could you locate a store that carries a roller that mak^s artificial grain, not the antique kit kind that most stores carry? ISABELLE M. OSWALD ROCHESTER REPLY We 'checked several dealers in Rochester to no avail, but Brown Brothers on West Huron Street in Pontiac will order one for you. They said it takes an expert to use one, but if you feel up to it, the sdt of three wood-graining rollers will cost you $4.50. Michigan’s Tale of Fiscal Woe By DICK SAUNDERS • “There isn’t enough money State Budget Director Glenn lor any substantial new pro-S. Allen Jr. was in town the grams, but there is enough to other night to tell the Pontiac carry us through this year Area Board of (1969-70) without a (state) Realtors how tax increase.” little money ★ ★ ★ Michigan has • “We can’t afford Paro-left after chiaid.’ ago, he explained, the state estimated it would cost $39 million annually. It is'^now running $90 million per year. i rough SAUNDERS Since existing programs are going to trim the state’s surplus to about 12 million by , 1976, according to Allen, everyone gets e People want more new n is impossible to foot^ftie bill through dip- programs but they simul- for a proposed Parochiaid bill ^bich would cost an estimated $40 million. The whole picture is bleak indeed. It seems, after hearing Allen’s expert dissection of the state’s income and expenses, that our troubled school districts are going to become more troubled and our state hospital may well crumble before aid is forthcoming from the state. and eight-digit figures. He That, he claimed, was one ta:fM™Md STwhat sSSJ “governors ates budgef directofs from other than built-in expenses, rarely become presidents." legislators He spins a tale of fiscal woe. He listed Soapy Williams ® * * * George Romney, Nelson In short, he does everything Rockefefler and Ronald Rea-he’s getting paid to do and gan as a few prime examples, does it well. Built-in programs are con- Allen’s chalk talk on Michi- tinuing programs of state aid One of Brad’s early assign- gan’s fiscal setup Monday in such fields as education ments at King was a difficult night at First FedN-al Savings mental health, welfare and one. Connolly had signed of Oakland was spiced up wiQi the like. Gene Tunney, heavyweight statements like; Allen pointed to Medicaid champion of the world, to do • “We’re working under a as an example of what some a series of articles on sub- system in which tile demands legislated built-in programs jects of his choice. Tunney for built-in programs go up can do to annual bi^gets made it clear that he needed faster than the economy." When it began three yeari In 1927 his work drew the attention of Gene Fowler, at that time doing publicity for King Features. Fowler recommended him strongly to Joseph V. Connolly, the legendary powerhouse of King, a^ Kelly joined a syndicate from which be never really retired until last week, at 74. the fiscal for them." pot. • “It’s going to be a Allen left year in Lansing.” everywie won- • ‘"rhe governorship is a dering whether political graveyard." or not there is ever any h<^ This last comment was of solving some of our more made in connection with his pressing needs in such areas pontention that states were as education and mental forced by rising costs to find health,-tomune a couple. new methods of taxation about He is all budget director every three years or face a . . . calm, cool, in conqplete fiscal crisis, command of all the seven- TK« AiMciatod Pm* I* MtlM*d «clu*ly«ly to th« fw cotiofi al all local now* printod in • woH « nil AP K Pm* I* dollvmd by >c a waali; whan mailad 2nd clau rata at PanHae. Michigan. TOE PONTIAC FREISIS. Bar May Open Up Its Hearings A—7 LANSING (AP)--nireatened ^th a loss power, the State Bar of Mkhigao will soon ask that the public be admitted to bar hearings dealing with lawyers accused of misfeasance. ■k it it Chief Justice Thomas Brwi-nan of the State Supreme Court said Wednesday the State Bar commissioners had already made such a request informally and would make a formal proposal soon. ★ ★ ★ Brennan added the Supreme Court, which makes the rules under which the bar operates, may also consider adding nonlawyer members to its grievance committee hearing boards. The move follows a controversial case involving charges PAM JERGOVICH Waterford's Teen of Week Is 'Involved' An “involved citizen” from Pierce Junior High School is this week’s Waterford Township teen of the week. ★ ★ ★ Pam Jergovich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Jergovich of 1090 Crescent Lake, has, according to her teachers, participated in school activities with the belief that students have a role and a responsibility to do more than simply show up. ★ ★ * A ninth-grader, Pam i s president of the student council, a member of the Pen Club and a member of the s c h newspaper staff. ★ ★ ★ She plans to start Waterford Township High School in the fall, then go on to college to prepare for a career in education or journalism. ★ ★ ★ “I feel it is important for a person to be happy with what he is doing,”,, said Pam “because if he isn’t, he is going to make all the people around him miserable.” igalnst Livingston County attorneys and introduction the Legislature of a bill which >^uld strip the bar of its power process grievances against lawyers. 'SOMETHING NEEDED’ Brennan said he thought the entire seveh-momber Supreme Court agreed that “something has to be done to discipline lawyers who are not pr(^ly handling their clients’ affairs. ★ ★ ★ , Making the grievance committee hearings public, he added, would let the public know “vidiat the bar association is doing about someone who is accused of' misfeasance as lawyer.” Now at SIMAAS ... The New HOME MOVIE SYSTEM That Talks! BEII & nCWELL tIC/HE MCYIIE SPlEAitS ECU lirSELf NOW YOU CAN TAKE MOVIES THAT TALK... WITH BELL&HOWELLFILMOSOUND 8 HOME MOVIE SYSTEM . . . AND FOR JUST A FEW DOLLARS MORE THAN SILENT EQUIPMENT. Of course you can buy Bell & Howell Filmo-sound 8 equipment one piece at a time . . . start with The Autoload Model 442 wood grained trim camera, equipped with new Focua-matic automatic rangefinder, optronic electric eye, F/1.9 lens with 3 to 1 zoom range, electric film drive, reflex viewing, normal and slow motion speeds, built in battery tester, footage counter in the viewfinder. $f 59 95 Model 450 Filmosound Recorder features automatic/ manual recording volume control, audio level meter and battery checker, solid state electronics, push button operation, microphone and carrying case and can be used as a conventional player/recorder that accepts standard cassettes. ^gg gg Model 458 Autoload Projector with automatic rsel-to-reel threading, super 8 and regular 8 film compatibility, reverse and still picture projection control, F/1.6 lens, variable speed control, rapid rewind and can be used as a silent film projector. ^|gg gg SIMAS..m. CAMERAS - Main Floor %-lb. 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Tear Drop Heart 99s $4.50 IW, hdcDonoldi ChocoloMi . Cl 19' $4.50 IW, hdcDonoldi ChocoloMi, 4-Oz. Conver. Hearts SIMMSi* Candy ..Main Floor SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St open fonite 'til 9 pm-fri. 9 am to 9:30 pm sat. 9 to 9-next to the WHITE TOWER better buys for babies in SIMMS annex Items to make it easier to take care of babies are priced much lower in Simms annex — look these over for proof • come in and save this week-end in Simms annex. smooth, easy rolling baby walker *2»» metal frome walker with large rolling casters • decorated seat is strong to support baby. adjustable seat back baby stroller all wood - folding training chair • famous 'Toi-dey' folding wood chair to toilet train the little unpainted pine wood 4-drawer chest genuine‘SIMMONS’ crib mattress comfortable supporting innerspring mattress is also wetproof. Fits standard baby cribs. big 40x40 inches mesh play-yard • smooth rolling baby stroller lets baby sit up or he down for his nap • canopy top. nylon mesh play-yard with hrome frame support casters to move it about easily. now —CHARGE IT! use Simms 30 day same as cash plan on purchase of $10 to $150 or your MIDWEST BANK CARD! gentle swing action 'baby swingomatic • wind It up and if •wings back and forth for 20 nninutes • keeps baby relaxed and happy. walnut or white baby crib drop side rails with plastic on both sides of :rib. choice of walnut or while fin- SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St. All Merchandise First Quality-American Made-All Sales Final Pull Overs-Cardigans-Shells Ladies’ Sweaters Values to $9.98, choice of bulky knits, Orion acrylic knits and mohair blends. Cardigans, pullovers and shells. Good selection of styles. Sizes 32 to 40 but not in oil styles. — AAain Floor Men’s First Quality - Rugby Turtleneck Shirts Famous Rugby cottons and rayons in sizes M-L-XL Solid colors and stripe Chevettes. First quality and American made. — Basement Warmly Lined Ladies' Car Coats Assorted Styles Ladies’ Skirts or Jackets Skirt styles include A-line styles, belted styles, and pleated in wools and corduroys. Sizes 8 to 14. Jackets ore ideol to wear with slacks or skirts. Corduroys and wool. —AAoin Floor Clearance of Popular Styled Girls’ Dresses Your choice of jumper^ knits 100% cotton wash and wear, wools and corduroys. Broken size range from 4 to 14. —Main Floor ]00 Pinch Pleat Never Iron Fiberglas Drapes Beautiful floral print pinch pleat drapes of never iron fiberglas. First quality 48" wide x 63" long or 48" wide x 84" long. 96” wide by 84” long .... 3.99 — Basemont 98 North' Saginaw St. 29J Were $14.95 ! Values to $24.95, styles j include cotton corduroy bonded to foam, with gold nautical buttons, pile lined % length coat, Suedeskin coat. Mini trench coat and Scotch plaid car coat. Sizes 8 to 18 but not in pioor Twin or Full Bed Size Bedspreads Full bed sizes' is beautifully patterned Melono stripe, twin size is tufted chenille - non lint rayon overlay on heavy sheeting. Mulberry, ginger or green. — Basement 3“ Warmly Lined-Washable Snow Pants Warmly lined children's snow pants with shoulder straps to keep them in place. Fully washable. Grey color only in sizes 3 to 5. —Main Floor Fast Color Prints-Stripes Yard Goods Beautifully patterned colors in prints and stripes. Machine washable. Ideal for clothes, curtains and quilts. —Basement Clearance Size 6-Only Ladies’ Ice Skates Regular $6.99 value. Good steel blades on sturdy leather uppers. White, size 6 only, now priced at only. ______ —Bosemsnt SIMMSiE 1% Warmly Lined Boys’ Nylon Ski Jackets Zipper front nylon ski jacket in attractive blue and white stripe is acrylic pile lined for warmth. Sizes 14 and 16 only. — Basemont Hooded-Orlon Pile Lined Ladies’ Benchwarmer Reg. $9.88 value, ladies' bench-warmer coat in wine color only. Worm Orion pile lined with attached hood and roomy pockets. Size small only. —Main Floor ]99 m 100% Continuous Filament Nylon 6x9-Ft. Area Rug •bjubby textured tweed rug takes • l^47f wear. With built-in foam rubber back for extra comfort. Bonded to mesh textured scrim, serged on oil sizes. Mot resistant and non-oliergenic. — Basement Choice of Girls’ Coat or Children’s Snow Suit $12.88 value snow suit with zipper front jacket with attached hood and matching snow pants. Sizes 5 and 6 only. Corduroy coat has Orion pile lining and attached hood. Sizes 4 to 12. —AAain Floor 4» Girls’ Lovely Floral Print Quilted Robes Reg. $4.98 values. Heavy quilted robes in a delicate floral print. Sizes 3 to 6x for little girls. Washable. First Quality. — Main Floor 136 Where You Have Saved More Since 1934 i\>. V A—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. FBBRUAKY 6. 1969 More Opinions From Our Readers Letters (Continued from Page A-«) Comineiils on Methods Used by (Communists How many have any concept of the methods and principles utilized by the Communists? How many have studied about this monstrous charging animal so as to more effectively fight and destroy it'"Bypassing the wiser and tough-skin of the older generation to get at our youth is an old favorite diet of this carnivore It is an easy matter to take the truth and principles that are time-pro\en to be good, and make them look like lies and even evil when you're dealing with gullible inexperience. More power to Senator Huber in his courageous efforts to open the eves of a sleeping population GERALD BORGQUIST 1247 Ch-chld ‘Suggest Budget (Cut for Rights (Commission’ As a Pontiac citizen for 50 years, I am proud of our elected officials, police department, firemen, sheriffs department. They understand the needs of Pontiac. They could do an even better job if they were not handicapped by unelected, out-of-town, racial rabble-rousers whose chief occupation seems to be to stir up racial ill will, condone crime and protect criminals. Perhaps the intentions of those responsible for creating the M C.R C. may have been laudible but the operation of this commission seems deplorable. If our state legislature would cut the operating budget for this commission by about 95 per cent, they would be doing something really worthwhile for all law-abiding citizens, both black and white M W KESSELRING 96 RUTH ‘Aiiieriraua Must Berome a United People' We are all Americans. We must obliterate from our minds any reference to color. With so many whose beginnings were in other lands, there are many races involved, but here all are one nation, one flag, one constitution. A minority group making the loudest noise would have us feel they are the “voice of the prople.” They are not. Many times their number are daily living the life which helps his fellow man, educates his children, feels concern for the elderly, sick and distressed, and yet finds time to give help and aid to other lands. The church plays Its part in molding his character. These we rarely hear from or about, but they are here—the bulwark of America. NELLIE POPPY AMERICANISM CHAIRMAN WWIV BK #49 BUY NOW! SAVE NOW! A M T T TIT Si-—^ ' OtALfR ANNUAl r' or YtAR SPE(3miUL4]s NOW... 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Saginaw Pontiac Millet Appliance 1493 S. Woodwj Birmingham McCoHueie fr Ocan 409 £. Maple Birmingham Bill Petrutho b Sent 77 S. Telegraph Pontiac Bill Potrutha b Sena I 550 Union Lake Union Lake Solldy Refrigeration 38t9 M-15 Clarkston ird II 57 W. Hurbn Pontiac Sweet's Radio b TV 422 W. Huron Pontiac Tela-Tec Sarvica 419 Main Rochester Coed Heuaekeeping Shop si W Huron St Pontiac Cheers Sen. Huber’s Stand on OU Incident Tliree cheers for Senator Hgber for his stand on the Oakland University incident. Most of us believe in a good moral living and do not want our colleges run in this manner. If some want an education on sex. they should go to a private school and pay their own way. Many other children and adults wish a moral education. Mr. Editor, you know Senator Huber represents the majority of his district or he would not be in office. R. D. THOR ‘Agree With Article on Condition of Natiort’ I commend The Press On publishing Professor Carl Wonn-berger's timely article on conditions in this ailing nation. He put it well in stating, “collective bargaining, and its uhsavory bedfellow, the strike, may well force America into the status of a third-rate power." We need more men like the professor to speak out with the truth and 1 would like to hear more from him. I would like to know this man—he is real. S. T. STINSON 1562 VILLA, BIRMINGHAM ‘Traffic Light Might Help Reduce Accidents’ Recently an accident occurred at N. Cass and Florence, involving two cars and injuring three men. It’s not the first time people have been hurt here. It is a dangerous comer and a traffic light would help tremendously. LYNDA DAVIS 235 N. CASS Disagrees We INeed Increase in Deductions I disagree with the writer who desires a raise in deductions for dependents. How could the Federal Government afford such an increase when it is in such need of today's surtax. Our tax structure is one of the lowest in the world. In Europe I had to pay 60 per cent on a taxable income of approximately $3,500. I was a home owner with two children. Can you visualize what this country would be like if everyone went on welfare? I would gladly pay my share to keep, or bring back, the ideal society the U S. has always been. M. J. WATERFORD Letter Discusses Incidents at Universities These disrobings and nude exhibitions at our universities' are awful. Imagine what they do to the student’s, morals, especially the boys who may have to fight in Vietnam' some day. These lewd exposures of the human body are a blatant disregard of our hi^ mor^l tradition as exemplified by our lack of racial prejudice, our atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, our generosity to the Apierican Indian, and our use of the Africari Negro as slaves, just to name a few. I resent my taxes being used to support universities that allow this degenerate nude bbhavi(«i to take place. This tax money could better be spent on napalm bombs, hydrogen bombs, and the further development of germ warfare in the Interest of world peace, NORMAN GENEZ i Cowhand Mother Can't Find a Job SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPD -I Maria de Joana, who gained national fame two years ago by giving birth while everyone thought she was a cowhand named Jose, is having a hard time finding work. ^ Maria, 21, complained recent-j ly that no ranchers want to hire her now they know she’s a woman, even though she’s as good a cowhand as most men. ★ ★ ★ Maria always dressed as a man before the birth of the baby, fathered by a rancher’s bodyguard. The baby later died.' VITAMIN SPECTACULAR Sove on your family’s vitomin needs ALL Ciry TV 2363 Orchard Lake Rd. Pontiac 1 20< COUPON 20$ COUPON 1 1 One-a-day 1 < 1 vitamins & iron | ^ 1 2.59 1 1 Federal dally fc. 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(Doumtotm eUuei Tues., Wei. el 6 RjeJ new sleep-shirts ^2 Sweet spring fashion: the shirt-look sleep n' lounge shifts of eosy-to-core-for Avril® rayon/ cotton. Eosy-on button front. Choose from long or short sleeves in oss't. pastels. Sizes 8 to 16. Sold in Lingerie Department SALE Our own Budget Value mesh nylons 37.< SeU only. 2 prt.. 74« 1 St quality seamless mesh nylons are run resistant, come with nude heel. Choose beige or suntan. Sizes 9-11 OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (Sot. 9:30-9) Drayton open Sendoy Neen te 4 p.m. fpawruawii cfaiiea Tima. rag. ei B .pjeJ BOWNTOWN and-BtAYTON PUIn": ' t 9 -ry y • • w X TitE PONTIAC >liESS. THUKSDAY, FEBKLARV 0, ii)(;9 (Contlnwki From Page One) ed petitions in Macomb Comity, forcing their board oj supervisors to reconsider its salaries of $7,800 a year and l^ayments of $35 a meeting. Macomb County is the state’s third largest, with a population (J[ 750,000, compart with Wayne’s 2.6 million. - ★ ★ ★ -The Detroit Jaycees bjamed 2coimiving, self-indulgent and greedy elected officials who do not,have a sense of dufy’’ for establishing the Wayne County pay levels. ★ ★ ★ There has been controversy elsewhere, too»,but not in Marquette County, largest in area in Michigan and the Upiwr Peninsula’s most populous, with more than 56,000 residents. New supervisors in Marquette County voted themselves no salary and decided to get along S ofti cers say it raises far-reaching questions and poses serious dan gers. * * ★ One major question: just how far in terms of men and logistics does the United States have to go to insure that the Saigon government's orders are carried out in the countryside Five men make up the Tam My village team, and there are nearly 4,000 villages in \’ieinam. In addition, an American team in a lightly defended village could, find itself in deep trouble if the enemy launched a determined attack. Yet the United States is talking about reducing its forces In Vietnam. The pilot program in the Me kong Delta province ‘of Vinh Long is the brain child of Lt Col. Paul K. Suplizio of DuBois, Pa , senior advi.ser in the province. He was assigned five-man military advisory teams which were to Improve the militia by moving from area to area, teaching tactics and weapons. Suplii’io had bigger ideas for his province's 12 teams He gave each a village, told the men to live alongside the Popular Force men in their mud forts, and carry out this program; tX)MBAT READINESS Get the militia up to combat Iowa, led his team to Tam My I Olsen arrived many fisoi The attempt at rooting out the in September. A veteran of a were without uniform^/ field Communist infrastructure, the previous Vietnam tour, Olsenjpacks, boots and other gear, underground guerrilla and polit-sa/s he was profoundly shocked}That's been corrected. Most of ical structure in tlje village, has when he saw his new piece of the meh had no training in been fairly successful.' One i marksmanship. Several now,hamlet chief, two senior propa- The village headquarters Was shoot better than the American I ganda officials and two commu-surrounded by a thin, crumbling expert who taught them. ’nications liaison officers to high-mud wall, its gate mi.ssing. The Medical supplies, materials er headquarters were killed or village chief was rated as in-1 for new .school buildings, special captured. Thirty-two other per-competent. The militiamen slept heln from Navy patrol boatsjsons on a wanted list are still to at their posts, were badly out-jand quick support from U.S. be rounded up, but plsoh said gunned by their Vletcong ad-;helicopters and jets if needed, most have fled. Instead of the versarics, were short of ammu-'.......... ~ ......... nition and even shorter of spirit. WALI. BUILT Olsen first got a 3H-foot thicl; readiness Get the village’s civil,"’*''* around the headquar-ters and bunkers wlttf roofs administration working. Root all of these ar? how Tam My's, 01sen’.s courage and leadership have shown what can be done at militia outposts. Just across the river frOin Tam My is a village oftfen fre- village officials being afraid to sleep In iheir homes, now it Is the infrastructure, he said. Olsen doesn’t even carry a weapon as he walks about the village. Not everything has changed miiitar,, or,) ciminictroH,,® '^‘*1 '*“■ * "Cl c la iiu iia^at Tsm My, howevec. Thc vil- 5r clure Expand nsvcho og cal inviting there, during “the fall Ameri-lage chief is still considered can with the sunglasses’’ to ineffective and lacking in lead-' a re u er e militiamen were coercedt-hofne take It down. 'ership, even by province offi- U S' Navy patrolicials.' .self defense units ^ ^ men out at night on arpbtish po- boats, Olsen three times led his “But he was elected by the . ‘ ‘ , sitions which yielded good re-squads of militiamen across, people,’’ one American said, in short, the pal was m suits. The men are trained in and they took down the flag. “probably because no one else hrpk thioup lethargy at the the use pnd care of American> “The VC put their pants on dared run for the job at the village level pd make them m16 automatic rifles, which half one leg at a time and aren’t time. We kept pushing the Viet-positively functioning units. |pi them carfy now. Ammunition eight feet tall,’’ Olsen tells the namese to become democratic, (’apt. Robert F. OLsen of Brjtt, no longer is a problem. When militiamen. - iNow we’re stuck with it’’ I IIA ‘'iTroTnH viAiAnna®"°“Kh to take 8 direct|ducnted by the Viebeong. TbrPe out the underground Vielcong mortar hit. There is no Ames they jalsed their flag FEBRUARY ACCESSORY SALE Stylish cotton glove assortment SALE 1.99 Short and mid-forearm lengths in white, bone and black tones. Many with decorative stitching. Sizes 6 to 8. Not all styles in all colors or sizes. Hudson’s Gloves. Ladies’ smart vinyl raincoats SALE 2.97 A pretty, practical fashion favorite is our vinyl raincoat with Two pockets and gold buttons. White or black, SML. Great savings now at Hudson’s Umbrcllgs. Full-fashioned acrylic sweaters SALE 3.97 Mock-turtle and jewel necks. Fashion styled in white and popular spring colors. Hand washable, S, M, L. All styles not in all colors. New from Hudson’s Neckwear. H XJ 3D S O N" ’ S PONTIAC PRESSv THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1969 A—n 19.59 A. Double veRet»bU B. Siuceboei wiihirejr C. 18” well end tree tr»jr D. 1 V4-quert cesserol# 59.59 5-pc.leesei Also ivetlabic, d-pc. coffee set, 29-i9 SALE Magnificent Wm. A Rogers Silverplate just a sample of th6 bcaiiitiful opportunities for sa'i^ngs at Hudson’s Silver Gidleries. VriTTW PHOirE A. 21”, deer glass bell end YOUR white pleated vinyl shade. B, 24", hand painted decora* - lion on white china lamp. C. 58", mustard color ceram* ic, fabric on vinyl shade. Vr^TTB PHOirE A. 36". metal with old wood your choice I'"*" parchment shade. mCA b. 37". iolidw.ood with metal A B eagle and matching shade. SALE 12 big lamps, 4 litte prices These and lots more ways to light your home at savings at Hudson’s Lamp Departments. HUDSM’S GREiikT HOME SALE downtown DETROIT NORTHLAND CENTER Woodward Avo. and Grand Rhw 8 Mila and Northwaatarn EASTLAND CENTER 8 Mila and Kaily Roads ■ WEStiAND CENTER Warran and Wayne Roads PONTIAC MALL Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road . OAKLAND MALL 1-75 and U Mile Road 1-.. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1969 Today's Wormrf You Can Just Call Her 'Super' By JUNE l^ERT Childhood dinner table discussions revolving around politics and community development are at the root of Mary Bawden’s interest and involvement in Oajdand Geunty affairs. As representative of District 4 on the Oakland County Board of Supervisors, Mrs. Bawden is the only womap on the reorganized 27-member Board. FAMILY A resident of Birmingham for over 30 years, Mrs. Bawden recalls a strong family interest in pubUc affairs with deep ties dating back to when, she notes, “my mother’s family came to Michigan from Vermont in an ox cart.” As for herself, she says, “When I was 21, I voted and joined the League of Women Voters and I’ve been doing the same thing ever since. “My first Interest was in sewers. That was when the Twelve Towns Drain was In the planning stages. There was a lot of public Interest in that. ’’After the drain, then there were schools and'the library, and so on.’’ * ★ ★ Mary’s background in LWV includes among other things service for six years on a study committee on County government and on the planning committee for forum on County home rule at Oakland University. She was observer at County Board of Supervisors meetings; delegate to the LW United States conference on financing state and local government and president of the Birmingham-Bloomfield League from 1963-65. She has also been active in the Oakland County Bepublican Party as a precinct delegate; precinct captain; Club Explores Immanuel Kant Work The Waterford Great Books group will discuss the “Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Morals” by Immanuel Kant at its Friday meeting in the CAI building. Mrs. Arnold Simson will lead the discuasich. Advocate for the 18th century Geianan philosopher will be Wilbur Ott. Any interested person may attend the 8 p.m. event. Wofltfifli vSedm Kick-Off Tea Friday Launches 'Fashionscope' for Symphony By SIflRLEY GRAY Just vdiat need to relieve the midwinter dddrums — a fashhm show to look forward tol. The Women'*s Association for the Detroit Symplumy is putting on its annual style spectacular “Fahionscope” at J. L. Hudson’s on March 11-12. The project, which will benefit the symphony maintenance fund, will be officially launched'on Friday with a kickoff tea at the home of Mrs. Joseph A. Vance Jr. of Grosse Pointe. * * -k Among those pouring will be Mrs. Warren B. Cooksey of Troy. Several women from this area are chairing key committees. Mrs. Harry J. Nederlander of Birmingham is general chairman of patroness tickets. Mrs. Robert B. Winter is in charge of general admission tickets; Mrs. W. Calvin Patterson will take care of arrangements for the luncheon at Blomnfield Open Hunt and the bus.down Woodward preceding the show — both women are from Birmingham. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Wiliam R. Shaw of Bloomfield Hills is in charge of patroness tickets for this area. Another Bloomfield Hills woman, Mrs. Edward I. Nicholas, is general chairman of the suburban bus-BOH luncheon committee. “Fashionscope” general chairman is Mrs. Harvey 0. Dixon Jr. of Grosse Pointe. The John S. Judds of Bingham Road in Birmingham are having a dinner dance Saturday at Bloomfield Hills Country Club. * former member of the education committee; and board member of the Birm-ingham-Troy Republican Women’s Club. Mary attended Wellesley College, majoring in Zoology and Psychology and received a BA degree in 1948. Marriage to Garvin Bawden Jr. apd children steered her life into a new channel. Son, Garvin, 19, is a student at Seaholm High School.; daughter, Carol Jean, 14, attends King^ood. ARE YOU KIDDING? Asked how she likes being the only woman on the Board, Mary laughed delightedly and said, “I love it. What woman wouldn’t?” Asked if her sex affects the attitude of the other Supervisors, she replied, “Oh, of course, they’re conscious of my presence. The apologies fly whenever an unguarded four-letter-word slips out. Politically, though, we are on equal, ground.” “Do you get bored when the wrangling goes on and on?” “Wrangling? That’s politics. No, I don’t get bored.” Mrs. Bawden was chairman of the Republican study group which formulated a plan for structuring of the Board into four divisions. Termed the Oakland Plan, it was not accepted by the Board, though it may come up for consideration again later in the year. As a Supervisor, Mary stresses that her first responsibility is to residents of the county; secondarily to her district which includes Birmingham. ★ ★ * She says her position will not permit efforts actively directed toward policies which will primarily benefit women, except “inasmuch as good government benefits all citizens.” She continues, “I am not a feminist. I don’t believe in crashing into saloons — that sort of thing. But I don’t believe Women should be treated as a minority group. “And I simply deplore the thought that support might be withheld simply because the candidate is a woman, or because an idea originates with a woman.” Mary’s talents and attention will be occupied with her appointments to membership on the Board’s equalization, legislative and regional affairs com-mitteek. Leisure activities include skiing, sailing, boating and golf, plus an occasional turn at needlework. We talked in the river room of the Bawdens’ contemporary home on Lakeside Street. Outside, the Rouge River wound sluggishly through the property under a thin coating of ice. A. brand new pair of skiis with boots attached stood against one wall. A scattering of decorative items, including paintings done by Mr. Bawden, copper . antiques and an ancient blue glass bottle gave evidence of domestic interests in keeping with her role as wife and homemaker. Second Wife Complains About Support Payments By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My husband was married before and had two children by that marriage. We have been happily married for five years. .His former wife never remairied. Of course we have to pay child suppwt, which my husband has been- doing regularly every month. Well, if we are just one day late with the check, his ex-wife has his son call us up and ask where the money is. (She hasn’t spoken to my husband since the divorce.) What I would like from you is a good stinging answer he could give this kid to get him off our backs. This calling to ask where the check is, is really getting to us. NO NAME, PLEASE Classical Guitar^ Lute Recital Set Karl Herreshoff will be heard in A classical guitar and baroque lute recital Feb. 12, at 8:30 p.m., in Oakland University’s Dodge; Halt Auditorium. Seventeenth through 20th century composers wiH be represented in Her-reshoff’s single concert appewance in the area. Programmed are SiMus Weiss’s Suite in F major and Sonata in D minor for baroque lute. On the classical guitar the artist will present Bach’s “Gavotte,” Scarlatti’s E minor and A minor sonatas, Guihani’s “Sonatina,” four waltzes by Antonio Lauro, and Turina’s Sonata, v A composer of note with several dora-missions to his cretSt^ Herreshoff has also worked in'films. His score for “Year of the Rat” took first prize in file 1964 Film Festival held at Bergamo, Switzerland. ^ . A limited number of tickete are available through the Meadow Brook Festival office, Oakland University. DEAR NO NAME: The solution is so obvious, I can’t understand why you didn’t think of it. Get the siipport check there on time every month, and you’ll not be bothered by any calls, and you won’t have to have an answer. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: I am a soldier who has been in Vietnam for six months. I recently received a letter from my mother telling me that my fiancee, to whom I’ve been engaged for nine months, is about four or five months pregnant, and she’s been going around telling everybody that she is carrying MY child. I do not deny having had relations with her, but I don’t see how this baby could possibly be mine. Should I write her a letter terminating our engagement and asking her to return my ring? I still love her. NAMELESS IN VIETNAM * * * DEAR NAMELESS: Since you still "love” her, don’t ask for the ring, ask for an explanation. Could be your moth- KARL HERR&SHOFF er heard wrong, or your fiancee figured wrong. * 4 DEAR ABBY: I have exhausted every last source and am about to lose my mind trying to find the author of a quote. As nearly as I can recall it goes like this: “It is all the same to me if a man comes from Sing Sing or Harvard. We have a man—not his history.” Ten. dollars to your favorite charity if you can give me the answer. Thank you. H. H. G. DEAR H. H. G.: 'The author is Henry Ford. (My source: “The Great Quotations,” compiled by George Seldes.) And please send 10 dollars to your local Mental Health association. You are welcome. ★ ★ • DEAR ABBY: I live about 15 minutes walking distance from school. Every morning, my boyfriend comes by and gives me a ride. I have a younger si.ster who goes to my school and my Mom has been taking her. My father .says it is .silly for my Mom to make a special trip to drive my sister to school—that she should ride with my boyfriend and me. Well I don’t particularly enjoy her company, so when this came up, we got into an argument, and my sister said she refused to go where she wasn’t wanted. Then my father ORDERED her to ride with us! Does my ta^her have the right to tell my boyfriend to'take my. Staler? OLDER SISTER DEAR SISTER: No, but be honest. You made your stater feel unwelcome, which was unfair. X ride to school is not a “date” and it wouldn’t have hurt you to graciousfy give her a ride in ordei^ to spare your mother the extra trip. Everybody hqs a problem. What's yours? For a personal reply write to Abby in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. &600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiafc, Mich. 48056 and enclose a stomped, self-addressed envelope. c Preti Photo hy Ron Unternohror MARY BAWDEN Touring Company Schedules Dates The Studio Company of Meadow Brook Theatre is taking its first touring production, “A Date with Shakespeare,” to area high schools this month. The Studio Company is composed of graduating seniors in the Oakland University Academy of Dramatic Art. * * ★ “A Date with Shakespeare” will include scenes from “Julius Caesar,” “Macbeth,” “Renry V,” “As You Like It,” “The Taming of the Shrew,” “Measure for Mea.sure,” “The Merchant of Venice,” and “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” -* * * The Studio Company will also offer public perftffmances of “A Date with Shakespeare” in the I n t r a - M u r a 1 Building on the Oakland University campus Feb. 10, II. 12, and 13 at 8 ^.m. Tickets for these four performances may be purchased at the door. Fair Employer but Maid Is Still Distressed By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute I am printing the following letter becau.se the answer holds true for any domestic employer. In general, the duties should be specifically nulling and understood at the time an employer hires domestic help. w * * Dear Mrs. Post: A young lady recently hired me as a personal maid. She has been a fair employer. The problem Is .she often wears Informal clothing such as shorts and expects me to help her dress in this attire. I feel a personal maid’s assistance in dressing an able-bodied lady is limited to formal clothing.. When I mentioned this, she was “amazed,” further stating that a personal maid's assistance in dressing is entirely up to the employer. - - H. N. Dear Miss N.: Your employer is right. If you accept a position as a lady’s maid you are expected to help her dress — if she wishes it — in any attire .she is putting on, and you are expected to care for all her clothing — not just her “dress” clothes. As long as she is fair and'cooperative in every other way, 1 .see no reason you should object to this reque.st -- it is certainly a .small payment for a good position. \ i k k Dear Mrs. Post: If I refer In a dear fri''nd of my mother's as Aunt Grace, what is the proper name to have my son call her?—Mrs. Z. Dear Mrs. 7, : It depends on .your son's closeness to the lady. If he regards her as affectionately as you do, he may also call her Aunt Grace. If not, he should call her Mrs. Brown, just as he would any other woman. k k k Dear Mrs. Post: A woman I know raised her husband’s two boys as a stepmother after the real mother left them. The relationship between her and the boys has always been good. But, their own mother was given the first row at the wedding, stood in the reception line with her ex-husband and circulated as though everybody had been bosom buddies. The stepmother's name was not mentioned in the wedding article even I hough .she attended with charm and poise and properly dressed.—Mrs. L.D. k k k • Dear Mrs. D.: It was correct for the boys’ own mother to be seated In the front row. But the rest is wrong. Since the stepmother and father were giving the wedding, it was sjje, as hostess, who should have been In the receiving line. The real mother should have attended aa III Spain they say “Si Si!” At the Better Bedroom Store they say “Let’s save *50 during onr Bedder Bedroom Sale.” Yesterday, you would have paid *449 for this set-now it’s sale priced at *399. You can say ‘‘Si Si!”, tooT It’s Spanish Provincial in rich pecan veneers, deeply carved and really exquisite. Includes 72” triple dresser, mirror, chest and chairback headboard. The Better Bedroom People on Telegraph Road house of bedrooms 1716 S. Telegraph Rd., Bloomfield, Between Miracle Mile and Orchard Lake Rd. STORE HOURSi MONDAY - SATURDAY 9 TO 9 a CALL 334-4593 TH£ i^^TIAC PtlES$. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1969 SHRIMP FRY FAMILY STYLE "ALL YOU WANT" STEAMED SHRIMP, served with Drawn Butter, DEEP FRIED SHRIMP, with homemade Snappy sauce. Huge TOSSED SALAD. Choice of POTATOES, Hot HOMEMADE Bread. EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 5 to 10 P.M. IVII 4-7764 Woodward & Square Lake Rd. BLOOMFIELD HILLS and PONTIAC MALL Group, Votes 4 Donations Voting by nMmben of Pon* tlac Business and Profesi Women's aub ^esday proved donaUons to the BPW Michigan Canon- Fund, the Golden Anniversary of the National BPW, ttie Pontihc YWCA (to help with redecorating), and to the Bureau of Social Aid, a second respirator for loan to patients with respiratory diseases. * it it Mrs. Sarah Paklaian, District Director from Walled Lake, was guest speaker. ewe Mrs. Lucinda Wyckoff hosted the meeting in her Newberry Street home. She was assisted by Jewell Burchwell, Grace Heitsch, and Mesdames Leo McDonald and Harold Crozier. BUY I SELLI TRADE I USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I Judge to Speak at YW JUDGE GILBERT Judge Alice Gilbert wlU speak at the Tuesday Timely Topic luncheon of the Pontiac YWCA next Tueisday at 12:30 p.m. The luncheon and talk are open to the public.’ Reservations are to be made with the YW. Mrs. Gilbert was elected district Judge for a six-year term in November. For eight years prior to election, served as Bloomfield Township Justice of the Peace. * e * A iawyer for the past 12 years, Judge Gilbert w a elected first president o Michigan District Judge Association in December. Her subject will be ‘"Ihe Relationship of the Court to Law Enforcement.” Here's New Type Nursety Furniture Nursery furniture that can be knocked down and packed flat for storage or moving now is in the market. The furniture is a Melamine-lacquered birch plywood in orange and white, designed by a Britisher, Susan Elkins. ★ ★ ★ The new line for the under-five set grew out of an earlier collection for older children. The lacquer finish is non-toxic and has a low-flame spread for safety. Cushions are of foam with detachable feature. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer AMERICAS LAROeST EAMILV CLOTHINO CHAIN The jumper dress or the jumper look has really taken over this spring. K you have a simple shift dress that you’re tired of, give it a new look by scooping out the neckline, cutting the sleeves out, and wearing it with a new long sleeved shirt. If you want the belted look, you can also wear a contrasting belt with it. Many jumpers have been outlined in a contrasting braid to finish off' the armholes, neck and perhaps repeated again at the hemline. This is a very flattering look for 'b suit or coat instead of just making a skirt or a skimmer dress. In this way you can wear the dress without a blouse or add a blouse and get double duty. ★ ★ ★ Blouses inade of the new polyester crepes are fabulous because they are washable and require no ironing. Remember one thing about blouses this spring; they all have long sleeves with some sort of cuff look. Make them as full as your figure will allow. The necklines on blouses vary frtnn the turtle neck look, flip-over-tie look to the l(«g pointed collars. I’m sure everyone has one dress in her closet that can be changed to look like you just bought it, and it will hardly cost a thing. TAILOR TRIX WINNER Mrs. Neil Bower, Alton, 111., is this week’s Tailor TYix pressing board winner for her following suggestion. ‘‘I have tried for years to get perfect round, curved edges to patch pockets but had nothing but trouble. I finally found a solution that works perfectly every time and is quite easy to do. I hope it helps your other readers. "First, run a row of stitching on the % inch seam line. Nexi^ run a gathering stitch Vt inch from the seamline closer% the raw or cut edge. Now pull the gaUiering thread on the last row you stitched so that all the excess fullness is takeir up so that you can press it smooth. If it’s wool, it will iJu-ink in nice and flat, otho-wise you may have to clip out a iittie excess fabric at the curve. “Last, in the pocket on the garment, use the Ik inch stitching as your guide and you’ll have a perfect curve every time.” ' Dear Eunice Farmer, I am making a pure silk dress that has a bias folded ruffle at the neckline and also at the cuff. I’m not sure if this needs to be lined or just how to press it after it is finished. Mrs. B. E. 0. Dear Mrs. B. E. O.: I would ordinarily not line any bias fold that is to be used 1 ruffle. When putting tbe-gafe^ingHstitch in for the ruffle, ould/suggest cj^fully pinning the two cut edges together first to/prevent th)s4op ^ge from shifting ahead of the under edge which woulp result in an uneven ruffle. lIso, ijse-a machine stitch almost the same length that you be/dsing for your regular stitching. By using this smaller sti|c^your gathers will pull up much more evenly and not form little pleats. As to pressing ruffles on silk fabric, I would never touch them at the fold line. A soft, puffy look to silk is much prettier than a flat, ironed look. Scarves are important accesories for spring and Eunice Farmer gives you directions on how to make three popular scarves plus other accessories in her booklet “Boutique Gifts.” To obtain your booklet send 25 cents and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for it to Eunice Farmer in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Locking Device Prevents Theft IMPORTED 3-PC. PURE WOOL DOUBLE KNITS 26 88 You^ll agree they're worth *40 to *50 Imported pure lOOS wool double-knits, all beautifuDy fuli-fashkmed, all ridily detailed. Soft sleeveless shdUs, slim graceful skirts, elegant jadeets with eyecatching contrasts. ThO'bivc-pattemed suit you see is just one from diis exciting new collection; misses’ sizes 8 to 18 in group. CLARKSTON STORt OPEN SUNDAY NOON TO C P.M. PRINTED NEVER-IRON SHIRTS AT A SPECIAL DOUBLE-VALUE PRICE | 2for*3 Your favorite shirt styles, m misses’ and hard-to-find sizes. Paisley, tatteTsal check and floral patterns in permanent-press cotton and polyester... in combination colors. Button-down, Bermuda and xounded-shiq;>e ooUan. Sizes 30-38t 40-44* A new device is designed to eliminate or pr^voit car theft. It consists of an adjustable steel shaft shaped like a shepherd’s staff — but with a crook at both ends. One steel hook locks firmly onto the brake pedal and the other on the steering wheel, making it impossible to turn the wheel or operate the brake. When not in use, simply slide i under the front seat. PONTIAC 200 Noitii Saginaw ftm» Parking For Hie Big and Tall Man in Hie Family, Pleaea Rafar to Our Big Man's Shop at 16051 Grand Rivar or 8800 Van Dyke CLARKSTON 6460 DixW Higkwoy Just North of Waterford I Swivgl S*t 7-Pc. Mod*m 5-Pc. Pin* 5-Pc. Modam Wood Reg.$m Plus many Odds and inds of Tobies and Chain ... Up to 50% Offl 1672S.Ttltfraph Oali 334-2124 !*••• • AnU* WHtt and Rnaa iallaa Qarvleri CaRart andCtivioalTraotioaate. FEMi?r DOBTOas OaOERS”... W^tr AND mStMeS™' home riTTlHO AVAIUBLE*CAlI FM SJ.’i'a'.i; !!*iT - - »•“»<•• - L FOB BENT OH SALE 0 fiTA.n ________Prescriptions IJfJBM free DELIVERY 4390 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains 6T4-0466 or 674^55 MURRAY SISTERS’ BEAUTY STUDIO luron By Appointment Only I THgxPONTUCJ*RESS, THURSDAY, F^BRUAfiY 6, i960 B-^3 John F. Ivorys Fete Newlyweds at Open Hunt Mr. and Mrs. John F. Ivory II of Masefield Drive, Bloomfield Township announce the recent marriage of their daughter, Mary Patricia, to Ralph Curtis Van Norman. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Van Norman of Detroit. Attended by her sister, Janet, the bride wore a tunic ensemble banded in mink. A matching mink bow with veil com-plenoented her attire. James Nash of Baxter, Tenn. attended the bridegroom. The i^lyweds were feted at the Bloomfield Open Hunt. There are more than 2% mil-ion telephones in Chicago. Extra FashI Fashion Exti Extra Vaiui [lue Extra Sizes Extra a Sizes Extra Fashion Extra Fashion Extra Fashion Extra Value One Week Q90 Only Q regular $10 PRICE-PERFECT STRETCH SLACKS A nof-to-be-missed chance to ► pant yourself smartly in 2-way stretch nylon. This 'year-of-the-pant' colls for several pairs in season's classic colors; brown, black, loden or navy. ' elastic waist sizes 32 to 40 lANE BRYANT The Pontiac Mall Older by mail or phene 682-7500. Add 35e tor delivery plus 1 Oc for CO.D.'t and 4% fax at Sibley's ... miracle mile SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE ■y;..,—;-;:s;F0B MEN FLORSHEIM W0MEN....A.....»vn7ri (discontinued styles) Red Cross, Socialites, Selected Styles Cobbles 15®® - 17®® 8®® ' Regularly 19.99 to 29.95 •k Sandler, Hush Puppies® Winthrop, Sibley Buskens, Miss Wonderful 3’* t. 6” Hush Puppies® Besularly 10.9S to 15.99 ★ (discontinued styles) FLORSHEIM SHOES 6“® t. 8*® /or women, (iuconlinued Uyle* Regularly 10.95 to 18.95 Regularly | ^00 19.95 to 21.95 1 £ Special Group for Children Red Goose Hush Puppies Youngdale *,99 099 MissSandleiZ” and 3 Women’s Lined WINTER BOOTS All Brands-Selected Styles 10®* .14®* Ree. From 11,99 Sibley's eemi-annual sale is famous all over the Michigan areo because of the wonderful values in famous brand shoes. Bring the entire family and save many dollars during this greet event! MICHIGAN’S URGEST FLORSHEIM OEALER Area Artist Has a Show Morgan D. Douglas Jr., a one- ^ time student of Cranbrook Academy of Art and graduate of the Cleveland School of Art, h£fs a one-man show of draw- k tags, and patattags at Galerie de Boicourt in Birmingham. j * * it J After comptation of h i s schooling and military service, Douglas worked with Marshall Fredericks. He did patattags for Ford Times and various sporting magazines. ★ • * * years as assistant art director of the Pontiac Motor account at McManus, John and Adams were followed by five years as a free lance art director. ★ * ★ Since 1963, Douglas has been with the R. J. Foster Company in Birmingham as art director. He has exhibited in a number of shows ta the Midwest and New York City. TRUNK SHOWING FRIDAY, FEB. 7 OF DALTON AND KENROB FASHIONS Informal Modeling 12:30 to 1;30 !• 633-0041 Open Mon. and Fri. 'til 9 p.m. ^‘Deserted Mine,” a drawing by Morgan D. Douglas Jr., is currently being shown at Galerie de Boicourt in Birmingham. The one-man show is on display through Feb. 27. Gallery hours are Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Friday until 9 p.m. 'Afterglo' Will Follow '69 Overture to Opera At a recent meeting of the Pontiac Opera Committee, and representatives of other opera committees of the North Oakland County, area, plans were made to hold the first “Afterglo” party following performance of the Overture to Opera. The champagne affair will be held at the Pontiac Creative Arts Center following the March performance in Pontiac Northern High School. D r. David DiChiera, director, and Overture performers and company members will be honored guests. * * * Tickets for Overture to Opera, 1969, are available from Opera Committee members, at Grin-nell’s stores ta Birmingham and The Pontiac Mall; at LaBelle’s in Rochester or by calling Mrs. Vem Severson of North Fieldstone Drive, Rochester. Students will be admitted for half price. i Tickets for the Afterglo may be purchased from a member of l«» Non, Sold to 0,ol.r ----’ You^re Safe When li)u Save at Kmart GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIACKPKKSS. THtJliSlXA.Y, FEBRUABY 6, 196» Iraq Frees Yank Who Was Held as Spy BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) —lam aure ahe will ba‘happy to American oilman Paul Bail andjhave you back at home.” his wife are expected to leave i^ooking pale and drawn un-for the United States as soon as ^pj. glare of television lights, possible following his release-^,! have trouble Wednesday after a month o' comprehending what was hap- captivity in Baghdad opening. He renrtained seated un- the Belgian Embassy to join his Bail's arrest on a charge of|til Taqaa motioned (or him to wife. "activities within the sphere of’ get up and apeak to the newsmen. ‘Tm glad to be released,” Ball said, groping for words, ‘that's about it.” A government car took him to Bail went to Iraq a year ago for a two-year tour, on loan from Standard Oil of New Jersey’s Humble Oil Co. The Iraq Petroleum Co. is a Western consortium which handles the production from Iraq’s chief oilfield iin Northern Iraq. espionage " apparently rosulledi from the combination of a tall: radio antenna projecting above hus house and the current spy fever in Iraq * * * j Iraqi officials said Bail had an unlicensed transmitter. Belgian diplomats who interceded on behalf of the American said he had an old shortw:ave receiver, and the outsbe antenna it required aroused suspicion. Bail. .I.*), a production engineer for the Iraq Petroleum Co., was arrested a month ago His wife was placed under house arrest but was released Saturday and took refuge in the Belgian Embassy, which looks after U.S. in-j terests in Iraq Bail did not learn he wasj being released until after he[ was brought to a news conference Wednesday in the Baghdad Museum. He was .seated at a table with the secretary of the information: ministry, Shazel Taqaa, when Taqaa said: ‘‘Despite all thCj mistakes you have made, and| becau.se we Arab people have our noble principles and values,^ you, Mr. Paul Bail, are free as! from this moment. , 1 "You can join your wifehhd I WE’RE MICHIGAN’S FASTEST- Growing UGHOMTIRY CGMRAilY HERE S WHY! • LOWEST PRICES • FINEST QUALITY WORKMANSHIP • FASTEST SERVICE • FINEST DECORATOR FABRICS • 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH OR UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY Let Us RE-UPHOLSTER Your Old Furniture m LOOK LIKE NEW AT HALF THE PRICE’’ DON PRAYER'S COMMERCIAL AND HOUSEHOLD UPHOLSTERY Sppcialitinfi all style* inrlnilinf( antique* 589 Orchard Lake Call 335-1700 For Free Estimates DON FRAYER OPEN MONDAY, THURS. & FRIDAY 'til 9 P.M. 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST. Downtown Pontiac 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH TERMS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET BUY ON WARD'S Convenient Credit Plan MONTHS TO PAY 6-Drawer Double Dresser $139.95 Framed Tilting Mirror 28" x 44" ’ $ 34.95 Chest $119.95 Full-Size Panel Bed $ 59.95 Night Stands, each $ 49.95 Unique and charming Spanish style f This fashion-fresh new design of courtly Spanish elegance adapts easily to contemporary living. Lets you create a luxurious bedroom at modest price with a wide choice of individual and correlating pieces. Has intricate carved effects that contrast dramatically with smooth panels and straight lines. In warm and mellow Antiguo finish on Pecan veneers, selected hardwoods, and polystyrene components. With antiqued brass finish pulls on fully dovetailed, centerguided, dustproofed drawers. Master-crafted by Johnson-Carper. Make your Brocado selection now. 5-Urawer Chest $139.95 9-Drawer 64" Triple Dresser $ 159.95 Framed Landscape Mirror 48" x 45" $49.95 "You Must Be Satisfied - This We Guarantee" - Free Delivery FE 2-4231 OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUN. 11-6 THURSv FRI., SAT. A DWMm •! Hi# f. f. Kmf« CMipany wllh throushwt Hm UnItMi Utihs, Oumdm and Pwnrto Rica Mid-Winter Discounts GE BIG-FAMILY WASHER Charge It Jf RR JW dw Heavy-duty 14 lb. capacity washer with these greajt features: Filter-Flo* to trap lint and fiir.z; special eoiiirols for permanent press and noii-eoloilast clothCS. mini-basket for snialI.loa• kitchen, family room, utility room and duldren’s rooms. S‘ i. isi' El 11 ROOM DIVIDERS | WITH BAROQUE 1; DECORATOR PANELS i 15 83 Jcwcl-Lite® Batoqu? pancl.s of polystyrene plastic give ymi the beauty of stained glass. In three patterns and five gloM-ing colors. Charge III ALUMINUM COMBINATION WINDOWS Our Reg. 9.HO r Charge It! Triple track aliimimnn ^lol•m and scr<‘eii windows. Holli storms and screens included. I its all .slandaril size. COMBINATION WHITE " ALUMINUM DOOR Kmart Discount Price NEW! LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON PRE-FINISHED PANELING 4’x7’ 4’xJ CHERRYNUT 2.98 3.6 BUTTERNUT 2.98 YORKTOWN WALNUT 4.» EMERALD 4J SANDSTONE VINYL WALNUT CINNAMON BIRCH NATURAL BIRCH IMPERIAL CHERRY NEW KITE CARPET TILES MADE OF VECTRA FIBER! New there'* a »oft, worm, quiet tile that never need* wexins er poli.hing . . . becou.e if* eerpetl Oa.te Carpet TtUt arm 12-inch«i tquorw, oftd hovw a loH rubbwr bock. Ub« in kitchen*, r«c-POom», bathi, nur*#n*t. Amonngly »toin-re*i*tent. 16 color*. Ea*y to in*tall. » WWc All color* 01*0 available in broodloom width*. ; Double Faced Tape, Roll....... I.to 2’x4' PEGBOAND 48 ADJUSTABLE ME1AL AWNING Discount Priced :■ ^ Charge It! ZO" \ :• For door* or window*, come* with hardware. Ea«y to hang. S6’*x36".......5.1T 42”x36".........6.43 :i i: 48"x36"........T.9T 60*'x36”........8.76 | • Moistens the air throughout your home all winter long. • You feel more comfortable even at lower thermostat settings • Stops dry throat complaints, helps protect family’s health. • Saves furniture from drying out, splitting at glue joints. • Stops warping of doors, floors. • Prevents buildup of annoying static electric shocks. • Has no electric motor or electric controls. acm* Runs on air from furnace blower. InsUII it yourself in your forced warm air furnace system in the warm sir duct or furnace plenum. Package includes instructions, template, plastic tube, saddle vilve. Complete! 54 Oar Reg. 39.98 .Spring loaded hinge design. Reinforeeil corner. .Scalloi»ed glass inserts. Vt ool i>ile weather slrip-])ing. Decorative hlack liinge. Strap and handle. Karly Anieriean bottom panel fits 32” and 36” openings. Charge It! HUMIDIFIER 14.96 Weather-Seal Prestige’ PINE DOORS J4(O.0 4g08 2'5”xl%” 2’8"x1H" l’x1»A” tOB 14.87 53S 15.10 1848 18.83 537 14.07 1747 18,80 596 23.18 23.83 612 33.46 34.18 630 14.68 EDX 12 47.38 48.08 Jalousie 36.84 36.84 E-3 28.66 28.86 E-1 28.58 28.58 Di'k. Kmart Kih Dried 2x4* .44* 7.ft...i.7r* 0"Vtt...... ®7* 2x2$, 8-tt. length ......... 44* Charge It at Kmart "A" GRADE INTERIOR 1%" MAHOGANY Flush Doors . --.;.4 ALUMINUM SELF-STORING COMBINATION DOORS Reg. $22.45 m W 2/0x6/8”...6” 2/4x6/8”...e” 2/6x6/8”...G“ 2/8x6/8”...7*’ 3/0x6/8”...7” Charge It! Self-storing, sprit^g loaded three hinge design. Bottom vinyl sweep, reinforced corners. Screen and glass included. 32”-36” openings only. STORM and SCREEM DOOR Kmart Regular 19.96 17" Spring loaded three hinge design heavy tubular hollow aluminum, bottom vinyl sweep, reinforced corner. Screen and glass inserts interchangeable. Fits 32” and 36” openings. 4 ft. X 8 ft. PLYWOOD G.I.S. 1/4” ... 5.12 1/2” ... 8.96 3/8” ... 7.66 5/8” ... 16.66 3/4”.....-7 . . 11.66 GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOP ■\ ■■ muz POyTIAOHPRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY.8, 1969 U.S. No Longer Has 'Mechanical Majofity' in U.N UNITED NATIONS. NY. (HP) — Voting pattern* In the General Assembly demonstrate ^t the United States no longer ehjoys the “mechanical major!- spread of nuclear weapon* andisensus of delegateii without the outer space treaties. I formal vote. ^ » Greater reliance on the 15- I formal vote. I MIDEAST RESOLUTION 1- nation security Council. TOs re^ ... ,1. ,, e was the Middle East resolution ,t once had in the United prtsenU a reversal ^ ^ Slhe council adopted unanimous-Nalions, thinking and to some extent of *: . . This is orte of the significant the Soviet attitude. ilwiKi« haii raiw in mncior ih> effects of the power shift that; In 1950 the United . Rtatas “one-country, one-vote” system|weighted Toting. Sdch augges-iM-ganlzatlon* and Individuals,jproposed by adopting *ome sort o(|Uon* have come from pritratalbut no government has fwrmaHylpreaent gystem. change of lects 01 me power smii mai m me vinuca n„pp„'arv two-thirds maioritv IS taken place in the world or-1 pushed through Its Uniting for , “ . • , . . ^ ^ ganiration as a result of the Peace plan which sought to .shift surge of new members from Af- a big part of the U.N. peace-r^ .. -ower it ^ * At that time, the council was u... ,1 1 j u tfs . I Nations, there has been no sen- A detailed analysis of voting virtually paralyzed by Soviett^^, to eliminate the In 37 controversial questions in vetoes and the assembly wasj_________ ____________________ the recent assembly .shows the strongly pro-Western. It hadi United States on the losing side, only 60 members. on 21-more than half the time, oi j, jimks , / ri\A/-/^PV ^fnrf the same l^es. the Soviet; LOW /\e/ OTOH Union voted with the lasers only n ‘-J 1 • t iu iTc held in the U.N.’s first years. It' DV irGSlOGHt The mam reason for he U S. meetings in 1948, for * showing was the fart that a.ssembly s agenda -as It “sual- though ly is the.sc days--was heavy practices of skipping with colonial questions and **■ consecutive Interpretation and sues Involving the economic! concentrating more on prehave-nots. jparatory negotiations have re- TEAMING UP duced the number of meetings It was a case of the Soviet required to reach decisions, bloc teaming up with the Aslani 0"® thin* that pos^b e and African cpuntries, and «h f‘ back to the Se^ty «>meume, the l.tin_ Amerl-jCoundl was a /s Deliberate H^ASHING-rON (UPI) - The unspoken motto of the Nixon administration is “cool it.” During his first two weeks in office, Uie new President deliberately has avoided dramatic gestures and /..n. Thi. ,>AaH»iftn of courseV*®* attitude toward the veto. Pitched his official acts and r« L^^siwl^on East w“t Th« Russians now use the veto statements in the lowest possl-* ®"*^ '^"Vmuch more sparingly, often ex- ble key. Tn the recent assembly tKe P'‘**®‘"R‘beiroppositionbyab- tln5ed%at^ dill^S put r ^^e past five years. United States still couiu put . . . , , „ . . White House aides say he 1 T there have been only four Soviet feels the country has had plher a ^ I’vetoes in comparison with the enough turmoil and excitement, j Issues as the seatmg d^ j^g.g4 jggg ^lone, a„d now needs the kind of calm,' na and Korean reunification. It„p,„ps u„ u_____ J was even able by intensive lobbying to defeat an Asian-African move to suspend South Africa from the U.N. Conference on Trade and Development. The United States contended the move was Illegal. * , * ' provide. In the council, however, as in should be surprised ?• the quiet tone of the new has lost Its “mechanical majorl- regime ty." The 1965 expansion of tiie “ council from 11 to 15 members NO INTENTION guaranteed the Asians and Afri- Nixon made quite clear dur-. u cans half the 10 nonpermanent jng the election campaign that Without joining the^vlet bloc, balance of had no intention of trying to the Asian-African bloc cannot po^^er. and can join with any be a glamorous or exciting diief muster a two-thirds majority fg^r other members to get the executive but it can exercise a sort of veto ni„p gep^ed to approve a gp has at least two strong by preventing opponents from rpsolution and, with any two to ,„r projecting a cool-cat getting two-thirds. block a decision. j^^agp -,-he first, already men- B^ause of this potential * * * ^ “veto and the unwieldy char- Because of this situation, the . acter of a body with 126 mem- trend in the council has been to- !* , ,, . , snoihp bers,th. big powers have quiet, ward agreed soluUons rather^^ J P ly turned to procedures outside than confrontations. Many of jitters of a tired and the assandily. These include; • Bilateral negotiations by the United States and the Soviet Union auch as those whidi resulted in the partial ban on nuclear the council’s major actions in recent months have been taken either by unanimous vote on resolutions worked out in the back rooms or by simply having tests, the treaty banning the council president state the con- nervous nation. * w w His second reason for playing it cool is that he wants very badly to live down the reputation he once had as a savage political battler subject t c unrestrained flights of temper. The largest opera house in the world is the Metropolitan Opera House in Lincoln Center, New York City, Come in ot (all Us let Us Show You Why Guoronteed ALUMINUM SIDING and TRIM lA by for your Beit Buy! AMM tuyaiv I Aluminum Miracle Finish ».*Ti I WINDOWS ond DOORS jV | Mir MEM. i $IQ95lT7lbcil WINDOWS I 14 J r»I3**|r^y . . for your home's protection . . for your own protection . . . ______________________ .Phone"'-”” 26400 W. Elfht Mill Rd. Hi Mil* Wnt Of Teitfiipli Vh- Design • We Manufotture • We Insloll • We Guarantee KAY'S Annual . . MID-WINTER AN IMPORTANT MESSABE TO ALL OF/ OUR PRESENT CUSTOMERS and to ANYONE ELSE LOOKING for EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS! We con'r possibly show you all the amazing values new ovailoble during our onnuol MID-WINTER SALEI Please come in of your earliest convenience. We'll promise you unusual savings on any furniture In stock. Special orders slightly higher. ON SUCH FAMOUS NAMES AS: Johnson/Carper-Hauskoe Harien-Bassatt Stanley - American of MartinviHe THIS IS JUST A SMALL SAMPLE OF THE MANV, MANY VALUES AVAILABLE TO THE SHARP FURNITURE BUYERI NO MONEY DOWN - INSTANT CREDIT Were Now Smooth Top Mattress »59 >33 Foam Mattress »49 >29 Extra Firm-10 Yr. Guar >69 '36 Extra Firm 15 Yr. Guar. »79 *44 DANISH MODERH Sofa & Chair FREHCH & ITALIAH PROVIHCIAL 2-Pc. Living Rooms 4 Pc. CORIEMPORARV Badraom Set REG. NOW >399 *249 Maple Bunk Beds ^39 *369 *229 Odd Chests.... ^29 Record Cabinets M2 *399 *269 Mirrors and *695 *469 Pictures M9 Open Oaily 9:30 til 9:00... Tuesday and Wednesday until 6 P.M. KAY FURNITURE . . 37 S. GLENWOOD . . K-MART SHOPPING CENTER 108 N. Saginaw St., Downtown Pontiac, 333-7114 Open Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. - Sat. 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M.. T WKC IS HEADQUARTERS FOR BIGGER SAVINGS .ON FAMOUS FRIGIDAIRE APPLIANCES! BOMSi FRIGIDAIRE 'GOOF-PROOF , JET ACTION WASHER With Small Load Setting $228 e Jet Away rinset • Deep oction agitator e Cold water wash setting e Small lood? Special setting lovei h^,)^^r and detergent. Regular $248.00 SAVE $20 FRIGIDAIRE DELUXE CUSTOM GAS DRYER Automatic Drying Time Reg. $199 SAVE $15.00 *184 • No guesswork — dryer stops Itself vdien clothes are dry • Durable press core * Cycle-End signal tells you when to take clothes out • Dacron lint screen. FRIGIDAIRE DELUXE ELECTRIC RANGE Cleans itself Automatically *278 * 30-inch deluxe range cleans itself automatically ebctrically • Electric clean range, rack and drip bowli e Cookmosler automatic oven control. Reg. $299 SAVE $21.00 Frigidaire 15.9 Cu. Ft. Si^e-By-Side Refrigerator-Freezer Completely Frost-Proof *397 • Side-by-side convenience • Measures 32" wide • Refrigerotor with 198-lb. vertical freezer • Never defrost again e White, copper or avocado colors. Reg. $448 SAVE $52.00 OTHER FRIGIDAIRE MODELS AT SAVINGS! FRIGIDAIRE WASHERS $]77 ELEaRIG RANGES FRIGIDAIRE DRYERS $]Op-'FRIGIDAIRE FREEZER 12L V/ ’ Priced as i6w as . THg ygNTIAC^PRESS. THURSlj^Y^ FEglTJARY 8, i960 B-0 S •Art STARR'S EXER-GYM Kmp the Eafira Family Fit Develop more spring In your legs, strengthen your back and shoulder muscles, improve your figure. Illustrated manual shows special exercise programs. Brief....... Trank Peatjr Trank Pantf Leepenlj... Feb. 10th-22nd Reg. S For Sizet Each Only .............4p6...1.3S....3.S5 .............4-7... 1.50....S.7S .............8-9... 1.85....4.70 ....5-7...2.00....5.10 ....8-9...2.S0....6.35 ....5-7...2.50....6.35 $2495 LeA Panty*..... 8*9* • • 3*00 • • e >7el5 Only TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER KRESGE'S QUILTED BEDSPREADS Reg. $7.96 NOW $g88 CASUAL HANDBAGS IN FAVORITE STYLES SALE 4.47 ■ Regulorly 6.00. $ove on shoulder bo{^ satchels, pouches and more In leother-like vinyl. Black and shades of brown. TEL-HURON CENTER Twin or Full Made of Luxurious, Long Wearing Decorator Fabrics OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 5 For Her FIRST COMMUNION See Our Beautiful Selection of Veils $1199 to $16” SIZES 6 to 10 m-HURON - FE5-IS65 ChILdR'EN sivyfi. GET IN ON THE BIG VALUES HERE Under One Reef at the TEL-HURON CENTER Make This Yeur One-Stop Headquarters EUAS ntmiBtS NG BOr 20 S. Telepaph Across from Tel-Huron Silver Lake Rd. and Dixie Highway ANNOUNCING!! 1 A New Service!! Custom Made Draperies and Slipcovers, Hundreds of Samples to Choose From, Excellent Workmanship and Service, nUkilONABLI raiCRS Call or Appointment Big Polaroid Sale at CAMERA MART THE BETTER POUROID COLOR PACK CAMERA Complete with Rangefinder MODEL 220 I CAMERA MART SALE PRICE 511 BELOW COST! SWINGER SALE 12*1 Big , Swinger I NO SALES TO DEALERS! THE CAMERA MART Osmunds FLORSHEIMS Reduced To *15 and $1090 FINAL REDUCnONt Values to *26*® Still a good selection, but you'd better hurryl OsMUN’S STonra FOR MBN a youns men TsI-TweKreManinSeutMisId Open Ivery HigM til I ncwalewe Peiitiae 0peaFri.ttti Teeh Plass Center la Werren Open tseiy Sight tS* Tai-Huren Center la Senliee CpanlveiyHIchllRI ' B-lO Dr. Oaks Says; THE PONTIAC PRESS. TH\jRSDAY; F^:EttftJARY 6, i969 Tests Urged if Strep Threatens Young ^EDITOR’S SOTE — Thw is Control ('ommillee. The objecti If a child aged 4 to 18 does in! onofher in a series of u^ekly is to eradicate rheumatic fever!fact have a strep, a complete ortides issued hi/ the Onlv/niid in Michigan. ! today minimum antibiotic! Countu Mfdiral Society Dr. issued to course of treatment is called Oaks is the collective voice 0/ parents and physicians. Dr. for. Also cultured should be the society ) iEdward L. Quinn, chairman of those children exposed to strep.^ ------ the MHA committee, sugests even if they don’t report a aore| The season of sore throats is that a throat culture test be|lbroat. upon us. Some, caused by a given where a strep infection is| No doubt because of the specific strep germ, could lead suspected. widespread use of antibiotics to rheumatic fever, the only! This can give a positive and modern affluence — which known cause of rheumatic heart diagnosis within a few hours has reduced human disease. and with a minimum of trouble.;overcrowding, strep throat and ‘This latter is the subject of a Children 4 to 18 years of age Its related diseases are becom-continuing campaign by the arc most susceptible t o'>og less prevalent. Michigan Heart Assoc-iation rheumatic fever and its corn- through its Rheumatic F'ever plications. -Junior Editors Quiz on Rheumatic fever killed 12' Michigan children In 1966. It; usually attacks about one per' cent of those children con-1 tacting a strep Infection. Rheumatic heart disease strikes about 20 per cent of the rheumatic fever victims There are still some mysteries medical science has not solved. One of them is how the strep brings about Irheumatic fever and then isubscnuent rheumatic heart 'di.sea.se. SERIOUS BUSINESS Rheumatic heart di.sease is serious business It can kill ouickly or remain concealed for 20 years and then cripple — or result in a heart murmur of no consequence. Alt of this of course. Is 'usually preventible by diagnosis and treatment at the proper time. Why the throat culture? * * * - I certain as physicians can The heart association cites „rtain of anything in two advantages. First, if a child .. .1, . n does show the presence of strep, there is the proper treatment, isti’cp groats were cultured —’ But if nobody knows whether he.properly treated with has strep or not, the tendency is tibiotics, we could eliminate the to quit the antibiotic with theLrep ind its consequences." first improvement, leaving the rheumatic fever danger still (^1 « question for alive. Oaks, send a card or let- \ter to Oakland County Medical CAN BECOME RESISTANT \^Society, 346 Park, Birmingham Secondly if the sore throat due to a virus, the use of an-i —------------------------- tibiotics is not only a waste of The use of hospital outpatient medicine and money, but it can]departments reached a new add to the possibility that other!peak of 9,589,487 visits in April bacteria tbe child may have of 1968. This figure was 19 per will become antibiotic resistant, {cent above the preceding April. NOTICE TO WATERFORD TOWNSHIP TAXPAYERS Notice is hereby given that the Treasurer's Office of the Charter Township of Waterford, 4995 W, Huron Street, Pontiac, Waterford Township, Oakland County, Michigan, will be open for the rollection of taxes on Saturday, February 8, 1969 from 8:30 AM. until 12:00 noon. ARTHUR J. SALLEY. Clerk Charter Township of Waterford February 3, 1969 QUESTION: How can stuffed animals in museums look so life-like? ★ * ★ ANSWER; Modern taxidermy — the art of stuffing animals — had its origin in the 1500s, but the first examples, as we show at upper left, were crude. The skins were simply stuffed with straw and sewed up. Nowadays, entirely different methods are used. In tlie late 1800s, the naturalist and sculptor, Carl Ake-ley, worked out a way of making mounted animals look unbelievably real. In this process (1), the skin of the animal is carefully measured and a complete model made in clay to show the action of all the muscles. Tbeo (Z) this is covered with plaster, which, when taken off, makes a mold in several pieces. Each mold piece is then lined with burlap dipped in glue. When dry, the stiffened burlap pieces are taken out and joined together, making a light but strong manikin of the animal’s body. The animal's skin is stretched over this (3). When such mounted animals are set in a museum group with foliage and skillfully painted background, the effect is startling — the real animal seems to be right there. (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) iDiHitd ti^to l)ui| [ui^ coApet [ori/€Ay (ittte... C(mietD 8eeki»itii-Evaiu oiii jw d ieml-tuuta (u(t [AiHrt Cullsfaui hmt§kt vmi (or gm! GULISTAN GULISTAN new 1969. 23*^ giant-screen compact, console GULISTAN with AFC plus Zenith’s new TI1AN80 handcrafted chassis GULISTAN GULISTAN Windrock Herculon Olefin High luster Olefin pile, hdndtomo subtle texture. A top teller Gulis-ton recently discontinued. 6 colors. All remaining stock at a spectacular $4.59 tq. yd. Acrilan® Acrylic Plush Acrilon-ff acrylic pile plush, extra heavy quality. Choice of 8 beautiful colors. Our fowest offering to dote on this fine fabric—$6.98. Zefkrome Acrylic Tip Shear Solution dyed Zefkrome acrylic pile tip sheared loop texture. Solution dyeing locks in the high luster colors more permanently for greater life and luster. 11 colors. Spectacularly sole priced at $7.79. Matinee Herculon Olefin Herculon Olefin pile texture in plains and tweeds. 5 colors. Our top $4.98 seller — all remaining stock goes at $3.98. Acrilan® Acrylic Tip Shear Acrilan® acrylic pile textured jfip sheared for highlights. 9 boautiful colors. Our lowest offering to date on this fine fabric. GULISTAN fiu Djnisli .Modern slylod comii.itl LOnsole m ponuino oil iinMicd U'jinul voncrri. '’ll 'r'erl hjrdwood solids. Obinct icjiurcs ff.indi.! styled bjse. 5 ' .v 3" Tujn-Cone Si)C,il.cr. Unbeatable $CCII95 Value! 0tl9 for full Zenith handcrafted quality 3 Years To Pay Luxury Wool Twist Springy, wool pile textured twist weave — on extra fine quality. Your choic* of 10 beautiful colors. If you lilm twist weave, you'll b* impressed with both the carpet and the remarkable sale price $8.98. OPEN TIL 9 P.M. THURS., FRI., and SAT. CONVENIENT CREDIT TOO - NO MONEY DOWN ALWAYS DISCOUNt PRICES SWEET’S 30 DAYS SAAAE AS CASH RADIO & APPLIANCE 422 West Huron FE 4-567T Open Monday and Friday Eieninizs 'lit 9 P.M. BeefewttK- Evans FINE FLOOR COVERINOS 27 SOUTH TELEBMPH ni-iwRON SNomN GEnn - nnuc - U4-M44 ^ CLOONAN'S DRUG STORES FILLED BY OUR EXPERT PHARMACISTS PQNTI4C rRE.SS.,J,fcIllRSnA\:, FMRP^RV ». B~U OOING SPECIAL !!S!!L!!!!? $7400 OPIN PAILY yNTIL 9 P.M. SATURDi^YS UNTIL 6 PMi ^ Every item in our store is marked down for this terrific event. . . Nothing held back ... Savings up to 50% ... Our new Spring and Summer ■ ||W DOWN LONOr EASY merchandise is on its, way and we must make room so are sacrificing profits and in some cases have marked items to below cost. T is is our wmbiit TERMS greatest annual selling event and offers you an opportunity tOjsave as never before. Even at these low, low prices you can charge it and PAT MINT take up to 3 years to pay. ------^-----—— DINEHE FURNITURE BEDROOM SUITES Regular Price NOW $69.95 5-Pc. Formica Top Dinettes $39°° Exttnsion tobl« ond h«avily paddad chairt. WF W $93»° $89.95 5-PC.BHgWttlUllt $30$5 Regular Price 4-PC. MODERN BEDROOM $179i95 In wolnut. 1968 CXTSnXIVIl lUUiw Knockad down. __ «,.« 7-PC. BROHZnONE DINETTE SET 5-PC.BRONZETONE DINEnE SET $189.95 9-PC. DINEnE 2 laaf tobla, 8 bfoniafona chairt, Formiea- IVOV clo«a-outi. Includai deubla drattar . loifiachatt and bookcoia bad. ■ NOW $229.95 4-PC. BEDROOM SUITE $1^700 (3 only). Walnut, bronia draw pullt. Hai iarga ■ gjB M mirror. Floor aampla. ■ ■ ■ $209.95 4-PC. BEDROOM SUITE $19900 Slightly damegad. Oowbla draitar, largo chatt. | A A $259.95 4-PC. BpOOM $jJJ00 Regular Price $339.95 7-PG. DINING ROOM SUITE $289.95 4-PC. BEDROOM SUITE by Bosseft. Floor Samplo. S^ggoo Extension Table with 4 AAatching Chairs, Large Buffet and Hutch. Floor m ■ Sample. ■■ ■ ■ $415.00 4-PC. BEDROOM SUITE : By Baiiett. Factory cIomouK In b«aotiful walnut. TripU draeiar. 5.dra war chatt. Ponai bad. $255°° LAMPS and CHAIRS 1 SAVINGS ON BEDDING NEEDS $119.95 RECLINING CHAIRS $CQ00 S.varal .tyla. tochootafrom.That#ora brand noma ■■■■ choir. Wifn hnatt covart. Sava. $t7.s5 HEAVY ROLL EDGE COTTONMATTRESS $12« $89.95 OCCASIONAL CHAIRS $CO00 Floor tampla. of bottar chairt In your choico of color. $59.95 INNERSPRING MATTRESS OR BOX SPRING (Floor Sample) $3250 $89.95 MAPLE ROCKERS $5000 Fldar lampU. al k.«« modal.. $109.95 Serta Restocraft Mattress and Box Spring (soiled) $3300 $9.95 TABLE LAMPS, Odd Lot $750 1 FLOOR SAMPLES Big Savings on Pole and Tree Lamps! ^ SYLVANIA COLOR TVs Silll $9.95 END AND COFFEE TABLES $690 FLOOR SAMPLES If 1 Large Picture$ .^1 H LIVING ROOM SUITES-SECTIONALS NOW $299.00 coUSk SOFA and CHAIR ^248®® $229.00 v^HYL SOFA and CHAIR $1C700 / 1 Only, fin* ceme geti it ot R W ■ $369.90 3-PG. LIVING ROOMS $94700 With Mr. e Mr». Choira ■BT ■ $249.N 2-Pc. Contemporary Suites SlgQoo 8.aulifulmad«i,H».. and biawntwHhann wye Sara $100. ■ "iP $239.09 2-Pc. SOFA BED SUITES $1C700 lOOrdaraouti. Mchnyl«nlilaiacaran.Clialeaaladnn. ■ wf M $269.08 2-Pc. Nylon Suite (1 only) $1Q700 Hoar .amplt. Widt otn. In drag Itrqraltt Mnia carar. g g $215"® $399.95 4-Pc. SECTIONALS NIoer oam^leo, chelee ef eolert In fine nylen cevero. APPLIANCES-CLOSE-OUT SPECIALS $219.95 $229.00 $169.00 $189.00 $179.00 $239.00 U-Cubie Foot Whirlpool REFRIGERATOR Floor Samplo Whirlpool REFRIGERATOR ELEaRIC RANGE 3e”-lnch GAS RANGE CLOTHES DRYER Whiripool AUTOMATIC WASNERS Fltor Samples $23700 $10400 $131»« $12900 $14300 $13000 little Joe’s BARGAIN FURNITURE HiABOUARTIRS FOR PUUR FURNITURI ANO APPLIANCNS • TELEPHONE FE 2-6842 OPEN DAILY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY UNTIL 6 P.M. NO MONIY DOemi Baldwin Avenue, Corner Walton ■ .4^. B—Ig . vK .. THE POyflAC PRESS. THItRSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1969 PRICES SO LOW YOU CAN ENJOY SINGER SEWING MACHINES. VACUUMS, STEREOS.TV NOW! „THE ^ WAIT?/-^ i SALEV By FREDBRICg H. TREESH I United Preit InternatioMl Americans are pTone to say I education is the ticket to! equality, the exit pass from the{ ghetto. I Yet slum schools that are chronically short of money,] materials and professional services and unable to compete with white suburbia in recruiting the best teachers $60 OFF.„..„ The fabulous Golden TOUCH & SEW* sewing machine by Singer In ‘^Copenhagen” desk, save now on this famous Touch & Sew zig-zag sawing machine with the exclusive Singer* push-button bobbin that winds Inside the machine. Has a built-in buttonholer that makes perfect buttonholes easily. Get the set. Two SINGER* vacuums Singer canister cleans high, low and hard-to-get-at places. Comes with five accessories for all cleaning Jobs. AND Singer upright has triple action vibrator to deep clean, sweep and air-wash carpets and rugs. Suburb Weighs Opening Schools to Ghetto Young hardly can be exfiected to close any culture gaps. AAA To make the American dream of equality of education work on the other side of the tracks, it will Uke a great piany things, not the least of which Is a lot of good will on the part of the advantaged majority. AAA This nation looked ttils week to Great Neck, N.Y., an affluent suburb on the North Shore of Long Island, for a reading on whether the necessary good will can be mustered. VOTING TODAY Tha resident of Great Neck were scheduled to vote today on this proposition: “Do you favor adoption of the Great Neck Board of Education plan to admit a limited number of New York City primaf^-grade children to our schools provided there is no cost to the school district?” AAA The vote could not be binding legally, but the school board said it would abide by the decision. The school board’s plan Involves the busing to Great Neck See “SINGER preeente THE BEAT OF THE BRASS atarrlng Heito Alpert and The TiJuar--- Wad..Feb.12onNBC-TV. luana Braea." W\at'$ new for tomorrow f( at SIN C E R today I SINGER FONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTIR — PHONE 682-0350 •A Tradvnwrk of THE SINGER COMPANY TEL-TWELVE SHOPPING CENTER PhoM 353-1330 OAKLAND MALL SHOPPING CENTER Phon* 585-5010 Bell to Expand GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -Michigan Bell Telephone Co. Wednesday announced a $6.8-million expansion program for the greater Grand Rapids area, including installation of direct distance dialing in eight communities. The largest expenditure will be $680,000 for a new vehicle service center In Grand Rapids. 'Elegant Style is°NEW HetUemHU TheValue iscAMAZING! Just Look at the Beauty of This BIG NEW BEDROOM OUTFIT //ere is the very first offering of this new and amazing bedroom value. The luxury look of these massive pieces will let you take special pride in your bedroom. The rich walnut color, the deep 3-dimensional design detail of natural wood-like plastic adds to the distinctive appeap met. The hand-rubbed plastic finish in warm wood grain on tapered hardboard will stay new looking for years. See this newjgroup now... you'll appreciate it as much as We do. You'll know why we are pleased to offerit at this very special price! Includes • 62" Triple Dresser s 50" Framed Mirror • Panel Bed • 38" S-Drawer Ch»t m 95 Matching Night fO/f Stand Additional FURNITURE CO. 2135 DIXIE HWY. AT TELEGRAPH Quality and service for 22 Years in Detroit NO MONEY DOWN — Up to 3 Years to Pay Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. 'til 9, Tues., Wed., Sat. »til 6 334-4934 BUY! SELL! TRADE!... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! starting next 'Septembo* of between 45 and 60 youngsters from disadvarttaged districts of the New Ywk City borough of Queens. Most of the children would be Negro. FEW NEGROES NOW School officials say t h presoit Great Neck school This has been attributed in population ot about 10,000 is Mtconsideri^ part to fear that per cent white, 4 per cent Negro. Despite careful effiwts bf school bmid and administrators to explain the plan and allay misunderstanding, substantial opposition developed in the community. the |dan would “weaken" the! school system, lead to higher taxes and give black militants a forum in the community. A A A> Countering the oi^ition have been a series of information meetings scheduled by school authorities and informal coffee klatches, door to door canvassing and the placing [of newspaper advalisements by backers of the plan. AAA Last weekend, more than 500 senior and junior high school sutdents and about 150 parents marched through the streets to urge a substantial “yes” vote. More than 2,000 secondary students also signed a petition backing the plan. _____ Sears Refreshen Rooms with Sears Latex Paints . . . Now Sale Priced Colorfast Latex Interior Flat Reg. 4.49 Gal. 9-Inch Roller Set , 2^’ For u.e with oil or* latex |>ainta excejftt one-coat. Roller cover...99o Sprayer SALE Portable S|W«yer . . . ideal for tha homeowner. Oilleu piaton model deliven 3.2 cfm at 3S pai. Mii-HP Sprayer has maximum 100 pii. Handles any paint on rough or smooth surfaces. Save tSO. %-HP Sprayer for commercial use. Big. air volume, high 100 psi for fast painting, inflating. 3-Gallon Paint Tank Maximum 60 psi. With safety valve, regulator. .Save $8 during this sale. Rtf. 11.91 Rag. 14i.tt Reg. 191.91 149»^ 26 97 Ladder SALE Aluminum Stepatool; 29 inch-ea high. Safa 3-inch, alip resistant steps. Folds for handy ■torage. Lightweight and easy to handle. Aluminum Stepladderi 6-foot household model with 3-inch ste|w. sirueted for safety, durability. 5-Foot Wooden Stepladder Reinforcing rods in each step, 4-way spreader. Braced for safety. Budget priced for the homeowner. Reg. 4.99 3»T Reg. 11.98 598 SearSlDowntown Pontiac e Phone FE 5-4171 KARt. ROIBIf^ M Ml W afc THK PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6> I960 R—18 Ritual Surrounding Mexico s 1970 Presidential Vote Beginning MEXICO CITY (AP) -They’re starting the involved process that converts a Mexican politician into president. By the end of this year, some six months before the 1970 election, Mexicans will know the name of their new leader. He will be the man chosen privately by the incumbent president after consultation with an exclusive set of party hierarchs. The choice will be announced at the party’s national convention as a product of the attending delegates. The election will in effect be unnecessary. Until the choice is unveiled, the nominee will be known to Mexicans as El Tapado—literally, the covered one. Speculation will swirl around his identity. To the professional politician, the ambitious bureaucrat, the job seeker and sycophant, the Tapado process is a form of po-liUcal roulette. The right guess is important to survival. When he takes office in December 1970, the new president will assume powers usually reserved for emperors and dictators. His person will be enveloped by the traditions of the presidency: infallibility, omnipotence. He’ll command one of , the most powerful political [ chines devised by man. IMPERSONAL RULE Yet, his rule will be relatively impersonal. The personal charm belongs to the office he occupies and it’s to the presL dency, not the person, that most Mexicans surrender their unconditional loyalty. Chances that this sexennial ritual will be appreciably affected by the political and socioeconomic storm signals buffeting nation are thread-thin at best. It has been going on with only the slightest variation in its basic theme since 1934. It has survived tluough two key factors: sound organization with the power and know-how to apply effective disciplinary pressures where necessaiy and tradition of autocracy ammg the pei^le dating back to days when Aztec kings ruled. The governing machine, knpwn as the Institutional Revolutionary party, or PRI, was created in 1929 atop four distinct pillars of support: military, peasant, labor and popular-small mercliants, industrialists and landowners; bimeaucrats, artisans, professiMials, etc. The military prop, the biggest threat to survival, was eradicated in 1940. The machine nourished Itself on nationalism and the mystique of popular revolution, which many regard as more myth than fact. Fifty-nine years after the revolution, (Hie-third of all Mexicans cant’ read or write Spanish; 1,500 land barons own one-sixth of the land, and peas- U.S. Phone Service Praised Foreign Press Kind to Nixon LONDON President Nixon and the quality of U.S. telephone service were stressed in foreign comment about America this week, while one Japanese newspaper speculated: “Will the United States recognize Communist China within 18 months?’’ Heinz Barth, Washington correspondent for Hamburg’s Die Welt, said Nixon “pleasantly surprised America and the world with his political debut as president.’’ ★ ★ ★ “One week after moving to the White House he spoke about foreign policy with a freehanded ease which his predecessor never possessed,’’ said Barth. “The first moves in the power triangle Washington - Moscow - Peking emerge. The President kept open to both sides the possibility of agreement, but indicated that Moscow will be first choice by all means. “It was not a bad start—a polished game with two red balls v/hich left the impression that American foreign policy is in firm and experienced hands again.” CAUTIOUS, CALM Tokyo’s Shimbun said Nixon’s first news conference showed he is taking “a cautious and calm” foreign policy posture and appears to be trying to avoid involvement in public debates on foreign policy issues. “This probably stei taking a hindsight of the dispute over Vietnam which divided the nation during the previous administration,” it said. ★ * * Sankei Shimbun of Tokyo told American businessmen, eying Red China as a potential mar- ket, are “now betting whether the U.S. government will recog-Ize Pekhig within 18 months.” Acknowledging that diplomatic recognition of Red (%ina is not on Nixon’s agenda, Sankei said American businessmen were nonetheless “encouraged by Italy’s decision to recot mainland China, and many of those business leaders are re-[wrtedly predicting that the United States would recognize the regime of Mao Tse-tung.” John Dodd, New York correspondent of Britain’s Sun, .likes the idea of being able to telephone Los Angeles in five sec-(Hids. “Of all the things in America that work and work efficiently, the telephone system is the one you would want most to bring back to Britain,” he said. This Story Is Testament to Columnist's Willpower BOYLE By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - There are few rites on earth more solemn than making out a last will and testament. Everybody keeps warning you that you should do it, and sooner or later most people do. Here’s how it sometimes operates. You go into the law firm of Zincom, Samllo-vitch, O’Branni-gan and Smuggles and tell the receptionist you want to make out your will. She casts a dubious look at your frayed collar and,, scuffed shoes and suggests you see Mr. Smuggles. Smuggles, it turns out, is the junior member of the firm—the. son-in-law of Mr. Zincom—and the ink on his law degree is still somewhat damp. “Who would you like to serve as your executor?” asks Smuggles. When you suggest that he will do just fine, he smiles like three Cheshire cats. He pulls out a pad of large yellow paper and starts putting down the data. CEMETERY LOT “Do you own any real estate?” “Yeah, a cemetery lot.” “Well,” says Smuggles tactfully, “Perhaps you’ll want to save that for yourself. Any bonds?” “Nope.” “Any stock market Investments?” “Nope.” “What value do you place on your hoirte?” “You’ll haVe to ask my landlord. It belongs to him.” “I see,” says Smuggles, his smile beginning to fade. “How about your savings account?” “What savings account?” “Don’t you have anything of value you want to leave to someone?” “Yeah, I got a lot of free ad- vice and—oh, yes, a $1 New York State lottery ticket that’ll be wrarth $100,000 if I will.” “Don’t you even have checking account?” “Yep, but right now it’s down to $51.13.” ★ * ★ ‘Why in the world do you want to make out a last will and testament?” demands Smuggles. ‘Well,” you reply, “everybody says if you don’t make one out, the government will take everything you own.” A THIRD OF A PAGE Smuggles sighs, calls In a ^ 1st, and a few minutes later you a copy of your wilt, which you sign and he has witnessed. It all takes up only a third of a page. “What’s your fee?” “It is just $51.11,” says Smuggles smiling bleakly. ■k * * As you fill out the check, you note that leaves you with just two cents in the world. But you left with a feeling of lime serenity. You have protected your heirs, you have made out your will, and no government on earth can break it. I iiaSTn OFF the cost of WITH THIS COUPON... KO»d mnlU March Si ALLSTATE BOOKKEEPING 2137 Opdyke Road We represent several companies! ... but we work for you! We’re free to choose just the right protection to fill your need.s. DAUTO DHOME □BUSIWESS 7 ants earn as little as 40 cents a day. The absence of an ideological base gave the PRI the political flexibility to assume the coloring the monient' demanded, skillfully exploited the political vulnerabilities of Mexicans, from tycoon to lathe turner, to extract loyalty. The character of the Mexican was and is a factor, says Adolfo Christlieb Ibarrola, 49, lawyer tl boss of the major opposition faction, the National Action party -PAN. “The lack of political education and that autocratic, monarchic tradition,” he says, “have caused the citizen to have a certain fear, a lack of will, to take independent postures. DEEP DISCONTENT Discontent runs deep in this sector of the population over varied Issues: administrative disarray, corruption and nepotism, the thinly distributed national wealth, “gringofication” of the economy, even the machine’s lack of “humanismo” or humanity. \ These anxieties are believed to have fueled a minor flap between two high school groups last fall into one of the bloodiest student storms in the country’s history. The problems stirred by the student strife have not been fuf-ly resolved. Mexico has one of Latin America’s most progressive ed. ucational systems, but among the poor, educators say, Uiere’s a lack vocational education. Thus they are difficult to assimilate in an economy that is demanding more and mor# skilled help. STRENGTH ERODING Opposition leader Christlieb and many independent Mexicans believe this is eroding the official party’s strength. Christlieb believes the official party must permit freer political play “to properly Channel political anxieties and give the people a sense of j^tlcipation in their problems,7^ ■k k * 'The alternative to truly democratic elections, he says, is violence. 108 N. SAGINAW ST. - Downtown Pontiac - FE 3-7114 OPEN FRI. 9:30 am to 9 pm — SAT. 9:30 am to 5:30 pm Next Friday, Feb. 14th, Is VALENTINE'S DAY Look at this Gift You Con Give Him! Not 7, Not 12, But 17-Jewel Men's SPORTSMAN WATCH Regular *24« - SAVE *10^" • For men and youths — waterproof tested to 150 feet underwater • Automatic calendar • Exterior dial to time underwater stay • Easy-to-read underwater Radium Dial • Unbreakable mainspring • Svveep Second Hand • Anti-Magnetic • Sh,ock Resistant • Stainless steel back • Rust resistant. NO MONEY DOWN - 25' Weekly n^ark Free in WKC's Lot at Rear of Store or 1-Hr in Downtown Moll Hove ticket stomped at Cashier's Office Putting you flruLkouptm first ’69 Nova Coupe During our Value Showdown, look what you can get. A ’69 Nova that’s priced less than a ’68 Nova with almost identical equipment. This Nova has PowergUde, which is priced less than last year. It has new advanced-design power disc brakes, which are a third less than our power disc brakes last year. The head restraints are standard. So is the 200-hp V8. And the whitewalls and wheel covers are pricpd just about the same. So that '69 Nova actually is priced $78.00* less than a '68 Nova with the same equipment. You get a better Nova, too. Better because of its new lock for the steering wheel, ignition and transmission lever. Its improved insulation to keep out road noise. Its quieter engines. Its looks. A lot of people buy the economical Nova instead of an economical foreign car. Drive one during your Chevy dealer’s Value Showdown and find out why. •Bated ®>i manufacturer'e tuuated retail pricet, indudhis federal excite tax and tuggeeted dealer nmo earpnp- llwTENlOCHEII Agency, Inc. 306 Riker Bldg., Pontiae FE 4-1551 H. W. Hutt*nlochl»r Max K«rns Jomai Huttanlochar Richard Huttanlochar Charles F. Hatter .. . OVER 35 YEARS OF DISTINGUISHED INSURANCE SERVICE J Value ShoMidown: $78j00less than last yeark Nova equipped the same way. B—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS; yHl RSDAV, ^KBRU^Y 6, 1969 -Ns Hong Kong—Busiest Port for Even Busier Smugglers (EDITOR’S NOTE — Norcot-jmen who '■ro charged with ks. Gold. Silver. You name if, searching the ships, and those tt*8 smuggled into Hong Kong, who try to prevent smuggling at The British colony on the main- Hong Kong’s Kai Tak airport,' land of China, one of the bust- concede it is an impossible task, esf ports in the Far East, is a!But they appear to be fighting a haven for smuggling, and o/-|>yinning battle. ^ fkials concede it is HAUL to stop.) ________ 1 9 6 8, Hong Kong Smugglers usually take their R JFFFPRirF authorities hauled in more thani gold legally to Macao, via Hong in a t®" narcotlcs, which would’Kong under permit. The bullionl has been a Kong s i, ^^^e refined and and then transferred under w!U„oRHfi.hoolonv ‘ distributed in American or, heavy guard to a hydrofoil or steamer which takes the cargo t some 40 miles southwest to the hepe, and the market buying selling prices are quoted throughout the world by financial services as if the operations were as legitimate as those of the New York and Ix>ndon stock exchanges. I>EGAL CARGO Hong Ktmg’s first governor hod toward the old opium smugglers. Unlike other countries In Asia, Hong Kong has n o restrictions on the Import and export of silver — no matter what the quantities. The only reason silver smugglers are forced to bring the metal in illegally is in most cases because it comes from countries prohibiting silver export and therefore cannot appear on a ship's manifest at^the port of origin. The smugglers of silver would gladly declare the metal en-route to Hong Kong if they could, for the cost of importing it legally is minimal. The loss in terms of govern- ment revenue through silver smuggling to Hong Kong is negligible: less than American cents for the cost of making a declaration and eight U.S. cents duty on every $165 worth of silver. The government’s own trade figures show how brazenly the silver smuggling is carried out. In 1968, more than four times the amount of silver Imported legally to Hong Kong was exported from the colony. Between January and August, according to official govem-ihent records, 343,|67 ounces of silver worth about $^15,000 were imported legally. During the same period, 1,279,581 ounces of silver worth more than $2,750,000 were exported undef license from the colony. •‘The last silver mine in the colony was closed before World War II, so we naturally presume the balance Is being smuggled in,^’ chuckles a senior preventive service officer. ___ European cities. Seizures in 1967 totaled about became a British colony Indeed, it was un^ Treaty of Nanking, wtich end^L^ opium [jNorphine and heroin and In 1966 Ing a good idea at the time that predominantly British and American merchant princes would use the colony as a base for smuggling opium to the vast; mainland of China. hauled 12,000 pounds of narcotics, which would have been worth at least $87 million had it found its way to the United States. m Senior Hong Kong preventive Portuguese colony of Macao. From Macao the smugglers I simply put their bullion on a I sampan or fishing junk bound 1 for Hong Kong and within days 1 the goods are in the hands of I what is wellknown in the col- I ony as the Chinese Qo^ld and | Silver Association — a con- ' .-tv; . r' n ^ , service officers and t h e i rjveniently private club which is ^ Th*. oreat rlinoers whichin the p ol i c e listed in the telephone book. Thf great Kr.«n/>h bccai-4 ihoft «ii«K Th#* AKRnoifltinn trades in brought opium to China and narcotics branch assert that the|’^ The association trades in an precious tea back to England,.'early decrease in narcolksjavcjage of jiome 2,5TO are lous lea oacK lo England^---------------- -------------1 ,. . j ,u j i. : gone but smuggling con- seizures repre.sents a decrease god per day, and the daily Kuiic, I „ vn limp ran reach a.s manv as tinues as a characteristic of Hong Kong with its main traffic in narcotics, gold and silver. And to a certain extent colonial g o v e rnment permissiveness regarding some smuggled commodities also persists. Hong Kong is one of the busiest ports In the East. An average of 70 vesseLs enter and lea»'e the colony each day. The Vocational Class Getting Training in Building Boats estimate that there are 80,000 addicts in Hong Kong — one in ' every 50 persons living here. Hong Kong’s free money I market attracts a great deal of gold smuggling and, were It not J that the colony is British and Britain is a member of the ______ . _ International Monetary Fund, PROVIDENCE, R. I. 141 —,the smugglers might get their Realistic vocational training injgj,|^ market very preparation for skilled jobs is easily, being given to woodworking students at Mount Pleasant Authorities point out that High School, with a view to, jj,at is smug- aiding the shortage of labor in j|ong Kong is brought in in the amounts incoming, not a 1 volume can reach as many as | failure on their parts to catch'25.000 transactions. What Is . as much as in preceding years. , being traded is smuggled gold, ^ Much of the narcotics smug-1 which originated, in most cases, gled to Hong Kong is destinedi from the Middle East, to other countries, including the: The sale of gold is legal, and I United States and S o u t hjauthorites hardly ever bother to I America, authorities say, but ajraid the market for it would be I large enough amount is for! impossible to trace the origin of | local-consumption. jthe bullion to charge anyone \\ ’ V- ONE IN 50 with smuggling. Government welfare agencies! SH VER SMUGGLING the state boating Industry. Cove Haven Marina in West Barrington and the school are cooperating in a project In which the students are building five 12-foot sailing prams. The students involvid will visit the Cove Haven Marina on • tour that will expose them to the many types of job opportunities in the boating industry, including those of riggers, marine mechanics and marine architects. by large syndicates seeking to move capital, which they do here easily because of the availability of virtually any currency on the open market. In many cases, police believe, the money Is used to pay for narcotics shipments or other illicit goods smuggled to the colony. The Import of gold to Hong Kong, except in transit, is flatly forbidden. However, government authorities openly concede the existence of a gold market BUYWTHdlNnnE ^ Church’s LAUAN PANELING Genuine Lauan wood paneling. Panels are V-grooved for random plank effect. Two beautiful shades to choose from. Dark Spice and Light Amber. $295 a 4x7 sheet Zonolite Attic Fill There's one thing worse than outdoor goosepimples. Indoor goosepimples. Zonolite Attic Insulotion is the cure. Heat bills go down, and so do goose- pimples. UL 2-4000 The government’s lalssezfalre attitude toward silver smuggling comes closer to that which SMUGGLING HAVEN-Honk Kong, the British colony on the mainland of^China, has long been a base for smugglers. The port is one of the busiest in the East; an average of 70 vessels enter and leave the colony each AP eiiato day. The authorities have had some success controlling the main traffic in nardotics, but gold and silver smuggling continue to flourish. ARE YOU UNDER 30? Set up a *30,000 life insurance estate overnight , . FOR LESS THAN 13.50 A MONTH For all the facts on this Allstate "10 year term" renewable policy, the men to see are at — 4381 Highland Road M-59- At Pontiac Lake Road PHONE 681-0400 /instate AllitoW Iniuranc* Cotnpony Northbrook, III. THIS IS THE MOST IHCREDIBLE CARPET SALE WE HAVE EVER HELDl SMS TODAY! AT “CABPET CENTER" 3127 W. WE SALE! 20* JO- CHOOSE FROM HUNDREDS OF STYLES PRICED TO SAVE YOU NO MONEY DOWN! TAKE 3 YEARS TO PAY! CABPET CENTER 3117 WEST HURON ROAD ONE MIIE WEST OF TELEGRAPH Can*t Come In? SHOP AT HOME SERVICE! So you won't mis* out on _____________ thii groat Worohouso Solo, a courtoous ■ tolotmon will , gladly bring a CARLOAD | of somploi right to yoUr homo. Abtolutoly no obligation! THE PONTIAC PRESS. TH:qRSDAY> FEBRUARY 6, 1969 Special Relationship Between US., Britain Is Virtually Dead LONDON — In describing Americans, many Englishmen gtill use words like brash, ^Igar, aggressive, crude, noisy, money-mad, ulcerous, nouveau-riche or rat race. The same public opinion polls gay Americans describing the British are just as likely to use snobbish, degenerate, caste^ ridden, humorless, undemocratic or effeminate. ★ ★ ★ Despite all this there has long been much talk on both sides of' the Atlantic about some sort' of special relationshipJ)et1veen the two count Lie's, sharing responsibi^y tor keeping world order,,''" But now. there Is no longer tny pretense here that the wartime partnership of Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt, or even the personal friendship of Harold Macmillan and John F. Kennedy, is continuing. VIRTUALLY DEAD In fact the Idea of a special relationship, created by the British in 1940, Is regarded in official circles as virtually dead. Americans agree. British officials cite the vast changes In the relative power of tht' two nations rather than in personalities in the White House or No. 10 Downing St. * ★ * More outspoken officials here admit that two world wars finished off Britain as a world power. They say America now informs Britain about political decisions instead of consulting Britain in advance ,as an equal. Rresldent Lyndon B. Johnson, for example, simply informed Britain about his decision to bomb North Vietnam. Britain is being informed but not consulted on tho efforts to arrange Soviet-American talks on antimissile systems. IN LIMBO? Increasingly, Britons see their future role as part of a united Europe, a role so far denied them by Charles de Gaulle. Many officials here see the Nixon years as likely to be one of a sort of limbo for Britain — no longer linked to the United States by a special relationship, end waiting to enter Europe. The London Times, which reflects establishment thinking here, published this harsh Judgment on the so-called special relationship the day President Nixon took office: “The truth is that Britain has never been less regarded as a factor of power in Washington. ★ ★ ★ “Britain is a useful second-class power, generally friendly, economically weak, reluctant to maintain her present level of responsibility.” An Evening Standard cartoon showed Prime Minister Harold Wilson outside No. 10 with packed, waiting for an vitation from Nixon, while his wife advised, “Relax, Harold, it may be months before he gets around to the Ws” in the alphabet. BIG STAKE William Davis, new editor of the humor magazine Punch, noted tljat U.S.-controlled firms produce about one-tenth everything manufactured Britain, have a stake in more than 1,600 firms, and employ 1 in 17 of all British workers. He suggestedv in jest, that Britain be^O the 51st state. high-ranking British of- ficial, an expert on British-1 He mentioned British mem- American relations, described bership in the U.N. Security the situation this way at aj Council and in three regional Britain’s future lies in Europe, i Johnson’s relations with Wil-ipore costs Britain more to private gathering recently: The two nations are no longer equals. TTie United States has the fastest-growing economy in the world and is likely to keep increasing the gap in living standards, military sources and technology. But friendship is not built on possession or lack of power and Britain still has much to offer America. military alliances—NATO, CENTO and SEATO-where and America approves of this. marked by BriUsh opposi-maintain, in relation to her fi- ir-ruiir. Dll' « tmor-Eo bombing of North|nancial resources, than it costs COULD BE A FORCE 'Vietnam, were further strained|the United States to maintain Another government source when Britain decided to with-the 7th Fleet in the same area went further: “We are not now draw;its military forces from without Singapore. London could play a helpful roleja first-class power, and we are «ast of Suez by 1971. j Lord Lohian, then BriUsh to America. Re also noted that not going to be one by our-j ★ * * ! ambassador to Washington, ap- the two countries share respon- selves. We need Europe and Eu- This decision is expected to parently coined the term “spe-sibility for the strength of the rope needs us. Europe with Dejcreate a vacuum that mayjcial relationship” in 1940. hitemational monetary system Gaulle in the chair does not throwmoreresponsibilityontheChurchillinl946 saldthefrater-dependent on the world’s two re-have enough weight in MoscowjUnited States in Southeast Asia serve currencies—the American or Washington. But a united Eu- during the Nixon adminlstra-dollar and the pound sterling, rope with Britain could be a tion. British officials say the Above all, he stressed that| real third force.” jkey east-of-Suez base at Singa- nal association of English-speaking peoples had forged a special relationship to prevent another By the 1956 Suez crisis, how>-ever, Britain was engaged in a war America was trying to prevent. Neither country has been willing in recent years to aid the military operations of the other.^ * * * Looking to the future, the Times paraphrased Kennedy in advising Britons what to expect now from their relations with America. It said: “Do not ask what the United States can do for us, but ask what we can do for the United States.” Efforts Backfire for'Samaritan' BELLEVILLE UD - A year-old Dearborn man faces eigth months to a year recu-peraUng from injuries he received trying to be a highway “Good Samaritan.” Barry Draper, westbound on 1-94 on his way to work at the Ford Motor Co. Rawsonville plant last Friday, saw Kimberly Ann Lewis, 2, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, James Lewis of Belleville,' fall from her mother’s car onto the median of the road in Van B u r e n Township. ★ ★ Draper stopped his car and was running back to check on the little girl when he was struck by a car. Draper suffered a broken leg, arm and jawbone and had two teeth knocked out. He was taken to University Hospital in Ann Arbor where he was listed in fair condition. EIGHT MONTHS Doctors said it will take eight months to a year fw Draper to recover completely. Police said Kimberly ap- parently had opened the left -rear door of her mother’s car. She was treated for multiple head and body abrasions. ★ ★ ★ -Mrs. Lewis, whose road speed was set at 50 miles per'hour, called Draper a “real hero.” Development of a pressure suit that can quickly reduce the workload of a patient’a heart in emergency treatment of heart-attack vfctos is a current project. The Sale of KINGS ^ OUEENS &TWINS & FULLS! PACKAGES & BONUS, TOOf) The Originators of the 12-piece KING-SIZE Sleep Package &The DOUBLE BONUS SIMP PMime—yours with any Ortho King or Qmm you iwyl You got motal fnins with oa^-roiiing castors, nsidcrest porcaio top ihso^ paresis fittid bottom ihsst; mattrsss pad, 2 boistsr pHlowp, 2 paresis piiiowcasss. Hug sranssa Dooms IsiBS-paddsd vinyl Hssdbosrd snd Quiitsd Bsdsprssd. TwiiMFunDoBblsDsass—Hsadbosrd snd Mstsi Frsnw with assy-roiling csstirs. The Economy King—»" A big sleep bargain for size, savings, quality and comfort! Giant 6 ft. wide, 7 ft. long King-Size mattress and matching box spring, heavy-duty button-tufted construction. Our complete Sleep Package and Double Bonus are included even at this low sale price! $ T (2 The Regal King A lavishly-quiltad King now at an excaptional buy! Hugo 7 ft. long, 6 ft. wide quilted decorator mattress and matching dual box springs. Sleep Package and Double Bonus included. ’218 The Royal Rueen A royal beauty — 80* long, 60* wide, richly-quilted mattress and box spring. Queenly luxury, ft fits where a King can’t Our Sleep Package and Double Bonus save you even morel ’148 The Value King Richly-quilted luxury, a royal 7 ft. long and 6 ft. wide with beautiful floral ticking on King-Size mattress and matching dual box springs. Sleep Package and Double Bonus included. ’168 Full or Twin Your choice of elegantly-quilted Full or Twin-Size mattress and matching box spring, cov-erad in deluxe decorator floral. Our famous Double Bonus makes your saving really super I If l«t sl(.(IUg WOK- Thrifty Rueen Oversize Queenly comfort that solves your space and budget problems, too. Full 60* x 80* Queen-size mSttress and matching box spring, plus our Sleep Package and Double Bonus. ’118 The Super Rueen Superbly constructed for sumptuous sleepingl Our lavlfhly-quilted 80* x 60* queen-size mattress and box spring are covered In decorator ticking. Sleep nckaga and Double Bonus tool ’198 Twin or Full or Full heavy-duty mattress and matching box spring. Complete Double Bonus with eachl ’56 Super Twin or Full Deop-down quilting with luxury, decorator floral psttem. Choose either the deluxe TWin or FMI mktressandmatchlnBboxsf)rinB.A draembiv ■pecialiy piked. And our Dmible Bonus, tool ’84 aENUINE ORTHO MATTRESSES SOLD ONLY AT ORTHO STORES ^.. ^ysa'rt wst --—------------------------—-----------^ THE NATION’S LAROEST CHAIN OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS! copyright eiMV Ortho Mottrott 2211 South Telegraph, Pontiac Free Perkina • The Miroele Mile Shopping Center ® Ph. 332-2227 OPEN DAILY 10-9 'SAT. W-6*S0N.12-B*{UVERH0B & GRAND RIVER CLOSED SUHDAY)»H0 CASH D0WH*UP TO 24 MONTHS TO PAY-MICHIGAM OANKARD & SECURITY CHARGES THR PONTIAC^RESS, THURSEhAlf, FEBRUARY 6, Kmo disf^oimts Savel Duit«r clearance sqlel Very special purchasel Reg. 6.97 - 7*97 sweaters Values up to 6.88 in this exciting group of dustersi Choose a colorful multi‘Print cotton Cordanna with gripper snaps or pearl butWns, or solid tricot quilt with Kodel (J) polyester fiberfill. Turquoise, maize, hot pink and pink. Cottons and brushed nyion fleece also in the group. Not all sizes in all styles So hurry to Yankee now and save! © Copyright Northgate Advertising Co. 1969 An exciting collection of newest styles! All have back zipper. Powder, pink, 'mint, celery. Iliac. Mahy other styles in group. Limit two. 34-40. N«wl Ribbed Turtleneck Made from easy.care Wintuck _ Orlon(s)acrylic,can be machine-washed and dried. Softly ribbed< Save at Yankee now. Stylish Striped crewneck Soft pastels contrasted with flattering stripes make this a welcome additioni Wintuck Orion (a) acrylic. Save now. Solid souffle crewneck Softly feminine. Has contrast striping around neck and bottom, made of Wintuck Orion (S)acrylic. Buy now. First-quality, non-run nylons Rag* 2/99^, save 11< a pairl 0 Seamless sheers are guaranteed not to run for 21 days or we replace themi Newest colors, sizes 8V4 to 11. Boys’ reg. 13.99 all-weather zip lining ceate Yankee vaiuel Perma-press coat never needs ironing. Poiyester/cot-ton blend. British tan and oiive. Full body and sleeve lining and zip-out lining. Sizes 6 to 18. Save now. Bulky knit Orion ® acrylics. Coat styles in solids and woven patterns. Pullovers in cables, tennis weaves. Novelty ski designs. Sizes 8 to 18. Savel Rog. 97<-1.48 Infants, toddlers, |rs< crawlers and overalls Low Yankee discount pricel Lined and unlined corduroy and denim crawlers and overalls are sturdy, long-wearing cotton. Perfect for hard, rugged play; perfect price for budget-minded mothersl Sizes 9 to 24 months, 2-4 and 3-8. Boys’ reg. 3.99 corduroy slacks Save at Yankee "Hockmeyer" thickset cotton corduroys in check patterns. Perma press soiids. Not all sizes in ail styles. Sturdy, attractive slacks are perfect for school or play, at this low prlc^.6 to 16. 277 Boys’ reg. 1.99 perma-press sport shirts A great value in shirtsi Button down styies in plaids, checks, ftripes. Polyester and cotton blends, cotton corduroys, and flannels. All dress and sport^shirts marked down to 1.57. 6 to 18. Reg. 5.97 knit legging sets Savings to 50%l 2 and 3 piece styles are perfect for early spring. Orion® acrylic. 12 months to 4. 2 94 Reg. 3.97 to 4.97 dresses, diaper sets Fussy, frilly outfits at low Yankee pricel Kodels ® polyester perma press in group. Pastels, colors. Sizes 9-18 months, 1-3. 1 94 * Boys’ reg. 88<-1.39 colorful polo shirts Savel Crew necks, turtle necks come in solids, stripes, jacquards. Sizes »-18 moe.. 1-3, and 3-7 at low Yankee pricel THE P0NT14C jeHKSS, TtfURSDAV. FEBRUARY 6, 1969 B-17 Sal« begins Thursday Fab. 0 at 10 AN Ends Sa^iday Feb. 8-at 10 PM. All.ltame on sale viMIe quantities last for savings, wm DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES Purchase! 8-pushbulton Waring blendor with new 60-sacond timer, in new gold , chrome or avocado Spectacular discounts for spring sewing 38^ Reg. 3.99 cutting beard! Professional style, a must for every seamsiress. Folds for storage. Relyester. double knits Pastels and navy. 54” wide, ^ machine washable, no iron polyester. 58< embossed cottons $nowy whits; ideal for blouSes, trisMnings, curtains and mora. 99 S4< glamo, plista crapa Cool, colorful, wash-wear cotton in lovely prints and solid colon. ' 97 72’* wida nylon not ' yd. A myriad of beautiful colors. Perfect for Valentine decorations. 6S( C«lan«s« laffata A rainbow of colors; for slips, party t^ses« linings. Acetate. Save 1.97 on men’s 7.97 work oxfords Crafted by Knapp with durable leather uppers and oil resistant neoprene soles and heels. Yankee has them at this low discount price now through Saturday, so hurry in and get set for work for months to come at savings. Jet black in sizes 6H to 12. Another Yankee vaiuel leather work shoes Rich supple leather uppers, with tough neoprene wedge sole that's easy on the feet; cushions every step and takes lots of hard wear. Golden tan in sizes 7 to 12. THR^ WNTIAC PRESS. TmTBSDA'VV^RBRfa^¥ 6, IftftO Soviet Journalist's Visit to Formosa Stir$ Worldwide Ripples The caWe to Taipei, which replied Pektoj. After ali NatioiiaUst.and even were allies durta^j^JAny contact between FrtnnosalMoscow playing tootsy irittijFormosa intended to^tweakl Pddng has * by a Sovietithere was no objection to thejchina and Soviet Russia maln-|wor1d War II." |and Soviet Russia Is bound toljaipei naturally would incur the Mao’s nose through this ind-“capitalistic agent of ™ Am ossibllity of'wrath of the Chinese Reds. If|dent, then she has succeeded." 'cans,” one sour^ 108 N. Saginaw St. - Downtown Pontiac - FE 3-7114 Inst ground and .shed its isola- ^ tionism. sla on how to produce nuclear missiles, determined to crush the United Slates, and insistent on being recognized as the supreme leader of the Communist world. The rift widened when Mao, that could bring Washington and Peking closer, no matter how remote this possibility may be. Russia also may be looking for ways to offset Communist China’s potential expansion by increasing Russian influence in Southeast Asia. . insserting that large portions of raplomst, .Iso .pooul.io IM ^ I;, ...... I and infiltrators across the Sin-' kiang-Hussian border into what the bitter rift between Muse and Peking, the Hussians (0 view any enemy of ^ Chinese territory munrst China as a f. lend. C.ElTINt; CHUMMlKlt patrols tried to turn back the Nationalist Chinese and Soviet Chinese. Border clashes ensued. Russian diplomats and Journalists in Tokyo and other capitals have been getting chummier of late. It's a far cry from the days when they cold-shouldered each other. and are reported continuing. I.ouls is reported to have invited Nationalist Chinese newsmen to visit Moscow in ex-eliange for permission for a Tass representative to visit For- ONCE-^A-YE AR... FACTORY-AUTHOFtliZED TOKYO (AP) ^ _____AUrnm .11 .... ..... .111.. .ru,.*..! K.«u>Aan F0 Democrats and ^‘J" simitar fn the continuinc unroar ™ ^ Renublicans on the County which pays $7,500 in addition to ^at San Francisco State College adjoining admini.strative olLce Reported taken from j Supervisors the body the full-time auditor salary of at San hrancisco Mate Loiiege^ highlight the demand. The Laborers Union Local 334, 2 S. u V 1'v Vhp S24 000 is an elective position Both are student strikes, with p president, Dr. Joseph P. Tasmania w"" responsible for making the $24,000 is an elective position, some faculty support, >n,.niv.nB f’ ^ ... Newsboy, 14, Recovering From Beating San Frandsco state CoHege. passenger Army .plane might crash. His guard. Spec. 5 Ronyiej _ ____ __________ Beachel, said Till “was askingreportedly beaten by a narticularlv , _ . questions about the parachute.]ast Thursdav is'"* ,a.s, ^ of Negro and Puerto Rican dem-Prv marks also were found on Ihow to put it on and how tolf^^K in onstraters. ..........the safe, which was not opened. pull the ripcord. [dition today in Pontiac ’ ’ .... , . college president. Waterford T o w n s h i p ...........................’''.‘^ McMiirray, said he would meed v(.ins from desk pried open .hm, rpnnrtprfiv hoaion hv Q'mprovemen s t^^ay with the militant coalition during the night, police said. auditor appointment, say they have made no plans to fill the position. James Seeterlin, former Democratic county treasurer, has expressed an interest ii GUSH OF AIR jOsteopathic Hospital after being dTsmis'saTo7an bTan itslelnrweek .h^tiuidi^ Robert‘ Patnale; 'All of a sudden we heard a! Previously listed as serious. ^ instructor at Southeastern ^ 50 to 225Ter- Lh ® |Republican caucus chairman. Hoosier Fun(gus) gush of a , .... . Occupation of the University 80 students were sitting in as a rhieaeo's administration sam onrrv ui/a= mano m. INDIANAPOLIS Ind (AP) — The mushroom would become [said he had been approached by!Indiana’s official state fungus out the door ...’’ Lioriam w. koss ot About 400 students took "" . ......... 1 former Supervisor John . S. under a resolution introduced in Daryle Little, a farmer, said .. a ®%art in the demonstration sup-cturipnls barced into AAina ^lavens, a Republican 0 f the Indiana House Wednesday he and his son, Jim, saw the!^®^ Somteaf^teTurtet m Krencer. whose , Wednesday^ staged InSpector ipieasant Ridge, who is inter- by five Democrats from Lake tornotrow at the Bell Ghapel of. parachutist coming down. ‘ the tecide^ri '"®’’'' propaganda Tkits, and demand- lanSING (APi ^ Gov Willi- ^ Th. T J the William R. Hamilton CoJ, ..j figure out what a ^ccurred^while he was defiver- ^ ^*ed a iSok at ifniver.sitv files gm Milliken announced Wednes- PART-TIME POSITION , mushroom picking and hunting guy would be doing jumping in, j“g"g'^5papgrs. ~ [ WON’T CALL POLICE The sit-in beenn wh n the uni-Jgy hg, appointed Waino The third auditor po.sition is this pasture,’’ Jim said. He and! youths reportedly, A college spokesman said po-versitv refused to rchiro Mar- 'iy,rin of Mass City as inspec-part time and pays $75 a day, ^ygikc of ufe ” Mrs. Colenso died Tuesday In his father drove to the Point^g^apked Hayes on D i x i e!lice would not be called in. Icne Dixon', an assistant sociolo-|or of mines for Ontonagon not to exceed 100 days. ' aearwater, Fla. She was ai^vhere the man landed but by |jjjgj,^ay near Andersonville At Greensboro. NC, Negro gy professor In addition to de-(ounty. Turin, who is retired, is Seeterlin, who c u r re n 11 y, member of the First United [then he was gone. IRoad. students seized the administra-making that Mrs. Nixon be re-3 former ju.stice of the peace manages a secretary of statej Pentazocine is a safe and po- Methodist Church and a * ♦ * • Hayes finished delivering his tion building at North Carolina hired, the students are insisting deputy sheriff. He succeeds branch office at the Oakland tent pain killer which is not a A search by highway patrol-! route, .but became ill when heiA&T University. They vowed to on student participation in the cieon Hawks, who resigned. Mall, said he would accept it on narcotic. with burial in Roseland Park! Cemetery, Berkley. member of the MOMS Club of: Birmingham. ,1. . . . , men and sheriff’s deputies wasj reached home and i SuiTivmg besfjs her husband^ J ^ Till was recap-to the hospital, are two sons, Richard » and, ^ Jack E., both of Birmingham, two sisters; a brother and seven grandchildren. Tills parents are Don H. TUI S Sr. of San Bruno, Calif, and [ y: Mrs. Winona Smothers of Mill-; y: brae, Calif., and his wife is Mrs. Janie Till of Burlingame, Calif., $ Army officials said. x 5 rushed stay there until six faculty hiring and firing of all faculty jmembers were dismissed with members. Your EYEGLASSES can look fashionable and 108 N. Saginaw - FE 3-7114 Our 45th Year in Pontiac HENRY GUTTIERREZ Jr. Imlay City Soldier Killed in Vietnam Pvt. Henry Guttierrez Jr., 20-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Guttierrez of 430 S. El-mont, Imlay City, was killed in action in Vietnam, Saturday, Pvt. Guttierrez had been in the Army for approximately four months and had been in Vietnam only 30 days. Funeral services are pending. Crash Hospitalizes Orion Twp. Teen An Orion Township teen-ager is hospitalized in satisfactory condition after the car he was driving went out of control and crashed in Oakland Township last night. 'Thomas L. Walker, 19, of 187 Clairemont, is being treated at Crittenton Hospital, Avon Township. * ★ ★ His car went off Orion Road near Dutton Road at an unreported rate of speed, according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies. Deputies were unable to get a statement from Walker as to how the crash happened. Agriculture Post LANSING (AP) - Gov. William Milliken has reappoint^ Mrs. Seth Tompkins, a Traverse City cherry grower, for a five-year term on the State Agriculture Commission. Senate confirmation is required. 30-Day Sleep Offer Choose any bedroom set in our store, (there are 114) and sleep In it and with it for 30 days. If you are not satisfied for any reason, return it within the 30 days for a full cash refund. No questions asked. Q £ ■•liar ateZreom faopU on Talagraph kaaJ house of bedrooms be HEAD SEARS INVISO NO-LINE GLASSES Enjoy all ihe advanlajies of the finest.bifocals WITHOUT the dividing line bn your lenses. These invisible bifocals give clear comfortable vision in near and far ranges without annoying jump, blur or distortion. And you can enjoy EXTRA comfort with “Head Hugger” frames. Come in or’ phone for an appointment. SEARS OPTICAL SERVICES • Optical repairs and most frames replaced while you wait • Eyes examined, glasses fitted and lenses duplicated by staff optometrists. • Oculists perscriptions filled OPI'OMETRIST: Dr, A. Sunieracki SEARS OPTICAL DEPARTMENT 154 N. Saginaw Cw-8v, TH^ roXTlM-l>UF:ss TW^KSI^AV, rKBHUARYx^. Low Fat Diet Need Not Be Monotonous » j * *® continue their stay on low cholesterol diets Food Editor, The Ponthic Press j education of the public on how often get discouraged. There February 1s heart month in | to svoid heart trouble. |are so many "No, nos." We'd more ways than one. The Homemakers whes<; famllyjUke to come to their rescue various heart associations take includes someone who must I with a tew new recipes. w ,w * Only the doctor can'tell you what foods to avoid. We have checked with our favorite heart patient, Dick Saunders, who lives (di this kind of diet. He says he could eat any of the dishes suggested. MUSTARD-BAKED FTIXETS 6 fjsh ftjlets, fresh or frozen (2 to 2'/i pounds) H cup dry white wine cup water 1 tablespoon safflower oil 2 tablespoons chopped parsley 2 tablespoons finely chopped green onion 4 teaspoons dry mustard Vi teaspoon salt % teaspoon freshly ground black pepper Thaw frozen fillets. Place fish add to wine mixture with salt and pepper. Pour over fish. * ★ * Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes or until fish flakes easily when tested with a fork. ~ ' ccasionally with mustard sauce. * To serve, put fillets on warm platter; pour sauce over them. Makes 6 servings. BRAISED VEAL CHOPS AND CORN SKILLET 2 tablespoons margarine o safflower oil 4 veal chops Salt and pepper 1 Bermuda onion, thinly sliced Vi cup sweet pickle relish 1 clove garlic, minced 1 No. 303 can whole kernel corn Vi teaspoon salt Dash pepper Heat margarine or oil over Sprinkle chops saute vegetables ov«r medium heat for 5 minutes. Add rock lobster meat and remaining in-ingredients and simmer tor additional 10 minutes. Serve with rice. Yield: C servings. STRAWBERRY NUT WHIP 2 egg vriiltes Vi teaspoon salt 4 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespoon lemon juice m cups crushed strawberries Vi cup chopped pecans Beat egg whites with salt until stiff but not dry. Gradually beat in sugar, lemon juice and fruit puree. Continue heating until mixture is very fluffy. Stir in nuts. Chill. Serves 4. / * * * / Note: This d e 1 i g h/f u 11 y refreshing fruit whip may be Varied according to.^e seasons by substituting mashed bananas, fresh peach pulp. medium heat. MUSTARD-BAKED FILLETS Puffy Pudding h Fine to Go With Any Meat Course This pudding Is marvwlous served with baked ham. New Batter PsMIag V4 cup butter Vi cup watarground white com- BRAISED VEAL CHOPS ROCK IX)BSTER, KYOTO in buttered shallow baking dish | with salt and pepper and brown Combine wine, water, oil,*®" butter or parsley and onion, Mix P®®'’f ...... . ... ^ fat. Add remaining ingredients. mustard with a little hot water;;cover and cook over low heat 45 minutes to 1 hour, or until chops are tender. Makes servings. ROCK LOBSTER, KYOTO 3 pkgs. (9 oz. ea.) rock lobster tails Vi cup safflower oil 1V4 cups, celery, diagonally sliced 1 cup peas, fresh or frozen 4 carrots, scraped and sliced diagonally 2 cups cabbage, shredded 6 scallions, cut into Vi inch slices 1 teaspoon sugar 2 tablespoons soy sauce 1 cup chicken stock. Thaw rock lobster tails. With scissors cut away thin underside membrane. Remove meat and cut into 1-inch slices. * ★ ★ Heat oil in large heavy skillet and add vegetables. Stir and apricot puree, fresh plum pulp, drained crushed pineapple or cooked prune puree. Drowning Pasta Is Poor Policy Did you know that more j vitamins are saved when pasta i is cooked in the least amount of It makes a marvelous . .u, , 'emergency” dessert by usingPossible. Cereal and one 7Vi oz. jar of junior style Pasta^ln Family Meals” from fruit dessert instead of prepar-ithe U.S. Department o f ing fruit puree yourself. Agriculture presents 1 teaspoon satt V j cup cold milk m cups scalded mOk 4 large eggs Melt butter in a glass baking dish (10 by 6 by 1V| inches) In a 350 desp-ee own shortly before batter is turned into dish so butter and dish are hot * * e In a medium saucepan, Mir together the conuneal, salt and cold milk; gradually stir in the scalded milk, keeping smooth. Cook and stir constantly over imoderately low heat until thickened; set aside. ' In a medium mixing bowl, beat eggs until thickened and , , - , pale vellow, gradually and homemaker tips plus recipes from mam dishes and desserts. “Cereals and Pasta in Family Meals,” H&G 157, may bej Bake in the 350 degree oven ordered for 20 cents from the until puffed and set — about 35 Government Printing Office,'minutes. Serve at once. Makes 6 Washington, D.C. 20402. i servings. WCKOlW smoked SUB BkSBH Half < ,U.5. (ORANGES “ss" ..:69^ \ PASCAL CELERY crisp EACH 25*^ \ GRAPEFRUIT 59f- \ BANANAS LB. 10' ; \ ORANGES s , J TEMPLE ORANGES 49'doz. 1 CARROTS pkbIO® n TANGERINES 3 Doz. 98^ f / PEPPERS OR „ , i ' 1 CUCUMBERS d 1 ™"15® tenrofs HOT DC6S OR. 1 SKINLESS 50 Lb,. for Teadowwu VEGtTABLES / PORK STEAKS / FRESH, LEAN, Lb..... 59' / / HAMBURGER.. .... l..53'‘/ / POT ROAST / BEST CUT BEEF, Lb 69'/ ( 1 SAUSAGE 4^.^ U.49-/ 1 PORK ROAST \ FRESH, LEAN, Ib... 39'/ ] 1 BOLOGNA cVuNK 35? J • ^•92/euV '9/& >7; Bazley Better Trim STEAKS Club • Round • Sirioin BEST CUTS lUtDRQOODl fuSDA choice! • Sides . . . JiSc lb. • Sides ... Sic lb. I * Hinds ... 65c lb. • Hinds ... 67c ib. | » Fronts ... 62c Ib. e Fronts ... 53c Ib. Fill Your Freezer Now ! ! ! GET OUR PRICES ON QUALITY BEEF! SAUSJieE. Valuable Coupon • SAVE! YOUR CHANCE TO WIN ONE FREE Quarter REEF! No Purchase Neceseary! Drawing to b* held February 8,1969 .,. Do-po.it coupon, at any of tho 3 convoniont Bozlay location. . . . Ono Hindquortor to bo givon from each (tore ... 3 Winners will be PORK UVER Lb. 35* • Tender, Juicy CHUCK STEAK.. • Center Cut CHUCK ROAST > Lean Beef SHORT MBS .. • Extre4etn, Beneless STEW BEEF ... 69l j Bazley Famous Fresh Lean HAMBUR6ER 49f. ■ySTNOc /((l 1 Paekagee "fJlib. \ J J S9t r y W 39^ STEAKS TO-J |•Swiet7QC f lllb. 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WE PROM^ TO Be»'? * 5S?«*tJ5'>1w4uB Twctw' I riiCF sitest T«^ffiar fur issct-. sratHs: - taOw ‘HhASsr ir»inh(uii*H*f> ‘ "n* tsf»d«uriwaii »»■ ■nHUtp ' frmni «ri «eni- -d«w» jaean* -thM Twnii^ m rdla«; Juki i rxir shi^if ‘’SBM&iHariws;’’ inawitli^ ^ *% artSi yna- Ksmcli! ^ flf wndw WTHttl ^ are li*sr»« arnuni the site ^ T*®5w«r imw le Inrm t»» ‘’tecs” ^ cur mik CWfir' the little snacis nr. f)r stbi ua^ ait hr^ tTJ{i’? ami snnie srltt, -es-^ jjbu* ntic tents m |!ilte '------------ P*^ Tuqnfcte «ic w«r nr^ Tajss aj^tr «r s plastic snact trsis hi cmnrlul,a. ^ ^ ^ naislei Jiilfil! the of pattern A prnJusimi rf na» and '’isM'' cnhs anti wwEtrj’ ran matee an inasresui^: twitHt' piece Twfi shredte Barp Cheddar jteise 1 run pufieaS ateaj 2 tahtespwins lamer or marparme., sidl t easpnrai salt teashwiTi cwmrne 1 cup sifts ali-pumn® flmr Lei r P e f ? e cnnw' tr tempewuure, Hna: nufis in pne-hsaiBO mnderate tvwat; ( 350 deprew ahmit If mnuiEK IncTCT» wsn jemperature ip JTBES Blend cheese anti hutesr Intr a paste. Blsnti in salt anti aj--erme Gradualk add flnur tojj-ing spell aitorf adE he TPsrt' cnmsfei’.. Frimr : irisctt- 7^ ■ innc rnuBCv pufr« a liae sheets. Imer: f e teaek around the « 'rf each .circle aPniui haf te len|!i^ of Iwmel ahnuM be hi dou^ u Bsise » preheated tnro fKIh! deETew. SI to 12 mimnes nr until li^tOy femraed, Cwi! nn wire racks. Hakes 3 doaro. Reaffirm Stand on Cholesterol, Heart Attacks The Amtrican Heart Assodatkm hm reaffirmed its poatim #dvf>c#tlni{ lower levels of fatf and cholestrfol in U S. dicta to heart attadci.i whidi now claim Wd,M0 Jivea a year. A H A aaid it haa taken into amamt auptetloi toien-tiOc data arctirnttlalad over tiie la*t three ym§ line# 11a earUd A.H A. dedaft* there I * “eiAdenea that the rh* of devdoiteii; pmmUm coronary heart diaeaae can he redwr^ed if proloiiged high level* of choleaterrd ffl the hlood are While coronary heart diaeaae Is the rmtH of many rMc 180, tors, mM AM,A,, gatihated and cheteatwid arc one bn' portam tHA factor that can be^ aafebt modified. Aa bi tiff previouf report, A.H.A. reoofimenda: (1) a caloric bdake adjoated t o Khieve and maintain proper wdgbt; (2f a deerease in intakei of aattraded fata, bicreaae in intake of polyiBMatoratod fats (whidi help reduce choketero* teveli and an over-all intake of fat of leae than 40 per cent d total cabnies; and (3) sutelan-tiat reduction of cholestatri in thediet. While the A H.A report does not go fate diet details, it says that *tepend(mce on fooib an* as vegetables^ cereals sod fruits to sitoldy fftet carbohydrate bi flie tet is preferaUa to ocessive bk of IHMitSimJESS lettuce 2 ^28* Buums^^^ CAOMVS *»• CEiOIT nwk It* CAMJEM ft. f MREMPERIR i MJkPiS If la. M tiw lail far Lass at OjuJoJS^ Comtr of CUirfcstoh and SashniMW Roads W Ms nartk ai Sashataat tail Opaa Bailp, tictplllwdaf, IttM to fin CSSAOiCiCI T-MKSTEIK .n” I^SACHQd SIRLMN STEAK .*r nmROftROUSS^ RCAST .*1" ufOtAiDrs sw«r^i2i© SUCED BACON A69* BONaESSROUJeD NMNIST .69* B«EF.WALAmK)Rlt MEAT LOAF MIX .69* oiEFBir4R«Eraia IU|« ^ liw tAT$ EISilOINS LWiuiii mni » 49‘ StAiTlST CRIAMT COmSE CREESE 1C Mk 28* HYCKADrS ASST. - pt^. ■UTS aaa. CNiFFON MM8MIIIE 38* Mk Nto 1 auemoAN tnuoiM ' 3 ia.uG 20* ' mMH emam bobboibm CIUMOYSw*w«%www*»w*»a IMSH MMUM PtPIHHtS n 1 FloridoIndtonRivorWiiitt SEEDLESS enwEFRyiT ' dl Silt 1116 W. HURON ST. „"U2.S=i. '"■izSumjbzzi _x^ THE POy riACxPBESS. 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By the way, ----------- __ _ • rt i. t ji.L Our Panflac Mall rtora t> anon TuMdoy and Valentines Day IS February 14lh w.dn*iday ra scso; Monday, TJiu^ay. • FrMay and Saturday to 9 P.M. e •'SMaMuatti.* psMMPiMa • wotromis • MmtmM.etrr * THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FRBRHARY 6,^1969 'Off Broadway'Can Mean as Far Away as Trisco Today (EDITOR’S NOTE — Brood-iShow Street's current pro-way is o tvxhway sWet, twtjduction calendar underlines the the traffic of late has ■heenishift. heavier coming in from out o/j Conspicuous on a schedule of fou«. A growing number 0/ acti\^ty, which may be the presentations in (he /omous smallest in some years for total theatre area of Nep York ore'endeavor, are nine dramas, originating in regional or col-comedies and satires that began lege playhouses and well’estab-1 in regional or college lished 6uthors are showing playhouses. Several of those their new works far from 42nd | that already have arrived are Street.; NEW YORK Important change In the relationship of Broadway t <> theatrical vitality across the country have been cumulating for some time, and providing among the sturdiest box-office attractions. ♦ * * The old order hasn’t vanished by any means, nor will It end entirely. Only bene*fits, however, can result from the i developing interchange. Along wlUi absorbing material from elsewhere, other indications 0^ Broadway change are evident. There are even to be some hew theaters built into skyscrapers scheduled to rise In the Times Square area over the next several years, the first! fresh facilities in more than 30 years. New impresarios are' showing up, such as Michael Butler with the brash hit, “Hair." NEW BRAVURA That muslcai, up from off-Broadway with nudity and crudity, was an early symptom of the new bravura invading REGIONAL THEATER - New enterprises, often with distingui.shcd authors and actors, are sparking interest in theaters all over the country. Many wind up on Broadway. Four are shown here; Estelle Parsons and Dick Latessa (upper left) in "Honor and Offer," by Henry Livings, at the Playhouse in the Park in Cincinnati, Ohio; Daniel Chodos and Evie McElroy (upper right) in “Mrs. Lincoln,” by Thomas Cullinan, at the Playhouse, Cleveland, Ohio; Anne Murray and Ed Bernard (lower left) in "The Village: A Party,” by Charles Fuller, at McCarter Theater, Princeton University; and Stanley Anderson and Robert Loper (lower right) in "Three Cheers for What’s-His-Name!” by Jon Swan, at Seattle Repertory Theater. Br^dway. Other exhibits, concocted by formula and as caerfully shaped as a Doris Itay movie, have at the same time withered by the wayside. ♦ s ★ The New York Drama Critics iCii^cle, a group not conspicuous for unorthodox thespic preferences, hinged too at the breakup of Shubert Alley authority by picking 0 f f -Broadway’s “Your Own Thing” as the best 1967-68 musical. The most emphatic demonstration to date regional infusion for the Fabulous Invalid is “The Great White Hope,” that began Washington’s Arena Stage. ★ ★ ★ Other Broadway displays this season have included ‘ ‘ W C; Bombed in New Haven,” from' Yale University’s School of Drama; Edward Albee’s “Box-i Mao-Box,” first shown by the Studio Arena, Buffalo, N.Y.; "A Cry of Players,” from Stockbridge, Mass.; the Just-arrived “Fire,” out of Brandeis University, Waltham, Mass., and “Red, White and Maddox,” by Theater Atlanta, s-mx TO COME ♦ Still to come are “The Gingham Dog.” Initiated by Washington’s Theater Club; the Case of J. Robert Op-penheimer,” that started at the Mark Taper Forum, Los Angeles; “Does a Tiger Wear a Necktie?,” another from Brandeis. * * ★ The Increasing recognition of regional companies — and audiences — as cogent creative-stimulants has been shown by the readiness of such established authors as Albee, Paddy Chayefsky, Tennessee Williams and Robert Anderson to show new works far from Manhattan. ★ ★ ★ Here is a sampling of what new departures are being tested this season up and down the land; • Actors Theater, Louisville: American premiere of N. F. Simpson’s “The Cresta Run." • TVinity Square, Providence; “Brother to Dragons,” by Pulit- xer Prize-winner Robert Penn Warren. • The Playhouse, Cleveland; “Mrs. Lincoln," by ’Ihomas Cullinan; and ' A m e r ic a A premiere of “Day of the Lion," by Joel Wyman of South Africa. • Inner City, Los Angeles: El Manco,” by J 0 s e f Rodriguez, ' a Mexlcan-American; and “Eagle Boy,' by Emathla Marshall, a full-blooded Indian. • Arena Stage, Wdshington “The Prince of Mandalore," by John Murray; and “The Convention of Patrolman P’Connor,” a musical with book and lyrics by Carolyn Richter, music by Charlie Byrd. • Playhouse in the Park, Cincinnati; “Four Men and a Monster,” by Maryat Lee; and! “Honor and Offer,” by England’s Henry Livings. • University of Michigan! Professional Theater, AnnI Arlxfr; American {xemiere of 'The Casile," by Ivan Klima of Czechoslovakia. • Long Wharf, New Haven: An unannounced new play among eight productions scheduled this season. ' • Good man Theater Chicago: “The Death and Life of Sneaky,Fitch,” by James L. Rosenbet-g. w lBrandeis University, Waltham, Mass.: “Z«ie,” a multimekia excursion {»wlu^ and directed by Allan Finneran. - • McCarter Thqhter, Princeton, N.N.; “The Village,” by Charles Fuller. • A merican Conservatwy Theater, San Francisco: “Glory Hallelujah!" by Anna Marie Barlow; “The Pastime of Monsieur Robert,” by Howard (“Great White Hope”) Sackler: and American debut 0 f Spaniard Fernando Arrabel’s “The Architect and the Emperor of Assyria.” | Many of the plays being tried are concerned with that |»ess-ing tofdc of the day, race relations in America, but the range is also eclettic and sometimes daring, v Judging by the quality of premiere presentitions seen in Atlanta, Cincinnati, Cleveland and Princeton, regional companies are giving authors good-to-superior opportunity. Some of the works, of course, may never again be seen. But Broadway knows a new period of national theater diversification' is well under way. Buirng PonitfMJc Mall SAVE UP TO $100 ON MAGNAVOX STEREO AND TV AT GRINNELL'S l\^agnavox. ONCE A YEAR. . FACTORY AUTHORIZED ANNUAL PORTABLE COLOR TV Trim and slim but ruggedly built for "go-anywhere" action is this versatile portable Color TV; "The Townsman" features 117 sq. in. picture,, brilliant color, concentric UHF-VHF tuner. Keyed AGC, dipole antenna, tote handle. Walnut grain. Now Only 299 i90 Sav« $20 SEE THE WIDEST MAGNAVOX SELECTION AT GRINNELL'S |RINrMELi.*S • ON OF AMOmOAN M U 0 I O O T O II B O INO PONTIAC MAIL 682-0422, Open Every Evening 'til 9-OOWNTOWN PONTIAC, 27 S. Saginaw, R 3-7168, Men. md PrL ta 9 ____________Um Your Chifg«, 4-Pay Plan (90 daya aama aa cash), or tudsat Tarma THESE CAME ERQM A MEN’S STORB Charming^Valentines from a collection of delightful, pretty, off-beat, on-beat, flattering, feminine gifts in our Women's Fashion Shops. Center-staged here: Iho newest ot chain belts, pure Mata Hari. in dazzling golden metal at $6; others in gold or silver finishes from $3 to $10.. . an unexpected handbag that looks like a treasure chest; combines polished wood, /leatherlsh trim and big nailheads, plus a plush velvet lining, at $15... and classic Arpege or My Sin spray mist by Lanvin, a lovely choice at $3. All from a surprisingly wide collection at HHS: the men’s stofe that certainly isn't In its Women's Fashion Shops. , Our Pontioc Moll Store Is Open Tuesday and Wednesday to 5:30; Monday, Thursdoy, Friday and Saturday to 9 P.M. - Telegraph and Elizabieth Lake Roads ^HE PONTIAC PRfeSS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, U)(>« Job Help Is Planned for Military Retirees By JERRY T. BAULCH Associated Press Newsfeatures WASHINGTON — >The average military man and wcpian retires at a relatively ^ung age — around 45 — and doesn’t find It easy to start a second career. So the Defense Department is going to help them, starting with a pilot project in September. The way it will work is this: A computerized data bank Dayton, Ohio, will record the skills of every retiree volunteering for the project. Employers will make requests to the bank for men with specific skills. A similar data bank is being developed for Vietnam era veterans who are interested in getting jobs with the federal government. ★ ★ ★ About 51,000 enlisted men and 13,000 officers retire with retirement pay each year, and most go job hunting. In announcing the program as one of his last acts as Secretary of Defense, Clark M. Clifford said: “We have a deep obligation to men and women who have served a full career in uniform to assist them to the appropriate extent possible as they move to new opportunities of useful employment. ★ * * “In many Instances, the particular skills and leadership qualities which these men and women have acquired during their military service will be of continued importance in civilian pursuits, both in the private and public sector.” Clifford has recommended that there be one scale of retirement pay during the serviceman’s remaining productive years and another higher scale ip the normal retirement years ^ginning in the 60s. Military Court Happenings Several decisions have been made recently in the Supreme Court and the U S. Court of Military Appeals involving military personnel problems. Probably the most far-reaching was the Supreme Court' agreement to decide whether people in the armed foPces have to pay sales taxes on purchases in states where they are stationed if they are not in their home states. ★ ★ * A group of Navy officers stationed in Connecticut balked at paying the state’s sales tax on autos and boats, saying the 1942 Federal Soldiers and Sailors Relief Act exempted ftem. The U.S. Circuit Court backed theni up last July, with the federal government on the sailors’ side. Then 20 States united in appealing to the Supreme Court, saying such an exemption would disrupt their tax systems. MONKEY WRENCH If the court upholds the sailors it could toss a monkey wrench Into the tax collecting systems of not only the 20 states but some others that didn’t join in the appeal. And it could get complicated if other servicemen who made purchases over the years sought refunds. In another case, the Supreme Court in effect opened the way for the military services to seek from Congress more power to force officers to retire early when they’ve been passed over for promotion two or three times. * * * The court merely refused without comment to hear an appeal by six Air Force colonels and lieutenant colonels who were retired involuntarily in 1960, who claimed they had a statutory right to stay in the normal limit — 28 years for lieutenant colonels, 30 for colonels. The six claimed back pay for the extra years plus the higher retirement pay those years would have gained them. DISCRETIONARY POWER They contended they could not be dismissed early without formal proceedings finding misconduct or inefficiency. The Air Force countered that it needed the discretion to keep “the best of the best” in service. ★ * * The officers also accused the Air Force of misrepresentation in getting Congress to approve the law, referred to as “The White Charger Act” by people who said it rushed through Congress like a white charger. That act, which expired in 1965, applied only to the Army and Air Force. The Air Force made most use of it and some top officers in the •ervice now feel they need the authority again. BLOCKED ADVANCEMENT The fledgling service, in its rapid growth after World War II, pushed its officers up the promotion ladder during the Korean war. A decade later, these still-young officers at the top blocked the advancement of younger ones. The U.S. Court of Military Appeals has handed down two i teresting decisions: In one it reversed a court-martial finding of guilty against Marine who pleaded guilty to being AWOL and was sentenced to six months at hard labor and a bad conduct discharge. / * * * The court said the Marine’s lawyer deprived him of special consideration by failing to tell the court-martial about the Marine’s two years’ service, his Vietnam duty and awards he won there. I In the other case, the court of military appeals refused to agree that all duty in Vietnam is hazardous. This reversed the! conviction of desertion with intent to avoid hazardous duty of a private who went over the hill from Ft. Meade, Md., for a week after he got orders for Vietnam duty. ★ ★ * The Army noted that men sent there receive hostile fire pay. But the court said, regardless, it has to be proven that a man’s duties there are in fact hazardous. Draft Rulings The Supreme Court has also handed down some Important rulings in recent weeks on the draft. It ruled that divinity students and others expressly exempted from the draft by Congress may not be shorn of their exemptions as punishment for antiwap. views. And it said a draft board’s refusal to shield a man from military service as a conscientious objector cannot be tested in court before his induction. ★ ★ ★ However, the court didn’t get around to the big issue of whether the Selective Service can use the draft laws to punish antiwar demonstrators, as Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, the draft director, has suggested. In another case, the court rejected a plea that it outlaw draft deferment of college students as an-illegal discrimination against young men who can’t afford to go to college. ★ ★ ★ The Supreme Court turned aside challenges to the President’s power to caU up Reservists and National Guardsmen for Vietnam duty without a congressional declaration of war. They had claimed they were exempt from a 1966 law that gave the president power to call up Reservists since they joined the Reserves before the law was passed. Overturned Tanker SloVrs MZI traffic HOLLAND (AP)—Traffic on ' M21 east of Holland was slowed for about three hours Wednesday when a tanker unit broke loose from a cab and overturned with gasoline spilling onto the highway. Gas on the road was washed offi Ottawa County authorities said, while the remainder of 4,000 gallons in the tank were pumped into another unit. Authorities attributed the accident to a broken hitch. Driver of the truck, Rex Hill of Spring Lake, was not injured. A clearance sale of diamonds? It's as unlikely as a clearance sale of dollar bills. Diamonds,have this unique thing about them: they have a tangible value-like money. Exfcept, unlike money today, their value continues to grow. That’s why a diamond is consijiered an excellent hedge against inflation. Thus, if a diamond is fairly priced in the first place, there’s no valid reason for it to be offered at "sale" or "clearance" prices at any time. That’s why you won’t find diamonds clearance-priced at Rose. We price our diamonds realistically, and then we add a real bonus: we give you a written guarantee that your Rose diamond will increase in value. This guarantee states that your diamond will increase in value at the rate of 3% a year, to 15% in five years, when you trade it it) on a larger Rose diamond. So all the while you’re wearing and enjoying your Rose diamond, its value is growing. How could we have a clearance on diamonds, when we guarantee that their value won't decline? ROSE The Pontiac Mall - Northland - Tel-Twelve Mall-Woodward and John R-Universal City Mall - Wonderland - Westborn - Michigan and Schaefer-Seven Grand - New Center - Grand Rapids, Downtown and Woodland Mall D—4 ¥kE POXl^AC PReIs. .1 hMSDay, iKEBftUARY (t; lor.t) New Play Near for Unflappable Woody (EDITOR’S mTE - Woody ■Allen, a fro-illooking roniir, has made something of his failures. His biggest failure, he jokes, is himself Hut from nightclubs and television to Hroadimy. he’s been a big entertainment tvccess. He's note ready la try a second play on^HrodduKiy, "Play It Again, Sam." in which he'll star in his oxen creation ) multiple hang ups, Woody Allen [ rymore later this month. Jitters, regards opening'night with rare but no basic worry, cool j '"njere is no way of failing Tlie bespectacled little jester actually,” he argues, “if you of nightclub? and television have fun at rehearsals, if you u.L' •; 1 involved has an enjoyable ex- Water, p r e m i e r e d on Broadway a couple of seasons back for what turned out to be a hit run. ~ Now Allen Is getting ready for By WILLIAM GIDVER his own acting debut in another AP Drama Writer self-induced opus, “Play It NEW YORK — For a man of Again, Sam,” due at the Bar- ter if a few critics don’t like RARE FRIENDSHIP HiS viewpoint, Allen realizes, may not be shared by producer David Merrick, with whom he has thus far enjoyed a rare two- COMIC AND CAST - Comic Woody Allen Ls surrounded by the cast of his new play, “Play It Again, Sam,” which Is due to open on Broadway later this month. It will be a doubly significant opening night for him since he will make his own acting debut in the play. Nevertheless, Woody clainu to be pretty calm about it all. play friendship. But that’s the! way it is, and he only wishes that he could extend such nice philosophic adjustment into other areas of existence. I’m very pessimistic about just about everything else. I don’t think I'll live through any day. I just know I’m going to get a call from my doctor and he’ll say — ‘You know, thosi Xrays we took las week! ? 1 —constantly. ’ ’ ★ ★ ★ The tongue-in-cheek scarcely shows as he shades in other asspects of a melancholy swain, beset by nemesis, baffled in romance. get scared about everything, any place. Like walking into a restaurant. How can I fail at a thing like that? But thats’ the sort of stuff that frightens me. PRUSSIAN QUAUTY "Also there are girls, women, 've never been able to like girls who speak with a foreign accent. I always get a feeling they can beat me at chess. There’s that Prussian quality about them. I get turned on by an American voice — that’s as far right as I can get on any issue.” Well-launched now on the subject of feminine fascination which he has observed close up on show business rounds, Allen rates Brigitte Bardot "most attractive,’^ Catherine Deneuve and Deborah Kerr "too fragile, to wishy-washy,” demotes Ursula Andress, Raquel Welch Sophia Loren as "too perfect, very commercial-looking.” His choice for top beauty Is Janet Margolin, who just happens to appear in a picture Allen wrote, directed and performed in prior to his current stage workout, "Take the Money and Run.” It releases next spring. "Play It Again Sam” comes "fantasy fulfillment,” concerning the romance of two neurotics. OWN LOVE UFE “It’s based on my own love life,” he observes, "It’s a very short play. But it’s got more substance than ‘Don’t Drink the Water,’ which was just a string of gags.” The plot of the new play employs nine handsome lasses “which I consciously engineered — I could have written a play about an Army Barracks,” The leading femme is Diane Keaton, and Allen shares top billing with Anthony Roberts in it under Joseph Hardy’s direction. ★ ★ ★ 'Mostly I keep approaching rehearsals as an actor, rather than the writer,” the comedian says. "And I’ve been having more trouble than anyone else In the cast learning the lines.” Having directed one film isn’t making him eager to ever direct on stage — “the two fields are utterly different, and ■’d never direct a play of my own, though I might handle I someone else’s.” IRREVERENT Allen’s attitude toward stage work is typically oblique and irreverent. "Acting on the stage is all shouting anyhow,” he insists, said that to Anthony Quinn when we were on a show together, and he was giving a very elaborate concept of acting. "But that is really what it is when you go to the theater. British Have Hulk Problem Milkman's 'Hazards' Told structor for the dairy at Sneyd Green, Stoke-on-Trent. 12,000 Shipwrecksj “Part of our course," Nixon said "is aimed at keeping the relationship on a friendly basis without going too far.” The dairy gives this advice to LONDON (UPI) - Trainee milkmen at a British dairy are learning the pitfalls of their profession, including the dangers of amorous housewives. “it has been known for a _ ^ , housewife to make a pass at the Offshore Are at Issue have included 'diplomacy and tact under such new milkrpen: lONnON (UPf^ - The Duke'circumstances in the course,”] Be friendly but not familiar 0(™ Zl’ George Mixon. .0 in-l Lie... but don', getlnvolved. treasure ships of the Spanish! Armada, but the trouble is that! it lies too deep under the silt in Tobermory Bay for effective salvage. | And, besides, it may not be a treasure ship at all, although] the duke has spent a fortune trying to prove it. However, the duke is at least! lucky in that the wreck! specifically belongs to him. Thej Ministry of Defense says there are 12,000 other wrecks around the shores of Britain, and in! most cases it’s first come fif'st. served. This is worrying scientists. While some of the ships are of' commercial interest — the German fleet sunk in World: War I, for example — there arej others of considerable scientific! interest. I AMATEURS FEARED | With the vast increase in popularity of skin diving, there, always the chance that! amateurs, through ignorance or I carelessness, might reach a' historic wreck first and destroy evidence that might be important to archaeologists., donnell coiffures and wig talon TELI6KAPH mt ELIZABETH LK. RD. SALE fashionable new speetalors — onr own pacesellei’s 8.97 The coming shoe for spring is the new-look spectator with perforations and stacked heels. Top: navy truffle calf. Bottom; shiny black or bone calf. THE PONTIAC MALL sale Ottoman rib dresses in fresh colors 10.66 Regulorly 13.00, Rn« sovingi on smart styles in ocetote or Arnel* friocetate/nylon. Here, peach, celery or turquoise In sizes 10 to.18. Take adrauiage ot limelg saU> savings with a II illkeintaaT lexi-idtargt* l<*c*oifiil and budget payments lo suit your u€»eds. Exquisite coats trimmed with mink 66.90 Comparative volue, 85.00, Many exciting stylings in rich wool blends collared with luxurious nofurol mink. This outstanding savings collection Includes colors of celery, navy and brown; misses' sizes. M proAicB leMed to *ew eewnv sale Slightly irregular nylon knit sweaters by a famous maker 3.99m.et4.99 Antron* nylon or Tycoro* nylon with long and short sleeves, many necklines, trims, colors, 36-40. Irregularities ore so slight, they won't affect looks or wear. mClny TEL-HURON CENTER shop monday through Saturday to 9 PONTIAC MALL shop monday, thursday, friday, Saturday to 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY fi, 1909 D—5 take g new look at yourself in new ideas from HHS Squarg toed shoes: the look that began iti Italy is a facesetting alassic today. Ours is slightly more conservative, so it'll go with a variety of stales: smooth black calfskin with a buckled monk strap, leather lining, $43 # The douhle-hreasted blazer repeats the season's most important look in a casual vein: shaped, deeply side-vented, and six-buttoned (you only button two of them)* Stanley Blacker does it here in navy hopsack. $60 Shape and the single-breasted: a lean-lined look that does more for your figure than a .week on cottage cheese. We have single-breasted shaped suits in one-, two-, and three-button versions, cut with wider lapels, deep side vents, many flattering details, from 89.30 The double-breasted: take a new look at the new look of the db. The lines are lean and clean, ^ smooth and flat-f teringly suppressed / —with the accent on wider lapels, ^shaped waist, deep side vents. This year's great look, from 89.30 The wide tie: finishing touch to the shaped look — accenting the i wider lapel, the . spread shirt collar, I the shaped waist. \ This one, by Oleg i ^ Cassini, is 4" [ at its widest i point. Pure / silk in ten iinre- ^ served shades, 8.30 The deep-tone tbirt: the single apcent that can vktudly cbange tbe look of your wardrobe, give fresh zest to every smt you own. Hathaway shows elegantly deep shades in imported cotton, cut with a high spread collar and double-button cuffs. $11 Our Pontiac Mall Store Is Open Tuesday and Wednesday to 5:30; Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday to 9 P. M. Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Roads D-^ THtk,PONTlAC PRESS. THURSl)A^V, FEBRUARY 6, 1969 Upcoming Mars Flights to Start Planet-Exploration Program CAPE KENNEDY. Fla Ufi -The space agency plans a vigorous planetary exploration program in the next decade, starting with a pair of Mariner launchings to Mars this month and in March. The extensive project mighj be climaxed by a ground tour of four distant planets with a large spacecraft in the late 1970s The aeries could lead to eventual manned flights to these faraway worlds. * * ★ Feb 23 and March 24 are the present launch dates for Mariners 6 and 7. With in-flight steering maneuvers, they are to fly within 2,000 miles of Mars between the end of July and mid-August, Both are to gather scientific Information and relay television pictures of the Planet. Scientists hope the photos will whether there is an intelligent pattern to the dark lines, called canlas, which some aslrwiomers have observed crisscrossing the surface. $146.8 MTIXION In its fiscal 1970 budget, submitted earlier last month, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is asking $146.0 million for planetary programs, compared with $81.8 million in the current year. A total of $45.4 million is! alloted to two Mars Orbiting j Vehicles slated for launching in 1971. This is an increase of $27 million over fiscal 1969 funds for the project. ♦ ★ * These two probes are to orbit 1,000 miles above the Martian surface and help scientists select suitable landing sites for two Project Viking payloads planned for 1973 launches Forty million dollars is asked for the project next year, with the total cost expected to reach 10 times that figure. Three million dollars Is requested to start development of a Mariner craft that would I swing by both Venus andj Mercury in 1973, snapping pic-' tures of both planets. The mission is expected to eventually cost $87 million. OBITING MISSIONS NASA is asking $8 million as a start for a series of five planetary exlorers which would orbit Venus and Mars''during the next decade. They would provide scientific information at a total cost of $133 million Drugs Used as an Escape, Says Expert LARAMIE, WYO. (UPI) -Students at universities and colleges are using narcotics to reli$ye the tension of studies, according to an official of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics. Dr. Jean Paul Smith, speaking at a seminar on narcotics at the University of Wyoming at Laramie, said he believed the need for such an escape was due to the “pressure-cooker’ atmosphere of college. ★ ★ ★ Smith also said that while drug education and counseling may not be the entire answer for curing the problem of narcotics on campus, he felt it often helped. “They (students) may be using drugs just as a way of shaking up other people,” Smith ■aid. “If you show them insight Into their problems, you may be able to help them.” IMPORTANT Smith said research Into drug abuse was becoming as important as research into problems such as cancer. QUALI1Y ^ REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE HEARING AIDS The grand tour proposal Is S| dream scientists have harbored for years. Between 1977 and 1979, Jupiter. Saturn, Uranus and Neptune will be lined up in the heavens in such a say that a single spacecraft could fly past all four. Such an alignment will I mission can not be plannfKl not occur again for 179 years, adequately without more in-★ ★ ★ I formation on the meteoroid belt No money Is requtfsted for the [beyond the orbit of Mars and on grand tour in fiscal 1970. Dr.'the atmosphere of Jupiter. John Naugle, NASA associate Naugle says it is hoped this administrator for space science information can be obtained and applications, said such a frpm two Pioneer probes scheduled for launching into orbit around the sun in 1972. BEING STUDIED Naugle said several payload possibilities are being studied for a grand tour. He said 1,600 pounds could be launched by a Titan 3D-Centaur rocket at a cost of about $1 billion. He saidlabout 10 years to reach the a much larger craft could be fairthest of the four planets, carried by a Saturn 5 using a Neptune, nuclear-powered upper stage, ★ ★ ★ but he had no estimate on the No money is requested In the cost of such an ambitious budget for manned missions to mission 'the planets. Dr. George It would take the payload Mueller, NASA associate ad- ministrator for manned space flight, said, however, “ttere have been studies made of what would be required to carry out manned planetary expeditions.” Officials said manned flights to the vigmity of Mars or Venus might be feasible in the 1980s. /lAOISnrGOAAt WARD LAYAWAY SALE! Buy now! Save *378! $ Sea King® Semi-V Bottom 12' aluminum cartop outboard boat Smooth-riciing semi-V moves through the weter as easily as it hoists on and off your car. Extruded gunwales and an extra tough .051 ga. aluminum hull for added strength. Sturdy aluminum seats, painted non-slip bottom. 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DOUBLE MANTLE LANTERN 1790 Reg. 14.94 Burnt white, leaded gqt. Coleman 5,000-BTU HEATER.........1I.N SAVESSIINSUUTED 3-Lb. SLEEPING BAG •■£^88 REG. lO 21.99 33x75" beg of blue cotton duck. Decron*' polyester fill. t,^HEARIN0 AlO OEALER^ ,.. Jkkju : W Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY I'HRU FUIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 ,A.M. TO 9 P,.\T. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO S P.M. e 6a2 l9i0 YHE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 0. lU(59 Canadas Broad Foreign Policy Review Amounting to Little OTTAWA (AP) - Despite ipeculation about revolutionary changes, Canada’s foreign policy renjains basically the same nine months after Pierre Elliott Trudeau became prime minister. Chinese Nationalist government now recognized by Canada. ★ ★ ★ The government’s study on the China question has been completed, but has not yet been made public or been discussed close to the government have predicted that Peking definitely would be recopized. ★ * The Montreal Gazette noted in an editorial that Trudeau had said there has been no reaction whatever from Peking. ★ ★ * "China has delusions of grandeur wWch even President De Gaulle would find awesome,” Trudeau says he is not sure by the Cabinet. Some newsmen the government’s sweeping for-eip policy review, due to be completed in the spring, will recommend sipificant revisions. may prove a humiliative exercise in futility.” Trudeau said he had not discussed the China question with the United States but that he would do so before any action was taken. He said he believed been unhappy several years ago I dent Nixon, although no such Conservative opposition, said if Canada had decided to recog- plans had been made. ithe Trudeau government nize Peking, but he was not sure Trudeau does not per-1 seemed to speciaUze in "open what the attitude would be now. turbed by critics who suggest!questions,” raising matters for * * * I that he is taking too much time; discussion and leaving them In He expressed hope that he to study foreign policy. j midair. He said he saw no need would be able to discuss this | ★ * ★ for th^ kind of delay the foreip been advocatiitg recognition of the Gazette said- "Seeking to — —.................... —----------------- Red China for some time but ‘make contact’ with such pride the United States would have and other problems with Presi-I Robert Stanfield, leader of the' policy review has involved. “We may come up with the same jwlicy,’’ he acknowledged after explaining how he had tried to generate a full-scale public debate on the issues and had invited the opinions of the academic world. After a weekend seminar with Foreip Secretary Mitchell Sharp and experts from his department, most of the eight leading professors participating were even more positive that no Important changes were to be expected. NO BARRIERS As far as Canadian policy toward the United States is concerned, there seems to be nothing to indicate any changes that might affect the existing amity between the two countries. ★ * * Trudeau is now an economic nationalist and he has made it clear that he has no intention of trying to erect a wall against U.S. investment. He has said he considers U.S. economic domination inevitable and that Canada should use its savings to invest in the future rath^ than trying to buy out American concerns. / *' * A Uke mtuiy other Canadians he is sensitive about having the country’s forrfp policy tied closely to that of the United States. One/of the things being undertaken in the , foreip policy study is to see how Canada can shoF Prtore independence without hfthning its own interests. TrUdeau has disclosed that he Is taking a hard look at Canada’s role in both the North At-laftic Treaty Organization and the North American Air Defense Command, but these studies are ■till In propess. Earlier plans to cut back Canadian participation in NATO have been ■helved. ★ ★ ★ This reversal was caused partly by the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia last Aupst, and perhaps to some extent by a public opinion poll which indicated that some 64 per cent of Canadians were opposed to a withdrawal of Canadian forces from Europe. The prime minister has come out publicly for Canadian diplomatic recopition of Red China, but like his predecessor, Lester B. Pearson, he has found no formula for dealing with the 2 State GIs Listed as Viet Casuaities WASHINGTON (AP) - One Michigan soldier was among 20 servicemen listed as killed in'’ action in Vietnam by the Defense Department Wednesday and another was changed from the missing list to dead as a result of hostile action. Killed in action was Army Spec. 4 James J. Morrison, son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore G. Morrison of Grand Rapids. * * * Changed from missing to dead on the official list was Army Pfc. Carl J. Andrus, son (rf Virginia M. Andrus of Detroit. jQualiCraft white fabric pumps TINTED FREE 899 PONTIAC MALL ^ ^ po»«W. S«(iy. No C.0.0. ■ /VIONTGOArtEI W/VRD The softened shapings... New and exciting polyester knit dresses 13“* Regularly $16 Now-into-Spring looks in rich new sculpturod patterns •— af Wards today! Typical of these outstanding fashion-values are these two exciting looks. All in the collection are washable, wrinkle-free Dacron* polyester knit. Navy and fresh pastels. Misses' 10 to 20. Save 10.12! DETAILED ALL-WEATHER COAT 14“ Smartly detailed with buttons and flaps, our all season Dacron* polyester-cotton coat has a zip-out Orion* acrylic-cotton pile lining. Single-breasted styling with snappy Peter Pan collar. Fashion colors. Misses' sizes. Jeans 'n tops CHECKED STRETCH DENIM TAILORED JEANS Beautifully cut for fine fit! Fly front, two pockets in yoked back. Cotton - nylon stretch denim in checks and plaids. 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Mozambique was the traditional accident-prone railroad have minutes late The train Undlocked Zambia depends i and cheapest route. ^n warned not to drive while was Railway links to the sea for Zambia has been wiUing to In- dnnking. ^d this had TOme to be *ccept-i exports. Rhodesia Rail-'cur high costs in developing also many wrecks were attrib-ed as the schedule. . , _ ... _ „ ®__________________________: uted to drunken train crews that_ Hastily trained crews and un-| 10.000 breath testers were im-.suitable secondhand equipment; ported from Britain last year to increased the accident toll, help enforce sobriety. They are * ★ * still in storage Solomon Kalulu, j^apy of the difficulties are at-Zambia’s foriher minister of tribulable to Rhodesia’s decla-; transi>ort. (xiwer sjnt communi-j-gtion of independence in 1965.; cations, said they will be used if At that time Rhodesia Railways legal technicalities ai?»., ironed included the Zambian tracks, out Resistance from wtwjters Zambia inherited 2,903 rail-and their union rcpresentatit?«S|way cars from the old system, Is probably the main reason foTji^aving 11,230 or 80 per cent in the delay I Rhodesian hands. The final dlvl- * * * j slon of^assets is not yet settled. Tho.se found drinking on the job may lose their jobs, Kalulu|CAW5 IMPORTED said before he was given anoth-i l;>elght caTsJrom Japan and er portfolio in the Cabinet. Brdmn and 28, diesel engines A government investigation from the United Stetes were im-Into operation of the railroad ported to fi I the shortage. One disclosed that engineers and of the diesels has been wrecked.; firemen showed up for work un- Five hundred secondhand,hop-dei the influence and some ap- por cars b<'ogfit m Britaini parentlv sipped from bottles in proved unsuitable because they, the < ab. Conductors and others lost stability when adapted to swapped tickets for liquor. the narrower gauge track here. There were 308 mishaps along * ♦ * the country's 650 miles of track 1 The railroad has about 7,000 In the la.st half of 1967, the finaljemployes, about 1,000 foreign-period for which figures were;ers. Many white railwaymen released The.se Included four {moved away from Zambia In main-line collisions, 20 In The bitterness which followed 8wilching yards or on sidings, 17 Rhodesian Independence. Remain-line derailments and 155 In placements were attracted from yards or .sidings. East Africa, Britain, India, Pak- Srores of passengers missed istan, Ireland and Sudan. Gen- ternatlves to remove from Salilh bury’s control a potential stranglehold on imports and exports. The Benguela Railway across Portuguese Angola to the Atlan- tic port of Loblto takes some ofineighbors by laying 1,000 milesi^sture the copper, but its capacity of track through Tanzania to Chinese e gi is limiteT Dar es Salaam. Planning of the cians work m Zambia hopes to end Its de-Tan-Zam RaUway is Comist yws of mwy pendence on^se white-ruled China’s biggest showpiece aidifor thfe $280-mimon project._____ Security Firms Say Execs Hired 'Blind' NEW YORK (DPI) — A few weeks ago a New York City employe responsible for investing more than $3,1 million per month for two city pension funds was indicted on charges of bribery and conflici of interest New Yorkers were as shocked by the Jiaekground of the man’s hiring as the indirlment Despite the sensitivity of the job, the man had been hired on the basis of a job resume not thoroughly cheeked out. ★ ★ ★ Security agencies such as Pinkerton’s Inc, and Bishop’s Services, which estimate that business thefts and frauds run as high as $4 billion per year, say such cases are common today. Many managements spend more to check the cost of an electric typewriter than the qualifications of a $30,008-a-year executive, theV say. It is all part of a scramble for talent and specialized skills demanded by computers, mergers, conglomerates and governmental red tape Business needs about 500,000 such management skills today. By the mid 1980s they’ll be looking for 2 million managers and specialized skills, according to Gus R. Carlson, assistant vice president in charge of investigating for Pinkerton's Inc. •BIG GAME HUNT’ “It’s like a big game hunt," said an official of one national accounting firm, “But the trouble is you don't know at times whether you are the hunter or the hunted.” Competition for brainpower has led to higher and higher salaries, stock options and countless fringe benefits. And such Inducements attract the phony, the fraudulent and the unsUble as well as the talented. ★ * ♦ A man being considered as an Investment counselor with a large company was checked through Pinkerton’s. He not only had a police record as/ a shoplifter but liked to wear women’s clothing while on stea/ing sprees. Another firm considered an applicant for a (xisilion of tru.st until a check showed he had been Indicated for a $66,000 business fraud. Security ageiu'ies go beyond routine checks of eredit and personal references “The biggest rogues are careful lo keep meticulous cnnlil records, and some fine people are slow or sloppy payers,” William Chiarello, head of Bishop’s said. And what job applicant ever has given a reference who might make an unfavorable comment? Bishop’s draws a fine bead on the prospective employe by Interviewing previous employers and fellow workers, through scholastic records and talks with home town acquaintances,! Pinkerton’s agents are urged to look for clues on how the applicant accepts responsibility, his ability to make correct I decisions, how he gets along with others and his ability to act ini crisis situations. j /lAO MTC; O AA E R Y WARD LAST 4 DAYS RIVERSIDE ST-107 2nd tire LANE BRYANT BUDGET FLOOR texture-knit shells in new spring shades 2 for Pjf them on your must list: 100°o stretch nylon tops in lots of coforsl A. Jewel neck. White, block, pink, light blue. B. V-neckline. White, oquo, inaize or toast. your tpacial sizat 40 to 52 Th* Pontiac Mall Ol^•^ kf Ml ar phm M2-7M0. A 10 \.M. Id (j:no |. \] > \Tl n\)\\ 0:,')H \.M. TO 0;nn I'.m, M) V'l V H i\ TO .1 r.M. . Odd THE % NTIAC ERESS. ^^HilK8DA\ . VEBRUAllt ( Poachers, Food Lack Just Part of Crisis for African Wildlife JOHANNESBURG, South Africa W — As many conservationists see it, wildiife never had it so bad in Africa. . Once-vast game herds are stalked by poachers, blocked by fences and dispossessed by new dams, missile bases and domestic lii^estock, Some are killed in the name of scientific game control. Others are afflicted by drought, disease, fires and pesticides. Sothe experts say it has taken man less than_,>50 years to reduce by two-thirds t h e migrant wildlife that once roamed East Africa’s 700,000 acres of grass and forest land. Bush fires and chronic poaching threaten an end to Kafue National Park in Zambia as a game conservation territory- During the flood season, vast herds .of red and black leebwe, a type of buck, come into the green grasslands. From there they are driven to the water’s edge by tribesmen who spear them from canoes. Botswana now licenses not only; those whites who hunt for sport, but also tribesmen who kill game for food. T h i politically unpopular m o v came after the government discovered that many Africans, equipped with powerful rifles, had turned from subsistence hunting to commercial shooting. A single control action against .poachers in East Africa February 1964 turned up 750 dead elephants. Tanzania police recovered 82 tons of poached Ivory in 1965, perhaps a fifth of the poachers’ annual haul. ★ ★ ★ Game reserves are not pro-ting a simple answer. As migration of wildlife into reserves increases, so does pressure on the food supply for! animals already there. j A VAIN EFFORT | Squth Africa erected a 10-strand barbed wire fence around most of Kruger National Park in a vain effort to control hoof and mouth disease. Elephants merely walk through the barrier, lions crawl under it, various buck leap it and smaller beasts slip through the wire. The government culls elephant, zebra, impala, buffalo and blue wildebeeste in Kruger Park. Zebra are caught life and sold outside the reserve. Impala and blue wildebeest are shot at night. Elephant and buffalo are imnaobilized by drugged darts shot from helicopters and removed later when the herd has moved off. ★ ★ * Culling is unpopular among nature lovers. Many conservationists agree that it mains an uncertain business which may upset ecology, on the ground that one species cannot be annihilated without upsetting nature’s balance. i Rangers have shot out leopard because they’ve killed aj few goats or sheep, only to findi the baboon population expands quickly to threaten crops-Snakes have been killed and then rodents overrun farms. When crocodile are destroyed the barbel on which they feed can eat every quality fish in the water. If insects are attacked with pesticides then there are fewer insect-eating birds. Richard’s Bay, north o f Durban, was once a 2,795-acre game reserve. Now plans are being completed to build a big seaport and modern city. Not far away, at Lake St. Lucia, South Africa carved its first missile range out of a bird sanctuary. , M k u z i Game Reserve in Zululand will be submerged when a river is dammed for sugar farming. The Tanzania government plans to build a hotel on the floor of the famous Ngorongoro Crater, described as “one of the wonders of the World’’ by German zoologist Dr. Bernhard Crzimek. Objections by naturelby the hundreds in Tsavo Na-j lovers are that construction will tional Park. Some 16,00 0 fri^ghten vast herds of animals^^^e counted in the which inhabit the crater. L^ga of 8,000 square mites, and * * * [authorities reported that 12,000 Sometimes animals survive inlothers in adjoining bushland spite of the experts. [popped into Tsavo for an oc- Eight years ago in a Kenya[casional meal, drought, elephants began dying! The pachyderms apparently! were eating themselves out ofi house and home. Thousands of trees were pu.slied over or trampled. Finally the experts announced plans to kill 5,000 elephant.s. An outcry from animal lovers — mostly in the United States and Britain — held up the slaughter. Those who fought to save the elephants were proved right. The mass destruction of trees ana bush resulted in the rapid growth of grass for t h e elephant.s to feed on. The water table has risen and new springs appeared all over the park. Treasurer Picked i GRAND RAPIDS (API -Appointment of John R. Frens, £, as new Grand Rapids city freasurer was announced Wed-flesday by Mayor Christ Sonne-wldt. Frens, who has been controller for a Grand Rapids j firm, succeeds Richard G. John- ’The Jefferson nickel was designed by Felix Schlag of Chicago in the first nationv artists’ competition ever s sored by the U.S. Mint. /lAONTGO/lAER WARD Save ^3 Gal. 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FLOOR FINISH *>49 REG. •|88 REG. ^ 4.19 1 2.-19 Roller, cover for latex, en- Filaments set in epoxy — amel paints; trey; 38-inch won’t shod. Extra thick and extension handle, edger^ long for best pick-up I2«« SAVE $3! 6-FOOT ALUMINUM STEP LADDER 199 . . . JUiJL Pontiac Mall Roll on epoxy base coat; Lightweight aluminum! Is sprinkle vinyl chips, cover great for household climb-with top coat! 25 sq. ft-.kit. |ng. Folds up; paint shelf. OPEN MONDAY rum FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 F.M. SATURDAY A.M. TO 9 P M. SI ND.^Y 12 NOON TO 5 P M. • 6K2-1910 Bridge Tricks From Jacobys rilK l’()\ riA(' PRESS. Press ID Badge Doesn't Figure WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - The police department secretary T F FI FIS DA V. FEBRUARY 6, 1969 ROBIN MALONE NOBTH *K»8654 VQ42 * AQ7 ¥KJ7 w. terest in a ,■ Bv OSWALD and JACOBY hid.s to three .spades as his part-J This pa ner has requesli'd North thi At this point North shows decides t slam interest b\ biddiiiR lour j,top in th clnhs. With a spade bust North would simply pass at three the slam spades, with a weak hand North when it c would sign off at four spades, ----------- with this holding he merely bids another suit to suggest a slam. South looks over his 21 points | He decides to do something about the slam. A control player might bid a Blackwood four no-trump and barge right into six, hut an expert .South would, be tar more delicate. This .South merely bids four diamonds to tell his partner that he too, has slam interest. North looks over his hand have enough to warrant going past game so he .signs off at four spades but South is not going to be denied. He might even barge right into six but I .South merely bids five spades. s the buck to North calls and performing ;:i‘.3br By Bob Lubbtni PAmN6AV^Ahe ‘ th7r .spade tran.sfir. All it guaian bide six hearts. What do you do tees IS possession of at li-ast "ow? five .siiaries so .South merelv re Answer Tomorrow L AstroFogicaF Forecast • t^SP Is^iphlv devpioprd. Som# relation-th* truth about where you belong. ★ * * I ........ , F!:£ By SYDNEY OMARR don’t think you can simply dismiss Hayakawa as an ‘Uncle Tom’!" OUT OUR WAY HOLD IT, YOU TWO —THAT'S EMOUGH.' WHEM I OFFERED TO \ TAKE CARE OF MRS. BAILEVS PARAKEET THAT DIPKJ'T IkJCLUDE ^ TEACHIkJcS IT SLAKIO AKJP DOUBLE-TALK.'' lt> BE ABSOLUTELY mortified IF THAT BIRD GREETED HER WITH 'BUZZ. OFF BUSTER.',’ OR 'ORA7.y, CLYDE.'’* srr: ''°- Daily Almanac Machine 9 m.iir Thursdav .Al.'imanac By United Pr^ss Intrrnalional Today is rtiursdav, Feb fi, the 37th day of 1969 with .32« to follow, Tlie moon is belween its full phase and last quarter. The morning stars are Mer- | cury, Mars and Jupiter. The evening stars are Saturn j and Venus. On this day in history: In 1778 Ma.ssachu.selt^ ratified the constitution In 1943 Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower was named commander in-chief of the Allied Expeditionarv Forces in'.NorIh Africa. WWW In 1964 Cuba shut off the water supply at the US. Naval Base of Guantanamo, , forcing temporary emergency measures. In 1967 Cassius Clay defeated challenger Ernie Terrell to retain his heavyweight boxing tiUe. BOARDING HOUSE ITHE law COULDM'TTOUiTH] : w,;h lOCFVouR 6i6^ WORD4 ^FRFTaAED ON ■ I “iC'LD YOUA (book, BESIDES, IP YOU UHAR-RUMPH.a WEKeNT TRVIN'TO WA*? KEPPlN6 ' CH&ATME how CON\E)tHAT LETTER you piDNiT tell Me / 6£<:ret Dimply ABOUT A LINOOLN MBE^AUee I LETTER IN AAY BOOK fi WANTED TO-ER, ^ ,0 PEFINITELY !HE RERRYS DRiK. DRIP- By Carl Gruberl f USE YOOR WILL POWER/^ HOW'S YOUR WILL POWER.^ ALL YOUR FAVORITE TIDBITS FROM THE PATIO SNACK SHOP ARE IN THE REFRIGERATOR.' DRiP- 'I’HE BORN LOSFR whatdosdua^am, vou cmsrewoTHE mKEMD WTH 0$?- StJUSPRAlMEP VDUR AWIOE AMP You'Re 01CRUTCHK?OH/ PEAR, WHAT A AMP mRE'^NOllJAV VOU CAM MAKE IT? m, mother, iT'e VOUR mHPAV!-^ I'U. TELL VOU WIHAT- VISIT^^ ALLEY OOU By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY SOIXRV TO RUSH OFPi aUT I'M TAK1N& MRS. COB TO 50MB ART &ALLERIE?: Bv Leslie Turner EEK & MEEK TRCrrH.LOVE AMD BEAUTY ARE ALL THAT MATTER,. IkJ THIS LIFE! SO X SAY CASTOFF MDOR MATERIAL. TUIWG.S' Rv Howie Schneider PtT^^fS^TcLO^ BACKOFJ! THAT’S MOT WHAT I MEAUT! Bv Ernie Bushmiller TUMBLEWEE COL-.I FE&MX»R PARPDN? /AS A MATTER OF F^Ci; HILPBSARR^ I I AM INTERESTEP IN A ) VJiU/VlBEROFTHIN&S] DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6. 1969 ; r-:!;:——:————---------> " ..^ D-11 OPEN YEAR ROUND SUNDAY LIQUOR Only at M0REY% QOLF 0 COUNTRY CLUB WILL YOU SEE LIVE LOBSTERS at Sensible Prices Wed. Noonday Buffet Luncheon, Thurs. Buffet Dinner SALAD TABLE INDESCRIBABLE GOLF ! Memberthipi at Reduced ' Rate* . . . NOW SEAFOODS You Name It Wo Have It |i ' SING-ALONG ] PIANO BAR You'll Sing, You'll See MOREY’S g GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB Phone 363-4101 2280 Union Lake Road UNION LAKE , ‘ - - M ) JOHN WAYNE WA KpARlNE BOSS eature at 7:05 and 9:10 F. M. idmission $1.25, Children .SOc Ex-Du Pont Home NowCuban VARAIffiRO, Cuba Iff) - In I Xanadu did liLubla Khan (and I millionaire Irenee Du Pont) a 'stately pleasure dome decree. Which ^e Castro government has taken over and turned into a restaiirant for the common people. Now hundreds of visitors — Cuban women in hair curlers, perspiring Russians and sun..^ toughened exemplary sugar cane cutters who have earned a visit—tramp through the 20-room summer mansion to see how one of the richest of Americans used to live. Most seem more impressed by the chance | of a decent meal than by the surroundings. Coleridge’s famous poem, Du acre estate. But the Depression| Carlos Dilez, 61, who headed Pont contracted Ms summer {ruined the idea, they add. [Du Pont’s staff of servants for home just ahead of the crash of Xanadu, hoWver, opened the 31 years and now hands out 1929. He named it Xanadu and peninsula to later resort turns for restaurant customers, had Coleridge’s poem development that came to a says he thinks his former boss emblazoned on maroon velvet halt when Fidel Castro took spent about $1 million building tagestry in the main dining over Cuba in January 1959. Du the house. Others say it was room where it still harigs- F^ont, who was in his 80s then, less. Old friends credit the man, never returned. The govern- good SHAPF) who until his death in 1964 was ment took j>ver the house and ' . . j the patriarch of the famous Du grounds November «61. Pont family of Wilmington, “Buss Du Pont was never told l^estone Dei:', with pioneering t h e the government had his house,’’ ^Plashed with C u ban development of the Varadero says a long-time friend. vprnmpnt ^ ha/kpnt ^ it in peninsula, stiU Cuba’s most ad- * * * haJ/ vanced resort area. | The old Du Pont grounds run reasonably go^ shape. ’Hiey say the former head of .for about 10 miles on a narrow] In its heyday, Xanadu was E.l. du Pont de Nemours and silver of land. Friends in used by Du Pont about four: Coi Inc. hoped some of his Havana say Du Pont bought the months annually. 'The servant friends in the United States land about 1926 for ap-staff, for whom he built 28 — 5 P.M. to 1 P.M. — FISH DINNER Undo j John’s^ L Reg. 4 1 $1.65 ■ 09 ^ • WOODWARD AVE. ^ at MVi Mile Rd. I • 15325 W. 8 MILE RO. f Just E. o( Oreenfield 1 • 10001 TELEGRAPH RD. f Near Plymouth Rd.. 1 ‘PoHeatic Taking his clue from Samuel would build alongside his 450-proximately $60,000. small houses, stayed on salary all year. 'The nine-hole course Ls still playable and now open to the public. Occasionally it draws a Western diplomat. The mansion, now called the “Restaurant of the Americas,’’ had a small bar and wine cellar in the basement during Du Pont’s ownership. 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY OPEN 9:45 A.M. Show Start* 10:00 A.M. Continuous- 334-4439 YOU MUST HE /« - PROOF IS REQUIRED OPEN 9:49 A.M. EVERY OAY EXCEPT SUNDAY OPEN 3:45 P.M. [iflDyeoDira RIDES 'M COME TO THE MARDI GRAS LOVE AND LUST ON TWO CONTINENTS^ IN COLOR H?? “NATURES PLAYMATE” (A* you are or an you like it) Saturday, February 8th, in the huge Hawaiian Room with dancing to the Tailgate Ramblers and Can-Can Review with Eva McKeon. NO COVER CHARGE also Clow Dancing on the Glass Volcano to the Psychedelic RhythTns of Berg & Joy every Friday and Saturday. Open for dinner 5 p.m. Tuesday thru Saturday, Sunday at Noon, Closed .Mondays. HAWAIIAN GARDENS RESORT and MOTEL 4501 Grange Hall Road Holly. Michigan 48442 TONITE at 1:00 and 9:23-“The HORSE WITH GREY FLANNEL SUIT" aifd "WINNIE THE POOH’ HURON Starts FRIDAY at 7:00 and 9:30 JiiU tlTabern STYLE SHOW EVERY FRIDAY During Luncheon 12:30 to 1:30 Featuring the LATEST FASHIONS FOR WINTER OPEN SUNDAYS 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. Serving from Our Regular Dinner Menu TOTirrinroTinnnnr SERVING A BUFFET BRUNCH from 10 A M. to 1 P.M. Featuring Assortments of Breakfast Items that Will Please Even the Most DISCRIMINATING ADULTS CHILDREN Under 10 . ft « B 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 0 8 a»m a 1 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 623-0060 Your Host Mr. Ken Wright 5838 Dixie Highway Waterford, Michigan / D—12 \ — - vv . . , . N- V - -■ - ■ - - THE PONTIAC PkESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 6. 1969 “. . . we airlines are motivated by PUBLIC SERVE-US” SHOULD THE AIRLINES BE ALLOWED TO TELL EVERY SECOND PERSON THAT THEY CAN’T TRAVEL BY AIR? The Federal Aviation Administration, in an official report, stated that the number of people served by general aN iation approximates the number carried as passengers by all the domestic air carriers.* Thus, one half of the public which uses air transportation use their own airplanes for the same reasons you use your automobile. Despite this, the scheduled airlines and the Department of Transportation now want to take publicly owned airports for the priority — and sometimes exclusive — use of the airlines. Where, then, is the “public interest” which the airlines claim must be served? Does it become only that part of the public which buys a ticket from the airlines? In the air as on the ground, the greatest public interest is served by-meeting the needs of the public. Public airports are built by public money for use by ALL the public. *FAA publication: General Aviation Occupant Load Factor. Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association the people who use their own airplanes for the same reasons you use your automobile, Washington, D. C. 20014 We want better air transportation for EVERYBODY — ask the airline you fly to join out efforts. No Calm Before Storm for Local 5's PROTEST FAILS — Rodney Dewey, 4, takes his hockey .seriously. In a Pee Wee Hockey game at Saranac Lake. N.Y., referee Phil Lalande imposed a two-minute penalty on Rodney who skates after Ihe ref (top photo) to protest. In the lower photo.s a teammate comes to help in the protest and Rodney finally makes his last protest (bottom right) but the referee says the decision stands. THE PONTIAC PRESS spom Tin RSDAV, FKRKITARV (i. K-- Tim Wood After Next Big Title OAKLAND, Calif. W - Slender Tim Wood of Bloomfield Hills takes step No. 2 here this weekend in his bid to become the world’s top skater. Fresh from his victory in the U.S. championships in Seattle last week, Wood will now go after the North American Figure Skating title in the three-day competition which opened today in the Oakland Arena. * -k -k Wood, a junior at John Carroll University in Cleveland, was a silver medalist in the 1968 Winter Olympics, and he’s easily the favorite here for the men’s title. 'The strongest competition for* Wood is expected to come from John Misha Petkovich of Great Falls, Mont., and Canadian champion Jay Humphrey of Toronto. The three-day program — featuring 18 skaters from the United States and 18 from Canada — opened with ladies, compulsory figures. GRADED 50-50 The six competitors — three from each country — will be graded 50 per cent on compulsory figures and 50 per cent on free skating Friday night. ★ ★ ★ Dancing and pairs competition begins tonight and men’s singles competition starts Friday night. Headlining the ladies’ competition are 15-year-old Janet Lynn of Rockford, 111., the U.S. winner last week in Seattle; and’ the Canadian ehamp, 19-year-old Linda Carbonnetto of Toronto. k k k Given an equal chance of taking the North American title and going on for the world title at Colorado Springs Feb. 25—-March 1 is Karen Magnussen, 16, of Toronto. Miss Magnussen, who placed seventh to Mi.ss Fleming in the Winter Olympics, was the 1968 Canadian champion. Miss Lynn, relatively unknown until she became the U.S.* champion, placed . ninth, and Miss Carbonetto was 13th. Giving the top three some competition will be Cathy Lee Irwin of Toronto, Julie Moscow Students Win Pairs Title GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCHEN, Germany OF) — Moscow students Irina Rod-nina and Aleksei Ulanov won the pairs title at the European Figure Skating Championships Wednesday night, ending the long ice rein of fellow Russian stars Ludmila Belousova and Oleg Protopopov, who finished second. ★ ★ ★ The Russians completed a 1-2-3 sweep of the event when Tamara Moskvina and Aleksei Mishin, the new Soviet national champs, captured third place. Holmes of Pasadena, Calif., and Tina Noyes of Colorado Springs. ★ * * Ronald and Cindy Kauffman of Seattle, four-time U.S. champions, face their toughest competition in the pairs from Richard Stephens and Anna Forder of Fort Perry, Ont. James Sladky of Rochester, N. Y., and Judy Schwomeyer of Indianapolis are favored in the dance. 'nM WOOD North American Favorite Central Visits Saginaw; PNH ' Hosts Falcons The big rematches between Pontiac Central and Northern, and Waterford Township and Kettermg are just beyond the weekend but probably nohe of the four is giving them much thought. The four teams are in one way or another caught up in the growing ‘ pressure of their respective prep league title races. PNH at present shares first place, PCH and Waterford are only one game off the pace, while WKHS has a' chance to be a spoiler. All will see action tomorrow night in key contests that precede their All-Sports Trophy rivalry renewals 'lYiesday. Central’s Chiefs could be walking into an ambush when they invade Saginaw where the usually potent Trojans are cast in the spoiler’s role this year as the Saginaw Valley Conference race moves into the stretch run. WIN SKEIN PCH will be gunning for Its 10th victory in a row but has been idle for 10 days and coach Ralph Grubb can only hope the young Chiefs won’t be rusty. Another crucial SVC contest finds pacesetting Flint Central invading archrival Flint Northern’s gym with the host Vikings anxious for a revenge win. ★ ★ Pontiac Northern’s Huskies find themselves knotted with Livonia Stevenson for the Inter-Lakes League top rung and the Huskies will entertain a dangerous Farmington quintet Friday night. They handled the Falcons easily in their first meeting, but Farmington has been bolstered by the return of rebounding ace Mark Lynott while PNH’s starting lineup has also seen some changes since the December encounter. IN PURSUIT Waterford is close on the Huskies’ tall and has another crack at both the coleaders. Ihe Skippers will visit winless Southfield Lathrup tomorrow and don’t want to become the Chargers’ initial victim at the varsity level. Walled Lake will be host to Stevenson in the third I-L clash. This wiU be the rubber game between the two: Stevenson owning a 17-point victory in their first league meeting, and Walled Lake grabbing an 11-point conquest In their holiday tournament encounter. That is one of the Vikings’ two victories this season. They currently are trying to shake a three-gam? skid. Kettering has run into rough sailing this winter. But the Captains can relive one of their few bright moments of the campaign with another triumph over Bloomfield Hills Andover. W-0 CONTENDER The two teams have gone in opposite directions. Andover’s Barons have won six straight since their 74-61 loss to WKHS, are 8-2 and occupy the Wayne-Oakland League's runner-up slot. | Kettering, meanwhile, hasn’t won since then, is burdened with a seven-game losing streak plus a 2-8 mark, and is the loop’s basement team. Andover can’t afford to lose to WKHS again. League-leading West Bloomfield will invade weakene"d-but-still-dangerous Milford tomorrow and a Laker win would be a big boost in WBHS’ bid for a second straight title. However, should the Redskins upset West Bloomfield and Andover produce much-needed triumphs over Kettering Friday and improved Clarkston Saturday night at BHA, the two contenders would be tied and moving toward a final-game title showdown. Elsewhere in the W-0 tomorrow, Brighton will entertain Northville who shares third-place with Milford and Clarenceville will travel to Clarkston. Redskins Want Miracle From Green Bay Legend BARONS’ BOARDMAN - Husky Dick Souther has become a spearhead in Bloomfield Hills Andover’s drive toward the top of the Wayne-Oakland League race. The Barons will need all his rebounding and scoring ability as they entertain Kettering and Clarkston in back-to-back crucial league games tomorrow and Saturday nights. New Grid Coach at Wichita State Wants Versatility WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - “I’m frightened to death of specialists,” Ben Wilson said Wednesday at a news conference announcing his appointment as head football coach at Wichita State University. ‘T don’t want a quarterback who can ju.st throw or one who can just run,” Wilson said. ‘‘I want athletes who can play more than one position.” ★ ★ ★ The 43-year-old offensive coach at the University of Virginia signed a four-year contract at WSU for an undisclosed amount. However, It is believed Wilson’s salary will exceed the $14,000 annually paid Eddie Kriwiel, who resigned Jan. IV- ★ * * Apparently the versatility won’t be limited to the athletes — Wilson said he plans to install a multiple offense this spring. WASHINC.TON (AP) - - In the nation’s capital today the legend of Lombardi already stands as high as the Washington Monument. Vince Lombardi, the little giant from’ Green Bay named to try to remake a miracle with the w o e - b e - g o n e Washington Redskins, was ready for a ‘triumphant entrance ofthe style usually saved for princes and presidents. He was released from his Green Bay contract by the Packers’ board of directors last night. The scene for his first news conference was set within sight of the White House. And, perhaps fittingly, it was being scheduled for late in the day so it wouldn’t compete with — or upstage—another news conference this day—by President Nixon. INSTANT WINNER Although he takes command of a team that hasn’t had a winning football season since 1955, I.,ombari already is an Instant winner in Washington. ‘‘Most of Washington is inspired. 1 think Ihe players are, ton,” said veteran quarterback Sonny .lurgensen. Lombari, fir.st man in National Football League playoff history ever to win three straight championships, comes to Washington probably as pro football’s first million-dollar coach. He will be Redskins’ executive vice president, coach and part owner, with a rich bloc of stock earmarked for him at a bargain basement price. RECORD PASSES Lombardi takes over a team with a 5-9 record last season, but also with the NKL’s recordholder in passing yardage, Jurgensen, at quarterback; a surfeit of top pass receivers led by ChaiTey Taylor, and a strong group of seasoned offensive linemen. The defense has been porous, the running attack a pushover. I.Ambardi won five NFL crowns in his last seven years as Green Bay coach. The very few games that the Packers lost during Lombardi’s nine-year reign is matched almost exactly by Ihe .sparse total of Redskin victories for the same period. Lombardi, 55, general manager at Green Bay during the past .season. Is coming out of coaching retirement ju.st one year and four days after he .sent him.self to the sidelines following hls second straight Super Bowl triumph. PIVOTAL FACTOR The offer of ownership of a bloc of slock somewhere between five and 13 per cent and worth a million dollars or more was a pivotal factor in Lombardi’s decision after he had been courted by half a dozen other teams. So was the site. In Washington, Lombardi enters as the toast of the nation’s most prestigious fans. Chief Justice Earl Warren is a regular rooter at Redskins games, as are many members of Congress. * k k And President Nixon, an ardent football fan aqd one-time bench-warmer at little Whittier College, virtually Is certain this fall to become the first White House resident to watch a regular season pro football game. Oakland County Skiers in Meet Numerous young .skiers from Oakland County are among the leading candidates for 40 berths in the Central Division U.S. Ski Association Junior Alpine chamionships at Lutsen, Minn. The final qualifying runs in Region III will be Saturday and Sunday at Thunder Mountain northeast of Boyne Falls. The slalom runs will begin 9:30 a.m. Saturday, and giant slalom plus downhill competition is set for 9:30 a m. Sunday. There will be 12 boys and 8 girls .selected by computer — based on their best two performances in the three weekends of qualifying — for Cla.ss A (the oldest teen-age competitiors). In Class B six boys and four girls will be cho.sen, and three boys and two girls will qualify in both Class C and Cla.ss D (the youngest racers). ADVANCE The 40 are eligible to compete for divisional honors Feb. 28, March 1-2 at Lutsen. Also, the leading "A” racers at Lutsen will advance to the Junior Alpine National Championships March 15-22 at Anchorage, Alaska. (Continued on Page E-6, Col. 1) Troy Overcomes Avondale Bid Avondale’.s slowdown tactics showed promise for seven minutes Wednesday night but Troy broke loose In the final minute of the opening quarter and muscled its way to a 53-38 Oakland A League conquest. * * ★ The victory in the rescheduled game bolsters the Celts’ third place record to 7-3 and leaves them one game behind runner-up Lake Orion in the pursuit of pacesetting Rochester (9-1). * ★ ★ “We slowed it down and tried to get ahead of them,” first-year Avondale mentor Phil Kahler revealed. “But we never did jget the lead. t'lt was i-2 with one minute to go, then Troy stole the hall and scored. We were fouled but they got the rebound on the second shot and scored again,” Kahler said. IMPROVE EDGE The Colts moved to an 8-3 lead at the buzzer. Aided by their domination of the backboards, the winners kept adding to their margin and built a 15-point lead in three periods. Troy (10-3 over-all) used its superior strength to command a 51-26 advantage In rebounds. Junior Randy Polasek had 14 of the losers’ retrieves. Polasek also led the scorers with 21 points, making 9 of his 16 southpaw shots from the field. ★ ★ ★ Avondale’.s loss was its sixth straight and the 'Yellow Jackets continue to look for the first OA triumph under Kahler’s guidance. Now 1-11 for the year, they will visit Orion (8-2) tomorrow in one of four league games that pair off the front four quintets with the bottom four. Rochester will visit Madison (3-7), Troy will go to Utica (1-9) and Romeo (64) will entertain Clawson (5-5) in a battle for fourth place. ICORl BY QUI^RTERS BREAK AWAY .» AUDETTE PONTIAC “YOUR FAMOUS DETROIT AREA PONTIAC DEALER” 1969 CATALINA 'mrv V HIGHEST TRADE-IN 2-DOOR HARDTOP • Hydramatic Trans. • Power Steering • Power Disc Brakes • Full Decor Mouldings • Deluxe Wheel Covers • Deluxe Steering Wheel e Custom Pedal Trim Plates • 8.55x15 Tires e All Safety Features PRICES ■ton '69 TEMPEST 2-DR. ’2678 ’B9 FIREBIRD 2-DR. HARDTOP AUTO. • DEL. STtIRING TRANSMISSION WHEEL SPECIAL PAINT • DELUXE WHEEL CONSOLE COVERS 2787 /CHECK THE EQUiPMEHTy THEN CHECK OUR PRICE! CREDIT OK’D BY PHONE - USE YOUR PRESENT CAR AS YOUR DOWN PAYMENT OPEN TIL 9 P.M. MONDAY ^THURSDAY ALL DAY SATURDAY TO nisT^souima O.CI M^FLEKS. _____7 ____8 1< .m:LE ~ MAPLE XO. __ . _____TO DETROIT Audette Pontiac, Inc. 1850 MAPtE RD., TROY, MICHIGAN (ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT) 642-8600i> JO 6-1380 - For Used Cars 642-3289 OPEN TIL 9 P.M. Mon, and Thurs. Just follow the map to theJTjgy jflotor MaOJ/jilesj^^HYo^^ E—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THLHSOAV, FEBRUARY 6, 1969 Drive a little- (only a f*w minutM from your homo lo Sholton) save a lot (that ohort drivolo Shehon can «avo yo( big monoy on o now Pontiac, Buick or Opol). Shelton HAIiL OF FAMERS — These former outslandinR football players were elected into Pro football's Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio, in an announcement by Dick r.allagher, director of the Hall. The players and the last team they played for are (left to right): Earl Neale, Philadelphia Eagles; Leo Nomel- AS Wirepliot* Uni, San Francisco 49ers; Turk Edwards, Washington Redskins; Joe Pen^, San Francisco 49ers; and Ernie Stautner, Pittsburgh Steelers. They will be honored at the annual Hall of Fame game next fall. Greasy Neale Heads Hall list Woeful Start but Still Lose By United Press International TTie Minnesota Pipers are no great shakes for consistency. They scored only eight points CANTON, Ohio (UPI) -Earle “Greasy” Neale, the coach who masterminded the Philadelphia Eagles’ rise to two world titles In the late 1940s, heads the list of five former football stars elected today to In the first quarter against Usir^c pro football Hall of Fame. Angeles In an American; * * * Basketball Association game; Joining Neale, who coached tackle and end with t h e Pittsburgh Steelers. Neale, who earned h 1 s nickname as a flashy end at West Virginia Wesleya, had an illustrious coaching background before taking over the lowly Eagles in 1941. played baseball with the Cincinnati Reds and batted .357 in the infamous 1919 "Black Sox Scandal” World Series. Edwards starred for the Redskins, first In Boiston and later when the franchise was moved to Washington, fof nine seasons, playing from 19,32-40. Hi.s 1922 Washington and ,lef-jj|y ^35, considered a giant In the Facies for 10 vears are Al''^"''^ hi.s era. standing 6-foot-2 and Wednesday night, fell behind 5.3-ine Eagles tor 1(1 years, are A ^ Neale- 2(50 nounds 28 at one point in the second Turk Edwards. « »«rkle «• ,,3ehed .semi pro team, '"sighing 260 pounds, period, then went wild in thel'J«shington, .Icie The Jet jj,.onion Tanks, won four of five third stanza to erase the entire Pprry a fullback, and J'PUjpxhihition games against Na- margin and take a 79 77 lead of Nomellmi, a defensive tackle, ^ ♦Wair nam who both plavcd with the .‘Ian! ® tneirown^ * * Francisco Forty Niners: andiSTANIKIUT ATHLETE Neale, a standout athlete, Los Angeles’ Stars we re Ernie Stautner, a defensive; ■pared the embarrassment of a / defeat under .^hos circumstances, however, b y riding the hot streak of rookie guard Bob Warren to a narrow 110-107 victory. The game enabled IjOS Angeles to retain fourth place In the Westj Division and cut Minnesota’s East Division lead lo only one p^j ,y| springs. Calif (AP)| Art Wall, Miller Barber, Tom game, over Kentucky and In- defending champion Ar- Nieporte, a winner of the Hope, nold Palmer put it, the Bob He eventually became coach of the Redskins in 1946 after a knee injury cut short his career five years earlier. Perry and Nomellinl, the first San Francisco players to enshrined, both carved Hope Desert Tourney 'H'i Has Four-Way Deadlock fatastic careers with the Forty Niners. BRIEF STAY Perry, whose only coUege experience was a brief two-year slay at Compton, CaliL, Junior College, joined the Forty Niners in 1948 when they were members of the All America Conference. He played for San Hoop Desert Coif Cla«wic is an others reside in the 69|prancisco for 1.3 seasons, was In other ABA games Wednes , j^e winter Ba'‘imore in 1961 and day. Miami defeated New York f"^ similar assortment of players, finished his career with the 111-99, Indiana beat Denver: ^t |pn.,t 46 of the field of 1.36 diana. 125-109, New Orleans uutgunned agreed after Kentucky 114-106 and H®b®*;whacking par around in the first isiged Houston 121 116. _ . . round. They could only hope the fun continued through the second round of the marathon, 90-hole tournament today. ★ * A Four pros shared the lead after one round—U S. Open champion Lee Trevino, veteran Gene ... . . 1 ,,iLlttler and two young guys, rows posted its second straight!Fleckman and Tom wrestling win yesterday by defeating Pontiac Catholic, 41- They were five under par with first round 67s but the field in ‘ the par was as bunched as a j stalk of bananas. Farmington OLS Wrestlers Triumph Farmington Our Lady of Sor- Sorrows now has a 2-4-1 record. The Titans are 3-2. Pat Kern of Sorrows remained pQun COURSES undefeated in dual meets In the show of golf Is 133 class by posting a pin in 37 pjgyg^ four desert courses. . , Each has par 36-36-72. The/rel- Both teams w 11 compete In n^grits of each are debata-a n eight-sebool tournament ^nd debated they are by the Saturday at Detroit Catholic resident members.. Central. | Two of tbe stars’ Palmer and umnn 41, p. Catholic 19 Jack Nicklaus, played Bermuda iwi’ocrrXwi'w-Miit’ mSek'^'p'SjDunes in par 72, with Billy Cas-KKitman'Ts! wSn*w'torfilti V»-^Ji^’P«r one Stroke in front. .... ... .stroke back of the leaders sonably well” except for a few errant putts. It was true. He had three bogeys—and all were charged to three-putt greens. Nicklaus was playing well and had a chance for a good score until he came to the last hole of his round. He said he hit into the sun, hooked near a tree, had to shoot out left-handed, landed in a bunker and came up with a double bogey 6. Gone LIIMor 3J 35-A7 Marly Fleckman 32 35—67 Leo Trevino 32-35—67 Tom Shaw 33 34—67 Ken Still 35-33-6* ■— Perrier 35-33—6* Wlecheri 32-36—68 Goldstreni) 34-34—M I Sulliven 34-34-4* tolbert 13-3S-M 3^33-4» 34-35—6* 36-33—69 36-33—6* 34-35—6* Van Dooran (! -Pal Ban Forty Niners in 1^963. * V A Nomellinl, an "iron man’ performer, spent 14 years with the Forty Niners, playing 174 consecutive games at one stretch, the third best, longevity record in NFL history. Stautner, a native of Bavaria, also played for 14 years, missing only one pro bowl from 19,5.’5-1962. He played defensive tackle and through most of his career, moved to defensive end| in the late years and also filled in on offensive when needed. Highly-Rated St. Clair CC Tops Highland One of the top community college teams in the country, St. aair OC with its big front line, handed Highland Lakes a 101-91 defeat last night to push its record to 19-1 for the season. ★ * * Rated 14th, St. Clair received a 27-point effort by John Phortej who led four double figure scorers in hitting 43 field * * A Five Highland Lakes’ players were in double figures in scoring led by Walt Cousey’s 21 and Frank RusseU’s 20. Highland led by five points then hit a cold sp^ with five minutes left in the first half and the closest margin late in the game was six points. A A St. Clair, winning its 10th straight, was rated 15th last week. AAA San Jacinto of Pasadena, Tex., retained its No. 1 spot for the fourth straight win on the basis of its 28-1 season mark ST. CLAia (1*1) ___________ Almont •• RIchmeM Armad* *t H*v*n . Nortti Branch at Imaly CKv Oackarvllla at Birch Run MiMIngtan at Yala Brown City at Hartior Baach Utka Stavanson at East Datrolt Port Huron at Mount Clamant Rotavlll* at Port Huron Northam Holly at Fanton _ Watartord MoH at Bloomflald H 111 a ■*Royal Oak Shrina at DafroB *t. Am- ** at Utica St. Lawranca Brothar Rica at Da La Oextor at South Lyon Flint Carman at Lap«ar Michigan School for Oaaf at Roapar Dearborn Annapolla at Clarktfon at Bloomflaldr Hills Andovs G.P. UnIvarsIty School M Harpar Wood Detroit Servile at Royal Oak Shrina Detroit Austin et Birmingham Broths lice Crenbrook et University School League playoffs—Redtord St. llAery PONTIAC - BUICK - OPEL % Mila Sooth of Downtown Rochastar 855 Rochester Rood, Rochester 651-5500 UNITED TIRE SERVICE WR6STLIN0 LAKES (t1) PO FT » 249 NO DOWN PAYMENT UP TO 16 MONTHS TO PAY "NO CHARGE" Repair Servica Policy for Electric Rangait on Edison Mwat CRUMP ELECTRIC FE 4-3573 3465 MUURN RORD UL 2-3000 imRWfflioiuu: CUB CADET umm GAHDEK TRACI0R8 with Snow Throwers or Snow Plow attachments move snow the easy way this winter when you choose any of international's 5 new models of Cub Cadet tractors, from 7,10, and 12 HP. All-gear, direct drive regular transmissions (10 and 12 HP models with hydrostatic transmissions). STOP IN AND GET OUR DEAL KtNG BROS. PONTIAC RD. at OPDYKE PONTIAC, MICH. TELEPHONE FE 4-1662 end FI 4-0T34 1 ^ me Bfios. INC. «□ 1 PONfMCfiO- It Chippewa Valley WHITEWALLS! 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Tracks have four shielded ball bearings, lubricated for life. 0 Yoke swivels 3M° horiiontally. e Black A Oecker/DeWalt Built totally enclosed motor has dirset drive, fan-cooling. Automatic built-in motor brake, o All controls are on top and up front for safety and easy handling, o Bevel pin gives quick, accurate sotting at 0% 45° and 90° positions o Motor has 9^*’ diameter front arbor and rear is thrsaded tor right hand tool chuck. o Maximum depth of cut 3”; gross cut capacity (1” stock) 14Vi (with tO" blade); spindle dado 13/16” width; ripping capaeityi 24-11/16” width; miter, bevel rip scales; 26” x 32” work table; 120/2B8-240V AC 1 phase; 2nlr DIVING . Rich Mathcny, Adover . , Dick Quint, B. Groves . Kevin Cahill, B. Seaho'-. Kim Magonigal, B. Grwo .. , Tom Sunquist, Hazel Park . , Bot) Martin, B. Grovas ...... . Darrel Jorgenson, Southlleld By Hie Associated Press Some might say it was even trade, but the Detroit Pistons likeiy wouidn’t subscribe to the theory. Defeated Wednesday night in Cobo Hall by the Chicago Bulls 120-108, the Pistons suffered their fourth straight de-|place, 6% games behind, feat at the hands of a team thht Chicago Detroit ended a four-game Winless leoerwkia foot-6 Baltimore woul^ undergo surgery today. The victory kept Baltimore three games ahead of New York and Philadelphia in the Eastern ratfe and. left the defending champion Celtics in fourth that the American League umpires received a very substantial increase.” It was reported the minimum wage was upped from $9,500 to $10,000, with larger increases for experienced men. Last year, the top National salary reportedly was $26,000 and the AL top $17,000. didn’t think we could even agree duties and renew to him our of-here to stay. But I think we on the sun rising in the East.” ;fer to play a constructive role in]should look at a lot of possibili-Kuhn hopes that under his efforts to modernize baseball’s ties.” . Jack H I, BH Andovai in BUTTERFLY I. Gary Gottschling, RO Kimball .. t. Grag Ortaga, Southtlald ...... J. Bruca Thorburn, RO Kimball ., S. Rick Amann, BH Lahsar . streak in the process. It was a familiar story. Piston Dave Bing had 28 points and Detroit many times played catch-up ball, but then turned cold, at one point for six consecutive minutes without scoring. * * ★ “They give us trouble because . Larry Drivar, B. Groves . , Pool Howard, Southtlald . in PREBSTYLI . Curt Finney, B. Seaholm ...... :50.» . Greg Ortega, •" in BACKSTROKB . Larry Driver, B. Groves . Gary Gottschling, RO KImba I. Steva Kuzma, BH Andovar I. John Klemansky, ---------- -- 1 Evarett, Seaholm 2. Steve Driv.., ---------- ------ 3. Bruce Butzlar, Brother Rica . 4. BUI Edwards, B. Groves ........ 5. Jeff Klonn, BH Andover ........ 6. Mika Benda, Madison ........... 7. Bob Phillips, Seaholm ......... 8. Tim Jonas, B. Groves ......... *. Jim Purlfoy, Madison Hgts. . 10. Heath Foxfaa, r— 3:30.8 4. H. Mins /vnoover ............... 3:r' ' 5. Brother Rica ................... 3:1 6. B. Hills Lahser ................. 3;< they play good defense,” said Pistons coach Paul Seymour. That (Jim) Washington killed us.” Washington’s defensive rebounding and 22 points, along with 23 by Jerry Sloan, proved too much. Ten straight free throws put the game out of reach for the Bulls. In other games, the streaking New York Knicks trimmed the Milwaukee Bucks 111-102, the San Diego Rockets defeated Cincinnati 110-93, the Philadelphia 76ers topped the Seattle Su Sonics 119-115 and the Baltimore Bullets hung a 124-112 setback on the crippled Boston Celtics. Gus Johnson, Baltimore’s All-Star forward, has joined Boston player-coach Bill Russell on the sidelines as injuries continue to shake the National Basketball Association’s Eastern Division title contenders. Earlier, Cazzie Russell of the Knickerbockers and Luke Jack-son of the Philadelphia 76ers were shelved for the season with injuries. Johnson also was feared lost for at least six weeks. He collided with teammate Kevin Loughery and fell heavily to the floor. Physicians said the “ il (ouli-Chlcago lls 38 3042 188 . 32 38 28 32—130 . 18 37 30 11-108 r, Dofrolt 27. Gran, ------ Mexico, 10. jtpointed Rocky Herni and the Oakland Seals beat the Montreal Canadiens 5-1 in other games. Third-period goals by Jean Pronovost and Ken ^hinkel enabled the Penguins to beat the Rangers for the first time in their history. Vic H a d f i e 1 d scored a late goal with Ranger goalie Ed Giacomin out of the nets to cut the deficit to one goal but New York could not get the equalizer. scored two goals and had two assists each in leading the Seals to their victory over the Canadiens. * ★ * The victory moved the Seals three points - ahead of Los Angeles in the race for second place in the western Division. NEW AND USED CARS AND TRUCKS ‘BOB” HILL Matlhewa-Hargreaves, Inc. “Chevyland” ’ 631 Oakland Ave. Pontiac, Michigan Phone FE S-4161 Cyclists Huddle Friday Detroit and suburban cyclists will huddle Friday for a discussion of routes and races in thci season ahead. The meeting is slated for 7:30 at 14335 West| McNichols. 1 SALE Winter Clearance Up to y2 off Underwear - Boots Ice Skates Hats and Caps • Sweatshirts SPORTING GOODS 24 E. UWRENCE, FE 2-2388 IN DOWNTOWN FONTiAO ASSOCIATED INCOME TAX SERVICE If There's A Way to SAVC.. We'll Find If! DON’T $|- Keep Us LET ® APART! Your Income Return is too IMPORTANT! 1 Atuociatad hat built its buuinaut on uotitfiod cuitomoru not $5 billt. For prompt, accurate and rooionoblo tax return torvico ... SEE ASSOCIATED! • OPEN MON. thru FBI. 9-9 • SAT. 9-B e SUN. 9-8 83 N. Tolasraph-Pontiae T226 Ormond Rd.-DavitburK : TAKES THE LIFTING OUT OF DRIFTING, ALL OVER PONTIAC h'( no Mcrol. An Arloni Sno-Thr« CMli let. mer* than a .now thov.l. It ihould. It do*, much mor* For •no thing, a 2-.togo Arion. cut. through aftar-Uitioid drift, quickly, dopandobly. Tok*. on any typa Sno-Thro givo. you a tooling of pow«r — o way of putting Old Mon Wintor In hit ploco. All Arion. Sno-Throt hovo 4 forward tpoodt, power rovort*. diroctionol di.chorgo chuto. Th* Eioo-Slort 4 hp, 5 hp, A hp and 7 hp onginoi oro wintoriiod fw dopondoblo got-up-ond-go portormonco. NtW! LOCK-OUT OIF-rUINTIAL! tUndard on Mddtii tOM-l and I6M-6. Why don't you, loo, got o lift ou) ol life with o now 1969 Arion. Sne-Thro. 4 H P. Pricad at Only Only $229.95 \mroitfBirt. END OF YEAR SALE!! KING BROS. PONTIAC Rd. at OPDYKE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Mend! FE 4-tlS2 and FE 4-ST14 Des Moines 6 Trims Flags PORT HURON (Urn — The Des Moines Oak l.eafs continued their International Hockey U'ague mastery over the Port Hunm Flags Wednesday night, winning 5-3 for their third straight victory over the Flags. The Oak Ia*afs scored twice in the fir-st period on goals by Rich I Brown and Pat Donnelly, added ^ RKN.S.SEI.AER, Ind.,(AP) -one by Dave Padzerski in the Host St, Joseph's College fast second and capped their scoring breaks in the second half to with tallies by Barry Jackman overpower Olivet, 93-69, in ; and Barry Boughner in the nonconfeyence basketball game, third period. j Wednesday night. Geoff Powless and Ron! st, Joseph has a 9-8 record! Ringler scored in the opening!while OHVet’s mark is 5-9. St. period for Port Huron with Bob| Joseph’s Ted «Ulary and Oli-McCammon getting a lone tally | vet’s Max Lindsay each had 22 in the third. ’ 'points. Chlcgo i>l OfU^ Only g«m«»j!4chedV^I(d. 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FEBRUARY 6, 1969 E—a Young Veterans Leave F^w Openings Lions Figure 3 Rookies May Possibly Make Team DETROIT (AP) - The pickings in the recent pro football draft may not have been great for the Detroit Lions, but who is to say which of the 14 players they chose will make squad? Carl Brettschneider, of the | We didn’t do as well as most Lions’ front office, says he of the other clubs because we thinks about three of the 14 will I didn’t have a first pick, or a Invitational Mat Touifiey Set Saturday The 10th annual Invitational Wrestling Tour namnet sponsored by the Michigan Wrestling Club is on tap for Saturday at the Michigan State Fairgrounds. Some 125-150 wrestlers are expected to be on hand for the event which opens at noon. Competition will continue through the afternoon with the finals slated to start at 7:30. ★ ★ ★ Among the performers hand will be Rich Sofman, Greg Ruth and Jerry Bell, all national champions from the New York Athletic Club; Werner Holzer and Steve Combs, 1968 Olympians from the Chicago Club; and Olympian Sam Al-Karaghouli. Former national champ Masaaki Hatta, Rudy Williams and Don Buzzard from the Michigan club are also in the field. Heavy Bout Scheduled NEW YORK (AP) - A heavyweight elimination bout between cQntenders Bust Mathis of Grafldi Rapids, Mich., and Jerry Quarry of Ballflower, Calif., will be held March 24 at Madison Square Garden, it was announced Wednesday. make it but adds that never can tell about those things.” * ★ ★ “I^st year the first six guys ^e drafted made the team, but this year that won’t happen,” he said. We’ve acquired 27 new jeople in the la^t two seasons, including 19 rookies, and it’ll be harder for a rookie to make the team this time." fflS ADVICJE Brettschneider, who is In his third year at his post of director of player personnel, says he tries to see the top 100 players in the country every year. It was primarily his advice that determined who Detroit would draft. I think there will be some guys drafted In the 10th and 11th rounds who will come in and play for somebody,” Brettschneider says. ‘‘It’s hard to judge some players. Some will mature and grow a lot while others have reached their full potential in college. * * But, he adds, “chances are slim of anybody making it in the pros if they’ve been drafted after the sevenUi round." Detroit didn’t get a first round pick this year. ’The first choice went to Los Angeles as part of the trade that brought quarterback Bill Munson to the Lions. The Lions had two second round choices, and a third round pick, then didn’t get another one until the eighth round. Both National Football League and American Football League teams participated in the common draft. FEWER CHOICES fourth, fifth, sixth or seventh. You can usually pick up someone in those rounds who can help you.” Detroit’s first choice was 5-foot-lO, 195-pound running back Altie Taylor from Utah State. 'I personally, feel that Taylor will come in and play for us,” he says. “He will help us the most of all those drafted." But Brettschneider says he f^ls some of the others have chdnce to make the team. “A lot of times players from small schools develop late because they ne^ bigger competition,” he says, “and when you play against better competition you often get better as long as you have the innate ability. Here is a rundown of the 14 players and what Brettschneider has to say about them: Taylor: “A great specialist runner, he’s a breakaway threat and is very durable and elusive. He has a chance of being first string. We’ll probably use him in the backfield with Mel Farr.” Jim Yarbrough, 6-foot-6, 259-pound tight end, ihorida: “He’s short receiver and a good blocker. We want to use him as an offensive tackle but it’ll take some teaching.” ★ ★ ★ Larry Walton, 5-11, 195, flanker, Arizona State: “A great specialist runner. We plan to make him either a flanker or defensive back. He has run a 9.5 hundred-yard dash. He has a lot of physical ability and is an exceptional runner in the open field.” Jim Carr, 6-4, 260, tackle, Jackson State: “He has good size and strength and good mobility. He will take a year of play offensive tackle. He has a chance to play defensive end.” Rocky Rasley, 6-2, 245, guard, Oregon State: “He’s a collegiate wrestler, a good, strong man-on-man blocker and a good trap blocker.” GOOD RUSHER Bob Bergum, 6-5, 240, defensive end, Wisconsin State at Platteville: “He shows a pass rush and has good strength in his arms and hands. He’s also a collegiate wrestler. He lacks experience in big time competition." Ron Walker, 6-4, 220, defensive end, Morris Brown: “We feel he has a chance as a tight end or as a defensive end. We feel he can get his weight up to 250. He’s another one who has played against small competi- end or tight end in pro football.’ tion.” John Stahl, 6-3, 2.30, guard, Fresno State: “He’s a good pass blocker but will have to work on techniques. He may have a chance as an offensive guard.” Gary Steel, 6-5, tight ei Army: “He is strictly LaSalle Five Playing Numbers Game By the Associated Press The Explorers of La Salle, having captured No. 9, have their sights set on No. 8 in an attempt to rise above No. 7. Translation: La Salle, ranked seventh in The Associated Press college ba^etball poll, tied the school record of nine straight regular season victories by whomping Lafayette 97-65 Wednesday night and setting up Saturday night’s big meeting with eighth-ranked Villanova. * * * Actually, the 1954-55 team won 13 in a row, but the last four came in the postseason NCAA Tournament. Bob Hadlock, 6-6, 265, defensive tackle, George Fox College: He has faced small competition but he has good size and speed. He’s also a track man.” Wilson Bowie, 6-1, 190, run ning back. Southern California: the first team running back at USC until he hurt his knee his junior year and 0. Simpson took over. He rarely played after that. If his knee holds up he could be a pretty good runner.” George Hoey, 5-10, 170, flanker, Michigan: “He has a chancej to play cornerback. He’s a track man and we might use him as a punt and kickoff return special-1 ist. He has run the 60-yard dash, in six and one-tenths seconds.” Fred Gough, 6-2, 220, line-j backer, Arlington State: “He has shown good pursuit and good tackling ability. He does a fair job of covering on short: passes. He has an outside chance to make it as a linebacker.” CAGE PLAYER Ken Spain, 6-8, 260, Houston. He is a basketball player but ARMSTRONG FEBRUARY WHITEWAU SALE 9 ANY SIZE usfio 1 1 URQEH iizn i 1 I mTANT CRtOIT . URtoUMenlh^ ' 1 to Roy 1 i MEMCO TIRE CO- 1 1 4U.HMmLAMm, 114-lin, SK-KN never come to training camp but if he got out of his military commitment he could make it with the Lions.” RENT, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! points and 6-foot-7 sophomorei half behind 6-9 Gary Major and Ken Durret had 20, 18 of them Inj Jarrett Durham. Major paced the second^half^ ^ comeback while Durham| pia”ed"“‘foot“bair in high The only other teams in thel®™''^'* ® ^ame high 30 points!school. He played in the Olym-Top Twenty to see action were^and sank six clutch free throws'pics last year and we feel he ...........-.....................u- r:__i ----!jjgg g chance to be a defensive, llth-ranked Tulsa, which turned back St. Louis 80-66; No. 15 Du-quesne, a 78-71 winner over ^evidence, and 16th-rated New Mexico State, which walloped Hardin-Simmons 103-78. Rob Washington and Ron Car-son set personal scoring highs of 34 and 24 points, respectively, in Tulsa’s victory over pesky St. Louis. The win gave the Golden Hurricane record of 17-2 and a school record of nine straight Wednesday night’s triumph Missouri Valley Conference vic-gave Tom Gola, who led La tories. Salle to its greatest heights in * * * “I thought the Rams did thej the mid-1950s, a 17-1 mark in hisj Duquesne trailed 38-36 at halfbest,” Brettschneider says, rookie season as coach. Larry!time against stubborn Provi-“They had three No. 1 picks. I Cannon was high scorer with 29 dence but rallied in the second HAGGERTY LUMBER & SUPPLY CO. MICHIGAN'S MOST MODERN LUMBER MART TELEPHONE 2055 HAGGERTY HWY, WALLED LAKE B«twwi W»rt MapU ond Pontioc Trail I Knocked Down ON Easy To LOOK 2”x4”x8’ 59! Movable Shutters 7" X 24" ea. 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The only other skier cei tain of a berth in the divisionals is Boyne City’s Cary Adgate who has captured two CiS races among the Class A high schcwl boys Miss Carter, in addition, last weekend placed second in the 11-year-olds’ giant slalom event plus third in slalom at the State Jaycee championships at Big Powderhom near Iron wood OTHER HOPEFUIJS Others expected to do well in the Junior Alpine eliminations this weekend are Jim Nye of Waterford; Robin Brennan, Jeff Swarbrick, Glen Musser, Dan Hartman, Cindy Oldenburg, Libby Paddy and Carol Walter of West Bloomfield Mike Dunlay, Scott Mcl>ean,^ Jess and Marion Webster, Rick' Reininger, Judy King and Barb Goode of BUximfield Hills; Pauli Cunningham, Linda Whitehead, Lynn Hof ley and Mark Ross, Birmingham, and Wendy W i 1 Soviet Ski Buffs Hurting for Slats MOSCOW (JD — The Soviet,came to sports clothing “there: Union has a shortage of at least I is a completely insufficient 600 000 pairs of skiis^ !„^„ber of jackets, gloves,; It also has huge shortages of, , ^ ,, most other kinds of winter ‘ sports equipment and clothing,! “The quantity and quality of production must be sharply in-, RENT-AJiAir Onl^' ^ Plui *c etr Mil* Min. 7 Day* 1969 Chevy [\ V-8, Aulomatie Tranimiuion, CA.R, Rental & Inc. Divittoner Chevy-Land 631 Oakland al Can FE 5-4161 READY ro GO These are the four local machines that will be at the .starling gate when the International 500 Sno-Mobile race opens Saliirday morning al Sault Ste, Marie. In the driver’s seals (from lefti are I.ouls Schaar and Bruce Cliflon, driving machines from Sno Mobile P'nterprise, along with John and Henry Manuel, guiding machines from M.G. Collision. At left (standing) is Dan Jannette, who’ll pilot a vehicle entered by Ski-Roule of Warren. Continuing from ieft are members of the Manuel driving and pit crew — Lowell Grimshaw, Bill Manuel, Howard Lovett and Darrell Felts. Area Drivers in Marathon Race .SAULT .STE. MARIE --terpri.se, both of Drayton Plains, Sno-Mobile Enterprise along sisting of not less than three nor The hardiest of the new breed will have two cars each in the with Tom Clifton, will drive oneimore than five will be per-_ of snowmobile buffs head to-lineup and another will be of that firm's entries and Tom’s imitted to compete for each rac-Kathryn Shepherd' and Caroi Sault Ste. Marie this backed by .Ski-Route Sales & .son, Bruce, 18, will drive theling team. Swan of Rochester; E r i c preparation for the In-.Service of Warren. other. I ★ ★ ★ Brown, Troy; Melinda Zell, ternalional .500 - - a •'>••0 milei[)jyyjf^(j TEAM i members of their team Any component part of the Huntington Woods; Debra Wall, Southfield; and Pam Campbell, Ortonville. All placed among the top three finishers In either giant slalom, or slalom or downhill In their class at the last Region in qualifying trials. snow machine race scheduled for this Saturday. | The race is to be held on one-mile oval banked track capable of holding the machines at speeds upwards of 90 miles an hour. Elapsed time for the gruelling event is expected to be about 10 hours, and officials have recommended driver teams because of the time and weather conditions. DRIVING TEAM At the controls for the two M.G. entries will be the Manuel brothers — John, 23, and Henry, 18, — sons of Bill Manuel, owner of M.G. include Martin Hoskins and Fred Haynes of Clarkston and Carl Durnell of Drayton Plains. OTHER EI^Y Driving the fifth area entry will be Dan Janette, 26, of Washington, and he’ll get relief help from his brother Jerry, and Earl Girard, 31, owner of the vehicle. The Manuels will have j peven-driver teams for their Many of them plus their officials have recommended sleds. Along with the two teammates on the respective driver teams because of the will be Howard Lovett high school ski teams will be time and weather conditions. Waterford; Chuck Goklie readying themselves for next Ai.p» FivTltrFS Frank Lung of Imlay City; week’s stale prep .Southeast ‘^NTRIKS parrel Felts of Luzerne; and Michigan regional at Ml. Holly . firms will beifibwell Grim.shaw of Drayton and the annual Interscholaslic injHeights, one of Manuel's em-[at a speed of 51 miles an hour. Open Meet the following Satur- •><’jployees who’ll ------------------------i---'-. .. . * * * mechanic. [Janette made it with a 49. M.(i. Sales and Sno-Mnhile En- Louie Schaar, 50, who operates clocking. machine may be replaced subject to the following conditions, but only the driver may repair the machine when out of the pit area. No one, spectator crew, may assist the driver in returning the machine to the pit area for maintenance or repair. creased as soon said Konstantin Golshakov, deputy minister of trade for the Russian federation. ★ ★ But government officials have made statements like that before, without any great improvement. Complaints about sports supplies appear year aft-year, with the same regularity as winter itself. Boris Rogatin, chief of the Sports Department of the Young Communist League, said earlier this yedr that because of equipment shortages and poor quality “our showing in major sports events is suffering.” CHANGE GEAR He cites the Grenoble winter | Olympics of a year ago, where' the Soviet Union did poorly. Hei admitted that once Soviet athk letes get into international competition they frequently have to use foreign equipment because their own is so bad. ★ * ★ ‘"rhe noinistry of wood products every year lags behind the plan for skils by tens of thousands of pairs,” Bolshakov | said in the latest article on the problem, appearing in the newspaper Sovietskaya Rossiya Soviet Russia. ‘For the current season the shortage amounts to 600,000 pairs. New Snowmob//e sTREAMUNiNG In the qualifying last weekend - 50 of the 65 made the JOpened day (Feb. 22) aLso al Ml Holly. grade — John Manuel made I— .................o ...I.- at a speed of 51 miles an hour, k i J*// Iployees who’ll double as driveriHenry was in at 48.1 MPH and! f^GCir LOCf/f/aC Calvin Trims Ferris GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-Mlke Phelps and Eddie Weirs each had 23 points in pacing Calvin to a 90-81 victory of Ferris Slate in a nonconference basketball game Wednesday night. Cold Weather Helps Improved Ski Oufook [PRIZE MONEY total of 13,200 In prize money will be awarded to winners in the Sault’s 500 mile [race, not counting lap prizes [and prizes and plaques awarded Ito the fifty qualifiers for the I event. Ctlebrating 11 years at Matthaws-Hargreavet CURT CRAWFORD Curt Sayt, 'Tv* ir*v*r b« obi* to d*liv*r a n*w or lat* mod*l u**d car for : 40 be awarded $1,000 and a four foot trophy. 'The Michigan Snowmobile Association event also will offer cash prizes to the 'The deputy minister called for administrative streamlining in the winter sports industry and expansion of facilities. But such suggestions, like the complaints, have been made before CADILLAC (UPD — A 34-mile without decisive results, snowmobile trail that winds Bolshakov noted some lm-[ provements compared with last year, with a 25 per cent In-j crease in the supply of ski boots, a 13 per cent increase' in hockey sticks and — best of all — a 150 per cent increase in ski bindings. ★ ★ ★ But these increases, he added, I through the Manistee National Forest in southwest Wexford County was opened to the public Tuesday, culminating a year’s work by the National Forest Service. The trail, which begins and ends at the tournament hill at Caberfae Ski Lodge, is known as the Caberfae Way and was designed by Ronald Scott, a by no means meant that de-i ranger in the national forest, [mand was being satisfied. The official opening came as He pointed out planning foul-other nine top places in The ^^'’^ Mrs.|ups which aggravated the prob- event. Gerald Payne, the 1967 Michi-lem, such as hockey skates wn i iiuTT Powderpuff Snowmobile piling up on store shelves be- NO IJMIT ; Queen who gained the title by'cause of lack of the boots need- Rules for the race place no accumulating points in snowmo-'ed to go with them, limitation on displacement,‘bile races. I Bolshakov said that when it which will be up to 800 cubic [ _ centimeters. Other race rules include: A team of drivers, con- Mets Contract Young Hurler NEW YORK (UPl) - Jerry^ Perkins, a 20-year-old left-handed pitcher, has signed a 1969 contract with the New 4,[York Mets of the National League. 'Ttie Mets also announced that Pompano Beach of the Florida State League will replace Raleigh Durham of the Carolina League aS one of their Class A affiliates this year. ABSORBERS Gu3.ra.ntee B.F.Goodrich shock absorbers are guaranteed for the period stated and there is no , replacement charge in case of defect pr failure. Guarantee does not apply to shock absorbers used on commercial vehicles &r those damaged by accident. Replacement only at B.F.Goodrich store or dealer rrjak-,. ing original installation. ■ Assure a safe, smooth ride ■ Built stronger — deluxe quality construction; m Give better handling and. control FAST, FREE INSTALLATION NOMONEYDOWN CAR SERVICE. NEED 4 SHOCKS? Get the 4th Shock Free With This Coupon Expires on Wednesday^ February 12th B. F. GOODRICH 60 S. Telegraph, Across from Tel-Huron PHONE 332-0121 uwiim»»Cl PRICE BLAST Cuardicn Premium 4-PLY WHireWALLS 6.50x13 - $16.95 Plus 1,81 FET 7.35x14 - $17.95 Plus 2.06 FET 7.75x14 — $18.95 Plus 2.19 FET 8.25x14 - $21.95 Plus 2.35 FET 8.55x14 - $23.95 Plus 2.56 F.ET ‘’Th* Yukon King is made for winter people . . . people who want to go, even when they can't see over the snowdrifts. Proven JLO engines, a Frigid Flex track and exclusive center-point steering moke all that going so much easier. So, don't be left behind in deep snow, cold weather or rugged terrain . . . join the "get out and goers" with d Yukon SUBURBAN LAWN EQUIPMENT 1880 Cass Lake Road, Kel^go Harbor ^ Near Orchard Lake Road. 682-1610 j KING TIRE CENTER FE 3-70§8 31 WEST MONTCALM, PONTIAC, MICH. Since 1837 . . . finality has been a tradition Dooro & Company omploys 47,000 poopi* around tho fro* world. Solos of tractors, agricultural implomonts, industrial oquipmont, and lawn and garden equipment are approximately on* billion dollars a year. The company manufactures more than 500 different machines and 200,000 individual parts. There are fourteen talea branches in the United States and three in Canada. These are important statistics, but they provide only a superficial picture of the company. There are more - important facts which reflect the kind of company John Deere is... the kind of people who are John Deere. Company Reputation — When you deal with John Deere, you do business with a company that takes pride in the products it sells, whether these products are for the farm, the industrial market, or the suburbanite. Every product undergoes the same maticulous re-examination in each step of its development. John Deere was a blacksmith with a talent for inventiveness and business. When his first steel plow sliced a clean, straight furrow through the sticky prairie soil near Grand Detour, III., in 1 837, he virtually opened the richest farming region of the world. John Deere always insisted that every plow bearing his name contain only high-quality materials and workmanship. He put it this way, "I will not put my name on an implement that doesn't have in it the best that is in me." This policy Is conscientiously practiced today. John Deere Lawn and Garden Tractors, rotary mowers, front blades, du^npearts, and snow throwers are manufactured at the JohYi Deere Horicon Works, in Horicon, Wisconsin. n the dealOr organization, many employees are second and third generation John Deere people. Each takes pride in products of the Horicon Works. Throughout the development, testing, and manufacturing processes, conscientious employees are striving to make a good pn^uct better. For Your Lawn & Garden Equipment SEE HALVERSON Sales & Service 2 LCXATIONS 6465 Telegraph Rd- - 3297 Pontiac Rd. Birmineham Only: Open Fri. Evenings Til 9 P.M. (Northeast Comer Maple and Telegraph) Birmingham 647-5506 (Near Squirrel and Walton) Pontiac 332-0007 $ 39»» Reg. $49.98 A-3 LEATHER FLIGHT JACKET FULL SHEEPSKIN LINED SIZES: SAAALL, MEDIUM, AND URGE JOE’S rw SURPLUS 18 N. SAGINAW Shop Mon. and Thurs. Til l:N FE 2-0022 rrl. TO • THE PQNTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY fi. I9(is TIRE SAIE 1 DELUXE 100 WHITEWALL 4-PLY NYLON CORD TIRES *650x13 TUBELESS WHITEWALL PLUS 1.81 F.E.T. • Precision control wrap-around treads • Four full plies of super-strength nylon cord jbo( ■ ■ • Mileage boosting Polybutadiene tread gives smooth ride • "Wide-Proflle" construction • Good-looking ncyrow whitewall styling • Designed for greater safety on the road TUBELESS SIZES WHITEWALLS EACH F.E.T. TUBELESS SIZES WHITEWALLS EACH F.E.T. 650-13 15.88 1.81 855-14 19.88 2.57 700-13 16.88 1.94 775-15 17.88 2.21 695/735-14 16.88 2.07 815/825-15 18.88 2.38 775-14 17.88 2.20 845/855-15 19.88 2.57 825-14 18.88 2.36 900-15 20.88 2.83 WITH TRADE ■IN TIRE OFF CAR NO MONEY DOWN.......USE FEDERAL’S CHARGE BRAKE OVERHAUL HERE IS WHAT WE DO: • Install new linings • Check wheel cylincJers • Check mostei cylincler • Turn all foul drums • Check grease seals • Inspect all fluid lines • Install new fluid bleed and adjust brakes • Test drive automobile 27 88 LIFETIME GUARANTEED MUFFLER FREE 12 88 Automatic Transmission fiuld 37^ Winchester outomafic tronsmission tiurd 9 b % Save on Gumout Sealed beam Famous brand additive, now headlamps new spark plugs 99<. 1.17.. 49*. Cleans carburetors Models 4001, 4002 Reg 68® AC, Autolite, sofely Stock up! only. Reploce now! Chompion Chorge it! Big savings on Apco oil filters 1.66 Reg 2 27 Spin-type Apco quality filters Save plenty on Regularly 77c Apco air filter filter wrench 1.99 66* High quolity Apco air Great for removing filter reg. up to' 2 97 disposable filters Save! Winchester all-weather oil 3 , 99* Reg 3forl 61. 10W40 quality motor oil. je ■ je nvvy., urayton Plains — upen ivion. inru rn. y lu » • >iw.> eEDERiAL 9 l ^Ele R ElCw 1910 Widetrack Drive, Pontiac — Open Mon. thru Sat. 9 to 6 — Phone 334-2515 I'H E POX TI AC PRESS, FEBRU^V Market Moves Irregularly Ttie following are top prices covering Sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by. Quotations are fiirinshcd^tiv the YORK (AP) — Despite munications Commission that of 60 slocks at noon was up .3 at Detroit Bureau of Markets as of weakjiess in tobaccos and some would ban cigarette advertising 360 5 with industrials up .7, rails' _____ _ _ ....... Prices had a slight edge to the- 1 ,4 ....1 4.4 . I upside on the American StockI Liggett & Myers ost 2. Ameri-E';,hange as they recovered ir-i Monday Produce FRUITS broadcasting issues, the. stock on radio and television, market nudged irregidarly to: ^ Ihe upside early this afternoon, ^ Tntding was aeiive Sirhan Juror Quiz Goes On . with problems Attorneys Continue more suited to _ I r Ai {financial ex-| Search tor Alternatesjperts. But they, rather than the {experts, must " provide the an- IX)S ANGELES (API - In ------T—-\ ■; Homo Buyers Face ' Dilemma on Interest By JOHN CUNNIFF has in fact published a similar j During the past year houses AP'Business Analyst book of tables that goes to 10 in some sections of the country i'JEW YORK — Inflation and per cent. Within recent days the have risen 10 per cent, even high interest rates are present-ceiling on government-backed more, meaning that last year’s Ing potential homeowners today loans was lifted to 7.5 per cent, $32,000 home js probably now in ..... and some people already have the $35,000 range and still rls- paid more than that. ing. The book, incidentally, is available for $1 from the publisher at 82 Brookline Ave., Boston, Mass. 02215. Appl»». Jon*li « The Dow .lonos industrial av- regularly from the Thursday de->'"f“’- deliberate, premeditated! g^ers. 2 68 at Philip Morris 8 point g^.jj^g n^yrder, would you favor the' VEGETABLES Cut'v Ix) CAbbAQ^, bti Ciibb«9e, StarxlArd OnionA, 50 b b«a Parsnips, ‘7 bu Parsnips, CHIo Pftk, 1 Potatoes, 30 lb, bug Potatoes, 501b bag Radishes, Black. 1 Radishes. Red, Moth. Rhubarb, Hothousa If, then, you decide to postpone buying, you deny yourself the pleasure of a new home, especially one that might not CUNNIFF again be matched in value, and i buildup—although admittedly use. dz. bch. 1 50 Saua sh. Hubbard, bu. ips, lopped, bu. LETTUCE SALAD GREENS Livestock 90 105 I I ?• 79 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) or more ............“ .............V" ----- ' ,r..ould you, , than on the previous session, death penaltv or life imprison-for examnle ob- 0 » ‘ * American Broadcasting sank Kane Miller paced the list on menf' Would von he inflLneed ^7 1 Gain.s outnumbered losses by about 2, and Capital Cities volume, rising nearly a point. k c- i, d- i, c- u , tain a mortgage loo about 100 i.ssues on the New Broadcasting 1, Radio Oorp., Among other active issues, Al-Bishara Sirhan s now at 7.5 per iw York Stock Exchange. nwner of Ihe NBC network, was loyg Unlimited advanced ’ ®y compassion for his cent interest or wait until mon- sio^_of a„ equity interest. The cigarette and broadcast-steady. Cox Broadca.sting was gnj Equity Funding about 3. mother? ^ey prices come back down to 6 Even more important from a ’SJ ing ( (impanies reacted to a rule about unchanged. Papert, Kleinert, Ixiis fell uear-| With'such questions, attomeysjP®'’ cent or so, which is the rate^ viewpoint, are these pro|>os«-d by the Federal Com- The A.ssociated Pre.ss average ly 3 and Asamera Oil 1. j {continue examining prospective|^°“'' receivea a lew Your rent may very alternate jurors at the trial of years ago^ ^ ^ increased in the next Sirhan, 24, a Jordanian chargedi _ , year or so. and the price of that with murdering Sen. Robert F. question has no easy ^ postponed buying al- Kennedy with gunfire last June.!*'^®’’. The fellow with a $25,000 certainly will rise. ^ ; mortgage at 6 per cent a year-------------1----___ rr.u 1, , ... ifor 20 years pays principal and I Jhe alternates will , chairs flanking the eight-man,! 7 5 T''" mortgage, would pay $201.40, or CI.V Wednesday. They l hear ey-,22.29 more. , t^jdence along with the jury. An I The New York Stock Exchange In dollars and cents, therefore, it would seem that the person who bought now, even at high mortgage rates, could do better than the person who postpones. ♦ For some buyers the ideal situation under these circumstances is to take over an existing mortgage from the seller at somewhere between 5 per cent and 6 per cent, perhaps even avoiding closing costs in the process. aside from such ideal situations, most buyers are today faced with a problem that only they can work out. — A- -K- O (AP) (USDA) - Hoot * :h»rt Itrong to J5 hlgtiRri t»llTyiJ ilppori loot, 1,500 l-f *>5-330 IblJ n.fo si is; 100 h(«d •» 31.751 •* J alternate will replace a regular This may .seem rather unim-juror only in an emergency-ill- « y«"; especially when ;:ines,s, sav. or a death in the fam- of your aparM f: ily-that forces him to leave the trial. that amount in the next lease. But consider the costs over .. , 3 220-140 lb* 70 75-11.35, ............ .J» 20 25 30.75, 3-4 2 50^3M lb» 1* SO-IO 25, 34 200.300 lb( W.00-IV.50, MW* ‘ -nosllv 25 low*r, moderately »c-tiv«, , 0 J50-400 Ibl 17 50-11.25, 1-3 400-500 lb> 17.25 17 75 , 3 3 500-550 lb» 17.00-I7.25, 2 3 550 400 lb» 14 0017 00, boar* 14."'' 15.00 Caiil* 1,500: c»iv«i none, receipt* per cant >l«ught*r ilaari billed tor full, delivery, talabl* lupply mainly cow* >i Ing fully aleedv In an acllv* ' ^ and commercial cowi 17.00-1 and cullers 14 0011 35. Sheep none; insufficient •heep to establish a market, Four alternates were tenta-j, tively accepted by prosecution and defense after the jury was sworn in Wednesday. ONE CHALLENGED One, Warren Willis, aircraft maintenance foreman for an airline, was challenged by the defense after he said he would favor the death penalty in first-degree murder. Superior Court Judge Herbert V. Walker di.sal- $5,749 MORE The man with the 6 per cent mortgage pays $2,129.32 a year or $42,586.40 over the 20-year life of his loan. You pay $2,416.80 a ssHsP '-40 cr, C7>, 4_ I l.i vation. The defense said it body knows when rates will fall, didn't relinquish the challenge. They may, in fact, rise even * * ★ higher during the next few Also selected provisionally months, were Marshall Wolfe, power switchboard operator for the city Department of Water and Power; Georgia M. Liddle of suburban El Monte, wjfe of a mail carrier, and Ruth A. Stillman, insurance company adjus- Atlnrneys continued to predict it will be next week before six alternates are agreed on and testimony begins. Sirhan seemed at times almost the least interested person in the courtroom. Sucking lozenges after a recent cold, he smiled broadly at his mother and two brothers, sitting in the rear row. Evidence of how high are present rates is provided by the experience some months ago of Financial Publishing Co., which distributes to banks and savings and loan associations a tabular book called “Improved Payment Table for Monthly Mortgage Loans.” This little book listed almost every monthly payment for just about any conceivable mortgage -but it’s interest rates went only to 7 per cent. It had to rush new book into print, eliminating lower rates, adding higher Financial Publishing is prepared to go even higher, and Mutual Stock Quotations WSec ll.ft 12.47 Ind 13.37 13.37 Invest 6.05 8.70 .<;#r %mr: 12.47 13.63 Support for Skipper Is Evident at Inquiry CORONADO, CAlif. (AP) — sion not to man the Pueblo’s Junior officers from the USS Pueblo facing five admirals on a court of inquiry have declared support for their skipper. One said. “I’d follow him anywhere.” machine guns because “It would have been slaughter for anyone put out there.” . ★ ★ ★ “I am now going to ask you for your personal opinion,” said Bucher’s attorney, E. Miles IBB fnr lo vparR n The Statement came with de-Tt i’ f BifvdQm ^ ' termination from 21-year-old, Harvey. “Based on your experi- total of ^,749.60 more. freckle-faced Lt. j.g. Timothy ence and what you saw Immedi- Now that s nothing to overlook Harris, one of three officers who ately prior to the time of cap-even for a banker. Do you wait, testified Wednesday. He called ture, in your opinion did the ^ more suitable rate cjjyij. Lloyd Bucher “an out- commandir^ officer of the ship lowed the challenge after Willis can be obtained? Perhaps, leader.” any longer have the power to re- told him he would first consider in doing so you risk an indefi-j * * * s'st the boarding and ultimate evidence in mitigation or aggra- nite delay in purchasing. No- T personally think Cmdr. ^ _ Bucher is one of the finest offi- , cers I know-an 'outstanding; 38, skipper before and during the ^.s capture and certainly during de-tention,” said Lt. Frederick Schumacher Jr. I , u , ut, ..T j 44.44.- 1 I H contrasted sharply with “I don’t tlui* any of us could Harris’ boyish face and 25- have made it through that elev-^,^ Schumacher’s tow- en months m North Korean pns-| beaded mop. i Schumacher also ® ■ supported the surrender deci- SLAUGHTER’ sion. CWO Gene Howard Lacy said SEVERE BEATINGS he agreed with Bucher’s deci-j g^y^ral members of the crew were summoned to testify today, including Quartermaster l.C. Charles B. Law of Chehalis, Wash., who took some of the Brown Weighs Coed Mousing PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) Brown University’s interfraternity council passed a resolution Wednesday night aimed at establishing a coeducational housing program at Brown. The resolution urges fraterni- severest beatings during captivity. ★ ♦ ★ • Counsel for the court, Capt. William Newsome, said Capt. John Williams, an explosives expert from the offlqe of the Chief of Naval Operations at the Pentagon, will testify Friday on methods of destroying classified material in the event of capture. * ★ ★ Schumacher and Harris told ties and “other members of the how they exposed themselves to university community” to inves- cannon and submachine gun fire tigate the possibility of such a from North Korean patrol boats New Eng 11.„_________ New Hor 30.2330.23 New WW 15.10 14.40 Imega 0.50 0.40 .00 Fd 17.7010.34 On* WmS 14.8714.87 p'Nall 23.47 34.11 oppanhr.............. U.44 IS.'*' program and to encourage it. Lonn Shinn, a junior who presented the resoiution, said Pembroke women are invited to meet Thursday night with Brown men at Alpha Pi Lambda Fraternity, of which he is president, to duscuss the issue. Pembroke College is Brown’s sister school. and a submarine chaser tp destroy classified papers on the Pueblo. \ Schumacher said he was assisted by Communications Technician l.C. Michael Thomas Barrett and Communications Technician 3.C. Steven J. Robin. NO ONE HIT “Were you strafed during the time you were outside to burn the publications,” asked New-some. “Yes sir.” “Was anyone hit?” “No sir.” ★ ★ ★ Schumacher said Radioman 2.C. Lee Roy Hayes burned some classified papers. “The rest he loaded into his laundry bag and tossed a tool box in on top and threw it over the side.” FEEDING A FIRE Schumacher said Fireman Duane Hodges, 21, of Creswell, Ore., was fatally wounded while he was feeding a fire in a wastebasket on the deck with secret papers and files. Harris told how he ran out on the deck, grabbed a camera that was being used for surveillance photography and threw it over the side. Then, he said, he grabbed classified ptiblications fr(Hn the radio shack and the chart house an^ made ei^t or nine trips with them to an incinerator on the deck. •“Were you exposed to North Korean ships?” asked New- Rummage Sale, Saturday, Feb. 8, 10 a m. till 7 p.m.; Thei Episcopal Church of the Acivent, -------------------- Business Notes Paul J. Kennedy of 3819 San Mateo, Waterford Township, has been appointed manager of the Pontiac Branch of Lawyers Title Insurance Corp., 31 Oakland. Kennedy, 37, started with the company as a title examiner for Abstract & title Guaranty Ck>. in 1958. He continued as a title examiner for Lawyers Title when the company purchased Abstract & title Guaranty in 1960, and was transferred to the Chicago Branch office in 1961 and promoted to assistant title officer. He became branch manager of the Chicago office in ld65. News in Brief A portable television, valned at $80, was reported stolen from the Boys’ Club of Pontiac Inc. 530 E. Pike, last night, ac cording to police. 3325 Middle Beit, north of Long Lake Rd. —3(jy Fish Sapper, Baldwin United M^odW Onirch, Friday, Feb. as people IS to 21 year! of ago 7, « to 7. —adr|db. Men and women over 65 years of age spend about five times as much for prescribed medicines THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 6, 1969 Dem Deal With Friend of Nixon Spawns Controversy JiHAMI, Fla. (AP) - Charles Gregory (Bebe) Rebozo, the Florida businessman who became an instant celebrity last November, has a unique can’t-lose $2,4-mlllion federal guarantee of rent payments on a shopping center he’s about to open. Rebozo became a national figure following the election when tlte public suddenly became aware of his close friendship to President Nixon. But his shopping center project was arranged about two years ago while the Democrats controlled the federal government and Nixon was a lost thought in the political wilderness. ★ ★ ★ The Miami financier wa« asked to biilld the shopping center for Cuban refugee businessmen. The man who asked him was Thomas Butler, then and now the Miami-based regional director for the Small Business Administration. Butler also is (1) a close personal friend of Rebozo, (2) owner of land on an island Rebozo would like to develop as a residential or resort site, and (3) a charter stockholder in a bank founded and headed by Rebozo. NEXT DOOR Rebozo wasn’t available for comment. Since election night, he has worked assiduously to stay clear of comment or con- trovert that might embarrass Nixon politically. He is a personal Maid—not a political associate—of the President. Nixon has been a frequent guest in Rebozq’s home and the new vacation White House Nixon has purchased is next door to the financier’s house on posh Key Biscayne near Mianii. The property was purchased from George Smathers, the Florida Democrat who retired this year after three terms in the U.S. Senate. * '* ’ ★ Smathers Is a long-time friend of Rebozo and It was to one of the senator’s aides that Rebozo turned for assistance when the Cuban shopping center appeared to be foundering on bureaucratic reefs. At the time Smathers was chairman of the Senate Small Business Committee which, among other things, passes on the Small Business Administration’s budget requests. SMATHERS’ roEA The staff director oi the committee, William Mclnarnay, said in an interview that he intervened, at Rebozo’s request, and got the SBA to expedite final approval of the project. Mclnarnay went on to say Smathers not the committee had suggested the shopping center. “'The SBA came to us and said they were interested in Florida,” he said. “1 think they did It because Sniathers was chairman of the committee.” An SBA official in Washington Insisted privately there was no politics in the deal—but threw up his hands and good-naturedly said, *T don’t know what we would have done” if such an arrangement had been proposed during the Nixon administration. In an interview, Butler said Rebozo is the only person he asked to consider taking on the project, but dismissed que.s-tions about his investments in Rebozo’s business ventures as ‘‘trying to make something out of nothing.” PAYMENT GUARANTEED The shopping center is being developed under a 3-year-old lease guiarantee program of the SBA—but it's the first, and so far the only one, to receive a federal guarantee that 100 per cent of all tenants’ rents for 20 years will be paid. Although the financing arrangements for the 26-unit center seemingly constitute a guaranteed profit for Rebozo and his partner, C. V. W. Trice Jr., a Miami real estate developer, the SBA, Trice and a private consultant unanimously agreed there’s no big money in the center rents. Rebozo and Trice apparently are banking on prosperity in the area, however, because they've bought land across the Nixon Gives Qualified Yes to Big-Four Mideast Talks WASHINGTON (AP) - In switch from Johnson administration tactics. President Nixon has given a qualified “yes” to France’s proposals for Big Fourj power talks on the explosive | Middle East situation. | Former President Johnson and his Secretary of State, Dean Rusk, favored letting the United Nations mission headed by Gun-nar Jarring and the nations in the Middle East try to work out a settlement for themselves, while the big powers stayed In the background. | * ★ Wednesday, however, the Nix-: on administration—in its first major new foreign policy move —said the United States “is pre- pared in principle to consider favorably” the French call fori, talks among the Big Four U.N.i Security Council members. | Israel’s ambassador to the| United States, Yitzhak Rabin, expressed unhappiness in Jerusalem with the American decision, but said he did not expect the talks to lead to any change in the positions taken by the four powers. Rabin said it would have been difficult for the Nixon administration to refuse the proposal because Washington has always favored a free exchange of views among all parties. | In Algiers, President Houaii Boumedienne declared that Arab nations have no right to: bargain with Israel on behalf of lArab Palestinians. “Palestine belongs to the Palestinians and there is no Arab country which can negotiate to the detriment of the Palestinians,” he said. “We say to everyone: Stop the bargaining ...” The American reply to France’s Jan. 16 note was handed to Ambassador Charles Lucet by. Secretary of State William P. Rogers, State Department press officer Robert J. Mc-CHoskey said. The U.S. response proposed “promoting preliminary discus-: sions” between the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain' and France to lay the ground-; \ t', , iV % Nixon has made plain his interest in a new Initiative for a settlement of the protracted Mideast controversy. Last week he termed the situation 'a very explosive powder keg which needs to be defused. The National Security Council spent PLYMOUTH (AP) — Repub-all Saturday on the issue, licans share some of the ideals' of the New Left, including the SLUMBERS AT SIT-IN - With the sit-in at the University of Chicago administration building in its seventh day yesterday, the situation becomes a sleep-in for the youth in foreground. The girl and boy in background are carrying walkie-talkies to communicate with other students in building. 4 Accused of Plot to Smuggle Aliens DETROIT (UPI) — Twol The organized crime division reputed Mafia associates and of the state attorney general’s two other persons were charged office in Detroit said four yesterday with illegally con- aliens, all Italian, were taken spiring to .^smuggle aliens into into custody in Detroit Tuesday (pt »iir| tiriiviir’ the United States from Canada. I night as they tried to enter the j ^ Federal, Canadian, state and country illegally from Canada. Milliken Links New Left, GOP work for an early meeting of the U.N. ambassadors of the four. U. N. FRAMEWORK j But the American answer was qualified in that it stressed the big power talks should be within the framework of the United Nations with the aim of helping Jarring promote a Mideast agreement under the Security Council’s Nov. 2^, 1967, resolution. The U.N. resolution, passed after the June 1967 Arab-Israeli war, called for withdrawal by Israel from the Arab lands she conquered and Arab recognition' of Israel’s right to exist. * * * j • !! Officials said Washington still! favors secure and recognized! | boundaries for the Middle East " nations, settlement of refugees, respect for maritime rights and an arms curb—aims set forth by Johnson in 1967. Share Some Ideals, Claims Governor Miami Financier Charles Gregory (Bebe) Rebozo idea that men must help those who are less fortunate than they are, Gov. William Milliken said Wednesday. “In many respects—not all but many — we hold to the same principles that many young rkdi-cals hold today,” the governor said. 'We ought to try to reclaim those young people who have already defected to another system, and we . ought to prevent those who stand on the brink from joining them,” he added. Milliken’s remarks were included in a speech delivered at the Wayne County Lincoln Day diimer. PROBLEMS mGENT The problems of Vietnam, crime on the streets and racism are “terribly urgent,” he said. ‘Let me say in all sei'iousness now that all of these problems can be dealt with quickly and effectively or the quality of American life is going to sink rapidly. * ★ ★ “While we Republicans direct our energy, our imagination and our proven leadership to the solution of these problems, I believe very strongly that we ought to reserve an important part of our efforts to winning the minds of the young,” he added. “I know this may come as a surprise to some of you,” he said, but “we Republicans share some of the ideals of the New Left. FRENCH RELATIONS With a friendly U.S. response! Fulbrighf Predicts Senate Approval of N-Pact by March J In view of the President’s recommendation on the treaty, FuJbright said, “I don’t see any probability it will be turned down.’ to Paris’ proposal, Nixon alsoi hopes to k«p relations wthl WASHINGTON (AP) - Chair-1 on “negotiation rather than loanee on the upswing after! 3„ j ^ Fulbright of the Sen-'confrontation.” their low during the Johnson' Foreign Relations Commit-tee predicts ratification of the * * * I nuclear nonproliferation treaty He plans to visit President by March 1. Charles de Gaulle during his' “I see no reason to delay”, forthcoming European tour. ' Fulbright said Wednesday after President Nixon called for! Senate Majority Leader Mikej prompt Senate action. Mansfield also estimated the | ★ ★ ★ treaty would go through thei Nixon said in a message to Senate by the end of this month.' the Senate that “ratification of i POSTPONEMENT the treaty at this time would ad- .... . vance this administration’s poll- . added however, there was Will Marry Soon . . — The presidential message was . . „„„ the si^ial the committee had; While Nixon s move has won been awaiting to clear the ty and send it to the floor for ther““ two-thirds vote of approval needed for ratification. j „ INDECISION jSen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., After several weeks of Indecl-jdean of the Senate, remain op; sion, the same committee ap-| posed on the ground the treaty proved the treaty last Septem- lacks sufficienty safeguards to ber. assure all parties to it are abid- But it was never brought to a ing by its mandates, vote. Beetle Denies Rumors That He LONDON (AP) - Beatle Paul McCartney today denied persistent rumors that he is to marry a divorced member of the Eastman Kodak family. ‘‘It’s not true,” said the only bachelor Beatle, who broke hlsi engagement to actress Jane' :. Asher last July. Since November, he has been seen constantly with Linda Eastman, divorced 25-year-old, daughter of American art. collector Lee Eastman and sister of the new general counsel for the Beatles’ Apple organization. She has a, 5-year-old daughter. ★ ★ ★ The Daily Mail said Miss Eastman had told friends she and McCartney planned to marry this month In London. The Soviet-led Invasion of Czechoslovakia turned many members against the idea of approving a pact to which Russia a party. And Nixon, then campaigning local authorities' combined In the investigation, which culminated in charges against Frank Randazzo, 54, Detroit; Mike Mquro, 28, and Paul Dugan, 39, both of suburban Warren, and William Muiidiy, currently saving a sentence in Wayne County Jail for possession of burglary tools. Mafia figure hi testimony Mafia figure in tes imony The four men charged yesterday were specifically charged with smuggling in one alien last October. X 38-foot boat allegedly owned by Dugan also was seized, police said. But they refused to disclose how the alleged entries had been carried out. Specifically, the four who allegedly brought in the aliens Milliken said Republicans believe, as does the New Left, that “power ought to stay as close to home as possible, in the community and in the cities and in the states, and not—where it can be avoided—in the hands of the federal government. ■'We believe, as they do,-ttiat eve^ individual has talents, and must be allowed the greatest possible he said, “and that society ought to be so established as to permit SEATTLE Wash. (AP) — Po-“ lice Chief FYank Ramon pre-® sented the Larson brothers, Joshua, Howard and John, with awards of merit Wednesday for their help In the arrest of a rob-® bery suspect. ★ ★ trio was in a grocery before a U.S. Senate committee were charged with wilfully ®"'!this,pxDression ®tore when they felt something In 1963, and Dugaff was iden- couraging the entry into the ^ * ★ was wrong. They went outside m. “have-not” countries ® “I" short, we believe, as they watched through a window, - , Cnnitol Wa/ren Police Lt. Doug as Gi 1. lawful y entity to e e . _ that men and women ought j * ther seek nor accept nuclear' rFOITl © Opi " be tree to ‘do their own ‘^“^n headed for a tele ; phone. When the man left, Josh-1 Howard followed him to Police]Honor 3 Brothers Plane Down —'Out of Gas' DETROIT (AP) - A Wright , _ Airlines official said Wednesday for the presidency, advised^that its plane carrying 10 pas-against action in view of the ggnggj.g gn,j t^vo crewmen was Czech situation. forced to make an emergency ‘NO CHANGE’ landing in a Canadian field Mon- The President said in his mes-l^ay because it was running out sage urging ratification that of gas. “my request at this time in no senL alters my condemnation ‘h® board of Wright Airlines of that Soviet action.” Cleveland that the lack But, Nixon continued, “I be-i lieve the treaty can be an important step in our endeavor to curb the spread of nuclear weapons ...” Under the pact, nuclear powers would pledge that they would deliver neither atomic weapons nor the know-how for making them to nonnuclear powers. of fuel “resulted from an unfortunate human omission—the inadvertent failure of certain personnel to follow prescribed safety procedure.” The plane, a DeHaviland Sky-liner, was en route from Detroit City Airport to Cleveland when it was forced to land near Leamington, Ont., Monday. No one was injured. News at Glance 6ugan, an auto dealer, cur-| Randazzo, Dugan and Mauro rently is free on $10,000 bond on pleaded innocent at their ar-a charge of conspiracy fo extort raignment in U.S District Court through violence, and Maiffp is free on bond pesiding trial on a diarga'of receiving steden property. before Judge James. P Thbmton and were released on bond pending pretrial examination Mardi 7. things’ ” The heaviest bell in the world ie the Tear Kolpkol, cast in 1733. in Moscow. It weighs 216 tons. his car two blocks away and got the license number. Joshua is 8, Howard, 11 and John, 13. WELCOMES CALL Fulbright welcomed Nixon’s}of^r« call for prompt action. kaus He sdid he was: particularly r*" impressed by Nixon’s emphasising ■y rha Astocittad Pratt THE eOVBRNOR ha wished county boards^ef mnsIbHUv" In settling thefr* alarle^ lunced hit support for William Mc-lii at Republican ttata parly ehalr- street for an office building. The SBA, Trice and the consultant all say any significant profit from the shopping center would come from rising land values brought on by such pro-would come from rising land values brought on by such prosperity. Rebozo has dealt before with the SBA. In 1982, when Butler was a financial specialist in the Miami office. Rebozo obtained a 5'^ per cent, 10-year, $80,000 loan to construct a building for his ab.stracting and title insurance business in Key West, Fla. To qualify for an SBA loan, he had to be. unable to obtain capital through normal banking channels. BANKING CHARTER Only a year later, however. Rebozo applied for a Florida state banking charter as chairman of the board and a leading stockholder of Key Biscayne Bank, which subsequently opened in 1964. Listed In the articles of Incorporation as holder of 100 of the bank’s 20,000 shares were Butler and his wife. SBA regulations say “no employee, nor member of his or her household, shall solicit or accept, directly or Indirectly, any gift, gratuity, favor, entertainment, loan, or any other thing of monetary value, from a person who has . . . financial assistance . . . with the administration.” But the regulations do not say whether an investment opportunity constitutes' “any other thing of monetary value.” Also in 1963, Butler acquired two lots for $10,000 on Fisher’s Island ju.st south of Miami Beach, The island is about 90 per cent owned by Fisher’s Island Inc., whose president is Rebozo, According to Nixon's campaign financial statement, the President also holds an Interest In Fisher's Island, worth approximately $350,000. Butler, asked if his friendship with Rebozo had led to purchase of the lots, replied, “Well, yes, I was aware of them that way.” NATIONAL MOVEMENT Ten years earlier, Butler also bought two lots In a subdivision on Elliott Key—now part of the Bi.scayne National Monument, Rebozo owns 14 lots in that mapped but undeveloped subdivision. In locating a developer for the (3uban.center, Butler said; “Like anything, you sit back and run through the people in the community who would give it a whirl. I’ve known Rebozo for years and know he’s capable. I told Rebozo It was new and explained it to him and asked if he i^ld think it over and let me know.” ★ ★ ★ Another SBA regulation says “an employee shall disqualify himself whenever possible from acting on any official matter which involves a relative or close friend.” Butler informed Rebozo the SBA would guarantee per cent payment of all leases in the center for 20 yearS-r-a guarantee carrying a present price tag of $2,368,320. PILOT PROGRAM SBA officials said they offered the lOO per cent guarantee because the center is a pilot program designed to see if a shopping center tenanted solely by economically deprived businessmen can succeed. Harold Brown, boss of the SBA’s lease guarantee program, said in a Washington interview that it is difficult to find developers for projects of a modest scale like the 34,000-square-foot Cuban center. He said this is why efforts to begin several Negro projects have yet to get off tha ground. A commercial development consultant said privately that developers with $150,000 to invest in a shopping center could make far more money in a bigger operation by going straight commercial rather than through a government program. Trice said he and Rebozo will have spent $900,000 acquiring land, building the center and readying it for the opening expected by the end of February. They obtained $750,000 of that through a mortgage. SITE DESCRIBED The Chiban center-called Centro Commercial Cubano—Is in northwest Miami en a plot next to an unused boat repair yard, across from a planned city park and down the block from an expressway now under construction. The center itself, however, is a striking structure of Cuban-inspired architecture with plenty of decorative plans and shrubs, and a fresh, aii^ atmosphere. It wUl house businesses ranging from a 4,600-square foot restaurant featuring Cuban cuisine to a 520-square foot phonograph record shop. > ★ * Tenants were screened at Rebozo’s request by Dr. Edgardo Buttari, a former minister of commerce and labor in Cuba. After weeding out applicants, he sent the names to the SBA for approval. A few Were rejected, but substitutes sent by Buttari won approval. All had personal or family bflsiness experience in Cuba, Buttari said. The tenants will pay rents ranging from $3 to $3.88 per square foot per year. For startup costs such as fixtures and inventories, virtually all are getting Government Elconomic Opportunity Loans of $8,000 to $25,000-more than $450,000 for the project. INSURANCY POUCY Key to the shopping center is the lease guarantees, a sort of insurance policy that pays the rent If a tenant goes broke or otherwise fails to meet his rent payment. Cost of the insurance is 2.1 per cent of total rents over 20 years. Rebozo and Trice are putting up $6l,000 to cover all premiums and will recoup from charges on monthly rent payments. ' ★ ★ * Given the assurance that thekents will be coming in, Rebozo and Trice-with the help of an explanatory pep talk from SBA officials-obtained a 20-year, $750,000 mortgage loan from Equitable Life Assurance Society. Paying off this mortgage and its interest will up nearly $1.4 million of the guaranteed rents. Taxes, property management and maintenance costs likely will push expenses over the 20-year period past $2 million, reinforcing arguments that the project is no gold mine from a rent guarantee standpoint. TURNED DOWN Butler and Trice both said no figure below the 100 per cent rent guarantee was ever discussed for the Cuban project. Even with that, said Trice, he and Rebozo were turned down by numerous mortgage lenders before Equitable accepted the plan. Just where the idea for a Cuban center originated apparently is a bit ^azy in SBA minds. Brown said, “I imagine the idea came from the regional office in Miami.” Butler said, “Washington asked if we could do anything along the Unes of a Cuban shopping center.” ★ A * Trice said “Rebozo called me and said be had been asked about sponsoring such a project. He said he couldn’t promise much profit.” The Cuban project “slowed down almost to a halt” at one point, said Trice. “The procedure is slow, naturally, when dealing writh the government. You have to go through a lot of different people.” STEPPED UP The pace stepped up a bit, however, after Mclnarnay of Smathers’ Small Business Committee intervened. Mclnarnay, who had met Rebozo during Smathers’ 1962 Senate campaign, called SBA. “The principal thrust of the point I conveyed was in trying to get the matter expedited,” he said. “From the point of view of Rebozo, he had a lot crspns- R Burglaries—5 Property damage accidents—18 Injury accidents—6 Traffic offenses—14 Assaults—5 Vandalisms—6 Carrying concealed weapon—1 Threatening phone calls —2 Molesting—1 Rape—1 Auto theft—1 Apartment Site Plan Rebuffed DETROIT (API - Chairman Albert Zak of the Wavne Coun- , . tv Board of Supervisors backed down Wednesdav and announced "1 ^ " "r- "a . llniversilv east of the (.rand he thinks the supervisors should ~ , , , , ,/ ,,rnnn Trunk Westcm rai road tracks he paid ess han $ 5,000 per was disapproved by the Pontiac; '*4". u 1 j .1. u j 1 . Planning Commission last ntght ' Zak had led the board la.st wwk in setting supervisors' pay * , * * at $12,500 per year and $40 per Inadequate provision for ' meeting. Under the plan, ap- roads was cited The developer,] proved bv a 15-7 vole, supervis- Craflman’s Construction, 1109 ors could have made over $20,- W D'ikj 1 ake, Bloomfield Mills, 000 per year was asked to revise the site] ’ * * * pian A 250-unit complex has! Reacting to a storm of crit-been proposed for the site, icism and threats of recall move * ★ * ments. Zak said “The salary jp pp^pp action, the com-should be below $15,000 definite- mission | ly. But don't go distorting the . Hccommended denial of a' acts by tying, in fringe bene- fi^ hat any county employe is 3 ,pt ytitledto^^ „ west of 9.50 E, Walton. I , I'll 'i J * Recommended approval of, OptOITlBtriSt InVIlBQ « from single Si/enf on Social Security Number, so He's Walking to Speak io Europe family to commercial-office a' parcel on the southwest side of ’ North East Blvd., from Victory ^ , to 59.5 N. East Blvd. TEN DIED INSIDE - Investigators look over the burned-out hulk of a twin-engined air taxi which crashed and burned on takeoff early yesterday at Port Angelog^ Wash. The pilot, copilot and eight passengers died. 'Eye in the Sky' Dr. Paul L Connolly of 4547 Karen, Bloomfield Township, an optometrist and visual consultant to the automobile in ut'iM-r-mi'. M , AP, invited to give LOS ANC7ELES (API — The NEW BEDl'ORD, Ma.ss lAl I ^ scientific presen- Ixis Angeles Police Department — Louis 0.stric is on fool today. Europe wants a helicopter-mounted His driver's license wasn t re- * * * 'eye in the .sky,’’a flying televi- Town Boosts Government by the People Space Switchboard Heading for Outpost TOPEKA. Kan. (AP) - What caPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) tion 22,300 miles above the C.il-i Boosted by a rocket damaged berts. by lightning during an October newed after he refu.sed In give on vision -sion camera, so its tactical com- l his Social Security number to 3^,, 3,,,;,motive research in manders can keep a close watch ’ , the Registry of Motor Vehicles. p:nj,|3nd (lermanv and the on "unusual occurences.” The voters.,hurricane, a new "space switch- Ostric, a dawyer, said the re-c,.andina' (Ml uiiu:4Ucti *"c _ ’ .... i .......» Scandinavian countries a t city police commission asked whirled tlmough a pre- gistry requirement of a Social ,.p,Bareli centers a c t i v c I y the City Council Wednesday to are away on construe- bminary elongated orbit today Security number on the state's engaged in studies of vision as obtain the $55,000 necessary. Be-« stationary outpost new driver's licenses is an inva-it relates to vehicle a n d sides giving a first-hand view of Bion of privacy. Social .Security |^ipjn^,ay tjesign. jemergencies, official say, thel •••n---------o 1^* ^ numbers were not required on j, g member of the system would also provide video the old style licenses American Academy of tapes for later study. * * * Optometry, the Society of -------------------------------- Ostric's pld license expired Automotive Engineers, the' A commercial copying two days ago. [Engineering Society of Detroit machine capable of reproducing mayor and five counciP mem- Tlie board of appeals has a and the Illuminating Engineer- in color has been developed,bers. But as of today the ballot tentative hearing Feb IR ing Society. recently. iwill contain only blank lines. And five voters are required to man the election board and remain on duty 12 hours. The city by law must elect a high above the Pacific's Gilbert Islands. Once on station, the Pacific 3 satellite will more than double commercial satellite telephone and television circuits to and ASS ISOOII Sounds good . . . but is it os good as cash? Of course it is, because you can convert it INTO cash in a jiffy. The electric guitar which nobody plays any more, or any musical instrument, is readily converted into cash when you advertise it for sale in a Pontiac Press Want Ad. PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS Dial 332-8181 or 334-4981 A Trained Ad-Visor W'iU Assist You The satellite can handle l,20fl two-way telephone conversations or four television programs. Two smaller commercial satellites now over the Pacific have a total of only 480 circuits. The 64-nation International Telecommunications Satellite Consortium — INTELSAT $7,500 Fire Hits House in Pontiac Fire did an estimated $7,500 worth of damage to a one-story Pontiac hou.se at 269 Fisher yesterday, fire officials report. No one was home when firemen arrived at 9:.59 a m., firemen said. They fought the fire for nearly two hours. ★ About $5,000 damage was done to the house and $2,500 To its contents, firemen estimated. Fire officials were to investigate the cause of the fire this morning. They identified the owner of the home as Herbert Davis. Death Notiejs, Lambert; also survived by three grand daughters. Recitation of the Rosary will be Friday, at 8 p.m. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Funeral service will b^ held Saturday. February 8, at 10 am. at the St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Brown will life in state at the func'ral home. (Sugge.sted visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.)_________ FORD. FREDERICK; February 4, 1969 ; 9t5 Ennest, While Lake Township: age 55; beloved husband of Helen Ford; beloved son of Ethel S. Ford: dear father of Mrs. Donald Sanger, Mrs, Steven Polk, Mrs. Erving Downer and Robert Ford; also survived by eight g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral -service will be held Friday, February 7, at 2 p.m. at the Ellon Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Interment in Commerce Cemetery. M r . Ford will lie in state at ttie funeral home. FORSHEE, AGNES; February 4, 1969: wife of the late Roy G. Forshee: mother of Mrs. Harry W. (Kathryn) Chapman of ciarkston, Michigan, Mrs. William (Mary) Tar.sney of Farmington and Jack Forshee of Detroit: sister of George DeCrool: also .survived by 12 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Funeral service at Bell Chapel of William R. Hamilton Co.. 820 East Maple A v e .. Birmingham Friday at 11 a.m. Memorial tributes may be sent to the Michigan Cancer Society. Suggested visiting hours, 2 to 4 and. 7 to 9. from stations on the U S. main- paid the National Aeronautics land, Hawaii, Japan, Thailand,'and Space Administration $4.7 Australia and the Philippines. 1 million to launch the $6-millioni DoOth NotiCGS The 322-pound payload soared SECOND IN SERIES into space Wedne^ay mgh I The payload is the second of a atop a three-stage Delta rocket ISeries of four which are to form Which propelled it into ^ great;the first global commercial Lspace communications' network abouU65 0 22,700 miles here. by midyear. The first was The Delta originally was as- launched over the Atlantic in AYRISS, MRS. MABEL: February 4, 1969: 32 Murphy. Street: age 80; dear mother! HEWITT, CHARLES E. (RED): February 3, 1969 ; 57 South Shirley Street: age 65; beloved husband of Marie L. Hewitt: dear brother of Harry Hewitt: also survived by seven grandchildren and Mr. Mrs. Donald Hill. signed to orbit another communications satellite la.st year, but was removed from its pad after the launch area was struck by lightning during Hurricane Gladys. ‘REWORK NEEDED’ December. A second Atlantic satellite is to be launched in Aprii and an Indian Ocean pay-load in June or Juiy. George A. Sampson, vice ■president of the Communica-itions Satellite Corp. (COMSAT of Mrs. Theodore Stone and John M. Ayriss; dear sister of Mrs. Ethel Carr. Lily, Robert, Cecil and Harold Haslock; also survived by three grandchildren and five great-g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral .service will be held Saturday, February 8. at 10 a.m. at the All Saints Episcopal Church. Interment in Perry Mount B.P 0 E. No. 810 will conduct a lyodge of Sorrow at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, tonight at 8. F&AM Roosevelt.Lodge will conduct a memorial service, Thursday at 8 p.m. at the funeral home. Funeral service will be held Friday, February 7, at 1 p.m. at the funeral home. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. will lie in state Donelson-Johns Funeral Home visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to Launch Director Robert Grayithe U S. group which manages of the Kennedy Space Center re-jlNTELSAT. said: “We will this ported the rocket required a year achieve a truly global com-"jremendous amount of re-|munications system. This is work” to damaged parts before-what we've been working for.” 1 ^ ’______________________________ it could be used for the Pacific 31 Because of the successful De-'BROWN, ANNA BELL launching. cember launch, COMSAT an- February 5, 1%9; 154 North After checking Pacific 3 forinounced a 40 per cent reduction Astor Street; age 61; beloved about 49 hours, trackers plan tojin rates for television transmis- wife of Harry L. Brown; dear send a radio signal at about 9 sions across the Atlantic Ocean, mother of Mrs. Guy (Lucille) a.m. EST, Friday to fire a An official said comparable rate Hackett; dear sister of Mrs. spacecraft motor to kick the reductions will be sought if Pa- James Richway, Mrs. John sateliite into a permanent posi-1ciflc 3 is successful. Haines, Joseph and Ella Park Cemetery. Mrs. Ayriss^ Mr. Hewitt will lie in state at ... 1. • ._x_ ii--' iha funeral Vinmp fSlIiycrpstPd LAST 3 DAYS Ends Sat., Feb. 8th enneui .WAYS FIRST QUALITY If COXOft PORTRAITS BY EXCLUSIVELY AT PENNEYS! ^ for o 5" X 7" portrait All portraits aro delivered to you in our store . . . There are no mailing, handling or other extra charges . . . Your choice of several poses. ONE OR TWO CHILDREN UNDER 12 YEARS, PHOTOGRAPHED SINGLY. Two childr.n photo- 1.49 2.98 Wallet tizei available AAIRACLE AAILE SHOPPING CENTER, TELEGRAPH & SQ. LAKE RD. 9:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday thru Saturday Feb. 4 to Feb. 8 the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.)__________________________ KOReTjACOB H.: February 4, 1969 ; 5252 Walker Road, Davison; age 89; dear father of Mrs. Ruth Bensett and Mrs. Myrtha Loder; dear brother of Mrs. Alice Pugh; also survived by two grandchildren and six great-g r a n d c h ildren. Masonic memorial service will be tonight, at 7:30 p.m. at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, 135 South Street, Ortonville. Funeral service will 6e held Friday, February 7, at 2 p.m. at the fuiperal home. Interment in Green C 0 r n e h s Cemetery, Hadley. Mr. Kore will lie in state at the funeral home. NELSON, VICTOR; February 4, 1969 ; 3228 Watkins Lake Road. Waterford ToWqship; age 67; beloved husband of Eva M. Nelson: dear father of Mrs, Raymond Ebey, Victor A, and A. Vernor Nelson; also survived by 10 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, February 7, at 11 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Nelson will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) THOMAS, EZEKIEL ; January 31, 1969; 141 South Boulevard West; age 86, dear father of Mrs. Norris (Marie) Culp: dear grandfather of Jesse B. Culp. Funeral service will be held Friday, February 7, at 11 a m. at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. Following the service here Mr. Thomas will be taken to Metropolis, Illinois for service and burial Sunday. M r. Thomas will lie in state at the funeral home after 3:30 p.m. today. TRUIT, FRANK E.; February 4, 1969; 122 West Rutgers; age 78; beloved husband 0 f Florence Truit; dear father of Mrs. Clifford (Wanda) Neddo, Mrs. Elaine Orvis and LeRoy Truit; dear brother of Mrs. Harry (Minnie) Davidson and Elmer Truit; also survived by nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, February 7, at 1 p.m. at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. Interment in Lakeview Cemetery. Mr. Truit will lie in state at the funeral home, after 3 p.m. today. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) FOyrTIAC PTOSS, THURSDAY, FWUARKC, 1909 X “---- “ • * ------------ 6 Help Wont.d MaU , 6IHtlp W.nted Feim.1. 7|H*1p Wa\d F«mol. 7 Salef Help J DENNY'S RESTAURANT *............... ...........mW.ni h«, TOY /rTVXr i' __________ GirVs''Nrdenv'?rv‘'’i'„ I?I.7.,„„*'|, MULTIPLE USTINgIerVICE Shorsr'gX-'uL?;, «-■...... You Sell? OTHER FOLKS DO... Adjuster X----------- CALL frame'“and ALIGNMENT branch claims manager i$ BUY MORE 7-3700 : cross, hoMaovs, vacallon, 14 Iy HOME SALES ; MICH. MUTUAL LIABILITY i ~ waitresses £rS! H C°'SeTT '"tl 7-6560 'SALESMAN^ - ,':cor;,^'c;rR7j’^.'rE'si^;,"’aT; 1“Sk-l'S“s :"E“'-rt: •;“ IS: “:s:::„ °?J:IF^^o!^klng^onment iar'l^r' WATERFORD TOWNSHIP i "i;n«r PONTUC aV .I'sTs^jsr ' SCHOOLS fha“^,E?Tr^nc'*'Box"Sl*"Fo*r; ., HOSTESS WOOL PRESSER , gaia#--3;! ...mm- rr.«“sreT'=- woRnr— SANDERS!. ....... _ xiilp^F «-oir^-hh|s~ - ■ ,r c'.;,vi:a"" rr„: ^E€1S ' mr^o PERSONNEL MANAGER ".I" iBSSi Slild:'=ISSStX;—T °i fi.=,r............... i: -SlSlM==S“ :fgas|S:55 .! " MEDICAL SECRETARY "** 1.2 ^o .0... d,xS£i r„ah once. i.av. rs5S, “Ssjvsj;: 'a/s. aii;;. 'ToK's; maid-beauty SALON cA'k"'dayY THE HAIR SHOP _c,ii>-i3A7; K—13^ THE PONIJAC PjlBSS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 19»>9 For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 11 ftutiiiMi Sarvict ISlWantad HwMhoM SMdt 29 RMd. «7»-»534. A JOURNEYMAN CARfENTER|COLOR ANTENNA, llt.W, compHteiwiLL bUV OR SELL your IMMs work of oil klnJt, lomo or an wINno ono Chlmnoyi Tylor't Auction, 0S9 omill, rotSliw, »«mion», earoooLl mounts G & G Antonno, iH ^ WALL, INSTALLED, SioriXo'm « 'Jnslt(on (n th© bu^nfvs world with WantMi ReeI btal* 26 ApartWKWrtt, bniliiEdl p I to 50 LOTS, J NftO OF AN f II WANTED: 1 PLANER. >r jointer. In good conditl '* WOULD LIKE TO BUY Income Tox Service TAX RETURNS cafetolly »rag© f©» 3 OR 4 CLEAN BEDROOM home i HOMES, LOTS, ' ACREAGB PARCELS. FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACT. WARREN STOUT, Realtor .n„ , t,5o N. opoyk* ee S-SI4S rnoMi^; uT^ii Dol'v '*'1 • MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICi C-A-S-H 3 ROOMS, DRAYTON .. -----Rpply aa-W33. jrta, working Psychiatric «mai f n; • va laMt for d»v L. 4\A9 Iepair man looking t Work Wonted Female Al TE R at IONS DONE IRONINGS WANTED E » work, 335 4780 MIDDLE AGED LADY df twme live In ©25 5150 Practical nurse, wi rH^r^nces F*E^4 699r ' Iet'iRED LADY would iinmo Mor© for home v R©t©r©nc©»^ turn^ Repi fvPlNG, DICTATION TIVE TRANSFER destres 3 ar©a, 2 childr©n, 11 ©nd 13 yr$" Call 33S-4I71. ask lor Mr. Ross NEED IMMEDIAtELV,^ HOUSE or' ' aoartmanl. for mother and 2' ' Call FE .5-5682 bookkeeping and taxes ' V.12 ^424 , I »lf NOl Y I OW COST KEYS TAX SERVICE EM 3,6;ill khore living Quarteri ... ■ ’ N "PERRY Hallmark Income Tax I ASl ACLURAIE M: R a Rd , Convolescent-Nuriing 21 , CONVALESCING WITH SPECIAL CARE Wanted Real Estate 1 MILLION SEMINOLE HILLS SJ2 Orchard Lk. Rd. VTE HOME FOR >en. 693 8756. NCY FOR ELDERL (ontracii. morigagf homes, lots or acri W© will give you c equity. Our eppralse 333-7156 Miller Bros. REALTY CASH : IN AT s Brian Inc. fir„0 Horn., J, Divorce-Foreclosure i Don't qlv» your horn* awayl °G*u'.?a“^Ki;' 1 Agant 474-0310 Lauingarj El DERLY COUPLE NEEDS tiomfl near Mall. Ca«h. Agent, 334-4953^ | I I HAVE A PURCHASER ' I WITH CASH FOR A ol STARTER HOME IN d OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL y' AGENT, 47A1498 or 33«-4952. _ t LOTS-WANTED IN PONTIAC T| Immedlata closing. REAL VALUE ROOMS, ___________ I, complately turn, S30 pa ---- jius *7S dap. 1 Intar walcoma, call twt. 10 a.m. and p.m. J35-II34 or call J34^545. 4 ROOMS and' BATH, carpatad, al IracMvaly furnished, no children o pels,J35-7842 or 424-SU3.___ 4 ROOMS AND BATH, oldar horns quiet peopte, no pets, 8135 mo avellabla March I. 473-9458 attar BAC H ELORTlTfooms,^ Parkway ........... BACHELOl prlv«a,_<,- -- ------- EFFICIENCY I ROOM wh, Uwfanihhed 38 ARoe NOW ACCRPflNO 1^, lovaty Parkway Mof I, HoHy. ME 4-9107. kCHEL^S7'3 ROdMS. MW carptt, • quiat. fiorthifid. Fig fl-4376. Must Kava rafartnces. Cail aftar 6 p.m. 674.n5i. ef'fTciency J-r6oM, an utiiTtlaa turnishad, good condition, from 85d daposlt. ront 03.30 a sraak. 10 a.m, to 8 p.m. call 33A30O5 LOVELY CLEAN J ROOMS AND Coupe only. No pats. UL 2-3115. Aportmantt, Unfurnished 38 NOW , ...... LEASING BRAND NEW-WATERFORD Crescent Manor Apts. 1744 Crescent Lk. Rd. 1 BLOCK N. of M-S9 Spacious 2-lMdroom units faaturin Individually controlled heal and al cond., hixurlout c a r p a 11 n < throughout, privato b a I c o n I a s Planty of cloaaf 'apaco, groum noor, laundry facllltida In avan building, beautiful ground' ovarlooking the Clinton River. Rental IncTudaa all facliltlaa except alactricity. No .u—— CUSTOM C tpaclal featurea t o a. Call ua for datalla. START YOUR OWN BUSINESS ' In an araa ready to boom. A 4 bedroom ranch home on a 70x275' lot on Auburn \Rd. |utl west of Rochester Rd. Commercial loning possible 819,900. tOVELY HIGH ACRE LOT Is the selling lor this ,well planned 3 bedroom ranch home. i Spacious living room, Immense family room, dining ““ kitchen plus a for 'EO APPLIANCES 1 CRAFTED... BY "HOTPOINT" SEE MANAGER APT. No. 107 12-4 P.M. only. Dally by Appl. OR CALL 673-5050 VALLEY PLACE APaAtMENTI SNYDER, KINNEY 6c BENNETT :HESTER 136 W. UNIVERSITY (Second floor) 651-6100 or OR 334-3100 nent furnished, sec. dep., required. See Mgr., apt. 109, 2427 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. Arrowhead Mall. Apts. Call 335- 2-BEDROOMS — 2 baths I1U IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY »eparata Bldgs, for famillet with Children OPEN DAILY 10 a.m. to I p.m. I Rent Houses, Furnished 39 1 bedroom, deposit, pay your 674-2236 McCullough realty I 343-4574' Highland Rd. (M-591 MLSi 'ticome. T7 Clairmont. 3 ROOMS “ AND ' BATh7 'stovV refrigerator and utilities turn. 24 Taylor.____________ _ _ 3 ROOMS AND BATH, adults only. I Apply managar. Apt. 3, 2720 Dixit .... ........ SERVICE to landlords, reliabla tenants waiting. ART DANIELS REALTY, 22177 CR 4-9250. 1230 ' ^ Painting and Decorating 23 A SYNDICATE’ LAUINGER ______________________________________ 3 ROOMS AND BATH, partly 3 ROOMS AND BATH, Thinkina of Sellina? lumisned, utmiiei, »i25. can Mr.' 338-2438. Get our appTai.al llrsl-guar.nle.dEA'’'-'''®'^'-3W:'t541._ " sale 3 POOMS AND BATH, *145 LAUINGER REALTY WnVftN VLANl.', E Building Servicei-Supplies 13 \ LOW OVERHEAD \CASH AND CARRY \ PRICES their agent to < 673 1168 Transportotion NFW CADIUACS TO N 9B59 Wonted Children to Boord 28! Medium pif loo ft. each THICK plair ROCK salt per 1( Medicine cabinet SPECIAL Birch InsulkLIO LICENSED DAY CARE, horn# X IS ‘ Pontiac Airport. 673-0255. Wonted Household Goods 29 15" 107 ” 1 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL. 1 per ' 81^5 highest PRICES PAID FOR good 82 25 i9,»S ,1 e you? and appllancet. Or «”''Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action M. A. B'ENSON COMPANY L umber ^nd^ B uM^r^s^Supc PHONE: 334-2521 OPEN 8 to S Saturdays Von^^Realty to- a cash sale The Tike prospects going through your VON ’ Kty REALTOR ILS 3401 W HURON 485-5802, It buay 482-5800 A BETTER CASH DEAL “ All cash lor homas, Pontiac and Drayton Plaint araa. Caih In 48 houri. Call homa purchasing department. YORK REAL ESTATE FE I?!/! OR 4 03 PRIVATE PARTY WANTS to buy 2 or 3-lamily Income, FE 5-0303. SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER, FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVE-NmoS. FE^^OS. fRANSFERRED COUPLE" WITH 85000 down dasirat J-badrooi home In Waterford aroe. Aqcnt D _^1649. _____ Want to sell? leed of goo,, the Clarkston S ROOM UPPER, 830 a WEEK 335-5743 AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS ipplications for i ______ _,_jrtment8. New un /ailable soon. 673-5168. BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS Ideally situated in Bloomfitld-Blrmlngham area, luxur * * ~ bedroom apartments a v from $145 per month ______________ carpeting, Hotpoint air conditioning and appliances, large family kitchens, swimming pool and large sun deck — All utllltlet t-------* electric. No children. Locate South Bivd. (20 Mila Rd.) be Opdyke and 1-75 expressway, daily and Sunday, 12 to 6 ROOM HOUSE ne Genrral, fireplace. I) basement with washer utilities paid $175 per t Pontiac dryer ’ld';'"334-454l 230 E. MAPLE, TROY. 3 bedrooms. East City 5 Bedrooms You can purchata a flna family noma for nothing down If you have a steady lob. Includat full dining room, full basement. Price only $13,150. Call J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. 7732 Highland Rd. (M-59) DAILY OR 4-0304 EVES. EM 3-7544 extras, $52,900. Full basement ... ..... Lake privileges, $14,800. 25 ""Tlattley realty 420 COMMERCE RD. AT ROCHESTER ivi story bungalow i bath, recreation r t, garage. Ideal I n water and sew«t a. 829,900 — Immediate possession this 3 bedroom brick, formal dl Ing room, 2 full baths, full bas ment, gas heat, near schools, t( leges. Terms, Office In Rochester I site. Sheldon ■1*—'—>. ■ Quick Refer«nc®iv^Y’L>- Wa are li residential _ ... vea, Waterford and Two. Wa will be glad to talk you with no obligation. Pleas# cl OR 4 0304. J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. 7732 Highland Rd. (M-59) y\ 3-7546. SPACIOUS apart-[ ’'''I'*- scnuitz. 474-054. ...---- home.' _ . Home and acreage. No brokers. Enjoy A HAWAIIAN Ranches, Colonials, up to 2 baths, 1-2-3 bedrooms. Brick, basem^-** Children welcome. 1337 ryiawn, corner of W. Hopkins. 335- 6171. Agent. _________________________ RENT WITH OPTION Ranches. Colonials. 1-2-3 bedrooms, up to 2 baths. Brick, basement. From $103 monthly. Big Tax Sav- Rtnt SLEEPING ROOMS, 2 w.... ing. Men. Ponflac. B52-49S9. BY OWNER. 2 bedroom on 1 acres, Orion Township, glass pat carpet, drapes, air conditionii Included, submersible p u m | cIreJiar driva, 2-car garaga. I appointment only, no agents. 61 6909, 332-7020._____________ BY OWNER - 4 bedroom bri tra lai ” ‘ arge pi backyar ____________________________ BY owner": BLOOMFrELO" bedroom, * ----" I SPECIAL ____s, lamlly room. < privileges. $17,900 3 BEDROOMS P-73. GET OUT OF the city. ' enloy country living In Roch much more. We're offering .. fine looking brick ranch with bedrooms end another pottlbly ... glace of utility room, partial RAY Salt Houms *49 ■anch. IVi baths, new ------1, axceptlonally fireplace, full a b I na ■ on_______________ .... heat. 120x100* lot, ---------1, lift la ____ .-lad. Commtrct Lake. 482- touch up could lazenby CLARKSTON AREA ancher, full basement. mortgage. ^ ROYCE LAZENBY, Reftljor Open dally 9-8 4424 W. Walton - OR 4-0301 LIKE FUNf lake front masonry Pontiac Lake, large d front rolls It 60' of summer r o 11 i HAVE YOU BEEN WAITING for a 3i bedroom home In Perry Park. To see this exceptional home withj cathedral ceilings and gas furnace,; call Ray for your personal ap-: pointmenf. Best of all there is no down payment on this $15,000 _home. 6W^410L__________________ HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty Colonial—Lake Privileges Fox Bay Estates, lovely 9 rooms, only 8 years old. Gleaming oak floors throughout, 4 bedrooms. IVi baths, separate dining room, kitchen with dining area, 20-family room, brick wall fireplace, full basement, 2'/s car finished garage. Only 835.500. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3208____________ 363-7181 HAGSTRAM, REALTOR 4900 W. HURON OR 4-035t ' "■ ■ p.m. FE 4-70r anch. Newly I larage, mint condition. 837.00C BY OWNER, EAST SIDE income, good condition, close to schools, factory and bus line, sell on land contract with satisfactory -"------ ^yment, call altar 4 p.m.. BY OWNER. 3 bedroom _____________ ... dian Villaga, lirga family room, finishad basemant, c a r p a 11 n g, drapes, atove, refrigerator, washer, drier, S2S.500. Immediate HOWELL TOWN & COUNTRY INC. HIGHLAND, BRANCH OFFICE PHONE: 313-685-1585 HOWARD T. KEATING We turn to r ATTRACTIVE FURNISHED ROOMS for men, Pontiac area, $12 per wk., OR SdS39 or EM 3-2544._ COMFORTABLE ROOM, WATER, relrigeralor, poking. ^-9454._ clean, cozy, light housekeep--'.“fiaM"i"9' "0 ‘"’“‘‘'"O' •’otchelor. 852- „ I CLEAN CARPETED ROOMS 1 AflerJ OR 4-1397_ ' CLEAN "' S LEE P I N G ROOM,' asbestos home v ,...y $18,500 FHA. Call u more details. 674-4101. RAY it SERVICI- SUPPUK - IQUIPMINT ' r.f Aluminum Bldg. Items Answering Service ANSWERING SERVICE Boots ond Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Slercraft, I.M.P. S i I ve r I I n i Fiberglass 8. Aluminum Boat Merc, outboard & stern dr _ 1265 S. Woodward at Adamt_ Carpentry lA CARPENTRY Floor Sanding Floor Tiling « ' f, 'fj#, J'aVv-.' Sand-^Grnvel—Dirt FILL SAND LOADING DAILY WANTED LOTS ACREAGE HOUSES In the Clarkston area Clarkston Real Estate 15854 S. Main MA 5-5821 , WANTED: DEAD OR ALIVE ^ oulrlght^or ^jiive yw ^a guaranleadj DORRISSON,*^ REALTORS ' ( "Established 1930" 474-0324 ’ Apartments, Furnished 37 I OR 2 ROOMS, CARPETED, ntw| WEEKEND Every Weekend Year-Round POOLSIDE COLONIAL VILLAGE East Apartments 3379. Call after white " Chlrstian 39._____________ IVE ROOM for , home privileges. 332- n siding, cards in LARGE, CLEAN ROOM Re'lsotTF'E 4-437I____*" LARGE ROOM FOR li^. Kitchen privileges. No amoking. 335-4207. LARGE CLEAN ROOM. Prlvatu entrenca. Shower. Near TeFHuron lor gentleman. FE 8-3338.___________ LIKE NEW, LARGE studio room. Private entrance and bath, garage, business and protasslonal people. $70 per month. Call 474-3892.______ LOVEL.Y ROOM for professional basement. Attached 2 car ga lot 110x307, 1345 Shorn NEAR CLARKSTON And 1-75 entrance. Approximately 60 acres. Some lake frontage. (Some has been sold). Has gravel private lake (small one: cavatina a spring, $75,00 might accept a good ce Land selling at a high pri area. Please contact Mr. _______ Linebdugh. May reverse charges. 3 bedro< 646-1234, Birmingham. , C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT Jevisburg 444-1234 and lam ______^venjng Calls Welcome plus lot. HALLMARK REAL ESTATE 4737837_ Take “front homes ROSS AND LAKE PRIVILEGE HOMES, 3-5 BEDROOMS, lW-3 BATHi FROM $33,900 INCLUDING LOT LAKELAND ESTATES and Sunday 1 tc (Vest of WaltOii divu. un iafiAi* Hwy. North on Shoreline Blvd. II Model 623-0670 S. Telegraph FE 4-05»l E PRI NAake i s extra _______ Gives _______ _ ____ Otter and Sylvan Lakes. Has 2 bedrooms, full basement and plen-ty of extras, carpel, marble sills, coved ceilings, sandstone fireplace and tiled foyer. See whet else it offers. Cali us today. 674-4101. RAY_ “LOOK WHAT'S “NEW FOR '69 $700 DOWN Pluf costa moves you Into • new t-bedroom, full basement, aluminum rancher, located on large S4xl20 ft. lot In city of Pontiac. Paved streets and sidewalks Included In price of only $18,400. 30-year FHA terms. Place your order now for early spring delivery. Model temporarily located at 84S Northflald. Open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Parsonson Bulldert Inc. 338-8588. M-59^ni immediate occupancy. OR 3-7440: HAVE BOUGHT BUSINESS ^^34^93^ after 5 p.m BIG HOME SMALL PRICE One look will convince you of I ■ ■" ' niently locate- jst $15,000 ' sleepTEig room I ilue of the conveniently located 8 ojn home at I ................ ..... terms. It has 3 lar k'itcht Snow Plowing Do All My Own WorkI U/’II I I * w 1 AAA, B $ K Snowplowing, Com Will Insulate Your j ^rciai ^and Home For Less ! ty 335-0064. 3388665. 332-5024. " 3 2414 Eves. 624 2339 1-A SNOW PLOWING, RaasonabH Lumber JERRY SNOW PLOWING, 24 ?. 338-8427 or 682-8518. ROOFING. SNOW TALBOTT LUMBER \ licensed. R«as. Call aM«r 5 p.m. 682 0648. ADDITIONS AND ALTERATIONS of aflV kind. FE 5-1331 CARPENTRY AND CEMBtIT WPrK, roofing, gutter. INTERIOR FINISH, paneling, 40 yean • E 4 5170 kitchens (ptriance, FE Home Repair ALL KINDS OF HOME REPAIR. Free estimates, call OR 3 2835 MODERNIZATION OF ALL TYPE and cement work. 625-55IS. Moving, Storage ■» MOVING CO Yo»*r .ahsis FE 4 4864 CLARKSTON suppliei.: plowing. 673-9297. E 4-4595 COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIAL garage, 1 person only. $65 plus util. 1 year lease. I1< Ml 6-2895. I BEDROOM APARTMENT Orion, newly dec-------- couple, all utllftie mo.‘ Call 693-6103. nd^bath.l Norton. ^ Watkins Lake R( CE ROA! .WV... *4~'—' * heat, heated 2’/a “icrete drive, couia oe convern > 3 nice apartments. Will Gl week. 789 S. Woodward. TWIN b"eDS, Prlvala entre FROM $T6Ymonthly" ^AND BOARD, homa cooked l-9-:i h©drrsnm< Rrlrlr h*«.r«d8r$»c I ,eaH^335^67^ SNOWPLOWING LOTS AND I, 332-3251. SNOW PLOWING 2 ROOMS AND BATH. ®3*-<280 17-1 bedroom’ epts.. ________ 2 ROOMS, UTILITIES FURNISHED, 17-2 bedroom apis., from prefer working lady. FE 4-3858. INCLUDING CARPETING 2 AND 3 ROOMS, Ulllltles furnished" " Couple only. 332-4581 i _ “JL'.'./*!..??! 2 ROOMS AND BATH, $'22 per w( L e 5 1241 evenings 191-195 W. KENNETT ROAD welcome. 1337 Cherrylawn.l —--------------------- ol w. Hopkins, 335^171,1 Rant Form Property Garden Court Apartments f\. Agent for owner, 338-699$. CLARKSTON SCHOOL DISTRICT - f land. Reduced h tiac Motors |2 SEPARATE OFFICES to i I residential. 334-6259. " SNOW PLOWING, " Union residential and commercl Cement Work ALL TYPES OF CEMENT WORK. 625-5515 BLOCK AND CEMEN' Piano Tuning PIANO TUNING REPAIRING Tree Trimming Service 1 TREE SERVICE BY 2 ROOMS AND BATH, $25 a I $50 dep. 673-5491. 2 BEDROOMS. i $125 per mont^-Call between ( Lake. 2 ROOMS, NO CHILDREN or pets 363- 890 Robinwood. 338-2754. 3 LARGE ROOMS, warm." 2 closets -arpeted, close t I FE 8 2734 Pon. OSCAR SCHMIDT FE 2:5217 removed Painting ond Decoroting .. P.Timi.TP PP's-iiiO ©7ilsin l* rooms. PRIVATE“baTH and * •© ©STimaT©. FE 5-4449. 674-3510. j iranC9. FE 5$466. Call after 6 p. TREE SERVICE, etump»13 ROOMS AND BATH, 2 “ ‘ down the 1 Chamberlain. FE 4-1458 334-9049 or Utilities. ROCHESTER LUDLOW apartments 7 Ludlow, Rochester TY vacancy. $150. a Hotpoint applianc 358-54201 ditioning and cleaning furnished. ining ....... . John Stier, 674-£136. 3 OFFICE SPACES, HEAT, turn.. 4540 Dixie, OR 3-1355. excellent shipping. 315-5253. Trucking GUARANTEED. Free eatimetet. ' ■ 473-7278; UL2‘4751 .......... 4«2 0620 ____ A PRICE TO SUIT - COMMERCIAL, industrial AND ' eod residential ^B^jock and .emenl Thompson GUIt^N'S CONST. CO. AMERICAN E'aGLES PAINTERS Want Ads For Action Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Aportments, Unfurnished 38 2- Plenty of free parking. I 651-5553 0T 651-4576. ________ OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE, dvUI divide 1o suit any size office up to 334-7677. 4.'2J J&B PAINTING COMPANY, ' PAINT 49 20S6 laragei cleaned and odd lobs. Call inytlrrre, free estlmatei. 334-9049. 335-5253. FE’5- A-1 light MOVING. TRASH hauled reasonable. FE 4-1353. interior HAULING AND RUBBISH. Name anging. your price. Anytime, FE 8-0095. LIGHT HAULING end odd |obs7 FE Dressmaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS. ALL TYPES Kk desses, leather coats. 682-9533 ' iETTY "JO'S dressmaking, a t© _tlon» ^d weddings, 674-3704 ALTERATIONS - 335 9079 Drywoll _Que-©nte©d 335 1419 Eavestroughing MCCORMICK ELECTRIC, n guaranteed work, Reae. 335-^50. quality WORK ASSURED PalnS | Odd |ob$. FE 4-2347. Tb^'2 ! LIGHT HAUUNG^ AND moving. SPRAY PAINTING ....... - RATES._ LIGHT HAULING. BASEMENT^ garages cleaned. 674-1242. _ LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, d rubbish, fill dirt, grading and L oravel and front-end loading. FE 2- I. Wall Was 59. _ .....Y PAIf 852-2940, K Plostering Service ,. 6/3 6*:jTER and dry V Trucks to Rent Plumbing & Heating CONDRA plumbing & HEATING Sa> in Dally Including Sund, Excavating A-l BULLDOZING, f fULLDOZING TRU reasonable. r a I i a b aatimatea OR 3-1165 Fencing on Pickups l'3-Ton Sfal TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trailers Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. 1 Dl iiuBiiu,- .iur. 825 $. WOODWARD - L PLUMBING AND HEATING, cb ,i.iU4U ©t George Do it^73-0377. _ Y® p, UMBING AND HEATING Service'” ,nq^R.pajr,_33W98i.------------, WollChnnen Restaurants bloomfield wall cleaners, . ' Wells cleened. Rees. Satisfectlofi guaranteed. Insured. FE 2-1631._ Well Drilling ' well DRILLING, well points IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY CHILDREN WELCOME YOU'LL ENJOY LIFE MORE IN A BEAUTIFUL NEW APARTMENT BETWEEN 2 LOVELY LAKES. COME OUT TODAY. > I- and 2-BEOROOMS - • private balcony or patio • • *CL APPLIANCES INCLUDED • EXTRA STORAGE SPACE a PRIVATE PARKING • PRIVATE BEACH AND BOATING FACILITIES • OPEN FOR INSPECTION: SAT. and SUN., NOON-4 P.M. • RENTALS FROM $152 MONTHLY a 7 MINUTES TO PONTIAC, 35 MINUTES TO DETROIT MON.-FRI., 4-7 P.M. PHONE 482-9031 or 357-4300 Right on Cast Lake Rd. SYLVAN ON THE LAKES on Cass Lake Rd., between Cass ond Sylvan Lakes DIRECTIONS: From Pontiac, taka Elirabatb Lake Rd. to Cast Lake I Aportments, Unfurnished 38 Aportments, Unfurnished 38 NEW ROOFS POR OLD, HOT ROOF 2-1831. . UL PONTIAC FENCE CO. 1(933 Di "A PAD THAT'S RIGHT OUT OF PLAYBOYI" 30-DAY OCCUPANCY That's what one young iwlngar laid whan ha first glimpsed an Oakland Valley ApartmantI Modestly, wa agree. IM'va put all the latest luxuries Into these 1 and 2 bedroom apart-— -----living rooms, terrace dining rooms, even PLAN TO MOVE Single or small tulta In our_ carpefed and panel^ building, AA-24 lust No. of 1-75 from $15. 391-3300 LADD'S OF PONTIAC UNION LAKE AREA — dandy larga office space with separate private office. All utilities plus air conditioning. $170 month. Excellent parking lot. 363-3208 or 363-7153. FRANKS REALTY. Rent Business Property 47-A 20x58' BUILDING $100 PER MO.________ FE 8-4484 3 NEW, 3 BEDROOM ranch homas, by builder, brick and aluminum, 2'/> car garage, bullt-ins, carpeting, large lots, $31,700, $2 3,500 Rochastar, Utica araa. Wa h " , W. of Oxford. $24.90( -- ...— ,--------------- . -------- ..a're serious about the Playboy bit. we've built the greet new Oakland Valley Club ‘-r Oakland Valley Apartment residents and their guests, has a pool, card and game rooms, exercise room, sauna Iths, and a very free-wheeling atmosphere. All yours for little as $177 a month. P.S.-Bonnie$ Wal--------------- ilcoma. I P.M. Saturday--1 ta 4 P.M. OAKLAND VALLEY APARTMENTS on Walton Road between Adams and Opdyke just east of 1-75 Rhone. 335-2641 BUILT BY THB SMOKLIR COMPANY 3 BEDROOM HOME r University, ------- nicely Ian avergreeni ____ _____ heat, iraao* kitchan ' - larga haaiao 2< , --nverfad fo workshc postasaion — $17,500 and fru^ garaga, convai aarly post ?uaH?M*bu MENZIES $ BEDROOMS, BRICK, full basa-mtnt, tilaV. Flraplaca, 1W baths, scraenad in patio. $18,500. Assume 4.75 per cent mortgage for $6,500. Located In Herrington Hills sub. Owner, FE 2-8881. _____ must sell — ranch type 3 bedroorr 2 full baths, 1 with shower, ba&< ment with recreation room, 2 attached garage, 1.07 Asking price $24,9f^ DIAL ' ........... ^HIITER LAND CONTRACT TERMS -- FHA TERMS I, North side. You WE BUILD 3 bedroom ranchers with oak floors, full basemant, aluminum siding, $15,390 on your lot. CALL B. C. HIITER REALTOR, 3792 Elizabeth Lake Rd., 682-8080, after 8 p.m. 682-6427. GIROUX REAL ESTATE 5338 Highland 673-0200 NEW^ HOMES 3-4-5 BEDROOMS 1-1’/2-2’/2 BATHS We have fur yuur seleclinn e chuice uf 9 mndels with 15 SIstincllve elevatlunt. Prices range Irum $17,100 tu $37,900 plus lot. A New Model Is Open For Your Inspection m Colony Heights from 2-5 dplly t Friday. Take Eliz. Lake ............ '---1 Wllllame , ---- Highland Vi Mile West of Oxbo__ ONLY $380 DOWN schraM'royer HOLLY OFFICE tiding. $800 will This I BEGINNER'S LUCK 9250. 1230 N. Milford Rd. MU 5- Cash For Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 CUSTOM HOMES IN HI-HILL VILLAGE Country estate size lots near Meadowbrook-Oakland University. Unlimited recreational facilities In adlacent 2400 acre park. Paved roads, low taxes, excellent schools. NOW AVAILABLE 4 bedroom farm. Colonial, less than 2 years old. Separata dining room, first floor utilities. Cozy family room with fireplace. Bonus storage In over sized attached garage. Luxurious carpeting $45,750 beamed KEEPING ROOM. Fu M lance. Vacant. Agent for < $38,500 LADD'S OF PONTIAC 1704 S. TELEGRAPH FE 4-2533 room, full room, FHA ■ I. Agent for owner, OR 4-1449. Dixie lake front. home within Income epi carpeting and partly fu garage, garden and fruit, ELWOOP REALTY_______ payment, call i anytime. 713 DeSOTA. THIS HALF of family unit contains 2 bedi bath on tacond floor," ------ floor," living dining room and kitchen -floor. Full basement meted, has gas» hot a and laundry tub*. Can bt “d at tl4JN or —J with $100 dos... ling cost osttmatad at $350 to lllfM ----AS- Woodhuil Lake, IVa baths, price only $8,000. Term* Cail YORK RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding taxet and Inxuranca ONLY $10 Deposit 3-BEDROOM HOME WITH APPLICATION GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLIWTWNS PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROB; OPEN DAILY AND S/^. AND SI (SwfKNUWtt '^LUW^EAprt REAL VALU_---- For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 642-4220 movt you in on FHA terr List With SCHRAM and Call the Van OPEN EVES. AND SUN. Ill JOSLYN Ava. FE 5-94 EALTOR Ml Serving Pontiac Area for 20 year: Investors Special —Tm Cape tod, full basemeni rork. $2,000 taka over $2,500 JOSEPH Singleton Realty 417 S. Paddock_________335-0114 JOHNSON - ----- -----1 large living om, kitchen and bath, attach I'/j ir garage, 2 lots 100x149 with all .... ...... _ .| kinds ol fruit I JOHNSON LOOKING FOR A HOME? ralt US — We will be happy to mu of our many listed homes. LAUINGER I gamble itching — Sharp I u to look - at. young couple Home kitchen new aluminum siding. Yearly only $120. Priced at only $11,950. iS.OOO Down (Income) Sharp colonial 2 story h contains apartmenl .. ___ ........... .... lust been redecorated. Separate utilities for each apartment. Garage fscllities for each apartm*nt. Homa Is large end spacious and could be easily changed Into a single 5 or 4 bedroom home. Located In the Village of Holly. The Sky is Falling Yes, this Is the end of the world lor the executive looking for' an Ideal country home. This brick end aluminum bl-level boasts of 2300 square feet of living area. 4 largo bedrooms, 13gi23 living room With fireplace and picture windows: 3 kitchens, 2 full befhs and 2 car attached garage. Also includes a 22x40 shop with separate well and septic, bath, studio and lots- of storage. The home was built- to take advantage of the aun and scenery on this beautiful rolling 40 acre parcel. Pine trees, orchard, live stream. Possible site tor lake. Don't be a little chicken — tall today to end your dreary world of Sale Houses plus many, many oi WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE: 634-8204 673-2168 Holly Branch Holly Plaza 49 49Sale Houses "IT'S TRADING TIME" CLARKSTON FHA-GI SPECIAL situated on better than an acre lot — fhrt____ Has a larga family siza kitchen, also ■ heated twooar garaga. A lot of home for a minimum Investment. $14,900. It the pried. ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT newest lake front listing « . A laru five-bedroom ho finished recreation root--I lake, stone fireplace In TRADE-IN YOl SENT HOME I ■ SUBURBAN SPECIAL Save mortgage costs and Interest, too, on this shar room rancher featuring large carpeted living room sized kitchen. Has aluminum siding and aluminum well landscaped yard. In an area of nice homes w streets and community water and very close to —— assuTO. ract. FAST POSSESSION. CALL TODAYI .for YOU^ OUR GUARANTED TRADE-!.. . . MR, HOMEOWNER! WITHOUT IT . YOU BUY - OR BUY BEFORE YOU SELL YOUlMUST sell BEFORE to'trade the home'yoU own'for the home YotTwAN-ri ASK FOR; Dava Bradlay, ^ry Butler, DonSi G«^n, Bdb Harrell, Peta Groenandal, 6leta Howard, ------ " Ellaan Moytr, Elaina Smith, “ '- - Lao Kamptan, 1071 W. HURON ST. AFTER 8 P.M. CALL FE 4-0921 673-8565 For Want Ad$ Dial 3344981 NORTH PONTIAC MILLER Realty 8. Investn THE PONTIAC PRESS. YH^RSPAY, FEBRUARY I HousM 49jSol6 Hoiiscf 49]Sol0 Hoiisss 491 Sol® Houi Val-U-wSy'..IrW'gaYLORd! ^ LAUINGER a. y_HjBj'L»i>d..Rd,_(M-5>). AVON waT'-wALTON RAY RHODES REAGAN WATERFORD TOWNSHIP YORK SYLVAN MANOR COSWAY fE 5-8183 681-0760 lakland Av«. OPEN 9 to lOYER ON m ACRES KINZL Don't Look Now haS£? -•'« '£f.sr£«ri 'x/sKSSvra'3 YORK !ip;.;;LPc= ROYER $85.00 ! ilfl . ... YORK i ARRO :m: OUTH EAST SIDE jack Frushour REALTOR STRUBLE WE TRADE PLEASANT LAKE WOODS '11»^ ” ""fn.w QUJ LOVELAND I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR A. J. RHODES, REALTOR _________ ""RAY n||S GILES 0 DOWN 6X22^Y Tour dreams will ROCHESTER t Tic. I lUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. iRWIN & SONS LET'S TRADE A PEEK IS MLS 6744161 674-2245 TIMES PANELED RECREATION R ........ TED'S Trading ’SP=''^£3p‘'°, jasra^ia.. VON O'NEIL Waterfront ,-^ ^ J ROYER 80 ACRES ESTATE So^roperty Times Realty STOUTS Best Buys Tociay iOFF F NEW MODELS COLONIALS RANCHERS MID-LEVELS TRI-LEVELS Custom-built to Meet Your Personal Needs « m isffim Mmifm im Sr PONTIAC "“"iZn ' 3387161 iSt€-“W DORRIS 8< SON REALTOR 2536 Dixie Hwy. MLS OR 4-$324 WARREN STOUT, REALTOR ’^“rM«Ll-nn,S.rvrc!^’‘ cdsWAY 681-0760 80 to 800 ACRES BROOCK ANNETT ROYER srSS*. 40 Acres on Paved Road p^i IN ORTONVILLE AREAj^or^ W7S High School. $59,500, terms. I Reolty, Inc. r«°-»OR OR RAY O'NEIL REALTY E— THE PONTIAC FRE3S. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 0, I960 For Want Ads Dial 3344981 Salt Iwiiwn Priyiity S7 Wmrttd Ctiitr«cti4llf|. AO-A Solt HeutehoM Getdi AS //TNT TT^fl 1 rn ca A ’’69 DIAL-A-MATIC ; Br«nd new itwlno mtcMn* left In Chri»im«» Lay-a-wey. Sold for $l».S0 balanca dua only U3.33 or 1 will accept $1.35 par wi»*k r*n >r_nlQht^334-38j$. 'BUD" 1 TO 50 UNO CONTRACTS Worrtn Stout, Reoltor u - plenty of used waanari I N. OMvka M, Ft Mias! »»<>»»•. rafrioarafora, and trada-ln Oean *»aa YH • p.m j fumjtura bargalna. LIMIa Joe'a CASH >d conrrai ZONED COMMERCIAL BUSY PAVED highway TiP'top fwft* t K 1126 ft. 3 houses i5 'c f possible disc a$M$30. ksk for Prank ARRO REALTY ''43 Cass-€hz. taka Ro LROe OR SMALL land Ct> 3^‘vA. ciosi^. Reaionahia d fo' Oar'#a, MA 4 S40O o AUTOMATIC ZIGZAG I machina. ’ FasWon Dial" modal Ir NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inocr IMNG TROUeiE CASHING ;! paymanlAol: ' $5,50 PER MO. FOR 8 MOS. OR $44 CASH BALANCE FE 5-1201 offer 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 GREENHOUSE 1 rafrigarafor, a"i « lotrad commarci traas, 5 room- living quai oias* Eorl Gorrels, Reoltor so COMMERCe Mark«f 4 Ir^i LAKE ---------- - I A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN I pc. tIvjrYO rm. arouo (sola, rhair Jea, 3 lamps); 8 n (double dre«ser, chan!, t % aprino*. -> 5 ptact dinatta. In cornar, Tarma. LEASED-INVESTMENT Ponflac city, WOO iq. ft buildi plus extras. It you need depracialion for lax base this Is Ideal 179,000.^ Make an appointment lor details. QUICK CASH FOR lahd central : ,,,,1 a82«*56, r 13, Mr. Clark, Any Item Sold Sapari...., All lor »3»l $10 monihii KAY FURNITURE n Glenwood Canter LOANS house all leased, gross tio.eoo c year. Will give 25 par ci ' person In 25 per cant COMMUNITY LOAN CO BATEMAN lAWRtNCE LOANS $25 to $1,000 cash balance $45. Sale Household Goedo 651 TIZZY By Kate Osann YOUNG MARRIEDS Need turnitura? Under 21? We can pal you credit without co-signars. Household Appliance, 33S-2283. USED KENMORE 'rronari^ "- art gat Reaper stove, |75. 423- UNCLAIMED NEW - LEFT IN LAY-AWAY bedroom suite, double Sold for $159, Id record playai. records, AM FM odarn styling. Sold 1 dua $5W ca— — nalching chair. Zipi iW long Danish modern co.,.„„ stereo, AM-FM radio, 4-spaakart plus remote speaker outlets. Plays all slla records, record storage space. Sold tor $3??, balanca '*•— only $334 cash or $12 monthly. 18" color portabla channel. ----- $15 monthly. DeGausser, 2 ' •antaa on pictur# lube. Sold f. Attention Housewives t Furn k for N . Oran INVESTMENT & COMMERCIAL CO V7 S Tetwgraph Rd. 338-9641 Wf»ekd«ys altwr 5. 334 BK Partridge BUNKBEDS, ABOUT '/$ price L Joe's, 1441 Baldwin, FE 2-6842. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large - " ! small size iround, drop-leal, "I tangular) tables In 3-, S- and n; sets. $24.85 up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" ;Morrgag« Loans UNBELIEVABLE 13,000 SQ. FT. LIGHT MFGING. OR WAREHOUSING FOR THE PAST 43 YEARS Tiled office space Concrete floors - tome herdwood ONLY $3.00 per SO FT. FULL PRICE $39,000 WITH $9,000 DOWN Voss & Buckner, Inc. CHROME DINETTES, I CHROME DINETTE s Scolchp^arded with zipper ed! — Sold lor $278,1 "Poor Herbie! His Father won’t let him grow a mustache — even if he could!” stereo console. remote speaker 10,000 BTU CRANE ________ ________ slightly damaged case. Will Install. _Bargalz^a.H_Sales, 425-1501. ANTIQUE GLASS and mlscelianeous, color TV, Feb. 4 through 9 from 9 nil?, 254 W. Chicago, FE 5-7305. MYERS UNIT TO • sh&CIAL CREDIT AVAILABLE FOR YOtIWG MARRIEDS. NO COSIGNERS MeDED. oanino $1000 to $5000 to mortoaoei tor repairing, additions,: top.,' Michigan Fiui orchard t ake, FE 4 1 HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 61 Ellz. Lk. Rd. 335-9283 Near Telegraph Rd.JO-8 p m. dally)! For Sal* Mitcallumoui 67 iMn watery CallJ57-0W4, eyejh ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN _ FE 5-7471 ADDING MACHINE^ $35; portable typewriter, $35. IBM executive typewriter, $150. Comptometer $65. Check protector, $30. Cash register, $35. Office desk, new, slightly -------- Jtoo, Copy ------ $20. Bev 7758 and chair. 81 S, clearance I Antiquai natic washer $29.95; electric $39.95) Reynolds : Swaps CALL TODAY! WALKING TRACTOR, $2" ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 West Huron St, Pontior 3 CRUMP ELECTRIC ,3465 Auburn^Rd. FE 4-35) ’"IeLECTRIC STOVE, 125) GAS SIOVI "Pi $35; Relrlgerotor with top freeze; ” $49) Wringer washer. $40. G. Hai ris^FES-W. ______________ “IfrTgidaire bottom freezer. $150, FE 2 1 779. 1952 WILLYS PICKUP, $150; I wagon b 7'’gE REFRIGERATOR, Sear I ANTIQUE LIQUIDATION, oldlea and goodies auction. Ladder back chair, leaded glass bookcase, old ----------- t.,, piano china, dolls, Bowfror — hiarWe top tablt lop dressar and mil) riarble top dresser ar._ ........... eaded hammer glass windows, old ilble stand. Jim Bean bottlea, 3 - . Small wood stove Telephone Insulators and night 8 p.m. Halls Auc- GE WASHER, $S0. 674 2731, 852- 2 FARM BELLS. Y-Knoi Anti I Davlsburg^634-899l.____ cash* ANTIQUE: FRENCH D I S P LAY _Norlhwood_Colnj;o.________ CLOSE-OUT PRICES ON Evlnrudi ■ Cats, the Scat lorci with $1,000 di ’’ GE 2 DOOR AUTOMATIC c DOOR JOHN FRANCHISE ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE 48823 VAn Dyke 856 E. 1 estebllthed consist of rentel end tervicing and all new light weight fiberglass portable chemical toilets. WARDEN REALTY Butiness Opportunities av wmiis Brewer, fe ssiaT ev - —- and Sundeys^682-2073 IKC POCKET SIZE toy poodle, wks , black end apricot, valued $250. Trade for spinet piano, ore or whxi.v.r 14J-&58. ---- - - — -- 1 sectional, n,,,. I.uiin.| lauic. I I GE Portable dishwasher. Best ' tep 642-3590. N '24 HO’URS ■ I ^household SPECIAL Incorp, PO. B0X;“""" ........... 423-0702 $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF i, Michigan. 313- MONTGOMERY WARDS 9" redlali. FURNITURE ' ' ' Specializing In lurnifure stale lew, little a FISH SHANTY AND l937 Chev swap lor chain sew. OR 4-2I39 MONEY FOR HOUSES ' Dally IIL9 " 739-1010 ___ "iGOLO CONTEMPORARY 755-9090 CASH It 48A 7352. ___* Jor deep treeez. 62SJ495! NEW TWIN BED, $70 value tor nice j couch or couch end_chalr. 391-1438. steel'DESK AND TIRE chVnger I swap Jor ? 343-l258_ -y , -K T-irni-Y 1965 TRAVEL TRAILER for FOOD - EXTRA KWIK 1 7-pieci Equip HAS 2 NEW STORES NOW AVAILABLE FOR FRAN- CHISE. 1 ON HIGHWAY 59. WATERFORD TWP. . ... LAKE ORION. NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED. TRAINING PROVIDED. MODEST INVESTMENT RE- FOR INFORMA- A GULF OIL AFFILIATE 'trade complete Sur meni, 2 years old. Ilka late model car $1200 valui H 8. H AUTO SALE OR 3-5200 WILL SWAP WIFE'S like ne> ' cocktail table, 2 table I; nnerspring mattrei . tull-alze t Salt Clothing ^th $300 673-X255 Spring and 2 vanlN lamps. 5-pleca dLnarte sat with 4 chroma chairs and tabla. All for $399. Your credit is good at wymr-' WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E HURON FE 5-1501 J^omSel. _ JUST received'TRUCK loai antiques from Canada. Uniqua i picture frai glas tray and br $10; $10; cold many mi„. couch, $15) solid bottle brass spittoon, $15^^ 651-7188. MAHOGANY 5-bRAWER " CHEST, birch dresser, walnut 3 drawer ;hest, gateleg table, beautiful merry dropleat table, 2 mahogany ilde chairs, hall free, lift top :ommode, dough box, Martha Vashington sewing cabinet, tiered Y-Knot Antiques, Davisburg, , reasonabla coM Call 5 4 7 - 7 9 1 5 noblles. The Snowflakt For Solo Miscellanaou* 67 Sand-GrovoHMit 1st SEE THE SNO-JE f snownn^ (by Glestron). Save now. TO/ hardware, »(»5^ Orchart Dally 9-4, Sun. 9-2. FE 5-242J_ 2 USED SKI-DOOS SHAPE. ONLY $450. -1968 MODEL SKI-D(30, 14 HJ WITH ELECTRIC START AN COVER, A-1 SHAPE. ONLY $750. lODY fireplace delivered. OR 3-3478 or FIREPLACE S KING BROS. Pontiac at Opdyke Rd. FE f 1642_______________ 1948 SNO-SPORT by Rupp, 18 h p, _2^CC, $400. 474-2545 after 4 P m_ mFRED WING Hunters ....... $36.50 GENE'S ARCHERY 714 W^uron 1969 669 TNT VKI-DO^ *1395 brand new. Perrys Lawn fc Garden, 7605 Highland RJ.__________________ f?69 ■FamAH'a snowmobile with cover end doubler trailer. Priced to sell. Call 852-2300, after 5;30 D.m. 651-1739;_________________ SEASONED HARDWOOD, Pets-Hunting Dogs 9 TNT 399 SKI-DOO, practically SCORPION SNOWMO- BILES Wood'Cool-Coke-Futl approx. 2 cords, $25. You haul. U ARABIANS FOR SALE. Doubla D-C Arabian Farm. 425G55Q._____________ WOULD LIKE TO BUY good riding —-e and saddla. 428-l()42.___________ ^ BEAGLE, AKC, FIELD CHa'mP-PION female, 8 yrs. old. 682-8539. dachshund pups, AKC, ESTEi HEIM KENNELS. 391-1689 -A POODLE GROOMING, toy ifud. MING, toy I __________ 1-A GROdMING Mr. Edward's High Fashion Poodle Salon, where experience and natural talents abound lor tha bes‘ in Poodle grooming. B:30 a.m. I 10 p.m., 7 day week. 335-5259 Farm Equipment Service, ail col^. FE 5-0120. 2 PUREBRED GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, 5 months old, $60 ea. 673-3500. ADORABLE COCKER puppies, $5. AIREDALE PUPS, AKC, reasonable. _33023241.____________________ 'aKC poodles, REDUCING Block, .......... 33$-^29. L, $125. 6e]>0635. Trailer d AKC MALE POOLEe MINIATURE AKC BRITTANY Spaniel pups, Ba?H!lS STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. _________ New‘’‘5*hp!'^'3 phase air compressor, 377t_Hlahlend (M-59).__M2-9M0,akc'POODLE TOY STUD Sen brand new I S'rln"^Srr'row^a;:d".Kr„„„! BOLEN'S SNOWMOBILE FE 4-4344, 693-1631. d used steel, angles, channel, Used metal garage' doars. Ideal for s, ate. BOULEVARD SUPPLY HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 500 S. Blvi^E,________ 3337161 112 W. University Dr. .... WEsfiNGHOUSE A U T 6 MAT 1C __________Downlown Rochester ?°?I'^BLE__Olshwasner. Tape, CLOSE-OUT New 25 Horse Skl-BIrd snov lodel, AKC'SCOTTfs'H TERRIER male, 20 YEAR OLD CHESTNUT Gelding, gentle, would make exc. 4-H or pleasure horse. Call after 4 PM, YEAR REGISTERED Quarter --------------ribbon . 791-9343, for your table or freezer. Cut a HOMELITE CHAINSAWS and Snowmobiles In stock, also In-' sulated coveralls and lackatt. New Davis Machinery Ci .. _______ul 4.9 cubic Inch ingina. SI 09.95. While supply last. Harps Sales & Service 1060 Lapeer Rd. Oxford 62B-1521 24'' & 36" Pickup Covers T. 624-2965. $1600. _______673-0234. __ WATE R F0RD~^CAB INETS,” 5~7 2 0! ....ims Lake Rd., Dray PIES, 3 mos. old, black a,,u Call after 2:30 p.m. 343-6359. lAkc /VIINIATURE 5Chnauzer.~, - chihuahua. FE 4-4021. 1969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS CAMPERS INSIDE DISPLAY - CRUISE-OUT, INC. WBjlon_ Dally 9 ' — ' CLOSED SUNDAYS AMERIGO Plains. Close-out of plastic ) _Elden^H e. OR 3J420. anitles, vario 40" r.rt,-4u 1 WEDDING GOWN; formal; maternity; women's s u clothes, all size 12. Boys tc - ___ dler; girls to 18 months) diaper 'bmp; high chair; others 2523 Sashabaw. 428-3513. Hand Tool^Machinery 68 SN0WJV10BILES 20 h.p. Polaris, 14'/!i h.p. Ski Doo, 14 h.p. Diablo, wide track, 14 h.p. Evinrude, wide track ------ 22 h.p. Ski Daddler, wide track $795 - Ski Daddlar, demo. Motor Parts, >■ FE 2- CLARK 2000 LB. LIFT TRUCK, pneumatic tires, good condition, $1850. Clark 7000 ib. lift truck, ^ood^condltion, $1100. 542-1602 or backho assorted Walnut Doors $5. Displays - Celling Acoustic — OlctopKones 79.50. Typewriter Table $7.99, Heinz Soup machine $15, Verif $39 with supplies. 22741 Woodwar D^lly_10;3(K8_ ___Sat. 10:30-6 SALE TO PUBLIC Large suppliers, selling warehous of j and moder (vashers and' Ster< )f Maple, Mediterranean, or walnut, '69 models. ^ $79. $2 down, $2 per irgain House Blvd. FE 2-684} SINGER SEWING MACHINE, like ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE 48825 Van Dyka Frankowtki, Easlherr CUBIC foot" Relrigeral ■ with s, ESTABLISHED "" SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC I Zig Zag sewing m a c I in Dyke and Supply Co. growlno -- ' regarding I. 30' BROOCK 4139 Orchard Lake Road At Pontiac Trail M MA 6-4000 444-48901 $60 682 2442. ....ECTRIC RANgS' tully' aulo'.l '("UliS'"' ..........* ’ $6 PE^MONTH OR $59 CASH , _ . Jew Machine Guarantee :h^g_chii^7jl2i. i=i“ 2 3^54* UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER GALLON GLASS LINED electric 2615 Dixie Hwy. FE 4-0905 ............ TAKE OVER PAYMENTS tekly for genulr 600 series, pus Dally 10-9 739 1010 ____________ 755^9090 (TV'S FOR SALE, re as I Sagamore MotjBl,_78^ S^W^ward. VVANTEb RCA COLOR TV repairs^j23-1156. , 602 University N'S FURNITURE HAS NEW CONSOLE PIANOa Italian $596, bench Incl. Used Spinet piano with bench $275 Smiley Bros. Music . Saginaw__________F^J721 shower stalls with ti SAVE PLUMBING CO. $4 For Sole Miscelloneous $ DIAMOND RING SETTING . appraised et $325, - repaired, Cone's, FE a-OOiZ. jSNOW BLOWER, CRAFTSMAN 26" * ^ «tage, used twice, call before • . 642-7057. ______ 0 YARDS OF CARPET -■ Sole Land Contracts credit. I y?-. of Rochester's Cash 1 MILLION Delian has baen 1969 TDUCH-A-MATTC v^tewlng machines, does fancy duty mndel. Zig etc***'II '***''’' end' lessons Include^'Cair'credlt Dept. 335-9283, Household Appliance,_ _ _ _ J.V., $25; FORtUliCA "top cabiraL'i . SET. EXCELLENT Condition, $49. coppei ■Thompson ij5i»^jo05^ __ t'/z INCFI plastic drain plpa" anc fittings, no need to thread pipe — “ -...................— 11 need Is a hack-sa I paint brush. See G. A Thompson 8. Son. 7005 V__ 7x35 BINOCULARS, $10) bolt ac 22, $20) mangle, $10; table s chest $25. 473-3424. appraiser Is awaiting you- call at ! 674-2236 McCullough realty ! so Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS an 9-a ..... s. makes button holes, sews o parts and service guarantei 9'XI2' LINOLEUM RUGS. $3.95 EA. Plastic swii tilt .......... Ic aa. Celling tile — well paneling, cheer ---- ' FE 4-9957. 1075 W. HyO i"nd tool! payments of $i Sewing Credit Manager til _all Collect: 563-8200 u 1968 USED SINGER —.v; ... - . touch and sew controls for zig- Warren Stout, Realtor i z«o hems, buttonholes, designs etc. I4M N. opdylta Rd. fe S4I45! ready IS’mw* De * i «mpVt? “w^th c 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently naadad. See us before _______________ —Jng , bought for $400. must tell! _ll _ tor $200. FE_2J8n. 2CKI l'B. ANVIL and forge, t USED COLOR T V. SETS, $199 95 " *<>’ conveyor, end 2 engine., SWEET'S : 3620 APPLIANCE. INC 300 AMP LINCOLN portabia" ” ____ ___ 334 5677 $550, with approx, 225 feat UNCLAIMED LAY-A-WAY ------ " make button holes, SPREO-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK S^ly. 2471 Orchard Lake. 48^ THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE III W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meat your neadi ___Clothing, Fumitura. Appliances USED WELL PUMP, JACUZZI, T3C, le 4514)228 after 4 p. 17SD rpm. chairs, typewriters, addin machines, drafting tables, fi cabinets. Forbes Printing ar flea Supply, 4500 Dixie Qeyton,_OR_M74^ grate, Blue-Green carpeting 1l'«"xU' Amateur home Drastic reduction 1 Up to 40 per cent off, Pontiac Music 8; Sounf 3101 W. Huron, 482-3350. _____ GOYA GUITAR floor models. Drastic reduction! Up to 40 per cent off. Pontiac Music and Sound, -........ ‘1uron, 482-3350. HAMMOND C-3 ORGAN, JR-20 I Leslie Speakers — extra vo organ as third manual — excalli buy. Hagen Music, 332-OSOO.____ LOWREY ORGAN. $275. J3J0445_ LDWREY ORGaN'hOLIDAY Model, Provincial, 10 y used reconditioned p with a g< B have them from . $195. GALLAGHER'S MUSIC UPRIGHT PIANOS, $25 end up. ; USED ORGANS Choose from Hammonds end other well-known brands, prices as low MDiic iMSons : and Sound, 482- LEARN A CORRECT WAY DAVID A. SCULL A.P.S. PIANO-ORGAN-ACCORDION 289 STATE ST. 335-8227 Sporting jGoods 74 Snowmobile $825 Up poodle is'father.''GorgTOui . While They Last. poodle pups, no papers. 852-3467. MG SALES & SERVICE golden retriever ""puppies, 4647 Dixie Hwy. Drayton 673-4458 _________ ---------------------------------IRISH SETTER MALE AKC ' ALL PET SHOP, S3 Williams. FE . 4433. Parakeets a 3404, FE 8-8421. 9 weeks, shots. 442-5782. ENGLISH POINTER, ______________ sacritice tor oest oiler. 493-3553. FREE SPAN'iEL MIXED, 3 yea old, to good home with tenci Windshield, Ami) SLEEP 4 or 6 TREANOR'S TRAILERS 2012 Pontiac Drive 682-8945 " " -ixcept Sunday Apache Camp Trailers Pickup truck covers and cabovar campers. Wa » ») M-21. AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS SInct 1932. Guaranteed for life. Sao them and gat a deinanstratlon at Warner Trailer Sales, 3098 W. Huron (plan to loin one of Wally Byam's exciting caravans). ________ rppMAM cmrDuifiir. .V,--. BELMONT 1967. p'RIVATE OWNER, 12x50, must be moved, $3400. 838- _6405. GUNS-GUNS-GUNS One of the largest selectloi Oakland County. BrownI . Weaiherby, Winchester, Reminqion, Coil and Smith-Wesson pistols, scopes, sights. Wa do our — "SKI-DOO'S FROM $695 15". 18", and 30" 1 luits, boots, helmets, g I c single and oouoie! STOP OUT THIS WEEKEND! Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 4-6771 Open Dally and Sundays JOHNSON 1948 WIDE TRACK, MUZZLE LOADING RIFLE n hand, 17 and 0441 or 334-1442. I, 825 Woodward, 334- MOTO SKI SNOWMOBILES , clearance 19x24 and 30 .. . Also sleighs and trailers. Terrifi ------ ----- Final c _______ _____________ lachine Open Sunday and evenings, TRACK AND WHEEL RD. h of 1-75. 625-5530 w Flake mini snowmobiles T. BERNARD PUPPIES AKC, Register, champion blood lii^e. 483- ^LVER~MTNrtOY~ p^^s~>^C 682-0185. Light, compact, 10 h.p. 40 mph SPORTCRAFT MFG. 4160 Foley Waterford, 623-0650 POOLROOM TYPE pool table, 5x' SCHNAUZER MINIATURE puppie 7 weeks, AKC, silver and salt ar pepper. 65MSQ7._ condition. MA 5-1910. Ski Doo's Sno Jet's Mercury's SCHNAUZERS A SAMOYED PUPPIES, $75. SheltlS, UKC AMERICAN ESKIMO F upples. WELSH CORGI (Pembrol CRUISE OUT, INC. 43 E. Walton FE 8-4402 Dally 9-4, Closed Sundays SCORPION Snow Mobiles :tory shortage has cut oft upply. Only six machines It lock. 15 Inch Tracks 24 h.p. electric st McClellan travel TRAILERS 4820 Highland Road (M-59) Phone -............ 474-3143 SNOWMOBILES SKI ROULE — MOTO SKI SNO PONY Prices start at 8520 Complete engine modifying Racing parts and eoulpment SEE THE NEW SNOW CAMPER OAKLAND SNOWMOBILE CENTER 2434 Dixie 9-8 3344500 SKIDADDLER SKIDOO 22 starter. Reverse 8 TERRIFIC SAVINGS ’for the “Early Bird" Shopper On new Johnson motors And Sfarcratt boats. Also see SCRAMBLER The new concept In mobility. . few 1949 Ski Doos left in stock. JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Open 10 to 9, Mon. - Frl. i. Toll Carpet, 5 ol $5 per e $36 Installati CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS p.m. Call collect 563-8200. ,u gre,______Capitol Sewing Machine Sales comesUSED 3 mTontHS. Gibso 1 tree; Relrigerator, $175: Frigidair Aubun Rd. 4S40 Dixia Hwy.-OR 3 1355 Midwest Apolier (M^59) Rochester. Between John R & Deouindre. i ol Rochester's largest carpel warehouses, over 17,000 so vards_ in stocky 852-2444.___ 1959 "jeep universal. 1954 Ford ') ton pickup. 1964 350 Honda. 682- spreader, MTD LawrtFllte rotary Portable umbrella clothe) ■- Aluminum yard chair Voorhels. 332:3929. Mw'lJ’cTr P^rn t e'? 6"r^RUP>^SNpl^"i«""^j w*fh 4) vlc«. 22"x61", hrs^ Call 33?1104 betort 4 or 682- ''' 0PDYKEJHARDWARE FE M4J4 Warehouse Clearance Sale On Yukon King, snowmobile, 15 h p, Griizley .. *445 18 h.p. Super Grlziley .... .. $?95 18 H P. Kodiac Widetrack .. S795 All brand new — never uncrated. KAR S BOATS 8i motors ......... 493-1400 [.8522647. JAPANESE SPANIELS, puppies. NO 3-5004.__ labrador retrieversT" " 2^2W8^ large purebred, ouard"pup5 Gorgeous, Impressive. J82-5481. large female 2 years oli shepherd and collie, spayed, ex —"-It vyatchdog. Free. 335-1802. BE/ - ^ A6ALE BEAGLE RABBIT Dog, $50 MIXED COCKER-COLLIE, | MjXED PUPPIES WANTED. Open- Check our deal on — SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 28 ft. on display at — Jacobson Trailer Soles 5690 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5981 CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANY BUDGET STACHLER TRAILER te?s.*851-0072.' ** 3771_Hlghland_____________________'(M-59)' 482-9448 SALES, INC. OLD ENGLISH SHEEP DOG, week old male AK<“ “ South Lyon, 437-2843. OLD ENGLISH SHEEPDOG pupi AKC Show quality no papers, $35 C; POODLE PUPPIES for light apricot almost a 7 weeks old. 363-9590. REGISTERED APRIC POODLES, Toy Fox 1 this one! Only $1495. EVANS EQUIPMENT 425-1711 or 425-2514 CLARKSTON LIFETIME MOTOR HOMES 23' self contained, full power, V-8 enoine, duals, stereo, etc., special ST. BERNARD, MALE, $35. _ :_____481-0784_____ BERNARD PUPS, registered, champion sired' mass! Swiss type, bred for STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland Rd. (M-59 ) 482- Baldwln at Colgate STEEL FRAME PICKUP sitepers ■ ‘-os. Cab to camper boot, lit Mtg. 4140 Foley Spoitcr, Vaterlord. 423-0450. TRAILERS—CAMPERS- COVERS, Goodell Trailer Sales, 3200 S. Rochester Rd., 852-4550. TRUCK CAMPER 34" high old, $50. FE 4-9394. II shots. 781-4929 between 6-8 p.n WHITE POODLE, FEMALE, ) O^jAltorJ^mj^. YORKSHIRE TERRIER, AKC male, — ‘5 and wormed, 10 weeks, also service, 493-3851, after 4 p.m. Pet Supplies-Service 79-A Holly Travel Coach Inc. 15210 Holly, Holly______ME FISH AQUARIUM, 1 WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPER* AND SLEEPERS. Factory outlet. Jacks, I n t a r c 0 m 4 , K R U P T MERCHANDISE, . Hall'i Auction, ANTIQUE STaInED GLASS win- other Items. Sat., Feb. 8, 10 _ Walled Lake United Methodist Church. Northport St. at Pontiac B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY .. . 7:00 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY ..7:00 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY ... 2:00 P.M. WE BUY - SELL - TRADE Retail 7 Days Weekly CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION — Dixie Hwy. SATURDAY, 7 P.M. CHINA cabinet. color TV, p SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8-10 a.m. Dalglicsh Farm, Home and Shop, 10041 S. Linden Rd., 5 mllet North of Linden. 2 tractors and matching shop, household Sefvice Auctioneers Ph. Swartz Creek 435-9400._____________________ SILVER STAR Colossal Clearance — s-‘ ’----------- brass- fabric frames, radio speaker wicker round ________ ________ tools, screen tube tester. . ... motors, vise. Loads more! 5900 Green Rd.. (3 Mi. N. M-59—3 Mi. W.-U.S. 23 Clyde Rd. exit) (517) 546-0484. Open dally-Sun._________ TYLER'S AUCTION 6959 Highland Rd. (M-59 ) 673-9534 PIONEER CAMPER SALES ■ Trailers; Jubiiee, Globs Star Barlh Campers: Swinger, Mackinaw, Travel Queen, Caribou, Barth CoversiStuti Beatcar, Merit vacation. Goocell Trailers, I TROTWOODS JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS' 517 E. Walton Blvd.—FE 4-5853 WE CARRY AND SERVICE ' repair a. rentals. .................. telescoping bumpers, spars tiro tanks. Lowry Camper Salas, 1325 S. Hospital Rd., Union Lakt EM 3- travel trailers BONANZA r WIND WOOD LAKE McClellan travel TRAILERS 4820 Highland Road (M-59) Phone 474-3143 _ 'WE'RE BRAGGING," It you think IM re kidding about having tha bast travel fralltri on the merket. Slop In," see tor yourself. Tha early bird gats the worm, to don't r.'\'im*;'fo*’bu*y:* “ EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 425-1711 or 42S-2514 CLARKSTON S9 1 EACH IN STOCK ORDER FROM FACTORY 5 fi Academy Cadet ....83795 X 40 with Expando ....$4295 COUNTRYSIDE LIVING W4 Oakland____^ 334-1509 1 or more Mobile Homes Decor FINANCING g.z TERMS RICHARDSON LIBERTY DELTA MONARCH OXFORD •ark S08ca-immediately avallabi* Colonial Mobile Homes FE 2-1657 423-1310 25 Opdyke Rd., 5430 t«x e ^ujm Heigm. S. «t wlSertnrd THE PQNTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY, 6, 1909 Used Can 106 CARNIVAL E—L5 International Trucks ]0 TruckriJow Reody'^ ISSfAr'S Wilson Crissman wo N. Woodward Birmingham Mansfield THH ALL NEW DETROITER HEATED MODELS AT by . . . ACTIVE TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. wS’S^S- Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 '“'“"jeep |».'.:;'K,.ra-A.ss s sai.s-< “•'’“&ANSflElD STOP HERE LAST M&M GLENN'S ^ Tn iVyrG T r^T '^foTeJidwTAv. ^ “P y°“'' ^'y $1195 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1968 CHRYSLER ts^sss: $2495 BIRMINGHAM 1000 SEO CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL~ ;ts»Tt " LUCKY AUTO CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Mi S. Woodward BIrmInghana. AUTO Used Cadillac SALE Lorgs selection ol 1S64, Averill's model GM Cars or will INSURANCE ANDERSON' ASSOCIATES lonces. Will'finonce at bank MAJMrn___ ~t65 Dewey Wilson Crissman Cadillac 'T«i2SS5a JSED CARS AT TROY MOTOR 3£I Racdemacher Chevy-Olds On US 10 at MIS '7; Mansfield Other Cars ,,4, chew nickuo ir k 1 irt Frnml mileege, v:«, custom c«b J.ton’^ 1«* :™ATTr.NOUTF^L On M24 in'"Lnke Oti KESSLER'S 1969 s'S.'aT:;,rr"‘Si CHEVELLE iss" irtsH' $3195 .. «. /liMii 1967 Buick 225 ( rSiSS; sdS^p-iP' “77^ $2695 Matthews- Hargreaves ___ MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH VILLAGE RAMBLER TRADES 963 Dodge Coronet 5 fuT" $499 $495 Suburban Olds Hi'' KINC AUTO SALES $495 Oakland $3495 BOB BORST " "milosch” CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IseC^vt 5HELTON PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL ■SSS.go«'C..^">5,.S50. ”|r,5XX iVnliSrletYo^^SS: 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL )NE STOP SHOPPING AT AUDETTE PONTIAC 1968 MODELS USED BOATS AND MOTORS ■ Drastic Reductions CRUISE OUT.. Z° bJnJiy,'’Vuni i“cSd il,A h"i*h A^TohVE? Sr"!; ["S.il^iZsSik^ inlinCCrl'S 8ia.F0X CHEVROLET ^ ]\/[ansfield □ "'""'“'’autobahn Lnv .K lEROME mxmm CADILLAC CO. two wide Tr.ck Dr. Fg 1M7-CADILLAC, 40,000 miles. 338- Want Ads For Action 1969 CAMARO SptiH ^$3595 Matthews-Hangreaves 67 & 68 Demo & FO Cars $1299 Village Rambler 666 South Woodward 1000 SED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL^ SALE bontinues $200 ALLOWANCE ON ANY CAR YOU CAN DRIVE-PUSH-PULL-TOW ONTO OUR LOT ON THE OF ANY ONE OF THE FIFTY SPECIAL^LY^PRIC^D^PW^^^^ HILLSIDE IINCOINJUERCURY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 Tiiic 1‘ox'rJiVc njKsa rnvhsdav, febiiiiary q, uMi9 for Want Ads Dial 334-4981 106|Niw and Used Cars )>64 PL YMOUTH BELVe DE 1965 PLYMOUTH Belv< STANDARD AUTO of Waterford 681-0004 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR mall' Mtplt Roftd OS Mitel between ^ Coolktpe end Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac BirmingTiam Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst lincoln-Mercory Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet New end Used Cart 106 New and Used Cars $1195 TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH •ROCHESTER $1595 BIRMINGHAM Used Cari_ 106 AT MIKE SAVOIE V. M«Ol«^MI A3753 MOUTH 4-door MARMADUKE By Anderson and LeeminsT Full pric* tUW. redlt maneoer al ) TURNER FORD “MVkE SAVOIE wMeN YOU buy STATION ' wagon. CHECK THESE NEW CAR TRADES! HV.,.n,,.,.,.,nw.oon, .u.c^.llc, poo. n AND MANY MORE NEW 68'$ and 69's i SPARTAN DODGE SELLS FOR LESS (Tell Us If We're Wrong) AUDETTE PONTIAC “Now I KNOW why Fhil doesn’t shovel his driveway!” New and Uud Cara_106 .7 PONTIAC FIREBIRD, •xcptlent LOiKlIllon, lowipd with •xtrpt. Alter . p.m. MA 6-6S4T. 1W7 PONTIAC Gt6 CONVERTIBLE, —1; dpi/bl* powar, new condition, . owner. SIW. *73-9364. After 7 _.^»ll 3*3-093*._ 1967 PONTIAC station WAGON, '’owe' steering and power brakes. iM FM redio, good condition. *42- T967”““ PONTIAC Executive Hardtop lomalic, power steerino. brakes! ...cellent condition, end is e one owner trade. Only— $2195 Matthews- Hargreaves New and Used Cart 106 3NTIAC Grand Frix. Power HAROLD TURNER FORD 4*4 5. Woodward Blrmlnohem IREBIRD convertible, power s and top, console, low 19*0 PONTIAC, 4 DOOR I powar, many extras, 8.600 S7600. FE 4-2781 after 5 p.m Mansfield ..“ ■ wmm 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Mila) batwean CoolldQd and Crooks. ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth '"mIJ L^T'""aTr7ss'5rlm ^^Be7j New ood Uted Cort 106 New and Used Cora 106 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Chrys^r-ptruth Ta"rold'turn°er fc Mansfield PONTIAC Mansfield COLD OR HOT WEATHER -WE HAVE A CAR ^ FOR THE SEASONS ^ 1968 Buick Riviera 1968 LeSabre Easy Terms Arranged T?Sr,naed 1966 Opel Kadette 1967 Cadillac Convertible $995 Easy Terms Arronged Easy Terms Arranged 1968 Opel Luxury Sedan 1967 Buick Skylark $1645 C or rL.rVu,! '‘l^cCy''w.Ya“^: Eosy Terms Arronged $1895 mmsim mm. 544 S. Woodward 647-5600 Mansfield " "" KING " AUTO SALES BUICK'S Double Checked Used Cars 1966 PONTIAC Bonnevi “ GO! HAUPT PONTIAC And Save $ $ $ _______ *2! 5500 Transportation SPECIALS From $195 Upl VAN CAMP NEW 1969 Oldsmobile 98 4-Door ■ $3636.00 Turbo hydromatic, power steering, power brakes, electric clock, whitewalls, deluxe radio, plus all GM safety equipment. BEST Oldsmobile Inc. ^HAHN ^ TODAY'S SPECIAL 1966 OLDS Toronado ..........$2295 Come See... Come Buy SPECIAL OF THE WEEK 1967 $1995 1964 Ford Fairlane 500 $695 1967 Tempest 2-Door Sport Coupe $1295 1966 Tempest 4-Door Sedan 1968 Grand Prix 2-Door Hardtop $1395 $3195 1966 Bonneville Convertible 1967 Bonneville 4-Door Hardtop $1595 $2595 1967 Catolina 4-Door Sedon 1967 Catalina 4-Door Sedan $2095 $1995 PONTIAC 1966 BUICK leSobre $1595 1940 W. wide Track 1965 T-BIRD Hardtop w^Vontiac-eYooRW “W"""””''' Troo 1967 BUICK LeSabre used CARS AT !£;,rs tROY ,,63C60rPle.,»9o6 MOTO^^ ONE STOrsffomNG At 1967 OLDS Toronado ... 1965 BUICK Riviera Ki Bill Galling VW ch“;rpti.B 106 New and Used Cars PONTIAC RETAIL STORE USED CAR LOT NEW AND USED CAR SALES OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY The Jone's well be Trying to keep up This New 1968 Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth Chrysler-Plymouth-Rambler-Jeep Clarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635 1969 PONTIAC Tempest Sport Coupe seat, dual horns, custom carpeting, worn 1 power steering, soft ray glass windshield, 1969 TEMPEST SPORTS COUPE 1969 PONTIAC I Grand Prix $3765 mirror. Only. ^2693 1969 FIREBIRD $2562 OUTSTANDING QUALITY SELEGTION 1966 Pontiac $1795 1967 Mustang $1995 1968 Pontiac $3195 1966 PONTIAC ready to go $1595 1967 PONTIAC Bonneville Convertible :!!!; ^ChVW'y-r.- $2195 1968 Bonneville $3495 1963 LINCOLN Hardtop . 1965 TEMPEST WAGON . 1963 PONTIAC WAGON 1967 TEMPE 1966 MG Cl 1967 FIAT C .. $595 1966 PONTIAC $1695 1968 Bonneville Coupe With V8. automatlce powar iTaerInge povw $3195 1965 Pontiac $1395 WE WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY DEAL, WE WILL NOT BE I PONTIAC-TEMPEST On M-24-Lake Orion MY 3-6266 TH^^ONTiAC PRESS, THUjlSDAV, FEBRUARY 6, B—ir Pair Them IBMkand- tobonm a---- -------wi—- • Uncle--rand^Chemkal J«rimBuU , , UExtent MTlmdl 13---Boleya 48 Strong- end King scented . Vm 49 Solitary 7 Distinct part S3 Fortification 8 Slow (music) 35 Assemblies 9 Underwater (y"-) 59 Redactors (ab.) 60 Looked at 24 Bo^er 611>« covering 27 Negative votes DOWN 32 MoSz^ 1 Solicitude 34 Feline and— Moses 25False^ 45 Affluent 46 Restaurant 47 Greedy 48 Predator’s WILSON Gabors Make Banner News With a 'Not Speaking' Act By EARL WILSON NEW YORK - A Gabor isn’t talking? That’s news! TWO Gabors ain’t talking? FLASH — rip open Page One! Zsa Zsa Gabor and her mother, Jolie Gabor, aren’t talking. Zsa Zsa explained at El Morocco that “Mama vas lecturing me, she says ‘2^a Zsa dahling,: you are getting vurse publicity thari Mia Farrow. You must do something.’ I finally heard | enough and I says, ‘Mama, I am busy, besides I have 6 moving men vaiting for me. I call you later.’ ’’ That caused the rupture. | Angela Lansbury and the rest in “Dear World” are sort of holding their breaths till tonight’s (Thursday’s) opening. “We may have^ a sleeper,” oi»nels! 2-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV. 9-CKlW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV THURSDAY NIGHT 8:90 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — Movie: “Belles on Their Toes” (1952) The mother In the “Cheaper by the Dozen” family decides to carry on Pop’s unique engineering career. Jeanne Crain, Myma Loy, Debra Paget (50) RC-Flintstones (56) Friendly Giant (62) R-Sea Hunt 6:15 (56) Mr. Lister’s Storytime 6:39 (2) C - News -Cronkite (4) C - News - Huntley, ■Brinkley (7) C — News — Reynolds (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) R - What’s New (62) C - Country Canfival 7:90 (2) C - Truth o r Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — News (50) R — I Love Lucy — Ricky and Fred neglect their wives to play golf, so the girls set up a basketball court. (56) R - Choice - “Who am I?” (62) R - Movie: “The Last Mile” (1959) Mickey Rooney stars in a tale about a prison break on the night of an execution. 7:39 (2) C - The Queen and I — Duffy works overiime to hide Becker from his wife, aboard the Queen to get more money from her husband. (4) C — Daniel Boone — Burgess Meredith plays an elderly gunsmith who reveals his trade secrets to warring Indians to gain esteem among them. (7) C — The Flying Nun — Alan Hale Jr. guest stars in “The Great Casino Robbery.” (50) R C — Hazel -Hazel enters a contest to determine the best housekeeper In town. (56) Ivory Tower — “Jesus Sid the Zealots” are dls^^ussed by representative^ of The Jewish and Catholic faiths. 8:99 (2) C — Jonathan Winters — Alice Ghostley, Barbara McNair, comedians Paul Lynde and Louis Nye and singer-actor Jimmy Darren are guests. (7) C - That Girl - Ann Marie (Mario Thomas) plans a spectacular singing career for Rose Cassinitti (played b y Terre, Mario’s sister) unaware that she is a nun. (9) C - I Spy - Kelly and Scott seek a double agent in Hong Kong, the only person the Reds will trade for a captured American pilot. (50) C - Pay Cards (56) NET Playhouse — A dramatized documentary tells of a rich boy and a working-class girl in a French town and the obstacles they encounter when they want to marry. 8:25 (62) Greatest Headlines 8:39 (4) C — Ironside — A columnist’s prophecy that his investigation of an art theft will endanger his life is ignored by Ironside. (7) C — Bewitched — Samantha tries her hand at ^sculpting so she can teach Tabatha to model clay the mortal way. (50) C — Password — Guests are Sheila MacRae and George Grizzard. (62) R C - Movie: “Blood Alley” (1955) An • American merchant marine captain is aided in escaping from the Reds. John Wayne, Lauren Bacall, Anita Ekberg 9:99 (2) R C - Movie: “Please Don’t Eat the Daisies” (1960) A drama critic, his wife, and four children encounter problems in their old house in the country. Doris Day, -David Wven (7) C - (Debut) What’s It AU About, World? -DeSin Jones, S c o e y Mitchlll, Gerri' Granger and the comedy team of Clair and McMahon focus on ‘topical and humorous happenings. Barbara Bain and Martin Landau also guest. (9) Telescope (50) R — Perry Mason (56) Creative Person — Richard Williams, a contemporary film animator, is interviewed. 1:39 (4) C - Dragnet -Sgt. Friday discovers a fellow officer is Involved in a bookmaking operation. (56) C — Washington Week 19:00 (4) C - Dean Martin -- Guests include Shecky Greene, Stanley Myron Handelman, Lou Rawls and Lainie Kazan. (7) R — Untouchables (9) Horse Race -Windsor (50) C - News, Weather, Sports (56) R - Free Play 10:39 ( 50) R - Alfred Hitchcock (62) Star Performance — Merle Oberon stbrs as a woman who gets in\)olved on an ocean voyage when her husband misses the boat. 11:09 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (50) R — Movie: “Uncertain Glory’’ Errol Flynn, Faye Emerson, Paul Lukas (62) R — Movie: “Reach for the Sky” (British, 1957) Kenneth More stars as an English flier who loses both legs but becomes a legend. 11:30 (2) R - Movie: “Death Ray of Dr. Mabuse” (British, 1962) Peter Van Eyck (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop 1:09 (4) Beat the Champ “NICKY ” HILTON Death Claims Hotel Heir, 42 BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - Conrad N. “Nicky” Hilton Jr., eldest son of the million-hotel owner and first husband of actress Elizabeth Taylor, is dead of an apparent heart attack. Hilton, 42, was found dead in his home Wednesday by nurse. * * ★ His widow Patricia, two sons and his 81-year-old father survive. Hilton was active in civic affairs, president of the Conrad Hilton Foundation, a director of Trans World Airlines and other corporations. He was formerly vice president of Hilton Hotels Corp., domestic section of the worldwide chain. In 1952, at the age of 23, he and the 17-year-old star of the motion picture, "National Vel-’ were married but Miss Taylor won an uncontested divorce 205 days later. Hilton neglected her, said the young actress. In 1958 he and Patricia Blake McClintock, heiress to McClintock Oil Co., were married. * * * His brother Eric, lives Houston, Tex., and another brother, Barron, is president of Hilton Hotels. (7) R — Texan (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:39 (2) R C - Movie: “The 7th Voyage of Sin-bad” (British, 1 9 5 8) Kerwin Mathews, Kathryn Grant 1:35 (7) News 3:09 (2) R - Naked City 4:00 (2) C-News, Weather 4:95 (2) TV Chapel FRIDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2)C — Sunrise Semester 6:30 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Classroom 6:45 (7) C - Bat Fink 7:99 (4) C - Today (7) C — Morning Show ' 7:30 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports aptaln 7:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:99 (2)C - C Kangaroo (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R - Movie: “The Egg and I” ( 1 9 4 7 ) Claudette Colbert, Fred MacMurray (9) R C — Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) R C — The Beverly Hillbillies (4) C — Steve Allen (9) C — Bozo the Qown (56) Rhyme Time 9:10 (56) American History 9:39 (2) R-Dick Van Dyke 9:35 (56) Sounds to Say 9:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 19:90 (2) R C — The Lucy Show (4) Snap Judgment (9) Ontario Schools 19:25 (4) C - News (56) Art Lesson 10:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas (4) C — Concentration (7) C — Anniversary Game . 19:40 (56) Interlude 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:09 (4) C — Personality (7) C ■- Galloping Gourmet (9) Canadian Schools (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:39 (4) C — Hollywood Squares (7) R — Bachelor Father (9) Take Thirty (50) C — Kimba 11:50 ( 56) Memo to Teachers FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports (4) C —Jeopardy (7) R — Bewitched (9) Bonnie Prudden (50) C — Alvin 12:20 ( 56) Misterogers 12:25 (2) C-Fashions 12:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — News, \jWeather, Sports (7) C - Funny You Should Ask (9) R — Real McCoys (50) R — Movie: “My Love Came Back” (19i40) Olivia de Havilland, Jeffrey Lynn, Jane Wyman. 12:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:55 (4) C - News 1:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dream House (9) R — Movie: “DakotdJ’ (1945) John Wayne, Walter Brennan 1:95 (56) American History 1:25 (2) C-News (4) C-Carol Duvall 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C — Hidden Faces (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal 1:45 (56) Sounds to Say 2:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (50) O-Islands in the Sun 2:25 (56) Interlude 2:39 (2) C - Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C - Secret Storih (4) f - Another World (7) C — General Hospital (50) R —Topper (56) R — Chicago Roundtable 3:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C — One Life to Live (9) Bozo’s Big Top (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Pottery 4:00 (2) C-Linkletter Show (4) C — Donald O’Connor (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Lively Spot (56) Continental Comment 4:25 (2) C - News 4:30 (2) C - Merv Griffin — Gina Lollobrigida, Jackie Mason guest. (7) R - Movie: “It Came From Outer Space (1953) Richard Carlson, Barbara Rush (50) R - Uttle Rascals (56) What’s New (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters (56) 'TV Kindergarten (62) R-Robin Hood ' 5:30 (4) C—George Pierrot — "New Zealand Invites” (9) R C—Gilligan’s Island (50) R C — Superman (56) Misterogers (62) R — Leave It to Beaver Mrs- Muir's Ghost Full of Life off-Screen HOLLYWOOD ( U P1) -.trained In the British Isles who Edward Mulhare, the salty sea finds his way to an American captain in “The Ghost and Mrs. television .^eries. One such Muir,” has no home but main-/other. Joim Mills, bombed a tains three headquarters. Iseason or two back In “Dundee He lives temporarily in a and the Culhane.” modest apartment on Sunset Boulevard. He visits his London flat at least once a year. And he owns an apartment in Palm Beach, Fla. Though he plays a ghost in the weekly NBC series, Mulhare is anything but a shade off-camera. He stands 6-feet 2-lnches and weighs 190 pounds of County Cork Irish. His speech is curious blend of upper-class British and Irish brogue with a touch of American thrown in. THEATER STAR He is that rare theater star TV Features JONATHAN WINTERS, 8 p.m. (2) WHAT’S IT ALL ABOUT, WORLD?, 9 p.m. (7) DEAN MARTIN, 10 p.m A Look at TV Drama Moving, Exciting By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK - “Teach-r. Teacher,” an original 90-minute drama on NBC Wednesday night was basically an inspirational story of the hard-won release of a young boy from the prison of a clouded mind. But more than that, it was an exciting and suspenseful play. There was Fred(Ue Niles, who at 13 could neither i write because of serious mental retardation. The play told how two skillful teachers, each in his own way, taught him to work with his mind and with his hands. And in the play, the work helped heal the wounds of one of his teachers. David McCallum sensitively played the touchy young school teacher, Hamilton Cade, emerging from a shattering experience of a broken marriage, who comes to the Niles home as tutor just before the boy’s protective and loving father had to be absent for a protracted period. At the same time, there came to the estate Charles Carter-played quietly and gently by Ossie Davis, a retired Air Force captain who had decided to work as a handyman. RESPOND TO TREATMENT Freddie responded immediately to Carter’s calm, casual treatment and was fascinated by tools. Cade pushed him hard with lessons and they had a poor relationship. This ultimately led to a fiery confrontation between the two men. But between them they led Freddie to a point where he was beginning to read, write and make friends. Most remarkable and at times almost unbearably moving the performance of 13-year-old Billy Schulman as Freddie. The boy, who actually is retarded, skillfully showed the process of his character from the early stages when he could scarcely talk or understand to a point where he was participating in| the world around him. ★ ♦ * Fielder Cook directed the play credited originally to Allan E. Sloane, although the name “Ellison Carrol” appeared on the screen. Sloane requested that his name be removed because so much of his dialogue could not be used. ★ ★ * But no matter who wrote it, it was a rich and meaningful television event. If, as seems likely, television is about to be inundated with reasonably exact facsimilies of .’Laugh-In,” it is only fair that “Laugh-In’s” creators get there first with a miniversion of the NBC hit. “Turn-On,” ABC’s new half-hour comedy series, 1 slightly modified format, the tempo and the type of mate-furious mix of political shafts, sight and nonsense gags, doubles entendres and frankly blue jokes—is a twin of the established show. If you don’t get enough of this on Monday nights, you’ll probably love it on Wednesday’s. Gordon Jenkins wrote some delightful music, dressed it up with attractive lyrics and all of it, under the title of “What It Was, "Was Love” was presented nn NBC’s Wednesday night “Music Hall” by Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme. What it was, was Steve and Eydie in concert, singing attractively in a variety of settings designed to illustrate or set the mood for each of the baker’s dozen of new songs. In between—to help pad out the hour since the music couldn’t stretch that far, | the two stars indulged in some easy banter, usually playing the jokes off their own 11 years of marriage. * * * “Turn-On” aside, it added up an unusually satisfying evening of television. Mulhare is a bachelor who collects classical records and enjoys the books that fill his apartment. While he is not a typical man-about-town, h q quietly dates several Hollywood beauties but at the moment isn’t considering matrimony. ★ * * Mulhare came to America to replace Rex Harrison in “My Fair Lady” on Broadway. He starred in the role for three years. He went on to star in “Mar riage-Go-Round” and finally “Mary, Mary” for 19 months on Broadway. Since 1956, then, Mulhare has found himself stranded here in the colonies. “I wouldn’t think of changing my citizenship,” the Irishman said. “I don’t think it’s possible.” FALSE BEARD Because he is required to wear a false beard in his role as Captain Gregg, Mulhare reports to 20th Century-Fox at 7 a m. five days a week. Rare Is the day when he can knock oH before 7 In the evening. After a quick bite of dinner he studies his script with the stereo playing softly in the background and then hits the hay. ★ ★ ♦ On weekends he joins friends for sailing and relaxing in the in. If the day is cloudy Mulhare can be found poking around Beverly Hills and environs looking for still another house. GE’TS BETTER 'When I first came t o California I felt like a fish out f water, especially climatically,” he says. “But the longer I stay here, and the more friends I make, the better I like It.” The beard and the 19th century costume he wears in the series prevent many persons from recognizing the handsome Irishman. In his private life he wears fashionable British clothes, tweed sports jackets and slacks. He attends parties infrequently, and then those usually given by members of the British colony in Hollywood with whom he appears to feel more at ease. While he worked on Broadway, Mulhare owned a home in Connecticut. He has since sold it, but owns property in Westport, Conn. * ★ ★ "I Imagine the United States more my home than Britain,” he says. “I spent the last 12 years here and it probably woulcf be a good idea to start thinking about settling down.” PLUMBING Di [ DISCOUNTS •^PIeceBATHSET| i Whita or From Cfigs S * ftAlAMrf UR» ^ “I I f I TOILETS "B" FIREPLACE Oas Logs SUMPJ»UMPS VANITIES CABINET SINKS TUB Enclosures Raidio Programs- WJR(760) WXYZd 270) CICLW(800) WWJ(950) WCARQ130) WPONQ 460) WJBK(1500) WHFI-FM(94.71 Ex~Monkee Plans LOS ANGELES (AP) - Peter Tork, after a “very amicable” split from the Monkees rock ’n’ roll singing group, plans to become a record producer, spokesman says. No replacement is planned for Tork, whose departure about a month ago made the Monkees a three-man group. WWJ. News, Sport! ^R, News, Ron R 3N, News, Phoni FI, Oon Bosco 4:»5-WJR, Sports i:30-wvyj. Today In Review, ' wTl?,^Bu»lnes! Barometer «:4»-WXVZ Dial Dave Dues W)R, . :me Traveler ♦ 4S-WJR, Lowell Thomas, Autoscope TrOO-VKWJ, News, SportsLIne WJBK. News, Tom Dean WCAR, News, Rick Stewart WJR, World Tonight 7:13—WJR, Business, Sports 7:M-WXYZ, News, Dave Choral Cavalcade 7.-43-WWJ, Sportsllne, Red Wing Hockey t-se-WJR, News, Dimension t:1S_WJR, Sunnyslda EneVe t:3d-WJR, Showcase, Close- t Regen I, Kaleidoscope CKLW, Mark Richards WCAR, News, Wayne Phillips WJBK, Nighttime WWJ, News WPON, Na*s, Arizona VI WCAR, News, Jim Dav CKLW, frank Brodle WWJ, News »:IS—WWJ, Ask Your Ni bor WJR, Open House lOiUB-WPON, News, J Whitman WCAR, Newt, Rod Mill WJBK, Newt, Conrad lt:Sa-WJR, News, Farm WWJ, Newstime WCAR, News. Rod Millet WPON, News, Music CKLW, Jim Edwards l!:13-WJR, Focus 1J:30-WWJ, Marty McNeelay liOO-WJR, News, At Home l:13-WJR, Arthur Godfrey l:4s-WJR, Sunnyside 1:N - WPON, News; Don Singer WHF1. Bill Lynch WJR, News, Mike Sherm 1:13—WJR, Music Hall >:M-WCAR, News, Ron, R( WJBK. News, Hank O'Ni CKLW, Ed Mitchell 5:qo—WWJ, Newstlitla 5:15-WPON, Lum 'n' Ab: S:10-WPON, Don Singer I I R I I t I i I I Laundry Tmy and Trim.........S19.9S t Stainless Steal Shths........$22.95 Both Tubs, Inag..........$30.00 ap I Sheoar Stall wMi Trim........$35.95 ” S$4al,t$.Year I las Nat Water Haatar $49,95 EXTRA SPECIALS! PtKMD I S SfiavenuRBiNB! I 841 Baldwin g I FE4-1S16orFE5-21N f TENUTA’S RESTAURANT nai ssMtLt aaaaa - sainTaar FISH SPECML-«LL MY FRIMY ALL YOU CAN EAT! m (inside) Tender, Golden FRIED FISH DINNERS T FE 8-9639 CORNER CF HURON AND JOHNSON (Across From Pontiac General Hospital) xT.HE rOXTIAC press. THT ESDAY. EEBRU^RV />/ 1?^ Flourishing Taiwan, Beat the By CHA,RI,F.S SMITH IX)NDON (I'rn - In the early ’50s when the I’acific seaboard of Asia was reeovcr-ii\R from the effects of World War II, the Chinese civil war and the Korean war, few obsejvers would have been prepared to lay very big stakes on the future of its component countries. Japan still appeared to hav been thrust back decades by its || defeat. Korea was a wilderness with no apparent grounds for; hope except the presence of anj American garrison and the; sturdiness and determination ol its people. F'urther south, off the coast of Mao Tse-timg's triumphant Communist China, the remnants' of the routed Nationalist Chinese were struggling pathetically to c.stahlish a ha.se for themselves in tlie island of Taiwan. Their efforts mu.st have appeared ho}>eless to many unprejudiced onlookers, especially given the dismal administrativei record of the nationalist leader,' Chiang Kai-.shek, on the mainland and the exaggerated emphasis which the island regime was forced to place on defense. Yet today the 81-year-old Chiang presides over one of the .most vigorous and successful communities to be found in tropical or subtropical Asia. NOT PAINLESS The transformation which has come over Taiwan has not been; a painless one. As late as 1955 the island and its people were poorer than they had been on of the Chinese civil war.' iln 1957 and '58, the attempts of the mainland Communists to ■onquer Taiwan were placing a severe strain on the resources the Nationalist regime and the stability of its economy. Yet in the past decade, Taiwan has managed to register an average annual growth rale of 9 per cent in its Cro.Ss National PriKluct, and tixiay it is wMlhout doubt enjoying greatest wealth which has been known In any part of China governed by an indigenous or nominally indigenous regime. ; To lay all the credit for this 'at the door of the Nationalists would, of course, be misleading. Taiwan ha.s had the benefit, during the crucial pha.se of its economic takeoff, of an American aid program which dwarfed the assistance given to many larger and needier countries. Its security is guaranteed in the last resort by the U. S. 7th Fleet, and it has benefited significantly from the good will of both American and Japanese investors. Nevertheless it would wrong today to think of Taiwan as nothing more than an economic client state. Taiwanese industry has long ince established its ability to compete on world markets, in such fields as textiles, plastics, electronics and petrochemicals, end its strength in all these fields may continue to grow as wage costs rise in Japan and elsewhere. * * * As a visible proof of its achievement, Taiwan ceased three years ago to receive aid from the U. S. Agency for 1 n 1 e rnalional Development. .Since then itjias established a modest aid program of its own, sending agricultural and other experts to advise the developing nation.s of Southeast Asia. Political considerations apart, there seems no reason why Taiwan should not continue to flourish for decades to come. 'ITie problem of population ex- plosions, which seemed to be a serious one up to two or three years ago, appears to have been successfully handled and there are no other economic problems which need bother the nationalist government. But there is a continuing uncertainty about the role which Taiwan will play In eastern Asia. CHERISH RECONQUEST Gen. Chiang and his closest supporters still cherish the idea of an eventual reconquest of mainland China, though there need not be the slightest doubt that if they ever launched such an invasion they would lose everything that has been gained (luring the last painstaking decade. The U. S. government would never, of course, conlenapce such a venture, and it almost certainly possesses the means to prevent it. But this does not end the uncertainty Taiwan’s future. Sooner or later^ there Is little doubt that some understanding mu.st be reached b e Washington and Peking, even if it falls short of full diplomatic relations. When this happens, wha* future will there be for the capitalist Taiwanese and their government which aspires to the title of “the Republic Chilta?’’ The only aqSwer which can be given to this at present is that no sudden changes are likely toi occur. I'he awkward triangle of relations between Peking, Washington and Taipei will probably not begin to be sorted put until other nations, such as Canada and Japan, have tried their hand at working out a viable policy towards both Peking and Taipei, and however much of a hurry Canada’s Mr. Pierre Trudeau may be in to tackle this problem. Undoes not look as if the cautious Japanese will begin to fade up to it until the early 1970s. It mtist be hard for the aged Geh.Chiang to accept any such perspective, and there is no indication that his probable successors in Taiwan will initially be much more flexible than he i.s But the Chinese, whether nationalist or Communist, are renowned for their ccanmon sense. It is not too much to expect that in this case, as in others, they should be able to reconcile their material interests with thqir political aspirations. SALEf MEN'S SUITS Formerly $80 Formerly $90 Formerly $T 00 NOW NOW NOW »72 *80 Monarch's rogular fin* auality clothing at greatly reduced prices for quick clearance. No Charge for Alterations! ENTIRE STOCK OF MEN'S SPORT COATS also substantially reduced! All Major Credit Cards Honored BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. Pre-Season SALE Slim-Line Auto Air Conditioner Reg. 239“ T84 Save over $55 Save over $65 installed, reg. 289.95 . $224 Why swelter? Drive cool... arrive relaxed! Sears High-Output Air Conditioners can cool your car quickly, automatically hold temperatures you select even in warmest weather. Super-slim model is raally compact — takes less depth. Includes convenient slide control to regulate degree of coolness; adjustable louvers, side louvers, recessed controls^ 3-way fan. High Capacity Model, Save over $60, reg. 249.95 .. $188 Save over $70 installed, reg. 299.95.. $228 '/z-Toii Two-Wheel Trailer All-steel, all-welded seam trailer (56x44x25 inches) hauls 34 cubic feet of cargo. Removable tailgate equipped with 2 safety reflectors. Body mounted on channel-steel frame, leaf spring snspension, rides on two 4.80/4.00-8 4-ply tires twith~ltibfs), safety chains are included. 2 Wheel Treller wHh pretecNve eever, reg. 2HJI..$2H Auto Accessories Dept. Reg. 179.99 «49 Sava Over $30 24,000 Bi t Central Air Conditioning Reg. *425 349 Condenser and “A” Coil Enjoy carefree, cool-weather comfort in every room this summer with Sears Central Air Conditioning. Sleep sweeter, work and relax happier. Plan now to stay cool this summer! System includes: High efficiency outdoor condenser, indoor “A” cooling coil. Find the right air conditioner to fit your needs! Low Cost Installation Available. 28.000 BTU Condenser and A Coil, reg. $480.........$389 32.000 BTU Condenser and A Coil, reg. $530........... $429 36.000 BTU Condenser and A Coil, reg. $560.........$459 88.000 BTU Condenser and A Coil, reg. $590...... $489 42.000 BTU Condenser and A Coil, reg. $640.........$539 48.000 BTU Condenser and A Coil, reg. $740.........$639 59.000 BTU Condenser and A Coil, reg. $840.........$739 Pre-Charged Tubing and Thermostat Extra Plumbing and Heating Dept. Opea Monday, T1iiir.day, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9; Tnetday, Wednesday 9 to 5:S0 No Money Down - No Payments tUl June 1st, 1969 on Sears Easy Payment Plan Sears! Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1969 m COLOR F—1 % Special for Your Valentine C? World Famous Dinners • STEAKS •CHICKEN • SALADS •FISH •SHRIMP 39 Varieties of World-Famous Pancakes A real joy and treat for the whole family. A variety of delicious flavored syrups to suit everyone • SANDWICHES UNCLE JOHN’S PANCAKE HOUSE !;s each flay ...” "Fashion news, store events and special values have no equal for helping to stretch dollars and cut shopping time and effort to a minimum! . . . Often times the weekly savings on groceries alone pay for the paper many times Smart shoppers know too, that the newspaper serves them best in so many other ways. That its complete news coverage, exciting pictures, entertaining features and helpful services, are worth far more than the small sum the carrier-boy collects each week. That's why it's always a pleasure to pay him on collection day. THE PONTIAC PRESS A sir/gle rose ... a plant... or cut flowers . . . Valentine's may be expressed so many ways. When Words Fail... Let Flowers Say It For You CALL FE 3-7165 FLOWERS 101 N. Saginaw Street % Gift Certificates 15% DISCOUNT Factory Close-Out SPECIAL A Perfect Gift DRAYTON WIG DISTRIBUTORS Wholesale and Retail % GIVE A DUmilll KIIIB Small Weekly or Monthly Terms $2.50 W..Uy I / / If OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, AND FRIDAY EVENINGS 3-DIAMDND RING “"^11 .......siiqso f Ul Wttkiy U sJ PONTIAC SINCE 1865 I JEWELERS 25 N. Saginaw St. In Downtown Pontine SOLID AAAPLE CRICKET ROCKERS o $26°° Loose pillow seat and bock covered in your choice of colorful prints. A welcome to any Colonial Room. 144 OAKLAND Valentine Fat'oritV^'^f^ How Sweet The Music Is With a ^ LOWREY ORGAN Tlie Lowrey is the perfect organ for your hor:iel Lowrey hns versatility . . . moro voices, more exciting tonal elfectsi Playing ease . . . Lowrey's e.xclusive "minit-Music" envibles anyone to play beautiful iway '1 Glide Cl in,bon ivides real inci many other realistic tonal effects! NO MONEY DOWN-IMMEDIATE DELlVERY-90 DAYS SAME AS CASH 1 71 0 S. TELEGRAPH - ’A Mile S. of Orchard Lake Rd. Lots of Free Parking FE 4-0566 A Valentine (iift The pp Whole Family Will Enjoy RCA Color TV IS” (diajt.) liOOD HOCSEKEEPIAIi SHOP 51 West Huron FE 4-1555 b Be My Valentine SAY IT WITH A SONY It If ill Always lie Remembered^ We Carry a COMPLETE STOCK of SONY TAPE RECORDERS RADIDS & TVs Come in For For Business and Pleasure! FREE DEMONSTRATION Modal 100 CASSETTE-CDRDER A/C or battery operated. Quick change ca«»ette ejector button. Remote control. Stop/Starton Mike. • Caie with shoulder strop included LAY-A-WAY EASY TERMS Get the Most from Auto/Stereo! PLAYBACKS YOUR CAR! Self-Taped Stereo Cartridges! TAPE YOUR OWN STEREO CARTRIDGE LIBRARY! 6 N. SAGINAW DDWNTOWN £1 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC STORE ONLY! reg. $3.87 2 lbs. CANDY IN HEART BOX 2*7 VARIETY OF CHOCOLATES 50c Valum BOYS' and GIRLS' SHARP CREW SOCKS 28t- Hug* S*l*ction of Colors OWE COLOR THi; PONTIAC yUESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1969 blowers to Please'^ The iweetesl way to convey your Valentine Menage it with Flowers. Better than words . . . they say ‘*1 Love You” in the nicest way. PeV FLORAL CO. 559 Orchard Lake AvenueFE 2-0127 0> R&M DEPT. STORE is Your ONE STOP VALENTINE SHOP HALLMARK VALENTINE CARDS and WRAPPING PAPER LADIES', MEN'S, & CHILDREN'S GIFT WARE FREE GIFT WRAPPING Open Sunday 10:30-3-Daily 9:30 - 9:00 **Charge It" R&M Charge, Bankard, Security Charge R&M** store 363-7174 UNION LAKE VILLAGE nfgjW DON’T LEAVE YOUR (V)''’ C? ^ GIRL BEHIND TfflS % WINTER OR NEXT WINTER CLEARANCE SALE On All of Our SNOWMOBILE SLEDS As Low As 79 Also We Have Snowmobile Boots and Suits On Sale CRUISE-OUT INC. 63 E. Walton Blvd. 338-4402 a Valentine suggestion! ' SNACK TABLES White Formica or Walnut Tops—Walnut Finish Maple Formica Top and Maple Finish , Set of Three Round or Square—Beautiful and Practical CLAYTON’S 2133 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD PH; 333-7052 The Best Way to Say "I Love You' DOWNTOWN PONTIAC STORE ONLY! COMPLETE TURKEY DINNER Roast Tender Turkoy Savory Dressing Mashod Potatoes Rich Turkoy Gravy Sweet Peas, Rolls & Butter Dish of Ice Cream Cup of Hot Coffeo ALL FOR Cupid Approved... 124“ Tke CASCADE • ZaOUC TItt glim Unt S$rk$ Oractfully slim portable TV in a lightwaight moldad two-tone color eabinat. Charcoal color afKl Off-Whita color. Top Carry handla. Monopola Antanna. • Sales 20,000 VOLTS OF PICTURE POWER... IL^ For unsurpassed'^'^ picturs brightness ^ snd clarity! • $01^106 I STEFANSKI RADIO & TV Open Friday Evenings 'til 9 % 1157 W. HURON DOWNTOWN PONTIAC STQRE ONLY! THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY DELICIOUS BAKED HAM SLICED TO ORDER \a IG nti n e - Pg pfect • Nylon Gowns • Slips • Blouses • Hosiery • Dresses • Sportswear • Robes • Purses • Jewelry ' Give Her A Bobette GIFT CERTIFICATE Sure to please! Ends ell of your problems about etyle, eiee, ^^hap^end color. Bobette Shop Saginaw - Downtown C\ A O Perk Free FE 2-6967 ^ CLaree-^Mieh. Ennkard-mdiretlB^^ FOR YOUR VALENTINE You’ll find a wide assortment of chocolates by WHITMAN’S Serving Greater Oakland County With Stores In: » PONTIAC • WATERFORD • BIRMINGHAM • HIGHUND » TROY • LAKE ORION •SfWSiSf- ttMyrenrttMS PRINCE GARDNER’ REGISTRAR* or Banker Billfoldi with matching KEY CARD* ... eaeae for keye, packed in silk lined gift boxes. Popular colors. Michigan Bankard Diner's Club 20 W. HURON TODD'S DOWNTOWN Open 9:30-5:30 - Friday to 9 Good is great at MR. STEAK. "m you haven’t tried a delicious, perfectly aged USDA CHOICE MR. STEAK steak, you should. Enjoy our great.steaks any time between 11:30 a.m. and 9 p.m. A Valentine gift that Is REALLY Appreciated Is a Dinner at Mr. Steak ELIZABETH LAKE RD. OPPOSITE PONTIAC MALL AMERICA’S FAVORITE /9?/i//ZKRESTAURANTS 17 JEWEL ELGIN WATCHES Pp 29 Watorproof THE PERFECT VALENTINE GIFT! I PARK JEWELERS and OPTICIANS 1 N. SAGINAW (Corner Pike St) ^ FE 4-1889 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1969 ONE COLOR F—3 From The BLOOMHELD MIRACLE MILE Merchants to That EXTRA SPECIAL Person in Your Life QLountj^ % §ljO}J Gift Your Valentine One of Our Newly , Arrived Knit Shirts By: GINO PAOLI (Italy) and TREND FASHIONS F,o« '$9 t, $42^0 Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center That EXTRA Special Gift For That EXTRA Special Girl WITTNAUER A AnODUCT or LOMOINtM-WJTTNAUtn Witfnauer the watch of time and fashion. These two beauties are but two from our collection of elegantly crafted Wittnaiier watches that await your inspection. FREE ENGRAVING Loth-MoT/ Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center FROMWICKES TOTHEGIRLYOULOVE SELF-CLEANING ELECTRIC RANGE NOW JUST $29095 X X / Reg. $289.95 WICKES Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center '^0’ From WICKES' To The Girl You Love ^ bUILT-lN ' DISHWASHER $16F Reg. $189.95 WICKES BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE 100% NYLON MICRO MESH SEAMLESS PANTY HOSE GOOD COLOR ASSORTMENT Proportioned Sizes Short • Average Long • Extra Long Garterless Flattery For Dress or Casual Wear. $169 I pair ' (not 05 shown) <3 penneys ^ Bloomfield Miracle IV Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center LION has the perfect gift HOUBIGANT Chantilly <0 - . , *. I » [au Toilette Spray . . 4-oz...$6 (rfumed Dusting Powder, 5-oz. $3.50 Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center From WICKES To The Man You LOVE 1" CIRCULAR SAW NOW $]388 Reg. ^23.95 WICKES ^ ^ BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE PENNEY'S OWN gaymode SLEEP SHIFT GOWNS Penn-Prest never iron, 65% Polyester, 35% Cotton. Elasticized neck opening with a ruffly trim. Colors of Red, of course, also Feminine Pink, and Blue. Sizes S-M-L. The Ideal Valentine Gift For Only ^6°^^ PENNEYS Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center From PENNEYS Just In Time For ^ VALENTINE GIVING Y AMERICAN JEWELRY Red/White/Blue Choose from pins, necklaces, earrings, and bracelets. This will- delight any Valentine. YOUR CHOICE $2 each PENNEYS Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center Miracle Mile Merchants Have All The Gifts fi7 iiftiBiiiriTi I 2 free parking ^ 1 Open 10 AM, to 9 PM, Bloomfield ^ Miracle Mile Low to win I> y^urValentme Look Smart And Have A Sunny Smile It Can Work Wonders We Now Hove All New Equipment Including a 25-lb. Rug Cleaner and All New 2 Speed SPEED QUEEN Washers. ECON-O-WASH Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center MIRACLE MILE STORE ONLY . LAY-AWAY FOR SPRING SUNDAY 12 TO 5 P.M. $29700 • 7 H.P. GARDEN TRACTOR • With 32" Twin Blades • 16" Rear Hi-Flotation Wheels • 13" Front Hi- Flotation Wheels • 8 Speeds, 6 Forward, 2 Reverse KRESGE Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center F—4 J1!‘ tki’* >X rhVC Rat)AF>: 13UL’AUv;.6, 18U9 Brazil Tougher on Its Scoff lows I Ifalian-Americon j I Backs Honor for Columbus Rival \i Soviet Superlatives Meet Law of Diminishing Returns X MOSCOW. (Jfi - Soviet superlatives are running into a law of diminishing returns. NEW YORK (AP) — What The Russian people are am-Vred-bloodcd Hallan-American bilious and prestige-conscious, would sponsor an honor for the | They like to think and build on SAO PAULO, Brasil (AP) - of Alcatrar., and a penal colpny;Norwegian rival of Christopher!a grand scale. But the lure of With almost unrestricted au-in the city of Belo Horizonte!Columbus for the title of di.scov-.sheer size has run into pitfalls thority, police alt over Brazil called Magalhaes Pinto. The'erer of America? on several projects recently, have launched a campaign right of habeas corpus is sus- Angelo J. Arculeo, the City ★ ♦ ★ against minor lawbreakers. pended. Council minority leader, that’s Russian history is full of ex- * * * VI mrfrs; tamp who. But the Italian-American amples of official efforts to im- Since President Arthur da ‘ ’ ' councilman is quick to insist'press people, especially Costa e Silva closed Congress 9’**’ pns'>ners In that he still believes that Colum- foreigners, with showcase pro- and assumed dictatorial powers Magalhaes Pinto were involved Italian, was the first to jects. The Soviets have carried Dec 13 militarv and political "'fh'hP Pnpo'ar numbers game (jispoypr y^merica in 1492, |on the tradition, sometimes with police have been rounding up JIRn Although the * * * greater enthusiasm than their petty offenders with increasing R*'"''*' ^ren illegal for .some -phe City Council’s committee prerevolutionary ancestors, vigor. First offenders ranging'‘mr police havfT'becn cracking parks and thoroughfares to- A new 4,000-room hotel In from speeding motorisis lo sus- '’"'V recently. day considers Arculeo’s propos- Moscow, the modern! pected merchants are being Also among the many new a] to change the name of the Rosiya, is so.huge that tourists sent off to prisons without being prisoners are merchants who city portion of Shore Parkway are constantly getting lost in it. formally charged or tried raised prices on such staples as to |,eif Kricson Drive. A reporter who showed up there ★ * * rice and meat in defiance of Arculeo explained he pro-ifor a late-night appointment Persons breaking new price-price controls. The newspaper 0 po.sed the local name changing; found his host’s room empty. control laws were the main tar- Estado reports police in Brasil- only because the state legisla-;He descended to the lobby cm gets recently as well as those ia, the national capital, have ture has already renamed the the opposite .side of the hotel — Involved in the numbers game, gone on an arrested "blitz.” ap- parkway la-if Ericson Drive, a 20-minute walk, one-way — marijuana traffic and contra- prehendmg merchants who dis His bill would speed changing of and came right bade. By the band ohev the price freeze. One of the the signs. time he returned to the room Dozens have been sent out to city’s largest druggists was ar- the man was a.sleep the llha Grande, Rio's version rested after he raised the price The bald eagle, national em- A restaurant built into the of medicines. blem of the United States, is Ostankino television tower, to * * * protected from hunters by fed- provide a panoramic view of k I n '/J'.-,.— Srniiggling, previously accept-eral law. !Moscow, often finds itself in the New bUlluing ed as part of Brazils way of life, now is rigorously attacked for TV SfOflOn'’'A'?,ajri..ml».,r,nlh.„..rlh. eastern state of .Sergipe wasj GRAND RAPIDS lAPi - recently arrested for selling! Ground will be broken April 15 contraband watches and ciga-for a $7.30.000 building to house f'T n WZZM.TV „r Grand Rapid,, it was announ^d Wedne.sriay bv cigarettes in WiUiam C. Dempsey, president pocket can be arrested.” and generaj manager^ APPLIANCE CRAC KDOWN Television facilities are A crackdown on persons located at present in the Pant- smuggling electrical appliances Und Hotel and the FM radio has had a marked effect. The facilities are at the R and G influx of record players, televi-Terminal Building. appl'nnees has ^ ★ ★ oeen rut off He said the radio transmitter i*'c new pnrge has moral and antenna will be located on Department of the same four-acre site Public Diversioas in Rio has is-^ Wniknr. . Grand Rapid, »,b„rb, - 3|,7ri“„;'"lhi^ year’s Carnival festivities which the department promises will be I clouds. Jt makes for -eerie dining, but likely no view, day or night, from the l,lQ|k-foot level. The AN22 turboprop plane, first made public In Paris in June 1965, was designed to carry 724 persons. The prototype was billed as the world’s largest, but the plane never has appeared lor ppssenger or cargo use. The AI^ apparently was a descendant of the Maxim Ckirky, an eight-engine monster built in 1933 and advertised then as the biggest in' the world. It blew, up in flight, killing everybody aboard. Moscow) itself was laid out , men with big ideas. The Garden Ring street circling the business district 'is A® ® places it can be crossed only ui two cycles of the stoplight. * * * Intourist, the travel agency that handles foreigners, is quick to remind visitors of various Soviet firsts, bests and mosts. One tourist who hpd his fill of superlatives remarked recently on a pebble beach on the Black Everything is big in the Soviet Union — even the sand.” $t Down Holds Your Selection till April IS ■ ■. $10 for Riding T>act^ i Scars CRAFTSMAN PRE-SL4tS0\ Skid Falls; 1 Dead "rigorously enforced.” These in-, . elude a prohibition against per-^ sons "removing any of their [■ clothing in public places.” GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-Paiil L. Crisman, .50, of Grand Rapids was crushed to death when a skid tipped while being ^ Paulo "television inter-moved and fell on him, author- vjpyypr ^vas arrested for “creat-lUes said Wednesday Crisman mg untjanqiiility in the public was an employe for Gallmeyer order" on the ground that his and Livingston Co The acci- program exploited people’s per-dent happened Tuesday. .sonal problem.s. ’10-M5 Sweaters $595 2 for ’ir Jacket Sale Limited Iluantities V2 Price Reg. ‘lO" Pants Dress & Sport $J95 2 for $15.00 Cashmere Topcoats $100.00 Value $5500 Reg. 129.95 CONN’S NOTICE! Members Chief Pontiac Federal S OtkKnd Ctnttr 8 Pryol* HouM 4 utrary t Sp«lt mi NKr««U«R Bull«i SScitnci Bulltfing D.HIII H«ui* OAKLAND UNIVERSITY I ROCMITCR. MICMItAN ' Every Craftsman Mower Gives You V Easier Starts V Dependability V Safety V Quality 20-In. Self-Cleaning Rotary With Catcher Big 10..5-CU. ii 522" Self-Propelled Rotary Mower h Grass-Leaf Catcher...........148.95 18” Power Reel Mower with Grass Catcher DON'T MISS THESE ‘‘END OF MONTH’ VALUES AT 10«»5 3-HP engine with safety blade and throttle control on handle ... just lower to stop. Quick set height-of-cut adjustments. Powerful, precise cutting. 73 N. SAGINAW 3f^UTTLE BUS PARKING t Do You Kiuho Wlim? Do Yoa Kiuho WIim? 28th ANNUAL MEETING Chief Pontiac Federal Credit Union Febniaiy 8,1969 at 7:30 P.M. Oakland University, Rochester, Michigan Sports and Recreation Building IMPORTANT INFORMATION (See Above Map). • FREE Shuttle Bus Service will be provided (6:4^ P.M. ij:; to 7:30 P.M.) for your convenience from the parking lot to the Sports and Recreation Building. ' e Guests may drive their automobiles to the Sports and •Recreation Building to let passengers off before parking in the designated lot. t Follow the arrows — it's only a short walk. CHIEF PONflAC FEDERAL UNION .SN5 X- V 0. Follow Map on Right to :•} Locate Oakland University Custom 10 Tractor WITH 38" CUniNG ATTACHMENT ^699 tch, loHd-ctate ignition, all-gear transmission ds and 2 reverse, fingertip cpntrol group, ■na with Timkin roller bearings. Power Edger-Trimmer CRAFTSMAN 3V2-HP GASOLINE ENGINE 8799 Rugged 3Vk-HPengine cats through the toughest turf with adjustable cutting head. Trim along curbs or walks with ease. Folding handle for storage. Steel Lawn Building 8'2" X 6’9" “LINCOLNWOOD" 9799 EleCtric-Start Rider CRAFTSMAN HYDROSTATIC DRIVE MOTOR Inside area, 7x5-ft. deep. Finish looks like wdilnut, but it’s actually rugged vinyl. Extra-rigid construction. Floor 169.95 9’2" X 1>9" Building......................134.99 Reg. 899.50 burbon Equipment Deportment 79950 Smooth power flow for easy lawn care. Big 10-HP engine starts with just the turn of a key. 5 cutting heights . . . adjust froln driver's seat. Save Now! Seori Hardware Department NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Opea Meadey, Tkar«4>r. FrWag. Catarder « i. W TanAv. « M 3,SO ScRre Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 ■uagawavcaAfcaa. TO READERS OF THIS YOU ARE INVITED JNt>^0R to saver up to 50% on our great magazines — if you are a new subscriber. We twenty one pubiiphers got together and decided to make this offer to introduce you to our famous magazines. Just check the magazines you want and mail the NEW SUBSCRIBER’S COMPUTER CERTIFICATE below. good. Youi reedWat if lege ef car Your subscription will start right away. You will be billed later. you don't enjoy every Issue, If you aren’t absolutely fas-cancelling the balance of your subscription and the unused You need send no money your credit is You take no risk because we publishers agreed^ cinated and delighted — you have the privilege portion will be refunded. Prices are far below newsstand rates and regular subscription rates paid by the general public. To avoid dis» appointment we suggest you mail the NEW SUBSCRIBER’S COMPUTER CERTIFICATE now, as these offers are being made in your community newspaper Just this once and may not be repeated. 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Check the Journal on the special order form and you’ll receive all this and much more — Vogue and Journel patterns, fabulous “Book Bonus” inserts, the Cookbook of the Month and highlights and sidelights in the world of women — all for just $2.00. Send your order now. We’ll gladly bill you later. SAVE 50% LADIES HOME JOURNAL SAVE 50% Outdoor Life MAGAZINE SPECIAL HALF-PRICE OFFER MONTHS ONLY JO (Regularly $4) £» 12 LAST CHANCE AT THIS LOW PRICE RATE INCREASE EFFECTIVE MARCH ZTttl ItSB Want a crack at some trophy size game? Looking for a fishing spot where you'll land your limit eveiy time out? Want a changa^-pace IHte bow-fishing or snowmobile hunting? Let Outdoor Life show you the way— and save vou 50% on the re^ar subscription price! Get expert tips on everything from guns and gear to driving, tracking, dressing and packing your fevorlte game. Get angling advice on everytMng from baits to boats, from lures for lunkers to patterns for panfish. Hus regular features on camping, archery, hunting dogs, ammo, fresh- and saltwater fishing-all filled with full-color photos and paintings. NOW IN EVERY ISSUE-EXTRA PAGES THAT PINPOIffT HUNTING AM> FISHING IN YOUR REGION! Get state-by-state coverage of: big and small game hot spots ... prospects for fresh-and saltwater angling... top arras for waterfowl and uj^and bird shooting ... bowhunting — game populations, harvests, and wildlife restocking - - - licenses, limits, seasons... conswvation news. More big news! Joe Brooks is now Outdoor Life’s fuH-time Fishing Editor, sharing with you every month his 40 years of angling know-how. Bag a year’s subscription to Outdoor Life now — and pocket half the price! Or, if you iike, you can save even more on a 2 or 3-year subscription: 24 nranths only $4; 36 months only S6. Send no money now — use attached card to order. ARGOSY Special Half Price Offer ONE YEAR FOR $3.00! Single copy value $7.20. Subscription value $K00. This special offer brings you ARGOSY for only 25c per copy, ARGOSY has everything for the man every month of the year. Articles, fiction, guns, fishing, hunting, boating, sports PLUS many, nuiny more. Order today. Send no money. ARGOSY will bill you. FOR THE CHILDREN, OF COURSE GOLDEN MAGAZINE From the publishers of the popular Qoldon Books. It’s the monthly tonic recommended for young readers 7 through 12 by teachers, parents and young readers ... A happy blend of fiction, facts and fun from Golden ... so you can be sure it’s a magazine you want your child to read, and one he or she will love. Order now and save $2 with this Special Introductory Subscription Offer. y» OFF-12 hmt M-lawlatlY N it NtwsttMids YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD-ORDER NOW PAY LATER BUSINESS REPLY MAIL Postage will be paid by Box 2810 Clinton, Iowa 52732 TAKE YOUR CHOICE of these great magizir*;!. at special ‘‘NEW SUBSCRIBER'S” rates TIME/17 weeks $1.97 (REGULAR SUBSCRIPTION RATE: 17 WEEKS/$3.»2) The point of this offer is to make it as simple as possible for you to start reading TIME, The Weekly Newsmagazine, regularly. And to make it easy on your finances, too, we're inviting you to try TIME fof less than 12C a week. Just check the TIME box on the attached form. The magazine will arrive each week with fresh reports on everything the world is up to. And you’ll save almost 50% off the regular subscription rate. If for some reason you don’t profit from TIME—don’t use, quote, and thoroughly enjoy it, then you’ve risked little. But if you find TIME fills your needs and fits your taste, gives you the satisfaction of being truly well informed in only a few hours’ reading—then you’ve made a discovery worth many times your small investment. For it’s TIME’S job to get the facts from every corner of the globe... organize them into a clear connected story of our times ... put events into perspective ... cover fields you might otherwise miss in your busy life ... introduce you to personalities in and behind the headlines ... and put at your fingertips an accurate, astute, and entertaining suminary of all the news you need and want to know—every week. Try it and see. Mail your order today so that TIME can start arriving regularly within the next three or four issues. THE INFINITE VARIETY OF LIFE. ONLY 100 AN ISSUE. LIFE makes you an eyewitness to the world. ^ You may find yourself on safari In Africa one week, and In the thick of civilization on a political bandwagon the next. You’ll be on the spot with LIFE’S award winning photographers wherever news is made, and you’ll meet the people who make it, like Charles de Gaulle and President Richard M. Nixon. There’ll be colorful glimpies into fashion’s whimsical crystal ball, a gourmet’s delight in LIFE’S Great Dinner Series, and fascinating excursions into the kaleidoscopic world of today’s technology. All this, plus front row seats at major sports events like the recent exciting Super Bowl — and reviews of the latest movies, books and plays to keep you up to date. That’s a lot of ground to cover for 10^ a week. Just check LIFE on the attached order form and you’ll be on your way. You’ll love every minute. 30 WEEKS FOR «2.99. GET INGENUE FOR HALF PRICE 18 BIG ISSUES—ONLY $3.00 II you aro a girl—hart's good naws! Now you can kaap up arlth tha loan aat's lamlnino lads, happanings, lasMonsI Got INGENUE magazine for half prical 18 big, baautliul Isauas of advica...fun...loan lathlom...baauly...boytI...tha tcon# ...glrl-lo-glrl talk...books...racords...food...dacoratlon... Action... Broadaray shows...movlat... poetry (by toarwl)... horoscopes...parsonallllas...groups...and taan opinlonst Just check ‘iNGENUE” on the card and mall lodayl Sand no money—am'll gladly bill you lalarl A LOGICAL CHOICE FOR MEN/fN BUSINESS For sensib)^ Ideas about your career, your bank account, your investments. It pays to read FORTUNE. Each issue offers exclusive reports on the world of business—as it really exists. Our special trial offer brings you the next 15 issues of FORTUNE for $12.50— about 830 a copy, compared to $1.50 at the newsstand. It's quite a bargain! WHY IS CHRISTIAN HERALD . . . America's most quoted interdenominational religious magazine? ... Because you get inspiring, fascinating, informative articles like WHO HAS TIME TO PRAY?, BROTHERHOOD & DISSENT, THE ENIGMA OF JUDAS, THOSE RADIO CALL-IN PROGRAMS, CHRISTIAN IMAGINATION, AN ATTORNEY LOOKS AT UW AND ORDER, THEY SHALL JOG AND NOT BE WEARY, WHAT MAKES ART SACRED? IS IT TOO LATE FOR INTEGRATION?, THE FAITHS OF OUR FATHERS. Now you can sample this unique religious magazine at a special introductory price — 11 months lor only $1,97. (Single copy value $5.50. Subscription value $3.66). Check the attached Com-puter Certificate and mai|.__________________ Sports Illustrated A SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY RATE ’ 26 WEEKS FOR ONLY $2.97 LESS THAN 120 A WEEK! Go with SPORTS ILLUSTRATED to the exciting events ahead in sport —the start of baseball ’69, the Stanley Cup playoffs, the Masters, the Kentucky Derby, the Indianapolis 500 and much more. 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And you’ll save even more when you try our great ideas in decorating, gardening, traveling and **do-it-yoursalf-ing". nOW— the magazines you like best... at great savings! ■! > = OFrTr l / F;l 3EING MADE IN YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER JUST THIS AN ) n/lAY NOT BE REPEATED - SO WE RECOMMEND YOU MAIL THE New Suoscnoer's Computer Certificate NOW TO AVOID DISAPPOINTMENT Popular Science 19 MONTHS ONLY C95Q liL (Regularly $5.00) DID YOU KNOW ? ? ? ^ Flight and missile guidance data can be altered by lightning! •X- Your carburetor can get clogged by exhausts from other cars! -X- Transistors can now be printed on paper - like stamps! -X- Turning off the vacuum cleaner can spoil color TV picture quality! ^ An astronaut does not float in earth orbit, he falls around the earth! -X- Food poisoning is second only to the common cold as a cause of illness! 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Regular subscription rale, $6 for one year (12 issues). Single copy price, $7.20. Your price, only $3. SORRY BUT WE MUST LIMIT THESE OFFERS TO NEW SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - AND TO NO MORE THAN 4 TO A FAMILY © 1968 NATIONAL NETWORK OF COMMUNITY WEEKLIES PRINTED IN U S A 01 COLOR Ready to Replace Yanks, Says SAIGON (AP) — President Nguyen Van Hiiwi said today the South Vietnamese army now “has. the capability to replace sizable American troop units in the war.” Thieu’s appraisal of his troops’ capability, made at a news conference, was not detailed, but it was by far the most ambitious Sagon statement to date. He confirmed earlier reports that the South Vietnamese command is conferring with senior U.S. officers on preliminary plans for withdrawal of some American combat troops this year. Thieu did not indicate a withdrawal timetable. ★ ★ ★ He also did not make the expected announcement of dates Tor a cease-fire for the Tet lunar new year celebration in the middle of this month. “It is still too early,” he said, but he added: “Up to this date, in principle we will have a Tet truce.” The lunar holiday this year falls on Feb. 17, and the Vietcong has proclaimed a seven-day cease-fire for Feb. 15-22. Thieu said he would like to meet with President Nixon sometime this year and that he also plans to visit South Korea, Formosa and Thailand. He suggested a summit meeting of the seven allied nations fighting on his side in Vietnam if the Paris peace talks come to a “decisive moment on substantive matters.” In a preliminary statement, Thieu reviewed pacification efforts during 1968, particularly a recent three-month special accelerated program. Nixon Outlines Policy Toward Soviets, Mideast WASHINGTON (AP) - |>President Nixon has set out the first broad outlines of his policy toward the Soviet Union and the Mideast as he prepares to embark on one of the most extensive trips to Western Europe ever planned by an American president. In its first major step in foreign affairs, the administration agreed yesterday to a French proposal for four-power talks on the Middle East situation, but suggested the way be paved with preliminary d' At the same time, Nixon called for quick Senate ratification of the long-pending nuclear nonproliferation treaty and repeated his inaugural promise of a policy toward Russia based o n “negotiation rather than confrontation.” With Nixon’s trip later this month to an expected five Western European countries still some weeks away, more details and more policy were expected, beginning with today’s nationally televised news conference. LAYS DOWN PRINCIPAL At his news conference last week Nixon laid down the principal that solving wcwld political problems should be paralell to nuclear arms control and yesterday’s action was a move toward implementing it. The White House also announced yesterday it was ordering an immediate $l^million increase in outlays to col-and universities by the National Science Foundation, thus wiping out big cuts made by Johnson. ★ * ★ The quartet of major decisions in the foreign and domestic fields were announced after Nixon met at the White House yesterday with Republican congressional leaders. The GOP leaders said afterward that Nixon plans to send to Congress by mid-February special messages calling for tax and electoral reform. After the White House urged quick action on the treaty to ban the spread of nuclear weapons, Chairpian J. W. Fulbright of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee slated hearings for Feb. 18 and said the document should reach the floor by of the end of the month. The action on the nuclear treaty followed through on something long sought by President Johnsm. But in agreeing to talks between France, Great Britain, Ruskia ami the United Stntes oq the Arab-Israeli tensions Nixon moved away from the Johnson stance. TAKING TURNS — Pontiac Press Ski School instructor Neal Moore demonstrates turning on skis to a class of beginners. The first class of the school’s second session was held Kelley Ruling Hits Schools, Too County Building Periled? By JEANSAILE A formal opinion issued by Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley may have placed Oakland County’s building' program and the financing of the intermediate school budget in jeopardy. Kelley ruled yesterdsiy on a request of Rep. Clifford Smart, R-Walled Lake, that taxing beyond the 15-mill limitation for long-term leasr contracts with the building authority is illegal. ★ ★ ★ Aliso he ruled that the Oakland County Interpi^iate Sphool District which depends on t^e use of two-tenths of a mill of its .22-miIl budget from nonvoted monies is doing so illegally. “The 15-mill tax limitation controls,” Kelley ruled in' regard to the intermediate school budget. Ttie mere fact that the district extends beyond the county line does not justify the intermediate district to exce^ the limitation he said. Dr. William' Emerson, superintendent of the Oakland County Intermediate School District, said he would have no comment until he had had an opportunity to read the opinion. Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the county board of auditors, said he did not believe the ruling would affect the financing of the east wing of the courthouse. Murphy said he had not received a copy of the attorney general’s opinion yet, but that in his opinion the ruling would have little application in that the county’s decision to exceed the limitation is made on a yearly basis and not on a long-term agreement. CURRENT TAX SPREAD The county’s current tax spread, approved last year by the Board of Supervisors, provides for the raising of sorne $300,000 by a levy of .112 mills beyond the limitation. The money is used to pay drain assessments and the lease payments to the building authority for the east wing. Where the ruling is likely to have mora effect is on the construction of the county’s proposed $9-million jail and law enforcement complex. * ★ * Kelley ruled: “Notices of sale of building authority revenue bonds will not be approved by the Municipal Finance Commission, unless a showing is made that the annual rental payments can be made within the millage authority of the county.” COMMITTED By lease and lease-back agreement approved in board of supervisors’ committee, the county is committed to annual payments of $641,000 for the jail. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) “1 am greatly encouraged by the results obtained,” he said, adding that at the end of last month “the government of Vietnam controlled 89 per cent of the population throughout the country. ” * ★ * This figure contrasts sharply with Vietcong claims that they control most of the population. Thieu said that his goal in 1969 would be for the government “to control 100 per cent of the population.” To accomplish this, he laid out a four-point program including improving local administration, improving personnel, organizing elections in all villages and hamlets where the government has extended its control, and finally a “really vigorous and revolutionary land reform program.” Talks Are Sfal led, Saigon Assailed PARIS (41 - The United States appealed to North Vietnam and the Viel-cong’s National Liberation Front today to "come to grips” with basic problems of peace. But the Vietnam talks bogged down into solid deadlock, scaled by violent attacks on the government of South Vietnam. The third session of the full-scale talks opened with an NLF blast declaring peace impossible so long an the present South Vietnamese government remains in power and the Americans refuse to negotiate directly with the front. * ★ A This, plus a North Vietnamese statement echoing the sentiments, suggested a distinct hardening of positions. The other side of the deadlock came from Saigon, where President Nguyen Van Thieu said South Vietnam “will not make any concessions detrimental to the national .sovereignty or interest. ’ last night. Subsequent classes will be held the next three Wednesdays at the Mt. Holly Ski Area, 13536 S. Dixie, Groveland Township. Some 700 beginners are enrolled. Supervisor Pay Statewi(de Issue fEDITOR'S NOTE — Every county in Michigan has a newly formed board of supervisors. Since they took office the first of the year, fhci No. 1 problem facing most of the boards has been how much they should pay themselves. Michigan newspapers which are members of the Associated Press contributed the information for this roundup on the statewide issue of county supervisors’ pay./ Py KARL MANTYLA AND A. F. MAHAN Associated Press Writers A storm of controversy sparked by angry taxpayers has broken about the heads of many of Michigan’s new county boards of supervisors. Pay scales form the vortex of the storm, but controversy also swirls over whether the jobs require full-time or only part-time attention. ★ ★ ★ The salary squabble has swept to the State Capitol. State Sen. George Kuhn, R-West Bloomfield Twp., has threatened to offer a bill under which the Legislature would fix $5,000 a year as the absolute maximum compensation for any supervisor. Gov. William Milliken said he wished some county boards had acted “with a greater sense of responsibility” in setting their pay. RECALL DRIVE STARTS A drive to recall 14 of the 26 Wayne County supervisors from office is being staged by Detroit’s Jaycees who oppose the board’s new salaries of $12,500 a year plus fringe benefits and payments of $40 a day for attending’meetings. The prospect of a similar recall drive against nine of the 17 Genesee County supervisors is being investigated by Flint Jaycees. They oppose newly set salaries of $7,500 a year and payments of $20 a ■meeting, charging they amount to “a high price for a public trust.” The Jaycees consider the supervisory jobs in the county of 419,000 as part-time positions. (Continued on Page A-9, Col. 1) This news conference statement was a clarification of one in Paris by Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky. As the American, North Vietnamese, NLF and Saigon delegates gathered for the third time around the enormous round table in the International Conference Center, the atmosphere was one of pessimism for any positive result in the near future. U.S. Ambas.sador Henry Cabot Lodge, heading the U.S. team, sought once again to bring up military matters, although he declared that “we do not, thereby, set aside the importance of political matters. ” Ambassador Xuan Thuy of North Vietnam, however, insisted that the Vietnam problem must be solved as a whole in both military and political aspects, “the political aspect being the more fundamental.” This is a basic element of the deadlock. Lodge indicated this when, in his formal statement, he said: “We do underline two things in this regard: First, as we have repeatedly said, we consider that the settlement of political affairs must be a matter for determination by the South Vietnamese themselves; second, that the separation of the contending military forces will help to create a climate in which the political process can go forward without external interference ” * * * Thus, the United States is stressing that military matters involving reestablishment of the demilitarized zone between North and South and mutual withdrawal of forces must be dealt with first in Paris. Lodge revived his DMZ proposal and rejected a charge of his antagonists that the Americans brought this up as a means of maintaining military superiority in the South. Temporary Half on ABMs Ordered WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird has ordered major work on the $5.5-billion Sentinel antiballistic missile system halted temporarily pending a high-level review of antimissile plans, the Pentagon announced today. The move comes in the wake of grow- Earlier Sfory, Page A-4 ing congressional criticism about plans for the controversial Sentinel defense. Chairman L. Mendel Rivers of the House Armed Services Committee has told the Defense Department his group will approve no construction plans for Sentinel sites until the Nixon administration makes known its intentions about the program. if -k * The Pentagon said “certain aspects” of the Sentinel program are being deferred. These include the selection and buying of land for antimissile complexes as well as construction of Sentinel facilities. “The Sentinel system is being reviewed as part of our over-all look at major weapons systems,” a defense statement said. “That review is continuing on a priority basis. Waterford Legislator Hits Plan for Costly New Capitol Chance of Snow, Drizzle Tonight There’s a chance of light snow late today, possibly mixed with vfreezing drizzle, acc(ffding ^o the weathermaq. Tonight will be partly cloudy and somewhat warmer, the low 16 to 21. Partly cloudy with a high of 30 to 35 is the forecast for tomorrow. ★ * ★ Clouds rolling in Saturday are expected to drop some rain on the Pontiac area. PredjBtation probabilities in per cent are 40 today, 30 tonight and 20 tomorrow,. * ★ * Thirteen was the low temperature in downto^ Pontiac prior to 8 a.m.. The therm(|^l)er recorded 23 at 12:30 p.ti&i Thorough Study of State Hospitals Urged REP. LOREN ANDERSON “I don’t see how I could in good conscience vote for any new (state) capitol involving $49 million to $70 million when we have conditions such as we know exist in our state mental institutions,” said Rep. Loren D. Anderson, R-Waterford Township. Anderson yesterday introduced a resolution to the State Legislature in which he asked that a special committee be set up to conduct “a thorough reevaluation” of Michigan mental hospitals. ★ * * Anderson a member of the House Mental Health Committee last year, said he had been assured of the support of House Speaker William Ryan, D-Detroit. “Ryan told me,” Anderson shid, “that as soon as the resolution is reported to the mental health committee he will appoint a group to meet and develop some sejjise of direction. ” Anderson said the Mental Health Department “is the third highest agency in the state in the amount of money it gets. What is needed is better handling of finances.” * ★ ★ During the 1967-68 fiscal year, the department was allocated about $152 million in operating funds. Another $6 million was budgeted for capital im- provements. ★ * * “Some of the conditions under which patients at the Pontiac State Hospital live are atrocious. 1 am assured by other legislators from other areas that there’s much to be desired in their mental facilities. Most of the buildings are old and antiquated and should have been torn down years ago,” Anderson said. “Two of the most basic responsibilities anyone has who serves the people is the provision of health ahd safety. Whatever^ else we give them isn’t very much,” Anderson added. NO CAPITOL OFFICE Anderson said he had no office in the present state capitol and that he shares a secretary with another representative. * * “1 get along very well,” said Anderson. “If we have the money to spend that promoters Say we have who are pushing the new capitol, let’s give some relief to people who need it so desperately.” ★ * * ‘At Pontiac State Hospital I stood In a patient's cold room, dependent on heat from the hall, and I could see right outside through cracks in the wall,” Anderson said. “If we can’t provide the basic comfort of warmth, then we’re completely derelict in our j^Klgment.” J THE PONTIAC PRESS. THI RSDAV, FEBRUARY 1969 BMiMm ])i¥iy Fcc Eyes Bon Postal Patronoge Stand Is Hailed of Cigarette Ads ^ From Radio, TV WASHINGTON (APi - The Federal Communications Commission’s plan to sweep all cigarette advertising off radio and television—if it gets t h e authority—has drawn strong criticism from the tobacco and broadcasting industries, but was welcomed by the American Cancer Society. FCC Chairman Rosel H. Hyde vesterday announced the agency's 6-to-1 decision to issue a "notice of proposed rule making” as the first step toward the ban. ★ ♦ * The FCC, however, can take no action before June 30, when a 1965 law forbidding new regulations is scheduled to expire. The Tobacco Institute, the National Association of Broadcasters, tobacco-state congressmen and the one dissenting commissioner, James J. Wadsworth, criticized the action. In New York the cancer society — a long-time crusader against cigarette smoking—issued a statement welcoming the proposal and expressing hope broadcasters would accept the recommendation. The Tobacco Institute called the announcement “an obvious threat to usurp the congressional function, ” and said a ban would be arbitrary and extreme. Hyde told a news conference there would be only two things that might cause the commission to reconsider a complete ban: The broadcasters could omit the advertisements voluntarily, or the FCX: might approve advertising of low-tar-low-nicotine cigarettes. He made clear, however, the emphasis of the commission’s thinking is on a complete 'ban. Exam Tuesday in Murder Case A Pontiac man faces preliminary examination in City District Court Tuesday on an open charge of murder in connection with the gunshot death of another. Held without bond in Oakland County Jail is Carlton Flowers, 26, of 445 S. Jessie. * ★ ★ He is accused of firing the shots Tuesday which kilted John L. Cowart, 35, and wounded Charles Shiel, 21, in an Incident in front of Flower's home about 3 p.m. Cowart of 497 S. Paddock was pronounced dead on arrival at Pontiac-Osteopathic Hospital, where Shiel of 301 Osmun, is reported in satisfactory condition with a chest wound. ★ * w Witnesses told police the shots were fired following an argument They said Cowart was shot when he stepp^ from a car in front of Flowers’ home and that Shiel was shot moments later when he attempted to grab the gunman. WASHINGTON (AP) — Post masters across the nation hailed the Nixon administration's first move to divorce postal affairs from politics today. But there was some doubt the traditional marriage will be broken up. "Patronage was a possibility under the old systiim but in most cases it wasn't a problem,” said Seattle Postmaster James Symbol. ”11 may give the postmaster general more latitude in selecting men who are real business managers. The Post Office Department needs real business managers, ” said l.os Angeles Postmaster Leslie N. Shaw. The remarks of Symbol and Shaw, a Negro postal-service career man who came up through the ranks, were typical of the reaction in a cross-country survey to the Nixon administration’s announcement Wednesday that henceforth all postmasters will be selected on merit. Postmaster General Winton M. Blount, appearing at a White House news conference with the President at his side, said that effective immediately “the best -qualified candidate will be appointed, regardless of his or her politics — indeed without even asking the candidate’s party affiliation.” Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen said later that the immediate effect would be to withdraw 2,130 acting postmasterships and require the ap- pointees to taTte new examinations for their jobs. WWW The political machinery, however, that locks postmasterships into the patronage system must be changed by legislation, not executive order, and until the Senate votes to give up its power of confirmation over such appointments a lasting break with the past cannot be Birmingham Congress to Get Raise on Feb. 14 WASHINGTON (4^ -The congressional pay b(Hist that goes into effect next week will provide a $42,500 yearly salary to Capitol Hill lawmakers already comforted by extensive fringe benefits ranging from liberal travel allowances to free haircuts for senators. The only fringe benefits affected by the change are pensions, figured on length of .service and a percentage of pay WWW Since salaries are going up $12,500 a year, pensions under the voluntary Civil Service retirement plan automatically go up, too. The House Rules Committee made certain yesterday that the pay boosts, recommended by a special commission that suggested big hikes for other top federal officeholders, would take effect Feb. 14 while Congress is on a 10-day vacation. VOTE CALL KILLED The Rules Committee killed a resolu lion that would have forced a vote on whether the 41 percent raise should be accepted. The committee tabled a veto proposal by vote of 12 to 3, acting a day after the Senate killed a similar resolution, 47 to ,34. The dual action cleared the way for the increases without further action WWW It is the first pay hike for members of (Congress since a $7,500 boost — from $22,500 to $30,000 — was voted in 1964. It is the first raise in history on which there was not a direct vote, a departure made possible by a 1967 law Under current salary scales, the congressional pension ceiling has been $24,000 after 32 years service. This will go up to $34,000 five years from now because of the new raise. Under current practice, senators generally select from the top three candidates in their own cities who have qualified by Civil Service examination. Representatives chose the rest from the top three qualifiers in their districts. ★ ★ * As long as the power to veto a nominee lies with Congress, the preference of the postmaster general presumably could be blocked should local political needs momentarily eclipse postal merit. WWW Chairman Gale W. McGee, D-Wyo., indicated a favorable response by his Senate Post Office Committee, and noted that the Senate approved “this course of action” two years ago in a congressional reorganization bill that died in the House. MANY CAREER MEN The survey of postmasters also brought out an interesting fact — many were career men who came up through the ranks anyway. School Vote Registration Deadline Near BIRMINGHAM - Residents of the Birmingham School District are reminded the deadline for registration to vote in the March 24 special school election is 5 p.m. Feb. 21. Voters will be asked to approve a $5,500,000 bond'issue for proposed additions to the two high schools and an operating levy of 11.25 mills. * * A John Blackball Smith, superintendent of schools noted that residents who have voted in any election—presidential, state, city or township in the last two years, are already registered and qualified to vote. WWW Persons who have moved from one municipality or township to another within the Birmingham school district since they last registered, must reregister with the clerk in their new municipality. No More Patronage, Say Nixon And Blount Clark to Forego Enemy Toll Highest in 4 Months License Appeal SAIGON (AP) — Despite daily communiques reporting only light, scattered fighting, the number of Vietcong and North Vietnamese troops killed last week exceeded 3,000 for the first time in four and a half months, according to the weekly casualty report from the U S. A U S. spokesman insisted that the total of 3,190 enemy soldiers reported killed last week was tabulated from body counts by troops in the field. It was the highest enemy toll since the week of Sept. 15-21. w, w w The spokesman’s explanation of the seeming inconsistency was one the U S. Command has made repeatedly: There are hundreds of small clashes in which 'Wiretaps Not Relevant' small numbers of enemy soldiers are killed, but these are not considered significant enough to report in the daily communiques. In addition, some reports are delayed; for example, if enemy troops are killed in an air strike but their bodies are not found for several weeks, they are in-clud,ed in the total for the week in which they are found. Also many of the enemy dead are killed by artillery and air strikes and the body count frequently is done by aerial observers instead of by more accurate ground checks. The total of American and South Vietnamese battle dead last week remained about what they had been for the • previous three weeks: 198 Americans and 242 government soldiers. Dr. Ronald E. Clark of Farmington Township, serving a 3-to-5 year prison sentence for manslaughter, will not appeal the revocation of his medical license, according to his attorney, James E. Wells. Wells said that Clark plans to go to British Honduras when he is releiised fnm the state prison at Jackson. Clark was convicted last summer'of causing the death of a patient - employe, Mrs. Grace Neil of Livonia, by giving her an overdose of sodium pentathol. ★ ★ -It The 57-year-old Clark will work with real estate holdings owned by his wife in the Central American country, said Wells. Clark’s license was revoked Jan. 22 by the State Board of Registration in Medicine on the grounds of the conviction and gross unprofessional conduct. Save the Children Federation will launch its 27th Bundle Days Drive Monday for wearable used clothing for children living in the depressed Southern Appalachian Mountain region. Birmingham School District will sponsor the collection, which will take place through next Friday. All schools in the Birmingham school district will serve as collection centers. Clothing collected will be distributed at token prices in the southern mountain area. * * * Save the Children Federation is an international child welfare organization headquartered in Norwalk, Conn. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Jackson W. Smart Jr. of 725 Half Moon, has been elected president and chief operating officer of Michigan Screw Products Co., Center Line. ★ * * He previously was executive vice president for commercial banking at the Bank of the Commomweaith in Detroit. Smart was graduated from the University o& Michigan and the Harvard Business School. ★ ★ * Michigan Screw Products supplies precision fasteners to the automotive industry. U.S. Counters Holla Appeal WASHINGTON (AP) - The Justice Department contended again Wednesday that no information obtained b y wiretapping was even remotely related to James R Hoffa’s mail fraud conviction The Weather Full U.S, Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Increasing cloudiness, chance of light snow this afternoon, possibly mixed with freezing drizzle. High 29 to 33. Partly cloudy tonight, low 16 to 21. High Friday 30 to 35. Saturday’s outlook: a little warmer, chance ot rain. Winds easterly 8 to 18 miles per hour this afternoon, northerly tonight. Precipitation probabilities; 40 per cent today; 30 per cent tonight and 20 per cent tomorrow. TM«y In Pantile oni Viar Agi in Ponllic Direction: East Sun sets Thursday at S Sun ritat Frkiav at 7;« Moon aatt FrWav at ♦: Moon rises Thursday a 5 Detroit 23 1 Fort Worth —------- .. 5 JacksonviBe 6^ Houghton Lk. 19 9 Kansas City 4| 28 13 Los Angeles M 75 7 Miami Beach 7( 19 9 Milwaukee 7t 74 12 New Orleans i •d Lowest Temperatures Wednesday In Pontiac 21 2 1 23 1 V York 32 22 St. Louis 5 Tampa 6 . S. Lake City 4 > S. Francisco 5 26 12 S. Ste. Marie II 32 29 Seattle 49 34 Tucson S6 23 Washington Answering the latest appeal by the imprisoned Teamsters Union official the government told the Supreme Court it .sees no reason why Hoffa’s five-year prison sentence should be overturned * ★ * Hoffa is now serving an eight-year term for a jury tampering conviction in Chattanooga, Tenn. If he fails in his bid to overturn a mail fraud conviction, Hoffa would face a total sentence of 13 years—thus making him eligible for parole in June 1970. But if the court rules the conviction should be set aside, Hoffa would be eligible in nine more months. The government’s repy to Hoffa’s latest appeal contained no new disclosures. * * * It merely asked the court to uphold two lower court rulings that FBI-monitored conversations involving a Hoffa codefendant were “absolutely irrelevant” to the mail fraud case. In ruling the overheard conversations were not related, the district court judge examined privately nine logs submitted by the government. Hoffa and four other men were convicted by a Chicago jury in August 1964 of mail fraud and conspiracy in connection with procurement of funds from the Teamsters Union pension fund. His fourth appeal of the Chattanooga conviction, which also involves wiretap allegations, is pending before the court. It’s like adding a new room to your home NATKmAL WEATHER - Snow is due tonight over Illinois, Ohio and Indiana, as well as eastern Montana. Snow and snow flurries are due in Oregon, Id^o, Utah and Nevada. Rain is expected along the Gulf from Louisiana to Florida ara along the Attantic Coast from Florida to 'Virginia. More rain will fall in Califoroia while ilwi^becdoler intiieSqiithwest. ^ 4 Kelley Rules on Tax Limit (Continued From Page One) The opinion also provides, however, that once bonds are issued, a nonvoted levy over the 15 mills may be applied “iemporarily” to meet contract obligations. • lE * Oakland County has for three years levied nonvoted taxes for the east wing lease payments and for drain assessments. The east wing was c guidance radar installation^ also have voiced loud complaints when Army engineers showed up to check out possible sites. Congress authorized the beginning of site acquisition last year. Oakland County is one of the areas being considered to house a site for the antiballistic missiles. UP TO 9 IN epUT^TY Congressman William S. Broomfield, R-18th District, announced earlier this week that hi.s office has been advised that up to nine sites are being considered in the county. This is an tncTea.ie from the six Pontiac area sites thought to be under consideration. T*r ' Broomfield’s aides said the Army promised., to disclose a list of the new proposed Sites in a few days. Tuesday by Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, Sen. J..W. Fulbright, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, Sens. Jacob K. Javils, R-N.Y., John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., Edward W. Brooke, R-Mass.. Harrison A. Williams, D-N.J., and George S. McGovern, D-S.D. All generally opposed former president Johnson’s Vietnam war policies. Even Minority Leader Everette M. Dirksen, who pointed out-that he voted for a token start on the system last year, said he thought “the time ha$ come to take a cooler and more deliberate look at this proposal and I’m willing to do that.” The Defense Department has e.stimated that the system would cost $.5,."ii. billion, but Ken'rt^y said th# eveti^ tiial cost might go as high as $60 billion. 48 West Huron Street JOM« W. FinOCTAl-D Executive Vice PreMd. and Editor Maneilne Editor THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6. 1969 HOWARD H. President i .JOHN A. RlLir Secretary and Advertising Director Richard M. Pitwiraid Treasurer and Plnince Officer GM Shifts Top Execs Pontiac, Michifian: Attention' GM shuffles the deck. It happens heie periodically, because this city is invariably favored with exceptionally capable and outstanding top executives. They're seized continually by the upper echelon and moved along to even more exalted positions than they were already occupying. ★ ★ Here’s another deal! We lose John Z. DeLorean. Our boss for the past four years becomes the General Manager of Chevrolet, suceeding E. M. Estes who is whisked down to the I General Motors! Building and given | charge of practically everything in I sight. He will over-1 see the Truck and' Car Group of Gen- DeLOREAN eral Motors and if that doesn’t keep him up *’’ghts he’s permanently im- McDonald becomes the s of Pontiac Motor and do is maintain the whirl-■wind, dynamic and ■all-out pace set by ■his illustrious prede-Icessors. Either Pon-Itiac lias been fa-■vored during the ■past many years or ■this is an all-around ■lucky spot. Perhaps ■it’s both, for giants ■of the industry who headed the local plant have gone on to even greater glory and bigger assignments. They always succeed. ★ ★ ★ Mr. McDonald is no stranger in Pontiac. He was here a few years ago as Works Manager and he went from that to a big- ger calling in Chevrolet. Now he’s back as the Head Man and he’s welcomed with ringing applause from all of us. Mr. Me-iionald is built along the successful lines of our previous general managers and the community welcomes him with open arms. ★ ★ ★ “Pete" Estes is one of the most personable individuals in this or any other corporation and has made friends all over the industry and throughout the area. Without question, long John De-LoFiEAN is one of i the most brilliant I engineers in the entire automotive world and thus Chevrolet continues to be in the hands of j an exceedingly competent administra-1 tor. Mr. DeLorean’s continuous upswing ' in volume sales has McDONALD staggered the entire industr^^ for several years. The man’s a magician. The whole situation recalls a pro-nouncement by the late W.A.P. .John. Once when he was commenting on this giant operation, the sagacious “Wap” said: “General Motors is lousy with brains.” So be it. ★ ★ ★ Pontiac, Michigan, and Pontiac Motor Division unite in echoing this reassuring declaration. And over a period of years Pontiac Motor Division has been the most energetic, the most forward bounding and the most assertive unit in this great, gigantic setup — the largest corporation in the world. We’re in the hands of the mighty. What a nice spot to be. CED Eyes Election Costs The sixth of a series of studies on national and local government conducted by the Committee for Economic Development deals with “Financing a Better Election System. " This editorial is concerned with one of the study’s three-phase approaches, “Eliminating Needless Campaign Costs.” The study stresses the superfluity of state 2|nd local officeholders, pointing out that nationwide a total of 514,000 local and 12,000 state officials hold elective office. Through modernized concepts of government and resulting streamlining these numbers could be vastly reduced. In doing so, 80,000 units of local government would be reduced by 80 per cent, and on the state level the total of 8,300 legislators would be cut to about 4,000. it -k it Substantial reduction in heavy election costs could be effected by electing all governors and state legislators for four-year terras. Currently, 10 states elect governors for two-year terms while two-year terms are set for state legislators in 45 lower houses and 12 upper chambers. Nationwide standardized voter registration practices would reflect considerable dollar savings by elimi- nation of excessive manpower now required to staff diverse qualification •ind registration-period systems from one state to another. With state primaries for major offices frequently costing candidates from $100,000 to $250,000, a revamping on uniform lines of the state .primary structure would save not only candidates but the government establishmenti a tremendous outlay of taxpayers’ dollars. State presidential preference primaries and the national nominating conventions have become a hodgepodge of dissimilarity in the case of the former and in that of the latter an outmoded exercise in profitless expenditure of time and money for delegates and an expense bordering on the prohibitive for the campaigning nominees. ★ ★ ★ Finally, the campaigns—particularly those for president— run much too long, with expenditures for news media — both print and electronic—and other accruing campaign expenses as^ s u m i n g astronomical proportions, while a bored public reacts apathetically, if at all, to repetitious platitudes and empty governmental panaceas. Editorials on two other aspects of Political Finance will appear. Legalize Organ Donations If you want to give your heart away—or your eyes or kidneys or other vital organs—see a lawyer. According to R. C. Page, senior vice president of the Wachovia Bank and Trust Company of Winston-Salem, N. C., and a leading national authority on wills and trusts, legal authorization is as vital as the vital organ itself. Since transplants must be made immediately after death, any delay could make the organ no usable. ^ ^ The bank has distributed to North Carolina attorneys a suggested legal form for dealing with anatomifcal gifts. ★ ★ ★ Unfortunately, in some states at the present time, the law has not caught up with medical science and the wishes of next of kin can override those of a deceased. But having your intentions down in black and white is certainly ^ot a bad idea. David Lawrence Asks: Is Cigarette-Ad Plan Legal? WASHINGTON - Although the Federal Communications Commission has proposed that a ban be variety of things could be barred by a simple edict from Washington. Whether cigarette smoking is or is not dangerous to health is not the prime issue. What is actually involved is the power of Congress or the Federal Communications Commission or any other work, Brad used to say with the sale of such products by any of the available methods of marketing. ★ * ★ As their enduring friendship bloomed, Tunney, the great fancier of Shaw, Shakespeare and Santayana, permitted Brad to “touch up” his LAWRENCE covering such a prohibition, is adopted by both houses of Congress and three-fourths of the states. The FCC has jurisdiction over communication facilities, but it is primarily for the purpose of regulating their operations through the allocation of channels and frequencies, ★ ★ ★ , It has no authority to tell either television or radio stations what they may say in their programs. This is protected under the First Amendment of th&onstitution, which guarantees the right of free speech and freedom of the press. When public opinion in America recognized that excessive drinking of alcoholic beverages could be injurious to health, a constitutional amendment forbidding the manufacture and sale of such products was adopted in 1919, and then repealed in 1933. INJURIOUS TO HEALTH There are many things being sold today which could be injurious to the health of the citizens if used unwisely. The argument being made against cigarette advertising is based on a detailed report by the U.S. surgeon general issued in 1964 declaring that “cigarette smoking is a health hazard of sufficient importance in the United States to warrant appropriate remedial action. ” ★ ★ * He told a .Senate committee in 1965 that, “in general, the greater the number of cigarettes smoked daily, the higher the death rate.” But if the executive branph of the government or any of the independent agencies or the Congress has the power to prevent the advertising of cigarettes by radio and television, it also could conceivably attempt to prevent similar advertising from being presented through the printed word. ★ ★ Likewise, the prohibition could extend to all potentially harmful instruments or articles, including ammunition or medicines of certain kinds. If the federal government, without any constitutional amendment, can lawfully exclude the advertising of any article which might be injurious, then the sale of a agency to issue regulations which determine what may or may not be advertised for sale to the public. ★ ★ * If it is lawful to manufacture and sell the article itself, then the advertising is a proper exercise of the right to conduct a business through the faintest trace of a smile. As a Knight of Malta,* he and Mrs. Kelly were granted audiences with Plus XII, John XXIII and Paul VI. Yes, my friend Brad Kelly had range. He was too true to be good Hollywood material. Bob Considine Says: Story of Late Newsman Is a Cut Above Hollywood CONSIDINE NEW YORK - No Hollywood scenarist would have modeled his newspaper character after Bradley Kelly. As any moviegoer or TV a d d i ct knows, newspaper Char-a c t e r s are heavy drinkers, great lovers, tough and they can always solve crimes that baffle the FBI. Brad was a gentlemanly newspaper character, as a couple of generations of publishers and editors throughout the U.S. would and will attest. He was as humane and soft-spoken as a good priest, a selfless Samaritan to countless younger writers and artists who sought his counsel during his years as an executive of King Features Syndicate. One of Brad’s early assignments at King was a difficult one. Connolly had signed Gene Tunney, heavyweight champion of the world, to do a series of articles on subjects of his choice. Tunney made it clear that he needed no help from any office ghost. It was the Golden Age of the literary spooks, particularly in sports. Virtually every well-known athlete was appearing in print, notably Babe Ruth and Jack Dempsey. But most of them never wrote a word of the material that appeared under their bylines, and some of them didn’t even deign to glance at the stuff the ghosts turned out for them. Voice of the People: New Resident Questions Coverage of Local News I read a big news story about The Pontiac State Hospital in another newspaper and. also one about our jail. Why weren’t these in our locaj paper? ^NEW RESIDENT (Editor’s Note: You answer your own question with your signature. Both ran here, one several lyeeks ago and the other several months ago.) Letters Discuss Possible MSU Presidents After John Hannah’s great record as president at MSU, how could anyone even think of Soapy Williams as the next president? His record as governor * cost us payless paydays and millions and millions of dollars in unpaid debts and bills. ONE OF THE VICTIMS What’s wrong with Dana Whitmer as the next president of MSU? PONTIAC TEACHER ‘Cheers Citizens Who Cleared Sidewalks' Three cheers for the writer in the Voice of the People who pointed out the northeast corner of Orchard Lake and Ottawa had bushes sticking clear across the icy sidewalk. And nine louder cheers for the people that live there. They did a swell'job cleaning up the mess very quickly. They must be real swell citizens. OBSERVER ,‘Can City Oean Walks and Bill Residents?' If people won’t shovel their own walks, why doesn’t the City do it and put it on their tax bill? HOPEFUL Reader Gives His Views on Discrimination All I see in the paper, on the news or television are different cases where the Negro feels he is being discriminated against. About every time a colored male, female or family think they have some legitimate gripe regardless of what financial status they are in, they always manage to make the news media through the Civil Rights Commlskon or the NAACP. Where do the white .«r Caucasian people file their complaints? I wonder if the Negro has ever stopped to take a look at the prejudice and discriminatory actions being taken against 98 per cent of the white people and 100 per cent of the Indians. GEORGE C. SCOTT 1029 Cherrylawn (Continued on Page A-8, Col. 1) Question and Answer We want to move to Texas and would like to know the comparison in living standards (employment, housing, all-around monthly living cost) between Michigan and Texas. LARRY H. SMITH UNION LAKE REPLY We could give you a lot of statistics, but they wouldn’t help you much. We don’t know what type of employment you’re looking for, what type of housing you need, or any of the specifics for the information to be meaningful. And it would vary from area to area within the state. We suggest you select some cities you’d be interested in, and write to the Chamber of Commerce in those places. Give them details about your family and the type of work you need, your training and experience, and they will be able to advise you on any questions you have. Question and Answer Could you locate a store that carries a roller that makes artificial grain, not the antique kit kind that most stores carry? ISABELLE M. OSWALD ROCHESTER REPLY We checked several dealers in Rochester to no avail, but Brown Brothers on West Huron Street in Pontiac will order dne for you. They said it takes an expert to use one, but if you feel up to it, the set of three wogd-graining rollers will cost you $4.50. Michigan’s Tale of Fiscal Woe By DICK SAUNDERS State Budget Director Glenn S. Allen Jr. was in town the other night to tell the Pontiac Area Board of • “There isn’t enough money ago, he explained, the state for any substantial new pro- estimated it would cost $39 ;, but there is enough to million annually. It is now Kelly’s range of interests was phenomenal, his total experience as far-reaching as a satellite. In the early 1920s, as a Red Cross director, he established a vocational school for boys in Albania. CORRESPONDENT’S AIDE In 1923 Brad became an assistant to Frank G. Carpenter, the Washington correspondent, lecturer and well-known travel writer who of solving some of our more was among the country’s first pressing needs in such areas nationally syndicated writera as education and mental with a Washington dateline. health, to name a .couple. carry us through this year (1969-70) without a (state) Realtors how tax increase.” The following year Brad I came a feature writer on the New York Evening World, moved on to the North American Newspaper Alliance, and then helped form a short-lived news syndicate called Imperial News Service. little money Michigan has • “We can’t afford Paro-left after chiaid.” everyone gets • “People want more new through dip- programs blit they simul- ping his mitts taneously don’t want to pay in the fiscal for them.” pot. • “It’s going to be a rough AUen left year in Lansing.” everyone won- • “The governorship is a dering whether political graveyard.” or not there is ever any hope This last comment was made in connection with his contention that states were forced by rising costs to find new methods of taxation about every three years or face a fiscal crisis. SAUNDERS He is all budget director . . . calm, cool, in complete command of all the seven-and eight-digit figures. He commits the state to nothing other than built-in expenses. He spins a tale of fiscal woe. In 1927 his work drew the he’s getting paid to do and attention of Gene Fowler, at does it well, that time doing publicity for Allen’s chalk talk on Michi-VprKal Ori*hlf1ci Features. gan’s fiscal setup Monday T Cl uai ciMUO recommended him night at First Federal Savii^ strongly to Joseph V. Con- of Oakland was spiced up with nolly, the legendary power- statements like: house of King, and Kelly • “We’re working under a joined a syndicate from which system in which the demands he never really retired until for built-in programs go up his death last week, at 74. faster the economy.” . 4' Mrs. Goldie M. Orelly of 92 Moreland; 83rd birthday. Willet Hazard of 2942 Old Orchard; 95th birthday. That, he claimed, was one good reason why “governors rarely become presidents.” He listed Soapy Williams, George Romney, Nelson In short, he does everything RockeMer and Ronald Rea- . ^ ------.j ggn priiHe cxamplcs. Built-in programs are continuing programs of state aid in such fields as education, mental health, welfare and the like. Allen pointed to Medicaid as an example of whAt some legislated ^It-in programs can do to' annual budgets. When it be|an three years running $90 million per year. ★ ★ ★ Since existing programs are going to trim the state’s surplus to about 12 million by June 1970, according to Allen, it is impossible to foot the bill for a proposed Parochiaid bill which would cost an estimated $40 million. The whole picture is bleak indeed. It seems, after hearing Allen’s expert dissection of the state’s income and expanses, that our troubled school districts are going to become more troubled and our state hospital may well crumble before aid is forthcoming from the state. Allen’s answer is more taxes, and that’s what separates budget directors from legislators. Ihm AueckrtMl Pm** h •xclustv^hr to fh* M* fo cotioR oil IocqI n*w» | .■Tpsr.." ■ ■ Pi*---------------- g wg*4t;»lnf* •» Th« Pwrtiac Piw* I* JiliwrgJ b coimHm H i* moo a r> icriptkHU poyobig kt ad hat baan paid at tW PONTIAC PRESS, TIirKSDAY. ^EBRlIAH^^ C. HM!9 More Opinions From Our Readers Letters / (Continued from Page A-6) Comments on Methods Used by Communists How many have any concept of the methods and {>rinciples utilized by the Communists? How mahy have studied about this mon^rous charging animal so as to more effectively fight and destroy it? Bypassing the wiser and tough-skin of the older generation to get at our youth is an old favorite diet of this cm-nivore. It is an easy matter to take the truth and principles that are time-proven to be good, and make them look like lies and even evil when you’re dealing with gullible inexperience. More power to Senator Huber in his courageous efforts to open the eyes of a sleeping population. GERALD BORGQUIST 1247 Orchid ‘Suggest Budget Cut for Rights Commission' As a Pontiac citizen for 50 years, I am proud of our elected officials, police department, firemen, sheriff’s department. They understand the needs of Pontiac. They could do an even better job if they were not handicapped by unelected, out-of-town, racial rabble-rousers whose chief occupation seems to be to stir up racial ill will, condone crime and protect criminals. Perhaps the intentions of those responsible for creating tile M.C.R.C. may have been laudible but the operation of this commission seems deplorable. If our state legislature would cut the operating budget for this commission by about 95 per cent, they would be doing something rea^y worthwhile for all law-abiding citizens, both black and while. M. W. KESSELRING 96 RUTH ‘Americans Must Become a United People’ We are all Americans. We must obliterate from our minds any reference to color. With so many whose beginnings were in other lands, there are many races involved, but here all are one nation, one flag, one constituion. A minority group making the loudest noise would have us feel they are the “voice of the people.” They are not. Many times their number are daily living the life which helps his fellow man, educates his children, feels concern for the elderly, sick and distressed, and yet fin^ time to give help and aid to other lands. The church plays its parti in molding his character. These we rarely hear from or about, but they are here—the bulwark of America. NELLIE POPPY AMERICANISM CHAIRMAN WWIV BK #49 BUV NOW! SAVE NOW! 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Saginaw Pontiac Milks Appliance H93 S. Woodward Birmingham MeCailum fir Dean 409 E. Maple Birmingham Bill Petrusha fir Sene 77 S. Telegraph Pontiac Bill Petrusha fir Sons 1 550 Union Lake Union Lake SoHey Refrigeration 3819 M-15 Clarkston John Stefanski n 57 W. Huron Pontiac Swroet'i Radio & TV 422 W. Huron Pontiac Tele-Tec Service 419 Main Rochester Good Housekeeping SI 51 W. Huron St. Pontiac Cheers Sen. Huller’^ St^d oh OU Incident Three cheers for Senator Huber for his stand on the Oakland University incfdent. Most of us believe in a good moral living and do not want our colleges run in this manner. If some want an education on sex, they should go to a private school and pay their own way. Many other children and adults wish a moral education. Mr. Editor, you know Senator Huber represents the majority of his district or he would not be in office. R. D. THOR ‘Agree With Article on Condition of Nation’ I commend The Press on publishing Professor Carl Wonn-berger’s timely article on conditions in this ailing nation. He put it well in stating, “collective bargaining, and its unsavory bedfellow, the strike, may well force America into the status of a third-rate power.” We need more men like the professor to speak out with the truth and I would like to hear more from him. I would like to know this man—he is real. S. T. STINSON 1562 VILLA, BIRMINGHAM ‘Traffic Light Might Help Reduce Accidents’ Recently an accident occurred at N. Cass and Florence, involving two cars and injuring three men. It’s not the first time people have been hurt here. It is a dangerous corner and a traffic light would help tremendously. LYNDA DAVIS 235 N. CASS Disagrees We Need Increase in Deductions I disagree with the writer who desires a raise in deductions for dependents. How could the Federal Government afford such an increase when it is in such need of today’s surtax. Ouf tax structure is one of the lowest in the world. In Europe I had to pay 60 per cent on a taxable income of approximately $3,500. I was a home owner with two children. Can you visualize what this country would be like if everyone went on welfare? I would gladly pay my share to keep, or bring back, the ideal society the U S. has always been. M. J. WATERFORD More Letters^ Discuss University Incidents These disrobings and nude exhibitions at our universities' are dWful. Imagine what they do the student’s morals, especially the boys who may have to fight in Vietnam some day. These lewd exposures of the human body are a blatant disregard of our high moral tradition as exemplified by our lack of racial prejudice, our atomic bombings of‘Hiroshima and Nagasaki, our generosity to the American Indian, and our use of the African Negro as slaves, just to name a few. I resent my taxes being used to support universities that allow this degenerate nude behavior to take place. This tax mmiey ccmld better be spent on napalm bombs, hydrogen bombs, and the further development of germ warfare in the interest of world peace. NORMAN GENEZ FREE PARKINO Cowhand Mother , Can't Find a Job SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPl) — Maria de Joana, who gained national fame two years ago by giving birth while everyone thought she was a cowhand named Jose, is having a hard time finding work. Maria, 21, complained recently that no ranchers want to hire her now they know she’s a woman, even though she’s as good a cowhand as most men. ★ ★ A Maria always dressed as a man before the birth of the baby, fathered by a rancher’s bodyguard. The baby later died. ALL City TV 2363 Orchard Uke Rd. 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FAMIl.Y A resident of Birmingham for over .m years, Mrs. Rawden recalls a strong family interest in public affairs with deep ties dating back lo when, she notes, “my mother's family came to Michigan from \ ermonl in an ox cart ’ As for her.self. .she says, “When I was 21. 1 voted and joined Hie League of Women Voters and I'vc'been doing the same thing ever since. "My first /interest was in sewers. That was when the Twelve Towns Drain was in the planning stages.-There was a lot of public interest in that. “After the drain, then there were .schools and the library, and so on" Mary's background in l.WV includes among olher things service for six years on a study committee on County government and on the planning committee for forum on ('minty home rule at Oakland University. She was observer at County Board of Supervisors meetings; delegate lo the LWV United States conference on financing stale and local government and president of the Birmingham Bloomfield League from 1963-65. She has also been active in the Oakland (bounty Republican Party as a precinct delegate; precinct captain; Club Explores Emmanuel Kant Work The Waterford Cireal Books group will discuss the “P'lindamenlal Principles of Ihe Metaphysics of Morals" by Immanuel Kant at its Friday meeting in the CAl building. Mrs, Arnold Simson will lead the di.scussion. Advocate for the 18th century Cicrman philosopher will be Wilbur Ott. Any interested person may attend the 8 p.m. event. Kick-Off Tea Friday Launches 'Fashionscope' for Symphony By SHIRLEY GRAY Just what we need lo relieve the midwinter doldrums — a fashion show to look forward to! The Women’s A.ssociation for the Detroit Symphony is putting on its annual style spectacular “F'ahionscope’’ at J. L. Hudson’s on March 11-12. The project, which will benefit the symphony maintenance fund, will be officially launched on Friday with a kickoff tea at the home of Mrs. Joseph A. Vance Jr. of Grosse Pointe. * ★ ★ Among tho.se pouring will be Mrs. Warren B. Cooksey of Troy. Several women from this area are chairing key committees, Mrs. Harry J. Nederlander of Birmingham is general chairman of patroness tickets. Mrs. Robert B. Winter is in charge of general admission tickets; Mrs, W. Calvin Patterson will take care of arrangements for the luncheon at Bloomfield Open Hunt and the bus down Woodward preceding the show — both women arc from Birmingham. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Wiliam R. Shaw of Bloomfield Hills is in charge of patroness tickets for this area. Another Bloomfield Hills woman, Mrs. F.dward 1. Nicholas, is general chairman of the suburban bus-BOH luncheon committee. “Fashionscope” general chairman is Mrs. Harvey O. Dixon Jr. of Gros.se Pointe. The John VS. Judds ol Bingham Road in Birmingham are having a dinner dance Saturday at Bloomfield Hills Country Club. former member of the education committee; and board member of the Birm-ingham-Troy Republican Women’s Club. Mary attended Wellesley (College, majoring in IZoology and Psychology and received a BA degree in 1948. Marriage to Garvin Bawden Jr. and children steered her life into a new channel. Son, Garvin, 19, is a student at Seaholm High School; daughter, Carol Jean, 14, attends Kingswood. ARE YOU KIDDING? Asked how she likes being the only woman on the Board, Mary laughed delightedly and said, “I love it. What woman wouldn’t?” Asked if her sex affects the attitude of the other Supervisors, she replied, “Oh, of course, they’re conscious of my presence. The apologies fly whenever an unguarded four-letter-word slips out. Politically, though, we are on equal ground" “Do you get boted when the wrangling goes on and on?” “Wrangling? That’s politics. No, I don’t get bored.” Mrs. Bawden was chairman of the Republican study group Which formulated a plan for structuring of the Board into four divisions. Termed the Oakland Plan, it was not accepted by the Board, though it may come up for consideration again later in the year. As a Supervisor, Mary stresses that her first responsibility is to residents of the county; secondarily to her district which includes Birmingham. ★ ★ ★ She says her position will not permit efforts actively directed toward policies which will primarily benefit women, except “inasmuch as good government benefits all citizens.” She continues, “1 am not a feminist. I don’t believe in crashing into saloons — that .sort of thing. But I don’t believe women should be treated as a minority group. “And 1 simply deplore the thought that support might be withheld simply because the candidate is a woman, or because an idea originates with a woman.” Mary’s talents and attention will be occupied with her appointments to membership on the Board’s equalization, legislative and regional affairs committees. Leisure activities include skiing, sailing, boating and golf, plus an occasional turn at needlework. We talked in the river room of the Bawdens’ contemporary home o n Lakeside Street. Outside, the Rouge River wound sluggishly through the property under a thin coating of ice. A brand new pair of skiis with boots attached stood against one wall. A scattering of decorative items, including paintings done by Mr. Bawden, copper antiques and an ancient blue glass bottle gave evidence of domestic interests in keeping with her role as wife and homemaker. Second Wife Complains About Support Payments By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEIAR ABBY: My husband was married before and had two children by that marriage. We have been happily married for five years. His former wife never remarried. Of course we have to pay child support, which my husband has been doing regularly every month. Well, if we are just one day late with the check, his ex-wife has his son call us up and ask where the money is. (She hasn't spoken to my husband since the divorce. I What 1 would like from you IS a good stinging answer he could give this kid to get him off our backs. This calling to ask where the check is, is reallv getting to us. NO NAME. PLEASE Classical Guitar, Lute Recital Set Karl Herreshoff will be heard in a classical guitar and baroque lute recital Feb. 12. at 8:30 p.m., in Oakland University’s Dodge Hall Auditorium. Seventeenth through 20th century composers will be represented in Her-reshoff's single concert appearance in the area. Programmed are Silvius Weiss’s Suite in F major and Sonata in D minor for baroque lute. On the clissical guitar the artist will present Bach’s “Gavotte,” Scarlatti's E minor and A minor sonatas, Guiliani's “Sonatina,” four waltzes by Antonio Lauro, and Turina’s Sonata. A composer of note with several commissions to his credit, Herreshoff has also worked in films. His ncore for “Year of the Rat” took first prize in the 1964 Film Festival held at Bergamo, Switzerland. A limited number of tickets are available through the Meadow Brook Fj^ival office, Oakland University. DEAR NO NAME: The solution is so obvious, 1 can’t understand why .you didn't think of it. Get the support check there on time every month, and you'll not be bothered by any calls, and you won't have to have an answer. ★ * * DEAR ABBA': 1 am a soldier who has been in Vietnam for six months I recently received a letter from my mother telling me that my fiancee, to whom I've been engaged for nine months, is about four or five months pregnant, and she's been going around telling everybody that she is carrying MY child. 1 do not [leny having hail relations with her. but I don't see how this baby could possibly be mine. Should I write her a letter terminating mir engagement and asking her to return mv ring'.’ I still love her NAMELESS IN VIETNAM w * * DEAR NAMELESS: Since you still love " her, don’t ask for the ring, ask for an explanation. Could be your moth- Ron Untornohrtr MARY BAWDEN Touring Company Schedules Dates The Studio Company of Meadow Brook Theatre is taking its first touring production, “A Date with Shakespeare,” to area high schools this month. ★ ★ ★ The Studio Company Is composed of graduating seniors in the Oakland University Academy of Dramatic Art. ★ * * “A Date with Shakespeare” will include scenes from “Julius Caesar,” “Macbeth,” “Henry V,” “As You Like It,” “The Taming of the Shrew,” “Measure for Measure,” “The Merchant of Venice,” and “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” it -k ir The Studio Company will also offer public performances of “A Date with Shakespeare” in the I n t r a - M u r a 1 Building the Oakland University campus Feb. 10, 11, 12, and 13 at 8 p.m. Tickets for these four performances may be purchased at the door. but MaicJ Is Still Distressed By EUZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute I am printing the following letter because the answer holds true for any domestic employer. In general, the duties should te specifically outlined and understood at the time an employer hires domestic help. ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. Post: A young lady recently hired me as a personal maid. She has been a fair employer. The problem is she often wears informal clothing such as shorts and expects me to help her dress in this attire. I feel a personal maid’s assistance in dressing an able-bodied lady is limited to formal clothing, When I mentioned - this, she was “amazed,” further stating that a personal maid’s assistance in dressing is entirely up to the employer. — H. N. Dear Miss N.; Your employer is right. If you accept a position as a lady’s maid you are expected to help her dress — if she wishes it — in any attire she is putting on, and you are expected to care for all her clothing — not just her “dress” clothes. *As long as she is fair and cooperative in every other way, I see no reason you should object to this request — it is certainly a small payment for a good position. * * ★ Dear Mrs. Post: If I refer to a dear friend of my mother’s as Aunt Grace, what is the proper name to have my son call her?—Mrs. Z. Dear Mrs. Z.; It depends on your son’s closeness to the lady. If he regards her as affectionately as you do, he may also call her Aunt Grace. If n(it, he should call her Mrs. Brown, just as he would any other woman. * *■ * Dear Mrs. Post: A woman I know raised her husband’s two boys as a stepmother after the real mother left them. The relationship between her and the boys has always been good. But, their own mother was given the first row at the wedding, stood in the reception line with her ex-husband and circulated as though everybody had been bosom buddies. The stepmother’s name was not mentioned in the wedding article even though she attended with charm and poise and properly dressed.—Mrs. L.D|. ★ ★ ★ ‘ i Dear Mrs. D.: It was correct for the boys’ own mother to be seated in the front row. But the rest is wrong. Since the stepmother and father were giving the wedding, it was she, as hostess, who should have been in the receiving line. The real mother should have attended as a guest. In Spain they say “Si Si!” At the Better Bedroom Store they say “Let’s save *50 during, our Bedder Bedroom Sale.” ^KARL HERRESHOFF rr heard wrong, or your fiancee figured wrong. * -tr * DEAR ABBY: I have exhausted every last source and am about to lose my iiiind trying to find the author of a quote. As nearly as I can recall it goes like Ihis: "It is all the same to me if a man comes from Sing Sing or Harvard. We have a man—not his history.” Ten dollars to your favorite charity if you can give me the answer. Thank you. H, H, G DEAR H. H. G.: The author is Henry Ford. (My source: "The Great Quotations, ” compiled by George Seldes.) And please send 10 dollars to your local Mental Health association. You are welcome. ♦ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: I live about 15 minutes walking distance from school. Every morning, my boyfriend mmes by and gives me a ride I have a younger sister who goes to my school and my Mom has been taking her. My father says it is silly for my Mom to make a special trip to drive my sister to school—that she should ride with my boyfriend and me. Well I don’t particularly enjoy her company, so when this came up, we got into an argument, and my sister said she refused to go where she wasn’t wanted. Then my father ORDERED her to ride with us! Does my father have the right to tell my boyfriend to take my sister? OLDER SISTER DEAR SISTER: No, but be honest. You made your sister feel unwelcome, which was unfair. A ride to schocH is not a “date” and it wouldn’t have hurt you to graciously give her a ride in order to spare your mother the extra trip. Everybody has a problem. What's yours? For a personal reply write to Abby in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9. Pontiac, Mich. 48056 and enclose a stamped, self-addressed Mvelope. Yesterday, you would have paid ’449 for this set-now it’s sale priced at *399. You can say Si!% too. It’s Spanish Provincial in rich pecan veneers, deeply carved and really exquisite. Includes 72” triple dresser, mirror, chest and chairback headboard. The Better Bedroom People on Telegraph Road house of bedrooms 1711S. Tilignirii M.> BtoMfiild, Bitiracii Miracli MHt ind Orckanl Laki Rd. STORE HOURS: MONDAY-SATURDAY 9 TO 9 • CALL 334-4593 fst I: t' THE PONTIAC PRESS. TIIURSUAV. FEBRI.'AllV' li, 111(19 in f rri> Poachers, Food Lack Just Part of Crisis for Africian Wildlife JOHANNESBURG, South quickly to threaten c r o p s ^ Africa Iff) — As many conservationists see it, wildlife never had it so bad in Africa. ' Onoe-vast game herds are stalked by poachers, blocked by fences and dispossessed by new dams, missile bases and domestic livestock. Some are killed in the name of scientific game control. Others are afflicted by drought, disease, fires and pesticides. Some experts say it has taken man less than 50 years t reduce by two-thirds t fi migrant wildlife that once roamed East Africa’s 700,QP0 acres of grass and forest land. Bush fires and chronic jwaching threaten an end to Kafue National Park in Zambia as a game conservation territory,. During the flood season, vast herds of red and black lechwe, a type of buck, come into the green grasslands. From there they are driven to the water’s edge by tribesmen who spear them from canoes. Botswana now licenses not only those whites who hunt for ' sport, but also tribesmen who kill game for food. This politically unpopular move came after the government discovered that many Africans, ! equipped with powerful rifles, had turned from subsistence hunting to commercial shooting, A single control action against poachers in East Africa in February 1964 turned up 750 dead elephants. Tanzania police recovered 82 tons of poached ivory in 1965, perhaps a fifth of tlie poachers’ annual haul. ★ ★ ★ Game reserves are not proving a simple answer. As migration of wildlife into reserves increases, so does pressure on the food supply for animals already there. A VAIN EFFORT South Africa erected a 10-strand barbed wire fence around most of Kruger National Park in a vain effort to control hoof and mouth disease Elephants merely walk through the barrier, lions crawl under it, various buck leap it and smaller beasts slip through the wire. The government culls elephant, zebra, impala, buffalo and blue wildeteeste in Kruger Park. Zebra are caught life and sold outside the reserve. Impala and blue wildebeest are shot at night. Elephant and buffalo are immobilize by drugged darts shot from helicopters and removed later when the herd has moved off. * Culling is unpopular among nature lovers. Many conservationists agree that it remains ah uncertain business which may .upset ecology, on the ground that one species cannot be annihilated without upsetting nature’s balance. Rangers have shot leopard because they’ve killed a few goats or sheep, only to find the baboon population expands Snakes have been killed and then rodents overrun farms.' When crocodile are destroyed the barbel on which they feed can eat eveo' quality ifish in the water. If insects are attacked with pesticides then there are fewer insect-eating birds. Richard’s Bay, north o f Durban, was once a 2,795-acre game reserve. Now plans are being completed to build a big seaport and modem city. Not far away, at Lake St. Lucia, South Africa carved its first missile range out of a bird sanctuary. M k u z i Game Reserve' in Zululanci wUI^ be submerged when a river is danuned for sugar farming. The Tanzania government plans to build a hotel on the floor of the famous Ngonmgoro Crater, described as “one of the wonders of the World” by German zoologist Dr. Bernhard Crzimek. Objections by nature lovers are that construction will frighten vast herds of animals which inhabit the crater. ★ * ★ Sometimes animals survive in spite of the experts. Eight years ago in a Kenya drought, elephants began dying by the hundreds in Tsavo National Park. Some 16,000 elephants were counted in the area of 8,000 square miles, and authorities reported that 12,000 others in adjoining bushland popped into Tsavo for an occasional meal. The pachyderms apparently were eating themselves out ofj house and home. Thousands of trees were pushed over or trampled. Finally the experts announced plans to kill 5,000 elephants. An outcry from animal lovers — mostly in the United States and Britain — held up the slaughter. Those who fought to shve the elephants were proved right. The mass destruction of trees and bush resulted in the rapid growth of grass for t h e elephants to feed on. The water table lias risen and new .springs appeared all over the park. Treasurer Picked GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -Appointment of John R. Frens, 45, as new Grand Rapids city treasurer was announced Wednesday by Mayor Christ Sonne-veldt. Frens, who has been controller for a Grand Rapids firm, succeeds Richard G. Johnston, who resigned. The treasurer earns $13,500 a year. ; The Jefferson nickel was designed by'Felix Schlag of Chi-c^o in the first nationwide artists’ competition ever sponsored by the U.S. Mint. /V\OIVTGO/V\ER W/\RD Save ^3 Gal. SUPREME DRIPLESS LATEX FOR A PROFESSIONAL LOOK REGULARLY 8.49 GALLON New, improved Supreme dripless latex assures you of professional results with no stirring, thinning, or mixing— just open and paint! Glides on with ease; levels instantly to a silky-smooth finish. And Supreme is now sanitized to make and keep it bacteria-free! White, colors. Save 2.50! Guaranteed one coat dripless latex enamel 49 6 REG. 8.99 GAL New colors to match Dripless Latex paint! Sanitized® to retard the growth of bacteria and mildew. You get a beautiful, soft-sheen finish. Hues for every discriminating taste. To use on walls AND woodwork. 1999 ■ ^ Ret.24.S9 _ Point foncot, roilingt, louvorod Non-flammable. Roady-mix- REG. A.4f Resists grime as it keeps its lustrous sheen. Produces armor-hard finish. Applies quickly with brush or roller. Ideal for walk end trim. Scrubbable. SAVE 47c! ONE-INCH MASKING TAPE—180 FT. SAVE 90c! 9x12-FT. PLASTIC DROP CLOTH 88‘ 99* Intornol-m decorator colors. Masks edges, corners when Heavy-duty embossed drop painting. Holds drop cloth cloth is so durable — use securely. 180 feet. over and over. SAVE 70c! 9-INCH PAINT ROLLER KIT «t49 REG. SAVE Sic! 4.INCH NYLON SIDING BRUSH ^ 88 REG. Roller, cover for latex, en- Filaments set in epoxy —■ amel paints; tray; 38-inch won't shed. Extra thick and extension handle, edger. long for best pick-up hkQIL Jldzju UJo^uLl. ; : Save *1 on Antique or Wood-tone EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO GLAMORIZE YOUR FURNITURE 449 Tear Ckelce REG. 5.49 Antique or wood-tone your furniture with all you need in a kit! To antique, juEt paint, glaze, wipe. Wood-tone is just as dasy. - SAVE 2.07! SEAMLESS PERM. FLOOR FINISH 12” SAVE $3! 4-FOOT ALUMINUM STEP LADDER 999 REG. 1Z.9S Roll on epoxy base coat; Lightweight aluminum! It sprinkle vinyl chips, cover great for household climb-wlth top coat! 25 tq. ft. kit. ing. Folds up; paint shelf. Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY IHRl FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 F.M. SATLRDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P M. SFNDAY 12 NOON I'O 5 P-M- * OHL’-lODl I'HK. PONTIAC PRESS. TlirUSUAV . FEBRUARY n, 19H9 OKI VEH MUND SUNDAY LIQUOR Only at MOREY’S x GOLF G COUNTRY CLUB WILL YOU SEE \ ^ ^ LIVE LOBSTERS at Sansible Prices ^ r Wed. Noonday Buffet Luncheon, \ Thurs. Buffet Dinner SALAD TABLE INDESCRIBABLE SEAFOODS GOLF Mcmbarahipi «» Reduced R.»e. . . . NOW SING-ALONG PIANO BAR You'll S.ng, You'll S.. MOREY’S iD GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB Ex-Du Pont Home Now Cuban VARADERO, Cuba ~ In Xanadu did Kubla Khan (and I millionaire Irenee Du Pontl a ! stately plea.sure dome decree. ! Which the Castro government has taken over and turned into a restaurant for the common people. Now hundreds of visitors -Cuban women in hair curlers,! perspiring Russians and sun-toughened exemplary sugar' ' cane cutters who have earned a visit—tramp through the 20-iroom summer mansion to see how one of the richest of Amer-jicans u.sed to live. Most seem more impressed by the chance of a decent meal than by the surroundings Taking his clue from Samuel Coleridge's famous poem, Du Pont constructed his ^summer home just ahead of the crash of 1929. He named it Xanadu and had Coleridge’s poem emblazoned on maroon velvet tapestry in the main dining room where it still hangs. Old friends credit the man, who until his death in 19B4 was the patriarch of the famous Du Pont family of Wilmington, Del., with pioneering the development of the Varadero peninsula, still Cuba’s most advanced resort area. acre estate. But the Depression i Carlos Dilez, 61, who headec ruined the idea, they add. Du Font’s staff of servants for Xanadu, however, opened the 31 years and now hands out peninsula to later resortjturns for restaurant customers,' development that came to alsayis he thinks his former boss halt when Fidel Castro took]spent about $1 million building over Cuba^in i^anuary 1959, Ehilthe house. Others say it was Pont, who was in his 80s then,!less. i never returned. The govern-jj^, ment took over the house andi grounds in November 1961. house is constructed Du Pont was never told /rom native limestone 1 ) JOHRWAYNE ^^'KAniARlNEROSS ^ ^HEUFIGHJIRS m /ZZ3KEECO COME TO HIE MAKDI (iRAS (\> v»l or IIK >oii Mkr ill Salimlay, Kcbriiaiy Uili. in the huge Hiivwiiiat) Kooni willi dancing In the I'ailgale Kainldcrs and a Can-Can Hevievv with Kva McKcon. I\() COVER CHAR(,I’: hIm> (;low Dancing on tlic Class \Olcano In the I’sychedriic Rliylhms of Berg iX ,|oy every l-riday and Saturday. Open for dinner p.m. Tuesday lliru Saturday. Siindav at Noon. Closed Mondays. HAWAIIAN (;ARDENS RE.SORT and MOTEL 4501 (France Hull Road Reservation* Holly. Miehiaan 48442 654-8251 TONITE at 1:00 and 9:23-“The HORSE WITH GREY FLANNEL SUIT" and “WINNIE THE POOH” HURON Starts FRIDAY at 1:00 and 9:30 ©lb jWUH^aUent STYLE SHOW EVERY FR1D.4Y During Luncheon 12:30 to 1:30 l i‘utnrinf: the LATES I’ FASHIONS FOR WIINI'ER OPEN SUNDAYS 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. S«‘rviii*!: from Our RrjSiilar Dinner Menu I yTnrrrvTTnrinrTYTnnnnrrrvTnrTTnr ’ SERVING A j BUFFET BRUNCH \ from 10 A.M. to I P.M. Eeaturinp Assortments oi Breakfast Items that Vi ill Please Even th<* Most discriminatim; I adults *2^® : CHILDREN Under 10 iXXSLi $J25 H P e 0 0 0 a « t 8 » 0 t » 8 t ft AAliLJUt. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 623-0060 Your Host Mr. Ken Wright 5838 Dixie Highway Waterford, Michigan Buss Du Pont was never told - , the government had his house.’’l«"d splashed with Cuban, says a long-time friend. mahogany and paneling. The, ^ * [government has kept it in ......... ; The Old DU Pont grounds run I'-easonably good Shape. 1 They say the former head of [for about 10 miles on a narrow | In its heyday, Xanadu was! E.I. du Pont de Nemours and]sliver of land. Friends in used by Du Pont about four Co. Inc hoped some of his| Havana say Du Pont bought the nionths annually. The servant friends in the United States land about 1926 for ap-staff, for whom he built 28 would build alongside his 450-proximately $60,000. small houses, stayed on salary | , all year. I ★ ' ★ * I The nine-hole course is still playable and now open to the public. Occasionally it draws a Western diplomat. The mansion, now called the ‘Restaurant of the Americas,” had a small bar and wine cellar in the basement during Du Font’s ownership. ★ * ★ •rhe bar remains, but the Du Pont wine is gone. Cocktails, however, are available for restaurant customers. A martini with Russian vodka costs $2.i Most of the customers drink beer. IVIIIY PKIMY — S P.M. to I P.M.V- FISH DlliNER Reg. $1.65 1 09 • 10001 TELEGRAPH RD. Near Plymouth Rd. 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY OPEN l:« A.M. Show Start! 10:00 A.M. YOU MUST BE 18 - PROOF IS REQUIRED OPEN 0:45 A.M. EVERY OAY EXCEPT SUNDAY OPEN 1:45 P.M. [1HDV6ODIVB RIDBS LOVE AND LUST ON TWO CONTINENTS IN COLOR H?f “MATURES PlAYMATE” Castro Mode Pleasure Dome A Restaurant Son Gravely Wounded in Viet Ad Expresses Family's Grief WEST By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPII — Eighty-six House members are sponsoring legislation to enlarge Presi-dent Nixon’s Cabinet by creating a Depart-m e n t of Consumer Affairs. 1 understand it, the proposed d e -partment would do for consumers what the Commerce Department has done for businessmen, the Labor Department for workingmen, t h e Agriculture Department for farmers and the Department of Housing and Urban Development for city dwellers. i But let us not be discouraged by that. It could be that some of the programs which haven't been overwhelmingly successful in the other departments would [produce the desired result when applied to consumer problems. SHORT OF UTOPIA Take, for example, the attempts by t h e Agriculture Department to solve the farm problem by paying farmers nq|f to grow things. That program may have helped to some extent, but thus far it has fallen short of bringing about an agrarian utopia. If, however, the proposed new j department were to adopt the same approach — thai is, if consumers were paid for not jbuying thinp — all sorts of problems might disappear. I Each consumer, as I envision jit, would be assigned a purchase allotment, along the lines of the acreage allotments assigned to farmers. Should he exceed his quota, he would forfeit his benefits under the program. But if he stayed within the allotment, he would be paid for not buying the things he would otherwise have purchased. Right away this would lessen the danger of a consumer getting rooked on a transaction. Which seems to be the No. 1 consumer problem. Most of the consumer laws now on the books were designed to protect the consumers from sharp dealings in the marketplace. This way he would protect himself by avoiding the marketplace. A secondary benefit would be an easing of the inflationary pressures now besetting the economy. BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:30 P.M. SNAP UP THESE TURTLES AND SAVE/ NOW 2 for 5050 $4.99 each Add to your turtle collection —save while you’re at it! These versatile glo-tone pullovers are great for casual daytime wear-perfect with your dressy evening wear. Easy-care acetate/cotton in snow white, iet black, regal gold, green. S.M.L.XL. wiiere ceurtesy it centosiem MAIL AND PHONE ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY ... 682-1010 Fi«« Delivery on erdert within deliveit area. Outside delivery area add 50c for handling. C.O.D. orders please add 50c. 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