VOL. 18T PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY, FEBRUARY S4. 1909 Home Edition ] PAGES uN.T.mwtm.oi Nixon Definite: Soviet Talks Ahead 1 (AP) — President Nixwi told America’s European allies today that he later will “enter into negotiations with the Soviet Union on a wide range of issues,’’ and he promised to consult with them both before and during the talks. Nixon, in a speech to the council of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization during the first stop of his * Oakland Highway Toll in ’6^ 22 Law Year to Data IS Miss Macchietto was a passenger in a car driven by her mother, Mrs. Pauline N. Macchietto, 43, of Detroit, which struck a parked car on Telegraph near Hickory Grove, careened across' the road and hit two others headon. Township police said. Seven people received minor injuries in that crash. In Today's Press Birmingham Vote on purchase of site for historical park is April 8 — PAGE A-4. Romney HUD job tougher than running state, he says ^ PAGE A-8. Study of Police Most white officers downgrade blacks, says, Detroit psychologist - PAG^ A41. Area News .............A-4 Astrology .......... Bridge . C4 Crosswwd Puzzle ......C-16 Comics ................ C4 Editorials A-6 Lenten Series B-11 Markets ............ .. C-7 Obitaaries .. B-8 Sports C-1—C-4 Iheaters C-5 TV and Radio Programs C-15 Vietnam War News A-2 I Pages B-l-B-3 eight-day European trip, did not hedge about prospects for eventual Soviet-American talks. He said there will be negotiations “in due course, and’ with proper preparation.” Nixon arrived in London from Belgium today for talks with Prime Minister Harold Wilson and leaders of the Conservative opposition. In his speech to NATO representatives, the President made no mention of two crises of paramount concern to the Atlantic allies: the new dispute between the British and French governments, and the possibility of an East-West confrontation in Berlin. . Instead, with the aim of revitalizing the Atlantic alliance, he emphasized a pledge that “the United States is determined to listen with new attentiveness to its NATO partners.” " ★ * ★ To underscore this policy declaration, he said that because American-Soviet talks would directly affect the nations of Western Europe, the United States will approach Moscow *‘on the basis of full Crashes Fatal to Pontiac Man and Detroit Girl A Pontiac man was killed in a two-car accident in the city and a Detroit girl died in a four-car crash in Bloomfield Township yesterday. KiUed were Willie Hiley, 43, of 266 Os-mun, and Diane Macchietto, 15. Hiley was . a passenger in a car driven by Delbert Stovall, 56, of 266 Os- PoUce said Stovall was trying to make a left turn onto Nebraska frmn Bagley when his car collided with one driven by Spurgeon Grazes, 46, of 56a Nevada. IN SERIOUS CONDITION Another passenger in the Stovall auto, James Stovall, 41, of 460 Nebraska^ Is in serious condition at Pontiac General Hospital. Delbert Stovall and Grazes were treated at the hospital for minor injuries and ADDUCES NATO COUNCH^President Richard Nixon Brussels this morning. He is flanked by Secretary of State addresses NATO Council meeting at NATO headquarters in WlOittft'P. Rogers (left) and Ambassador Harland Cleveland. Mild Weather Forecast All Week This mornings clouds *held a few surprises for the weatherman as snow flur-Ties punctuated the atmosphere despite predicted precipitation possibilities in the 10-per-cent range today, tonight and tomorrow. The clouds will persist through tonight and tomorrow. By tomorrow afternoon, a breakup will occur and skies will become partly cloudy. * * The springlike temperatures, pushing tulip and crocus bulbs through the ground iri protected areas, are due to remain at least to the weekend, according to Weather Bureau’s five-day forecast. ★ * * Tonight’s low is expected to fall into the mid,-20s with tomorrow’s high in the upper Ms. Wednesday calls for higher temperatures and partly cloudy skies. WWW Low mercury reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 31. By 2 p.m. the thermometer reached 36. Ike 'Satisfactory' After Surgery WASHINGTON (AP)-Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower is “resting comfortably as can be expected,” Walter Reed Army Hospital officials announced today after late-night emergency abdominal surgery. * ★ ★ A brief statement issued at 10:30 a.m. EST said the general’s heart condition was stable. The combination of Eisenhower’s 78 years and history of seven heart attacks had made the surgery a decided risk. . The report said Eisenhower’s vital signs were satisfactoiy. These would include such things as pulse and i blood pressure. ■k * * Earlier this morning, a team of Army doctors had pronounced the 2-hour, 20- hospital earlier yesterday from their farm home in Gettysburg, Pa, Eisenhower also had been visited by his son John and his brother. Dr. Milton Eisenhower, before undergoing the delicate operation that was described by one authority as a “terrible risk” for a man of his age and medical history. The condition was first reported Saturday^ night, but the decision to operate was not announced until shortly before 8 p.m. yesterday. It was 4^ hours later that Brig. Gen. Frederick .L Hughes Jr., commanding officer of the hospital where Elsenhower Related Story, Page C-16 minute operation for removal of an in- * testinal blockage successful but had given no indication of the former president’s chances for recovery. NOQUES'nONS Maj. George H. Foster, hospital information officer, declined to answer questions at the latest briefing. * k * His full statement said: “Gen. Eiseh-"hower is resting as comfortably as can be expected. His vital signs are satisfactory and his cardiac^tatus remains stable. We will issue further bulletins twice a day during the immediate postoperative period. ■ ★ .*★ k Foster presented an answer to one previously submitted written question, saying it was not possible to determine which of Eisenhower’s previous abdominal operations had produced the adhesions leading to the present treatment. ★ President Nixon, in Brussels on the first stop of his five-nation Western European tour, was described a s “pleased” with the report. Aides said he was beit^; kept constantly informed of the condition of the man whom he served as vice president for eight years. RUSHED TO HOSPITAL The two-hour and 20-minute operation, performed by a seven-member surgical team, had been accepted “with equanimity” by Eisenhower and his wife, Mamie. She had rushed to the REPORIS ON SURGERY — Brig. Gen. Frederick J. Hughes Jr., commanding officer of Walter Reed Army Hospital, announces early today that former President Dwight D. Eisenhower successfully was operated on for the alleviation of an intestinal obstruction. consultation and cooperation with our allies, because we recognize that the chances for successful negotiations depend on our unity.” • k k k He went on: “I. realize that this course has not always been followed in the past. But I pledge to you today, that in any negotiations directly affecting the interest of the NATO nations, there will be full and genuine consultation before and during those negotiations.” ★ * Nixon said he knew the allies had felt “that too often the United States talked at its partners instead of with them, or Related Story, Page B-6 merely informed them of decisions after they were made instead of consulting with them before deciding.” “The United States is determined to listen with a new attentiveness to its NATO partners,” he declared, “not only because they have a right to be heard but because we want their ideas. And I believe we have a right to expect that consultation shall be a two-way street.” INTERCHANGE OF IDEAS Summarizing the approach he wants to take in his European meetings, he said: “I have come for work, not for ceremony; to inquire, pot to insist; to consult, not convince; to listen and learn,-and to begin what I hope will be a continuing interchange of ideas and insights.” White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler was asked if. Nixon had discussed with Belgian officials the latest chill in British-French relations; he replied: “I don’t have any information on that.” After visits to Bonn, West Berlin and Rome, Nixon will go to Paris Friday to meet with President Charles de Gaulle. Ziegler said Nixon, during his 10,500-mile trip is keeping closely abreast of latest reports from South Vietnam, where a new wave of enemy attacks has been launched, apparently to bolster the Communist position at the Paris peace tall^s. U.S. COUNTERMOVE Nixon, discussing the countrywide rocket and mortar attacks yesterday, indicated to newsmen during his flight from Washington that in ' some circumstances such assaults could result in an American countermove. White House sources said the President had ordered a careful study of the attacks, one purpose being to determine whether they violated the secret understandings with North Vietnam under which the United States halted the bombing of the North. But these sources emphasized Nixon would move with caution and was “not looking for an excuse to do something.” The sources obviously were referring to a resumption of the bombing of North Vietnam. k k k Arriving in Brussels last night under a half moon in 43 degree weather, Nixon was greeted by King Baudouin, a military honor guard, several hundred enthilsiastic citizens and a small but noisy group of demonstrators who chanted “Nixon go home” from the terminal roof. Three of the demonstrators were arrested following scuffles with police. Nixon to Congress: Ease Debt Ceiling has been bedridden in the third-floor presidential suite since May, went before newsmen to say: “Gen. Eisenhower underwent surgery for intestinal obstruction this Evening. The procedure began at 9:10 p.m. and terminated successfully at 11:30 p.m. The obstruction was found to be due to two large adhesive bands resulting from previous surgery.” SCAR-nSSUE The five-paragraph statement, steeped in medical terminology and naming members of the surgical team, boiled down to a Ceport that surgeons had cut through scar tissue blocking the passage of food through the intestine. WASHINGTON (AP)-President NixOn asked Congress today to ease the ceiling on the national debt, in effect permitting the government to borrow $17 billion more to meet cash needs in coming weeks. At the same time, he urged a change in the method of computing the ceiling which would put the statutory figure at $3()0 billion instead of $382 billion that otherwise would be required. This would be done by exempting from the ceiling the bonds and other obligations held by various government agencies. ★ * ★ ■The present permanent ceiling is $358 billion but a temporary top of $365 billion is in effect until July 1. The President’s message was dispatched to Capitol Hill by the White House whil& Nixon was on t o u r. in Europe. ASKING CEILING Under the new approach, he said, he is actually asking for a ceiling of $300 billion because redefinition of the debt subject to limitation would impose the limit only on those federal obligations held by the public and exclude those held by federally owned agencies and trust funds. ^ Figured in this manner, he said, the debt on Jan. 21, 1969, was $293.7 billion. Computed by the present method the debt as of that date was $364.2 billion-only $800 million short of the limitation. k k k Nixon noted that when he took office his economic advisers said it was almost certain that the bills the government had to pay would exceed the mohey coming in to the point where by mid-April it would be necessary to borrow more than the legal ceiling allowed. The projections have held up, he said. ‘UNIFIED CONCEPT’ “These facts permit me only one prudent course of action,” the President said. “I must ask the Congress to revise the debt limit before mid-April.” The new concept would make the manner the debt ceiling is figured compati- ble with the way the federal budget is prpsented. Last year the budget was figured for the first time by a “unified budget concept” recommended by a bipartisan committeei Paroebiaid Gets 'No'From Dems EAST LANSING (AP) - State aid to private and parochial schools probably will be passed by the Legislature this session despite official disapproval by the Democratic party, observers agree. The Democratic State Central Committee Saturday came out against the ?o-calied Parochiaid. State House Speaker William Ryan of Detroit had urged the committee to reject a resolution opposing the bill. But State Sen. Coleman A. Young, D-Detroit, who opposes the measure, said he expects it to be approved by the Legislature “unless there is a ground-swell of oppositioa In other action, the Democrats elected two new officers in an apparent effort to unify the party regulars ahd the dissident New Democratic Coalition. The new officers, whose titles and duties were not outlined, are James Harrison of East Lansing and Zeline Richard of Detroit. Flash Pontiac District Court Judge Cecil B. McCallum today postponed until next Monday sentencing of six persons who were found guilty Feb. 17 of trespassing following a city school board meeting. The six, all members of the Voice of Oakland County Action League (VOCAL), were arrested while demonstrating against the selected Pontiac State Hospital site for a proposed super high school. ■w . V .' - *' 'Stadium Beautiful Thing James Clarkson, president of First Federal Savings of Oakland, described the proposal for a domed sports stadium in Pontiac as “a beautiful thing if we can get it.” Clarkson of 3111 St. Jude, Waterford Township, praised the idea of a stadium at the I-75-M5? interchange as a potentially tremendous asset for the city. k" k k I \ “It would be a real help to the economy in a growing area and would bring in more new businesses,” he said. Clarkson .called the site a good Choice, pointing out the availability of parking and the proximity of the esipressway network. / *3 V I A—2 Apollo 9 Crewmen Gef Last Preflight Physical In Birmingham Area W. Berlin Crisis Eases as Result School Architecture Shown of New Offers p^PE KENNEDY, Fl». (AP) - n» A|M>Uo I astmiauu today und«io ttidr fiM|l aMjar prdFiii^t physical «iam •wWlf teandi cMfiri prqmt tar a apact tripleheader starttaf to^ghi with a toward the plaiet Man. Air Farce Lt Coi. JaflMt A. McDivitt «id DavM R. Scott and civittan Russell 3*. Schwekrkart plui aevwal hours with i^NKe afoncy doctors, who want to be miain they are flt. Ihe trio's ndasion :will be to circte the earth for M days alter d«ir S rocicet Mails off at 11 a.tn. EST Friday. The phyrical exam also prolides medical data for in flijibt *nd postflight comparlsoo. Seeking clues to possible life <» Mars, Mariner 6 ia to rocket toward that distant planet at 1:14 p.m. toiiii^t. Afta* an interplanetary voyage of nearly five months. It Is to sweep within 2,000 miles df the Red Planet, snapping Return gathering Ktmitific data. ESSA SHOT WEDNESDAY Sandwiched between Mariner and Apollo will be the launching of the ESSA Viet Red Fire Rakes Towns --Spring Offensive Feared SAIGON (AP) - VIetcong and North Vieinamese troops raked tncHe than SO towns and military posts with rockets, mortars and light ground attadu today In die second day of countrywide at- tacks. American otficirs said die emmy had started a spring offensive intended to generate pressure hrom the Amo'ican public for concessions at the Paris peace talks. President Nugyen Van HUeu said the offensive had beat "completely foiled” with heavy losses to the enemy. The U S. CMnmand announced that more than 1,000 Vietcong and North Vietnamese had been killed since the attacks began Saturday night. Allied casualties include about 100 American soldiers and an equal number of South Vietnamese troops killed, at least 140 American soldiers and more than 100 South Vietnamese troops wounded, and at least 66 civilians killed ahd another 250 wounded. Military spokesman said enemy gunners had slwlled Saigon and Da Nang, South Virtnam’s two largest cities, 20 provincial capitals, and 29 district capitals. Some towns were hit several times. AARON 8. BROWN Ex-Envoy Dies; Native of City Former tJ.S. Ambaiswkir to Nicaragua Aaron S. Brown, a former Pontiac resident, died Saturday at his home ill New York C2ty. He lias Si .Brown, who was a reporter for The Pontiac Press from 1M6-37, was ap-iminted to the fmeign service office in 1937. He served in Bangkok. Lisbon, Mexico City, Dublin ahd Ber cent of the totiU assessi in Pontiac,” he saW. "In each M last six years, GM’s tax assessma Pontiac has increased and has n sCTted an increasing proportion at city s total assessment.” t A'\ TllE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBHUARY 24. 1969 State Police Seek Second Swimming Pool LANSING (AP) - The Michigan State PoHce Department] has requested funds tn build a second swimming pool. The department already has an indoor pool located at its East Lansing facilities. It is used to teach recruits swimming and lifesaving. It also is frequently used for recreation by Gov. Wiiliam MilUken, au-thorities said. ★ ★ ★ The plea for a second pool was made in the departmeht’s annual fafudget request. The pool would be part of a police braining aca^my located abmit 10 miles from its East Lansing headquarters. The request was made during SIMPER* ZIG-ZAG SEWING MACHINE This zig-zag marvel sews buttonholes, buttons; darns, mends ana monograms without attachments. It's quiet, has a fuikango speed control. Case included. m BittenbslsSetisoR.Notchedblade makes smooth cut away from edge of material. Adjusts to cut buttonhole up to 114 in. Reg.$4.25.Naw’2.77 Embreideiy Scissors. Sturdily constructed with extra sharp points fi>r delicate mediework. Reg. $3.25. NOW $117 SINGER* SCISSORS aiid SHEARS For the first time in Silver history, in’re giving you 14 off the regular prieo of Singer scissors and shears. All are forged Meel-lab tested to cut neatly and accurately. So come In today and |dck up a few pairs-for all your cutting needs. LWit Trimmers. Used to cut sills, rayons and lightweight fabrics. Reg. $3.50. NOW $127 Sewing Scissors. One pointed and one straight blade. Good for general household use. Reg. $3.75. NOW $147 permit eaqr, accurate cutting without lifting material from cutting surMce. 7" length. Reg. $5.25. WOW $347 ASK ABOUT OUR CREDIT PLAN DESIONED TO HT EVERY BUDQETI PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CEMTIR Pboii* 482-0350 TEL-TWELVE SHOPPING CENTER Phona 353-1330 SINGER wAflrSINCERiaAvf* OAKUND MALL SHOPPING CENTER PhaiM 585-5010 a year in which Gov. Milliken aaked all. departments to trim unueceasary items from their proposed budgets. NO COST ESTIMATE The anticipated Ill.O-milllrm budget surplus would not permit nonessential items, MUlikmi said'. Ernest Banning, state police director of business administration, said no estimate had baen madto of the pool’s cost l^ause the architect had not yet completed plaiis for t he trabiiiig academy. The total cost of the academy, however, was estimated at $4 million. Banning said the new pool is liecessary because it’s "bigger’* the present pool. In addition, he said the state police Warren Man Wallaceites' New Chief battle CREEK (AP)-De-spite a reported walkout by delegations from several western htichigan counties and uncertainty about the party’s future, the American Independent Par-has elected a new Michigan chairman. James Hall of Warren was named Saturday to head the state chapter of the party that backed former Alabama Gov. George Wallace’s third-party presidential bid. A A A Walkouts were staged by delegations from Kalamazoo and Leelanau Counties in protest against what they called the “undemod'atic’’ manner in which the ccmvbntion was run. Delegation leaders from the two counties claimed delegates from most other Western Michigan counties joined their walkout, but observers were unable to tell whether this claim was true. [eastern domination Gale Aikens, a member of the Kalamazoo County delegation’s executive committee, said his fear of convention domination by eastern Michigan interests was ciHiUrmed when Hail Was elected cKaiiman. Aikens added he wash’t sure what the party’s future will be. The sentiments were echoed Sunday by members of the Leelanau delegation. planned to expand their training program. PART OP COMPLEX The training academy would be part of a new state police complex located 8-10 miles from its present headquarters. Banning said. However, Banning could not say when or if the department would vacate its quarters on the Michigan State University cam-pus. The department owns about two and one-half acres on the campus. Several other buildings are leased from the university. The lepse. Banning said, “expires abwt 80 years from now.’* In his capitol outlay budget released last week, Milliken recommended the department’s $3.3-million request for thei training academy be trimmed to only $750,000. However, the request can bei boosted or decreased by the Capitol Outlay Committee. The committee. Banning said, has indicated it is favorable to the proposed academy. • KEV5 m LUMBER CO. POWER TOOLS DeWolt Home Shop Block & Decker Porter Coble Prefinithed PANELING, TRIM Pavco • Weldwood Georgia Pacific Royolcote * Morlite MISCELLANEOUS Armstrong Ceiling Tile Corkboord Bulletin Board Basketball Backboard Table Tennis Tops & Legs Homosote Bed Boards Fireplace Accessories 151 Oakland Ave. FE 4-1594 A SIMMS Special Purchase Acrylic Teddy-Bear Jacket • Reversible • Hooded Raveiilb'e Teddy-Bear iackel hai ottadied. IhrmNxxk drwnirind hood, full front Xipper, hnit cvff*. 2 hand warmer poclielt on pile tide. Dense, ocrylte pile reverses to quilled nylon. Moc;hIne 3 to 7. fl . V' ■ rSK r s, Simms Bros.-98 H. Saginaw St.-DowntoWn Pontiac Simms^ 98 N. Saginaw St. SIMMS OPEN TOHITE Til 9 pji TOES., WED. 9 m to 8:30 P.M. FREEPUMNG... «.ri. i-u. downtown parking mall — just stops from Simms front doors for 1-hour. Hovo your ticket stampod at timo of purchaio. (Except on tobacco & boveragoe). ‘CHARGE IF at SIMMS UsO our 30-day, same as cash i plan on buys of $10 to $150 or use your MIDWEST BANK CARD. SIMMS CAMERA DEPT. DISCOUNTS SILVER LENTICULAR SCREENS For Brightest Shows 40x40 Inche$ For brightest projections got the Siiver Lenticular screen. On tripod hose, folds compactly for storage and carrying. $1 holds or charge it at Simms. KOWA 'SET’ 35 MX Reflex Camera 35mm reflex lens camera with f1.8 coated lens. Shutter speeds to 1/500 seconds. Behind-the-iens-meter, single lens reflex with built-in self timer. Buy it on Simmt Instant Credit or $1 holds in lavowoy. 'SAWYERS’ MITOMATIG FOCUSING Slide Projector Regular $133.$0 Model 600AQ with 500 watt quartz bulb. Solid state automatic focusing. Big 4-inch f3.5 lens, builf-fnto self-contained case. Complete with 1 roto-tray and easy edit tray. With re-mote control cord. Charge it or $1 holds in Simms free layaway. t ------------------------ Police and AM Radio $29.95 Value Alaron model BIOAP as shown — portable battery operated radio for Police Colls and AM ' broadcasts. Complete with earphone and battery. $1 holds or charge it. POLICE - FM -- I PORTA-RADIO Condi* model TK184B radio con.plqf* with batteries ond earphone is portable. Powerful ronge for Police Colls, fM/AM notions, Morme bond and Short wave bond, ge It Ojr $ 1 holds ol Simms. I - MR-SW Weekend Road toll Is 17 in Michigan Th« Hunfar Houm (Left) And Th«. Harty Allen Family Home May Form A Museum Complex For Birmingham Birmingham to Vote on Historical Park BIRMINGHAM » The Cify Com* mtttion will voters at the A|n11 8 city election to approve a pn^xmal Butlwrixliig the city to purchase probity iw purpexm of «rtaUlriilng this dty'a first historical park. The dty Is currently negotiating for file pturhase of a parcel located on the north side of htairie at Southfield owned by Mrs. Harry Allen, the widow of a f«mer Binnbigham mayor. * * * It the pn^al is approved, the city would move the Hunter House. Birming* haitt’s (ridest house to the Allen property. The Hunter House was recently donated to the city by James Flack. 'the Allen family home would be epn* verted into a museum and remain on the property as part of the historical park. COSTS or PROPERTY Costs for the ^tiperty are estimated between E02,000 and $250,000. A com- would run between $10,000 and $11,000, according to R. S. Kenning, dty manager. The figures lm;lude electridty, heating, grounds maintenance, and b u 11 d 1 n g maintenance. Costs for a custodian and mission spokesman said the estimated, curator if needed, would be additional, costs are based on the "assumed fair^ market value" of the jM-operty. Based on the mailmum price for the property, the cost of moving file Hunter House to the site atul expenses for site preparation, it is estimated the project, exclusive of fumishlnp, would cost approximately $$80,000. Annual maintenance expenses for the Allen property and the Hunter House STIPULATIONS Mr. Allen has agreed to sell the property providing the Allen home is not demolished and the property be used solely as a historical park future generations. e ♦ w The dty’s Historical Board gave the following reasons for reconunending purchase of the Allen prop«1y: THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, FEMHUARY 2$, limo A—4 Troy Commission to Study i-ond Deal Eyed Proposed Pay Amendment • Hie imqwrty is attractive and well suited for park purposes. • The location is at an important entry point to the downtown area. • The property is contiguorus to present city land and provides a natural extensim of existing park area. • The Allen House represents a valuable long-range asset as the focus for a historical museum. The board also feels the Allen property is large enough to permit location for thp Hunter House, and also that the property and the Allen family have significant historic importa^ to the community. The Historical Board had originally recommended that the city acquire a substantial portion of the block in which the house Is located, thus keeping the house where it has been for the past 76 years. The Hunter House is located at 264 W. Brown. ★ ★ ★ The original proposal was rejected because of cost fa^rs and by Jdmson, Johnson and Roy,4he7Ann Arlxff planning consultant devekqiing Birmingham's proposed Urban D^ign plan for the downtown area. The planning consultant contoided the 264 W. Brown location is too close to the central business district. ^ the Assodated Press A Bay Ci^ man, who kmled over two hours aftfw an automobUe acditent in which be suffeiad no visible injuries, was one of IB persons to die in weekend Michigan teaffic. The victim, Cliffwd Biskner, 12, died in the emergemiy room of a Bay City hMpital whm he was taken after his car, northbound oa M13, Struck ' anothor car emerging fium a driveway. Hoqiital officials scheduled an autopsy. . * w There were three double fatalities. A child struck when he ran into the street while chasing his younger tatJther, was among the victims of accidents between 6 p.m. Friday and noidnigbt Sunday, the Michigan State Police repmted. VICTIM WAS $ The child, Thomas K. Adams, 3, son of Mrs. and Mrs. Thomas Adams of Milan, died Sunday when he ran in fi’Wt of an (Hicoming car. Girard Poole, SS of EssexvUle and his brother, Vincent, 53, of Bay City both died in a head-on collision with a second' car Saturday near the Gladwin-Bay County line. * * * Twin sisters Karen and Sharon Green, IS, of Ludington, were killed late Friday when struck by a car as they walked along U.S. 10 near their Mason County home. A three -car collision Saturday on M 53 in Van Buren County claimed the lives of Edward L. Murphy Jr., 25 of Bangor, tuid KatJUnen Wentland, 41, of Bloom-ingdale. OTHER VICTIMS Hie other victims: Diane S. Macchietto, 15 of Detrrit, pronounced dead when taken to Pontiac’s St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after the car driven by her mother collided with another in Bloomfield Hiwnship Sunday. * ■*■ * Steven F- Waldofsky, 15, of Mid-dleville, in a two -car collision Saturday on U.S. 27 near Charlotte shortly after he had been picked up while hitchhiking. TROY — Another proposed charter Bmmdnieat on city commissioners* salaries will be scrutinised by the commission at its regular meeting at 7:30 tonight. Cmmissioners asked for revision of the original charter proposal, which will appear on the April 7 municipal election balim if approved, after City Attorney Stanley Burke reported that the state attorney general's office had objected to its wording. According to an opinion Issued by the (rffioe, Burke said, the proposed amendment would be "in violation of the home-rule act" under which cities are incorporated and chartered. The proposal had called for the eataUishment of a salary committee to study and then set commissioners' com-penution. However, under the attorney general's WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP - Ihe township board has approved an agreement ^th a new township building authority to lease )»operty the authority' is buying adjacent to the town hall. The formal rmiUfi offW fmm the township has been received and tabled depending further study. The townfiiip plans to lease the 10-acre parcel, which the building authority bought for $36,500, with an advance down payment of $10,000. Ownership of the land will revert to the township when the Several commissioners, however, said total price is paid through the rent Truman Will PAmaih they are opposed on principle to setting money. muiiivim tv hi rveiiiuiii ________ Firm Annotinces Brandon Board Okays Three Promotions Street Lighting Project Mitchell Byrnes, 26, of Flint, Whose car left 1-75 in Detroit Saturday, TWO-CAR CRASH James A. Bell, 23, of Grand Rapids, in a two rear crash Saturday on U.S. 131 in Allegan County. Bernard Helm, 22, of Kirtand, Ohio, whose car ran off 1-75 in Oakland County’s Independence Township Saturday. ★ we Raymond Miller, 22, of Royal Oak, when his car struck a parked auto on Joseph Campau Street in Detroit Sunday. Thomas A. Archlpley, 81, of Linden, N.J., in a two^ar crash Saturday on M 59 in Howell. CAR HTT TREE Patricia Catalano, 27, of Southgate, early Sunday on MSS at Walnut Street in Southgate when the car in which she was a passenger stnick a tree. ★ ★ ★ Hiliie Hiley, 42, of 266 Osmun, Pmitlac, killed ^day at Bagley and Nebraska Streets in Pontiac whM two cars collided at right angles. Planning Board to 'Meet People' ADDIS9N TOWNSHIP « The township planning board will attempt the “meet the people” approach .in the formulation of zoning policies for the township. The board has planned a series of meetings to give $11 township property owners an opportunity to discuss zoning procedures and air their views regarding possible zoning of township property. By calling in the residents and giving them an you can sttok anybody elae with is the caidiaai rule. For a while that left Mom and Dad as the fall guys, but they’re developing One the land is a house — which probably will be rented — and two other buildings, one of which will become a fire station according to supervisor James Reid. The board, in other recent action, hired another fireman giving the township three full-time firemen. Gene Miller, who most recently worked for a gravel company, previously was the township’s first full-time fireman. He will receive about $7,200 salary. STREET UGHT HEARING A hearing on installation of street lights in Cedar Shores subdivision will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. March 18. The board also gave approval to an agreement by which the township will take over the. water system to be put in Colony Heights subdivision at a time when 50 per cent of the homes are using water. ★ ★ ★ Final approval was given plans for Fox Bay subdivision Na 4. ’The plans call for aome 40 homes. in Hospital for Tests KANSAS CITY DB - Former President Harry S. Truman Is recovering frikn a bout with influenza, his doctors say, but will remain in Research Hospital for an undetermined period for a series of routine tests. The 84-year-old 1>uman was brought Ken Taylor, 3843 Percy King Ct., Waterford Township, has been promoted to vice president of the Oakland Kirby organization, Carl Brooks, president of the county vacuum cleaner distributorship announded. Taylor, was the general manager of the company’s office at 2617 Dixie, Waterford Township. ★ ★ ★ Oliver Pawlik of 277 Bay, West Bloomfield Township, was promoted to sales manager at that office. Dale Pace of 124 Clayborn, Pontiac, was promoted to branch manager of the Kirby store at 7216 Cooley Lake, White Lake Township. ★ ★ ★ Brooks also announced the establishment of Mikle Kirby Sales, inc., at 425 Whippoorwill, Commerce Township, headed by Robert Mickle. Sex Education Topic to the hospital Hiursday night from his OTA home in Inde^ndence, Mo, for treat *0*^ YY 01100 Lake FT A Six File for Four Seats on Farmington Council in Election on April 7 FARMINGTON — Six men are running for four council seats in the April 7 election. Those who have filed include John F. Stenson, Jr. of 34144 Alta Lwna, Dr. John Richardson of 34069 Alta Loma, and Walter L. Christensen of 22408 Floral. Incumbents running include Howard W. Thayer of 33603 Grand River; Wilbur Brotherton qf 23622 Beacon, now mayor; and John A, Allen of 32293 ^awassee. ★ ★ ★ The two men receiving the highest number of votes will win four-year terms while the next two will receive two-year terms. Councilmen receive an annual salary of $500. The mayor is elected by the council. # ment of intestinal flu. ★ ■ ★ A Officials said Truman received telephone calls yesterday from former President and Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, and his daughter, Mrs. Gifton Daniel of New York. The former president spent much of the day sitting in a chair in his'iWn. WALLED LAKE — A registered nurse and family-life consultant will speak at Dublin School’s first PTA meeting of the new year tomorrow^ Doris Milton Will speak at the 8 p.m. meeting at Dublin School on the sex education program presented to in Walled Lake system. No Meeting Tonight ROCHESTER — Because of emergency business commitments which prevent the attendance of a quorum, the board of education meeting scheduled for tonight has been canceled. Hie board’s next regular meeting will be held March 3 at 8 p.m. at the bOard offices, 522 W. Fourth. ' I saw Mom, who ha.s never, but never, offered unsolicited advice, cut quite a swathe.through the kids the other night. And they flew. Open-mouthed. Things are settling down, and It’s great. A HERO Grandpa has beciune a hero. Despite bliralness he’s equiwied the basement FloiF*f Inn with shelves it wouldn’t have gotten in I OF iNOmet? L.iev.TIUn years. The buzz of the i»wer saw doesn’t faze Grandma, therefore it doesn’t faze Ballot Lineup Set Grandpa climbs trees to install bird feedars and falls out of them. He diudfies when he learns nobody saw him iall. Grandma iHshes and fishes, and file kids giggle and keep the floor dear of toys so he won’t fall Inside. Evot crippled old Sceeter, the family dog, moves aside when she sees Dad ronitog — she who,finds the most traf-^cked spot in Ute house and stretches oht there defying fate. y SOFT LAP And S^year-old Liz and 7:year-old Pete think ev«rybody should have a Grandma’s roft lap to be rocked to sleep in and a ^andpa to tell atories tkimesteadiiig days ok of your peripatetic reporter: The five-year-old twins had knelt for bed-time prayers. Clara concluded: “Amen. And good night, God Now stay tuned for Clarence." .......Sign on a New York doc tor’s door: “Am sick with the flu Find another doctor or take two aspirins and go to bed. That’s what I did.” . ........ Tbat attempt on the lives of the cosmonauts in Moscow has frightened the Russian police They are expecting outbreaks anytime. Some anti-government ex- probabiy be “put k : k Scmta advise me that Ardith Charles deserves mention as one of the attractive young ladies in the area. .... ...... C on- gress still buzzes a bit at the pasting George Meany got at the hands of George Romney. Romney said ARDITH flatly a major reason housing production lagged so far behind actual needs “is because of organized labor’s skyrocketing wages and restrictive work practices.” ...........More cattle are headed for the slaughter markets than there were a year ago. This may slow down meat price increases in the months ahead. k k k A Great (Big Round of Applause for Hank ’ Gotham who struggles and struggles manfully with his woefully inadequate space. . . The way things are going, the hostess on the airliner should say:'“Coffee, tea dr Castrb.’’...... Sdng- birds rarely sing on the ground. A few do, but the songbird proper wants a tree^ a bush, a fence post or even “on the wing.” ............... Overheard: “I dragged my son fighting and kicHing to the barber shop to get some of that stupid looking hair cut, but it turned out I had the next door neighbor’s kid." ...... .... Dept, of Cheers and jeers: the C's — Detroit’s Jaycees; the J’s — Wayne County Stadium locations compared to ours. -^-Harold A. F’itzgerald Voice of the People: Expre9ses Appreciation to Area Blood Donors On January 17, a Red Cross Bloodmobile was sponsored by the Waterford school employes blood bank. Members of the community groups, former students and schodl employes edntributed a total of 118 pints of blood. Forty-seven of the pints contributed were given to make up some of over 200 pints of blood used by a former Waterford Township High School student, Dr. Rich^ Trai-coff, whose story was told in The Pontiac Press January 16. Also, the Waterford Township High School faculty lost a member recently who received 47 pints of blood during his terminal illness. Our group is assuming this debt by pledging to replace this amount in the next few months. ★ ★ ★ I appreciate all those who gave blood and also those who attempted to give but were not allowed to because of health reasons. None of us can give another person life, but many can assist in the preservation of life through the donation of blood. Another bank is being held at Waterford Township High School on March 28. ARTHUR K. LAKE WATERFORD TOWNSHIP SCHOOLS BLOOD BANK CHAIRMAN 'Now What?' ^Appreciate Prize Won at Cooking School’ David Lawrence Says: I express appreciation for the lovely wig I won at the 1969 Pontiac Press Cooking School. It is something most every woman would like but hardly dreams of actually having. Mr. James of Donnell’s was most courtews and helpful. JOYCE SLACK 5766 SHETLAND WAY U.S. Faces Bombing Decision Letters Discuss Site for New High School WASHINGTON— An important military decision faces the United States government today — whether to retaliate against North Vietnam by a resumption of heavy bombing or to drift along while waiting hopefully for the Paris peace LAWRENCE talks to bring a solution. The sudden offensive oyer the weekend, as Communist rockets and mortars struck at least 72 cities and military sites throughout South Vietnam, was undoubtedly planned as a deliberate effort to test the resoluteness of the American and allied forces. The American people have favored a halt in the bombing, but they expected some reclproeal move instead of intensified warfare by North Vietnam. Even though 40,000 troops had been massed to protect the South Vietnantese capital, it was not anticipated tl^at Saigon itself would be at-tackMi. •MASSIVE EVIDENCE’ Our own commanders, however, according to j>ress reports in the last few days, said there was “massive evidence" of a contemplated offensive throughout the country. Was there any conference with the Joint Chiefs of Staff by President Nixon before he left for Europe? It is customary for the commander in chief to leave instructions as . to what steps might be taken in a milltiuY emergen- mu n i c a t i o n which are available to him during his absence. When a crisis arises, a president needs the firsthand advice of Cabinet offirars and militMY commanders. ^ potential enemy might feel tempted to launch an attack when the president is away from the United States. Quick action is imperative. RISKS INVOLVED So what will have to be weighed in the future Is whether all the risks involved, when the commander in chief’ is out of the country are worth taking and whether international conferences with the leading military and economic power in the world shouldn’t be, held in this country. For without the aid of the United States, almost all nations would be at the mercy of nuclear forces commanded by Communist dictatorships. The paramount consideration, therefore, would appear to be the maintenance of an effective mechanism of defense and retaliation as .the best means of deterring an enemy from starting a nuclear war. According to a recent article, if the proposed new high school is located in the suggested area on Orchard Lake Ave., it would be necessary to tear down 375 houses to make room for the facility. The housing situation in Pontiac is acute now. Where are the displaced 375 families going to live — in tents? Let those outsiders that come to the City from other towns and foment trouble anwer that. CONCERNED I had a dream of a magilificent monument being built in the center of Pontiac—an educational facility that would sp^ak out to all the concern of the white community for its black counterpart. I had a dream of children with a new self image given to them by thdr black teachcre and white brothers. I had a dream that included a library, an dthletic field and a cultural center to be shared by black and white together. I had a dream that promises becotoe realities and of a monument to prove it. MONNIE SHAUGHNESSY 4260 BARNARD, WATERFORD (eubllilMrt.H*ll Syndlcit*) Bob Considine Says: Apollo Project Failing to Draw Much Support It’s time taxpayers and registered voters in Pontiac woke up to the fact that a portion of our tax money goes to pay our City officials, the ones we trust to make the proper decisions as to where our, tax money will be spent. 'Ihe location of the super high school should be where our City leaders selected. I read that one UAW local in Pontiac has elected to go along with the protest group and favor the south central Pontiac location. ’Iliis is poor unionism and shows the dictatorial manner in which the UAW is run. GERALD T. MOORE 701 EMERSON NEW YORK-People . . >. Places ... God never intended us to CONSIDINE cy. The Conununists certainly picked an advantageous time for their attacks. American policy in Vietnam Is still unsettled. CrittcismX continue as tnany persons inside' and outside of Congress advocate either fighting with maximum power or getting out altogether. President Nixon will be away from Washington for a week, and although telephone communication is available for consultation with the military chiefs h«e. It Is being assumed that the latter obtained af^val for a course of actim befWe the President left. SOME UNEASINESS It always creates some uneasiness in Washington when a president of the United States leaves the country. The question now is whether a president, who al«ie has the resporoibiUty for ordering the trigpr pulled if there are s^s of a nuclear attack, sl^M ever be away from this country notwithstanding the efftcient means of c(Hn- gointospace,’ one of the persons questioned in a re-cent Harris survey stated flatly. He not asked whether he was a card-carrying Flat Earth member. Surprisingly, almost half pf those queried opposed the $4-blUion-a-year ApoUo project. Only 39 per cent were in favor of it, and the rest didn’t know or didn’t give a hoot one way or the other. The project will continue. In the long run, it may prove only that Apollo 8’s crew said it all when the men described the moon as an ugly, worthy less, dead object and they wanted no part of it. 3 PERFECT LANDINGS As of now, there is only money enough and hardware enough to land a total of six astronauts on the lunar There will be no “moon station" in the Apollo program. What will be left of the dollars and equipment, after the third moon landing, will be spent trying to put an observation station in earth orbit. ‘Waterford Citizens Should Check Article’ This could be manned periodically by fresh crews, and supplies could be shuttled up to it by much cheaper means than now are avRilable in the Apollo program. I do not know Mike Spak or anything about him other than his article in The Pontiac Press February 15, under “Personals.” If this article is true, or any part is true, people of Waterford Township should check it out and get the facts on Waterford’s tax problems. GORDON W. JONES 3450 VanZANDT, DRAYTON PLAINS (Continued on Page A-7) At a recent Washington dinner party, Averell Harriman said that the reason the peace talks were going so slowly at Paris WM the fault of “the Kennedy administration.” He was quite cross about the whole thing. “The Kennedy administration?" his dinner companion Question and Answer Do you know where we can get a Boston Bull pappy? We’ve looked since Christmas and can’t locate one. MRS. WILUAM McMORRAN 905 UNIVERSITY DRIVE' REPLY Ray Perso, 1624 W. Famum, Royal Oak, LI 2-5164, breads Boston Bulls. We’re sending you the name of another breeder who preferred not to publish her name, and if we learn of others, we’ll forward the information to you. Harriman blinjEed. “I mean thp a^nistratiqi^^ of President Ted Kennedy, which begins in 1973,” the venerable Democrat recovered. Question ami Atlswer ^maBjmwatches did GMC divisions give women etn-Xin 196S for 25-year service? H. G. B. REPLY Fisher Body—5, GMTC—220, Pontiac Motor face. That will require three perfect landings. The first two astronauts— scheduled to touchdown sometime in August, if this week’s Apollo 9 mission proves that the Lunar Module works—will venutre only 300 feet from their vehicle. The next two may wander as far as 606 feet from their CTaft. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Great 'Squares' The Lawrence (Kan.) Daily Journal-World Verbal Orchids Mr. aad Mrs. Adam H. Ktmpel of 124 E. Howard; 5^ wedding anniversary. Charles Bassett of Novi; 88th birthday. The mission of the third crew Has ndt yet been spelled out by NASA. But it seems that they, too, will stick pretty close to their (mly means of getting back to earth. Twenty-four hours appears id be the longest perkid that any of the adventurers will stay on the ntomi’s surfoce. NO’MOON STATION’ Any further exploration of heavenly bodies will remain a idpedream until that indefi-idte day when man’s inventiveness induces atdmic-poweried ispace engines and, the means of ^ying alive in a hostile clime for periods as long as a year. Frank Borman, the man who (commanded) the Apollo 8 lunar orlHt orew, is the kind dl man who brus^ his t^th regularly, uses the ZIP on his mail and comes to a complete halt at stop signs, He’s respectful to his elders, kind to his ^fe and children add patient' WUft his subordinates. 'He’s a temperate man, an outdooranan and an active dnirch wOTkor. He calls just about everyone over 21 sir or ma’am and he can talk about patrirtism as unhlushingly as he discusses theweatho*. “square.” ^ut as most vrill agree about Glenn, and probably will come to think about Borman, these men are by no means square as cynics use the term. “niere’s no lace on ^ Frank Borman’s space suit,”’ a top official of the N a t i o n r i Ao'onautics and Space Administration says. “I think history wijl prove that if peo pie in the future could pick the man they think should have been the first on the moon, Frank Borman would have to be one of them. He has it all to be a national hero, and to deserve the hemor without letting anyone Yes, there are those who will view a John Glenn or Frank Borman, for all their assets, and still contend they’re “squares” because they pay so much attention to so many important things, get involved and work hard at being good citizens. But thank God for squares! It’s ttiis kind of peq>le who have put tile nation where it is today, and will keep it great in the future. He, John Glenn and (Aher men like them are all tiiese tiungs — Hungs that aome so-called sophisticates in our midst think constitute a Borman is a’ tough-minded perledJonist and he knows his demanding job better than any man alive: Yet he has the patience and tolerance to be understanding and gentle with others. n» Nntitt Vmt )• MlvwW by «Oc « w—kf ”^O^end, Oewesee, I in WchiiM .ml mu MbH pImw nJtw MM Sfa»k> $36.00 ■ «Mr. ) ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 24, 1969 A—7 Voice of the People Swarms of Locusts Infest Vast Africa, Mideast Areas , (ConUnued frofiti P«g# A-6) LONDON (UPI) - The plaguel From the Somali Peninsula „ ; Cl- 1J W 1 ^ ^ Pliaraohs themselves reports reaching the Antilocust iveneration Snoulil Be Afore UnderHtanning khew and feared Is on the Research Centerthere speak of march aggin.. new locust swarms brewing The young generation should pay more attention to the old generation and try to understand them instead of walking away when they try to tell us something. The old generation shouldn't cut down the young generatiwi. They should try to understand why we wear what we do and why the boys wear their hair the way they i^o. \ bobbie'matney 111 N. ASTOR ‘Decision Should Benefit Majority in Gty’ I read with amazement the in-oposals of all the special pressure groups of this city and their problems. In most cases these 9-oups represent a small, biased percentage of the citizens. They aren’t speaking for me. I resent the trouble a few are causing. ★ '.w ★ It doesn’t appear that any one of these groiqis is thinking in terms of the betterment of Pontiac as a city, the interests of the other M per cent of the citizens, the effiect they have on the proposals that are pending, or the general welfare of the City as a whole. Why should any citizen of America feel that his own personal needs or opinions should disrupt a whole city? ★ * * Pontiac can never move ahead and solve her problems unless we move together as a majority. We have responsible men working for the good of this City. I trust their ability and feel they should be able to perform their jobs without constant harassment by special groups. M. H. BENTER 35 E. IROQUOIS Northern Fan Comments on Press Coverage Why doesn’t The Pontiac Press write more sports articles concerning Pontiac Northern? Every week the front page of the sports section is covered with news of Pontiac Central’s games. Could it be this City’s only newspaper is prejudiced? SUE BIERL 635 DeSOTA (Editor’s Note: Funny, we get the same complaint from Central fans.) ^ Gives Views on Rebelling College-Students Rebelling students say they want a larger voice in college affairs and the hiring and firing of professors. Yet, if a professor disagrees with a leader or someone in an influential group, he could have his house or office bombed. The rebelling students also preach for more individual rights, yet they preach socialism and call for more government restrictions. JOHNGRIGQS 2310 DEXTER Residents Give Views on Waterford Schools Waterford taxpayers, our schools need money to keep going. Our children need the best education they can get. They cannot get this education if we deny the schools the necessary funds. Let’s do something to save our children and our schools. MRS. PEDRO GUZMAN 5780 SHETLAND WAY, WATERFORD rpreviously livisd In Walled Lake school district. We vot^ to ihclude the northwest section into Walled Lake school district. We bwght a house In this section only to find that our children had to go to Waterford schools. I live near OxbOw and have five children in four different Waterford schools. _ If WaterfOTd is so hard up for ihoney and room, let this section have a choice pf schdob. Walled Lake is an accredited school with all-day sessions. IDA LELEY 8381 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. ‘MexicamAmericans Paid Tribute to Friend' The Mexican-American colony of this community paid tribute to Jose Moran. He was not a wealthy man, a politician, or even a businessman; but a simple person who gave us his warmth and friendship through the love of his music. The people that thronged the pews Of St. Vincent de Paid Church reflected the unity that Jose bound in us. MRS. NINA P. MENDOZA 204 FRANKLIN RD. Pay Increase for Judges Raises Questions To the nine judges who are going to split a $72,000 vacation pie, get a $4,000 raise and try to live on $34,000 a year: Seeing the needs of the State Hospital, etc., can yoii really face your> fellow taxpayers with a clear conscience? I s^" get your hands out of our pockets. C. LUNDGREN 270 S. TILDEN Comments on Pay Increases for Firemen Isn’t it a shame that some 90,000 lives must sometimes go unprotected because of one man’s ignorance and mistakes with Pontiac firemen? Firemen pay,room and board out of their own paychecks every two weeks. Each station bought its own color television. Yet, Joe Warren says they don’t derive a higher salary. How many times could Mr. Warren and a lot of other people take getting up three or four times to go into freezing weather just to find a false alarm and sometimes save a life? The salary of $10,300 is nothing when it means saving the lives of many, and fire protection 24 hours a day. If a life is taken during this strike, I yonder whose conscience-will bother him. MRS. ROBERT MOR’nMORE ‘Appreciate Help Given After A^Ccident' I appreciate the two gentlemen who pulled me out of my wrecked car and got help for me on February 13, on Williams Lake Road. I’d also like to know the man Who pulled out in front of me, causing me to swerve and crash into a telephone pole. He drove off without bothering to see if I was breathing. MRS. DELORES MOULTON 1087 EDGEORGE Safety Warnings Deserve Front Page Space With spring eopiing and dogs running loose, I was pleased to read your article on what to do for self protection in dealing with strange dogs. / But why waS it put in Section B, page 4? Also, why put the unsafe ice warning on Page 8, Action A? Both deserve front page space. SAFETY FIRST Comments oh Recent Flag Burning Incident CongratulatiiMis to Oakland University for its prompt statement rejecting the action in which an American flag was burned on campus. Having communicated with Chancellor Varner, Senator Huber and several in the news media following Uie “nude guru poetry session,” I’m * sirnilw public disavowal at that time would have avoided the hassle which developed. ’ . , i DAVID BRADBURY 4066 TELEGRAPH, BLOOMFIELD HILLS jj Over vast areas of the Middle East and Africa locusts are stripping all things green from the countryside and In many places leaving famine in their wake. while the damage is still being assessed in the Spanish Sahara, Mauretania, Mali, Niger, Chad, the Sudan, Egypt, Ethopia and Nigeria. The plague now under wdy was detected by scientists of the center more than a year ago. SWARMING In Mali and Niger they noted that the harmless grasshopper was swarming, a hormone re-achon set off by numbers that turhs him into a marching-fly- ing terror able to eat his own weight every day. ★ ★ ★ Since Individual swarms can contain more than 20,000 t< of the insect, the damage obvious. And more than one-fifth of the land area of the world is threatened. “They cover 3,000 miles in a; few months,” said a spokesman for the center. “And where they have been they take everything. "Hie farms are left barren of everything above ground, course the locusts themselves are edible but they are a poor substitute for green crops.” Clock Repair • Antique Clock Speciall$t$ 151 S. Balci, Blrminiihaiii 646-7377 «. ..............t 20" dia. *er«*n portabla TV $*t includ« decora- tor styled roll-oround cort. 227 tq. in. rectangular color tube. Auto- ^ m motic color monitor atturet eharp UHF/VHF pictures always. B. ADMIRAL. Beautiful walnut wood console with 20" dio.; 227 sq. . ^ in rectangular screen. INSTANT PLAY. INSTANT SOUND. Automatic color clorifier. Smort contemporary styling. 3-yeor color tube war- K ranty. " ” C. ADMIRAL 23". Giont 295 sq. In. rectangular tube. Contempo- ^ ^ ^ rary jtyling. Wolnut grained genuine wood cabinet. All channel UHF/VHF. Push-pull oH-qn volume. "AAeniory" tuning. 3-year color tube warrnaty. '' FREi DELIVERY AND FREE M-DAYAERVICE, WITH ANY OF THESE COLOR TV D. RCA 20". 227 sq. in. rectangular tube. Powerful 25,000 volt New Vista chdssis. All-range tone control. Exquisite French Provincial in fine futniture cabinetry. >2-year color tube war-ronty. E. RCA 23"COMBINATION. With A.F.C. switch. Conplete home theatre with Color TV, stereo hi-fi, AM-FM, FiM-stereo radio. 6 speok-ers. Early American maple woods. 2-year color tube ranty. F. WESTINGHOUSE 23" 295 sq. in. rectangular color tube. INSTANT- ON, Sound at Oncq — pictures in 6 seconds. Exclusive on-screen tuning bar. "Memory" tuning. Illuminated UHF/VHF channel numbers. Beautiful contemporary cabinetry. , NO MONEY DOWN PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH Rq., COR. ELIZABETH LAKE RD. OPEN DAILY to to 9 PHONE 682-2330 3 YEARS TO PAY OAKLAND IN TROY 1-75 at 14 Mile Rd. OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 PHONE 505^5743 A"" "',""8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MO^DAY^ FEBRUARY 2*. 1969 Romney: HUD Job Harder Than Running State WAailNGTON (Upn — for bett«r organiaalion oflnterpreled by newsmen and at ln| with thMe being about as, the form, of lower prices andipresent practices and ^ Housing Secretary G e o r g e available resources and new least one senator to mean he *ccurate as you can arrive at higher wages, you wouldn’t! there is a receptiveness to pro-Romney rates the job of incentives for their use In f„r more^™*" **'® ®*®"^*"* the automobile market!grams that will provide greater building 26 million new homes seeking to meet the 10 year ^g^e set by *lthii>|that you now have." employment and greater the the I960 housing law Thaf those figures the Johnson ad-| Romney cmceded that the by 1979 as somewhat tougher housing goals set by than running Michigan or send- Johnson administration. tag a man to the imon. But he He also s^ke hopefully that middle-lncomei _ _ „ _ believes it can be done. American know-how-! n^ , .. . ^ million i **“■*“*■ The Housing a^ H *‘®*P ‘‘“Iprivacy ftaanew^ and built .! dwellings. railed for six million f«lerallvindicated that analogy to airto mamilacturlng . called for ,;^^y|30o,00^ units should be built in was limited: “f don’t expect to t see a coimpaiQi producing • office they had not «>mpietod millions (tf new homes a year of Ilevelopment (HUD) dilef, In job. 'dwentaM the programs of 900,000 tlds or an exclusive Interview with Since taking office a month " 500,000 next year of 600,000 after United Press International ago, Romney has made several!NQ ARGUMENT jtbat, so that’s why 1 say that reporters, emphasized the need statements that have been| “1 don't think anyone’s argu- thelr goals in terms of actual housing units were inflated and portunity Iw everyone." Romney defended his recent increase of permissible mortgage rates for FRA insured loans to 7.5 pe^ cent, saying it the same esssaitial type and was “absolutely essential” and have people accept them." iresulted in "hundreds of * * w jmilliims" of new dollms But, he said, there was hope terii« the hoiming market, to achieve in the low-cost hous-i * * * Buthe sald theltaostwai pUcation of our current,,y ..b,terim increase" and he Romney said the probtemsjtMhnology and a great ap- believed that the Nixon ad-plicatlon of modern maMge-Jj^igb-ation’s effmto to check ^ • • A were beginning to get pr^uetton of homes ’ results ^ “There is a liss men." and he added: “I don’t, The MJD secretary re- situation.’ think they are insurmountable; obstacles to mass exaggerated." I encompassed all the elements of 'producing new housing — “land and money, materials a’n d Smm Our Complatw Line of FIREPLACES FIRE SCREENS AND ALL ACCESSORIES 1x1 ..... ______4‘/4X4«/4.. ALL FIRST RUAIITY CERAMIC TILE 39«sq.ft. 39«sq.«. 1 iwoblems. Noting that the nation now was “losing ground" In the effort to eliminate substandard housing, he said; “We expect to change that and we expect to organize the use of our resources and provide t h e incentive for the use of our resources that will changis that picture.’’ , I ‘QUITE SERIOUS’ I Romney said he believed {Congress “is quite serious about {these goals" and he expected ' suppwt from both Republicans and Democrats, including appropriation of the necessary federal funds. ’’But the problem Isn’t simple one of congressional action” he said. “After all, this housing goal requires the investment of substantial amounts of private money and I private effort. And that’s the that needs stimulated." production of housing in labor union and local building code restrictions, but said there was something new in the picture. "I think there is a grmving realization of the fact thafr there must be sqme changes in Looking back on his first month as head of the department, Ronrney recalled: “The acting head of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration was in here the other day and he Said, ‘Your Job is a lot more complicated and complex than mine.’ IRINt ALL VOUR nTERTAINMEIIT NOBS TR Your Party Center Wa rant and sail banquat tablas and ahairs, puneh fountains, glassas, dishas... FE 4-4044 FE 4-3989 Pontiac Chair Rental 1400AKIAND Just North of Wido Track Driva VERMOUT SLATE QaugeS •9** Carton IS sq. It. ALL FORMICA VANITIES 14" w/Sink I Qian Tub Enclotiiires ' $24.9$ and U *39»® ASK US ABOUT KITCHEN CARPET WE CARRY A LARGE SELECTION OF CARPETS FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS OaSN MON. and PRI. 'TIL 9 WM. PMI atTIMATOS AND lAAMEDIATE INSTALLATION Romney, who came Into national prominence as American Motors president by introducing compact low-priced cars, used his industrial experience to Illustrate his ideas for stimulating the private housing market. “The way you expand demand is to reduce cost and price. Now that’s the way the major markets in this country were developed. NOT LIKELY “It everybody in this country continued to produce before Henry Ford came along and began to share the benefits of more advanced technology in 'BUY NOW’ ««)» IHHKBlEnK ulor U.E. UIIKV PAIR »333«® Full Size Heiiy Dn^ Wasler aid Eleciric Diyer WASHER 0«lyr U89’® ELECTRIC $-1 AQ95 IjilfJU DRYER . Only X“rV IITAIITI «0W! No Money Down 90 Days Same As Cash Miss These Special Buys! 2-Door, 12-Ft. REFRIGEMTOR FREEZER Ti’ue zero top freezer, auIomaUc defrost refrigerator. full • width erisper. Deep roomy door shelves. Sl%C SPECIALLY PRICED *199 No Money Do»cn Xo Money Doten • He Wislw Hit’s A Heal WHerPER! 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WASHINGTON The enemvi Also, tome officials believe WASHINGTON -- iTie enemyjgij^jjlj, bombard-... ____________ bombardment o( Soutt VieU|„^„j ^ ciUes. namese ciUes is expected to> . ^ |ndud-**“®™P* pacification pro- bring U.S. recommendations fori* rirMi inin'K’’®'" •"** to try to demonstrate sonw kind of retaliation against *"« '"‘®,that the North Vietnamese and North Vietnam, perhaps selec-L*^j5« «*UU represent a tough tive resumption of bombing. jp - ^|miHtary\problem in South Viet- !t is known that military offi-|» AliolyStS 7®"'* cials regard the widespread ft.,. Mil JTARY IS CONFIDENT shelUng and use of rockeu and i Mjiitarv men here sound con- mortars as a breach of the un>[Saigon, a.s well as some ground _ ^___________________ deristandings under which thejattacks. United States agreed to stop all Action could range all the'way bombing of the North last Oct. | from stem U.S. warnings to the 31. North Vietnamese and Vleb^ * * * icong about the possible hreak- But pending a presidential de-jdown of the Paris peace talks to clsion, the Pentagon declined all resumed bombing of North Viet-comment and officials refused nam on the scale before the to discus the situation. halt, or on a larger scale. The keynote to the U.S. atti- With U.S. public opinion In tude probably was sounded by a mind, Nixon can hardly dismiss Nixon administration source; the oiffensive, although he could fident that any concerted North Vietnamese and Vietcong ground offensive would be crushed with heavy enemy casualties. At the time the bombing was halted high ranking U.S. officials made it clear that the North VietMmese understood that in exchteigc they were not to “abuse" the dtunilltarized zone or to Shell &iuth Vietnamese communities. 'We made It clear to them that the peace talks amid go on only so long as they observed the DMZ and refrained frirni shelling the cities,” tme (rfficial said the night the bonb^ ing of North Vietnam was ordered supped. Almost from the beginning cd Uie U.S. bombing halt, the American, codunand in Saigon reported repeated iiMrldents in the DMZ area, including Ninih Vietnamese artillery and machine gun attacka on allied positions and planes. ' j ISSUE WASN’T FREEST I U S. miUtaiy leadns regarded these Incidents, which ran into the hundreds, as violations bood>4wlt understandings, but did not press the issue because U.S. forces In the DMZ area were not swiousiy affected. glTCKII REMBEUM SUl iMTTWlHIlWMIlll ^ WdiM. W* S* CMH|^ (.•MtM 100% •rtirfwM"- Oi^wrw"*« Call 682-6800 ON Dispur • DAT iNiTAUATIOII WYSglll«nr UFE KITCHEN and KiTCHOOM Mv.oiLNoaMfreo. •paaBaiiyil^W^Saadair»-l m Foirtiae Mall OfHee IMg. - Facing gliiabeth Ukc M. now in Europe who said Sunday that authorities were “not going to do anyUiing precipitiously. THE KEY WORD Before leaving for his European trip, President Nixon said the “key word Is shelling,'’ be- play down its Importance. BREAK OFF RISK If he moved to resume the bombing, he would risk a break off in the Paris peace talks. That could well put the war back where it was last year- cause if this has happened “it,something the new president al-.........— most certainly wants to avoid. Dog's Nose Goes fo Pot DETROIT (AP) - A 19-year-old San Francisco girl who was arrested by Wayne County sheriff’s police and Detroit police after a dog allegedly smelled marijuana in her suitcase at Metro Airport, is to be examined in court Wednesday. Carol Beacham had just debarked from a flight from the West Coast when Bomber, dog which had just been demonstrating his narcotlcs-snlffing talents, began to sniff at her bag excitedly. a * , * Police said they then asked if four packages in the bag contained marijuana. Police said she replied, “You mean grass? Yes.” Miss Beacham was arrested, arraigned and freed on $20,(M)0 bond. Government sources speculated that the city bombardment was timed to embarrass Nixon Scranton Woman Better Next Day... hin Of Piles ReM Treatment Promptly Bellevei Pain, Ito^ In Ibat Cages Scranton. Pa^ Mrs. J. Btrantere, Jr. of this cltgr Writes: "When I had our aon, 1 got htmorrhoids and how painfuL My husband bought Preparation H for me. (Note: Doctorshavo provod In mostcases-Pi'cpBratlon H*acttt* ally ahrlnks inflamed hemorrhoids. In case af ter Case, the sufferer first notices prompt relief from pain, burning and itching. Then swelling is gently reduced. There’s no other formula for the treatmentof hemorrhoids liko doctor-tested Preparation H. It also lubricates to mUko bowel movements more comfortable, ■oothealnlta prevent] fur ointmenil or i provant] further-----------— ointment! or auppository form.) Aimrico'sMostGlonwrous FOLDING AliBiiiM AWllNCS from *24** r. 01 Coll th let Us Show You Why C'uoronteed ALUMINUM SIDING and TRIM th by far your Besf Buy! Aluminum Mi rod# Finish Dooiondralions WINDOWS ai4 POODSJ $1395^ OUIE FRITTER Guoronfoos Your Complete Satiekntlen | Pay Nothing Down, No Paynnent for 90 Days save up to nOONOWAI^^ _ 1 DURING OUR ONCE-A-YEAR FACTORY AUTHORIZED \^C3G1 DQOWSSS ANNUAL SALE ' , Ill'll!: . - Li . "• $39350^ SAVE ^100 MEDITERRANEAN Astro-SONIC STEREO Modal 3813 with 50 watts undistortod music powor, 2 heavy duty high efficiency 15" bon woofers, 2-1000 cycle exponential horns. Stereo FM and Monaural FAVAM radio. Exclusive Micro-matic 4 speed record, player. Stores over 200 records. Concealed castors. 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FEBRUARY 24, 1969 A-^11 Most White Detroit Police Scorn Blocks, Study Shows DETROIT (AP> -r Mo6t white which th«y come remain “of policenMni in Detroit feei tin conalderabie ihfluence throogh black contanunity ia “primitive the rest of their lives emotional and easily aroused to «a, ion* « ^-ietv is miv , antisocial **^ racism!” i “deficient to tew md ^er |Mendelsohn, “as long as the'»..^M,» « gays a psycnmogiat wno made a white community turns its iw«»lr contention, rtudy with the cooperatioi of--------- ' or contlhues to resist the legitimate aspirationa of the black American, and tiims the role of enforeing its wUl over to the police, the police will be the inevitable targets of hostility and Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father); Ouan* M. Hattan Jr., 5I3S Orllt» .............. Larry D. Bowlat. )*M CrtKanI Laka toad The moon has a diameter of 2,160 miles. Fire Destroys Battle Greek City Garage BATTLE CSIEEK (AP) Damage from Saturday night’s city garage fire in Battle Creek will run into hundreds of thousands of dollars, according Fire Chief Donald Burroughs. ★ ★ * Hie Maze, origin so far unde-termlnwi, completely destri^ed tile dovmtown garage houring many city vehicles. Including two new trucks, a new end loader, city lawn-mowing equipment and the police recoiwry team truck and underwater diving gear. ★ ★ ★ I Eed by supplies of gasoline and oti, the flames were so hot that firemen were forced to' spend much of their lime spraying themselves with water to prevent #irir clothing from catching fire. * * * Plastic domes on the lights atop the fire trucks at the scene were melted by the heat, Bur-I roughs said. One fireman was overcome by the heat and treated-and released at a nearby hospital Fire Kills Man DETROIT (AP) - A Detroit man, Livingston Holmes, 35, died in a fire at his home Sunday, apparently as a result of smoking In^bM, fire officials said. Dr. Robert Mendelsohn, a 37-year-oid sodd psychologic with Wayne State University’s Lafayette CUnic. cleared the study with pblice officlils before biter-view!^ 3M Detroit policemen, Including 36 Negro officers. The 4,8064nan force is 92 per cent wMte, Mendelsdin noted, adding that the potential for racial conflict could not be ezag-gerated. • Most white policemen reject the idea that Negroa are victims of social faijustlce. • Few iriiite (dflcoe believe that good will come of the 1967 Detroit riot, and those who do believe so ,say it will be a form of appeasement. • Mut she has served other people’s children as counselor, playground director and Camp Fire worker since l»M. She says, “Fve always loved children.” ' development committee. He says, "I wish everybody could see that camp. It’s, a wonderful place and it’s such,a great thing for kids, just to have something to do.” Bernice came to Pontiac in IMl and started doing volunteer work at the old Southwest Community Center on the corner of Bagley and Wessen Streets. She . worked two summers on the playground, was a junior playground director and then slid into a cooperative program for the city, Girl Scouts and Camp Fire Girls at Dodge Park. Bernice's activities over the years have by no means been limited to Camp Fire. She was one of Uie earliest counselors of the youth program at the YWCA, has worked for the Urban League and as recording secretary of the* NAACP and held office for several years in Local 100, Anterican Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes. recently for the annual scholarship banquet of the city-wide Choir Union. “Ask a busy person,” seems to be the rule here. In 1987, Bernice served as area ctiairman for the Pontiac Area United Fund drive and also squeezed in two weeks on jury duty. She,rounds out her activities with membership in two social clubs, the Jolly Ladies and LaVogue. THE rONTIAC PRESS MONDAY. FEBRUARY 24, 1969 B—1 “Who-he-lo” also means work. , Bernice was an active Camp Fire group leader until she went into full-time employment in the accounting depart-fnent at Pontiac General Hospital about 19 years ago. CHARTER MEMBER She is a charter member and financial secretary of Pontiac Negro Business and Professional Women, Inc,; is corresponding secretary for the Pontiac Area Federation of Women’s Clubs; is a 25-year member of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union and a charter meihber of Providence Missionary Baptist Church. A charming and vivacious woman, ^Mrs. Ferguson long ago began offsetting her athletic image with indulgence of a penchant for pretty things. She loves hats and shoes and has them all neatly stacked and labeled for easy coordination of outfits. Her collection of costume jewelry astounded me. A little closer to home, Bernice plays second mother to her 13-ycar-old niece, Norine Archer, who shares her love of shopping and pretty clothes. Since then, her devotion to Camp Fire has been expressed in various offices of the organization. She has been president of the Leaders’ Association, council secretary, annual meeting chairman and second vice president, not necessarily in that order. Bernice is often called upon to serve as mistress of ceremonies for various organizations’ affairs, as she did Mr. Ferguson joined us in the living room of thdr home on Esther Street and, in case she might have overlooked something, he told me, “She can cook a good steak, too,” OTHER DUTIES She has also served as recording secretary, worked on the budget committee several times, and on the personnel committee. Presently, in addition to her duties as president, she is the local representative to tfie Regional Board as well as being on the National Council of Camp Fire Girls. Galleries Exhibiting Art Works of Specialists in Several Media Glen Michaels has an exhibit of new drawings at the Little Gallery in Birmingham. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 11 a m. to 6 p.m. The ex- Pontiac Pratt Photo by Rolf WIntar Mrs. Ferguson was awarded the Luther Halsey Gulick award in 1968 for outstanding service to Camp Fire. It is an interesting coincidence that Lake GUlick, where the organization’s Camp Oweki is located, was not named for the founder, but already carried the Gulick name when the property was acquired. . Calendar Mrs. Willie Ferguson displays part of her collection of costume jewelry begun many years ago to accent her femininity and counter an athletic image picked up as a result of her work on community playgrounds. Mrs. Ferguson, of Esther Street, was recently elected dra«m\*^liaro1iis‘'v^fe’^^^^^ President of Pontiac’s Camp Fire Girls. and is serving .this year on the camp Order of Eastern Star, Pontiac chapter No. 228, 8 p.m., Roosevelt Temple. Annual Friendship Night. TUESDAY Willie Ferguson has recently been countants, i WriteYs Present Opinions on Wives Phoning Office American Society of Women Ac-Detroit chapter, 6:15 p.m., Northwood Inn, Berkley. Prof. Sam B. Tidwell on “Current Trends in Accounting Education.” South Squares extension group, 8:30 p.m., Troy home of Mrs. Richard Saterstad. Mrs. Ron Ackerman and Mrs. Jack Thompson on “Understanding Major Health Problems;” hibit will remain up through March. Jan Dorer, of Utica and a former teacher in the Utica Schools, will be honored at an opening reception of her new exhibit at Galerie de Boicourt in Birmingham. The acrylic painting exhibit opens March 2 and will run for four weeks. Gallery hours are Monday through Saturday from lO a.m. to 5:30 pm. The*'’first exhibit in Detroit of Adolph Gottlieb’s paintings and tapestries will begin March 1 at the Gertrude Kasle Gallery in the Fisher Building, Detroit. Gottlieb’s paintings are in many important galleries throughout the country, including the Detroit Institute of Arts and the Flint Institute of Arts. Gallery hours are Monday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Watercolors and drawings by Rumanian-born Saul Steinberg will be exhibited at the J. L. Hudson Gallery in the downtown stone from Tuesday through March 18. Steinberg is known for his New Yorker magazine drawings, blit he is not merely a cartomist. The seventh floor gallery is open during store hours. A double-faced turquoise coat with buttons in the form of four-leaf clovers and a panel on each side also with the same kind of buttons, is a creation of the Luigi Faraoni fashion house of Rome. It was presented at the recent Rome showing of Italian spring and summer fashions for 1969. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: This is for the lady who has been anarried for 21 years, and still calls her husband every day at Work just to say, “I love you.” She said, “Who knows? After he leaves for work, one of us may not live through the day.” Well, I have news for her. ' • It won’t hurt any less if he dies five minutes aRer you’ve called him at work than if he dies Rve hours after you pttfted in the morning. Spring Arts Calendar Ready for Distribution Besides, multiply your call 1^ 40 or 50 other calls from wives, and it adds up to a lot of the telephone operator’s time. Not to mention tytog up the lines. Also, I have been with the same firm for 35 years, and I’ve found that the men whose wives are always calling them are seldom called up fOr promotions. And you may use my name, I don’t care who knows it. DOROTHY UEHLEIN, L.A., Calif. ■k if. if DEAR ABBY: I cried when I read the letter In your colunm from that woman who called he# husband every day just to tell him she loved him. It was fte most beautiful thing I ha’#e ever read. N.G.L.: DETROIT their husbands to say, “I love you”? Also most companies have a limited number of lines„^d in all fairness to the “hand that f^s her” those lines should be kept *(q?en for company business. SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR Pstribution of the 1969 spring activities calendar will highlight a meeting of the Pontiac Area Community Arts Council Wednesday slated at the Pontiac Oreative Arts Center. Also noted on the 7:30 p.m. meeting agenda will be the restyling of the fall 1969 calendar, a review of Michigan Week activities, and plans for an environmental art program. DEAR ABBY: I think it’s lovely that a wife, after 21 years of marriage, still calls her husband every day at work just to say, “I love you.” But maybe she should look at it from another point of view. Perhaps one day she will have an emergency at home and REALLY need to talk to her husband in a hurry. What will she do if she calls and gets a busy signal because all the lines going into the company are busy with wives calling DEAR ABBY: I’ve been on the same switchboard for 19 years and I can tell you that the married men who work here are not bothered by their WIVES so much. It’s their GIRLFRIENDS who cali them. I don’t have time to listen, but I’ve got about 10 bosses who are called five or six times every day by a “Miss Jones” or a “Miss Smith.” You’d think these stujdd women would use'a little more imagination. ^ If you publish tMs letter, please don’t use my name or company. I’d like to continue working here a little longer. , “BROWN EYES” DEAR ABBY: I am furious. What a slap in the face one of your readers gave us PBX operators! I’ve been at the switchboard of my company for sk years and I vrish I had a dime for every time I’ve had to dr^ everything and try to locate some employe so his wife cgn tell him to stop on the way home and Mng home a loaf of bread. And if she’s calling just to say, “I love you,” that’s worse yet! She has from 5:30 p.m. until 7:30 a.m. to tell him that. BETTY Psi Chapter to Present Spring Fashion Show Plans are being made for a fashion show and luncheon to be held March 15 at Spring Lake Country Club by Psi chapter. Sigma Beta Sorority. Mrs. Robert Lenz hosted the group in her Genella Street home, assisted by Mrs. Jerry McKay. The show will feature fashions by Lizbethj modeled by sorority members. Proceeds of the event will be donated ‘ to the National Cyatii# Fibfosis Resea^*ch Foundation. , Alumni Dante Slated Mrs. Eleanor Driver, orientation interviewer at Oakland University’s Continuum Center, confers with Mrs. T. Warren FoWler of the Pontiac YWCA before the Y’s annual meeting Saturday. Mrs. Driver was guest speaker for the luncheon event at the Elks Temple; 'Mrs. Fowler was general chairman. R. H. Schirmer and Mrs. Lawrence Heitsch are heading up this year’s Kingswood-Cranbrook Alumni Dance on March 1 in Detroit’s Mauna Loa Restaurant. The Ar Navarro Orchestra will provide music for the diners and dancers. Others working on this annual event include: Mrs. William Morrison. Owen Fett and Jerry fjiohn. All Kingswood and Cranbrook alumni may attend. YOU SAVE MORE (j&uxxeijb Beautify your Icitchon and both with p» f«tienally initallod Mo. Our qualBy tl wpartly initollad, moanr yoon of «»fvlco for you. AT THE FLOOR SHO Vinyl CARPET PROTECTOR SALE PRICED Width I 27" r4 i $1.69 ? Sq. Ft. CLEAR $|39 ■ Sq.rt. - GOLD - GREEN I originol beauty ot your the bad wealherl genuine VINYL RUBBER TILE Solid Viiiyl TILE 9"x9" VINYL CUSHION LINOLEUM IrYd. The Comfort Floor S499 If SqrYd. Genuine CERAMIC TILE Vestibule REAL VERMONT SUTE Special sgso RECREATION ROOM SPECIAL VINYL ASBESTOS * CC60 TILE *3 Per Cotton 45 sq. ft. I KITCHEN CAR^ 41/4x4 Vi 1st QUALITY PLASTIC WALL TILE to I * . BATH and KITCHEN VIMYL 54“ WIDTH ■■ WALL ■iHt COVERING Many, Colors ■3*** Yd! First Quolityl ACROSS From HUDSON’S PONTIAC MALL 2255 Elizabeth Lake Road FRONTDOOR PARKING Open Monday and Friday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.; Tues., Wed., Thurs. A Sat. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Phone 682-4421 \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUAKY 24, l»6> JHeumode Ont of ttit boot nylon buys in Urn Noumodo $hops! i SMART 6IRU I Dress shotr wHh doml>to§ and nudt bool..real dnm nylon for^o tinisst pri(rel in plain knit or mlpro-waava. Now on salsX 3 pai n $1.10 Por a relon both run'rMtelml •nd bMuttful. Sy NEULOCK. Wondtrfiil wsvl LovoVcolpral $1.10 a pair 82 N. Saginaw St. H "YOUR HEALTH" SEViN DANGER SIGNALS 1. a>ci»w»m liwdittm 8. Nwvmis laniiM and/ a.NaclipaiMar*ciM(- ordli^*.^ S.OraNn«WMlpa|iOiflO A Oonaval body imMcIa MiMwlMMihHnlnt tontlwi. boML 7. Patai hohMon WARNING If any tH thaM lymptemt portltt CALL YOUR CHIROPRACtOR 1.1. H. Alcmisr EASTER HOLIDAY 8 Days - 4 M All Tliia Only $250 ()^siiiaP PHONE 682-4600 *J1 i>— «rn*RkwM'nim.Wlh*nfM*Mi4SMM. C. R. HASKILL STUDIO FE 4-0553 BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Refresher Courses Set for Nurses The Domenic Spigarellis of Iron Mountain announce the engagement of their daughter, Christine Ann, to Ross Charles Coppersmith. He u the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Coppersmith Of Sylvan Lake. The couple, students at Western Michigan .University, plan a spring 1970 wedding. Aug. 22 vows are planned by Didne V. Sioma, Michigan State University senior, and Richard J. Waggoner, University of Michigan junior. Their parents are the Mitchell J. Siomas of Aquarina Drive and the Francis L. Waggo^rs of Detroit. The lUchign EmiAqnnMit Security CkunmindoD (MBSC) and t^ Midiigan Nursei Anociattm (MNA) ue seeing sod inactive rostered for enndbnent faa refresher course. Federal funds in the amouDt of 1107,000 were approved fn* thii pn^am cm Ibiy tt, 1960, and an agreement was made between the MNA and the MESC giving MNA th responsibility fir adminliteiftig the program to enable SW nurses to. enter these I courses in order to resume their professional careers. A Nurse Educator has been asripied to the of MNA to coor^te the resources et MESC, MNA, and the Division of Vocational Education of thg Michigan Department ot Case No. H-583 Why Do Sexes Differ? By 1970 Michigan will need 7,000 more r^^totered oi than were avMlable in This additional number Is ro^ quired to fill unmet nu needs in the l^te and to maintain that levd ot supply in relation to growing demands of tho population. SHORTAGE In recent years the flow of new graduates from ffflictiigan’ Prirfonional Nimbig Sdiods n sufficient fit replace nurses who retired or By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE H-Se: Anne P., aged 28, is puzzled. “Dr. Q-ane,” she began. have been hap-|)ily married for 5' years. 'And we have S beautiful chil-dr«i. 'But my bus-band accusal nft of not loving him am not as eager for physical af- I DR. CRANE fection as he is. “So I am convinced that y the Jungle, suppose she then would see a stalwart young She would lay the baby at the fold of a tree and run after the male to have an affair. But when she returned to her baby, tt might have meanwhile been devoured by a python or tiger or lion. So the human female was JACOBSON'S WILL BE CLOSED FOR INVENTORY Tomorrow JaiCobgOin!^ Birmingham wives to Insure his small country fi-om invasion by the rc^I fathers of those brides. For the Pharaoh of Egypt or King of Syria would not be likely to invade ami destroy Jerusalem if his own dau^der were tin 9ueen of Judea. In modem monogamy Dwever, the cause of mos divorces is this mlsun derstanding by husband and wife of the sexual outlook of the other mate. Men grow abnormally Jealous because they oRen mistakody believe that aU women are as erotic and wildly passionate as the usual male. The newest idea in greeting cards are cards that you can blow up into animats and toys. Developed by Gibson, there are four birthday and four getrwell greetings. The inflatables are made of heat-sealed heavyweight vinyl with special no-leak valves,. Rumor has it adidts are secretly buying the new cards for themselves. became inactive. Pntentia trainees are available in Michigan. Tuesday refreriim* courses will begin in 14 fiflchigan cities. Thoe is crying n^ fin: these nurses in tile hospitals and convalescent Imma in the state, and inactive are urg^ to avMl tiiemselves of this fre refresher training. One course will begin March at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, in cooperatioi with Oakland Community College, Another course starts March 17 at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Further information may be had by calling MESC or the ho8|dtals. County Chapter Lists Officers, Notes Speaker At an organizational dinner meeting in the Elks’ Tmnple, Wednesday, Mrs. Danid J. Himmelspach was elected president of the new Oakland County chapter. National Associatim of Legal Secretaries. She will be assisted by Mrs. J. Frank Coad as secretary and Mrs. Robert J. Bruce, trea8u^ Marilyn Davis wiU save as representative to the Naticm-al Association. Thomas G. Plunkett, Prosecuting Attorney of Oakland County, welcomed the 80 legal secretaries. Guest speaker was Mrs. Mari-ann Farhat of Lansing, National Director ot the hfichigan Association, who outlined the history of the National Association and ribed its purposes projects. Newest FASHIONS '"EYEWEAR ACONPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE • Contact Lansas • Eya Examination 4 Precision Lons Grinding • Fast Rapoir Sarvica »Compli^to Manufacturing Facilitios Your, soloction of fromot can omplia-sixo your porsonolity, odd on alluring touch to ycMir foco. Thore is o fldttoring thapo for your facial contour hare for you. Select From Over 4Q0 Fashictn Frames budget teraas Opwt Doily 9:30 to 5:30 Friday 9.-30 to 8:30 I. STIINMAN^ O.D. iiii©n 109 N. Saginaw St. all PERMANENTS 2*5-to ItiefmdmAUTMst^ 1. New LnsUw Shampoo S.FUttering Hair Cut S.~Lanolin Nentrallsing 4-Snoiri Stylo Setting NO APPOINTMENT necessary HOLLYWOOD BEIIITY Open Mornings af 8 A.M. .78 N. Saginaw Qvwf Bagiey Mkt. 8Sfr7660 BEADSPREADS TW.N $988 >|sa $1488 kfULL ________Wall - Blnbarii Ul» ot Toloani^ IM. OpwiUaHy I0a.m. to9 |i.in. - Phwi^3-MS0 Bom urn S»e 2S% tol0% M EeqMsteriig AU owbotMadi of Am . rie* an drMUailly ndmad boMOM tiMn't Jon MWlOll WILLIAM WRIGHT „ , „ , . EASYBimCET Furniture Maker* and Uphoutarar* TERMS OR 270 Oivhard Lake e FE 4-05S8 90 DaTs CASH Smrvlng Oakland Caunly Oner S6 Yeanl LAST WEEK of our annual pre-season ILL HSOSaOLD ITEMS THE PONTIAC t*KRSS. MONDAY, FEBRUARV 24. imi9 Weight Watchers Ordinary Lunch Kits Become Boutique-Type Purses TUESDAY TMUonette ChibofPoii-ttac, 7 p.m., Adah SheUy Library. WEDNESDAY Waterfitd Fashioa Your Figure Club, 7 p.m., Schoolcraft School. THURSDAYS Cal Cutters of Keego Harbor, 7 p.m., Trinity Methodist Church. No Hips Horray TOPS Club, 7 p.m., Schoolcraft School. JoUy Holly TOPS Club, 7:30 p.m., Holly Plaza, Community Room of Citizens Commercial and Savings Bank. Weight Watching Jills of TOPS, Inc., 7:30 p.m., Pontiac Unity Center. Fashion Your Figure Club of Pontiac, 7:30 p.m., Adah Shelly Library. Pontiac TOPS Club, 8 p.m., Bethany Baptist Church. Exclusive boutiques across ,,the country offer col lag e-i I decorated workman’s lunch kits and school kits for the new(Ut fashion accessory. These in-'triguing, custom-made purses ■come from America’s most imaginative designers, and they carry price tags of |25 and up. With the same lunch kit base, you can adapt the designers’ like the smaller size Spray-on adhesive or white 8lV« Varnish or spray-on lacquer Collage materials Assorted trims Organize your collage materials first-. Collage means collection, and yours can be as unique as you are. • Do you collect match- /W()(VT(,()AAt Inspiration to create a pOce-jbooks? Their covers could setting lunch tote, and the price i make your personalized collage, is about one |iour of your *Se^! packet illustrations, !, plus a whit of im-newspaper clippings, magazine agination. Follow these directions from the Thermos Division of King-Seeley Thermos Co., Norwich, Conn., to make your boutique beauty. Assemble your supplies: Thermos steel workman’s lunch kit with vacuum bottle, or Thermos domed school lunch kit with vacuum bottle if you’d cutouts are other sources of materials, as well as playing cards, travel brochures and posters, decals and ticket stubs. • Motifs cut from wallpaper samples, wrapping paper and greeting cards may contribute to your individual agglomeration, too. • ! Experiment with your collage materials for the arrangement j which pleases you by laying! them out on a table. Group your selections' according to the area of the lunch box and vacuum bottle they will decorate. I^OVE HANDLE Prepare the lunch kit by removing the handle. Just pry open the clasps' and set the handle aside. Also, repiove the vacuum bottle from the lunch box lid With spray-pn adhesive or white glue, paste your design on the exterior of the lunch box. Take care to leave /^he hinges and front clasps uncovered,*and leave openings for re-attaching the handle. Carefully smooth out your paste-ons while the glue is still wet. Varnish or coat your collage with spray-on lacquer. Follow Ihp manufacturer’s directions for drying. You can achieve a different [effect by spray-painting the lunch box first matching the color of a favorite scarf or coat. Then paste your collage. When the glue is dry. coat Uie lunch box with a wood stain, such as walnut stain. Then varnish to create an antiqued appearance. Trim the edges and handle of your collaged kit-with colored plastic tape, ribbon, braid or your own choice of decoration. Replace the handle by perhaps tightening . the steel clasps. Use the same technique to decorate a matching vacuum bottle, and be prepared for compliments at lunch time. A touch of lukury is added when you line the kit with burlap, felt, gift wrapping paper, adhesive-backed plastic.. Forj the workman’s lunch kit, one yard of 18” material is required for a lining. Beauty Salon—2nd Floor Phone 682-4940 Reading Skills to Be Taught TheOakland County Volunteer Bureau in Birmingham is looking for women to tutor poverty area children in remedial reading. This will be a carefully controlled test group to evaluate the achievement of such a program. The Volunteer will w< closely with the school s and will receive in-service training. . If you have had the feeling ^at you would really like to contribute in a very worthwhile Uvay to bettering the education pt ghetto children, and can spare two hours a week from fiow until the end of the school - Decorate a workman’s lunch kit with a theme that suits you, from hearts and flowers to pop art. Sarry a matching decorated vacuum bottle in the. lid for a coffee break or .a beverage at lunchtime. There’s plenty of room in the bottom for purse items and a sandwich and cookies. ^ear please call the OakUmd County Volunteer Bureau. Bob)n^etirTopic Wigs Nothing New for Either. Sex ■A program on “The! LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI) — The because of the hot climate. Importance of Baby Teeth” will “nothing new under the sun” be presented for the Weaver fcJiooL PTA, Tuesday at 7:30 ip.m. Speaker will be Dr. Chris Mansky. Tender pods of nasturtiums are delicious pickled and may be used in any recipe which balls for capers. Try chopping the fresh nasturtium pods ahdi The ancient Egyptians wore| using them as a relish in wigs partly for hygienic and-sandwiches or in salads. (religious reasons, and also rase applies to wigs — worn: the ancients as well as by today’s fashionable femmes. sexes have worn wigs through history for various' reasons, reports Mrs. Jane! Speece, University of Nebraska extension textiles, clothing and' design specialist. j Their own hair was shaved or j cropped to provide . coolness while they were inside. Wigs [then gave them insulation from the sun outside. Mrs. Speece said the Egyptians preferred human hair for wigs, but sheep wool and palm fiber also were baldness or gray hair, openly WEIGHT® WATCHERS How You Can LOSE WEIGHT And Koop It Off... FOR GOOO? Perhaps you have been on diots beforo. You lose a fow pounds and then go right back your old eating habits and right back to your old weight! WEIGHT WATCHERS CAN HELP YOU. We retrain your eating habits so you can enjoy 3 full meals a day plus plenty of snacks ... and still lose weight and keep it off. No pills, no crash diets. Just "some talking, some listening and d program that works." JOIN WEIGHT WATCHERS NOW •....in PONTL4C-==-=:^ GLASSES FOR WOMEN, FOR MEN... FOR TEENS at PONTIAC AAALL COAAAAUNITV ROOAA MON.... 5:30 P.M. (Men Only) TUES.... 10 A.M., 12:30 It 7:30 P.M. SAT.... 10 A.M. (Teens & Pre-Teens) SAT.... 1 P.M. (All ages) for FREE Information call (1)342-2844 NO OBLIGATION NO CONTRACTS TO SIGN WEIGHTS , r-WATCHBtS- CLUB OFFICES 144IS W. 1 MILE DETROIT, 48235 Mrs. FtORINE MARK," director, is a mother of five and has lost over 40 pounds.herself anyway. He just put on a wig. In the 17th century, three European kings made wigs popular for men. Louis XIII of France wore a wig of natural hair, parted in the middle, and hanging to his waist. His son, Louis XIV adopted a wig when sed. he began to gray. In England, ★ ★ * Charles II began wearing a wig The Persians and Romans 1®*' much the same reason. j also wore wigs. In the Greek I Throughout the 18th century, theater, the color of a wig the men wore wigs, and those You'll lovo tho car* and ••rvico of our oxpiorioncod eporolort ARE YOU TROUBLED? Dy dandruff and falling hair? You n«ed not be. Our electronic scalp treatment will help you SPECIAL ONLY COMPLETE with shampoo and sat FERMUIENT WAVES Beauty Shop 42 Saginaw St. FE 8-1343 NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Offers you a ^ FREE SHAMPOO-SET PERMANENT WA $1 with I " " Shampoo Plus • • • your next Shampoo and Set FREE with our compleinenls and the coupon below. ^ (Ufftr iiaod on anyptrm. Si 0 or up) THIS COUPON ENTITLES; ...PHONE........ OPERATOR'S SIO....................EXPIRES........... Offer only food with co|ipoii end operalon .iiinoture! 108 N. Saginaw-Downtown Pontiac-FE 3-7114 Open Tonight 'til 9 p.m. —Tuesday and Wednesday 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.n denoted a certain kind of servant. Both Queen EHizaebth and Mary, Queen of Scots, owned numerous wigs. And the well-dressed man of the Renaissance Wbs not going to give in to of style. who could not afford them, cut their hair in imitation of wigs. It was the colonists who brought the wig fashion to America, but by. 1820, as a fashion for men, wigs went out TONITE, TUES. & WEDS, at WKC TZDt(uMiul "T/tio Regular ’140« Seller-SAVE HI • Engagement Ring • Wedding Ring • Groam's Ring -all for Other DIAMOND SETS AT 1/3 OFF! • Get the exquisite diamond engagement ring with matching wedding ring and groam's ring in 14-K white or natural gold • Know your jeweler—yVKC has been in Pontiac tor-r 45 years. X MiEE in WKC'» lOT ( Sloroor 1-Hr. in Dow. Mull Hiivo.Ticket Sid 01 Ouliier's Ollico 108 N. Saginaw St. - Downtown Pontiac - FE 3-7114 _______Open Tonite 'til 9 pm — Tues. & Wed., 9:30 am to 5:30 pr® V2 PRICE SALE AT WKC on HAND GRAFTED rf" t ....'-‘-I j , i ■ ^ '’*1 ■ Trufy an outstanding value in WKC'S* LOWER LEVEL FURNITURE DEPT. • A decorators' collection of handcrafted table lamps styled Brass or Ceramic to complement your furniture and room decor • Come, see these lamps at WKC and save 50% off the regular price tonite, Tues. and Wed. V2 OFF Regular Price ' No Money Down 90 Days Same As Cash Up to 3 Years to Pay Park Free in WKC's Lot at Rear of Store or 1-Hr. in Downtown Mall Have ticket stamped at Cashier's Office ..............(A ...... . .. G A.K/,. .A. THE rONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1069 • ■ V LAST 5 DAYS TO SAVE SAIC ENDS SATVSIMT, MUCH 1 NO DOWJ PAYMENT REQUIRED ON MAJOR APPLIANCES ... UP TO 24 MONTHS TO PAY i 1 j '"r ’ I i' ' ' , $ 189 •ALE Wvitiiivksiim pui^hultoii wash«r sives plenty of time. A heikvy duty model with five wash Ac rinse settings^ 3 •elections for fine fabrics and perm •nent press, pre*wash cycle for very •oiled garments, big 16*lb* capacity. As little as $10.00 a month. SALE Woslinghoiuo koawy duty dryar with 16 lb. capacity, automatic push-button controls for permanent press and regular cycles for every type of fabric. Poircelain drum, 4-way exhaliist, safety switch on door. As little as 13.75 a month. Same dryer in gas, $169. SALE G.E. dishwashor that does it all. Four wash cycles, rinse & hold, china and crystal setting, built-in food waste disposer, 3 level wash action. Twin lift-top racks, full-width handle, retractable cord. As little as 10.00 a month. SALE Weslingiiousa 30” aulo-maiic rang* has a lift-off oven door, simple plug-out corox surface units for greater ease in cleaning. High speed broiling with porcelain pan. Fluorescent hill-width top light. As litde as 10.00 a month. ■m SALE Gaaaial Elanlrio ,2-apand washar with exclusive mini-basket to wash small loads or two tyjpes of fabrics at one loading. With 3 water level selections, 5 cycles, permanent press, extra wash & rinse cyde, bleach dispenser, 16 lb. capacity. As little as 10.00 a montb. SALE G.E. Mli-claaning 30” rang* is high speed automatic electric model. Easy set oven timer cooks while you’re away. Push-button controls, lighted cpok-ing top, high-speed calrod top units. OVen cleans itself. 13.25 a month. SALE AMC nfrigaralof with complete no frost convenience and revksible doors for left or right hand opening. 12 cu. ft. capacity, 83 lb. freezer. Porcelain crisper & interior. Door storage, egg nest, butter dish. As little as 11.00 a month. SALE CI.E. IG.G cn. ft. rafrigaratar never, never needs defrosting. And, it rolls oh wheels to permit floor and wall cleaning easi^. Big 154-lb. freezer, twin porcelain vegetable crispers and plenty of door storage. 13.25 a month. PONTIAC. OAKLAND. NORTHLAND. EASTLAND. WESTLAND: Mon.. Thutt.. Fri.. Sat. Till 9; Tuea. and Wed. till 5:30. DOWNTOWN. Mon. A Wod. till 8:30, other days tUl 5:30. HUDSON’S GREAT HOME SALE DOWNTOWN DETROIT Woodwaid Ave. and Grand River NORTHLAND CENTER 8 Mile and NoithwettHn EASTLAND CENTER 8 Mile and KMty Roads WESTUND CENTER Wanan and Wayna Roada PONTIAC MALL Talagiaph and Elizabatti Laka Road OAKLAND MALL 1-75 and 14 MHa Road ■; 4 .,1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 24. 1969 R-—5 doming of Ago—7 Continuing Education Vital (EDITOR'S NOTE This is the seventh in a 10-paii series designed to help young people cope with the new challenges they face as they enter legal adulthood.) By SIDNEY MAftGOUUS Without continuing education, even a young man can ■ become an obsolete man. Americans typically now are high school graduates. Almost half get at least some college education. In some professions even a bachelor’s degree Is no longer enough. Just in your lifetime, the average person’s sphnnling has increased by a third. ‘ Ihe money reason for continuing our education is that experience by itself carries less weight these days. Much of the experience you gain on a job can become obsolete overnight because of technological dianges, the U.S. Labor Department notes. Only when experience is backed up vrith considerable schooling does it lead to substantial boosts in Incoipe. A COLD FACT The cold fact is that the average income of college graduates age 25 to 35 is a good 10 per cent higher than that of high school graduates age 45 to 54 even with their additional 20 years of work experience. If you have not gone, beyond high school, you should understand that jobs which require only that much education are becoming increasingly limited in numbers, and static in advancement possibilities. According to Ted Silvey, AFLrCIO automation expert, even in factory jobs the United States has changed ip just a few years from a nation in which most people relied on manual skills to onh in which knowledge and information have become a worker’s primary resource. Another pragmatic value of continuing your education or training is that it provides goals. UNEXPECTED DILEMMAS 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET SPECIAL TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY Downtown Pontiac Store Only! YOUR CHOICE! • 3 lbs. Le?s or Breasts » 2 lbS.Swsat« »10 th Fill Your $4 00 Freezer How!^^ * We Accept Food Coupons formal courses, including correspondence courses. Some seven million of these are taking courses for credit. Significantly, there are almost as many people over 21 studying for a higher degree as for a first college degree. One of the fastest-growing (qq^rtunities to continue your education is the financial aid provided today by many employers under tuition:refu|Kl or incentive programs. TUITION ASSISTANCE In |hese plans, emf^oyo's pay part or all of the cost of taking cweidng or extension courses at local universitites or other schools. They may, for example, pay 75 per cent of the cost of taking an approved course, < or all of the cost of courses directly related to the firm’s business, and half the cost of general education courses. Not only as a result of-tuition-assistance plans but also because many employed workers are seeking advanced education on their oiyn initiative, evening college courses have become one of the fastest-growing types of enrollment. There also are university television courses, adult education classes ranging from knitting, to real estate training and chemistry, private home study schools (be sure these are reputable and accredited before signing a contract) and union training programs. PROFESSIONAL GUIDANCE If you want professional vocational guidance, your first port of call may well be the local office of your State Employment Service. If it cannot provide as complete service as you may need, it can refer you ‘to other local agencies—Y’s, religious groups, public schools in larger cities, college testing and advisement centers, and reputable guidance centers. (NEXT: Making Money Work.) (Excerpted With Permleslan o( the Macmillan Company from "The t Adult Guide to Indtwndent Living." Copyright IMP by Sidney Margollua.) (Dlftrlbwlad by Newapaper Eniarpriia Aim.) One of the unexpected dilemmas that often confronts young people after they achieve their initial educational goal—whether high school or college—is that suddenly they no longer have the immediate objectives they always had when they were growing up. - Education experts estimate that 25 to 50 million people over 21 today are continuing their education, most through Museum Stuck for an Answer THOSI HORRID PfflLADELPfflA (AP) Museum visitors ask lots of curious questions. For instance, two elderly women touring the Philadelphia' Museum of Art were fascinated by a trickling lUh century French marble fountain. Where does the water come from asked one. A museum guide explained that ah electric motor kept recirculating the wa- old—ppcba^ bciMmu raMly an. Fada tha^way with ESOTEmCA, that orpigm^ <« tha Jtin. I hands look whits and yo £quaUy affactiva - * - arms. Not a covai ter. That’s fine, said the woman; But how did it work back in the 11th century? The museum still is trying to answer that one. lub^ting'al UaiSta. , _____________JiJry trustworthy Sd-ysar-old laboratory produoaa it. At laadlM drug and »u.try oountara. 12. FRR OfPKR with aadi jar of E80TERICA—ganaious trial bar oC ISOTXIUCA SOAP. Nnr «waAsliaM*«al mnaan gwanAiata hurimris. aiHfl n.ool^fcr to?$2m ^ arith tiaAlw IS Emtaiioa. Umitad CALIFORNIA SEES IT A LITTLE DIFFERENTLY in Casual one-button blazers that follow the natural line with just a hint of shape, anr^^f touch up your torso with-striking details like narrow slit lapels, slant flap pockets and inverted wefe pleats. Cool and comfortable, imported worsted crepe in bl^ey^old, black, grey, 69.50 OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE fS OPEN TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY TO 5:30; MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TO 9 P.M. TELEGRAPH AND ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS BUY! SELL! TRADE!... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! 108 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac-FE 3-7114 Open Tonite 'til 9 p.m.—-Tues. & Weds. 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p QUESTION: Where do redwood trees come from and why do they grow so large? ANSWER: Picture (A) shows naked plant, the first tree. ancestor, of 400 million years ago; (B) and (C) are descend-ents, leading to the mighty redwoods and sequoias of today. Redwoods grow very large because they can live a very long time. Only a few parts of the tree are actually alive — such as the root tips and hairs, the buds, some cells in toe bark and the very thin cambium layer under the bark. All, these renew themselves continually, so remaining young. The powerful wood structure holds up these living parts and is a kind of wood which repels bacteria, insects and fungi As it grows, rings form in toe tree trunk which tell its age when cut across. Examining the cross section we show, we would find the tree started growing in 549 A.D. By the time it reached point (1) in circular thickness it was 800 A.D.; Charlemagne was teing crowned. At point (2), Leif Ericson was sailing towhrd this continent. By point (3), Columbus was making his famous voyage. At (4) the Pilgrims were landing; at (5) the Rev(dution bngfin and at (6) the first man-made satellite orbited toe earth—1408 years after the tree started growing. (You may 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.) A B-« THE PONT?AC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY1969 British Ponder Selling New Tanks to Israelis LONDON (AP) — BriUdn Britain h rt-equlpping Its m«v sell Israel some of its new- army with Chieftaliui, which est and most powerful Chieftain havd rendered hulKtreds of old' tanks despite Arab threats bf postw^ C^tiirion tanks sur-trading and | ‘ _____^ J political reprisals, plus. Hm Israelis idready use Kovemment Murces reported to-Centurions and possibly could day. 'do with more. No formal decision on the sale * has been made, the sources Tbe Wilson government, need-said, pending further political Ing exports, g(merally has re-and military crhis was emphasized to am-son. ibasaadors representing Egypt, The Israelis evidently Initiat-jIraq, Lebanon and Saudi ed negotiations with/Britain late i Arabia when thg envoys called in 196# Tlieir main is need for Foreign Secretary Michael tanks to replace scores lost or|siewart Friday to protest the damaged during the six-day war proposed deal. in 1967.' —------------------------------ OF PRIME INTERF^T | The Israelis showed special ■ i i.i ii / • men Interest in the Chieftain, a 115,- Unlike Ike S IR 1959 000-pound tank that can cruise on roads at 25 miles per hour Wider Police-Brutality Probes Urged EAST LANSING'(AP) - The weekend to urge the Ss rtafe”(S!‘ State Civil Rights Commission,to broadfn ^^ mission to^ act.” said Ernest ought to be allowid to Investl-.powers to investigate state ACLU director. gate complaints of police bru-plaints. -—---------—— taUty regardless of whether or I * ♦ * About 1.7 million househdds, not bigotry Is Involved in the al-l Under current law. the clvU one of 59 nulhcm in the U.S., leged brutality, the Idichlgan liberties group noted, the OTC hi^e - ______________________________________________ ______ *^"*®*- chapter of the American ClvU can act only if the alleged bru-j 360,000 addlUonal famiUes are UberUes Union says. ItaUty is moUvated by factors of expected fo buy or build a sec- The ACLU voted at a meet- race, nationality or religion, fond home within the next two Ing in Bast Lansing over the! “The objective fact mte-years. _____________________________________ REACTOR GONE ASTRAY - The 210-ton nuclear reactor core destined for a nuclear power plant under construcUon by the Wis^sin-f^chigan Power Co. near Kewaunee, Wis. went astray Saturday when It slipped off its transport dolly and toppled into a ditch near tbe plant. No one was hurt and company officials were unable to make a damage estimate. Officials blamed the accident on a workman who forgot to remove a block set in front of one set of wheels. and carries a 120mm pn said to^ be able to outfire any tank in the world. Nixon's Trip Is Shrouded in Security “problem” perspiration solved It. thousaidt whs pirtpiri biavily LONDON (AP) - UnUke his old boss Dwight D. Eisenhower, President Nixon is visiting London this week with a minimum of exposure to the public, j Security has always surrounded American Presidents, but the| men responsible for the chief executive’s safety have become! supercareful since the assassination of two Kennedys, [call “the professional hater,’’ bower’s visit, and they remem-;Tumberry. But all'they needed the individual without ties to her the “good old days.” |was pencils, scorecards and ex-any organization who usually ‘‘Nobody hated Ike for any-tra golf balls for those six extra keeps his mouth shut until he thing,” said one. ‘‘He really was shots he insisted on taking o0| shoots tlw object of his hate. no worry. The Americans car-the first tee. He caUed them Some Scotland Yard detec-rled submachine guns in golf ‘MuIUgans’ and picked out the tlves were on duty during Eisen-bags when Ike played golf at one he liked best.” I underarm ___.____1 of effective help. MItchum Antl-Pereptrant keepe underarm* abeoUitely dry for thouaanda of grateful u**ra, with complete gentleneaa to normal akin and clothing. Thia Meet Jim Mitchell Ike’s trip In August 1959 was a ball for both him and the British public. He rode in an open Rolls: Royce and people threw flowers into it. A half million Britans cheered him every time he went in England and Scotland. Grimaldi Buick-Opel Star Salesman of the Month But Elsenhower was an enormously popular hero to the British, an old friend from World War II. Nixon comes strictly as a President, and a freshman at unuaual formula from a tru«i- Uhat. He has Scheduled no press dealer will refund purctiaa* and no fol-de-rol in Britain, price. So get the poeitive pro- .France, Belgium, Germany-and taction of MItchum Anu-Per- |i.i„ I oplrant, Liquid or cream. $3.00, ,, , 90-day aupmy-Available at your | For NixOn it Is a listening favorite drug or toiletry counter, trip.” , John F. Kennedy came to I London in June 1963 for only 221 ! hours after a triumphal visit to Ireland. But he. too, managed toj I throw presidential security tO| the winds when he motored to a| '! V village near Gatwick for Sunday i Mass. As he came out of the church he left his security detail and walked Into a small crowd of villagers, shaking hands. “Oh, my God, he’s done it again,” moaned a Secret Service man. Jim Mitcholl Jr. told 24 rtow Buickt and Opel* during tho month of January. Wo, ot Grimaldi Buick-Opol, 210 Orchard Lako Avonuo, Pontiac, art very proud of Jim in hi* progroit oi on* of our quality tolotpoopi*. Jim ho* provor) that honesty, linearity and good will pay* big dividonds. Jim ii married and reiide* with hi* wife, Morvi* and hit two children, Margret, 3, and Jam** III, at 518 Granada, Pontiac. Jim Mitchell, Jr., I* a graduate of Flint Northern and recently completed three years' service in the U. S. Army. After working a* an insurance salesmen, Jim, who wes a proud Buick owner, decided to sell the quality product of the Generql Motors line, Buick, and joined Grimaldi Buick-Opel Inc., where he is our star salesman of the month. W* invite you to come in, meet'Jim Mitchell, Jr., see our line of beautiful new Buicks ond Opel* os well as our double-checked used cart. You will be aitured of service, satisfaction and a guarantee of personal service. CAimoUl 8ui£k-0pet, Ine. High-Oloae Polish ——— INST ANT-ACTINO.. TARNifi] '— Hiah-Oloee Polish-* The Imitnt Ttrnil* it applied, lamiih, (treakt, tmean, heal and water tiaini Hart to diiappear. No more hourt of tediout rubbing, in tecondt, dirt and dullneti vamih and your grimittl melall get an enduring, lustroul .gleam Thal't why maintenance men in Hoteli, HotpiUlt, Banks, (Ktonet, publir buildingt UM Tarnite. • MSTaetB saMMM unm AT MOST HAB0WAK STOtlS President Nixon’s security arrangements in London, ti^ in with a packed business schedule, will keep him a considerable distance from potential antiwar, antibomb and anti-American demonstrators. Scotland Yard’s Special Branch of 300 highly trained security agents, spy catchers and trouble shooters have the help of the U.S. Secret Service and^ th? FBI to make sure of this. I 210 Orclmrcl Lak* Av«., T«l*f>hon« 338-6121 Just 2 Blocks West of Wid* Track Drivo Nixon arrives by air tonight, travels by helitopter to Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s country residence, and thenceforth his trips inside London will be ini his own bullet-proof bubble-top The Special Branch experts fear little from demimstrators. j They worry about what they NOTICE INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP BOARD OF REVIEW MEETINGS The Independence Township Board of Review will meet on the following dotes ot the Township Hall, 9p H* Main Street, Clarkston, Michigan, for. the purpose of reviewing the 1969 Assessment Roll of said Township: Morcli 4, 5 and 11 9 A M. fo 12 Noon 1 P.M. to 4 P.M. Morch 10 3 P.M. to 9 P.Mi Howord Altaian, Clerk Township of Independence ifioUy BiiwJ 3 DAYS ONLY Good Februaiy 24,25,26 CUP THIS COUPON ANY TWO GARMENTS $2.89 SUITS BRESSES MB COOTS COUNT AS ONE UP TO *1.51 SAVINGS ON EACH SET OF TWO Coupon Only WK CfouWlA M-69 at Crateant Laka Read WATERFORD PLAZA - 613-8833 S. Talagraph Read TEL HURON S. C. - 335-7934 T1 South Sfiuirral Read Auburn Haights-* 652-3131 Om Hew Maitiiiizing South Talagraph Road MIRACLE MILE S. C. •* 332-1822 T63 Baldwin Avanua BALDWIlt PLAZA •* SS5-2266 3361 Eiiiabath Lake Road ELiaBETH UKE 3. 0.-332-3916 AU STORES OPEN 7:30 A.M. - 7K» PAA DURING THIS FACTORY AUTHORIZED Ct^Gog] meiwois ANNUAL SALE Enjoy today's Biggest Picture COLOR TV Five space-saving furniture styies! SAVE «50 Your Choice...NOW $54850 A. Italian Provincial model 6960 B. Franch Provincial model 6958. Concealed Swivel Casters permit easy moving on C. Contemporary model 6952 D. Early American model 6954 and E.' Mediterranean model 6956. Revolutionary 82-Channel UHF/ VHF Instant Automatic Remote Control—with more functions, more conveniences than any other remote control today; is optional on Contemporary, Early American hnd beautiful Mediterranean styles above. . SAVE $50 ... NOW $648.50 Magnavox INSTANT AUTOMATIC COLOR always fine-tunes your picture—perfectly and automatically-on every channel, every time! You'll «l$o enjoy many more superb features that truly make Magnavox today’$ most advanced Color TV—and your best buy! Huge 295 eq. in. screen. Chroma-ton*—adds thrilling depth to color, eye-pleasing warmth to black/white pictures. Quick-On permits ‘‘instant” viewing without annoying warm-up delay. High Fidelity Speaker and Tone Control provide better listening. Best of all, the exclusive Magnavox Bonded Circuitry chassis assures you of forr/ng.reliability. QAl/F on over40m:ignificentColorTV $OQQ90 OMV L styles . . . NOW from ONLY . . . Zi/U OAifC snf on compact and spaca-saving OAVC ’a* Solld-Stata Stereo Phonographs NOW 138®" Actually outperformf many higher priced edn-ioies on the market today I Precision Player also lets your records last a lifetime. Four Magnavox high.fidelity speakers; 20-watts undistorted music power. Detachable legs make it equally suited for use on tables, shelves, even bookcases. In Contemporary model 3000, shown, plus Mediterranean, French Provincial, and Colonial. All with solid-state Stereo FM/AM Radio: save $20-NOW $178.50. No Down Payment-36 Mos. to Pay 1550 UNION LAKE ROAD-UNION LAKE FE 3-7879 363-6286; THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 24, 1969 B—T ^ ^ '"^1 ^ :^1 :g|^ ^ go ;ii^^ v^Jm aPEN MON, THRU SAT. 9 to 9 SUNDAYS 10 To S FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS a Pleasure to Shop and Save at OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 SUNOAYS to to ^ to 9 1110 Hiihland Rd. ' M-MPU» M4I •« Williimt Lk. Rd. OPEN SUNDAYS 1 1200 Baldwin Avt I 0200 Ooelty Lakd Rd. I >$20 SMbibaw Rd. I C.rn.r6..d«.bi. I Uni.n Uk. Vm.|. I I OPEN SUNDAYS I OPINSUNOikYS | OPEN SUNpAYS | 2111 Hlihitnd M. HYLAND PLAU 00R.DUCK OPENSUNOAYS ITe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities! None Sold to Dealers or Minors __ t 213 Auburn Av*< I YS * ^ SUt^AYS I PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS m mu 4iS E. PikD $1. OPEN SUNDAYS TOO Auburn AVi. OPEN SUNDAYS Everyday Low Prices • Friendly Service • Gold Bell Stamps I”.„. . I Elliabtib Likd Rd, I 001 Orchard Lk.Rd. I I OPEN SUNDAYS | pp^H SUNDAYS | East llvd. Gsrnar at Parry OPEN SUNDAYS U. S. Choice-Center Cut blade ,h roast'” BLADE ROAST 0 U. S. Choice Bcneiets CHOCK ROAST PORK CUTLETS ib. 79* Bonalatt loiton lutt PORK ROAST lb. 69* SHORT RIBS lb. 49* BEEF LIVER ib. 59* Puttrs or Hycrada mssm LUNCH MEAT lb. 59* SUCED lEATS sX^*1” HOTOOCS lb-59* DRUMSTICKS »>• 39* Banc|uet PrGxen ' APPLE ||||h PIE \£3 19^ 11. S. Choico - SHOUL R0AS1 Franco American SPAGHEHI l5»/2-OZ. 11* FLORIDA ORANGES Z Z RED RADISHES MclNTOSH APPLES *^**^ 49*^ Kleeooex PAPER TOWELS 1st Taro Roll Pkg. 43* 2nd Two CDEEI RoUPkc. rnEES WithCoupon HamiHon Large EGGS Uoz. DgIg CrusliGd PINEAPPLE 1-ib. 4||c StaiRiM With Purchasa 2 Pkgs. KOTEX B—« TUB PONTIAC PKRSS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24. 1969 Plunkett Aide to Resign Post James E. Roberts, chief trial lawyer for the Oakland County pposecuto’s OTce, will resign Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas Death Cabin to Be Razed Chari«t D. Cart«r ICrcwsley of Waterford Township Laguna, Calif., and Mrs. land Mrs. Thomas Lowry andjWinifred Lafferty, Mrs, Mar- , ........ ................ Service for Charles D. Carter, Mrs. Roger L. Lowry, both ofijorle Jorgensen, and Mrs next month to take a position,*». Mohawk will be 11 Holly; a son, Terry l:, serving Barbara Mallot, all of Tucson, with the public defender pro-»>« Wedn<»day at the with the Navy; four sisters, In-lArli.; and21 grandchildren, gram in Detroit Donelson-Jdins Funeral Home eluding Mrs. I^leen M. Samosikj An assistant orosecutor for 13 the White Chapel of Birmingham, Mrs. Helen Mri, Donald K. Green ProsecutOT Thomas G. operator at Pontiac Motor Plunkett has not announced DjvisiMi. Roberts’ successor but an of-i surviving are two daughters, fice spokesman indicated it will ^rs. Melvin F. Wedow of Pon-be Jack I. Bain. IUac and Mrs. Henry Beardsley Bain, sectmd in seniority, has. Oxford: three sons, Theodwe Newated of Clarkston and Mra ______ l^ma Bowser of Pontiac; and _ BI^MFIELD TOWNSHIP six brothers. i Service for Mrs. Donald (Grace |M.) Green 39, of 256S Alveston, Vern Stinson ot Covenant Baptist Church, Detroit. Burial was in Service for Vern Stinson, 69,1 White Chapel Memorial of 1022 Cherryiawn will be 3:30, Cemetery, Troy, by Vasu-Lynch p.m. Wednesday with burial in I Funeral Home, Royal Oak. three brothers, including Fred! **ART (UPI) - A Stocker of Pontiac, Wilfred northern Michigan sum-i Stocker of Keego Harbor; 16!™**’ “^n, the scene lasti grandchildren and M great-1 •""'"‘f. ^ murders of an grandchildren. • land four children, will be razed, Mr.. Frank McCall j^. MILFORD - Former resident. Richard Robison | Mrs. Frank (Mary Jane llf?™**^***''* aRreed to permit| McCall, 99, of Detroit died^^ yi^rday. Her body is “ "* for the last several mernths been pontiac Township, Lawrence Mount Park Cemetery by Mrs. Green died Saturday, assigned to work with State gparta and Rev. R. D. of i**® l^rks-Grlffln Funeral Surviving besides I Police and the State Attorney j| grandchildren; and _ husband; are daughter, plane Mr. Stinson, a retired Pontiac; L. at home; a son, David'B. at Motor Division employe and a home; three sisters; and her member Pontiac Eagles General's staff in covering .5 g,,aBt-grandchlidren. Peter Lazaros, who has been; relating underworld activities to] gya Crompton authorities. | m twe TO RE’cinN I Service for Mrs. Eva ni nrsiuiv Crampton, 91, of « Hudson will his mother, Mrs. Mabel Monroe Bam, too. plans to resign to ^ p^ tomorrow at the of Howell; three daughters, enter private law practice, but vasu-Lynch Funeral Home ,iMrs. Patricia Hebda of Pontiac, mnn « Royal Oak, with burial in Mrs. Sue McRoberts of Seattle, Ogdensburg. I Wash., and MrS. La vern a Lodge 1230, died yesterday, luryiving are his wife, Sybil; mother, h................. not for several months. A 1951 graduate of the Wayne State University Law School, Roberts was the chief prosecute in the grand Jury investigation of Royal Oak Township in 1965-86. Since some of those cases are still pending, Roberts probably will continue to try the cases after he leaves under the title of a special prosecutor. Mrs. Crampton died yesterday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Laura Bryan, at home; a son, Elmer in Florida; a sister; five grandchildren; and several great-grandchildren. ' Algiers Motel Case Hearing Starts Today Lawraice of Rochester; a swi, James of Pontiac; three sisters, Mrs. Maxine Terry and Mrs. Jane Bowhall, all of Pmitiae; three brothers including James and Donald, both of Pontiac; and 16 grandchildren. Mrs. Ann T. Gordon Requiem Mass for Mrs. Ann T. Gordon, 46, of 2378. Sanford Mrs. James C. F. Barkisr parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Anderson of New York. Kandi L. Harris TROY - Kandi L. Harris, 5%-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Keimeth Harris, 1290 Hart-wig, died today. Her body will be brought to the Price Funeral Home. Edmund A. Kraft Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Mrs. Elmer Rockefeller MILFORD — Service for Mrs. Elmer (Rose L.) Rockefeller, 84, of 224 Houghton will be 11 a.m. Wednesday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, with burial in Milford Memorial Cemetery, Mrs. Rockefeller died Saturday. She was a member of Rebecca Lodge No. 511, OES, and a member of the Past Noble Grand Club. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Max Thompson of Pontiac; three sons, Paul of Pontiac, Norman of Detroit and George of Lancaster, Pa.; a sister; sev-grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren. stone summer home on ^ Freddie L. Sparkman WHITE LAKE 'TOWNSHIP case was scheduled to get under way this afternoon in the courtroom of (takland- County Circuit Judge William J. Beer. After listening to testimony. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Services for Edmund A. Kraft, 64. of 5470 Telegraph, will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Vasu-Lynch ______ COMMERCE TOWNSHIP —Funeral Home, Royal Oak with Service for Freddie L. _________ „ _______________Service for former resident,cremation at White Chapel Sparkman, 21, of 720 Hillwood will be 10 am. Wednesday at | Mrs. James C. F. (Winifred B.JlMemorial Cemetery, Troy. I wifi be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Vincent de Paul Church. | Barker, 71, of Detroit will be 11 Mr. Kraft died Saturday. He Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Burial will be in Mount Hope a m. tomorrow at Hammond was a purchasing agent for Milford, with burial in Highland Cunetery. A Rosary will be and Haas Funeral H q m e . McDaniel Tank Manufacturing;Cemetery, Highland Township, said at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Detroit, wlhh burial in that city. jCo., Holly. He was a member of Mr. Sparkman, an assembly Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home. | Mrs. Barker died Saturday, the Pontiac and Oakland County lineman at the Fisher Body Mrs. Gordon, a press She was a member of Scovilie I Kennel Clubs, of the American Division plant in Willow Run, operator with Original Products Presbyterian Church. Detroit. jFox Terrier Qub and the Wire * died Friday. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Sparkman Sr., at home; two ^andparents, Clarence Jones ^ Knoxville, Tenn., and Mrs. Bessie Snarkman of Poplar Bluff, Mo.; and a brother, Edwin Jr. of Milford. . . , . , Inc., died Saturday. I Surviving are six daughters,!Fox Terrier Club. A hearing on What tne prw-| surviving are a son, Joseph, Mrs. Patricia Maciver of Surviving are his wife icutlOT has descr bedj as the 1^^ ^ daughter, Joanne, both at,Livonia, Mrs. Shirley Napier of Winifred; and a sister, heart ™^ “J®, four brothers including' Berkley, Mrs. Alberta Ossa of ^ _ . Casper Tarchalskl of Waterfwd —-----------— Township, Edward and Joseph Tarohalaki both of PonUac; and three sisters. Mrs. Stanley Tominsky, Mrs. Frank Samson, Mr*. Edyth Moody Beer Is to decide If statement Shovels, all of made by former Detroit pn-ji-p policeman Ronald J. August, implicating himself in the Detroit riot-connected murder, oLa Negro, will be admitted as Service for Mrs. Edyth, evidence to a jury when his Moody, 84, of 397 Franklin Road trial begins in Mason in Ingham will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the County May 13. iDavIs-Cobb Funeral Home with * ♦ * I burial in the Perry Mount Park August. 29. is charged with Cemetery, first-degree murder in the Mrs. Moody, vrho died Friday, shooting of Auixey Pollard, 19, i was a member of the Trinity one of three Negro youths Baptist Church, whose bodies were found in the; Surviving are a daughter, Manor Annex of the Algiers Mrs. Margaret Carr in Motel in Detroit during the ohiahoma; a granddaughter; a height of the 1967 riot. Igreat-grandau^ter; four great- Two other former policemen great-grandchildren; and and a Negroe private guard sister, have been indict^l on charges; ranging from murder 10, Mrs. RufuS Ratliff felonious assault stemming ... from the Incident. August’s case' Mrs. Rufus (Violet) Ratliff, is the first to come to trial. M, of 1370 Parkway, Waterford Foi mw RliMOBS Township, died today. Hef FOLLOW RUMORS ^ Sparks-Griffin The indictments a g a i n s t pu„eral Horae. Photographer Loses Eye to Red Grenade DA NANG, Vietnam (AP) AP photographer Dang Van Phuoc lost his right eye today when an enemy hand grenade exploded near his face. A veteran of three years of combat assignments, he had been wounded three times before In the Vietnam wUr. The 26-year-old Vietnamese photographer was on a sweep a with a ranger battalion south of Da Nang when a firelight broke out. An enemy hand grenade was hurled at nearly pointblank range, and a fragment cut into Phuoc’s face, slashing his right eye and nose. ★ , A helicopter brought him to the U.S. Army Hospital at Da Dewey F. Lake HOLLY - Dewey F. Lake, 71, of 201 Locke died today. His body will be brought to Dryer Funeral Home. Mrs. Glenn Mason ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Glenn (Beatrice B») Mason, 79. of 231 W. Tienken will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac with burial in Oak HUl Cemetery. Mrs. Mason died yesterday. She was a member of Bethany Baptist Church, the Dames of Malta, the auxiliary of VFW 1370 and was past president of the Navy Mother’s Club of Pontiac. Surviving are five sons, John B. and William J., both of Waterford Township, Charles E. of Clarkston, Gilbert A. of Royal Oak, and Richard W. of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Viola Cargal of Rochester; a sister: Lake Michigan near here. I “Everybody will be relieved when this constant reminder of ford Fosmore, Emmet County' NEW SEC HEAD - Hamer undersheriff. “It’s impossible' E. Budge of Boise, onetime but they are trying to forget 1 U.S. Congressman from that the slayings happened-No clues have be^ found in the six months since the Robison family was found shot to death in their cabin July 22. family SLAIN Robisem, his wife ailrley, and Uieir children Richard C. Jr.,i . 17, Gary, IS, Randall, 12, andi Susan, 8, may have been slain aamudi as a month before. No motive has been established and the massacre was only discovered when ■ of the Idaho, was named Saturday by President Nixon a s chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission. He replaces Manuel F. Cohen, who resigned last week. Gets National Post Oakland County Road Commission's highway engineer, Paul VanRoekel, has been led to the I steering com-1 mittee of the I National Asso-1 elation of Cdun-1 ties’ committee I on air and Wa-1 ter pollut The committee I will meet for | the first Ume next week at VanROEKEIL the Fiscal, Federalism Forum . I Washington, D C. * A A VanRoekel, 2871 Adlake, Waterford Township, has been highway engineer here for 12 years and is currently serving as regional vice president of the National Association of Cpunty Engineers. SAVE MONEY OH USED . AUTO PARTS Robison, an advertising executive and publisher, was from the Detroit suburb of Lathrup Village. Legislature Weighs Cash | for Airport I State Rep. Loren D. Andenton, R - W a t er f 0 r d Township, today announced, plans to provide $536,000 for improvements at Oakland-Pon-tiac Airport. Anderson said the allocation I included in the state’s .Restricted Funds Appn^riatlon Mrs. George Stevens Bill and is subject to currently 'unforeseen changes as it moves GROVELAND TOWNSHIP — through the legislative process., I Service for Mrs. Georg e| jf the appropriation requeist is (Maude M.) Stevens, 70. of 4510 approved it would be used to Groveland will be 1 p.m.'provide for reimlnirsement for tomorrow at C. F. Sherman land costs, extend the northeast Funeral Home, Ortonville, with end of the airport’s diagonal burial in Bristol Cemetery, runway and provide taxiways COPPER-BRASS-ALUMINUM (We Also Pick Up Junk Cars) FE 2-0200 Pontiac Scrap 135 Branch Flint. Mrs. Stevens died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; two sons, Jaihes of Chicago, 111. and William daughter, Mary and enlarge the terminal ramp, Anderson said. As proposed, the funds would include $268,000 from the Pontiac; a federal government, $101,500 Alward 0 f from the state and $166,500 from Goodrich: 14 grandchildren; local government, Anderson and 13 great-grandchildren. said. NOTICE TO City of Pontiac Dog Owners 1969 Dog Licontot or* now duo and payablo at tho City Clork’s Office, First Floor, City Hall. 450 Wide Track Drive, last, Pontiac, Michigan. FEE: Up to March 1 st After March 1 at *2.00 ♦3.00 It ii necettory that oil dog owners in Oakland County produce a certificate that their dog (ordogi) ha« been vaccinated ogoinet rabies within the last 12 months with tissue Vaccine or within 24 months if vaccinated with Modified Live Virus in order to eecure a 1969 dog license. If such owners do not poseest such a certificate, one may be obtained from their local VETERINARIAN or at the County operated clinic, located at 1200 North Telegraph Road. Olga Botkelgy, City Clerk V Publish: Feb. 6,18 and 24 August and the Others followed: surviving are her husband; a Nano 4ere‘aVnrthv^ rumors m the black communityjdaughter. Mrs. ..Lauralee l^^riorm'eJ ® TndS was complicated by postoperative bleeding, and he was on the critical list. Phuoc carried 13 piecqs of shrapnel in his slight body from previous wounds, the most recent during the enemy Tet offensive last year. He was wounded then^ while taking pictures of street fighting in Saigon. that police had become enraged^aynjek vvailed Lake; when they found 12 Negro] gisjer. Mrs. Dorothy Miller of males and two white girls, pontjac. and four grandchil-allegedly prostitutes, in the^ip^n. motel; that all 14 had been beaten and the girls iiarUallyj Mrs. Robert H. Shooff undressed; and that the three; youths finally executed. i Service for former Waterford During interrogation. Augu.s| Township resident Mrs. Robert first denied any knowledge of H. (Dorothy E.) Shoaff, 43, of the shooting. Later, he told aiRoyal Oak will be 2:80 p.m-superior officer that he had shot] tomorrow at the C. J. Godhardt one of thee youths in self-' Funeral Home, Keego Harbor, defense. jwith burial in White Chapel Beer is to rule whether Memorial Cemetery. Troy. August, the father of two young: Mrs. Shoaff died yesterday, girls, made the s t a t e m e n t Surviving are her husband; During the Tet fighting, Phuoc was commended by the U.S. 9th Infantry Division for carrying.an American soldier to Ex-GOP Leader, j Mrs. Rae HookerJ Is Dead at 78 MOUNT PLEASANT (AP) Services will be held Tuesday] for Mrs. Rae C. Hooker, the top woman in the Michigan Repub-j lican party for 12 years. j ★ it ■ ir ■ I Mrs. Hooker died Saturday in' Alma at the age of 78. | She was Republican national; committeewoman from Michigan from 1948 to 1960. Before that, Mrs. Hooker was vice voluntarily and under the full her mother, Mrs. Gayle Neff of safety under fire. Phuoc Iffotection of his constitutional Waterford Township: thre e; weighed about 80 pounds and ^chairman of the GOP state cen-rights. daughters. Mrs. G e o r.g e the American twice that. I tral committee. MONTH-END SALE! PIANOS On«-of10 THE POyTIAC PRESS. MOKDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1069 No newspaper anywhere gives US the news of schools in this area the way The Pontiac Press does. Pictured left to right: Charlene Barnette^ Rochester; Sandy Whiter Rochester. n a YouVe so right, Charlene.' Of course Charlene is right and all the students for miles around follow activities with THE PONTIAC PRESS For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 I ' ...ill' ' THE PONTIAC PilESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1969 E~n Lenten GuidepostsS Ex-Boxer Chainpion for the Young By DONALD FREEMAN NemiMper Reporter, Saa Diego, CaUf. Hio speaker was Negro. So was his audience. His subject was freedom. MMway through his talk, he quoted from memory the eiir tire 20th chapter of Exodus. When he reached the Ten Cenn-jnandments, a group of boys who occupied the platform with him started to call them out wift him. > of (he ndghboriiood’s problttns. Boys would throw rocks throutdi windows of the vacant new houses, dislodge the they could pry loose. Suddenly, » voice in fl»e audience objected. ‘What’s this got to c I MOORE freedom?” A taut silence fell over the auditorium^ Hie man before the lectern smiled. “My friend, you have your freedmn now— only you don’t know it.” ’The audi«ice erupted into loud prolonged applause. NEW BOLE This was Archie Moore, former li^ heayyweiidit boxing champi(m, in a new role—trying to inqiire young men and wor men to realize the onxMtunity that is theirs. Moore heads a inrogram in San Diego named ABC, “Any Boy Can.” "And any boy can improve himself if he wants to,’' says Moore, a man who speaks from experience. “]|( remembered my dieam in reform school,” Archie says, “and 1 began to think.’,’ He set up a punching bag in a makeshift outdoor gym. A young Negro boo shoots, drairiied 4 teaspoons cornstarch 3/4 cup chicicen stock (or S/4 cup hot water and I chicken bouillon cube, cooled) 2 iabie^oons soy sauce WALNUT SPONGE ORIENTAL 1/2 cup very finely chopped 2 eggs, separated ' California walnuts 1/2 cup granulated sugar 1 cup sifted cake flour 1/2 cup milk 1 teaspoon baking powder 1/2 ted^oon lemon etdract 8 bite-size pieces. I’law chicken nieces in marinade and refrigerate 2 to 3 hours or overnight. Preheat deep fat to 400°F. Place each portion of chicken in center of 6-inch square of heavy duty aluminum foil. Fold into SOI immedi luare, well sealetl packets. Fry in deep fat 3 to 4 minutes. Serve liately. YIELD: 48 servings. •To bone chicken thighs, cut along thinner side of thigh to the bone, slashing thigh the length of the bone. Holding one end of the bone, » the meat away until bohe is free. Cut off rounded piece of Remove skin from chicken breasts. Cut chicken into 1-inch squares. Heat oil in sldllet; add walnuts and toast lightly. Remove walnuts, set aside; add chicken to skillet; sprinkle with monosodium glutamate. 'Stir over high heat for 3 minutes. Add liamboo shoots; continue stirring over high heat for 2 minutes. Blend cornstarch with chidcen stock and soy sauce; add to skillet and mix well. Reduce heat; cover and simmer 4 to 5 minutes, until chicken is tender and sauce is thickened. Add toasted walnuts. If desired, garnish with parsley. Serv'e with hot cookedrice. YlEXiD: 6 servings. CHICKEN VEGETABLE SOUP (Gai Boh choy Tong) FRIED PASTRIES with Walnut Filling Drumsticks, wings, necks and 1/4 teaspoon ginger backs from 3 broiler-fryer 4 celery tops with leaves chickens j tfiedium onion, sliced 4 cups water -'■< » -i . .-.. -j.-— 2 teaspoons salt : 1 teaspoon monosodium glutamate 1/4 pound mushrooms, sliced 2 cups fresh spinach leaves, tom into bite-size pieces 3/4 cup chopped dates 1/4 cup tvater 1/4 cup granulated sugar Dash salt 3/4 cup chopped California 1 8-otmce can refrigerated a escent dinner roUs Spread walnuts on cookie sheet and bake at 350®F. 8 to 10 min-Utes to lightly toast. Resift flour with baking powder and salt. Set aside. Beat egg whites till foamy, gradually add sugar and beat till soft peaks form, with same beater, beat egg yolks wim milk and lemon extract till light and foamy. Sprinkle flour mixture and toasted walnuts over beaten egg whites; add egg yolk mixture attd with rubber spatula, gently fold to combine ingredients. Four into an 8-inch square pan and steam over medium heat for 20 minutes. YIELD: one 8-inch cake. Remove from steamer and invert over wire rack to “han^' 15 minutes to set. Cut into “diamonds” dr “squares.” Serve warm garnished with a walnut half. Or, cold topped with a dollop of Lemony Frost and a walnut half. Lemony Frost: Combine 2 tablespoons butter or margarine, 1-1/2 cups iwvdered sugar, 1 tablespoon water, 1 teaspoon lemon extract and a dash of salt; blend till smooth. Make 1/2 cup. Kitchen notes: Walnuts slioitld be dispersed throughout the sponge. If they are not very finely chopped they will sink to the bottom. If a steamer is not available, use a large roasting pan. Heat water in bottom of roaster until steaming; suspend wire rack on pyrex bowls above water; place batter-filled pan on wire rack. Place lid o or cover with aluminum foil. tvalnuts Plat* chiikcfi pieces in large saucepan or kettle with water, salt, monosodium glutamate, ginger, telery and union. Bring to • r^uce heal and covered, 1 hour or until tender. Strain broth. reduce heat and rimmcY, covered, 1 .......... - -- Cool chicken slightly and remo\e mc'at from Iwmes and ,skin; cut into “*■■“'5. (Jf bn>th and chicken are not to l>e used immediately, cover atrin; ana i J egg yolk 1 teaspoon water 2 teaspoons sesame seeds Fat for deep-fat frying Combine dsibs, water, sugar and salf; simmer until tifick, st frequently. Cool, and stir in walnuts. Open package oi. rolls, and unrol halt carefully, without separating at perforations. On lightly floured board, plate one rectangle of dough over tlie other, reversing angles of perforations. Roll dough to a very thin rectangle. 7 x 14-inches. Cut in nalv'es, then cut each piece into fotir 3 1/2-inch squares. Place a rounded teaspoonfu! of the wahiut filling on each. Moisten edges of ' ’ ■ • ............. • • ' ’Ightly, ►li 1 refrigerate,) To make scn»p, bring chicken hnrth to a l>oil in sauerpan. Add mushrooms and chicken strips; simmer until mushrooms are tender, about 5 minutes. Add spinach leaves; simmer 2 minutes longer. YIELD: 8 servings. dough, and press together over filling, turning points in slightly, to make crescents. Repeat with .second half of dough and fllliug. Beat egg yolks lightly with water. Brush over pu^tries, and sprinkle with .sestame seeds. Heat fat to 360 degrees F. Fry j^tries, a few at a time, for about four minutes, turning frequently. Dram on paper towels. Serve w’arm. YIELD: 16 pastries. HOW TO MAKE REALLY GOOD HOT TEA Experts agree that the following Four Golden Rules insure a delicious and refreshing cup of tea: ' ' 1. Use your teapot. 2. Bring fresh, cold tap water to a full boil. 3. Use one teaspoonfu! or one teabag per cup. 4. Brew by the clock... 3 to S minutes. Helpful hint? for more Tea pleasure • Preheat your teapot by rinsing it out with hot water. This keeps the ■ tea hot during brewing. • Always use freshly drawn water. Water that has been standing and reheated gives tea a fiat taste. • Don’t judge the strength of tea by color. Some teas brew light, some Brew by the clock. • Stir tea before pouring to make sure it's uniformly strong. i • <"0* oream) to let the true flavor of the tea come through. » Or with lemon to point up its flavor. Cain, Pepper After Jobs Rookies Sweeten Tigers '69 Hopes u By BRUNO L. KEAira The mgar oomcs In tbe form of Lea SpertaEditer.PobUmPreea **Sugar’' Cain and the the spice in the LApaAND, Fla. — nils may be the determined bid of Don Pepper, the two year the Detroit Tigers have to add a rookies who folt most dejected wh«n they little “sugar" and “spice" to the were shipped back to Toledo last iguing. American League pennant race. Cain wasAne td the young idtchlng stars of the 1968 siting camp and he qwnt the first two months of the regular season in Detroit before he was told he “wasn’t ready." ★ ■ * ★ “Sure I was very disapiMdnted when I Was sent back to ToMo," said,Cain, “because I was really cqnfident I could do the job. But then I couldn’t really show them what I could do with four very short relief assignments." In more than too months the big. southpaw did faave ibur starts ahd he won his first imajm^ ^ague dCci^ over the Senators, he wenf blister whi(^ tpre ;6ff nif' one of the fingers of bis pltcl^ hand. STARTED OVER “This kept wk out for nearly three weeks and tl^ it was just like-stai:^ all over again," he said. Despite his pitching (fisappointment in 1968, Cain did admit that as far as learning things, experience and maturing in his ideas of how.to pitdi to various hitters, “it was the best year of my career.” For the past three months he was keeping in shape playing winter ball in Puerto Rico. “My fast ball, of course, is my Inread and butter pitch, but I worked hard on control of my curve ahd slider and believe me I’m going to break into the rotation on this team.’’ ★ ★ ★ Like Cain, big Don Pepper feels that the current rituation in training camp, in which the veterans have not yet reported, will,be a “big break’’ tor him'. Pepper,.6t4 fprSt baseman from Saratoga spring, |N.Y., was figured to be Norm Cash’s replacement at first base. But, when, the Tigers brought in Ed Mathews two years ago. Pepper was hoping he would be put-on the list and picked in the expansion draft. GETS PROTECTION “I was dejhcted when I didn’t go in the draft. Hiey had me on the protective list, whid) makes me feel that at least they must think something of me, but my attitude and morale were really (Ohndpu^ Ml Page C-3, Col. 1) LIMBERING UP-Tiger rookie pitcher Les Cain loosens his lett arm during a warmUp drill at the Detroit traiidng camp in Lakeland, Fla. Cain opened the 1968 season with the Bengals, appearing in eight games and postii^ a 1-0 record. He wds later sent to Toledo where he complied a 7-5 mark. Catholic Sunk by Ml Carmel Ponnac Prwt PiwM fev aoH wUiMr COMETS CONVERGE ON LARSON-Pontiac Catholic’s Herb Larsunder, ★ ★ ★ John Hudson (95), Larry Arnold (133), Myron Borders (138), Bill Gottschall (165) and Roggie Rodrigues (175) posted individual wins for Coitral, while taking seconds were Car Byas (103), Everett Seay (120) and Lariy Hannah (154). topbout Rodriguez and Waterford’s Jim Main were locked in one of the top bouts of the evening and it wound up with the PCH acd posting a 3-1 verdict in overtime. Castill in the heavyweight bout. The w ★ ★ ' The overtime was one ot three extrasessions bouts. Main’s teammate Paul Shatimnn, a 154rpounder, came up with a 2-0 win over Central’s Hannah while Pontiac Northern’s David Bushey Mushes to Sled Title LACX)NIA, N.H. (AP) world sled dog champion, John 1 is the youngest man to win the title. He’s 21, a Belknap College student and he capturedithe 13tii annual eveftt Sunday in - • ' three h^. 49 minutes, 37 seconds for the three 20-mile races. prevailed 3-0 against Don Carlquist of Grand FOES Three of Northern’s winners posted falls, the onljrones in the championship finals. Tom Mash 003) ended his match at 1:03, John Dunn (120) went only 2:48 and Epi Ctomez (127) was a winner in 1:48. Mash and Gomez won their three bouts en route to titles by falls. Northern’s other winner was Mario Huskies other qualifier was Doug Bushey (95). Along with Main and Shallman, Waterford produced the 145-pound champ in Erick Alsup. (Continued on Page C-2, Col. 7) Prep Mat Results —. J G< tr ATS! Haliw (NF), % 115 - Rick St^ tan (OCB), l-o" i« - M k« Cinnon before but decided to wi^^ till the last lap, where he could not gain enough momentum to pass me back.” IX^T SPEED They waged a twocar duel through the last 100 miles after Donnie Allison—who led 87 of the 200 laps aroUnd the 2.S-mile high banked track—brushed the wall and lost scnne of his qieed. The crucial tire change came 50 mUes before the finish. Yarinough pitted 21 seconds. In addition to fueiing, they changed the'left rear tire. Glotzbach was in the pit only 18 seconds, just for fuel. k * k “We put on a soft tire,” said Herb Nab of Yarbrough’s crew. “It wouldn’t go a long distance but it grabbed the track real good tte time he needed it.” Owens said he decided against a tire change on the last stop because “we were trying to save seconds.” When both cars went into the nnal laps, it appeared the three-second difference hGti won the race for Glotzbach, the comparative newcomer from Georgetown, Ind. But Yarbrough steadily closed in. SPEED MARGIN After he got past a dangerous situation just before passing Glotzbach, he had thq tiny speed margin that tn-ought him $38,^ in prize money compared to 318,425 for Glotzbach. That dangerous situation cropped up (Continued on Page C-3, Col. 3) P.CATHOU|(^ WY.MT.CARMEL^^ " * • “1 Kgwaltikl 7 2-3 15 . . . J Lvbik 0 g.1 2 ~ ■ 11 0-1 _ 2 1-2 5 0 0-10 1 3-3 5 1 0-2 2 21 I-10 57 TOIOlf 5CORI BY QUARTRRS ^ “It was fantastic ... I’ve never seen anything like, it,” bubbled coach Dick Robinson after guiding Oakland-Orchard, Ridge to a 122-112 victory over Oakland-Auburn Hills Saturday night. “I just couldn’t believe it,” ccmtfiiu^ Robinson. “It was the most superb shooting I’ve ever seen.” What made Robinson so happy was the shooting ai the Raiders in the second half. Down 61-47 at hdftime, the fodders came on to hit, 30 M 44 shots from the field in the second half - 68 per cent — to pull the game out. k k k ■ ■ With 16 minutes left, Auburn Hills (12-13) had stretched the lead to 72-50 and it loi^ed like Stains for the Raiders (13- HO). ' f, . . But they outscored the Nikes, 33-11, during a brief span to gain an 83-all tie and then quickly roared away. k k k Thp point total was a record for the Raiders who had set the old mark of 121 just last Wednesday. k k k Fred Street led the way with 42 points, while Bill Miller and Harold Lowe tossed in 30 apiece. Glenn Lenhoff tossed in 37 for Auburn Hills. ORCHARD RIDGE (122) AUBURN HILLS (l)l)_ PO FT TF FO FT TF Bowuni 5 0-1 10 Lenhoff 15 9-10 37 Hunt 3 0-1 5 Cottroll 7 1-2 15 Lowe 15 2-5 30 McNab -i n-n ; Miller 12 5-r 30 SfubI 1 2-2 I 51, orchard RWge 57. Flyweight Crown Won by 'Scorpion' in Eighth Round MEXICO CITY (UPI) - According to Mexican lore, the lighter a scorpion’s color, the more venomous its sting. Which pretty well fits Efren “Scot- • pion” Torres, a light-tan 25-year-old from the little town of La P,alma in western Mexico, who reigns today as the smallest man on the list of world boxing champions, at 112 pounds. Torres crowned himself world flyweight champ Sunday night, beating Chartchai Chionoi of Thailand, who held the title since December 1966, with mu(di less trouble than anyone expected. , Torres won a technical knqckolit over Chionoi, 111 pounds, when ring doctor Herrera Franjutti almbed between the ropes after the end of tito eight round, and declared Chionoi — whose left ey« wes swollen tightly shut — was no longer able to defend himself. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 24, 1969 Wood Favored in World Skate Meet COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo I no death to o^r style of pairs worlds, four European and two Olympic gold medals, upimd by Tamara Mokvina and Alexei Mishin In the Russian championships and earlier this month bowed to two other The World Flpre Skating! skating it is classic. No (Hie can Champiimships, opentag here; do it as well. Others may win Tuesday, are a crusade for but the victory belongs to us." Russia's Oleg Protopov and hisi The 3ft>yeaiH>Id Protopov i peUte blonde wife, Ludmila his pretty wife, winner of four Beldussova, whose classic ballet ____ style in pairs Is threatened by tile m^e modem athletic, school. •nm Olymjdc silver medalist, Czechoslovakia, Jay Humpbrev of Cviada and Mlriia Petkevlcn of Great Falls, Mont., the chief threats. ♦ * I "We have lost some small skirmishei but we shall not lose the war," vowed Protopov today as he and Ludmila prepared to defind the crown they have wdn four straight times. ★ ♦ ♦ "Comparing, our style of skating with the more aggressive style featuring jumps and spins is like comparing the .w BIZ - Miss Gabriel Seyfert, 20-year-old Bolshoi baUet with vai^evllle or EuriH^n champion, is not Interested in turning to show P^w "»«»« with Bacii ana Imslness Wiould she win the World Figure Skating Cham- Beethov«i. piouAdp tills week in Colorado ^ings, Colo, htiss Seyfert, a ‘UVB FOREVER' ttazriing blcmde from East Germany, said, "I intend to finish "Bach and Beethoven will live ariiool apd tiien become a coach like my mother." forever. Similarly, there can be Urn Wood of Bloomfield Hills, !| Michigan Christian '5' ^lymjdc silver medalist, is the ft choice in the men’s singles||| . ■r«il r*l rff“ Clinches Title Share .fav Hiimnhrftv * Michigan Christian Junior college clinched a share of its first state Christian College AA (H-own Saturday afternoon by routing Detroit Bible, 106-58. The Warriors scored M points in the last half for tiieir best 2lt-minute output of the campaign and it enabled them to equal their seasim high point production. Garth Pleasant hit 18 of his 24 points in the closing half and Mike Fields added 13 for 18 in the game as MCJC made its record 8-2 for the league cam-paign. Baptist Bible handily topped Grace Bible Saturday night in Grand Rapida to gain a share of ■ ■ • with Now 12Ji over-all, the Warriors will entertain Lansing CC at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow on the Avpndale High School court ’ their final warmup for Friday and Saturday’s league playoffs at Grand Rapids. Michigan Christian will meet either Midwestern Baptist Grace in the 7 p.m. tournament opener at East Grand Rapida the laurels Christian. Michigan 1 M S Ludwtck y...... I 3 I-S t FI*M| I . ...cloui 13 f li 35 Edwird* 3 Mttchdl 4 0-0 1 Row 3 ---- ■•10-23 Plfoiont 10 MCOvm Etnborton 3 1-3 compatriots, Irlnla Rodnina and Alexei Ulanov in the European finals at Garmlsch-PartenUrchen, Germany, w ★ ★ The Protopopovs are famed for their sprial program, featuring what is known as the full-life which Oleg raises bis wife overhead with one strong arm. "Jumps do not make good pairs skating," Oleg said. “Jumps are very easy. It Is like two single skaters S'kating together. It makes the woman just like the man. ' * , * w "It is a man wearing a short skirt. The ballet style is much more beautiful and much more difficult. No one is better at it than we are." EXPECTED TO WIN The Tuesday pri^am begins with compulsory figures by the ladies. The overwhelming favorite for the title Is pretty Gabriele Seyfert of East Germany, silver medalist In the 1968 piymidc and the European champiim. Her chief competition will come from Hana Moskova of -------------------------- ----------------. . C z e fe b oslovaHa, 15-year-old honori in the World Figure Skating championships tills week Janet Lynn of R(»kford, IB., will be 15-year-old Janet Lynn of Rockford, 111., and Tim and Karen Magnussen of Van- Wood of Bloomfield Hills. They’re shown here during a break coaver, Canada. in training at Colonulo Springs. STAYING IN STEP - Carrying U.S. hopes for individual Red Wings May Burn Place in NHL Playoff DETROIT (UPI) - The Detroit Rad Wings are so hot they may bura themselves r^t into the National Hockey league’s Stanley Cup playoffs. * Sunday ni|ti>t’s smiudiing 8-1 Crocking of the Phlladel|4ila fjtyers was tiie most recent victory in a surge which has Alien Detroit from the base-Aoit of the East Division iMf the a into third place, one p(dnt [ of the New York Bangers. • ♦ ♦ ★ -The Red Wings, however, lave played two more games 0ian Ae Rangers. But on the re side of the ledger, Detroit five points up on flfth-|dace ddeago, whictii has one in hand, |nd six up on last Toronto, whkdi has four games more to Bd than Detroit. ★ ♦ o' *jynce the first of 1969, when Roy Edwards started his drive A file top of the Red Wings’ fbcee-goalie heap, Detixdt has msyed at a 15-94 clip — and iro of those losses were in the &b’s first two games of the pew Year. fWOEACH oThe big goal-getters against Bhtladel|dila were Frank llahovllch — vtiio netted his |8th and 39th — along with Pete Itemkowski and Wayne Con-|el^, who both coliected their and 17th season markers. 89 margin — it almost wasn’t necessary to use the ice re-surfacer between pmiciMls. Yon could sort of tell the kind of night it was gidng to be at 5:44 of tile opening session, when the Flyers were attacking on a power play. Trevino Rests After Winning Tucson Event TUCSON, Arlz. (UPI) - With $20,000 in his pocket from his runaway victory in the Tucson Open, Lee Trevino heads back to his El Paso, Texas, home today for a week of rest and practice before rejoining the PGA tour in Florida. Trevino played the 7,305-yard Tucson National Golf Club course without, showing any need for practice Sunday. He clinched first place with a s' under 66 in the final round gain a seven stroke victory, total was 271 for the four rounds, tying the tournammt record set by Bob Oiarles in 1963. ■* e * Miller Barber, who led tiie tournament after the first round, won Second place money with a 10-under xn. Barber complained after the match, "in the last two weeks I’ve shot 29 under par and I didn’t win either tournament.” Dean Prentice went into the Philadelphia end sUckhandled the puck away fi-om Allen Stanley. Bruce MacGregor was right behind and fired it into the net behind as antonished Bernie Parent fiv his 13th goal and secimd this wiUi Detroit short man. Then, 63. seconds later, while both clubs had a man off the ice, Alex Delvecchio hit the 20-goal circle for the 10th time in his NHL career. Before the period was io minutes old it was 3-0 and Connelly had Ms first marker. Njck Ubett’s 10th goal of the at 3:07 of the second chased out Parent and brought on Doug Favell — and Detroit just loved that Stemkowskl scored his first goal at the 15:55 mark and Mahovlich followed up with his first at 18:14. Chiefs, Huskies Pace Disfricf Mat Tourney Detroit Country Day, Farmington OLS and Pontiac Catholic will be among the Qass C-D teams meeting in the Freeland state regional Friday and Saturday. * * A FOLS tuned for the tourney Friday with a 32-11 win over Country Day. It was Sorrows’ fourth straight after four losses and a tie. FOLS captain remained unbeaten in dual meets by posting an 8-7 decision. SHORT REST — Pontiac Central’s Rog-gie Rodriguez enjoys a brief rest while getting attention from assistant coach Max Basse (left) and head coach Steve Szabo during his 175-pound bout against Waterford’s Jim Main in the distriirt finals Saturday night. Rodriguez rests just before resuming his battles with Main in overtime. The PCH ace eventually won, 3-1, and helped Central to the district championship. (Continued from Page C-1) Walled Lake junior Rick Baker ran his record to 2WM) by whipping three foes claiming the 175-pound title. He pinned all of his rivals Saturday to run his number of falls to 21 for the season. ★ , * " A. The other Walled Lakers claiming titles were George Wimbrol (106), Randy Hyde (123) and Mike Kamer (130), Qualifying for the regional with runner-up ■ finishes were Bill Reierson (145), Bob Mott (165) and Pat Callan (heavyweight). The Vikings are entered in the Belleville regional. THREE CHAMPS Avondale managed three Individual champions and will take its six-man delegation to the regional at Flint Hamady. Winning for Avondale were Bruce Walton (103), Harold Cason (133) and Dan Barker ^^e West (heavyweight). Taking seconds Bloomfield and Rochester girls’ Ski Spotlight on Prep Girls W. Bloomfield, Falcons Dueling Wednesday • Edwards was at his sparkling Best Sunday, missing bis fifth Cutout since he became tN No. r aetminder by thO nuurgin of a detected power play shot by the Flyers’ Jean Guy Gendron, his 18th goal, at 8:12 of the final'FOUR-UNDER period. I Barber had a four-under 32 on * * * the front nine of the final round Detroit was dowii in the but was bettered by one stndie Philadelphia end so often the by TVevino. two goalies the Flyers used are Bert Yancey finished third at probably stiU seeing those red|279, with Gene yttler end Don uniforms wheeling around in on;Bies sharing fourth at 280. them and every stick must looki Tucson amateur Dr. Ed like it has four pucks coming |Updegraff also shot a 280, but from it. , forgot to sign his card and was * * * , disqualified. The Red Wings were so hot —: * they outshot the Flyers by a 49- Purdue Close to Title; Spartans, 'M' Downed St. Louis Nefter Continues Streak on Eastern Courts^ Phil Rodgers was by himself I in fourth place With a 281 and four players, including second round leader Johnny Pott. Dale Douglass, Jim Wright and Ron Cerrudo tied for fifth place at m. TREVINO. THE CONQUISTADOR - Jovial Lee Trevitw models the big Conquistador helmet symbolic of his championship yesterday in the Tucson Open Golf Tournament. The U S. Open champion from El Paso, Tex., had a 17-under-par 271 capped by a 66 on the final day to pocket the $20,000 first prize and be crowned with the oversized helmet. (C(Hitinued From Page C-1) Well, Pontiac — with Brady WINCHESTER, Mass. (UPI)i . When Mary Ann Eisel plays in Massachusetts she doesn't ' lose. ' j The 2^year■old St. Louis t«i-| nis star won the Women’s Indoor chamjMonships Sunday scoring its first 10 points m tiie by beating Stephanie De Fine of game — did warm up. With the Hollywood, Fla., 6-3, 44,6-2. |6-foot-4 juniiwr forivard making A A A three straight baskets and Miss Eisel then combined Chuck Gallagher adding with Valarie Ziegenfuss of San the Titam scored the final eight Diego to win the doubk» crownipoints in the quarter, from Patti Hogan of U JoUa.l * * i Calif., and Pi^ggy Michel of When sophomore Kellie Dean Pacific Palisades, Calif., 6-1, S- roared in from the left corner to Tall Mt. Carmel Center Halls PCHS Vii .75S 1531 1432 .100 1723 144- ............ . .55* 1111 177 5 5 .500 10 » J2* 1399 137. 4 * .400 10 M JOO 1373 13*1 4 0 .400 11 * 4" 4 t .400 10 10 .SL. 4 t .400 10 10 .500 13*5 14M 3 7 .300 II * .550 1571 1500 3 7 .300 0 12 .400 1434 1034 tougher as the Spartans plan to greet powerful Purdue Tuesday and Ohio State Saturday. were Fred Watson (95), Dave Sutherland (138) and Dan Souheaver (165). FIVE MAKE GRADE North Farmington produced two chamfdcRis in Mike Eickhoff (133) and Mike Cannon (165) and a trip qualified with seconds — Mike Haller (103), Tom Toohey (112) and Ray Toohey (120). Earning seconds for Farmington were John Plichta (145), Tom Koops (165), Bruce Thayer (175) an0 Kim Caramer (Heavyweight). Gibbons Copotand fe By United Press International While Purdue’s Rick Mount was leading the Boilermakers closer to their first Big Ten basketball championship in 29| Michi«tn stata years, both Michigan and Michigan State failed to make good on a boast they would have something to say about who wins the cimference title. FYom a positive standpoint, anyway. Both the state’s Big Ten schoids drcqiped road games Saturday, kfichigan with Rudy Tomjanovich clicking on 40 points, were downed by Illinois' steady markmanship, 100-92 while Wisconsin snipped a four-game Michigan State winning streak, 7644. The Wolverines, now 54 Tomivh 1* 2-4 ,40 Jackson 16 1 Fife 4 1-1 * Harisn 6 1 Maxey 1 2-2 4 Price 9 ! Carter 0 0-0 0 Pace 4 I Henry 0 (Ml 0 Howat . 1 ( BWwrth 0 041 0 Totals . 39 14-1**2 T***>« 4510-16100 Mlchloan 40 44- " '**F5uied out — Illinois, Jackson!* Total fouls - Michigan 15, Illinois Attendance — 16,121. 10-0 2 Mitchell 0 0-0 OMaybery j (Ml 0 Voigt 2 Schell 0 Drayton SIzemre 0 0-0 0 4 Talala 20 20-2* 76 Total fouls — Michigan S Don MacTavish Killed DAYTONA (UPI) BEACM, Fla Driver Don 3) retaliated for field goals by Herb Larson, Gallagher and Dean for their biggSst lead at 2517 with 5)4 minutes remaining in the half. After that the game was ti^ at 21 and 23 before the Comets to<^ the lead for good on a charity toss by Kowaleski followed by a Sacka basket. Brady dropped in a reboiBid Burch, who came off the bench late in the third quarter, Unable^keep prep race for the Daytona 500. the Big Ten, put a jinx onjMacTavish, 26, Dover, Mass. Coach John Orr’s pre-game was killed Saturday after his statement, "We’re going to car slammed into a wall at ISO ' ’ 'miles per hour in the 300-mile only other Pontiac player to hit three field goals. Steve Hcdf-man’s 10 rebounds helped the Titans. But the brief aid by Burdi and sustitute Gerard Hollaod’s hustling antics weren’t able to stem the tide as Mt. Carmel built its advantage to 6943 with |one’'minute to {day. T have to be proud of these ; Local Bantams Share 1st Place in Hockey Loop Sunday was a bad day for the Lakeland Hawks’ ice hockey hopes. The Lakeland bantams rallied from a 3-1 deficit only to drop a 4-3 decision to Grosse Pointe the final IS seconds of play. The defeat drops Lakeland into a first-place tie, with the winners in the “B” bracket of the Southeast Michigan Junior Hockey League. Eric Rose, who had three ’ goals in tiie bantams’ 3-2 triumph Saturday night over Fraser, opened the scoring yesterday morning while Brad Strohm and Tim McGraw sparked the Lakeland rally-In a midgets league contest, Kurt Wright netted the only goal as Lakeland took a 6-1 drubbing Grosse Pointe. There’s a showdown looming Bloomfield and Rochester ^Is’ ski teams if the snow holds up on the Mt. Holly slalom course. Rochester evened the score Saturday at two wins apiece by capturing the coeds’ race in the annual Interscholastic Meet. West Bloomfield was the runner-up, less than one second back, 133.9-134.8. AAA Kettering was a distant third, 12 seconds behind the Lakers’ girls. Bloomfield Hills Andover (147.0) and Waterford Mott (147.4) rounded out the top five girls’ finishers. LAKER BOYS West Bloomfield’s boys continued their dominhtion of their bracket, winning the trophy with a 161.0 total. Andover’s boys trailed with 165.9, WKHS ■ 166.3, Waterford 168.1 and Walled Lake 173.5. The Individual victors were Kim Woodruff of WBHS who edged teammate Rick Stanker by less than one-tenth of a second, and Wendy Willis of Rochester who nipped Bloomfield Hills Lahser’s Judy King by .8. AAA Wednesday’s concluding aeon for the Scholastic season is the Mt. Holly Prep Ski League finals, matching the leading teams and individuals from each division. NY Pro Kegler Victor PARAMUS, N.J. (UPI) -Ralph Engan of Monsey, N Y. took the $10,000 first prize and a new automobile Saturday in the Prtrfessiohal Bowlers’ Association $75,000 Cougar Open. pace with tlM Illini’s hot second half shooting, Michigan fell behind for good with 13:09 left when Dennis Pace’s lay-^up made it 6746. NEW HIGH Domis Stewart bagged 29 (Xdnts for Michigan vtiiile Tnn-janovich With 19 field goals set District Prep Wrestling Results basket with four seconds to play 8. (Hit in a reverse layup un-ito net his 15th and 16th points of] » n«vo w uz: jmuuu m mese - A A A molested, the underdog PCHS the game and leave PCHS down kids." the disap|>ointed Larsen ■* It was Miss Eisel’• lOth.na- s(}uad led for the first time, 14-. by five at the halftime. commented to the lockerroom' Michigan meets Minnesota titt (AAF) dtc Jim Gr»«n (JP), 4-2; 1*6 — 6«oro* WImbrow (WU dec. D«V* Chrtetinwi (AAP), 115 - Curt RMd (AAH) dtc. Stay* Garris (AAP). .11-2; 123 -Rsndy Hydt (WU dac. Pata aragsr (J), 4-1; 130 — MIks Karnsr (WU dec. Don Satnesr (AAH). 2-1; tw, (H) dac. Tim CtbuiskI (AAP), r ConntngiMm (AAP), dec. Dsv* M — Bob Mann (AAP) d»c. — ---------‘-g (AAP) « Hunt (JP), 3-2; I Reierson (WU. John Miller (JP). 1( Bob Mott (WU. 3-Br 17B — Rick Beker (WL: ssr,«s».'ai •iS‘1; un-BRI DavMi (H. Park) dac Dan Repress (Femdeic), 24 OT; 112-Barn Id WeRs (Femdale) dec Lence cassallo. (Dondero), n4i 121 —PeUI Natsmitti (Dondaro) 'dec Lonard TiHHnpson (Hazel Park); 127--Oominlc PItrucelll (Famdalt) dec Mike GadcMiskl (Lamphare), 3-2; 133-Mlko 6- 1; 13l-%lottn Harptr (Hazel Park) dec Kurt Mittw Shepard (Femdale) dec Ron Nagy (Hazel Park), dec Bob Aanallo (Haael Park), 11-4; 156-Roger Duty (UmphereT. 1-0. OT; 145-Mike Wood (tlfmphareV (Dondero) dec Bill Stowick (Lampherc), 6-0; 165^ Sieve Mitchell (Dondero) dec Greg BriMS (Kimball), 7- 5; 175—Pete Reynolds (Femdale) dee Don SonOer iiisi s £sr%!iu-,3ss;>rtir‘ / THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBKUARY 2«, 19B9 Pioneers Stop Adrian, 101-77 OU's Cage Team Hits Crossroads Oakland University’s basketball team Is at the crossroads. The Pioneers will reach season’s end with either a winning or losing record after this Friday’s game with Grand Valley College. Setting the stage Bulldogs, now W was a 101-77 triumph over] “I’ve never coached a loser, Adrian College Saturday. |said OU mentor Gene Boldoi ★ * * I who took over the Pioneer reins The victory everted OU’s,****® ■ successful record at 10-10. It also avenged to the Showdown Neoring for Andover, Lakers tenure In Detroit prep rartks, “I hope it stays that way.” COVE-ANDGO The pioneers had their problems with Adrian’s give-and-go offense in the first half. Thej I smallor Bulldogs c<»isistently| I punctured oy’s man-to-man defense for layups. I j However, superiw board I strength and strmg shooting by {guard Ed Holloman kept the Pioneers slightly ahead most of |the opening 20 minutes and they < Bloomfield Hills Andover kept feat West Bloomfield. The went to the lockerroom wi ' its school record winning stared alive Saturday night by downing Wayne-Oaklai^ League rival Northville, 6047, to set up a title showdown Friday at West Bloomfield. Andover had to win against the third-place Mustangs to remain in the W-0 race. The ftarons’ victory leaves them one game behind WBHS with one league clash remaining. BHA is the only team to de- Rookies Eying Tiger Positions (Continued from Page C-1) hurting last season. Jack Tighe (manager at Toledo) was probably the only reason why didn’t fizzle out completely. He ' kept encouraging me,” said Pepper. “I didn't lose my power, but I fell in my batting average. One thing tiiat bothered me, and there were a lot of hits I didn’t get because I couldn’t run too well, was an. inflammed heel on my foot. “Now ,Mathews has retired and Pepper is back in the role of understudy to Cash. However during the current boycott of camp, he has the first base situation to himself. Pepper came into camp Saturday 12 pounds lighter, primarily due to the long hours of work on his family’s turkey farm in Saratoga Springs. LOOKS THINNER “He actually looks much thinner than 200 pounds,” said manager Mayo Smith, “but he looks in real good shape.” Pepper did have a short stay in Detroit in the final weeks of the 1966 season, with three bitting appearaijces and a strike out to show for his major league record. He hit .302 at Montgomery that seaswi with 19 homers and 67 rbi’s. At Toledo he hit .277 in 1967 and dropped to .248 last year, but his ^1 production was close with 69 and 65 three more homers in 1968. Pepper and Cain were among the 17 players who reported to the opening of camp Saturday. None of the regulars were on hand. However, Smith pointed out that this situation could be a 4442 lead. ★ Three quick baskets as thel second half opened and a zone defense turned the game over to the Pioneers. Adrian’s drives to the basket were stopped and, lacking outside footers, the Barons, losers to Milford and Kettering, have won 11 in a row to stay on the heels of the Lakers. Tomorrow’s light card of action involves all nonleague games. West Bloomfield will gun for its eighth straight win 15-1 over-all record against an improving but young Waterford MoU quintet (4-10). STREAKING BHL Bloomfield Hills Lahser’s ambitious Knights, going at a 10-oUtH>f-ll success tempo since opening defeats, faces a sterp test by entertaining Waterford Township (9-5). Also Tuesday, Waterford Our Lady of Lakes (4-12) will be host to Qrtonville Brandon (8-7), North Farmington (13-2) will invade Widled Lake (3-12), Royal Oak Dondero (2-12) wUl be at Birmingham Seaholm (5-7) and Madison Heights Lamphere (8-7) wUl visit Clawson (5-10). (Country Day (11-3) wUl «iter-tain weidr D^bom Annapolis, Almtmt (88) wUl be host to bnlay City (4-0); whUe Gran-brook (5-10) has a Wednesday aftemocm date with Western Reserve; SECT PERFORMANCE Andover’s triumph over N’lrUle Saturday saw 6-foot-5 pivotman Tim Weddle produce the best individual all-round effort by a Baron player this Oakland’s tall front line led the scoring parade. Greg Ran-ney netted 21. Tom Allan hit 23 J0 FitsW 0 F T S' Jackson Peake Antaau , Anteau W 4 1 f Phone 334-2515 ;c~** ’ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1909 \Msicer8Mifii^ I, LMTtln* (OhM) W ft. John'i, N.Y., 77. ColH<* «* Unction 1* -------- Nnn U, Vi n. HMtrt « irMum^a*'}l,^Datrall Narthwatl-*'oNrell Nortnarn 71, Datrolt Murray ■SI Claira 71, grWgman M ' Oroata Polnla South 77, Highland Park ^*OrNN Polnia Unlvarilty Ichoel 70, Harpar Woodt 53 _ „ , „ fil!^ 74, NIIM'Vandy.ylna YplaianllTl, Ann Arbor Huron 54 •« THa Aitaclaiad Pratt Br MM^lgan Mala lA OW» » I Windsor I Raceway Windsor Reiults Rent-A-Tnick k. Prom 1.00 1.50 __________• Praiarraal at Patai l Mlili*® Pairmaada Chlala It.M 7.00 4.T* Royal Adtaa ^inaiiai «R uinatia: M mm tstao, ~ MiN Pratatvad ai Pacai I Mila irg Pa^tar 7..M 4.40 130 l^ry Mir nth - MON Clalmint pki Yankoa Lock 1.70 Caught Happing Timmy Darat ■tacter; 5-4 paid 540.lt Crovid 0,110 “tdia 1540.555 INI Chtvy II Windsor Entries MONDAY NIOHT't iNTRIII -atoa cMimiag Pacat i mini ly Altarnav t, Tammy •. ISl. __________________ ltt**il0t^tatii{S!g Paioi riSiiai Out Vala Rocky toproma C. 15-^Ma aViS STtSai'cMimia. tWm%*T CahatiM Llitia Lad Pkk't Collatia Htva'i Princa SNO-CAPS 4 FULL PLY ^TMOUNTINa s£;i 2 -^r nn-aitN cialmmg pact; 1 Mila: Culla Darat Bud t Brolhar Princait Cindy 0. Mr, C. 0. Sports Calendar Wgh Othaa^wlimiiliig Allan Pari^jt,Rp Iningtan at WalM LOka --------AAoti ai watt Blaamflaid Lamphara at Claiatan RO Oondarg at Birmingham laaholm ---------Brandan at Wattrford OLL Local Doubles Entry Wins in Elks Tourney Holds 2nd Place A Pontiac doubles eittry came up in aingles. A MilCord n Plim Horthwatlarn at Saginaw Midland Jt^lgaw (feac^hOr Clartwh* at UMPrlon^ through on the final aquad of took third place in the singles, the 12th annual Elks Ladies Nationai Invitational Bowijing Tournament Sunday to give the host lodge No. 110 two diam-pions for the fint time in lour years. ..nlthit at g. at Dairoii ^W^,ft.^Wtam Mlfhlgan _ „ ..tw Sciiaai fuming Pontiac Cantrai ai Raehaiiar (Oakland Oiarlotte Bennett and Jo Willhite of Pontiac c<»nplled a 1261 handicap score ]mt«day afternoon to win the dotdike event trophies and NO first prize. 'Vil£*KmtoiwS!^ I'fcWTN- ?!jS 1. Crackar Barrall Plymoom ' Hagan Mwtic PoMlae ^ WlllhNl CharlMta Jana Pow Maiilyn f 5. Margaral Marlorla i A AAadlyn Si ^aca AhuvrMm miwivriw If TffNI GRAND RAPIDS (AP)- ?ay, AI Evara and^^eS|«b^ City bowlers took over kader-;became ‘^1? ■Mn in three divisions of the leaders with a l,«f series. MADISON, Wis. (AP)-MlchJMichigan Men's State igan entrants were prominent in,Tournament over the weekend. Schimert » • . singles and doubles competitlonj Michael Marciniak twk hSfeao Sunday as the 66th Ainerlcan actual and handicap teads in all-,Detroit rete n^^ JJtoap Bowling Congress tournament:events with 2,001 and 2,136 wrapp^ up its djiening week-^tals. He rolled an actual series Brewster of Unsmg K|pt the end. PcmiM 1341 Plymouth 1344 Ponllae 1344 NHL Standings Ruth Sullivan of Pontiac last weekend posted a 667 to idee trophy, plus give the local lodge two champions for the first time since 1965. Oerglhy Prior Milford Ritg Nordiirom 5. Ckicagp 5. Miry Jam Klint Btraa. Ohio 445 A SHI. (iMS,^^vma,dh 44. »A"iifJsrii.aSi.p Caro Keg Squad Bay City Bowlers Take Lead Isingles lead with 763. Harmony Hill of Caro i6 sec- - ond In the team standings with! 2,816, Max TetU, also of Caro, is second wltii 631, in singles com-petltlcMi and Vernon Hills Marshall is fifth with 617. All events leader in the 70-' day tcximey at 1,980 is Howard. Ekberg of Dayton, Ohio. A rec-j ord 1656,499 is behig offered in; prizes in the tournament. regular RAZOR STYLE CUTS Kingsley Inn Barber Shop eymaattl Kant Slala 137.50. W Michigan stata 111.45, ' Michigan Stala 175.75, Phone 644-1400, Ext IBS Serving You: JOHN BULIGA W L T Pit. OP BA Mj3 7 4»ini44 j^iSSSt “miM »r«nvf . ., 24 2t ^ IM 141 ;;v; . SiT'l 8B!B Pllicburgh Montraal Chicago 15 IMt^a'IlMulti “ “* i^A^PhlladoWiio 1 fSfV'Hsliof.., ac 4, Oakland 5 It is the lowest total ever tp win the singles crown in the annual tourney. LOW SCORE Similarly, Lillian Hasten’s winning 1667 In the handicap all events is also the lowest to win in that event. She is from Mt. Clemens. 5'^J‘Ji"" ■uSlflx Cflm -V . ^ \ __ irj’Tir- OWNERS! » Ktifduifd. NBA Standings There were no changes, except for the doubles, on the find weekend of the seven-week competttiem. Plymouth entries were one-two-three In the team standings, led by Plymouth Bowl’s 2979. ★ ★ Betty Bowman of Elkhart, Ind., reigns as the actual all evMts queen with her 1644 total. SAVE UPTO^SO set'bf Pontiac also had the fourth and fifth teams, the third-place doubles finisher and the runner. yireslone DEUIXE CHAMPION Original Equipment AmlMT Chldl B. Chief C. Pblty Ml»i MIkt Atir* 5IR-B55M CMMI. EUMTOd Ed't Dream Phylll« Oilier UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1001 Baldwin Avc. Princet* Dickey M^IMB Cwid. P Glynn# jfckBon R. PHsco Wvn VBHtycrffk Rfd HonMt OoTMki LIndi Wilson Vjh»A ^*^^**** NO MONEY DOWN MONTHS TO PAY! Meedewview I Lord Doyle See 5. Song mASligg CWlmlng Pace; I IMIa; “lannagan OimolM Gallon Grattan wally"i Quaan West German Winners LAKE PLACID. N.Y, (UPI) ~ West Gwmany’s No. 2 sled ; won the world four-man bobsled | jtitle Sunday with a time of; ! 4:20.75 for four heals. BONY WOBRY ABOUT INCOME m. SeeSouriatl & Associates 13 Years in This Area in MoHingly ButinafC Cantar 4IW PIXIE NWr. In Dieyton Piauia Phona 674-3312 iStMISURNRO. flanli«e-6l2-SB3B NEW 1969 RAMBLER AMERICAN 2-DOOR $1889 MONTH OF FEBRUARY SPECIAL! All Factory Equipment NEATER, BACK-UP LIGHTS, OIL FILTER, COMPLETELY WINTERIZED HAHN MOTORS 6673 Dixie Highway CLAAKSTON 625-2635 . meiwrieie ^ ✓ tar tkd mlirg Mi tl thg /^BBliBiMMlg.ggeM«iagBgt griginaltrggSfMiBSgglk honorad by mm.-naa In aecordanca with iha^tarma «f our printad waftnlt^ prica of Taplacambnt Yira proratad on origMal troad —r —I •'cdoldvdl prieo Flraatona ttoraa ■ datlgn waar and bacad on Firoatono tradoT^ prieo '-ir foplacamont tiro it timo of adiuitmonl. FRoitono •do Tovat pricat ara intandad to. but may npt rgpro: -------------------------------------------------- DON’T MISS DUT...DBIVE IN TODAY! HURRY! rrieBd osshown of Rr.5t.nd Stor... eampti«vdly pficed at rire.loi.. D.al.r. and at oil ..ryie. statKmi d.iploymB ft* Rrfsftx* ••9". FEBRUARY SPECIAL! PHILCO CLOCK 5095 RADIO 9 Automatic Doze Alarm Windshield Washer Solvent firestone Windshiold Washor Cleanfr and Solvent | temperetur to 16* belov M' Ad«6siwl,nil EACH Priced Bt thown Bt FiroitMid Stem. Compettrively priced at Firertont Dtalcrg and at aH tarvica ataHont fircsfoite OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY 'til 9 P.M. 146 W. Huron Pontiac * FE 3-7917 I ; ......'.........................fft.il ^ 'a THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1969 0“—fl How to Make Best of Taxing Situation—4 Being Elderly Can Entitle You to a Few Tax Breaks ia dll^erent forms. Instead of a paycheck, It’s probably a EldCTb“p^M hav^ quite Scoial Security check ByTOMSIEWART WASHINGTON (AP) 12 Americans Killed in Viet WASHINGTON CAP) - The Pentagon identified 12 servicemen killed in acti(m in the Viet- dlfferent bag of income tai problema from those of younger people, but their age also entitles them to a few tax breaks. ExemapUcHi, for instance, come in the large economy size If ywi’re 6S or over. If you’re under 65 you get a personal exemption a reduction of income - of leoo, but at 65 it jumps to $1^. In fact, the Internal Revenue Service sp| Ml IHYd q>aiq-Flsiui-t(8-gte-|i| myd .. ( , THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUAEY 24, 1969 Bridge Tricks From Jacobys Marriage Licenses ROBIN MALONE wMty D. Wtnte, PcrmMgtav^« > A. MctvUla, Pwmlnftan. itid Marliii ” M__ Hfnnr I. Miron, Unk •rijw M. Hum, Union >.«w. -Otcor J. Unti, 17 Oono Ct. i ■ „ . u—..— rt U< Ml lorold P. ...— - „ ... Jolmon. ScImMOor, WolM Loko ond NOftTH M *1017 VK432 ♦ JS «K76S mSI EAST *Q42 VQioes VAjrsre ♦ t733 410 #QJ10t «AI43 SOOTH (D> AAKJtSS HVoid ♦ AKQ«54 «2 Both vulnonblo 2* 4N.T. •A Opwiing iMd-AQ I hope you eh-jswered, ‘Angeb could not do jmore,’ or something equally I complimentary and obscure.” I Jim: ”1 mire did. Of course, he had a tough hand to bid and six spades is . the correct final contract but I wasn't going to tell him that his line of piay, whiie successful, was incor- spades held by his opponents. The drop play is slightly better and any expert would try it and go down this time." (Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) Small, light narrow automobiles Involved in cldents are more likely overturn than Targe heavy cars mat are wider By Bob Lubboia THE BETTER HALF THE BERRYS Bly Carl-Gnibcrt Oswald; “This play when you miss queen and three small in a suit is one of the closest percentage plays in bridge. Sixty-one per cent of the time both the finesse and the drop either lose so you are only concerned with the 39 per cent where your play makes a dif-and in these situations By OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY Jim; “In bridge articles the emwrts always seem to wear the white hats and their plays appear to wwk almost every time." Oswald: “Hie sanne appIlM at the table. Hie right play Is going to be a winner more often than a los«'. It is a matter of |»«babllity. A 60 per coit play wins 60 per cent of the time; a 40 per cent play only 40 per cent of the time, and so on." the drop play works 20.4 per cent and ,the finesse 18.6 per cent.” Jim; “That is so close that the expert wll try the finesse if he has collateral information there is none here.” THE BORN LOSER wee PLACE “Phone my boss and tell him I’m giving him till sundown to get out of town.” Oswald: “No. Hie c^nents have done nothing excqit sit at the table. South has a freak hand but the fact that he has two six-card suits has no effect on the distribution of the four CARfETlNdt BE TWREE-1MCHE5 thick! BERRY’S WORLD—By Jim Berry Jim: “I watched today’s hand pleyed in a rubber bridge game. South ruffed the second club, catdied one high spade, entered dummy wiUi the JacA of diamonds, flnmsed against East’s queen of spades and made his slam. Then he asked what I thought of his Nding and jday.” V4*CHRD.5*///J^4^ You, South, hold: AAKil Y3S #5*AKieS64 What is- your oponlag bidT A-Ono club. This is really no TODAYW QUESTION Your partasr i boart What do y< 0 you rabid? 2swr«tnsr “*> • Swiei (Mifff^SSSrlf’^ii c«i n HwMIW nSwSnmw.* Oort't abl^ ovsrtims tnlsnmsnf. Chack tsM. flauru ’"'nUiaur*(Aprll"*^Mlv • ?’• iwtlsllws, Monsy aurnMl In uniqu* "’•n-mt. ersilttait contscu inOlcaMdi confMwict. a* orlalnsi nna likHasnSsnl. VarMMI RiMncIlim ratino It hloli. OBMINI (Mtv Tl-Juna lOl! You miy uwa ann. youna aartoni bring you gut----------- arablamt. a# analyllcsl. Analyit. Find tut why. AvaW lumpint w conclutlant. TanloM ha wllb ana wha atiracit you. IF TUiSOAt IS^Yoim aiSTHDAY Ml art a nalural axacutiva, hut ym rtfar Marking bahind tht tcantt. AddM nponilblllty dut alorw with gradlar iwardt. It ilnglt, mtrrldgd It an By Art Eanaom ^co VEX/ ALLEY 001- By V.T. Hamlin If TRULY „ ..^..aRKABLE, TRANSFDnwnONi . 3 HER THROAT. YOUR HI6HNB8S;.AHE WONT BEABLETOTAIX , FORA....... HAl IKNOWMANVWHO WOULD REWARP you WELL TO WORK SUCH A CAPTAIN EASY By Laslia Tomer PIOVOU X DID I?! HER PALM ^ FIMP our \WKBASB 13 WORTH THREE , WHAT jupyw Vtimee wot it COET CO^ '' PROPBRT/ h laNBaAL^TeNDaNciaai cycia nn CANCIS, LIO. Igacial ward i tiet; IlnWi what you ttdrt. layrlght TdA edatral Ftalun “You might have had a best seller on your hands-4f you looked like Jacqueline Susann!” a InveKiadi to art hopti _____^ OUT OUR WAT aharat igaclal Inlaratt. Shara k I. You ara Mvlitd la loin tgaclal grauh. Antwar In aWlwnatlvji. , Viaoo (Aug. »^t. ditat^ ha twtm at tuMIt HandiW ijurrtRf tHitkrt with .. thorough, you Imprttt toparlwt. Talk ol pranwflon couM taatura day. Study Aaies mttMigt. , uSad '*“* ' OUTA HERE/AIN'T 1 ENOUGH HOLES TO LOOK INTO PER APPLES AN' SPUPS WITHOUT TOU TROUBLEMAKERS COAAIN' AROUNPr/ rw«.. Fiona a.™ ________ Involvaa traual and n word, sTrtnglhdo phlloadghy. f--itlva. Find rat torn why. Tonlg cemat conaamlng taraar, «om- "’Ko!»Ko“(Oet. M-Nov. Pr 5ouf"atlorS*Waa^widar dialribuiion. Acoagt Invitation far aw^ranea which galn addad aulhorlly. Soma at Ih ...^ dagand ugon your ludgmani. Tkna la on ^"^n* rtnVrI.., your ability lo hromolo mulual InItreafi. FrolacI can ha auceaaafully comgitltd. Day to tlnlah ralhar than to iMln. 1} AMP HER FLORIDA T BV JOVBt BOTH TRACT 13 NEAR TH' ( TRACT5 NpW TOTAL new PIfVEY ABOUT il.380.000! EES & MEEK Rv Howie Schneider AOUARIUS (Jan. SO-Fab. 1 PIKES (Fab. ItASarch »); Lovad Births MEEK. WHEN AJiE SOU GOINS TO REALlZ-e THAT . CRVINS DOESN'T SOLVE AJOYTHINGY 1 DONT KNOW VUHAT VOUR <3RDBLEM IS BUT IF SOU CANT DO anything more QONSTRUenVE ABOUT nr THAN CRYING...SOU’RB i ^ IN DEEP TROUBLE! / Hie following Is ■ list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): Tom C. Ot»»yn, Union Lokt Torry A. Upeott, M7 Inpktwood Jtgtd H. Adlar Jr., I4t Hudaon Richard 0. (Salham, wallad Laka Mark 0. LaFnrga, Clarfctton HiIim' Lf*RiAlau,*5iljY* Taltgraah ICtJfSV^.Nlcfc.'^SyirPl.ln. Jkiunla A, Tarkat, SOTg Faulaan Arthur W. Vanhrook. HHond AAorton H. Franca. 3tOS Grafton Robart D. Hataantahl, Oxford Thomat J- Uaoch, Rochaater Edmund S. Klowandar. Auburn Haigntt Albtrt J. Parker, Orton —ta Rlehardaon, Wallad Laka By Ejniib BnshmiUm: AUNT PRITZI 1 CAUGHT AfVE ^ SHAKING MONEy OUT OF MV r— PIGGY BANK ) THE yVORRV WART BOARDING HOUSE CrRiO RiCftba W«wae evwitwvw OrviilQ N. Engltodr 43 W. Oannta C. Ladford, WalM Laka ----- . ------ Lika Bobbie J. Wartield. 4V Jemet Willie O Turner, tit Balboa Trey >. Burnt, Union Lake _ ___________ Utica Cavandcr w. EdwaiUa. 33A S. Marahatl "ilUiam Perk*. Orio- WlUiain Data C H-, esi Hoaeard McNeill wr, Oavltburg -1* Hemdareoo ......... .. —..Jt, Welled Leke RKtwrd L. Grignon. Walled Leke Malvin C. KImmarar, tm N. Lekt ^'SoSKt W. MBiay, Si E. Longteltow Jamta JL Blthoa, Walartord Robart M. Celpua. IS Handaraon Charlta W. Eantllan, ZU Cairlagt Ct Laland R. Hagntr. union Lake Letter J. Mullln. M E Blvd. South Einane W. Bolyea. liZ Chorlee Lina Wimim H. Savlllt, Roehettar ^ WANT TO HEAR AN ODD TWING. AMOS THE Oef?V?T/HEN)T Of LABOR 6AY6 THAT EMaoV-MEMT IG AT AN ALL -TIME HIGH / BUT I NOTICE that the h/UMBEK OF NON - WORKERS STAYS V THE SAME AROUND HERE/ , eXACTLV ONE * Richard J. Ewing, li John Richord C. F^. ISM Ediaon Robart L. FrankHn, r--------- ----- K McGaei zr* Coarad C. Conti. Union Laka Clark E. Garaa, Orayton Pli Nioholat F. Klak II, Holly David E. McFhareon, t034 Meadowlewn Laanarii I. Jemat, Orchard Laka Lawranct Burnt, Union Lake Lyle M. Getbr. ftoz Jarocc Bryant L. Holland, S17 Ortondo PMIp A Malavie, Union Lake Cary L. ttawart, ZSTt Patrick Henry Malvin E. ——. !. SgUie, W ___ 0. Tarkat, .„ -- Peter 0. Hllata, 41 AAary Day Hollta C. Hunter, STS E. Blvd. North "•••r M. Kohnen, Clerkston ?:rd*LWW^ Rata A. Wtalta, Orion Alan L. WBItamt, S74 E. Bavaily Jamat A. BdckuA WataHord DavM A. Sdiang, DavltUirv »E'^&ETri^fS04b. bag Radithai. Black, ft ..................... Radittiet, Rad, Hothouie, dz. bch...l 50 Rhubarb, Hothouta, S-lb. box Rhubarb, --------- '•* - dined sharply in moderate trading earfy this afternoon. Losses outnumbered gains by about 700 issues on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jwies industrial average at noon was off 7M at 909.25. The market was lower from the start, although early gains by some blue chips gave hcgie that last week’s slide might be slowed. The flicker of hope died as blue chips sagged, dragging down the averages. The Assodated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was off 2.4 at 343.4, with industrials down 5.0, rails off .6, and utilities off A 4-point drop by. Du Pont was depressing to the market indicators. Also hurting the popular averages, American Smelting lost 2, Chrysler, Sews Roebuck, Union Carbide, International Paper, Penn Central and United Air Lines a point or more. A cheerful highlight was Sin- clair’s spurt of half a dozen points on a report of a significant oil discovery in Indonesia. Tte market was taking off from a loss last week of 35.30 points, its largest weekly loss since the dark days of August 1966 when there was a weekly drop of 35.91. Prices declined on the American Stock Exchange. Equity Funding lost 2, Fidier Governor and North Canadian Oils about 1 each. Airlift International, Asa-mera Oil, New Idria Mining, Commonwealth United, and & boney fractions, 2 --,---------—------------^---- I The New York Stock Exchange Fuel Suppliers 'Bilking U.S.' Defense Contracting Procedures Blamed WASfflNGTON (AP) - Prl-vate contractors delivering U.S. military fuel in Southeast Asia have failed to return millions of dollars worth of reusable steel oil drums as required by government contracts, according to Sen. William Proxmire. The Wisconsin Democrat, a consistent critic of what he says are wasteful defense contracting procedures, made the charge in a letter to Secretary of the Navy John Chaffee. CMery, ( Livestock DITRDIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) -(USDA)-Uve»loek: X Cettle IrfWL TrMIng en eleughler eteerj /4 36ft — ft G 6 47ft 47ft 47ft -f ft G 45 54ft 54ft 54ft -f ft G .22 X28 32ft 32 (lids.) High Low UstChg. I 29 45ft 44ft 44ft — ft I 197 aoft 88 08ft T 1 17 78ft 78ft 78ft + ..............) 24 33 32ft 32ft — .. Gen Mot 3.40 177 78ft 78 78ft -f ft ^, ,,, 109 38ft 38 38ft — I I 19 29ft 29ft 29ft - ) 28 39ft 38ft 39ft — ft b 38 92ft 91ft 91ft — ft 4 30ft 30ft 30ft -I- ft 1 85 84ft 84 .......... 30 52ft 511 194 16ft 161 S 27 31 291 2 X90 55 54 ...... 65 57ft 56ft 57 -)- ft 0 37 41ft 40ft 40% 12 21% 21ft 21ft >ugSPL 1.68 31 37ft ! -1-1% t Cf 1.90 1S&T2 ..'hot .Ota A Smett^Sa — Smelt wl Std 1 TBT 2.40 .. Tobac 2 AM KCp .30 AMK C^wI Z-Ji lArmco StI 3 . Armour 1.60 47 23ft 23ft mk -13 46% 46ft 46ft — 125 11% lift 11ft- 6 42ft 41ft 41ft- .. 109 14ft 14ft 14ft + ft 48 74ft 73ft 73ft-Oft 11 38 37% 37ft — ft 39 41 ............. .. ,.,j 42ft 4... > 1.30 13 30ft 30ft 30ft- 5 34 33ft 33ft . .. 216 22ft 21ft 21ft —1ft 171 45% 45ft 45ft — ft 79 43% 43 43 — ft 18 26ft 25% 26 -f ft 106 40ft 40ft 40ft - f' —H— 12 47ft 47ft 47ft —9 ' "• '» 70 70 —9 9 33ft 33ft —1 Reyn M HewPaA .20 21 33ft 3 27 49ft 4 — ft HoW Electm 33 38% 38ft 38ft — ft H 126 37% 36% 36% 4 *'■ 5 37 36% 37 4 9 34ft 33ft 34ft 4 Poultry and Eggs DETRqiT BOOS DETROIT (AP) - lUSDAI^raoe ^ CHICAGO XAP)" -- Chicago Mercantile Exchange—Butter steady; wnolMSle bufc 1 Ing prlonunchanM; 93 score AA 66; 92 1 A 66; 90 B 63ft; 89 C tO'/ti Cars 90 B 64; **Eagi‘ steady; wholesale buying prices uncMnged to ft hloheji >0 better gra««- -'“■ andix 1.60 33 4^ 41J enefFIn 1.60 547 ^ «1.60 II f, r SI 49 32% 32 — . . loroWar 1.25 44 31ft 31% 31% 4 V riStMy 1.20 104 64 63ft 63ft - ft jrJnswIc .02g iJa 19'/. 10% io% - ft ucyEr 1.20^ .5 27ft 27ft 27ft — % n ___ 4 45% 44ft 45ft 4 ft JohnMan 2.40 Xl9 77% 76ft 76ft -ft JohnJhn .00a 5 104ft 1W 103 - 63 14% 14ft 14ft - CampSp i.10 23 31ft 31 31 , 9,74. 9xu 9« Kan GE 1.36 KanPwL 1.10 , Katy Ind * KaysarRo .60 Kennecott 2 Kerr Me 1.50 KImbClk 2.20 21 35% 33% 33% -1 —— 28 38ft 30% 38% 2 27% 27% 27% 13 22ft 22ft 22ft 23 JO 36ft 36ft 36%— 57 50 49ft 49ft 4 14 106'/!i 106% 106% ... 19 75ft 75% 75% — 14 42ft 41% 41% -1 39 40% 39ft 40 —1ft 52 35ft 35% 35% — “ " CaterTr 1.20 AlaxMa .15e Am Petr .70e W,? 16 18 17% 17% ..... 11 32% 32% 32'A — % 17 26ft 26ft 26% 55 34Vi 34VI »*% S? 3 26ft 26% 26ft - 4 7 39% 38% 38% — V 7 36% 36% 36% .... 22 69ft 68% 69 -1 13 18 17ft, 17ft — ft 5 177% 17% 177% 4 I- 28 33% 33 33 —1 11 45% 45 45 — 17 67% 66ft 67% 4 % ?? tS‘-:^LOCkR'dA 2.30 121 44ft 44% M% Lear Sleg .45 LehPCem .60 Leh Val Ind Lahmn 1.39g LIbOFrd 2.00 LIbb McN L 26 237% 231/4 23% — 0 19 18% 187' 68 147% i4Vi 14f- 56 22 21% 21 %— 15 54ft 54ft 54ft - 18 137% 13% 13% — 25 43% 43 43 —1 35 747% 73 73% —1 62 84 83% 83<% 4 32 25 24% 24ft - _______ .„ 27 26% 25ft 25ft .. Rancolne .92 x36 39% 38% 38% -% Raythaon .50 60 41ft 40% 40% —1ft —10 217% 21% 21% - ft 102 16ft 16% 16% 60 46% 46 46% 77 78 77 77% 114 45ft 44% 4S — ft ........... 69 397% 39ft 39% 4 % ReynTob 2.20 136 43% 42% 43 ...■>■ RoanSel .47g 153 11% 11 11% 4 % Rohr Cp .80 52 35% 34ft 34ft -1% RoyCCola .81 f9 37<% 36% 37% 41ft RoyDut 1.89r 163 49% 48 48% ’ Ryder Sys 1 52 72% 72 72ft Safeway 1.10 x94 26% 257% 26, S«o.l{i M X3.4 3gk 3«k ____ 1.40 IS 40ta Wft 39ft larand ^ ^ ^ ^ isiE?i!j?i5o imr i’4iriS%,'.k+3ft iSftiri T ■' SbdCstL 2.30 24 44% 43% 43ft SearIGD 1.30 SO 44% 43% 44% ,4, 44,/, 427% 427/ii Shelton 2.30 1.20 109 37ft 36% 36% - SlngerCo 2.40 Smith KF 2 SouCalE 1.40 louNC^s l‘.40 ISO 26ft 26 36% — .. .‘ackaglng StauffCh 1.80 SterlDrug .70 SteVensJ 2.40 „) 48% 47ft 47ft- 187 20'% 20'% 20'% — 24 43% 43 43% -I- 29 23'% 22ft 227% _ i 190 6T% 67 67% — 97 19% 30% softs’?? ^7 IKS r+’ ■ ' 12 17% 17% 17%- ' *L Economic Slowdown Likely to Be Painful C||NNIFF Proxmire aides said the senator received information that only about 10 per cent of the costly drums issued over the past five years to private contractors to deliver oil products to U.S. miUtary bases were ever returned. They said the loss to the United States could run as high as ^00,000 a year over the five-year period. ‘BLEW WHISTLE’ John McGee, a civilian petro, leum inspector for the Navy whom Proxmire has credited with “blowing the whistle” i massive thefts of oil products Thailand, gave the oil drum in-fomoatitm to Proxmire. He said in an interview that large quantities of the 18-gauge steel drums—clearly marked with U.S. insignia—have found their ways into private hands. Chaffee, whose department was charged with procuring oil products for all the military services'in Southeast Asia, said he has referred Proxniire’s allegations to the Defense Department for investigation. ★ ★ ★ McGee said the drums, which cost about $9 each to make, are used by the private Interests who acquire them in Thailand “to manufacture a fantastic variety of items—from metal lawn chairs amd other furniture to all sorts of appliances.” By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - A concept widely accepted in recent days is Uiat the coming, eccmomlc slowdown will be accjomplished| almost painlessly. Acceptance of| the concept is understandable; it also may be] unrealistic. The u stanable aspect! is that critics' and analysts and general observers economic affairs still feel the Nixon people must be given every chance to prove they can control the errant economy. Adverse criticism, therefore, is being held to a minimum while the new administration tries to cope with the problems it inherited. NAIVE NOTION? What perhaps is naive of the populace is to accept the notion that Nixon’s highest hopes will be carried to a successful conclusion, when in past administrations such hopes have been frustrated. One of these hopes is that inflation gradually may be controlled without a resultant increase in .economics is always increasing, this might be possible. past experience, however, inflation and jobs have generally been related In a “trade-off” situation, meaning that as inflation receded the percentage of those without j(rt)s ncreased. Effects of the slowdown may be painful in many other areas also. The stock market, for example, may already be showing the strain. Investors foresee profits curtailed by rising borrowing costs and, in fact, the lack of money to borrow. ONE DEVICE Higher interest rates are, it should be remembered, one of the devices for slowing the economic pace. The housing market, although currently fairly strong, can hardly escape the consequences of rising rates. In some big cities mortgages already are hard to get. Some types of l(»ns automatically are turned down. The pain may be especially intense for corporations with big spending plans, for no matter how good their credit or how reasonable their requests, there may not be enough funds available. In fact, at almost any time now the nation’s big commercial banks are expected to __________ _______________ announce increases in the prime unemployment. And, since,rate. The rate, offered to the is now 7 per cent, the result of three increases in about thrijq months. ! EXPANSION VS. SLOWDOWN ; The problem of rising interest rates — and at the same time a slowing of the percentage by( which the money supply i^ growing — is that they come at a time when many corporations have enormous spending plans. Expansion and slowdown may soon confront each other. At least one recognizetj private analyst of corpora^ plans has measured a sharp increase in anticipated spendingl for plant and equipment during the past few months. Th^ money may not be there. ____r-.r---- knowledge of practlcaI'very best corporate customers. 59 7% 7'% 7% 177 31 . 30'% 30>% H Timp.Ei .72 2t% 27% - ftlficc last month issued a report 1% 4, 54% 56% I confirming McGee’s report that The General Accounting Of- 1.20 144 29% 29% 29% - % ______ 2.80* 193 81% TexETrn 1.40 " '65 95% 95" .... . - 91 37ft 37% 37ft - % 28 187% 18% IB'% — % 14 41ft 40'% 40%—1 30 37'% 37 37'% — '% 62 44ft 44 87 70 691 ________ 150 12% 12'% 12'% - 2 Tac’-v Twin Cent 1 711 39% Un Carbide 2 202 M% — ft Transam Cert-teed .80 Cessna A 1.40 BrazilLtPw 1 Brit Pat .57e CampU Chib Cdn Javelin CIntrama Craola 2.60a Data Cent DIxIlyn COrp Dynaleetfn„ EquItCp .05# Fad Resrees Falmont Oil Frontier Air Gen Plywood Giant Yal .40 Goldfield Gt Basn Pt Gulf Am CP HoomarW .82 Husky O ■*- 362 217% 21 131 9ft O' 71 16 m 11% « x'% 7 387% 38ft 38% 5 13ft 13'% 13'% 22 jift 22% 23ft 54 157% isft 15% 94 6% 6% 6%; 123 10'% 10 10 19 20% 19ft 197% 33 12% 12% 12% 16 97% 9ft 9ft ..... 31 147% 14ft 14% — % 109 10'% 9% *?%-'% 34 9ft 9'% 9% — ft 82 19'A 10% 19 -1-% 8 26'% 25ft 25ft —ft 26 23 22'% 22ft —1 61 15% W% 15^*-J Chris Craft 1 Chrysler 2 CITFIn 1.80 Cities Sve 2 ClarkEg ' * ClevEllfl 24 30% 30% 30%- 14 S7V4 56ft 56ft - 4 25ft 28’% 28<% - 43 25% 24% 24% - .. . 4 72 72 72 - '% 4 53ft 53ft 53ft - " 158 51% 50’% 50'% —1ft u 57 43ft 42% 43 36 667% 66 M , 56 33 32'% 32’% -1'% u 27 11% lift 11% - % Un Elec I.M .............. — “■ UnOIICal 1.40 UnlonPacIf 8 2?,. s sa=js»ilinl m «% 4j.% at least 5.5 million gallons of fuels had been stolen from U.S. supplies in Thailand. It blamed the thefts on bribery, forgery and collusion and said government laxity was, in part, responsible. ANOTHER CHARGE Sunday, Proxmire called for n investigation of another charge made originally by McGee: That the 32 29% »ft 3 47% 47'% 47'% -F % I —M— I to 25% 25ft 25% ?t? wcii«0 Jg = Hydromrtl Imper Oil ITf Corp McSc?Jry"5rt, U.iK 12'% 12% Mich Sug .10 23 ?'% ? 9 Mldiwast F|n Mohiwk Data :ouC3>l 1.20 Cold Pal 1.20 ColIInRad .80 Cololntst 1.60 §55gI's^.60 ComSolv .90& ComwEd 2.20 Comsat ConEdls 1.80 ssuNnz 13 40'% 397% . 30 67% 67ft 67%- 19 47'% 46'% 46'% - 18 567% J......- • x4 487% 4...------ X42 49% 48'% 48%- 16 30ft 30 ‘ 12 26'% 26 ^ VL fv — % ** ■a % x22 aft a% a'% — '% 10 46% 45% 44'% - ft 12 22ft 32'% 32% — % Xl6 51'% soft soft - ft » 47% 47'% 47ft — 19 43'% 42 42 -; 35 75 74ft 74% — lu i.Tv 48 44'% 44 44'% — ...... El 1.44 X59 3tft 30'% 31 + PhllMorr 1.80 19 59'% 50% 99'% + Phlll Pet 250 152 69% 68 68'% -1 '% Plh^WB 1.20 X34 TF/e 49% 49%-:% PMaroid 52 173 113'% 111% 113'% +1 V4 PPG Ind 71 37 35!% 35ftHlft PanhEP 1.60 ParkaDavIs 1 PannCen 2.40 PennDIx .60 Penney JC 1 PaPwLt 1.54 PennzUn .80 PepsiCo .90 Perfect Film PHzerC '40. PhtIPsD Treasury Position TREASURY STATEMENT WASHINGTON (AP) - The cash poal tlon of the Traatury Fab. 10, IW pared to Fab. 16, I960 (In dollars,): ®*'*"** 5500,165,763.06 4512507,364.13 Daposlts fiscal year ' 118,149564,271 been cheated of millions of dollars worth of petroleum products through failure to apply standard temperature conver-sim factors to fuel deliveries made between regions with widely varying temperatures. ★ ★ ★ Proxmire said he has evidence losses occurred because oil procurement contracts have ignored a simple law of physics —oil expands as it is heated. He said $1.2 million was lost last year on One contract alone procurement agreement with Asiatic Petroleum Co. * ★ ★ Chaffee told Proxmire letter earlier this month that there were no overpayments to contractors because “the standard practice of using temperature conversion factors has been followed ...” ‘MISINFORMED’ Proxmire wrote Chaffee that he has indications the secretary has bden misinformed. The senator gave this explanation in statement: ■k k k “If the U.S. buys 10,000 gallons of jet fuel at a temperature of 60 degrees Farenheit, the laws of physics tell us that we should own about 10,150 gallons at 90 degrees Farenheit. . W.25-7J . 262.49-1.1 GM Workers' Suggestions Pay Off Big Making suggestions meant record rewards for Geperal Motors Corp. employes in the United States and Canada last year. Awards for good suggestions netted GM personnel a total of $14,205,387, including $1,147,083 in Pontiac. i This exceeded the $13.6 million in awards in 1967, according to Louis G. Seaton, vice president in charge of the personnel staff. Seaton announced that 247,109 suggestions earned awards last year, including 100 maximum awards. Thirteen of the maximum winners received $10,000 by submitting suggestions in or after October, when the maximum was raised from $6,000. 9,667 LOCALLY Locally, 9,667 suggestions were accepted, with 180 winning awards of $1,000 or more and six winning the maximum. Since the suggestion plan was i initiated in 1942, more than $111 has been paid employes for more than 2.3 million suggestions adopted by GM. k k k Suggestions pertain to many aspects of the corporation’s operation including safety im- CLEVELAND (UPI) - Steel Magazine says shipments of finished steel from U. S. mills are being held up by freight car shortages and adverse weather. The magazine said that despite the hampered shipments »tMl-making operations are pushing ahead, reflecting continued strong demand. ★ ★ ★ Production of raw steel timated by the magazii 2,720,000 net tons in the week ended Feb. 22, up 0.9 per cent from the preceding week’s output of 2,697,000 tons. ★ ★ Steel Magazine noted the spurt in steel biiying appears to be slightly and demand less urgent than it late January and early February, indicating some consumers may have completed their first quarter procurement programs. PRICE TRENDS Steel noted all major producers have followed Bethlehem Steel Corp. in raising hot rolled sheets $12 and hot bands $14 a ton, at the same time revising extras provements, methods, 'c o s t for size and lowering pickling reduction, improved DlOlW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS 30 Indust .......y..; 20 Ralls J......./........... 15 Utllltlei ................ feifr*....................... gher grad*'raiia'!!!!."!! 6257- _____oond grade rails ......... 7557-. — 10 Publle UtiTitIC* ............ 79.71-051 10 Industrials ........ ....... 31.47-0.01 housekeeping, material saving and job improvements. Ford Workers Near London Cali for Strike LONDON (UPI)-Militant unofficial leaders of 20,000 workers at Ford Motor Ck>.’s huge Dagenham car plant near London yesterday reaffirmed their decision to. stop work today. The workers are demanding renegotiation of a $12-million package pay deal between the company and official union leaders. k k k Ford earlier offered to reopen talks with official union leaders tomorrow in a bid to head off the threatened stoppage. But unofficial leaders, meeting in Dagenham yesterday, dei cided to go ahead with the unofficial Strike. A spokesman for the group said after the meeting that about 11,000 Dagenham workers had already agreed to stay out. 129514.^28.11 X^3Si.397.973.751.71 347.721506.429.56 KSn""M*af.* V G®"* •“Tj®3M,gM,094.99 11,802523503.09, Week ^ . X-Includes 637,907,358.10 debt not sUb-Month Ago .. lact to statutory limit. Year Ago •mats .. . i... .. .i ................ 1960-69 High 10566,966594.99 11,012523,613.09 196059. Low . STOCK AVERAGES ComplM by The Assoeiatad Press 30 IS 15 60 400.4 203.2 153.7 343. 493.4 2035 153.2 345.8 506.2 210.4 1565 355.2 506.6 214.3 156.1 357.3 , 443.7 170.7 144.7 307.4 . 531.1 217.7 160.4 368.8 . 435.6 165.6 135.1 299.1 .. .493.3 209.6 159.1 342.4 . . .413.4 159.4 136.5 393.8 Steel Output Pushes Ahead Freight-Car Shortage, Weather Problems The toughening attitudes on lending were very evident in addresses made late last week^ by speakers at a , financial" forum of the National Industrial ’ Conference Board, a private,--nonprofit surveyor of the' business scene. One of the speakers, William'* F. ’Trdber of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, told bankers and others attending that they “will have to be more selective in meeting' loan requests.” DOMINO EFFECT When requests for money by such prime customers as corporations are refused of; granted only at record-high interest rates, then lesser customers all down the Une can, eventually, expect to find loans, proportionately more expensive and more difficult to obtain. , Some evidoice seems to be accumulating, therefore, that’ t h e much-forecast slowdown; that didn’t come as expected six-months ago may be proaching now, bringing with it; even higher interest rates and some difficulties for all. Some of the more obvious results are likely to be demonstrated by pressure on stock prices; on plant ex-pansion, on jobs, oh homebuilding and. In general, on borrowing. The real question is noL-whether there will be pain" associated with a slowdown.; That answer is clear: There will be. What nobody can say is:, how effecUVe the Nixon ad-' ministration’s aspirins will be. . In restoring former price standards, one producer raised the base price ()I hot rolled strip $6.50 a ton and adjusted extras while a second put the new hot rolled steet price into effect on hot strip, and revised extras. * ★ ★ Steel’s price composite on the 0. 1 grade of steelmaking scrap continued steady at $%.67 ton for the third straight week. Israel Planes Attack Two Syrian Sites : JERUSALEM (AP) - Israeli' warplanes struck in force across," the Syrian cease-fire Une today tor the first time since the 1967 war, bombed two Arab guerrilla bases and engaged in dog-fl^ts with Syrian MIGs neai . Damascus. Israel claimed its planes re* turned unharmed after shooting down one Syrian MIG17. Damascus radio said Uwee Israeli jets and two Syrian fighters were shot down. ' ' R k k Israel did not announce how^ many Israeli planes made the raid, but a spokesman said the" Syrians sent up about 10 or 12 MIG17S and MIG21s. This announcement and broadcasts from Damascus indicated it may have been the biggest Arab-IsraeU air clash since the 1967 war. College Student Voting at Place of Study OK'd News in Brief Delois Harbert, 24, of 17 Mich-jan told Pontiac police yesterday that someone broke info her residence and stole tWo color-television sete, valued at a total of $550. LANSING (AP) -Atty. Gen Frank Kelley ruled today that self-supporting college students can vote in the community in which they are studying. And he called for a change in election law to permit all students over 21 years of age to vote at “the place where they habitually sleep, keep their per:-sonal effects and have, their place of lodg|ig.” k k k Under present law, a student’s residence is described as the place where he resided prior to moving to a college community. “On a showing of relevant facts such as age, lack of parental support, family location, employment in the community and property ownership, a stu* dent clan register and vote in the community in which he is a dent,”'Kelley ruled. 1 “By such showing he has re- butted the statutory presumption that his voting residence i^ in that community where he resided prior to becoming a stu-' dent,” Kelley added. However, Kelley said “there 1 an unwise and inequitable quirk in our election laws which results in denial of franp chise t^ an intelligent and arr ticulate segment of our society —graduate and UMei*gradu«to college students over 21 years of age. Tf they were factory workers, nurses, young executives or even unemployed, they would have no difflculty in registering 1 voting in the college town," 'But, because they are in the ...jcess of preparing for a ca* reer, rather thw practicing one, they may be doiied access to the baliot box in the community in which they are actually living.” C—« THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1969 Chronology of Illness Ike: a Case History WASaan«6TON W — FoHow-i third selMire during recupera-|ng is a chronology of major Stion. Illnesses which have struck | Dec. 12, 1968 — Sgrgwy for fiMina' Ih:^ent Dwiglu D.'gall bladder removal. Etsoihower. * it * Sept. 24, 1955 - first heart April 29, 19« - Fourth heart attack, in Denver. attack, at winter home in Palm * * ★ Desert, Calif., listed as June 9, 1956 — Surgei7 fot “"’**‘* ” OeiUs, an intestinal in-! June 15 - Fifth heart at^ck, flammation. j described as "major,” at Nov. 26, 1957 - Illness first Walter Reed Army hospital in described as a "chill” diag-nosed as “small” stroke. j fourth attack. ,N»HE*RT*mCK Nov. 9, 1965 ~ Second heart!the momlng after he ad-attack, reported as "major,” Pressed the Republican National during vacation at Agusta Na-|convenUon by electronic tional Goif Club, followed by a hookup. ^ _ Seventh heart at- tackj at Walter Reed, after physicians were encouraged enough about his recovery to stop issuing bulletins on his condition. * It * Aug. 17 — Rapid irregular action of the heart developed and twice caused w* ciousneu but electrical treatment was used and Eisenhower rallied. He mained in the hMpital making a gradual recovery. Feb. 23, 1969 — Surgery for an Intestinal obstructio multing from scar tissue. ______ _______ ______ .... -snlna rSliNmet •! th« CMrtw Tswnihle a ...—,—.« Ortiind C#^y, MIcMgtn aoASO OS aevitw iabitinq IMka; Hw tetafflcM Tmthlp Be... ft itvitw wlirintM TumSw, Mwdi 4, imi WaSnntfay, MircS f, INfi IWur- SprlnottoM Ftbnian Hart's Blitz Continuing on ABM Net ANN ARpOR (APV-The proposed antiballistic missile defense system woiild “open a Paixtora’s box of troubles” RESCUED FROM FIRE — Twelve-year-old Robert Elliott consoles his mother, Joan, in Methodist Hoapltai in Philadelphia Saturday after they were rescued frcrni a fire AS WlraptitM which destroyed their home. The father and seven other children in the family also were rescued and treated for smoke inhalation. Admission of Notebooks at Issue Sirhan's Motive Still Untold New Clinic Truck Woes LOS ANGELES (AP) —itwo months before Kennedy’s shooting—two days before, and of hearing him ask which way the senator would leave the victory celebration. The' prosecution estimates it U.S. Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., said in Ann Arbor Sunday. Hart told a gathering of citizens at tile First Metis ' (%urch he does not believe the proposed ring of defensive missiles would do the j(d> for which it was intended arid called it "a losing game.” ★ , ★ ■ "'Ibe U.S.S.R. as well as the United States knows it has the technological capacity to go through any ABM'ilefense and the ABR< project could create enough mad momentum to start an all-out nuclear nrms race,” he said. 'It is unwise to build an .$80 billi(m project that won’t work and seven to 11 million Ameri-uis go hungry,” he added. Hart said that even before the growing controversy over the ABM system started there were 45 senators in oi^ition to the idea. Through nearly SO witnesses in death, "I’m planning on shoot-the Sirhan Sirhan murder trial, ing him.” the state has constructed a mo- Witnesses told of seeing Sir-. sale of a deliberate assassin han practice on a gunnery ine prosecution estuiuues u. TO UlQCInOS0 who revealed his Intent yet was range the day of the primary|Will wind up its case by mld- ^ able to kill heavily protected election, of seeing him in the!week while the defense says its Robert F. Kennedy. I Ambassador Hotel-scene of the!phase will probably last a week. Still to be told, as the trial went into the seventh day of tes- (ine Held in Attack n Ticket-Writers LIOAL NOTICf N*ltc« li Nrtkv flvM HmtIm to h* IWM by t Townthlb Mr--'— -------■- 4. 1H», •» 7:1# ..................... Tbwnihto Hlfb SchMl. lonticl . Cmc^ Ltk# BMd, to csniiSiM' GMC Truck and Coach Division has announced the installation ot the nation’s flrst computerised truck diagnostic clinic designed to handle both gasoline and diesel trucks. The clinic is located at the division Truck Center in Oeveland, Ohio, and was . d by manufacturing development engineers at the GM Tech Center in Warren. ★ ★ e The clinic is the first to use programmed test series an produce an automatically generated report. ’The system grestly improves the accuracy of vehicle testing, according to Martin J. Caserio, a GM vice president and general manager of the Truck and Coach Elivision. The test series includes possible total of 88 separate checks, which are divided Into five categories. ’They Include: I general Inspection; wheel axle and brake analysis; electrical and Ignition system check; engine performance; and diesel low-power option tests. ittol DlUrlct to a-t iWrM •• MlnM by W«tortor«“. 0«fcj#to).^cjw»y. ritot m ■bcfton is It-. ... .. ......V Boad. (W 417 i) Th* e 44S.M toM of Ih* N «IS.t •( tbt W Vt of Iht SW <4 of tocll (W 4*7A-n eon of tbo w to ^ too Sw <4 oi Waterford to Eye Fire-Fighting Aid, Volunteer Force oTsoefloo til toaneo $ . .. toonM N l#toS‘l4*’ w M rini" e ss.«o foi toonct N • SfMS'M" C ny 4M.O) Jonoory St, ABTHUa J. lAtLEY, Cborlor Toomthto of Wotoriw^ Oakland County. MIebtow Fob. 10, S4, tHOj Proposals to approve plans ■glfor a supplementary volunteer fire force and a contract with West Bloomfield Township for mutual fire-fighting aid will be offered at tonight’s meeting of the Waterford Township Board. The meeting Is scheduled fpr* 7:36 at Waterford Township High School, 1415 Crescent Uke. Old business Includes reports timony today, was the reason, a * * The answer to that, the prosecution feels, is omtalned in two black notebmks seized from Sir* Pasadena home after Kennedy was shot. ’The defense will fight their admission on grounds they were seized illegally. The notebooks, according to Mayor Sam Yorty, contain a “direct reference to the necessity to assassinate Sen. Robert F. Kennedy before June 5, 1968”— the first anniversary of the Arab-Israeli war. HATRED OF JEWS At 12:28 that morning, after addressing a joyous cro^ celebrating his victory in California’s Democratic presidential primary. Kennedy was shot. The defense claims that Sirhan—a 24-year-old Jordanian whose hatred of Jews goes back to childhood scenes of war—was intoxicated, in a trance, and pushed to the killing by Kennedy’s advocacy of more U.S. military aid to Israel. Its testimony will come mainly from Sirhan himself, his mother and brothers and from psychiatrists and psychologists. ★ In building a case of premeditation, the state has brought to the stand a trash collector who testified Sirhan told him nearly Pathologist to Testify in Shaw Trial Today Management Confab Held by GM Truck NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The defense called an Army pathologist to Clay Shaw’s conspiracy trial today for testimony on the official medical verdict that President John F. Kennedy was shot from behind. Col. Pierre A. Finck, who took part in the Kennedy autopsy, was summoned by defense law-Irving Dymond in move to oppose the state’s claim that Shaw and other conspirators set up a crossfire ambush for the president. ★ ★ ★ An FBI expert testified Saturday the shots fired at Kennedy were fired from behind and caused a confusing boom.” Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison said photographs and witnesses back his contention that the president also was hit by a bullet fired from in front of him. TRIAL IN SIXTH WEEK The Criminal District Court trial is in its sixth week. Shaw. 55, a retired New Orleans businessman, was charged with conspiring with Lee Harvey Oswald and others to murder Kennedy, shot in Dallas Nov. 22,1963. FBI ballistics unit in Washington, testified Saturday there was no evidence any other shots were fired except from a sixth floor window of the Texas School Book Depository behind Kennedy. ★ ★ ★ Frazier’s testimony covered reports by eyewitnesses that there were more than three shots and that it sounded like “back to back” shots by more than one gun. * ★ * Frazier said Oswald’s rifle fired high velocity bullets much faster than sound. "When a person is standing in front—in the general area in front of a firearm which fires high velocity bullets—they will hear a sound wave or sonic boom from the bullet itself before the report of the gun,” he said. NOTICE OF FUBLIC AUCTION Hto •! aiMIc melton, mmiml to Sm-IM m ol Act* M ol Fubllc Adi ol IW7 (C. L., me. »$7,II7) by to* Pe------ ItolK* 0*pl. M S*m Alim A Son> _________ 10# Colltor a«., eontlac, Mkhlsm. Sal* ol vanictoi will b* n*M on Salu * April a 1*«# *1 1:30 p.m. Chavrolal Van—3RI MS IN ( 1#47 Ch*»rol*l-3l» 47F 17S 3S7 1»40 Ford_OF ilVf»4«3« Owtaa-4IOt»l3#47 1»S» Ford N »YH 131 1U Fabruary 34, 1 Finck, the seventh defense witness, was one of the tiiree-man military medical team which performed the autopsy - , ' , , u. I More than 1,200 members of shortly after the body was flown on expansion of the township C o a c h back to Washington. fhp'^™inenranf'A^*«Mnmittee ™ra^*’'^*°" management team^ The medical findings, detailed for monev and' securities^®®*' **'® ‘**''*®*®"® in the Warren Commission for money and securities Conf er ence nort C0V6r&f!6. __Jl__ ’DeklntfliU V ''I.'’iPori, concludcd that Kennedy other business flated ‘ncl“.M., In to* W«l*rte?4 ”*?- d to* VSl4t d to* Sltto Towiwhip Hlgn Scliod. toc^tab d I4li; .15? iSSS, SLiiSL wS BiMbw** pStoWto a-1 MuniiM Dw*”:£l4SL9l2tor'^^^-®*" ^ . Olilrlel. a# Jtfd^ by ^«wiuhto[ i STATE OF MICHIGAN- DhltoKlr ------ - '* He said a key objective " modernization program that • will be “pushed vigorously in 4 ^ months phead.” / ’SUBSTANTIAL PROGRESS’ “We have made substantial • progress in this ,area already,’* 4 the general manager said n citing new warehouse and ^ manufacturing buildings, paved VS-*5iiiird‘i.MT»irtoi-P®*"*^ ®"** ™®*'® "* '* ficiently wganized producUpn I 14 ui-, cuMiwi «»•' •" “'■'‘•B bubitooiton d ■ cm areas. ! S'IS' -a trip through our plant wilH ____________ilS^it.^sISiT: Norm.* R. make it apparent that we have *' • aAbNAbD *®’*’ ^^®“ ARTMOR J. JALLE^Y.^ (s**i)*bo*coi»7_. jcVidence of our ‘Guarantees I Craftsmanship’ campaign and {other programs for progress.” 1 to R-1 Munipt* ow*fi.i I adtowt by Tmmahib: „ ^ = suarua-; A Pontiac man was arrested Saturday night fw allegedly assaulting a police officer after a number” of men and women attacked two officers who were issuing parking tickets, police said. Roy M. Hudson, 23, of 404 Bagley, was being held in Oakland County jail pending arraignment this thoming. ★ ■ ★ * Patrolman Santiago Sfima said Hudson hit him with his fist and threw him against a car. Serna and Patrolman Dennis line were issuing parking ckets at Lois and E. North Boulevard. Home in Pontiac Damaged by Fire A fire did about $4,500 worth of damage to a Pontiac home last night, firemen report. * A ★ ’The blaze started in bedroom of the home of Paul Rosales, 115 N. Sanford, at about 9 p.m. and did $3,000 damage to the building and $1,500 to its contents, according to firenien. No one was home at the time. PROTECT YOUR FMIILV AHD HOME with Mod*rn Woodm*n't NORMAN R. BARNARP, coi»y JuBb* *1 Fr*b*to, HELEN L HAMILTON, Ptpuiy Frobal* R*slioibl Bain, Ho»es. Bnithet. Belts. AUachments. Etc. ’’Rebuilt by Curt’* Appliances CtinA Our Own Parts” Complata wiNi CURT'S APPLIANCE Forlorv/lulhbriaed afcil# Dboier 6484 WILLIAMS UKE ROAD OR 4-t 101 I ......... ........— £ BIG BOY For Oaldond ^nly*! R»-tordad childran. ELIAS BROTHERS BIG BOY will not charga for your ceffoo. PtooBO holp tho rotordod childion by loavinR a contribution in tho QCAIK con-niator. Hio OaMand Bouirty Ato’n far Batardad CMMraa. 4M I. • MNa# Famdala, Mwh. CEUBRATHB OUR 750i AmVERSARV UnilTER RISCOONT SAVE-SAVE 10% . SELECT NOW FOR MEMORIAL DAT Beauty, QuafiSy, Craft$manthip ComploilM IndoBT DIaptay for Your Shopping Convonionco INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864H.Pony FEB4031 IRronso Ploteo for AAomoriol Paifc Camotorift at Bolow Comotory PricoB Where Should the Funeral Service Be Held? ... family to decide. Your preference is our guide — we will make all arrangements as you direct. With the Dohelson-Johns Funerd ■Home, you may make every decision. Our facilities are here fw your use and service. Our personnel will carry out your wishes. ^kone federal 4-4511 (PaJilunq On Our (Premia ASSETS Gosh on Hand and in Banks... United States Government Bonds... Municipal and Corporation Bonds.— Stocks . Mortgage Loans—Guaranteed-—FHA & VA.. Mortgage Loans—-Other Home Office and Regional Office Properties... Ground Rents —---------------------------------- Policy Loans_______.....------------------------ Accrued Interest and Rents-. Net Due end Deferred Premiums, etc... TOTAL.,_.„______________ INSURANCE IN FORCE *.. $8,662,750,722.00 LIARILITIES Statutory Policy Reserves. Policy Proceeds and Dividends Left with Company Policyholders Dividends Payable in 1969^________ Policy Benefits Currently Outstanding™...™__«... Premiums and Interest Paid in Advance.________ Accrued Taxes Payable in 1969___________________ Funds Held in Trust.......____________________ Other Liabilities . Security and Mortgage Loan Reservbs._ SURPLUS ................_______________ TOTAL.. /•' .■ \ 855 WEST HURON St. PONTIAC WESTERN- SOUTHERN LIFE 81st ANNUAL STATEMENT DECEMBER 81,1868 ... $ 35.019.805.10 r.. 120,315,537,32 .. 244,459,7^8.71 10.939.310.21 ... 984.992,770.39 114.602.180.42 25,890,497.55 10.748.38632 64.940.08936 9,463.126.78 63,887,641.27 .SI.685,2S9,I33J3 $1,443,378,618.00 25,487,200.80 17.279.205.91 6.037.320.50 7.455.074.67 5,337,581.49 16,119,fe3 14.420,785.07 16.738.810.92 ... 133,004,890.74 Jl.685*2t9j333l SURFLUS AND SECURITY RESERVES. . .$149,743,701.66 WESTERN-SOUTHERN LIFE INSURANCE COBIFANT aNaNNAD, OHIO • A MUTUAL COMPANY • WILUAM C SAFFORD, FRESIDMT For Wont Ads Dial 3344981 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1969 0-9 Crewof Pueblo to Tell of Prison l^avy Court to Hear Stories of Captivity CORONADO, Calif. (AP) - A Navy court of inquiry says it plans to hear USS Pueblo crewmen tell their stories of prison life in North Korea at the rate of dght a day lintll nearly ail 82 have testified. The stories of imiH-isomnent are expected to take two weeks before fim inquiry into the capture of the intelligence ship last year and the detention of its crew. Court proceedings oiter their sixth week today. Before the court adjourned for the Washington's birthday weekend, the Navy counsel, Capt. William NeWsome, said he would continue quizzing the men ,-^ut the U.8. code of Conduct for>risoners. Newsome had said befwe the court started fitat he felt the code was not applicable because Pueblo crewmen were not technically prisimers of war. Some of the crew have testified they wore uncertain durii^ their imiaisonment whether the code was applicable to what they considered their situation.” Newsome said he now feels the code applied in a moral but not legally punitive sense, ‘ the 10 Commandments.” The Pueblo case is excellent for testing tlie code’s aj^licaUl-ity during a cold war when men are not taken prisoners of war but are only “illegally detained,” Newsome said. Pueblo crewmen cannot be punish^ under the code directly, he said, but only for any vio-latiOT of “aid to the enemy” bans in the Uniformed Code of Military Justice. Questioning the crew about the code is “simply for the sake of (evaluating) the code and no other,” Newsome said. Death Notices survived by seven grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, Primary 26, at 11 a.m. at the nchardson-Bird Funlsral Home, Mdlford. Interment in Milford Memorial Cemetery. Mrs Rockefeller will lie in state at the funeral home. SnVENS, MAUDE M. Februaiy 23, 1969; 4510 Groveland Road, Ortonville; age 70; belov^ wife oif George Stevens; dear mother of Mary Alward, James and William Stevens; also survived by 14 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, February 25, at p.m. at tte C. F, Sherman hmeral Home, 135 South Street, Ortonville with Rev. Archie Woodward officiating. Interment in Bristol Cemetery, Flint, Mrs. Stevens wOl lie in state at the funeral home. SPARKMAN, FREDDIE LEE; February 21, 1969; 720 Hillwood, MUford; age 21; beloved son of Edwin ant Georgia Sparkman Sr.; beloved grandson of Mrs. Bessie Sparkman Clarence Jones; dear brother of Edwin Sparkman J r Funeral service will be held Wednesday, February 26, at p.m. at the Richardscm-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Interment in Highland Cemetery. Mr. Sparkman will lie in state at the funeral home. h^Aton^ __________________S IN LOVINO OP LIONARO T*rry. But you 4M not gp •ton*. So pin of w wont with you, Tlw my God cill«d you homo. Oot^nm ut stroneih ond courogo. Sul whi JN tOVING MiMORY of Lorry Mym who pauod away Fob. 24, Tho7‘lt a link daath can not savor. Lova and ramombranco laat foravar. Sadly mltaod by Annia Ruth A Patti Clark._________ IN LOViUg memory of Larry “......."-------' - -y Fab. 24, --------------------ill In vain. To havo to lovo, and than to part, la tho groatoat aorrow of ona'a haart. Tha yoara may wipa out many thing* But Ihi* thoy wlpo out novor. Tha mamortoa W tboaa haPPy day*. Whon wo wora all togothor. SMiy mlaaad by mothar, aiator and Death Notices CARTER, CHARLES D. February 23, 1969; 109 Mohawk Road; age 83; dev father of Mrs. Melvin Wedow, Mrs. Henry Beardsley, Theodore; Lawrence and Rev. R. R Carter; also survived by 11 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, February 26s at 11 a.m. at the Dondson-Jbhns Funeral Home. Interment in White Chapel Memorla" Gardens. Mrs. Carter will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 tonight. (Suggested risiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9). MASON, BEATRICE E. February 23, 1969; 231 West llenken Road, Rochester (formerly of Pontiac); age 79; dear mother of Mrs. Viola Cargal, John B., Charles E., William J., Gilbert A. and RichUrd W. Mason; dev sister of Mrs. Dora Wellivier, Fred, Wilfred and Ernest Stocker; also survived by 15 grandchildren and 24 great-gran d c h i Idren. Funeral service virill be held Wednesday, February 26, at 1:30 p.m. at the Spvks-Griffin Funval Home. Interment in ,Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Mason will lie in state at the funeral home, (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) STINSON, VERN; Fehruary 23, 1969; 1022 Cheriylawn Street; age 59; beloved husband of Sybil Stinson ; beloved son of Mrs. Mabel Monroe; dear father of Mrs. Sue McRoberts, Mrs. Laveme Lawrence, Mrs. Patricia Hebda and James Stinson; dev brother of Mrs. Eleanor MUlv, Mrs. Maxine Terry, Mrs. Jane Bowhall, James, Armcmd and Donald Stinson; also survived by 16 g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, FelHTiary 26, at 3:30 p.m. at the ^arks-Griffin Funval H(une. mterment in Perry Mount Pvk Cemetery. Mr. Stinson vrill lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) MOODY, MRS. EDYTH February 21, 1969; 3 97 Franklin Road; age 84; dev mother of Mrs. Margvet Carr; dev sister of Mrs. Beulah Whitfield; d e a grandmother of Mr. and Mrs. Collins Wallace; also survived by one great-great ‘ granddaughter and four greUt-great - great - grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, Februaiy 25, at p.m. at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Moody will lie in state after 3:30 p,m. today at the funeral home. RATLIFF, VIOLET ELAINE; February 24, 1969; 13 70 Pjarkway, Waterford townsnip; age 51; belpved wife of Rufus Ra^ff; dev mothOr of Mrs. Lavalee Waynick; dev sistw of Mrs. Dorothy Miller; also survived by four grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Spvks-Griffin Funviu Home. Dial 334-4981 Pontiac Press Want Ads KM FAST ACTION ADS RECilVED SY S P.M. WILL BE PUBUSHED THE FOLLOWING DAY t-O^ 3-D^ a-Oatr* $2.00 S 3.SY S 3.99 2.00 2.7A S.SI 4.90 5i70 2.S2 3.70 4.39 S.02 9.12 S.A4 10.26 •.aT; 11.40 10.94 12>7 14.59 diofgaof SOcai, M *1 PaaHoc Prai The Pontiac Press^ Ctotoiftod OmcHtiiMni FiwnBAJILTOSPAt. to MeniMtaM IN M8MORY OF_Rom.,DJ2I Wti6 paaaad away Faiiruary 24,1«M. You art no* forgottan tovad ana. ROCKEFEUER, ROSE L-; February 22, 1969; 2 24 Houghton, Milford; age 84;! dev mothv of Mrs. Maxj (Ruth) Thompson, Paul,! Norman and George I Rockefeller; dear sister of Miss Rachel Lanstra; also| ta tong Va will J now, our haarta ara Luigi and Frand OanI; daughter Elvira Danl. wa mtoa you very mudL________ WEMiORY of. Larjy d what ha tlioght baaT, na out hla arina around you. and whiaparad coma and rmt. Tha Goldan Oata that opanad, wanwd m a yaar ago today. And with farowalls unapokan, you gantly paaaad away. Soma day wa hop* to meat you. Soma day wa know not whan. To put our arm* around you. Never to part again. Sadly mlaaad W Linda, Bill and granddaughtara Dana, Elliabafh. IN LOVING MEMORY oTour hus-band and father, Leonard Tarry who paaaad Fab. 24 194*. God aaw you growing waakar. So Ha did what Ha thought bast. Ha cama and stood baald* you. And whiaparad coma to rest. You wlahad no one a last farawail. Nor avan said o^by. You ware gone tiafora wa know It, And only Ood.towwo wmy. There Is no time that wa could sat tar parting. Wo who must ramain, Ara never ready for such pain. Evan our prayers would be; Not yet, not yet, SlSTaWorgrio^^atay. , Wa muat ballava whan falls a blow That wisely God haa willed It to. Sadly mlaaad by wHa, Maxine and daughter Barbara._________________ IF YOU ARE HAVING rilNImin, _ Oa in' 10 W. SHOAFF, DOROTHY E. Februairy 23, 1969; 519 Baldwin, Royal Oak; age 43; beloved wife of Robert H. Shoaff; beloved daughtv of Mrs. Gayle Neff; dear mother of Mrs. Gevge (Gayle E.) Crossley, Mrs. Thomv (Mary E.) Lowry, Mrs. Roger L. (Jacqueline R.) Lowry and Terry L. Shraff; dear sister of Mrs. Eileen M. Samosik, Mrs. Helen Newsted, Mrs. Thelma Bowser, Mrs. Sunday Claybaugh, Frank, Julian Daniel, Hvold, Relph and James Neff; also survived by two grandchildren. Funer^ service will be held Wednesday, February 26, at 2:30 p.m. at the C. J. Godhardt Funval IRnne, Keego Hvbv. Intermeitt in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Shoaff wiU lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) SSS**' HALL FOR RENT. RECEPTIONS, maatlnga, partlaa. FE 54»16 attar Parisi Antiques Announcing The Opening at New Location MARCH 1, 1969 796 Rochester Road Oxford, Michigan 6 mllai north of Rochkstar Hours: 9:30 to Tuesday thru Saturday 12:00 to 5:30 SundaV* CLOSED MONDAY QUALITY REPAIR SERVIC6 For your fine lawalry HUDSON'S / PONTIAC MALL YOUR $$$ BUY MORE FEBRUARY HOME SALES HUDSON'S BOX REPUES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: C-2, 05, OS, OS, 016, 0X4, 025, 029, C-30, 037, 072. COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS________*74-0441 C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac tor SO yoara 7* Oakland Ave._FE 2-0109 SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME • ■ Service" FE 0-9200 VoorheesSiple CametBry Lots 2 LOTS IN White Chm wpal, I 3M-9S7t AVOID GARNISHMENTS Gat out of debt witp our plan Debt Consultants 014 Pontiac State Bank Bulldino FE 8-0333 Uit and Fownd LOST: ONE PAIR woman's Brown bifocals, vicinity Saginaw and ^ Lowranca, call FE 4-2617. Reward. LOST: 1 dangling lrradaacsnt_purpto atons earring,* betwasn Tha Pontiac , Praaa, S. S. Kreagat or Naumoda Shop. Pltaae If Ibund (kaapaaka) return to PBX operator at Pontiac Praaa or call 334-4900. __________ LOST: VICINITY SASHABAW- Palton area, small ------- ------- dog. light tan, dark .. to Dexter, childrens' i call 334-2179. _________. ■ LOST - GIRL'S SILVER SpsIdkl IP bracalet. "Kim" engraved on front I. Snowappto : North aide ol Parks Lake. LOST:" F^AAALE MALTESE gray, with ^11 around NarTiKk, tsan Ip vIciMty of Cloveaa, a taw days age. FE 0493S._____________ LOSfi TOY WHITE POODLE, vicinity of M-59 and Whittier St. Reward. 6744102*.___________________ LOST: TAN AND V 1 PART-TIME MAN $50 WEEK Frae dcnrio. high . paid va’iar.! Jrfatiic AUTOMATIC SCREW machine operator and lathe apwaigr. Soma txptrlanca prafarrod, will train, days only. Now plant, oxcallant conditions. Bamla Inc., 14S0 Soutar Blvd., Troy, Mich.______________ Assistant Department Managers tut fulura opanlngt for marehan-dlaa Apartment managers In high volume dapartmant. Sand complata rtauma or apply at: PERSONNEL DEPT. 2ND FLOOR Montgomery Ward AUTO PAINTER Muat be axparlsncsd, plei raaume te Pontiac Preaa, Box C-3. BROWN AND $HARPE IE X p a r i e n c e d single spindls automatic screw machine — set up and operate. Day shift ■ overtime - fringe benefits. 564-5173. BORING MILL OPERATORS, FULL FRINGE BENEFITS. APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE. SUTTER PRODUCTS CO., 407 HADLEY ST., HOLLY. BUS BOY WANTED tor pai employment. Apply In perai at Franks Raataurant, ---------6 p,m. BRAKE MECHANIC MUST have a minimum of 2 year* experlanc* In brakes rallne. Excellant working conditions. Union atop. Bonus in-.. --------------1 ^ .1.— i. Ai^y jron, Pont Store, 146 W. Huron, P Bridgeport Operators EXPERIENCED Day shut, standard banefita, *x-cellant working conditions. CLYDE CORP. BEAVER PRECISION TURRET ond ENGINE LATHE O.D. Thread Grinders 1970 BIG BEAVER, TROY An squal opportunity amployar ~BEAVER PRECISION PROCESSED MEN TOOL DESIGNERS 1970 BIG BEAVER, TROY An Equal Opportunity ^—" CITY OF BIRMINGHAM Has tha following proftaslonal positions available: assistant CITY ENGINEER -Start $12,000413,000. C.E. Dagraa required. Admlnlatratlva and CIVIL ENGINEER — Start *9.000-$10,000. C. E. Dagraa rwulrm. Field and design work In municipal Improvamenta, atraeta, sldawalks, aewars, water, parking good ftold » ictlon. May d An Equal Opportunity Employer APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE, 151 MARTIN STREET, BIRM-INGHAM, MICHIGAN 644-1000. COLLEGE MEN National concern now hiring 0 college men for part time employment. Mon hired will bo completely trained by the. company tor mitton and be developed tor full time management during the aummar. Must be able to work 3 days a week during af^arnpon shift. Earn an excess of *3500 this summer. Pay to start will be determined In Interview. .Call Mr. Kelly Clark Oil Co. Has A Deolership Available This station last yaar netted S9.000. Business Is atlll there, need l sharp dealer. Phone LI 0-7222, after 7 p.m. 7"“*” CAN OFFER A Pemiananf lab to an older man who can be on tha lob every night. No hoovy i p.m. to 7 a.m,, muat be. sober and able to f—' ellabto, 1 goto CENTERLESS GRINDER Job siho p experience -set up and operate. Day shift - overtime - fringe benefits. 564-5173. COOKS, TOP WAGES, paid Blue Cross, Ufa Insurance, sick time, and vacation. Apply 114 Orchard Lk., Pontiac. _____________________ CLEANER PRESSER, experlanccd. Flash Cleaner, 339 W. Huron. COOK, NIGHTS, muat be fully ex perienCto on broiler, top wages 1-- MnHUInn, DUffy S, . working co on Like. 34344 .CARPENTERS, ROUGHERS Union toumeyn™ Apartments Ei river. E. M. Noian s-onira^imy x.u. 0!30 till S. Call 350-M70. Eve. and waakands 6244405 or 453-3482. An Equal Opportunity Employer. DRIVERS, WIPERS NEEDED. 149 W. Huron DUE TO THE expansion In these departments Sao Ray boats has openings In tha ataemblv, plastic, repair and angina department. Good chanco for advancement along with compiste fringe benefits prt^ram. 925 N. Lapeer Rd., Ox- DESiGNERS SPECIAL-MACHINE 50 hour week, benefits, and va( PROGRESSIVE WILDER msTaii«r» iwii Tima, ten ask for Mr. Black. ___________________ FULL TIME COUNTER CONTROI Clerk. Must ba reliable, outgoing Ixmdabla. Apply In person, 12 noto to 6 p.m. viteUiar Cue Club, 1662 S. foreman wanted «or FULL TIME COUNTER control clerk, must ba out going, reliable and bondabto. Apply In parson 12 inoon till 6 PM. Walker's Cue Club, 1662 So. falagraph Rd. ^PERIENCEO PARTS man nead-ad, salary om, alto need parts chaser. Apply Franchy't DIastI Sarvica, S67S Auburn Rd., Utica, Phone 731-3300.___________ EXPERIENCED CARPENTER and EXPERIENCED adrvlea atetloh at- Serv Pont trvica, 10 N. Williams Lake Rd., FULL TIME clerk rOlall store, aOto working conditions, fringe benefits. FULL TIME JANITOR - DAY WORK — GOOD SALARY AND FRINGE BENEFITS. Heljp WuHied Mole__________6 FULL TIME GRILL man. All shifte, apply in pirson. Hollywood Roateurant 1001 Orchard* Lk. Rd. FURNITURE MOVERS Exp«riencttd In Kindling effects. Must bs Mptnoat In person ^ S5$M BiUal lTsX GROUNDS KEEPER , Birmingham area private school. Immadiate opening. Full time lob April through October, Your option t« wnrk Inside or taka leave, bar through March. Call Mr at Ml 6-ftll. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, perlanced, mechanically Inclli local refsrencas, full or part *■ Gulf, Telegraph and Maple. Graphic Arts Sales METRO AREA. SALARY, COMMISSION, COMPANY CAR AND EXPENSES. EXPERlBNCi HELPFUL BUT NOT NECESSARY. SEND COMPLETE RESUME TO PONTIAC PRESS BOX C-4I. GOOD JOB, good pay, honatt work. GRILL MEN BUS BOYS For full or Good wagai. — tion with pay ai HELPI Man 35 yaari or youngar, with mechanical knowledge Interested In becoming an automottva machinist. Good pay and bansfiti. Let's got Apply In person to 1570 Baldwin HARDWARE SALES AtiO STOCK Clark. Apply Pontiac Press, C-26. HAVE OPENINGS FOR 1 Sscurlty Officer, over 21 .- --- HUNTER & OAK STANDARD BIRMINGHAM Job opening for part-time preferably with lom- •—-i from 6 p.m. to 12 f INSURANCE INVESTIGATOR, full Inspector Technicians Concrete products manufacturer has need tor young ambitigua energetic high sebooi graduates who have mechanical aptitude and Interest In Inspector technicians toipfoL^Tfutfe?'’ii!3uto’?ato^ testing, outdoor Inspecting and keeping accurate records. Opportunity to advance. Complete package of fringe benefits. We will train the Inaxparlanced applicant If he meets the qualifications. To apply call 625-2625 (Clarkston) and state that you wish to apply tor tha Inspector technicians position. LATHE AND MILL Operators and trainee Excellent opportunity tor amptoy-ment In new machine shop In Troy. Schadultd tor operation May 1969. Phone WE 3-0926 for Information or apply In person B:00 LABORERS SEE MANPOWER Man with cars also nototo Report ready for work 7 a.m. 1388 WIDE TRACK W. An Equal Opportunity Employer LARGE COAAMON CARRIER needs mechanic with gas and dtoael ax-perlence. Call HaraM Carter at S641344 or 6SF3I16. An Equal Opportunity Emptoyar. LOCAL CLUB NEEDS AAATURB qualified malntanance ^ partonnal. Steady work, year round. Vacation, Blue Croaa-Blua Shield, plus other benefits. Own transpoiTatlon helpful. Call Mr. Fallows, Ml 4- MAN TO LEARN Machinery repair must be willing to work. Wa wl train. Apply Pontiac Laundry Dry Cleaners, 540 S. Telegraph. LIFE INSURANCE SALESMAN $10,000 TO $25,000 perlence. Complete training In our rewarding and lucrative business, with a generous long-term training allowance up to I10,il00 per year to start, plus opportunity to earn ad- talnabls In 7 to 10 years. MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES Thera Is unlimited management and ar--------.-.-u Machine Operators Some experience necessary Drills, mills, grinders, gear cul '—*—* ""d opportunity ont for right r shifts. Equal LYND GEAR, INC. Subsidiary of Condec Corp. 361 South St. Rochester. Mich. MECHANICS r* and trucks, also helpers. Ap-’ KEEGO SALES 8. SERVICE 10 Orchard Lake Rd.. Keego AAATURE MANAGEMENT minded male tor position dealing with dental patients, must possess common sense, pleasing ap- MACHINE LAYOUT MEN AND DETAILERS. FULL FRINGE BENEFITS, DVER-TIME, APPLY PERSDNNEL OFFICE SUTTER PRODUCTS, 407 HADLEY ST., HOLLY. FOR INSTALLATION -Crete steps, must have drivers llceme, also man for Inside work. Concrete Step Company, . 6497 HIphlandRd.___________ AAALE BOOKKEEPER needed. Must be able to carry books thru trial balance. Sand complata resume to Pontiac Press Box C-35._ , Mens Clothing Salesman ExctllonI opportunity for a mature mart who has had some sates ex-perlenet. We will train. Good earning potential. Many cortipany bdnetlts. / Apply PERSQNNEL DEPT. 2ND FLOOR Montgomery Warci An equal Opportunity employer PONTIAC MALL MEN National corpprstlon ymnd tn*n to procure poVltfons. Must be at.,,, polllically mIndM. Only arc sharp, Intelligent appearing and who can Hein WaBted Mule * MECHANIC, GOOD ALL AROUND Man, fringe bananti, good &?’or,’5ir2's?'*uTO Ask tor Sarvica Manager. MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY Has Immadiate opanlngi In tl Pdhilac and surrpundlhg area tor: STATION uiSTALLBR , ^ LINEMEN \ SPLICERS gUILDlNO SERVICEMEN high atarting wagu sxcallant banalns • full pay during company Make application 1:38 i 4:30 p.m. Mon.-Frl. at 90 S St. Pontiac. Michigan. ** nattonwida Ball sysTam opportunity employer. 1:30 a.m. un ! 90 SDuIlt La 1. Parh at t n and ab aqi NIGHT AUDITOR, older man with soma bookkeeping ax parlance pratorrad. Knowladga of NCR 4200 helpful. Will train to our system. Contact Mri. Anderson or Mrs, McDonald Holiday Inn of Pontiac. 1001 S. Telegraph. 3342444. _ PRODUCTION WORKERS WANTED, full time or pari time In tha Rochester area. Call 651-5058. PDRTER Bloomfield Corman, 353-1240. will train 6 . management athletically or and, neat start Int- ■ $155 per’WEEK Call Mr. Nixon 332-3825 before 2 p.m. Plumbing and Heating Salesmen WE have an excellant carsar opportunity for man who have had soma experlanca In the plumbing and heating ftold, either In In. stallation or salsa. Wa wHt train you In selling. The earning potential In this field Is unllmitto. Many company benefits Including profit sharing. Investigate tha op-portunTlIas today. Apply PERSDNNEL DEPT. 2ND FLDDR Montgomery Ward PDNTIAC MALL PORTERS — New Butek Dtalarship. opportunity, Across from Tol-ra Shopping Canter, 28S0S iraph, Southtlald. __________ PDRTER iw car daalarihip, and raltobla. ax|i 1, Michigan No floaters. Apply DAKLAND PART-TIME HELP TO V Delight, ** PERFORMANCE CAR SALESMAN to sell tha hot scot pack from Dodge. Call Mr. BrUgai, Lloyd Bridges Dodge, Wallto Lake. 624 RELAXED SALESMAN, sccuatomad to high living standards, but can handle people. Phoha for Interview after 2 p.m. 3541727 or Sst., 534 IS tor RETIREE WANTED to work 2 a weak. Rafail atora and REAL ESTATE SALESMAN At Partridge Real Estate branch office. Commarclal and Residential. 200 mlllloni In listings throughout Mich. Write your own paycheck with Michigan's largest raSI estate offices. All Inquiries strictly confidential. Talk to Ward E. Partridge, 1050 W. Huron St., Pontiac. Ph. 334 3501 or 9640759.________________ Real Estate Classes ting taken n prapar4 ......................aafasman's examination. Class will be held '— 7 to 9 p.m. Contact Mr. f Von Raafty 3401 W. SURVEY CREW HELPER — outdoor work, high school graduate, will train. 651-72S1. SHIPPER-WAREHOUSE MAN for sporting goods warshousa Call Stalding, Ml 41556. ______ SERVICE STATION, mUsT bs able to drive wrecker, aftr--------- Blrmlngharn area. 6449776. SELL THE FINESTI Experlencad Automobile Salesman nasdedi Small lalas tores, finest pay plan. Contact George Btoick at 332-8101. BEST DLDSMDBILE INC. 550 Oakland Ava.______FE 2-8101 SERVICE STATION A1 ITTENDANI ■ry. Must b ---- In person batw—.. and 9 p.ni. XSabll Sarvica Stetli Long Lake and Telegraph, SHIPPING AND RECEIVING HELPER Town and Country Furniture, 4( -------- _ Bloomtlald HI SERVICE MANAGER A real opportunity for an aggressive with a progressiva new car lots of bonatlts. SHEET METAL tabrlcators, welders, multiple torch flams c u 11 a r operator. 65I-9290._____________________ wage, call 335-9261. suranca, Hod's Radio and Ilfs In-TV. FE Help Wanted Mole 8 WORK by the DAY Variety ot'' FREE Factory and warehouse lobt Available with dally pay. APPLY 6 A.M. TO 6 P.M. EMPLDYERS Temporary Service, Inc. TRAINEES National AAA-1 compi new office In Pontiac. .. openings tor 4 young men. Pleasant personal Interview work to start, leading to supervisory positions. Must bo high school graduate. Average earnings tl45 per week. For personal Interview, call Mr. Johnson before 2 p.m. 965- 0561. __________ fREE TRIMMERS, year round employment, goto starting wage, must ba quatlllto, 5899 W. Maple, Orchard Lake. TURRET LATHE Day shift for experlencad oltorat^rs. ,Steady employment with full benefits and overtime. ACME MANUFACTURING CO. 1400 E. 9 Mile Rd: Ferndato Va Mile W. ot 1-75______56415SQ Used Car Porter Fin# working conditions with many benefits. Paid Blue Cross, paid vacation plus other frlno* bonafitt. If you are machanlcally Inellnad you can qualify for this fine position. Apply In parson at: _ 3275 W. Huron St. Restaurant. 2490 Dixie Hwy. WELDERS WANTED. Capabla Of arc welding. Goto pay with fringe as. Apply McDanlal Tank atturing Co., 714 N. Sagfnaw, 'Jtqlly._________ _______________ ‘ WANTED — MANAGER tOr 2S UFlt west side apt. bldg. Salary, front ...... lights, heat turn. Rstlroa Raft. ........ ' WANTED SALESMAN Wa are looking tor, a ulMman who Intends to make *15,000 a year. An exptrlancad used car satasman who Is willing to work and desires to Incrtaio hit earit-Ings, can qualify lor this i aelllng new and used can modern, .progressiva CM ship. Mah fringe banaflts, Ing hospltelliatlon, — j^lan -—■* • tla™ Bulek,'I Rochester. WINE SALESMAN To develop new butinasa , Oakland Co. Excalient opporlunl< Fringe banallts. Jordan 46936. , In a s. Saa N Help WaitfeJ Malt 8 WASHROOM HELPtRS, full or part tima. Pontiac Laundry. *40 $. Tolayaph. WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS Gas or Diesel. Liiierai pay, insurance furnished, retirement and full benefits. See Mr. Coe, 8 a.m^ to 4i30 p.m. Monday thru Friday. GMC Factory Branch Dakland at Cass FE 5-9485 YOUNG IMAN POR g^ul htipi In retell tira atora. Steady pay ai fringe bahatlts, opportunity f person, 4S20 Highland Rd., ^tlac. YOUNfipiAri^te^ butldlng buainttt. Call batwaan O-jT 4242671,_________ Help Wanted Female 2 TELEPHDNE GIRLS 6 to I toura ptr day. Salary plus commlatlon. Call Mrs. WIxom, 674 2233, 9:30 a.m.-3;30 p.mJ*______ 3 LADIES FOR GENERAL office cleaning. Birmingham area. Muat have own transportation. Pontiac Press Bax C-19^________ . AUDITOR Recent promotions have resulted In a career opening for an experienced ouditor in the executive level. Candidate must have experience in bank operations, with solid monogement background. Ability to estob-lish and implement qoditing procedures a must. A degree is preferable, but not mandatory. NO TELEPHONE CALLS PLEASL SEND RESUME TO: BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD 6ANK P.O. BOX 500, BIRMINGHAM, MICH. 48012 An Equal Opportunity Employer Help Wanted Male Top Money for Top Drivers... at North American Van Lines It you own w pulling a 44tM Mist? 1 North American Offers: 1. Financial asslstanca In purchasing of tractor 6. Bonua awards and mtrehandlta for quality pariormanca Write North American Van Lines, Department 4, Fort Wayne, Indiana, or phone 219-742-1423 for applicotion and further details. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 6Help Wanted Male ARE YOU INTERESTED IN A CAREER INVOLVING Communications? Mechanical ability or electronic, radar, communications background very desirable but not an absolute necessity. We train you in the classroom and on the job with full pay. AS A VETERAN You may qualify for our ON-THE-JOB training money allowonce through the VA. This is extra money given you by the V.A. above that which we pay you. Enjoy eipployment with these benefits-. • Paid Vacations • 8 paid Holidays a year • In less than one year Free Medical and Hospitalization • Full pension plan • A self rewarding career • Job stability and security • Stable hours • Rapid job advancement A FUTURE /®\ Michigan Bell Telephone Co. , THE CAREER PEOPLE APPLY BETWEEN 1:38 A.M. and 5 P.M. MONDAY THRO FRIDAY ROOM S-101, NORTHWEST OFFICE CENTER SOUTHFIELD Southtlald at 914 Mila PHONE 357-4473 105 E. BETHUNE (CORNER JOHN R) 23500 MICHIGAN AVE., DEARBORN (NEAR WEST60RN) 1 ^ PHONE 274-9313 j o»io THBi PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1969 For Wont Adi Dial 3344981 iSflUliSW rtlmitXi X UDY n “ M iMtl, wrnt ny. frlnt* M <»r r >.t«t CLC»K FOR ICRVICI RtMlHWHH-Abt* ID tVRD m* RDIWtr RtWIt, 41 hpur DiDDti. Nd MturMyi. AwMy ?5h'o«Dc66iit, odiTsKrs^ uniS^'L•i^#.^■Mj A RiAfuRl WONXAN TO bO hywp clIrk TyTilY, wirt fimiT wmi*r, ® ^ wStawT^' ******^ *"• s«s.fe.r“r * ~| wffiss. tsMs ffi AAA.1 WDlDrtorR Rltn WnMM CinMr, I MmO«O.Y0UN0 •nod r*r. «»SM or « M«c J^nt. ____ MOITiW F&TrRAllt-t^^ Apply it 114 Of^hDrt tk-^WIIIK^ rF 'VOUliA'i^iSSl'TCS. - i2ri.!srD;r^rri«3!S 'cW'dJwraro'vs tl, Orpylpn PIpHii. ___ KEYPUNCH OPBS!0RS Timp. A^tfmiMnli. Ml MiHM CALL JEAN JOHNSTON RRMMK. WOCUft MUtT .» SSjtf* CdII VI ClMiMrt, 114 Mtin tl.. RdcIm *W5.'V!£S J* »*■ y ^ » toFliiput Atwctet *!.ji*^iliiC‘rfn.Sli"^ Si •SiD It ^'mcI rMR.' nwIntaSn RuiWbia wit m«k* WMll ripDlrt. A4A^D.tJr.«0 iMIIMm I FIGURE FANCY Opponwillv Mu«. OTMl ipDt tor t^lwy^Hii flpurD aplHwP* '— idNERAL OPFICf; TMi PRCe lob •CNIAMIN R. BACKUS PRIVATE PARTY, WANTt.l tpinlly mOAMlfATIOM. TMi WCHARDll 4tj|. i.. y>pwxs~ .’iJ?l!S.»T 'tdMrttncrtSn l4 Dini. *• * PJ"»' »v.m.»lu.«. 6»jo g2«£|gs; $625 DENTAL AtSItTANT. N* McptrlmeD ...... ■“ ClarluMn--- *“■" » •« ptMlitf P-mdAffi;-- AMERICAN GIRL In Dll Dl WE NEED EXPERIENCED: SKiwNirlm SnP OletDphOnD Opr». - Jr., tr., tttl. ClDrk* 0?53y APdInp «»tlt.) ComplomDiDr 0*r». BoDkkMptn A*d'«SS?Wl2’«;ill4 *^**m’t. AP»mt PiDM. Rm. 1M phone «4MMS . Birminplil Incidintolly, wt pay HolMtyt. VdcdIIom. EwiBm • HiaMtiRpiw- AUTO DEALER w««» >«l»Wl*Wi ClwDrlirSmoiSi^ fetf?oWi.kV lABYliWiTT io aW i» » I*m, «wn trDMporttllDB, I rtlll _•! Iwmt. Phon* tfttr l:lt EXPERIENCBD~ WO'MA'.. pwitril oHIcd warX. PE IPIIt. EX'PESrENCBO WAITREIl"POR momlna and alltrMxm (hint, no nlghti, SvMliyt or Holldayt'’ MDPlt-TDWgrtph «ft(, MMUt. EXPfKIi'NCfO INSPECTOR ' for StrlyrllS proprom. Birmingham Claanart IIJII. Woodward. Ml 4^Wt. PULL Ti^ offiCK, Mahira woman ■ (hap work. Apply Oanaral Lock TclY PUNCH OPERATORS (10) SENIOR ONLY pSfla?'^r5*'*2Bl2lil •'L&tli rontwc dfiM* fnMSMit wtniiHB g!»»..rwrv.«!’M raiat. PMata call MM Erpalu. KELLY GIRL Of ^Mlly •fPvie* KITCHEN HELP Par ovanlDB thin. 0^ w< Hoipllalliallan, vacanlHm with and othar banafllt. Apply at: ELIAS BROS. BIO BOY RESTAURANT TaiapTaph ______ LADY FOR LAUNDRY wii*, apply _»3a W, H»ron aflor 4 p.m. __ t^DY'pOR WAltiNO on cut^ri. »(.»n..t'yr'^- Sttnof — Socntarios immadlato lamporary ttalanmanft avalltBia at fop raigt, pantlac. BlopmfMM, RiMaMar - :all manpower URGENTLY NEEDED „ BLOOD CEI """ills WWO Track Dr., W" Mon.,PrL*^ I., Wad., Thp - ■' ______ .nCTflTl_________ -dl(hwadwik^M4itaA nmM a aftamoon ihtn, fit W. Hura EatmarPRf------ COOK *»■» XTr^TcJSSl'U"- trio dava or 4T4-»ia ova.__________ lit WANTED, INCOME TAX * - ‘'REPARER. Exeoliont wapai. C " ss-Mfy._________________________ ](~RAY TECHNICIANS x-ray iKhnIciani noadad ..... ^ madlataly lo work t a.m. la 4;M|Ol p.m. Salary opon. Ragtotarad or nafpraalalorad. Additional pay lor "an call" ilondy4iy. Excanant MnafWi. Canlact Pomnnpl Dapt» _ P^**t?I*%nl£,”Mia*^ PMM ® 33S-Wn, Ext. Ml. GROOVY TYPIST * If you Ilka to lypa. Ihli comp will pty won, ooad location, lap bonaflli. Calf IPS, 134-4171. GENERAL OFFICE: You^caiTt baat I Light typing? Anrn Id SMii Call Kay Roy, 1 TO •.m. onlye #ULL TIME NIGHT Toto-Trov eparotor, curb Birik woltrolow Tologroph. For^on^i^ratog homo In Foniloe ^ ago ChlKI^^FE BWS. own efr?' UnlDn'^Lalia ''otSo, Sm 3^181. hS?*’ Rood, Trey. otoro, gonorol olllca work, beak-kooplng oxporlonce raquirod. full or poH lima, coll Mr. Horvoy at 573-^. PIN MONEY PLUSI to hours ptr weak aornt $50 to 175. Hours floxiblo. Nut, urtontUa woman over 11 Cllf 3354373 hehMeiveni naan and 1 a.m. lar I tawing mad ...mt. salary, t !Sa’^I«r'2Jc.*TaKh!! bUr* UlOS i'Kp#rHlf1C# nDIpiUl Pvf ntcattary, wo will train, gulramonlt: Soma homo taw background, naat apptarance, li tchool graduato. An aqual Ca?"2o..*p"2;!rac*'Mair’rtSp, Cantor. _______ TURRET LATHE OPERATORS Exparlanca In tal-up and aparating *f wamar-Swaiay No. S or lardIngP-Chuckori. TECHNICIANS «lc'«Ua'XVaiy.-.; LAY OUT INSPECTORS IMp 8^ "A RIAL fSTATt EXPLOSION" ^HfEb/ChmrcBy 8J;iTtlaf. W STat ’^..'"ylJiS -- - aamlngt unllmliad, Wa will iMar full or part tima man pro. M you moot Our guallflcatlont. ... will toaeh you thit axciting floM ir If nacaatary. Bonut arrangamant. 5 WARREN STOUT, I^LTOR ' MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE '• l4St N. Qpdyka Rd. P pitiA cook f Rattourant, IISy sitter neaito,, llva In I |»4(14. __................. lAiWTTlIQa Itya. to, moihar y^t mMnlghtt. Ft S4S4. __ fAfV~SITTtl WAN!l0”in ihaiHOMt MANAOBR LIVE vicinlly of Horriniiton Hint, prafar ' motura woman. P_1_HI$S. ___ BABYSiW|1S7> (^■toriaTpTm. tha public? A (hart ........... convpniant hourt, t a.m. to 1 p.m. or 1 p.m. to t p.m.? If you ara young, altrtcilvo,' anttiutlattic nava your own IrantpoiTaHan, __ can bocoma a FOTOMAT In your araa. FOTOMAT UNIFORMS pro----------------—......—,---- » ‘X’! ^ P'TsohntKansultom McNIehOll, MTI-I7S4. „ _ ^ | 15,000 Up alRL>OR'QUAUfY~mtrerin t^^ Proitiga Birmingham onica, aata cartrMgo plant, daya and at- ralt glut Incantiva plan. Call Mrt. lornoont. MuttJM axwlancad. Plland. TAPB-TRONKriNC. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 4411 FERNLEE I----- ------- " ------ ----- ROYAL OAK 17S-1777 Of 4. Mutt ba axMtion - *— —" '•-'tnor anS I chlMron, Mp notch ( (. part Mtnt, PE 4-4W BEAUTY OPERATOR, FULL .or grKLWSsrt"'Kl'"a good ptrienanty. ThIt It girmarani *' It quaTniOd, cVl*«7MIU ”*** HomAro international too s. Woodward, PIaSTIC AiiiQLbTNO AAACHINE OPERATORS Good (toning raiat with II cant Incroata wllmn lint working ytar, promlum S conlt tacond, 10 ctnlt third thlM, holiday pay, r Cron, SSiA Iniuranca. goM wi Ing candlllana ttoady work. INSTASET CORPORATION ISIS PMdiml St. Troy, Michigan Bolwotn I-7S and Stophonton H: about ISW Mila Rd. MANAGERS Exparlancad In Party Plan? Organltoandtuparv'--' Domonitraiori to tall TOYS GIFTS. No dallvary. No collaci No tuppllot and hottott a LIbaral Incantiva programt. 1 training. Wrifa, living _ pi nymban, "SANDRA PARTIL.. n07 E. 4 MIto. Oatrolt, Mich. _4«!1._,________________ VICfNITY OF JOSLYN AND “—•calm, my homo, S a.m. to 1 S dayt a —*■ ' I*' WAlfRBSS WANTED TO work ( timo. Apply HI partan. Hollywi Roataurant IW1 Orchard Lk, R« waitress WANTED, PULL~ i pan lima, avat„ JoCt tpagh Heuta. Call bafora 4:10 p.m. : siiy aflar 4:10 P.m. 1MA434. WOMAN FOR SEWING dapartm: minor raniri, no axparla.— ntcoiiary. Watch Claanart, 14M S. Woodward, Birmingham. Ml d-""* waitresses COUNTER GIRLS For day and ovtning hourt. It ENJOY DRIVING? Enjoy Extra Money? MOTOR ROUTE Opining In BLOOMFIELD HILLS AREA Apply R. T. PECK CIRCULATION DEPT. THE PONTIAC PRESS PULL tiME CUSTODIAN. A hava rtforancpt. Apply 17S S< Saginaw. Standard Elactrlc. Co iBL' LikE LIFE It patting V'lh'S »ap“h*Vlr^7.m‘?"Sft __________ FREE CLASSES __?r woman wantod. Earn whifa you Mm. Wa hava S oHIoai, 100 ...-pi, ER BROS. REALTY 333-7156 Can You Sell? If to, wt hivo Immadlata o[ tar two rtal MtoW lotot paaph, Intarattad In making monay. Ex-porlanco holpf ' Will train, t-....., .. -- floor tImo and oMroctlvo com-million Mhodula. For Intorylow, call Mr. Toylor, QR 44n0f Evoi. EM S-7544. ___________ REAL ESTATE SALES Opaninga tor 2 oaMgaoplo,, will 4-1311. _________________ LICENSED REAL ESTATE SALESMEN WITH PURCHASING EXPERIENCE Call Mr. GOorga at Ray Raal Ettoto «?4-1l31 LUCKY GAL Draam |ob tor someona i !!!;ag.!gain&s.»-3»at^.*^ MEDICAL ASSISTANT: Right______ “‘"h.cumi^jianta rt Phylll - --.j and L.... MANAGEk TRAINEE: fhit top -------naada a raal tharp SS200. Jack Parki, MAINTENANCE: ^ If^yt^t FRIENDLY - l6w COST KEYS TAX SERVICE YournontooroyrelWcF 8-2»7 MU N. I Hollmork IncoinB Tax FAST ACCURATE SERVICE S5 and up. NO opp't. noe^o^ <74-4m 461 Highland I (M-3?) naxt to Airway Lanaa. , *f4.M»3.____ A PERSONAL . attention ^ I? paintmant In your hanw, Clarktttn- =c^^Sn 'VACANCY FOR *>-DERLY lady, ambulatory, prlvoto homo, 341-4174. --------: ^ ^ In Wttortotd araa. Agwit OR 4-144», Want to sell? Wa ara in urgant naad of good ;«l.?SJ!r^"!5hS?1SK &R,4«M. , Inc. LADIES DESIRE INTERIOE^poM- sx...Mago4oyg6s-^4*' •aintino and papbhjno^you'ro MID-TERM COLLEGE GRADS Cirtor opportunttlct In accounting, ihorkotlng, onginaoring and doto procoulm. Opaningt nation wide, to ax^rwnco noettsary. Call IPS, NEED A RAISE? Opportunity knocks tor ai------- ^^t^wlth oKIco skWt. Call IPS, 114- OFFICE T tractiv# I to work with top prototolonal^ No typing and they wUI train. Grab It nowl 1430. Phylllt Pago. 334-2471. J. A. Taylor Agency, Ir DAILy'w dfiir* 1-7I4S WANTED LOTS ACREAGE HOUSES : In Iho Clorkoton arta Clarkston Real Estote ^ S. Main MA S4in WANT TO BUY next. OrvQi Gidcumb. tTlJWS. FURNITURE Reuphoittsrod bottor than now st the price. Big tovlngs alto on ■ -nd draporM. Call 335-frta atfimato In your WATERFORD MORTGAGE COMPANY .... ,..^1, WoMrlOrg 623-9111 Wo* COMPANION FOR flthlng M aconie trip to Florldo. toaving about March 5. 454J age bracket. No drlnkert. Phono U3-223B 1-4 WANTED LISTINGS: Wa hajto dwol'ing l»t>M?*Wa*wlir li flfad^ fflsjwsa’-.jf’””’ JOHNSON MAN ON 1ST SHIFT would Ilka r da , to 6.M.T.C. Plant, llva on Marlon H Avo. I block behind Ponfl - RECEPTIONST $425 UP WaateJ liBWElieM GaaJt 29 1 PIECE OR HOUSEFUL. I FE 5"7932 2 I HIGHEST PRICES RAID FOR g^ BEDROOM COMPLETE, privoto ontronco, odulto only. FE 4-33ty. 0 and applloncoi. Or what _ y an oxclttng coraor working mvo you? the public, _^tonfto typing r»- RUB MICTION M. North suburban area. Foo' D Oi D MULlluri mo S. Woodward, B'ha LL^jjour I SALESMEN ....*iih« training In company tchool. $10,000 to sis.Sdo RAY Rm ESTATE CURTAIN, p R A> E ^j^ry. Downtown Blrmlnghoir SALES MANAGER OR PARTNER and County _____ _jol. Phono Mr. 7-*Stl.______________________________ ______ ....... ^______ _______________________________ - we ^ANT oxporloncod woman to voice gott 12B. Carol King, 334- WANTED: SPLITTING ox or vrodgo ■* --1 otlota. For more In-I 1471, Snolling and SnolHng. _; and tiodge for ipHtflng _______I contact Mr. George at SECRETARY; Now law firm noodt! Phono^ 47^3710, oftor S;3B. 7 Call Koy Roy, 334-2471. BEDROOM, UTILITIES PAID, acurlly deposit. Wool tide. From 2 RbOMS AND BATH. Etdbriy lady. 33«-49?3. -----------------------—itEiS, 30 2 ROOMS, LOWER, private, eloap,^ •* >-l'SWITCHBOARD: _ COPPER, BRASS, RADIATORS, 2 iol to start with thorn: Chance tor||u,,_g-,| g. I coroar opot hero. They will rain. «25. Phylllt Pagt. 134-2471.' A MANAGEMENT TRAINEE? TIrod of routine? Wont a career with a luturo? Not lutt a Many wall-known national l. panlat would like to talk to you. No oxMrlonct nocottary. Call IPS, 314-4fif|T HIGH SCHOOL GRAD Snolling and Snolling. , copabto oftico. — $475. Coll FULL TIME POSITIONS ovolloblo ADViRTISINO: l. Bv,,||,nt Op- I ptrtO- " jtt bo noat Apply In BIRCHBTT ANTENNA SERVICE AADCO ASPHALT PAVING Com- &tnas»r ■■■ ■*'' “ M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED IcCORMICK ELECTRIC, ratMbntlal ~ and commorcTol, oltorotlont, and . ronnodoling, 14 hour torvica. ever 21 vtort In butinott. 114-yift ROOFING AND GUTTER, Ot g^ winter ratot. Proa otllmotoi. Coll now S4I-302I. RSBEirt FkiCi - kctotlng ___Froo otllntotot, 334-1024 WOMACK ROOFING Cg. HOWARD JOHNSON’S Tologroph ot ModIo Rd. Birmingham, Mich._____ IIWOIMN NBEDBO FOR Office, T WOOL PRESSER Exporloocoa, good working eon-|_ ditiMt, gold hotwayo and vacation, K Kay;irgS!yr.«!7*ay^“ "“•’i caltont salary and iringa Wrlta or call collact, Mr. 153-3000, axf. — " Hospital 14001 S^htlald. MIC * tima.' axparlanca Kathy Davli I Snalling.___ Will tral I axporlan Kathy Dl d Snalling. Davit 134-2471. train craatlvf lanca lands Davit. 334- ito ^y pluj^ commlttlon or bom "iNTERNaViONAL PERSONNEL I. llto I. - ----- 2 OR 3 bedroom LAKE front ~ homo Pontiac oroo, wantod ft*' yearly rantol, will sign leato nocosiory. Coll 51S33I1 Oftor 7 ^ 3 or 4 BEDROOM HOME to ront i S rent with optlan to buy, outsido i g city llmlti. ^IfS.__________________ H CLEAN, RELIABLE ADULTS want I clean, modern 2 bedroom homo. I Prater one out ot cHy. 335-4512. “ I Shari Living Qaartert 2 ROOMS AND BATH, Privoio Oh? ‘ trance, Northtlde, 420 Wosbrook, Pontiac.________________ ' * . _______ ______ BATH, .. weicomo, S30. wkly, with S7S d< -----0 ot 173 Baldwin Avo. C 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH and on- Qn|-CT|/«r cdOT IBIRMINGHAM BACHELORS hove PRESTIGt 5POI , houM to Ihoro with r-"— At plulh lUburban firm, work with graduato. 444-3178 or 54MS30. ■op bran. Coll IP.... —r-— ----------------- fumlohod. 300 N.‘ OToOMS, PRIVATE both, odulto' om^, no pets, mold lorvico. 33t-„ r. Vaughan Providonco SECRETARY; I’ll bet you’i Msoir'is; Jfi Marv Hood, 332-2157, Atiocloloi 2471. Snolling and SnolHng. 10 3 ROOMS AND BATH, bmoflto 4k SHARP AGGRESSIVE Young gol=" <«r rmUII rfanartmant. 1300. Call ir. Foley, R 4^. YORK REAL E Mary Hood, 332-2157, Atioclalat Parionnal. ASSISTANT: . ... ....... jurroundlngt. Doctor Immodlotolyl Don’t lit anti. Mthj^^DtvIt, 334- 334- wORKiko GIRLS, private bedroom 3 ROOMS AND BATH, adults. > fould you II I locoflon. 2471, Sttolll _________ A CHANCE To attalh the goal of you: to our elm. Coif IPS, 334-4?7 SALES TRAINEE: Largo OI organlutlon Mtontlol ne< Porks. 334 ...andout u _____ $7,800. Jock 334-2471. Snolling and' 1-25 yrt. Rotoron t2-7?l» ovonlngt SI -wVITra"IS mutt, common S7,sao to tl vancomontl J 2471. now.' Sr TYPIST Like money? Bonofift?,. No • Sblurdovt? Good hours? Excolltnt company? $400. Carol King, 334- - Froo EtHmotot Siiki^Srav^^ FILL SAND LOADING DAILY I. Apply botwoon 4 and S p.m. KITCHEN HELP and DIthaaihart *■."— *■“ lull or part lima, day thifi, 5-4. _________________________________ Appl^ Machut Rad Fox or call MA ARE YOU' FAMILIAR WITH 0, TYPIST: "Well,’ porlect lobi I Eantfllt and 1 2471, Snalll Demine Const. Co. Inc. I. parking to t. Fraa atf. 4 bulldozing, Finish OradInB, Backhea. Batamanlt. 574-M3t. FI r~„-nfiTi'rrrN o _ railabla. Free ? 3-lUf matonry painting FE I BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER PONTIAC FENCE CO. •' 3831 Dixie Hwv., Watorterd 42S-I040 l-AAA,'/ B B K Snowplowing. Com-morclal and rotldanllol. 14 hr. torvico, throujtogut Oakland Ceun-ty. 33S4WM. 3314885. 332^24. SNOWPLOWING Roildonllol Commercial 574JW.5___________ —-~. Only thooo modloloty not $145 Coll Mr. Vinton .. 2 p.m. raqulrac __ .... jtort Ur 'pirw (ton 332-3438 \olora MATURE COUPLE, largo oportmont bldg., axporlonood eroforrod, will _»'?7._Attocijii coniMor training. 33B2135. NEEDED FULC. TiME Roll oi Solotmon, with or without . ______ ....ling to w t dally. Coll 474-31IH OFFICE-BUSINESS MANAGER for fait growing Dodge dealer, w-“—' Lake. Salary open, mini 10,500 par year pluo fringoi. Lloyd Bridgoo, 524-IS72. ___ PART-TIME 0I8HWASHER7~ tormi and moalt furnithod, day-FrIday, 12 noon until 4 Woitomor Boot Eutlot, I Ingham 424-4757. CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. LL ^i’*r-P.*yr534it- WMei MedbnilnHMi Do All My Own WorkI Will Insulate Your Home For Less Ki 1-MI4________fevot. 524-2338 SUSPENDED CEILINGS, corponlor work, cablnatt ond countor to'" 574-3087. ________ " Tree Trl^wg t# WH4 a. «c r. t ARE YOU READY lor the future? Coll Mr. Foloy, YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 44343. _ APPLICATIONS ARE NOW iMIng taken lor utheri, box office, con-cottlan help and day man. Apply to porion oft. 5 p.m, at Pontiac Drivt-ln Thootro. Wf YOU IN A~iul? Call Mr. Fgtoj. YORK REAL ESTATE, OR GENERAL OFFICE, many varied dullot, $350 call Mary Hood, 3Xb?lS7, Atioclatoi Partonnal. N EXCELLENT MANAGER tralnaa *' It Is, the ____rd»...... Kay F wiling. tartnirtioBS-SchooU LEARN BARBERING. NOW enroll- 1 MILLION iportment 105 1-3, 5-0. 1 3 ROOMS, ADULTS ..... 3 RoOMS and BATH. SSO dopollt, S3S 0 weak. 573-S59I.______________ ROOMS, 1 BEDROOM, upper,-private ontronco, adults. Inquire. I? E. Howard, f p.m. to 5 p.m.,- Rook, 3 3 2-9157, Water St. Flint, A A CAREER MISS? Good typing and the doitri grow with oxpondtng firm, you^lt opportune tpot. Coll IPS, OJUSTER; Wall Iralhad man with no oxporlonco. coilogo not a must. S'r'v.WLWM'sffr’J at 05.400. Jim Stolnlngor, 334-2471. ____________lot? And learn to ap- groeloto llt^oosthoflc voluoi? Joto Oak.____ -................... 4. Coll 333-7211. Ext. 2171. tollmlni^a^ talotmod, ----- 'c'SSito'i^oiS I and alto 1, Rftort H 1A CARPENTRY - and n fraa attlmalA. MA S-41(2. A-I ifffiRTSinkND i xt'Eh'iM -Family reamt, rough or fhiiihad. Hcansad. Raea. Call attar I 4IS0t«. ____ JaIpENTRY AND CEMEN*rwirk, . Hooni' kepNiAr ALL KINDS OP HOME RBMIR. Fraa atllmatat. call OR 3-203S. >■ reeHng. guttar. Fg 4-5IW inidRIOR FTHrSH, kitchen ^las"’’ ^ axportonct. CarneMof CARPET INSTALLATION. Alia • -I TREE SERVICE, ttuma ramovad trad It wa taka down I? troOj Iroo ottlmoMo. 335-2042 I lobo. FE 4-2347, .iOHt TRUCKiSC. RATES. 330-1245.___ THAUyN^O. ARE YOU REALLY LIVING? Or lutt oxTttingf Coll Mr. Foir-YORK REAL ESTATE 57*41353. BREAKFAST COOK o*r*hi!rtt "t. HOWEAMO JOHNSON'S, 35$0 Dixie Hwy„ Drayton Ptobit. No LIWTo^JiAULIW^^AND indvini. OShT hauling. ' BASiMkNTS floragot cloanod. 574-1143. medam atoroge. Plano PIANO tuning repaiimng SCAR SCHMIDT_______Pt l-SIll PHI^. CEMENT work. 1 CEMENT floors;' Rotkiontlol and ---------- -------- —, repair, Ir- ncoltod. Bo _________________ -2500._________ COkSMERClALTTNOUStRIAr' inumraun vw* SuALITV WORK ASSURED Point- , ^ Pojorlnjl^ Wall WathtoB. 473- < SPRAY PAINtiNG 334-7577 or 321-3571 CeroEik Til# S TAILORING. AND 523055$. CERAMIC TILE. SLATE «id marbto »~a. mortar or MoiNc m caiHfcTor. c«ll R—xwbit FhiteriEjjieivka !A-I PLASTERING. I CONORA PLUMBING B 8 0 Si' l'^plumbimg and hIatTno. Trucks to Renti Sami Trollort Pontiac Form and industrial Tractor Co. . an Dawv Inctodtog Sundi ^TV StloB md S*«le#_ COLOR TV SPECIALISTS SERVIN(|^^(M|l>NDj^OMB REPA?RED I^^OUR HOMt i-I MOBILE I^^IO^^CONTROLEB | COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL!;: ANTENNAS INSTALLED. ' ■AST PONTIAC-ROCHESTER ROMEO , And Tha- Graster TrKeunty Area 752-9796 Appllcatlont May ba acewnd until turlhar notice. STAFF PHYSICIAH The Oakland County Sanatorium, g 1M bod gorlitrlcs and TB hoopital It tobklng 0 qualified parson 0 sound modicol background Michigan llcontb. Position Invi all ttootot .of gonaral mod.— with omphaalt on gqriatrici. Salary ill.000 - S25.0W. Employmont With OaklindCounly olio oftori oxcollont fringb banotllt and ragulor working hours. For further Inrarmotlon and oppllcotlont contact; Portoimol DIvltlon, Ookland S Court Houta, 1100 N iph, Pontloc, Michigan Phono 330-47S1. Ext. 425. 7Holp WEBted FMMie !! TYPISTS!! IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Typist I - $4700 - $5000 Typist II - $5300 - $6100 Excellent fringe benefits in addition to soloryl Apply now toi THE PERSONNEL DIVISION OAKUNO COUNTY COURTHOUSE 1200 N. TELEGRAPH RD. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN 48053 33fr4751, Ext. 495 ADMITTING CLERK, _ portpnollty and light typing, 1320. Coll Pot Cary, 332-2157, AtloClaMt Pa ACCOUNTANT Looking for on oxoeutivo pc-1 counting potltlon with a molct notional corporation, wlth^growtB , opportunltloi and full benofitt. Don’t daloy, M nowi Coll IPS, 334-4271. _________ ARE YOU WANTED - ’’YESl’ WILL TRAIN. No oxperlonco nocottary. Rapid advancamant. 0325. Call Kathy Davit. 334-2471. Snalling ind Snalling. ADJUSTER TRAINEE This company ntods oggrouIVi man tor on exciting coraor potlllon at ttatf rap, company car for butinaw and plootura plui un-paroltolod bonaflli. Call IPS, 334- l-A CARPENTER NEEDS WORK. — name It, I will build It. Adorn, dormot, tiding, roofing, roc-II, coiling tile, panallng. Also ___to wall Tk Inch brick or ttono (Iroplaco. 4 foot wMo brick chimney. "-----Franklin Unit. Not 12100 or ______only $795. Bill Dow. FE I- 2191. State LIconto No. 15497. A-1 CARPENTER WORK WANTED, all kinds. 573-S515.________ AI CARPENTER ROUGH and finish. 335-3445. ________________ COMPLETE DRYWALL SERVICES, OFFICE CLEANING, and oquippod. FE AW, PLUMBING SERVICE i BOOKKEEPER: Do y««,»l>nk you'rt A-I IRONING. 1 day torvico, Moxino McCowan, FE 4-3057.__________ ,r1 IRONINGS IN MY homo. 335-5473 botoro 11:00 •b.m.-----**-- * '■ IRONINGS WANTED. E x C i * work, 33S-47I0. contracts, mortgages or buy hornet, lots or ocreoga outright. We will give you cash for your equity. Our opprolior it awaiting y ur call " 2236 McCullough realty 150 Highland Rd. (M-5t) I pan 9.*, 57A AVON TOWNSHIP - WILL boy cant land. Nix Raal Eitate. 9221, 952-5375. Must have g... — perk, tait. If no tower. 541-3757. 1 to 50 ”°pXI!ELS,'-TAR«5fSVsit.is! PROPERTIES, AND LAND CON- WaIrEN stout, Realtor 1450 M. Opdyka FE 54155 Urgonlly naad lor Immadlato aalal Pontiac Dattv 'til'8 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE A BEHER CASH DEAL All cash tor homes, Pontiac aito Drayton Plaint oroo. Ca^ to 40 hours. Call home purctiaaing department. YORK REAL ESTATE^ ’ AGYNDICATE DM UPPER, cMon, ooupla only,' child wokoma. 0135 mo, «3S w. 33A5505 or 5734097,______ ROOMS AND BATH, ClOOO In, liv-quUo at 2335 Dixie qr call FE 4- ROOMS AND BATH, ^iini^ 4 ROOMS AND BATH, small baby . welcome, $35 wk. SlOO dap., Inqulr^ - "3 Baldwin, Mil 331-454. T- BEAUTIFUL 1 BEDROOM, aparH-. EFFICIENCY APARTMENT, adult? only, $30 deposit. 350 W. Flint, Lake Orion. AfartiMOtB, UnfurniihoB 3t.' 1 AND 2 BEDROOMS, carpeted. ltd, tec. dap., ) AAor. opt. 1 ath Ilk. Rd. i . BEDROOM, CLARKSTON. Stovo,' rofrigarator, air conditioning, potto overlooking lake. Adults. No poll. 525-1775.______________________________ I BEDROOM UPPER, In beautHulI Indian Village, no chlMran or pats.. Application only. $135 ptr mo. 1 yr„ loose, sac. dao. For in. formation call 33 eking o ...........133. FRL-. , s, 335-2471, Snolling ond Lynn A B^KKEEPER: TIrod of your old lob? This position oftoro tots ot variety. No Saturdwra and It’s FREE. Grab Itl $550. Kay Roy, 334-24?!, Snolling and Snolling. . BLUE MONDAY? Eroio thorn In a thlny ntw offict - a atano. Call IPS. 3354971. p__ praatlM ft..... IW Andore, 334-2471. 9 —UtMMlto J -----*- w •191^ «v^H8RV ALTERATKM4S. ALL TYFIB, KNIT ^—as. toaiba---- ‘"Tyr/i .P'y.g _«arai tl “ NEW ROOFS F( F r WELL DRILLING. walM STENOGRAPHERS IMMEDIATE pPENINGS Stenpcjrcjpher I-$5200-$5500 Stenographer II"46000-$6800 Exctllenf fringo bonofits |n otMIfion to soloryl Con-tocti THE PERSONNEL DIVISION OAKLAND COUNTY COURTHOUSE 1200 N. TELEGRAPH RD. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN 48053 3384751, Ext. 495 tiilMlEg SorvIcts-SBppliot 13 BENSON LUMBER SAVE time AND MONEY WITH OUR 1 STOP (Personallied sarvica) Antiqua Birch, 4xtxW ......I9.W rosldantial property, II™------------------- ate. May wa suggest that before you list your proporty you contact . Von Roaity for o ipth oale. The' tvndicato winfi projMrty ------ ’■ hovo to move fast or — — -------"I Mng through your ■ n tor an appralial. you h itka p ROOMS AND BATH, StoVO. refrigerator and utllltloo turn., 24 Toylor.________ ■ , ___________ LARGE ROOM oportmont, largo- ClOSOtS, prlvoto a^™*™ in Pan. tiac. MY 3-II2S. ROOASS AND BATH, uppbr, S30' — ------- utHIttos POM. See. dap. -’’1 wafeiitw. 34B5IBT. i n W. HURON - only raquire Pago. m247l » to toarn is the , D. Jack Parks, ot.) ...........I: Jg lo go at 20 per cant willing to 33A24h,S------- .____________^ „ CLERICAL: Partonnal director Is _ looking far gol to help to study Ei and t^ aniivslt. Will train, m st Phyllis Pogt, 334-M71, Snalling and CLERK TYPIST: Groartng tl naods gtl tor light typing i phone work. Win train. 6n Iwurs and axctllint pay S2I0. Ca King. 3352471. Snalling and Sn DRY WALL old or new, "attlmatos. 537-3544. BEING TRANSFERRED? Need to Immidiatoly? For cull to 41 iro, coll ogont, 5754104. ^ C-A-S-H IN 24 HOURS Wo buy property onywhore, or condition. For tost service call: 333-7156 Miller Bros. ________REALTY Divorce-Foreclosure? Don’t Iota your honwl We will cosh out your Mortgogo — oil cosh. LAUINGER APARTMENTS Aceoptlng- oppllcaHom nr i bodroom .opartnlitlt. Last 21 naarlng completion. A Umlto( number avllobla for IMMEDIATI OCCUPANCY. Completaly carpotod alr-condltloned, tots of ctoaol apace Su our nrKxtel, you'll tova It. ALl UTILITIES Included to rant. "CUS TOM CRAFTED APPLIANCES B1 HOTPOINT." AduKo Only, no pots 573-5I43. p ________________ BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS CLERK: Do you llko your wo....-- —*» Than; c’mon, light typing you ISIS. Coll Kolhv Davis, saasirt toadjM 6 noadad. DENTAL ASSISTANT; " W “— Is your chance to wa 3 ^saniis.- AVON-TROY CARPET WAREHOUSE Carpoltog Instaltod — ctoo uMh! yp*. carpbf In ttock;^ | ft TiflliriBi 17 DENTAL ASSISTANT: L ead I nu Dintlst It in a pineh — could you £ help Mm ouir No axparlanca D DEN I^L ASSISTANT: Fantastic 5o*S Wtofdw^HlwJSS’^aS: *LT^^ syiTfc.. cot ft. Carol King 134-2471. Snalling and dtossai. l35-4au.j> Since 1?SS 5 5754019 ____________573-21 - ELDERLY COUPLE NEEDS ha nur Mall. Cash. Agent, 338-58 57AI59B or 3355951 ________ LOTS - WANTED IN PONTIAC immadlato doting. REAL VALUE REALY, 54K22B. ________ " Thinking of telling? Get our free eppratoal Gwrintoid uto LAUINGER REALTY 11S3*. tilRtodi exo 1 Kvd;l»'Mll^^^d.^ family kltchiM,' r llECBNn Tex StnkE ELECTRONIC TECH TRAINEE H you hava tome atoctrical or I CALL INSURES FAST tax servira.' buyers, maduinlctr background In tcheoli Ftdtril. Stato. City. 5734041 tor,YORK ar taSt larvica. mii companvj appt. ' ----------------------- •It train you, can IPS. 315-4971. Iall TAX RETURNS catoSiito,00 MODELS OPEN 2 P.M. - 'TILL DAf 3 DOdroom ranen, run uosemenT, ind family room at only $15,9t0: Olus lot, GIROUX REAL ESTATE t. 674-HH WATERFORD AREA , a modom kitchen, and Iwst el all, .ii,ojJ. imri«r |l5,nm nn Gl terms. $0 I. Call ROYER HOLLY OPPICB Young Budget Savers 1,000 DOWN AND 070 PER MO. -Aluminum ranch with tv -badrooms, ISxtS cmptl room with drapes, kitchon-dining comblnst.... — itainiao iiool Sink ond gorbogt 0x1$ ullllty rwm with YORK WILLIAMS LAKE AREA I bedroom ranch, largo family room, 2 cor attached gsrar^ beautifully landsoapad corner _ Paved atraat, city water. FI $4,000 DOWN AND $125 MO. — Lake front aluminum ranch with 2 bedrooms, 22xi3 carpotid living room,‘ with picture w I n ovarlboklng a lake. Wall shade. ... slopes to the lake. Dock arid boot -----— Attached 20x18 gorogo ------ --- ,...• own wishing well. $-717$ Clarkston School district. WE TRADE FE $-717$ ... 12 5. Telegraph $21, 28 ranges, gss and electric, I warohousa discount foraclos..«.i Roper, Teppan, Hotpolpt, Magic Chef, $97 tMCft, $2 oovm, $2 par weak. Now lolling kltchon sets at wholesale prices, large aalactloni ' ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE Dally to-f Tuas. ‘ WYMAN LEWIS REALTY 109 Whlttatnora 33S-I Websier-Curtis REAL ESTATE I'/f ben!y fIropiBca, plastered’waris, cove celling, full baament, gas heat, attached ^ear .gsrage,. rorner lot, paved streets, lake privileges. $2$,-MY 2-2291 WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY. INC. PHONE: 634-8204 oily Branch Holly Fla CLARK TIMES CRESCENT LAKE PRIVILEGES Largt older home In axeallanl condition teituring oopar^ dining f™rs, plasteriff wo!fc*m*' Olid 2 cor gorogo. ONori $17,950 with sore down ti quallfltd voteran. Thia lo s ..... exclusive listing and wbn't last long, so coll today for on op-pointmont. REMODELED BUNGALOW with 0 now fumaca, wiring, plumbing, water haotor and pabit. Located on the ahoras. of Sylvan Lake this lovely home fr-*— water heat, paneled I dining room, firaplace, mini ond largo lot. Lnrana ai, $29,000 with Immodlite occupancy so call right away. IRAND NEW And under $20,000., We have whet you've been looking for, bedroom ranch near Clarl featuring IVi bathe, huge kitchen, occupancy ** ---------- — an appointi WHEN YOi MILLER AARON BAU6HEY REALTOR BRICK RANCH with 3 bedrooms, marblt flroplaco In cerpoM llvlno room. Ceramic both, bullt-ln ovor and range. Large 3vk car attachaa garage. Radiant heat, water soften, ar pTusI Oetttng on 3 lovely tend. —— ■— In 1 quiet oroo. 024,900 fast ssls on this birgoln HALL CLARKSTON AREA _ new bedroom alum, ranch with fi basomont, m ceramic bofhi, lar. country kllchon, car pat In throughout phis many mere txITI Total price only $22,m with 10 p cent down. Don't wait on this on BEDROOM HOME testuring largo ling A dining room, kltchon. both, . bedrooms a, sun porch on floor. Largo 3rd. bodroom up. I ■—nt., gas host. Aluminum stoi -. screens. 2 csr garsgt. J $12,950. Will tredsl COULD BE 2 UNIT or use It ei tor the largo family. Good ropoli |hoVter kMiof. $'l4l900*on'’F”A foTr sharp BRICK FRONT ■' bedroom. Cloon ranch In a I 4 north lido location. Newly carpi n iiMi.,. urg, kltchon i 10, largo utility i m. TIltd bath, nica y. SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty "JUST MARRIED" Wo have lust the home tor the sl90 DIXIE HIGHWAY new bride end groom In tWs rokyj $23-0$00 REALTOR Open ^9 Dolly bungalow which faaturqe ottroctlya, OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 living room, delightful kltchon wl'"------------------------------ seporote dining araa, full basome with room tor finished recreetl... room, convenient to shopping cen-< ters and b{ls linos. Northern High; School District. F.H.A. or G.I.i Financing ovallobit. w 3 bodroom alum, ranch ’ to per appolnt- . HALL REALTY, REALTOR ' Dixie Hwy. $25-411$ Open dally 9-9, Sat. »$ GILES BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY 5 stall selt-sarvlca car wash with til new aqulpmont, wa have an a^ proximate amount of grou Ineomb ----------------.•TI SVal-U-Way EAST SIDE "WE J YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER Btl Russoll Young, Bldg. ...........ivy w. H— “ ...J onclosod f “CONSiDER~$lX5«) •e oM ranch with 3 C*" R»y Toqay OWNER, WJLL __ „ dinette, ------ —. shod In yard, plus ____ .of. Call ownara agan day. $74-4101. P-52.___________ ORION - 2 , kitchen and living r Insulated, immodlots bordering on Long Lake canal, | GREEN ACRES I RAY L HAVE A DREAM" I coma true In this cult ' comfortable heme, chambig living room, t kitchen with aaparate la, delightful bedrooms, _..,....ant, which provides laundry facllltlat. hardwood floors, -■ imlnum storms and sci—^-lA or Gl terms, call today. CLARK REAL ESTATE 1342 W. HURON ST. $$2-SI5( Open 9-9 MLS In essoclatlon with William A. Kennedy ARRO EAST SIDE — axcellaht 5 __________ and beth, baeament, IVi car; 1449 $. Lapeer Rd. ___________ geragt. $14,950, FHA terms. | owner TRANSFERRED, CLARKSTON AREA — Irida or lell I !?!?'’ “ this 7 room 2-levai home, 2 J.2 ceramic tile baths, flroplaca, A car garage, blacktop today. B.l:.. HI iter. A&G basement, 2,^ba1ht, _$$; HALLMARK REAL estate 412$ 4S21 Highland Ri 19) next to Airway Li ’ natural brick fro ' corner lot IIO'i enclosed wHh eye priv., city sawti bedrooms and dan for p Attached 2 leiit, family n baths, elec, h ■IT eat no mediata possession. C ~~ 4-1912. Brick i^rai rrar^fam tion. Down paymant te 4Vk par ama.r3Bf ~ ” bedrooms, 1W tiled baths carpeting ^ In llvlno . r«»m. Elnlns techa^ Mraw,**1oHl40' lot tenead, _____________^^”* ***°”'i TD A V CLEAN; SLEEPING ROOM. Clean , PS LS T Kr,asr"FE'’£a5!'i i in. i OOM AND meals. S»1 BOARD, home cooked REBt OfflCB SpOCE _ Panatad, carpeted. Heat, dltlonlng and cleaning I Call John SIter, $74-3134. D.m.. OR 3-7119.- _ "^CRESCENT LAKE COUNTRY CLUB roSm for *2fNS*Ining? Thte lovi ranch hoitw on a beauHful tot M hat full bstamenf, and attadi garage. All this tor only S20,9i Terrni. For appointment call YORK APPRdXIMATELY 1100 SQ. FT. Of baautIfuUy panalat' apace for laaea. Saparati office attached. — alba. U1... rdatonabla .. TRBFBCK, 474G1S4._________ AVAILABLE NOW IN ONE OF TOR $85 PER MONTH Yaur bualnaia home can be a to Wa-WirbuftoT^^^ ----------- piritbigi Near tePontlac Rtot lariiiiwE COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS, ar Pla parking. 10445 Dlkla. 42S-2544. M. 1^. IN FLINT, _________ a • PMaaselon. MA 5-2141. _________ BUILDING FOR LEASE or rant, Bood tocatton, 4479 D'-'- • earner of Frambaa. warahouia. 4744154. WE TRADE FE 1-7174 17« S. Telegraph Don't hsatitate to tea this gorgeous aiiedroom brick and alumlnutn ^ level situated Mparata dining room, dien cabinets, formica ■ bullt-ln iptlonally nice- ranch. Has 3 __.-oomt, with double closets, carpeting, full basement, terga patio, 2-cer garage and aottaner. FHA terms av P-32. all Ray Today RAY HOWELL Town & Country Inc. Highland Branch Offica PHONE: 313-685-1585 ammond lake privileges. Rustic contemporary ranch In 3 Btdr^ prestige area. 3 be"------- tlraplaca in living 1 room, separate dining OXFORD ich with 3 bedroome, terbla flraplaqa In living ly room, m bathe, full 2 csr attachad garage,' I with take privi togas. CUSTOM RANCH Bstwesn Rochester and Orlw, beamed Cathedral ceilings In Hvlng room and family--------”” high etona firaplaci.. . _ basomant, garage, 4 months OXFORD RANCH 3 bedrooms, large living 1 family room, attechad 2 garage, lOOxW lake privileges. Only 121,700. King-Phipps Agency 097 So. Lapeer Rd.______42B-2565 PONTIAC NORTHERN AREA York hat a lovely all brick tl> room homo. Basomont, plus 1 started^to Sq. ft. bl-leval . 1200 Sq. ft. Capa Cad -----|3' ft' ***'**)I** "■ ^.‘ft.'trl-laval .. .. . ju Como To Arro Wo'll Do Our Bast BEAT THE RUSH lot if lake privileges, sutx All sizes, an prices. ..... .. jurchasa y planiilng to build. - "Ildlng sites, woo« I, suburban and c FIVE BEDROOMS . ^ . Two story fromt, ....______ :omplotely radocoroted home near on first floor, family dining .ruck A Coacli. Footuros wall to, room, lull batomor* ' r.?lia”& *a% "M* a^S;l "•««*-"ha f $iYS» $5so'l?Sva^';;;i iTHREE bedrooms ' ' Located on Prospoct straol. fu fllTF AND C07Y dining room, bosomant with ha LUIC AWU lvai go, furnace, decorated IntW 2 btdroom home, with full bate- and out. $400 down. Vacant, ment and terga kitchen and dining area, booutItUI hardwood floors. COMMERCIAL Rsquiret $2,000 down and toko^'''”'’'"''^'''*' . ^ o«r present mdrtaaga. No clos- Frontego on Auburn noi Ing costs, no crtdlf reports. tocSon**TVriw* *** ^ * NORTHERN HIGH Like nsw 2 bodroom homo, largo! NIcnoilE-Marger tO. kltchon and dining area, utllllv -----------__________________ room, nice wall to wall carpeting. Alum, storms and scroons, nlcoly londscapod yard and 0 2 cor garage. Priced at $12,500, about $500 to move In. YOU CAN TRADE FOR ANY home we HAVE FOR SALE Val-U-Woy Roalfy and Building Co. FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Av<. OPEN 9 to 1 oWn call UB today. 2-FAMILY INCOME and onaiLocolod Inside the city, 5 rooms s bath on first floor. 3 rooms ond bi and private antranca, on the tocc floor, full basomont, gas hoot, < ^ !bo bought on land contract w -. -itantlal down paymant. - *"|3 BEDROOMS AND BASEMENT 1V> story colonial with gat hs aluminum elding, oak ftoora i ------ ------- ..I large roome, ai a large lot, located on Baldwin Ri —..........- St $23m ANDERSON & GILFORD Building 8i Realty d dining i 0 room, go”lmt, carofio; 0 tiding, 2 car garage. Or 01 and stww-. Convenient location. Teritit. MARGARET MCCULLOUGH, Realtor 5143 Coss-Ellzibatr ' I 682-2211 IRWIN ‘ KINZLER BRIAN LET'S TRADE OFF WALTON., 2 bedroom, flnlshod, basomont. A nice quiet tocatloi) on a dm ond itroof. Loado Of ro^ » the kids. Footuroo wall to wi ROYER OXFORD OFFICE Lakeville Lakefront Largo oak trots shads this I Claude McGruder Realtor llzaboth Lk. Rd. 4824720 s Lilting sorvitte Open 94 Brown LOOK LOOK LOOK AT WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER TODAYIII BRICK AND CEDAR RANCH In $llver Likt estates 3 bedroom. IW bath, 2 firtplacat, one In living room ond one In tha rae. room. Cathedral ■ftllingi YORK E BUY WE TRADE f R 4-0343 ' $-717$ ri3 DIXIE Hwy. 1702 S. Telegraph ALUMINUM RANCHER Lovely 3 t with full ---------- ---------- drapes, range, refrigerator, 1W baths, attached 2^ car oarage, family room In boiemont. This -u— ------I. .-•„ . year (ust LARGE FAMILY HOME Sapclous 11 room "Early American Colonial" that has boon ownod, occujiled and —" —•-•-■—• - room, carpeting and d r j ■-----1 latting r*--------- 338-4$45. and the price hat rtductd. Gl or FHA 3 bedroom home situatod line, hat full botomo , ground loval ontranc# to *^edi backyard. Price Is right at $11,5(^| Only closing costs down to quoHflOd 61. I GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR_ MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE I 9B W. Walton FE 3-7883 JOHN K. IRWIN kitchen, library, 5 generous s bedrooms and 2 deluxe tiled bat Gas hot water heat and 2‘b »ri-leval, 4 bedroome. rp'J5lnSKe'i:tto*lwi!*4l9F.“*'‘* •" TRY Kn room and comfOrtaMa living r»ni New 2 car garage. 3 email horw barns. Calf and ask tor 214F. 3-year-old tri-levBl ‘---- lendiceped yard. .Not fi irk L shapixl a to this doors^o ( S&E. living room ad wood cal • ■>andy kli Jitto. 2M amity ^ garage, sharp 3 li tvw 4'6" eliding g....-----... —, off the master bedroom and an- All this In a salting of pIna traaa - growing braa In f. Clarfcsbon Schaela ........... of Ping d Cwnty. war ••»> broehuroa w... — ~w lot - Garage' ^ ' ---------- ■onir$i^9iio7.rW;BUSINESS & RESIDENCE: $ Room eomtortoble Coll Ray Today 674-4101 home near Oakland Unt - ^ ' ' — — commercial. Almost VON Investors Special bedroom Capa Cod, full beta ..sods work. $}>00D taka ovor balance. Vacant. Agent for o FE $-4952. ________________ SCHRAM ffliir counter iw ?o*ndlftonlno. Alto 2W cor attach garage, call_ YORK UH >UY WE TRADE )R 4-0343 $-7174 yfi Dtele Hwv. 1702 S. Telegraph 10 rooms, .3 opartmont Income, completaly furnished. Rocrootlon room In basomont, 2 cor (joroge, gas tbrcod air heat. On 75x14$' lot. Coll for more partlcular- List With SCHRAM and Call the Van OPEN EVES. AMD SUN. 1111 J08LYN AVE. REALTOR Serving F______________ LAKE FRONT HOMES FE S9471 Vontlac Area for 20 Years air conditioned Tench with 3 bodrowns# IVo ceramic bilbo, flroplaco, PAjwj*® family room and full pontiod li^SSwntSIlfh bar, must too this one to sea all tha other extras. P-77. .•,,,1.1 toll Rty today 474-4101 RAY lake privilege to ust 2,------- -.....— this ranch with lorgo lots of storigo ipoeo. tg In living rexur .love and rofrlM low down paymant of *H0O. T Call Ray Today ''iSlir"''^aitlX''^l'a'!l? ________ Lots OF PARKING, A SOeE I Hurem pSIfwaif NEW COMMERCIAL' BUILOIN& 2$rx40' or HexiV. Mr conditio^ Ptonty of parking, Meoted at tua Orchard Lbka Rd., 8y- ‘ , Sylvan Li r 5B5«17 a . AVAILABLE. VAC AN T over. Owner. OR 4-3547. i BEDROOM HOME. BY OW?ilR. Corner tol SO'xlOO', IVi car farajH. ale and occu""*'-' SYLVAN Cash for Your Eq^ HACKETT 363-6703 Bwlen. '*ol"" funSce. *^ulate ECONOMY PRICE I2J00 will buy y«i " ROSS AND LAKE PRIVILEGE 3-5 BEDROOMS, FROM "batti* $33,900 la'p'IMt^s , , Skos,**bM!nng'^^s" open "oolly Ri:i Tolegroph LAZENBY RAY PONTIAC 3-bedroom boanHront ly|JI .lotI''5acanL’S» moves yqu'In 1 FHA moiteage. For sola by owni Call Mr. Cehw, $71-0110. RHODES INDIANWOOD LAKE, beautiful bedroom lakefront home, IVi bath fireplata, wall lo wall carpet, ft basement, 2 car garage. On $42,000. Call today for details. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR ^E $-2306 25$ W. Wilton FE 547 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ROYER GOODRICH OFFICE Country Setting 30 MINUTES TO PONTIAC ust the homo lor young r- ;*•? NEW HOMES Buying or Selling Call John K. Irwin 8i Sons 313 West Huron—Since 1925 FE 59444 After 5 PM 4254045 AVON BRICK COLONIAL bedroom, brick flroplaco In 21 , family room, large living om, formal dining r 0 — mlly kltchon with b atures, 1W baths, full AVON REALTY EXCLUSIVE SALES OF WEINBERGER HOMES OL 1-0222___^_______M5-9373 TRADE-SUREI IM — Brick u._ ------- fireplaces and walkout BEDROOM — Brick ranch family room In b 0 a o m 1 Including lot and I Lake prlvllogos. $34,700. BEDROOM BRICK COLONIAL -with 2Vli baths. Family room, In eluding lot and landscaping. Improved rbads. Lake privileges. From $37,900. Also other models available Sec us tor building your homo 5 Vtart OlQf PUT gwnvr iivaumw ivt , warmer climate. His Ipso lo your gain at 1 rnllsttc sailing price of 35,900. Isn't this about the price you -----planning lo Invest In your next if And didn't you olwws wo"*.■ SOON IT WILL BE SPRING ! Wickly tummtrtimo. Why not tiled In this cute. 4 Mrtm, SlIthK? ri Idsal family Iving with d 45' of on land Ih $5000.00 :4sS;GAYLORD ...FVf .W...1IC8 cupboardty Located I'uft V4"**mIla"*off state, ON THE LAKE. Sit by fhs fireplace highway and country lotting with In this natural log Iw.mo —' ns acres tor gardening. Priced at , CLARKSTON Sharp s badro( Cranbarn^^^ natural log balcony, gat I hast, boat dock, shod# tr garden. Only S25J00 wl down on tend contract. Ci 3821 or FE 87493. iF YOU ARE LOOKING for a largo 2 bedroom home In Waterford .. yuan to wall •r?ss‘'wirs!srw.«s, fourth bodroom. 100x150 to] partly fenced. Ctota to Khool end new shopping canter. Reasor ably Priced at $19,900 with ,tertni ROYCE LAZENBY, Realtoi^ Open dally 9-t 4434 W. Walton — OR 4^ SMALL FARMS, ROOM for horw and kids. Buy, sail, frada with ART DANIELS REALTY, 22m' GAYLORD INC.,2 W. Flint St., Michigan, CR 47250, 1230 N. Orion Milford Rd., MU 5-1547. MY 2-2821_________________FE 87493 Coll Ray Toddy LOVELAND Vacation-Year Round In this oxtromaly well-corsd^or noma you con bo proud of. Fc" basement. 2 car garage.,, Nt carpet. Large lot. Lake privilege $25,900 full price. Shown by 0 pointmont. ROYER REALTY, INC. goodricN 636-2211 refrioeral for $1$,50. . FE M$93. ...J'SStetSml'' p.-.. «loll'M 1 fruit trsos ont CROSS Realty & Investment Co. Wo pay cosh for used homes. 674-3105 MLS large lot to fit your pocketbook, $11,900 full price. Terms ave"-"-Call MY 3-2821, FE 8-9493 WALLED LAKE OVER ONE ACRE, RAY !?! long lake PRIVILEGES Lavaly 2-badro6m home with country kitchen, aluminum sided, plus 3-room apartment on $23,900. ' ROME PARK bedrooms, large couritry xiicnon, 20' living room, full basomont, hot wotor hoot, ^ar detached garage, I acre plut like prlvjleget. Only Leona Loveland, Realtor 2100 ent^^e Rd. LANtt contract” ferttii bveilable ' ----- nomt In Avon. Hat 2 a unfinMed, utility, hot water, full price SHARP NEW Milford. 3 bi room*""'*' basonte, rancfi h , bullt-ln HURON WOODS Call Ray Today $7 RAY __________ jarage, 2 tirapta bullt-ln charcoal grIIL family n I. I and othar extras, paved street 1011 drive. Only $29,900. i WELCH PARK Gosway sportsman. Tha home Is spacious and clean. Must be soon. A real bargain at tTtr ng room, magnificent built In range, oven and and disposal, panned .... wtih fireplace, 3 large with privacy balcor- WE BUILD-TRADE PHONE: 628-2548 ROYER REALTY, INC. oBi OFFICE $23 $. Lapeer Rd. __ _ ________ fof''tunnlng*'or Itiat relax, * • ||||„,., 40Sala Nautat Ing, V/t ceramic tile baths, .plus | >«e ,"OUIBI GVBait navSBS many other custom foaturas. wo'll —......—'------ ’ 1................... ' .....t- contldor It a Pteasuro to^w this property to youl Price $31,900. No. 4-3 OWNER SAYS "SELL NOW", is’^'beouflfuHy * p1ann«*3“b(te^^ u have to do LES BROWN REALTORS, BUILDERS, APPRAISERS e 37110 FE 2-0552 In the Pontiac araa tor aver 30 years. Members of fht Multiple Listing Service, FonHac board at Realtors, NARB North Oaklirid county Builders Association. 49 n Ellzoboth Lakt| Estates, 1 offering at $34,900, No. 20-3 SO MUCH FOR SO LITTLE Recently listed, you canriot afford to pass up, walking distance to Pmtloc ^"g'"*?rIng-?!^fr-5rrE^ctiri full bath first room, formal din I reatibn room, private i ----- floor living room ______and full bath. Ca out to make paymants. 1 tra lot, with kidney shat pool, patio, gas light s Y4rd *----" alum. I LET THE DOUGH ROLL IN from this 3 family Invortmont opportunity. Excollont location In City. Separate entrances and baths. Only $14700. Gl or FHA tormi. Furnlturo Included. No. 13 VALUE, SPACE, Gl TERMS "IT'S TRADING TIME" STOP PAYING RENTI Nothino down onp 0 sm«.......... into this small two bodrec oran. Situatod on a lorM^ $1fcOOO.*"cALL Fo'i?*FORT'HlR "nFORMATION. BEGINNER'S BARGAIN Are you Interested In froo rontf That's lu*» VW cwild have In this two family Income. Lila In tha five room, two bedroom lower apartment and rant out tha upw five room opartmont. Newly rebuilt. BOoufItui njw„W»e*te™-.^»^^ rote baths, gas heat. Just one block oH N. Parry M. .conyan-tent to shopping. Zero down to quollflod 0.1. or small dawn paymant on FHA terms. Hurry on this one. SCENIC, SPACIOUSNESS ON FOUR ACRES Ovortooklng a small private like. Four bodroom ...r >»achod garage, full bP-“"">*— om, first floor utility - —---------- flrapteces, carpeting, dropts, oxtro cupboards, dlsh-—rolory washer, dryer, water eoftenar and Mrm ___ _______ Adlacant acreaga can Da purchaaad. Situatod approximately 20 mites north of Pontiac, lust off 1-75. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT. HOW TO SELL YOUR HOME PROMPTLY AT FULL market value Consult on expert with many yoors oxparlonca who will ap. prals^^yo^ property T ^ ' any of < recreation roonr, f tpeopie—Biieen nrwryw. 1071 W. Huron St. AFTER 8 P.M. CALL FE 4-0921 673-6230 setting lor this Immaculate two- ---- -—i. ..... recently d dining ng and CLOSE TO DOWNTOWN Sevan room homo In good wi _ . _ Ihg room ond . Three big bodroomt and n second floor. Floored oftic, at, 3 cor garage. Excellent for family. Priced at 511,5(10, no payment for ex-servldomen. No. 2-2 NEW HOMES available NOW t*”tJio^rimon) I4U W. Huron. Pentlae 4127120 Call Ray Today imily room. Priced at *29,900. / HIS HCIME. bum at the turn of century, tots of on 4,4 i... —. for dividing, I bodrooms. Worn Call on this 1 $32,000. COZY, COMFORTABLE homo for thnmart^a°ppnjo modirn ram wu '.TcSrtoni~^»'"wiii; “ t^'Stecr'nna'-fn Z"' . toH-L corpetod, living room ond the ___________ other In thii master-bedroom. The lakEVIEW ESTATES, kitchen has tots of bullt-ins and cuntonvllle Road onto Co»a n>m. thoro Is a large porch and patio to open daily 1-5 p.m. and Fox Bat add to the outside inloyment. Vary ,i|,ht off Williams Lake Road cm large lot. $32,900. pirn Drive, left to Fox Bay Drivi You'll discover how well they': AAAX I built and easy to maintain. You'll b BROOGK 4139 Orchard Lake Road At Pontiac Troll MA 6-4000 444-4890 your 0-NEIU tativo todoyl RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD , OR 4-2222 MLS lOWt "COLONIALS" ARE BACK IN DEMAND Off West Huron lor an Ideal location end ovoralzod lot with 09'feat of frbntage with a complefely Anchor fenced back yard. 0 room brick 2 story homo with full basomont, new gosi furnace and hot water heater. 14x20 summer famHy room and 2 ear attachad I slate ahtrarice. h home that reprasants quality ■w and completion on 45 days, vinyl windows with marble fully decorated ceramic bath, toll baiemer* — “■“* coMructim heat, 019,200k VIP B^srar Inside r - plate s kitchen, HOUSE OF THE WEEK IN THE PONTIAC PRESS. This spacious 4 rooin brick ond a mlnum ranch Is truly an "ELEGANT" home, located In very popu Huntoon Shorn ond this homo has 3 hadrooma. IVb batt^ IIIW carpeted family room with full wall tlroploeo, basom^ attach 2 car parage. Oversized lot and reduced price of $3X500 Ir 180 FEET ON CANAL Brick ranch home with full walkout besemenf fe 3 bedrooms, oak floors, 2 fireplaces, ges tired hot ' heat, and a besutltut wooded lot in need oi soma s ot remodeling. $23,900. $0 down to qualltlad 01 DORRIS & SON REALTOR 2536 Dixie Hvoy. MLS c-ia THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24. 1969 For Wont Ads Dial 83A498! JACK Frushour REALTOR WE TRADE. MOVE RIGHT IN _ SKANO Nira 1 tlEOItOOMI NEAT, SWEET, COMPLETE If VM arti tlrtd «* piWni - nifla dollar far rani, iMn laaa a laok at mil lavalf t HMraam, a«ira daan and naat - and llttan la mli! Cl ar FHA Baymonti aiauld amy at aaeui HOW ABOUT THIS? Iianr and ana tan « atdroami — an Ita axtrai »om tavt loakind iar) Baltmint and patla. nicalv landicaaad Ml, cVdad w'lfhTiaart?''S2!L M W ’■ifgS MTAlCl TOOAV. 4744161 474-2245 m» wtuiAMi LAKt no. TED'S Trading 674-2236 PURR-FEQ raM ana h a wanaei s atdraam i arlek ranca ftaluraw a full tali., ad aaiamani, Mvaa drivt, tanmd Call leday for your atrianM laaw- m«. LCI, HEAR YEI HEAR YEI Commtrea Lakt It lull 1 away tram mil rail c alumimim raniai wlia t one_ ssTijaT!5iii,r*^i nrlca only llAtW. C-«. STRUBLE WE TRADE COUNTRY LIVING mlmS! frun* Van!lac DO YOU LIKE TO ENTERTAIN? Tala ranca aama Mi caniaiad, ivy_____ 2C^'Wtajii?n.,*ias: ma ilraat tram a IM acta lakt. miffm wSwliS!^ *•“ ■ NORTHERN HIGH m*fta ^Siiaam*Ml»!%Saaf *wali kara li mat aama. it MaMiraa akim. ildait, akim. alarim r--* ■craani, ail atM, part taaani and a prlca at aniy Ill^tO an anmi. Call taday. It «an't„ii laaliar it 674-3175 STOUTS Best Buys Texiay IT'S ALMOST SPRIN6- USS! . . i« 1.^1 Ar=^ 4»U)fi Aswaja 94 Ooktond Lokt Front BaaMiful tar aat iir at taka frantaia traai, an blaaktaa itraai, boat' dodi and oammunlr araiar. H can ba badiM an land cantrM tarmi. Pull mica only lIttSC PBUMOUR MALTOC — “la yyiLUA/** • ;nyder, KINNEY & BENNETT In Rochtstar PEACE AND TRANQUILITY m btiat, baaamanl a anal, tartact Hr Ita . yauraaitar," aa ma aama ra-auiraa ramtadrima. Vacant, and aricad to latl at mtll CUTE & COMPACT idaai Hama tar tta nawly riad cawpla and prlcid < your maani. Why waita r an rant adian you mm bulMIta an aaulty tar Tail euia„ 2 tadraom ...— ..„ boon nawly daematad and It raady tar Immadlaia occupancy, tliuaiad an ihadad comar lot wtm car ppraga, fMvad Ilraat, wim itwar and walar. Only Itea dawn plui coili la aualltiad boyar. TRANSFERRED TO DETROIT? Why not Ilua In iirklayt im-maeulafa maw walla ivt iiary apma wim naw aluminum iMlna and raal, Thrat tadraami wlin flnimad baiamani rac. room and 4 FAMILY Norm iMa, UON dawn can! ratura an dawn pa) 5 FAMILY mm lull prica - iNoa down, W par cant ratum on down pay-mant. CROSS Rsalty A Invtitmant Co. g wa pay cym tor mad tamai. ?674-3105 MLS Efizobiitn Loko Estatos Saml-bunpalow, I room* and b— tahl^ ^r^. Only lli,tW. Ixc. con kIT TEMPLETON, Roaltor M» ORCHARD LAKS RB. M2dt0p HAROLD R, FRANKS, Riaity 3-BEDROOM LAKE FRONT MlddM SIrallt caka in W. —Hlea, naa- ' EYE-pON'T-C mil «lra iham „ .„jt dacarallta, t car iS5*nJS5sr\7i'*i k Ml a«r oHica Iar prica a. R-U. SNEW? Vai, mu homo li brand naw and taaiurai 2 badraami, dminp roam, larpo family room, firaplaca, iw', car altachad aarapa. handwo-* flaari and II you hurry, you c chooM your own earpaling. R-lt. REAL CUTE low wim full bai carpafing an a:®-' PRICE REDUCTIONI Tail ipaclaui will iMa hi aai boon raabead by tta on tor gul^ Mia. CamlHi ol bodraomt wm Mmi «aor p S raomi and bam down and ar gM5t* z garaga: A good buy at tll,IN Womn Stout, Roaltor I N. opdyka Rd. PS M1« tae. Zara dbwn an ol. Pontioc Northom Arto 4 BEDROOMS Juat an tta marttal la mit btdraam hama Cdmglaiai radacaratad Intidg. All you taua .. go It mavg In ygur Rimltura ang fitaa! kfiSimyggf 'ritMt mmo, t gartgga gni aun paftti. Tta paint It M fna^lt mlghf nat ba tafita bvsliawa. lara dawn la Ola. VAL-U-VISION YOU tM In . ----- paaioa at tta Inilda It thi Vahw YOl aS^af 674-2236 McCullough Rooity, inc. 54M HIOHUINO RD. M-ll) Ot-nu MiLt RRALTOI kiaSSn a .'a.'¥K EASTHAM M nm. H taioii garaga and blacklap ind lapartla tancad Evorttt Cummings, Roaltor till UNION LAKS ROAD. IM iSW _ Ill-Tin HOWARD T. KEATING BEAUTIFUL LAKE BRAEMAR Woit of Dovisburg sur.iiiansstwS Uaka front lata, all with geM ranging from M,M0 la tl,TW. rafy SUBURBAN LIVING At lit bait In mil nw hama an approximatali tancad and baaulltully __________ ^ ?y?j--*yiDavlibura IMllM p Acr^lt?;rXd'l C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT fnXSl * ABSOLUTELY FREEI Vtai You can iiva abialulalv frag wHa laka ^vIlagM an 1 lakM an Trr&arL^pTTu's OtTAU.*. A FAMILY HOME '5T*l.iffi STta'S^; Or la ba camglaialy palntad I doling. Prica luAl. call YOU CAN STILL BUY 4 badroam homo on LAND CON-TRMT. Locolad nMr Iaittm Jr. High, Tail hama tai aama atnal-Ing on IniWa. Oat haat, f car aaram, frataiy palntad. Prica 111,801. DON'T WAIT. Bill Eosthom, Rsoltor WATtRPDRO PLAZA .JM HIOHLAND RD. (M-») 674-3124 UNION LAKE AREA MANDON LAKE PRONT. ninga • CALL I a largt li IT nignti. Aiauma tta t% morlgaga- OXFORD AREA LOTI OP Ktoir Than yw roam, ifyMm Kama wim pavad alraata luat waiting I naad nnara ROOMI Hart's a t bad-•uiL baiamanta communlhr walar and Iar you. NO morlgaga catli II you Pull prica nt.lW. CALL TODAY! 3 UNIT INCOME INYtlTWENT OPPORTUNITY f goad ratum. Land Contraci win mallar. CALL OUtCKI BRAND NEW I REOItOOM RANCH |uit no< ...... 1 at Wtilan iivd. In a aultt raglaca. aHachad garaga i w It la you TODAYT ROCHESTER AREA MT THE JUMP on mil 1 badraem brick a< na. Largo ttmHy roam, IW car garaga. It BEHER IDEA THAN RENTI Juil tM dawn plui colli rnauM you Into mil 1 bidmem brick ranch. Conlimperary ilyllno wim full biMminl ind lual two minulai lo Idwol, Hurry, CALL HOWI ASK AbOUT OUK GUARANTEE PROGRAM! CLARKSTON AREA GOING TO EUILOT A RANCHER? DanT boiaar, tM IM hold-•ra of tar yaui Rrick, Ilk balhi, giragi, MTwall, patia, baiamani and avan ma dn- bhwprlnli, and pick up • laka 'priunagaa alio.. NEW MODELS COLONIALS MID-LEVaS RANCHERS TRI-LEVELS Custom-built to Mott Your Personol Nttds CURKSTON 625-2441 ROCHESTER 651-B518 PONTIAC 388-7161 ORION/OXFORD 6284211 UNION LAKE 3684171 Parma and amati^arm?***' Miysn, MMH. Pewlar Raaity LAKE FRONT HOME Plus Incoma apt. Lirap lot. Ixtri. galoral Widow will mka amalMr hwnw lam anw, watt at Pontiac ii*y;i4?itgr"*- M Waterfront Home PlMlanl 1 badroam homo — llrapitca, landy baaeh. good llihmg, north ol Clarkalon on ■ Laulai, l!0,]N. tS.Mo down. C. PANGUS, Rooltors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK N M-IS Orlonvilla CALL COLLECT 117-lSll :res retween hom Aog!VrK.'Sn?aki CARIN AT HirriionT lan. salO, a ol HI par SWAN LAKE LAKE FRONT aO' tola an IM Kra flahlng laka, only ns mllai north. Wa hava i loll at SttSO. Ruy batoro tummar pricti, n par cant down. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE ti-MM _______________ iti-saai « ACRE LOT. Roehatlar araa. ».i.“."W*si-siS5r “s7T0 ACRE'PAlCELS, woadad, rolling. EM 34111, 411-1"" ivi ACRi PARCiLS, woodOfi, roll ■ N Clarkiton, StMdlS, M144n. AC'R^ CURKStON t. fiihlng, landKapafLNLR Itmw. ShaWonT®^. _ WOODED lMs, mhinpriviTiaai. C. PANGUS, RRoltors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 4M M-tl Orlanvl CALL COLLECT 4IMIIS E MULTIPLE SITE^ AVON TOWNSHIP ».^iii,irL£r*.on%s tvallablt. 220 FT. FRONTAGE Ceoldy Lakt Road—Zonad V.rn^ ........... BATEMAN Spdcipllil 177 S. TalSmpa Rd. 338-Wl Wtakdayi altar S, Sat. I _ _ Sun.-4ALL 11441111 RO^STEr AREA - 44' WoedP lot. tim. Nix Rtallor, 451-OHI MH17S. ________ Royar Rtolty-Oxford Offic# NEAR 1-75 1 parcalt — I acra and 44 dteh, 114, 111 tad X 144 taat. Priead vary raaionaMy tyr gulH Mia. Only I mlla to Raidwln Rd. dxH. Wt bulW to ault. Ufa trada. Aik tor a L. Clovorloof Aertogfl V4 mlla frantaga on pavad road. Only to mild Tram prapotid in-taratato hwy. clovartoaf. 7g acrat total. Nlea rolllm wreparty wifh aama walar. Only 4404 par acra. a ^ j^t^ down. Ld't trada. Aik WE BUILD-TRADE PHONE. 628-2548 ROYER REALTY, INC. OXPORD OPPICi 111 t. LapMr Rd, ROYER GOODRICH OFFICE 9 AertSf-High ond Rolling 410 ft. trenloga on good country prlvaN flih. H 4 Acros a kind latttno tor lomaona Ida m ba unusual. ' ' hat hlHa, traaa and laka thd aboundi rry - » wan'l laat al and coniraet torma. ROYER REALTY) INC. GOODRICH 636-2211 ROYER-OXFORD OFFICE NEAR 1-75 7 acraa wim 147 tl. at road tron. toga. BNutItol trM of naw homai. Park toilad .and lurvaytd. Ttrmt avillabla. I mlla to twarMt axil. 41200 par acra. Will build to lull. Lot's toada. Atk far 1» A. 120 ACRES Ovar 1400 ft. on Raidwln Rd. Ap-prexlmatoly im ft. tokt frodpga - will apllt Into two M's. Goad poulblliiy at lad farm on towor 40. SubdlvUlon alto an upoar 40. Tarmt to lult. Ask lor 217 aT WE BUILD-TRADE PHONE. 628-2548 ROYER, REALTY, INC. OXPORD OPPICB IM S. LapMr Rd. SCHOOLHOUSE UkKi, you can't bMt mil locallan, SS' on Ita walar. I ■“«’r*S5rto^vr«*.i5isf Watorterd Rlty. 41MI71. Br KatoOnui Partridge “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" MR. ROAT ENTHUSIAST Haro It a contplda Marina wim ---- —1 wwtor ttoraga. twp cant rahim par ytir. Aafc tor No. 14-•W-GB. TRAVEL TRAILER MFG. PLANT Ovar 7SSP Sauara Foot of ipow oi. SM acraa. Fully aquippad to praduca II, 10) 12. or 24' madala. PfOMM awnar ratiring attar if vMri but win SKma^Td^d."*^^ RESTAURANT AND lea crapm ^pmant. Coll aitor 4 p.m. Ft s- SAGINAW BAY RESORT Camp traitor alto for i larga maruia, aoir aiia monir laiat, !g?'iiirtoSr«'.rM; trM bi Ita atato wim 0>HO “I don’t think it’s fair to give parents too many headaches—they have enough probiems toying to run the wwld!” WARDEN REALTY S434 W. Hurwi, Podtoc 44tH20 SUPER MARKET wim S.O.D. 340 80 TO 800 ACRES In Lawar Michtan. Dairy, grain, "Mtchlgan'i Ptrm RmI Eatota 2vr «-!.W.”Siicll; P«a!f 1?!!1 > SQUARh PERT cainmarclal M 5 7 "BUD" COMMERCIAL LOCATION Camar, WIda Track Driva. 11 '•mm oldar hama. Can ba used amall tpartmadi. Excallant ■*—‘ '*■ fufura. Prlcad alS?." ACROSS PROM Podtoc Otntril Hoipltol, lonad efficat, lOOxISO', allay- SacrHIca. FB 54120. ZONED COMMERCIAL _ BUSY PAVED HIGHWAY ANNETT OFFERS NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. "fe'^1201,**‘ Yiftor 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 O'NEIL OFFERS - ^ a*!!:."'___________ Ava., walar A i 0400 Ml. ... ____ _________ —read tradagt. 2M ft. an itrMt, iwar larga rdall auto , ------------T. sssk' ______________Jllar pa real bldgt. d SISAaoo. NEAR PONTIAC CITY HALL And Oataopamic HotpIMI..----- ag. ft. masonry bktg. partly air —--------- '— tm uiM tm OP rdall buiinMa ACROSS FROM PONTIAC N 4 hMtIng. S7S,S00, ImnMdIato poiitialon, awnar anxiaui to tall. DIXIE HIGHWAY 13 acraa naar Talagraph Rd. May ba haavy Induatrlal with poiitbla railroad ipur; Prasintly lonad multipla. 1155.000. : AAALL !' MS! nignway, loi zinxzw ft, 2 toad frontiMt, watar * ------- S217,S0D, tarmi. G— ------- In daitrabto area. Hava cuitomar who will Mka a an r now bulMIng an a p of mit proparty. OPDYKR ROAD — ZONED C-1 1.4 acraa wim 1010 ft. fredago, adlalns Induatrlal lOMd praparftr, Anolhar parcal - 110x200. omo, I S50.000, 212,500, down. AFTER 4 P.M. CALL MRS. EVA F. ANDERSON 512-3750 IE WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 •Y OWNER - Excallant______________ marclal propartv. Drayton Plalna, on Dixia Hwy. SISMO. with nict S badroam hama. 474-24M._________ CORNER READY tor commardal ill or 11100 , raaianably t Mr. Whito. Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action 334-4981 OFFICE BUILDING Hi apartmad, 1000 aq. ft. total a 10' eommar-'-' EIDl Laka Rd., S42JN0, S10.M0 down an land cddract, 402d514. Partridge “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" , UNBELIEVABLE 13,000 SO. FT. LIGHT MFGING. OR WAREHOUSE BRICK AlW BLOCK BUILDING 2 do^a* Tiled otfica ipac* Concrete Floors—aama hardwood ,..., ------- sq. ft. FULL PRICE $30,000 WITH S4M0 DOWN Owner will catuldar trada. ACTIVE OR SILENT PARTNER Invsit In local butinast. Excalli ^tantla|._ For detail, call ' t 9x12 Linoloum Rugs $4.95 BdM vinyl Tlla ..........7cm, vinyl AibaaMi tlla.......7c M Inlaid Tile, axf ......... 7c M, Ftoar $tap-2US Ellzabam Lata “Across From tho MoH" r franchliaa are 1 nd %\mm W It" ADMIRAL TIP PORTABLE. IP prax. 31 yds. «» w«bi carpal, tor- ...... TM WATCH IT GROW to^ d ntaltnjm prica. ^PlIaSE CALL-33S4114 Singleton Reoity -17 8. Paddock _________________ilatid. OR WANT TO SEE YOUR BUSINESS? BE SEoil iS RUMMAGE SALE REPOSSESSION sarylca guaramao. vnmpnnv S4^ or 14.41 a tnenm...For Saw^ Credit IWCHIGAN BAN KARP ACCEPTED 1969 T0UCH-A.M4TIC :ter. built-in light. ZIg Zagw UAAlun*. a-rOi. With goad .qadit to »ata ^ tdi baautiL Sirca5!*bel».». .y. GuarantM and laaiona Inckidad. Meuaahold Appllanca, H5-42S1. SAVE PLENTY TODAY! ’ on all tOM t{MT aa^lw'^ "Vi; ' Littla^'l iMatad. Pay oH $54 CASH OR $6 PER MO. PAYMENTS .....V UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER »'..»toj 2415 Dixia t ■ " •tltchlliaf mtKtt punonnoitip •!«. 3619 OlXIt rtwy.____________ rm Sow for 1124^04 bolonoi Miy S2f.50 TWIN BOX SPRING mottraii A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN I pc. living rm. group (sofa, chain, 3 bMullful toblaa. 2 lamps)) I .PC, bedroom (doubto drassar, chest, tad, {S'!S-TIK.,ffi3S.' ‘ USED SEWING MACHINE SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Dial for all your fancy stltchaa., Uhid hama, etc. MI.M caah or taka «q paymanit of S5.00 par reMth. Yaur choice Of cmiala or portaMa. Call I - PLENTY OF USED washars, stovts, r-'-'............ — furnltura Trada-ln _____ . Blvd. FE 2-4042. Attention Housewives n at Walton. Warren Stout, Realtor I Fu?ntt.!S'Au^,Te^^{^ 1450 N. Opdyka Rd. ---- Open Evas, 't CASH FOR LAND CONTRACtS H. J. Van Walt 4540 Dixie Hwy, — OR 3-1155 FE 5-1145 bronze OR CHROME DINETTE "" Mia, BRAND NEW. Larga and amall site (round, drep-laat, ric-tongular) toblaa in 3-, 5- and 7-pc. ■ S24.45 - FRANK MAROTTA & ASSOC. 3125 Union U. Rd, _______Union Uka, Mich, Wanton CoxtnwmpIlIHg. 61HL 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently ntaded. Sta ui batort * deal. Warren Stout, Realtor 450 N. Opdyka Rd. FE 5-1145 „ Optn Eves, 'til 4 p “ CASH For your Land Confraeft or Equity. Lowtst poulbis discount! Call 412-1420. Ask tor Frank Kalli ARRO REALTY 5143 Cass-Etiz. Laka Rd. HAVING TROUBLE CASHING i mad land codracla, targa lalj talancai. rakionable d Eprl Garrets, Realtor .... so. COMMERCE MArkd 4-ta WALLED LAKE EMpIra 1 OR SMALL land contracts) quick closing. --------- ■"——•* Earl Garrals, III 314-1I7I. batwMn 4-4. INVESTORS SPECIAL Wad to ta Mll-affiploi businau myn for a i vestmantr Hare Is your __________ Ownar said "Mil this going Coney liland butlntia at a aacritica prica IncldIfiB all aquipmant (or nm ■ ............................. .. nthi. I .. ........ RMity. OR 4-2221 . _______tor Nick Backalukat. OWNER RETIRING. Soiling homo and itrvice stdlbn. Thit ousinass rafted $14,000 In' *— —* ’’ monthi. Here It an E?^12'*yaart?**l* dw! 'Subatodisi down paymant remiirad, —' Sundays. Phona 434^1. Monty to Loan _ ik-leenied Monai^Lindar^ loan's $250 TO $1,000 COAAMUNITY LOAN CO. I E. LAWRENCE FE K Bmineit Opportnirititc 59Bmimn OgportHnitiEi 59 THE GOOD LIFE ihould Includa a, littto acraaga to plant a gardan, ----------- *«v5i,R,'cjs;t choice IH to 31 at i-f» irerm ■iwwwo, tornw. Stalden. 415.5M7. SCENIC ACRES NEAR 1-75 Jaslyn intarchanga. Ready ... 4.1m or tUDSIT. COUNTRY tIVING Clarkston arM - 11 acnii, 414,000. —.....nd, 2Vk to 10 acraa, S74S0 up. ------1,10 acres, 41,000 daam. Brandon, » acret, 411,430. aoxiir lot, level and dean in --------------- 160 ACRES dsualepmant land, rolling .3 at read (radagb. 4vy C. PANGUS, Rioltors open 7 DAYS A WEEK I M-IS , Ortonvilla CALL COLLECT 417-1015 Plan ^r tama^ mata**^lMl m'' parcSto IMay. ^r**!?*tapartoi^, WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty ^ 0 DIXIE HIGHWAY REALTOR Open *-t 4toHy CE OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 . 'LOSklNG l_ Clarkstont _CaH < itaWlta''agr'pla MW construction, t 4723401 SYLVAN 411-2100 ELIZABETH LAKE E S t A T E S_, 6000 LOT WITH LAKE PRIVILEGES. ' CITY^^|A$T. 78 X IIS FT. WITH CITY OF SYLVi I. 0. WIOEMAN, REALTOR 411 W. HURON ST. iSeaSM EVE. CALL ___________MV444t INDIANWOOO_ SHMIES _________________ call lu- XT'rhodes, realtor FE 4-2M4 in W. Walton, FE 5-47U multiple listing service _ :LAKE Pl'lVILiisES. Oribn Township. 05 staH your EmI. WRIGHT REALTY in OAKLAND AVE. FE 1-0141 MIOOll STIiAITS LAKE. T^ ■rarh Sub. too- woadad) Fax I 147', Bi-Lavd alia. TIMES THIS COULD BE YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO EARN $20,000.00/YR. OR MORE ... OWN AN ORANGE JULIUS REFRESHMENT CENTER Hundradt of ORANGE JULIUS (ranchiM ownara (ram coast to coa will tall you .. . "An Orange Julius FrenchiN It ma proven reu to high Income, prasllge. sacurlly S. indtpandtnea." Our n yrari of axpartonca In tta fashtood businau gutrantoes yi a sltnpllllad aptrallng syttom wim mr-'-'— $10-15.000 caah. railablt In tta follow STANFORD MALL, SChtntClady, N.Y. ORANGE PLAZA, MkMIatown, N.Y. SUBURBAN MALL, EntlaM. Conn. AUBURN MALL, Auburn, Mbss. DARTMOUTH MALL. Dartmoum, Mail. NEWINGTON MALL. Nawlra^. N.H. BELTWAY PLAZA, GraanMI, Md. attara In Ohio, B Mich, totalis call; Mdthaw Lalna. FranchiM Dir. (211) 41M211 (attar S:00 p.m.) or writo; Orange Julius d America* SMt ymd - Jackian Halghit, N.Y. 1442 CORVAIR CONVERTIBLE. 4- TIMES 130 ACRE FARM Near Yale.. IS ream hama naadi ramadafthB. cauW ba t tdnlly. Barra and ouhbulWtosi to good candNtaii. ONtred at MJN. Cdl ua tor more particulare. 200 ACRES at Big Rapbto X antaram ,to axcoBad itaoa. part pavad. 25 an lancM) 114 acraa WltMa wtm 1 p^ton in aan bank. OftorM « WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty MM DIXIE HIGHWAY BE YOUR OWN BOSS OPERATE A PROFITABLE BUSINESS IN YOUR FULL OR SPARE TIME - an aggraulva earion whe w. I at an —UM Ma apart lima NOTHING TO SELL BE A DISTRIBUTOR FOR national PIZZA COMPANY campany at Its kM. Wa tupBly more than savaral hundrad and r^sffsss. NOTHING TO SELL -SERVICE COMPANY SECURED ACCOUNTS The danand tor our areduct and larvicaa Is grawtog evary day. aur (Wrawiy and taka rapaat NO FRANCHISE PEE. MIMmum InveMmed at SHW to 84148 Is rRfs*7ssS(«cf——— NATIONAL PIZZA COMPANY 10407 Liberty, Box 714 St. Louis, Missouri 63123 314423-1100, ^k for Mr. Joy BAXTER — LIVINGSTONE Financa Co. 401 Pontiac Stato Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 MONEY Available to hama oymars. Cash In 24 hours avan R bahlnd ' payments or in toraclosura. CASH IN AT BRIAN INC. 62 NEED UP TO $5,000? x)r money tor materials. Whttevar )our horns naads tta: Voss & Buckner, Inc. 1401 Pontiac Stole Bank BMg. 334-3267 63 I ANDERSONVILLE, badroam hoi MA 5-2141. mlngs (or FarmT S7P0245. CAMPER TRADE for guns or bolf MONEY FOR HOUSES . CASH IN 24 HOURS , ^ ^ Brian Ine. ____________ 4280708 ter pickup. 1480011. t Sole CMiEf » LACE WEDDING GOWNS, tlzu --d 10. FE S-5441. LADIES' DRESSES Including knits, tiia 7-1. I coat, tiza IMr ‘ ‘ ' good candltton. FE P333I. NEW SPRING COAT size 11 woman's suite size 14. a doming 4lza 14. 451-0434. knytlma._______, Inie lUmmMt Gaeds 65 M what YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297 SUB par walk LimE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Bafalwto d Wallah. FE 2-4S41 Evas. ry)1d^"?.l»yg?t. itosw REFRIGERATOR. SI». Spring and iraftrau a IStna.yy Spring and mattreu w.t ttf. Dianfta ul, m. Other Items. COUNTRYSIDE LIVING 314-I5ea______14S4 Oakland A 4-PIECE BEDROOMS, brand rw W7. LIttte JM't Bargain Hou 1441 Baldwin, FE UUt. 441^ CHROME DINETTE, 4 chairs. S34.l» or terms of IS.IW a madh. Call Capitol Sawing Crad.lt Manager fill 9 p.m. 541-1200. MICHIGAN BANKARO ACCEPTED WESTINGHOUSE rifrlgtrafor and! freezar, geod candltton. 474-2041. Wanteci: Buyers For repossessed TV —Major appliances ' GE 23'' black and white TV ’ 2 GE Consold color TVs '! GE Avacado elae. range * (Sen ciunlng) •; GE auto, washer CLEARANCE 40" elsdric rangt. automatic washtr $29.95) _alaefrjc clothu dryer, $39.95) RaynoMt water uftnar, S49.9S CRUMP ELECTRIC „445 Auburn Rd. . FE 4.1573 CHROME DINETTEES, , FE 2- DINING TABLE and 4 diairt, upholstered, mahogany, t 2 0 4 . ( bast offer. 2 wing back chairs ai nveral end tablea or bast ofti FE 2-7491. ViSjU.' waihar. MO. G. I FURNITURE NEW LEFT IN lAYJl-WAY Sofa, Mr. and Mrt. Ctalra, all S pltcei Scdchguarded, z I pp a rad ravtrilbla cushions. Sold for 4»9, batonco duo S1S2 caili or 1)0 monrniy. Walnut badroom suite, double drasnr, 4 drawer chut, mirror, bookcau bad. Sold for $199, telanca due till cash or tIO modhiy. Sofa and matching chair, zipparad reversible cushions. Sold for $119, balance dut $134 cash or HO ANTIQUE DINING ROOM SEI^ 0 ctalra, buftot. 4P-1471 or 42M471, -,RT GLASS, CUTGI-" --------- lamps, Y'Ktid ) Davlsburg, M4^l, GATELEG TABLE, i Hi-Fi, TV and Rndtoe ^ 21 INCH MOTOROLA ConMIa TV. place udtonal, i —, cushlont, ul- ... _______ due, 'S152 cash or 410 mommy. , SPECIAL CREDIT AVAILABLE FOR YOUNG IIAARRIEDS. COSIGNERS NEEDED. HAVE YOUR ( r chair wicu on Frayar caTi Iss-Ttoo fo HDUSEHDLD SPECIAL $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE — Conaitte of: a-ploco living room outfit With ! living room suite, 2 atop tabtf cockfall table,. 2 labto lamps (1) 9'xI2' rug Includad. tax spring and 2-- ------ 5-daca dlratta ut with 4 chtama chdra and Mbto. All tor 2399. Your credit It good d Wyman'a. WYMAN FURNITURE CD. 17 E. HURON___________Fi 5-1501 KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION-150 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. , H7 DIXIE HWY.________ 4782214 LINOLEOm RU^ Most Hi Auburn Ava. FE 4 LIVING ROOMS, BRAND raw, Vb price Llftla Jot'a, 1441 Baldwin, parted condition. TO NEW FURNITURE — Living rtom, bodroom, and dtoaftts. 20-41 par cent aft. Tytor's Auctlen, 4159 Highland Rd. 4734514. Optn M. NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC, Zig-Zag uwing machine. Cablnd $5.90 Per Month for 9 Mos. OR $53 CASH BAUNCE .to MOVED TO 440 AUBURN, PONTIAC, FE 87111. REFRIGERATORS. DISHWASHERS, Fully guarpniiad. TarrHfic uvingK USED COLOR TV SETS, S199.95 SWEET'S ND AP-.................... UNCLAIMED LAY-A-WAY ’2.“ s 1 GE Storaot GE 2 door Coppertona rafrlgaratar^ Westlnghouia comb, refrlgoratotv budget TERMS AVAILABLI 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH ' NO MONEY DOWN Goodyear Service Store! 1370 Wide Trade Pontiac, Mich. PhOna 3354149 YOUNG > MARRIEDS Need furnlturef Undir 212 WO Can 515 E. Walton, cb A-1 REBUILT COLOR and bl white TVs. Obal T.V. Si Sarvica, 412-0121 _______ ILACK AND WHitE Cons $39.95. Call 391-1045 aft. 4 p. 2..TLi.iagi'S'.Jg-* AflANUFACTURERS CLOSE-OUT. STEREO WALNUT CONSOLE $89 OR SS PER MONTH UNIVERSAL 2415 DIXIE HWY. FE 80105 Dally 10:304________Saf. 10:204 STEREO'S : 6-WiU ■0. Wal im win. . adlSr^ la*)!g % NEW LEFT IN UY-A-WAY Mediterranean conuto xiarao. Wahiul cabinet, solid tide system wtth 1 tpeakert, 70 watte, ramdr-- outlets. AM-FM ttotao n mond media, playa a" ords. Sow tor $319 t wilal maple a ng, AM-FM r Consoia ttorao AM-FM radW. >4 tpeaker wim ramola ipaakar pro-visions ptoyi Pll sIzp rpcorda. Sdd tor SI99, bPianca dup S157 cash ar COSIGNERS NEEDED. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 441 Ellz. Lk. Rd. 33S4>2i ...- Tatogrpph R«----- V't FOR SALE, rtatBpaBlP Sagamore Motel, 719 S..Waa«tard.' a.-...- - • aa a- FURS, axcellad i 1940 EDITION,'Scyckipidlp Britoii: 140^ BTU CRANE gu AiriMKP. In ABhI? *’*'■*'■ ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE S-7471 FARFISA 9ALAXY ORGAN, “~ith» eia, walnirt ci¥lr___ ^•Wt. Attw «;N p.m, Mt- (URRICAN FLYER TRAIN, Mir «ry«r aM mlie. FI SlljjUENT SALE: FEGRUARY VkrwSh Fab. », >0 a.mv« a.r {mm air canditlanar, raclini ffirimon. itaw*.____________ WilrelS ,.„.jrd Lk.. PE M4a - ». I HAMMOND C-3 ORGAN, JR4I and irEAUTY BOUiPMENf: TRo F SlSJlwra - axtri - - ouitar, im" tnounovnwnri ar vnvouni y8*?13d ifty 2;3Q p,hr ,,b.., 45« Plxla.DrbYlM.OR^MCTLLJ^y waH. lor Wont Ads Dial 3344981 THE PONTIAC PRISSS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 24, I960 C—13 •FLASH: Rant a brand naw Story and piano, tIZ par nwnlh. Rant cartaga appiTai toward purcha». Morris Music «t.TalMr.pb__...f,,4m| By Dick Turner Wonted Cort-Tncks 101 New end Usal TrOckt 103 PB »WZI I0» Phil* FB * enclose YOUR shower ovai * Mhtub with a boauNful glaai ontloiura, aluminum frama, uM blatlad Swan datlan, SI G. A. Thompaon, TOSS m4» W. efiRCBP AIR OIL rurnaca, conirolt “ndSii. pood condition SSO. FE 5- *"”fALB0TT LUMBER tOU Oakland FE AWS' iC'aiSfg a*;? &a Tarrltlc valuaa, Michigan Flugrt xant, ITS Orchard Laka. FB S4M^1«- __________:___ heavy duty TRAILER, could rSaui i anowmobliai. STSSSIT. hot WATER'TiASEBOARI T* aactlon. Cloaa^uti, SI. G. A. Thompion fc SOn, SMILEY eTrOsI MUSIC ,yia 10. S50. 1M-7SI0..Saginaw , FF a- USED ORGANS LAVAtoRiEsr. complete, mso valuo S14.TS, alio bathtubs, toilati, showar atalli, Irragulars. Ta"'"'-valuai, Michigan Fluonicml xrrchSrd LSka. FE 44M6Z — 1. ^LAWTrTRACfORS r Uiad, Simpllcl- iHTEN'S ROWS WNTOv/n ROCHESTER ' RItABLE DOG KENNEL, S'xl'. ISZ-4TIS. ■ I HIM Fai ---- ituf aarvi colors. Opsn 1:10 a.m. 7 day wssk. 335-5259 x ES^LH^M^KENtietS?ift*^W 1-AA ARC Stud Service ____ plei. a;_________ _______ FE 447ZI 4 PUPPIES, Mothsr Lai —--------retrlsvsr, l wkt, old. S'' 17T1. I ARC POODLES., ,^£^^^7100^, 1969 VACATIONAIR 16' Self Contained $1950 Rsducsd tirlcsi on Slivsr _Eagls Trallsra, displaysd at DatAll fm" in'afi Trollsr Show. '^w'p.mll TREANOR'S TRAILERS 12012 Pontiac Drivs, (1 block NW of Tsi. and Orch. Lk.) TtOURS: Dally ! M, Sunday 1M, Phona 4I2-IT4S. 'My Pop doesn’t believe we descended from monkeys. He thinks we started out as birds and bees!” 95 FE 3-7160’ PIES. *710714. PB ARSONS. C.'i"'l'™l»E.,HAS WHITEHALL DUO COMBO ORGAN LIST PRICE WTS Sole Price $600 PONTIAC MUSIC A SOUND 11 W. HURON . WEBCOR STEREO tapa SST.TSt laundry .!rav,, trimj_»iT.«i ihowir iliitt with trlnip $^#951 2* MVE PLUMBING CO. 041 Baldwin. FE 4-1S16. ________ SuARTERliAmMT (6»Carl) Call after t P.m. 332-455?, ...__ lAILRdAb TIEt-iklCE osiiis sa. call alt. 4. OSMioo. c^nictrw&'Kn awr «r _______ Sperting Geedt ROYAL TYPEWnTTER,'. 30" BM IJ-" stovs, siw 4V4 ladlsa rollar ikalM.,'»J '5,=, WrItiM Mik. TST-IOM Utica.___| S"«wm.hlla. Clo! .......... tl20. w... ..... _____ ______________...._______ BoroH FE A4SI5 ext. SS, ar 473-1 Stud sarvica. FE 4-4344. .'AKC POODLE PUPS, SSO aach With -----------■ 474-1S10. 714 AKC REGtSTERED BOXER, A isibftneH* a«A.9Jill I 1969 Camanche 21' $2,090 Gos-Elec. Refrig., Stool-Vanity, Sleeps 6 VILLAGE Trailer Sales Oakland Co.'s, Newest 12xSS' Richardson 2-badrm., S4,1TS. 1T40„BASA Colonial Mobile Homes ' - FE 3-14S7 423-1310 .. « .. 54M oixlsi 19 Motorcycles^ 1H7 NORTON SCRAMBLER 730 CC. Naw dutch, dark graan, Extraa. ..... IShorty muHlart Etc.) I77S. Altar 0475. Call Desperately Wonted Chavaiitt, OTOa, Fir IT4M nimugh 1T0T. I, Camsrea, Ca 1T4I FORD PICKUP, Campar J»«laL V-l, automatic, pir con- fc'iMK?.3St?a&. ’• CffiVRbllT 1T44 SarSTioTeirand Averill's Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Sharp Cadllltca, Pontiac, OWi and Buicka for out-ol-ltala markal. Too dollar paid. | MANSFIELD AUTO SALES FEAST«,’"^'*"^'"*%iM»23l ------only, V-3, 2-( Will taka up to t. . TOOxZq tirat, axe. condl waakdaya I - * Hagy. 5.apaad. ..A.'gJll 442-UOO, Mr.^ STOP HERE LAST M6cM MOTOR SALES Now at eur naw location ----, modil Nj.- International Trucks Newly Appointed Deoler 10 Trucks Now Ready For Immediate Delivery GRIMALDI IMPORTED CARS 900 Oakland Avenue FE 5-9421 New eiidxlleed Core 1M SHELTON 1447^ BUICK WlWcaf 2 door .rrait, r';.**Tt..,*.n«!7wi». PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL Opan 'til y p.m. tonight 153 S. RpchMtar Rd. 431-53110 Cara. Corvattas naadad, ■1130 Oakland at Viaduct i _______________331-1241 ___ I TOP $ FOR CLEAN CARS OR ‘•'ucka. Economy Cpra. 2333 Olxl4. EXTRA Dollars Paid « FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car Chaek tha raat.Wan gat tho hast Averill's *_Dlx!a_FB_4-4S7 i ‘ $2495 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Soles it50 W. AAapla_WI 4^ iSHELTON RIVJERA 2 door hardtop with I quarantOad actual milts, naW warranty, will taka cradit ovtr phona. PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL Opan 'til r tonight 135 S. RochostOf Rd. 431-5300 SHEL'TON , ;i74f BUICK Skylark custom 2-door Aute Insurance-Marine 104 5rt»i. vC ti'p^’Uap'l SC: ............ — (ng, on this onti Only 33575, $100 Auto Insurance " >oNTi*c.BuicK.opa Anderson :$33 S.^Rochestor^RS."’' ^’’"'"Ml-Siog 1044 Joslyn FE 4-3535 l^^nlvTOw^g^ JEEP Soles-Service Ovtr 23 UB«d Jt«p> In StocK -> Ready to go. HAHN JEEP 4473 01x14 Hwy. Near MIS TRAILER 4. 15' was good 700x! to 3, 442-M _MAJ:26M i'uo doTiy. I rollers. TOP DOLLARS FOR SHMP, LOW Faraim Cars MILEAGE AUTOMOBILES. ' GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS 105 CADILLAti coups. 1743 KARMANN GHIA. i . JACH IN STOCK 12 X 60 B4rly Amarican .... Front Living room Expands TRIUMPH ------------- D caih. Ilka naw, driven S .1 wSSarfwdl thSSSlSl "p™ FE 4-7371 ......... FE 4-1777 S- or, waiartafdl tjap,^,iating name and phona y^QuId |j|j, to buy late model GM Cars or will ac- ,1743 CADILLAC 4 _____ condition, all good rubber, ' power, $730 caiTi. 374-0114. 11743 CADILLAC SEDAN Da V • 37,000 actual miles, air c— power, 11,175. Buy ha,» — r»r -------- ....— ... ortland. .17775 " Motorcycle Sale SPECIAL PRICES ON ALL 12x50 ACTIVE , . ^ ^ ^ . 17 carpeting, vary clean, sat-up! Anderson Sales & Service lot, roady to i-‘— —-------------------------------------- "lESSION. r" •i *uICK 1463 S. telegraph FE 3-710, cept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK ________________------------------------------------------ ACCORDION GUITAR, LESSONS. AKC OERMAN^SHERHERD Pupa, 7' FOR NOMADS A CAMANCHES Sstat-sarvlca. Alto piano tuning, waaka. 402-4305._________^__i 4470 Dixie Clarktton 425-2217 PulanackI, OR M574- lAKC BRITTANY Spaniel pupa, I CLASSICAL rtlllTAb la.Mn«. Fan-i WSeka. 402-7071-—tjac_“--------- TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Tatagraph at Dixit Hwy. 334-6694 I SUZUKI 1969 Izsocc street ............. 230 CC Scrambler ...... ■200 CC Straat ..... 130 CC street ............ 544 S. WOODWARD ' 647-5600 144 VW 2 DOOR, Radio snd httlsr. horo, Marvol 'moIoi No S down, paymonls 15.73. Full FE B-4077.___ price S4I0. Coll Mr. Parks, eradit. late model CADILLACS ON TAToiria FORD _B]wlngham 1743 FIAT, 4 DOOR, good C( $473. 424-2772. JEROME 196‘5 VW Station Wagon Deluxe Radio, gat haalar and root rack. 7 $1495 SHELTON Bill GoUing VW, Inc. (From Pontiac to • Birmingham ----------------- ---- mllM,'*laft°en Maplalawn, Taii^wfe. PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL VOLKSWAGEN, anew liras, ax- Open'til 7 tonight ------...... j Roc^estor Rd. 451-5500 f745 CADILLAC COUPE DBVILLE. 764 vOLKSWAepN, inow iirai ctllont condition- EM 3-3772. ---TRAILERS Guarmtood nr tin. $•• gat a d-----------* I ! Junk Cart-Tracks 1967 CORTINA GT With nice burgundy finish, hat black Interior, only $1175. ' GRIMALDI CAR CO. iTOO Ookland Avo. ISonabiie'^for.’TOM'S BASSETT. AKC *JjLLE, .. _______________________________ , _________705 Orchard Lk.' Champion tired. 073-1334.----------------------- SUMP PUMPS SOLD, ranted and Ave. Dally 7-4. Sun. 7-2. FE 5-2424. COLLIE PUPS, AKC, S50 or $40. 343- - Supply, 2020. Tent trailer, good condition. THE PROVEN • CARPET clMiwr Bluo Luttro it oatv on tho br —" Ront oloctric ahomp^r THE SALVATION AR^MY ' red SHIELD STORE T1S W. LAWRENCE ST. itiO AND NEW offica MKA chairs, typawritera, . • ^ . mtchinaa, S!?mnB ,}obl«r cablnala. Forbes PrlnNw i Tiea SuppW,,.4500 Dixie ■'Drayton, OR 3-7747._________ WX^hId .vymjNG. Ra®S' “■ 500, S. GlVd. E, 333-714j yVBSTINGHOUSE DRYER, $«; 00$ pinoa, tSSi alaclrlc range, '*3 rafrnorator, S73» older cmblnatlon TV. and record plover, *20; huge badi, 137; .Uprfiht p ano, "" « R Swth MOvlpg, 10 S. Jatao,_____ vjXTERFORD ■ CA*JNETS, 5720 Wllllpma Loko Rd., DrfVtO" -TMaina. Cloaa-out of blattic or . Wood bothroom vanltfis. varla CLEARANCE SALE Special price on all tnowmoblla while they last. All modtia I ock. MG SALES & SERVICE .r M2-7m ____canariesTsinoers, pamaiat. rSTso 3703. __________! ---- ------1 pinscher puppies. imoars. Wt will be cK ■ Fabruiry. Re-eptn i IV Inventory tale hursdav. February 27. '/$ milt East of Ltpaor e CLEARANCE SCORPION SNOWMOBILES PftiCES SLASHED 15" TRACK -20 HP Wankol, -30 HP Twin, I IS" TRACK , SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS. SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS JaJJisfnTrXrlales .JOg Wllllama LaKo Rd. OR 3-37H CREE PICKUP CAMPER, SSlIzSr * ■’•^/•HWRlSoirRd^WmildfM •"'■i PTSiSi^NATii^rrbi^ *‘— *“ -?5t5SLm!ow...FB±0ML. I m ’wo' " afWir? Call altar 5, 6t5-27st. Jamaa ... ------------- „— ........ “A Hines. mileage. $l75. OR 4-1547. ||..h Au4«.Trttrb PitrOc —iMTAtLAS MOBILE" homeTiw ------------------------- ------------!----MUio-irMwi ran. with Bicycles 96 324 engine tJS; Mu^ticla_four spaed, 4SHELTON 1767 VW Custoiri 10 with 4 apood. Meal DAWSOli^ sale's T"i*P*S I C 0 copper — brass, RADIATORS — duj yas, nKf me wnoii gy'£!ff*'j!!S. lake Phwe ta-aiV 1 C- DIxson.- ,M go. $1,775. Il7.00down. F58p Jarntt H. vAAAAUA linrr. iik* n»w. Iaw , U.”.?rj5r ii— CREE PICKUP CAJWPBKr S23. long, self aontalnad. 117-3235. CHECK OUT THE BIG 8 NORWEGIAN ELKHOUNOa . months oW> fgrwtla. ~ TOTH EXCLUSIVES IN tHE APACHE '69 TRAVEL TRAILER 15 PER CENT OFF Trtllart, ^ itiots. M7-3337. POODLE PUPS, AKC, illvar and brown. Alio Stud tarylca. 420^473.. I POODLE PUPPIES, Darwin English Imgert^i^ apricot, doposlt, wiii|. . Unfurniahtd. Ready needs work, $43. FE 3-4700. PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL ipan 'til 7 p.m. r tonight Rechoitor Rd. _____431-5 OPAL 1767" W aITO N , “ h larlormanct packagt. LIM ns -adlo, low mileage, $1,073. 6 or your old cir do«m. Coll Mr. Parks, cradit manager at Ml 4- ^HAROLD TURNER FORD i7 CADILLAC rhita top, 1700 or 6 2 3- 1 720 BEST MOBILE HOMES Michigan Morlette Dealer Free dollvory and lat up within 200 miles Marietta'Expandos on displays OPEN DAILY 12 NOON TILL ♦ p.m. 4080 Dixie Hwy. 673-1191 1968 Cadilloc Eldorado Pull power, air conditioned, ttarao, and lilt whatl. MetaUlc blua with blut vinyl top. Mint condition. Hurry and buy this ona and SAVE I Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Soles - 1750 W. Maple Ml 6-2000 D.,rf..A.»....tna 07 '327 f?r''wrttrK'mMO.'’’^' "■"' i 1967 VW il760 CADILLAC COUPLi OteVlLLE Boats ACCGSiOriOS--------t# jjjj-jyfg^cuRY MONTCLAIR Beautiful blua with black Inferior leOVOMO.________________ wrocTSte anglnortrantmliilon, ill i real gas savor lor only $1175., SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVBTi partaT EM 34743. , GRIMALDI CAR CO. I CHEVY, 1700 W. Maple, Ml 4-2733, MUNCIB 700 Oakland Ava. FE 3-7421 14' SEARS ALUMINUM IX.,.. -- 4 h.p. Johnson AAotor, Cover Best offer. I1M N. Oakland, Pontiac. Bahind Ntdi Car Wash. Phone $34- ASSCRAPT GOAT norsa slactrlc Johnion. 117-4474. _____________________ Corvair Pontiac ouai alum. Wabar preasuro plati parti for a P< Nhsa! clutch ahdl 7431. II typsi ot apaad 57"' ic. f¥a-37"^sf 1' I V.W. SQUAREBACK, t1S50. 402- MIDLAND TRAILER SALES FEATURING; Holly Rork Parkwo Danish King. Houra 7:30 to 7 p.m. 2257 Dixit Hwy. 338-0772 POMERANIAN PUP, I WMks, 070; wormed, AKC ragistarad, tsmpar (Then dare to buy another brand!!!) 17' CENTURY 223 horis powar. Lika 1969 Models on Display Duo ond Gtasspar Boats CHRYSLER AND JOHNSON MOTOR dealer, 1 YOUNG'S MARINA 4030 Dixie on Loon Lakt Draylon Plains_____ OR 4-04111 WRECKEp 1745 Grind Prix, wtiolo or parts, wfackad. In front and. " ■■ — 0.7772. SHELTON ________________________J0J| "s.KAS'yris.s!.'-' ss»=™7' 133 8. Rocheltor M. 431-S 2 Cadillacs '41- ...... . 6 Ponttaca '41— '44.......$7S up '40 Mercury— '00 Falcon ..$45 ta. 'OS Chtvy — '44 Corvair and othari '41 bidt'-^ 'azbodga iiii' —ag. 4 Trucks others to ehoota from , 2333 Dixie economy Cart PE 4-in3r CHEVY, BXCELLENT COit 5341. I TMli-MachinGry 68 COMPRESSORS,, UWvaralty D^a. FE Voi04. ATTENTION STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. .... Id (M-57) WANTED GOOD HOME, -------- 4-2IB7. Demo-Used SNOWMOBILES 20 h.p. Polarla, Sfc. .....- - ■ 14'/i h.p. Ski Doo, 5475 ST. BERNARD AKC, « fcS; . lat! “ Ikt Diddler' dome W75 SCHNAUZERS, MINIATURE tlivtr. Ski Diddlor, demo. »'’*.n„f,r.6:homploh, lino, I w*m«- 474. PetsHHyaHaf P«y 79j REGISTERED MINI-TOY POODLE! 2 brown, 1 bolga. Padlgrood brown i mala for stud. PE »1773.__ * P§ODLEfc*Toy ^x * TorrIortT end I sy!;■■5rPEg;^4g^ ....... EVAN'S Equipment To7 425-ltll Clarkitpn WED. A FRI. OPEN TIL 7 P.M. CENTURY LIBERTY 1744 lOx 3ni YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS lUALITY AT ANYBU DGET STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. (M-57) ^ovor WM h,: airsotSbl CRUISE OUT, INC. Btno Miner, w I ® ChHari Sundovi*^ condHhm, $300. W A S turn ng --------------Dally 7-0, Cteaoil Sui^oyo tools (1733), 150. B A 0 turning aaaSSEY FERGUSON SKI I head, S2g. Duplax tool hoMsr, 540. snowmoWlo now on bond, 17 _ „ Largo additional oasortmoiif screw 23 horse irMchIrm, Pontiac ^Parm machine tooling. Cool-lt pumps, and Industrial, 125 ' 525. Wa atm are offering 3 fen I 0641 or 334-1442. milling cutttra, 51 lb. to 52 lb. mossbeRG 301 CALIBI . WroneW Sfc, High speed drill, 51 swpo, lb. Taps, 3 tor 51. End mills, $1 a| 332.4164. lb. 1 ton chain saw, $60. BAD air; ------------ Impact wrench, $160 list, aur price $75. Electric W Impact, $55. as capacity V* ---------- —......... . $15. Hand eld, $123. Call MO 4-4013, Li SIBERIAN HUSKY, 11 Woodward, 334- pollshing sto ------- .. .untad polnli, -aod tens at abrOsst ..from. - Mi-Lo AbrassivES & Tools 10120 Capl^Oak Park Houra-Mon„ Tuaa., W4d. 7 a.m.-l:30, T&ff:, SCORPION Snow Mobiles ’?naM PRICES SLASHED chooat ON LAST 3 MACHINES IN STOCK 15 Inch Tracks 1 24 h.p. MpnuPl H.D. Carb. 1 20 h.p aloctric WEINARANER PUPS. Also wlro^ terrier. 42SG727. YEAR bLD POODLE, Mali. Cham-pagna, raglllprad. housa trainad.' 473-7847 aft. 3, n lb. Capacity, IV lift, (t, pnaumOtlc tires, $2430; i » lb. capcily, 11030,- Yale “0, alf In gr-"--------- no'prices ove*' -1 McCELLAN TRAVEL "• TRAILERS . GUNS, M ^»”icr47^ FREE - FREE COLOR TV WITH FIRST^IZ^igROERS New SPORT TRAILER DELUXE HARDTOP cJkMPER Slotpa A 51475 Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4377 Dixie Highway.____425-44(1 LIFETIME MOTOR HOMES 23' aell contained, full powar, V-ai angina, duals, stereo, ate., apacial deal on stock unItS;_ i STACHLER TRAILER , SALES, INC. I B 8i B AUCTION 3771 Hleniand Rd. (M-57) 40M44g SVER^^UHOAY^.^.....-Wj(gJ.WI. ’‘•’%l6?.«a»SWELCOME„ CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION AT TONY'S MARINE nson motors, Areocreft GW , Geneve boats, pontoons ________Sylvan Lake 30' COMMANDER I 1743 DODGE DUMP, 5030, S! MA 3-4242 or 31 INew G.id Used Cars , 106 IM2 CORVAIR MONZA ROYAL-OR-REGAL ACTIVE JUST ARRIVED: I WTOXWIi' LIVING ROOM TOWN & COUNTRY M()BILE HOMES, INC. TYLER'S AUCTION TYLER'S AUCTION OAKLAND CAMPER 4rMS34 Midwest covers and sisapsra. / steel frame. ’—- " -— ,Tour-a- home covara , • " DAY, PEG, 24, 10 AJV\. ir salts aiM servlet Galdwin at Celgala MASSEY FERGUSON 1747 Diaael ..rrfedal 302, back --------■""“ >•—------- 771-0021. Pg H Yaw;8GH 69 Gun Shop, I'A. mllti nert.. -. Otlsvllte on M-lS. Open l:W:30. 7 days a weak. Phone 431-2“’ EIJCE NEW AUTOMATIC movla * c4mera, prejacter -and Ocraan. Original cost $300, tall lor $300.' ■ I74»74. I iftaiicai Goodt 71 1744 FENDER PRECISION Bats,! ' JoMTI* SALE SKI-DOOS lAL MODELS OF^ USED SK S, ALL IN A-1 CONDITION. KING BROS. Ski Doo's Sno Jet's AIRLINE DOUBLE KEYBOAR6 "N ^ CiTr'*! 1 T'VT’^ Q — I. 1 yr. old. St23. 402-4342. I iVJL t?iUU.iy O 't^gan. 1 ..._________________— , fEj^KWITH BABY GRAND, gOod, ctnditlon, S475. 451-3754. j TO 00 aura or oeiivary oy *■’ ***^*.^ .9.UTTUIC. fiV* »_«*.?’ vacation date order now. ibbEN PA WITH columha, Ttl-ray —-0 rovtrb. 4i2-S741. CONCERT HAMMOND ORGAN wilb organ mike and taalla tana ♦ CaMnat. 42341777. . i^CTWe^wrfA)^ and ampllflar. >PIANO U-. any plane • anrar sm i-------- - - jearton. S73. 431-S3tB. ENJOY YOUR PIANO DAVID A. SCULL PIANO TECHNICIAN 335-8227 TERRIFIC SAVINGS for the "Early Bird'' Shopper On naw Johnson nwtors And Starcratt boats._ Also tea SCRAMBLER Th# naw concapt In mobility. A tow 1%7 Ski Does left in stock. JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT V, Ml. E. city llmift PIONEER CAMPER SALES Trailers: Jubilee, Globa Star Barth Campars: Swlnnr, MKkInaw, Travel Quaan, Caribou, Barth Covars; Stutt Baarcar, AAarIt_ ........... 4014172a 334-6694 Opan Dolly 10 on. to I p.m. Open Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p. ' Op4n Sunday 1 p.m. to 4 p.nr Other timos by Appt. MCE W ^ PAYING RENTl' START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT SEE THE ALL NEW DETROITER AMERICAN KROPF BUY WHERE SERVICE IS BEST BUY [HERE SAVINGS ARE CREATES E-Z TERMS BANK FINANCING SHOP IN COMFORT HEATED MODELS AT Bob Hutchinson's Mobile Home Soles open Dally 'III I p.m. Saturday and Sunday 'til 5 DRAYTON PLAINS 4301 Dixie Hwy, (U.S. TO) OR 3-1202 winners. Sell bred open. SI TRAVEL TRAILERS BONANZA WEST WIND WOOD LAKE ,1 To bo aura of dellvary by your r< vacation date order now. Most moats, (fall PE 2-0153. 14 _ farm eggs, Grade. A large, 2 M. — —^-’a medium, 2 doi. 07C. _______,...w potatoes, 50 lbs. Si.47. ). 1 potatoes, 30 lbs. S1.47. Cooking onions, 3 lbs. ■ 17c. MCDonr“ Homogenittd milk, gal. corti 73C. or W goL 48C. -3330 Oil Hway, Boros CountfY. Markat. ml. north of Tal^rapn. •OTATOES - 335 W. SjIvtrbtll ( Gut Parry. Britig canlalnart. i*l*3?aot thru 27 feat. McClellan travel TRAILERS 6130 Highland Road (M-S7) 474-3103___ TROTWOODS WAO-N-MASTEl S ACE TRAVEL^-^AILERS ___ 517 E. Walton Blvd. PB 4-3053 ip ntao. Id In 'U. soft top. 4 sloeptr, OS, Snlfftr, onglnas $6000. Call 431-0007. 1963 JEEP ! AUTOBAHN nifi:“'’.n«!!:i 1hr5ik"on7v’ mm "your vw center" , GRIMALDI CAR CO. ,1765 Telegraph FE 8-4531 impala, 2 .......,..:.gl.l7«r------------------‘ ,1^,,-..--, STANDARD AUTO 1744 CHEVY PICKUP, W tan, good booting pleasurs. Includes tha new SriSSKM *14^5 ZO-, Steury, MIrro-Cratt, Grumman, Take M-32 to W. Highland, right to Hickory Ridgt Rd. tg Oemodo Rd., laft and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES TIPSICO LAKE. PhSIW 427- NEW 1968 MODELS USED BOATS ID MOTO: Drastic Reductions CRUISE OUT, INC. 1745 INTERNATIONAL TrovOPAll. ... —pjw,r slotr'— ' Automatic trar IS. BrakA and _______7 p.m. 3434204.__ 1744 FORD SOPER VAN automatic, priced right. FE 441544. 1744 3 QUARTER TON —mpor ipaclai with li mper. ^11 attar 4 p____ 1967 GMCu, Si crVl. 75 cori to ehS'so frotS.: wT~CORVAIR Mo.ua, Call cradit mgr. Mr. |rv —— ' -----*...... PE 4-te04Or PE 3-7134. transmission, good con-onion, mv-3000 oxt. 4144, Ask for Mr. Qorglo, or 451-1284, best otter. 1741 CHEVY, V-S, 4 door, automatic,! transmission, axoellont condition, S325. Buy hero — Pay hart, Marvol Motors, 331 Oakland, FE S-4077. 1743 CHEVY SS, COnvartlbM, 327,. ------ slaorlng, power brakes, fi.., radio, hoator and whilt side wjjjj^ Dealer_________ ‘’'1744 Ct I, HARDTOP .. and out, RONEY'S " ‘1 Avo. FE 4- $8951 'l7M CHEVY SS. I HILLSIDE ■ ■ o *'^^*^^^*^^313-7143 >»^»^0"VETTE CONVERTIBLi^ 1250 Ookland Avo. 333-7143 new meter. 402-3444. f744"iUICK\L0SABRE ^oor, deuUo iM6 CHEVY It, SS. 327-330, 4.tptOd, pwor. Exctllant condition. 332-1 best oHor. Call balwaan 44 p.m. 5303. _______I EM 3-2332. 1744 CHEVY BlSCAYNE, 4 cylinder Clean, $400. 474-2040. t764 * CHEVY liMPALA, 2 door hardtop, auto, transmission, powti 1747 JEEP, _4 whMl drive, pickup bu,ck Electro 223 4-door.| tRSfl'pE'?! with snowplow."334-503S. _| ppik, |(«>, ell go first class, lust ,7:**—...‘ 1747 DODGE $4 ton crew cab, drive end you'll bqvl Make )»04 CHEVY 4-DOOR, 4 slick. 423-■ - camper sptcisl 303 VO, " " '$1595 FLANNERY FORD - -..chf? ton r f747 FORD..TRUCKk-7X X.L_|J.,J X X V NOW IS THE TIME For your outboerd Motor tuno-up Be an "early bird." Beat tha spring rush HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1M7 s. Talograph 332-0131 school children. 335-0155. All In Our Showroom! PINTER'S Boston Whaler — ell models Johnson Motors - V/i to 113 h.p.. 20* Thompson 1-0 flboralas. ir Starcratt 1-0 alum. 14' Johnson Seasport IG. 24' Thompson crusltr IG. 10' MFG TrI-Hull IG. ----- -TSOn, TrI-OulI IG.O.B. ________17'-20', low'as 0475. Starcratt, MFG, Outboard, Sailboats, Fisherman, Canoes. ” 1370 ( payments you can il PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL 1745 CHEVY 4 _J, $075. Cell MY 3-1434. Ooen 'III 7 tonioht IMS CHEVY BISCAYliE, 3 door, 4 Toil 755_S._Ro?Q.r' 431-330oLcyJlnd.r.,$4«^(l444^ "'drmTvi tw'wTt'lTeompdr. 327 V- 1763 BUICK SkYpU«i^$p?rt wi * a engine. $13,000. Priced to toll. 1 7. patsongor,, VI, automstlc, ,p Rosa EM 3- GMC TRUCK CENTER 701 Oakland Ave. 8:00 to 5:00 Mondoy-Fridoy 8:00 to 12:00 Saturday $*375!"?I Auutiie PONTIAC ... w.-dnilM5 CHEVY IMPALA WAGON, 2 .... '-'^nvAiR MONZA, 4 spaad. 17« CHEVY IMPALA wagon, "V4, 1150 MapIo Rd. Tractor, 1 1967 GMC TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS ^ .. Call Mr. Parks, credit manager a Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 1743 BUICK. - $1175. On U.S. 10 at Clarktton, MA 3-3071. Over other cars to cheeso from. 1745 BUICK ELECTRA 4-dOO. hardtop, full power, real sharp :arl No "--------■■■ “ ly. 15,1— 75,17M^C or irp LUCKY AUTO 9, ioufb cor, uono, Ktags CHEVY SS, take over piymknt. i 04474 after S p JYi. 1745 IMPALA 2 DOOR hardtop. Exc. 1. 51100. FE 2-177V. ditlan. M30. FE 2-17 it o'aiilar^'Unlv. Exit). ^ •'••''•"I)- PRE-SEASON ! Boat Special ero-crott 40 h.p. Johr "■ BU|£k 1744 wildcat convertible, I $1675, while, with rr-* -«507*3£j.,30 iJS *'KXe'.-° ' ! / trailer TlrafrAitO-TracIt_______^‘KAR-. BoeftA Motors. REMlR^UN^And^bal.^ Mjj| chiJiSJwPT 55d sSaft • awaa A>a«. ’ iHirpi »iyT'OOwn. Blilinc* GMAC 1966 GMC bill FOX CHEVROLET ull air, 401 onglne, powtr 5 Rochester Rd, 651-7000 ll764 BUICK ELECTRA 225. 4. door, .nx 10AA rwir hardtop, burgundy, ond vinyl top/| 1250 and 1966 61VIC I Power windows, radio, whitewalls. Tandem tractor, $V, diesel engine, 10 real nice family *’"* apaad road range, nice tirt 1962 GMC Beverage Van, Shi REPAIR, MOUNT, and balanca mao' and chroma vrhaela. Naw and.utad whaeli. MaMiAmarlean ET, Cr------ sllckt. AAarfcat flra Co. 2635 On Uko Rd. Kaogo._______________ 8. Blvd. a __________FEBRUARY INE TRUCK campari and —^ , parts. SPECIAL rn;%.’M&oThK -*■ ‘ “ LOWRY CAMPER SALES \ 3-3681 MG SALES'8. service 67 Dixie Hwy. Drayton 67344SS 1S21B PE 4-7587 WE ARE PROUD TO ANNOUNCE WE NOW CARRY THE "THOMPSON BOAT LINE" CORRECT CRAFT DEALER Lund Alum. Boats iavtral Coho modolt to choose fron As low as $177. Silveriine Boots 1960 INTERNATIONAL Garbage packer, 17 yard, leach box extra nice, sharp. GMC TRUCK CENTER 701 Oakland Ave. 335-9731 196yiEEP 1764 CLIFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION Holly Rd. Holly, ME 447fl Wagoneer, this one has the plow, a real worker. Only $371 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 700 Oakland Ava. GRIMALDI SKYLARK GRAND SPOI line. 4 speed, rally wheal FE 2-7143 IPORT, 400 1747 GMC Vt TON hlCKUPS, . immodleft dollvory. Save. KEI PONTIAC, 412-3400. hTl iiL Ath" CMlVRbiS^» *m, *"lm, * tVU tMnbard thRt, radio. , riiT.iTlSEiuf'^ *•'' "^1 CHRY51ER-PIYM0UTH ......- 2)M MAAUI «0. TAOY, MICH. !_____^ nim_i»noo HUNtIR OODfi ~ Haw aai Utai Can WjNaw eadi Baai Can l*(U doao, t DOOR. Vfc tuM., rvni THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1969 IMIMARMAUUKE For Want Ads Diol 334-4981 f Anderaon and LaamiaflNaw aad Uaad Can Haw and Uaad Can 1M 1000 powar iltarlhBi brakai. aulamallc. USED CARS AT TROY .RMAMt t daar II. MMR awduT a------- aiftmanc. pewar alaarina. Vary II HIM. Call a«-3r“ AUDEHE BIRMINGHAM^ ^RMApi OitiiifdV& id **• rt Miai ONE WNO AT Wll CHIVY II.' paod eaiiidliliin. aatamaHc. M^Ut. TOM RAOEMACHER CHEVY~OLD$ taaa chevy impaia ImsTow r?- - from _ 0«i u s. CibHniaa, MA s-soli. 1965 'y. 'i^'allc* JZ FORD 10-Possan9ar Wagon Ih VI, auMmallc, pawar ilwri ■^IM IlnM. radio, h • a t a illawalla. $1295 Atidatta Pontiac Riririingham Chryslar-Plymouth elhar cart la aalael \ powar, dark maroon kRSii^^HEVCLLE, HM, IS Ml, Itl4''ilu!n! Rtvifri, aulo. ----.,p4^ f .......... Plrat $m, 4-apaad. alarao lapa, E. darit gray I. Magi, OKC. condlilon. Pirti oamar aim...................... W,»B lakw. M saus. lau Ford Torrino, ^ door hardlao. 19M CHEVY Bob Borst Lincoln-Marcury Bill Golling VW Milu Sov^ Chavrolat F0R~iAl.i3Y ownar lm~OMC '................cwidiikMi. Campar I a I. if,Mg an idaal actual miiat. 6R1MAIDI CAR CO. K m Oakland Ava. FE saatl <*JU m« CHEVY ‘ SPORTI coupa, Wuo. oawarTlad'wiili bi«k War’to;^^. 'FuH iMMY^Tf ntw Mrt> tfi0 twaNffR. Pohtitc BwifWvlllSa 4 ass 5. Ro^Otltf Rd. «51-» .PONtlAC CATALINA 1t«, 4,0 "Look! It’s tough enough doing pushups without YOU on top of me!” Crowar cam, I HUNTER DODGE WHERE THE HUNT BNDSI '- ■* Hlf-‘- 1044 FORD , COUNTRY SEDAN, I pfica' miV'ca'ii' 1044 CONTINENT! ' ‘ ‘,M-FM , 447-4330. 1M» CHEVY impaia L —■ _ _ SHELTON i at only SIMS, Ovtr t$ olhar cam ■*■■*—**-' * ’ to »»m tram ~ On U S. lo at MIS, ciarkiMn. MA s-»ri. laaa Chrysler a-doar hardtop lasr^Y.-HARDTOP, ........ PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL 451-3na. Opan TU a tonight last CHlvlLLE Mallbo I door vd. MS s. Rochaiiir Rd. .“ 3 apiid, naw snow urea, boat olltr or «^l occopt Irado. l-HS-Mai attar a p.m. foM “ChIVy impala sEPan, Vi, Call Mr. r manogor ol Ml TURNER FORD 1^. Auto _ FE I-3I7I naoM, KESSLER'S 1^43 PLYMOUTH 2-( 1047 CONTINENTAL 4 door hordtOp, “ ““ porT;;;cr'odiT •"!> •«'' Parka,' AUTO SALES ymouth Valiant, a door, itn with matching Initrlor, Hmimiulm, r_o d iiaa^FpScTFAiRLAlti w ^ VI, automatic, radio, baaulllul candy apple rad with black all vinyl Ihivnor. Praildantlal Special, only SIIIO. ______________ «... "JOHN MSiuiiFr! Foto HI". raiSiSKi SS..^ W5 FT.YM0UIH I»M rpRD FAIRLANE^ OT Can- Jowar •laarlna, radio, hfolor and sport Fury, Vd with 4 apoid aaO, 4 4pMd. 451-4, whllo tido wtlli. toOC IranHnlttlon, burgundy 2-dodr, Ml $9951 CO 106 risw end Used Cefi cyllndtr . Cl04n. Midnight bhro with motchliM tOrlor. IldW actual mll«. Thfi U likt brand naw. S17»5. "" HAUPT bast ollar. T-\^TVTrnT K CATAUNA" f PUN 11AL/1 dcwkUl^.! And Sove $ $ r !’M.n“;^rV. -. ciarkaton • 42S-55W, S30 down, paymanta aig.tl. ^ AUDETTE PONTIAC Vu’rrS$'ffi*tSS'"fcw‘“m?&.' "hAROLD -fuRNER FORD t Immaculata aim. Call 44a-3aM. 444 $. woodward ElrmUigtiNn AUUfcllt factory official c&t. PONTIAC Trey 1150 Maple Rd. ' SAVE ..CHEVy, ________________ it^COMET. GOW condHibn. 334- 1445 VALIANT 4 CYLINDER, 4X- ir 5 p.m. 1966 FQRD Tairlone ihowroor trttn Mil Iprk $1095 .....h mttching Wlarior, _______llal Special aniy SISM lull price. Juil Ilii down. JOHN McAULtFFE FORD 4ia oooiand avo. fe s-4Ioi last'“chev y" impala a door OHiord OA gi4M 1044 DODGE CORONET 5M, aulD.. deubla aowtr, naw lirta. brokai. _Coll antr 4 p.m. Ul-atSO. “«7 CHEVROLET ImpalL. . dwnad, powar 4l#»rlna, bmm.JHtka oflor. 473-4170. - "VROLff IMPAI a door, bardtap, 104. vdi lactpry " lad, radio, hppipr, whila tic $1895 I. call 474-1371. Privait ‘^c"Hiv^fpriS«v"Misir.“M.‘^"a?ir iW' 'pl!^’; *2Lii?5i?h,d?ama'ik®irS?.r^iM'^ i :: ma 4-4301 jyg^A MERCURY r%rCHEVROLff IMPALA --------------1 . $1495 TAYLOR KING 1000 I 'tr^v" 'cHpfrnMvw ___________________., TROY bnt,L 1UIN ijfeMr-oBsxsrji» ulo FE s-3171 544'4r, «r“- ?•!£"£• E jr,^rp/->. T-, -a c k T T Ml 4-7500. I»47 MONEY at MIKE lAVOIE t5W*llw”' CMtft Sffi***"** M W 1 C jR M ALL '»« PONTIAC tonnavllla caupa, VV, 1000 W. AJIapla, Ml A2735. ------ '7 with factory air conditioning, blue srr.*— —T: Mapit Rom ns M t) IM we«n with wMtt vrnv) too Ltfi oo first_ _____ ONE 'sTSTsEroWo AI Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymooth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Gollirig VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet lf|^ FLVSiOUTH ROAD RONNER 303. Coll 3t3d04i after 5. war statr- autoiMic, RVao Rarnbibr j~aep. Ullibn URoI 'EMJdl55. __________________ V Catollna l-door dpmo ... ■-1^5 Catalina 2-door ............01315 Oldt Hardtop, air ...........31M5 BOnnavlllo a-door hardtop. .41505 Wildcat 4- laaa tor vary llltia down. PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL n»n Tlmloht » P«!**< FAlirANl, eulbmellc. good 43S Oeklend Ave. FES-4111 33S-5HI. A4« condition, im. Fe 1-1779. _ T-iPCr-i rv — - 1945 falcon. auTo M99 1 QfiS FORD BILL FOX CHEVROLET I* Ooolor 33im3l -IvJUU 1 7551. Roehoilor Rd.____SSI-71N 19*5 FALCON 4 DOOR. Aulomollc, , it ■ ■ IlMS OLDS, VISTA CRUISER Wdgon, “*■ .iT'^uiront.JrYis:. i4:Aw.r;'""' sr, Kf* ,T;.7nd’“sT«' dtdx a x r.r. ^.F.rk.. crodll mono. ^2595 TOM RAOEMACHER 1 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH am MAPLE RD. TROY, MtCH. Phono 442-7*“ ^YiR- $1495 1965 98 Luxury Sedoh Full power, . tpclory .*lr. One ownar. Viny| lap. 1966 OLDS Toronado Doluxp^ Full powar, air dltlgiirng. 2 to cheoio from. 1965 Buick Electro 225 rsaiGRANb PRIX, AM-FNIetorib and many axtrat. MOO 4tS-3lt1. New oml Used Cart ~~106NeW~apli Used Cm 106 Birminghom Chrysler-Plymouth • Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet MAKE YGUR MOVE! Up To A New 1968 Plymouth Fury HI, 2-door, hardtop, loaded includingr, factory air. OAKLAND Chrysler - Plymouth Jhool covpt*. Bala ir4ir,-8ii&"'“’*“ HAROLD TURNER FORD ;444 S. WMdwtrd_ Cirmlns TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS I9M OLDS 442 Convartlblo, « n Dixie H *wtim*®Vl^^oui^ollc*^ rMto ’***—’*•'*''1 bleX'top!” wTy*'si«5 llmo laid wlMi Mock li». and molching Intorlor. Only SM toll prlGO. lull SM down. JOHN McAULIFFE FORO I itoorini, brakaa, boeullful can^ u.S. It at 4 apple rod wllh black vinyl top. S071. — ' TOM RADEMACHER sill dowi ........ ms MUStANG 2 deer, hordtop, 119. V-l. radio. I tide well.. A nice prict. luw now cor wi... JOHN Mcl 431 Oakland Avt. oviir HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY FE 4-4547 1150 Oakland Avt. 333 New md Ibod Cm 146 Ntw md died Cm 1000 USED CARS AT TROY Initrlor, only SI995. Over 75 01 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR mall OPPYKE MRDWR. mi OLDS ADOOR SEDAN, factory air. Incl. spiked snow tlrd*. 1411 ' mile*, under warronty. USSt. 493- Coolldao and Crooks. ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audttte Poritioc r/Alr. Exc. tl3». PE 3-2371. BONNEVILLE ... 2995 SHELTON $1495 1967 Buick 225 Custom Full power, fectory air co dlHonlng. Suburban Olds New and Used Cm 106 New md Used Con 146 bVER PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL 1000 USED CARS AT eerllS'l TROY ! « MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Check These New Car Trades J!! MOTOR MALL^i.I!S w 1941 OLOS Cullen 2 door hardtop. > automatic, doublt bo«vor. nd wHh black vinyl tap. Air i ondittening. ^Birmingham ^Chrysler-Plymouth 67 Chorger ......................................... $2195 an, 4-borrti, oulomolic, radio, htaltr. power ttaoring, powtr brakes. 66 Rombler Ambossador .......................... $1595 Tiu .eleerlng wheel, powtr brokee, power sloorlng. aulomelic, heed-reels. reUiner scett, lactory air conditioning. AM-FM radio. 65 Pontiac . ............... .................... $1195 Autamotle, powar atoprlng, power broket, low miloagt. A-l condlilon. 66 Classic......................................... $1095 Je5ffr!l«:*Kr; » cvllndor, with luggog. $av# 67 Oort ....................... tonomoHc, V4, vinyl root, radio, whHowellt, thorp cor. 67 Pontloc Firebird ................ 11993 convanwo, putamnic. radio, V^L wtoio side welli, ‘ rVedv V llw Chrysier-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet New md Cm 106 66 Chevrolet Malibu $1395 0, while $ 785 65 Valiont .',. u«.^.5rw.r"- ^ rni whui 65 Oirysteir New Yorker ..................... 11595 64Dld$98 . .;........ ............. t GGc ArttMlw btordieain «.etl - o4w.wl. itad.sw.__ * * * ' •LAST FtWM't AT WHITE HAT PRICES WE WON'T DODGE ANY DEAL SPARTAN DODGE SHLS FOR LESS , (Teli us if we're wrong) 455 Oakland V i 338-9222 ______ and Crooks. ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontloc IMl N OLDMOBILE. Many t Air. Exc. ISIJ441.__j_ mr’WfDTss a * pontiag / Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet VKAPfU PRIJC. i dltfoup ____________ 0035 otter 4 p-m. 1945 LEMANS^ Convertible, outomatic. power ttoerlne, in px- Coolldga and Crooks. ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontloc Birmingham Chrysier-Plymouth 1944 KWTIAC CATALINA, burgundy Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet 1968 OLDSMOBILE jw New oad Used Cm 106 New and Used Cm 106New md Used Cars Used Cars BRAI^ NEW If ordered with the following equipment (Auto Trons. light ond visi group, vinyi top, deluxe T wheel, disc and vrhitewolls) you will receive o FREE RADIO V|.llage Rambler 666 S. Woodward MI 6-3900 HAHN TODAY'S SPECIAL ; 1963 CORVETTE Fastback $2495 Stingray with 4-s|K*d, silver finish, top condition. 1968 CHRYSLER Newport $2595 Moor hardtop. HAW PctoM mltafc new $995 Adoor, wtth VI avtonMHc toto moddl tor e taw price, gapd trenspertellon. 1966 VALIANT 2-dgor ........$ 995 with tow mltodfi^ eNorp cpnORIon, Meal lacend 1965 JEEP Wogoneer $1995 VI, auNxnellc. pewor Woerlng, one osmer per. Mm* seetp eppracMel awheel driva. Ghrysler-^Plymouth-Rambler-Ieep Clarkstbn 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635 ,1/ FE 5-9436' CADILLACS Pre Owned Beauties From The Birmingham-Bloomfield Hills Area 1968 Cadillac Coupe DeVille Turquoistr Mack roefr air eonifl> tionedr only mflaip ntw> car warranty. 1967 Cadillac Coupe DeVille Clorat AAaroon, black roof, ell--m»to control, full powtr, ipot-lost throughout. 1968 Cadillac DeVijIe Convertible Only 10,M0 miles, air condL llonad, e-way leat, soft ray , elaes, now-car warranty. 1967 Cadillac Calais Hardtop Sedan r®*ef windows, cllmato cwitrol, 2l,00g mllot, nawTv/7-WXYZ>TV. 9-CKLW.TV. SO-WKBD-TV; 56-WTVS-TV, Sa-WXON-TV Blondes Get in Earl's Hair After He Boosted Brunettes By EARL WILSON : NEW YORK - What’s 8o bad about being picketed? I like it. - Twelve beautiful blondes carrying picket signs wiggled their miniskirts up and down bi front of my Broadway office because I wrote a column saying “Brunettes are in charge of the world ... Whatever happened to blondes? What bottle of peroxide did they disappear behind?” The dazzling darlings, who admitted that , Clakol sent them, carried signd with things like, “Lucrezia Borgia was a hronette.” > I tried to get tl»m to occupy my office and \ live here, like the pickets did at Colombia, boti they were too smart. They stayed on the idde’i walk. ' “iHas E. W. heard there’s a blonde in the White House?” one sign said. They also listed Brigitte Bardot, Angela Lansbury, Joey Heatherton, Joanne Woodward, Catherine Deneuve, Jane Fonda, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Nancy Sinatra, Jane Morgan, Dina Merrill, Tuesday Weld, Mamie Van Doren, Marlene Dietrich, Twiggy, Carol Channing— and PhilUs Diller. “Which of those are really blondes?” I asked. They shrugged. But one Of the 12 pickets swore she’s a real blonde. One out of 12, that’s a pretty good average, I guess. The reason we don’t hear about blondes, one said. Is that blondes are naturally quiet, shy and retiring. TWE MIDNIGHT EARL ... ' . Attempted suicides by two film actresses, via sleeping pills, were hushed up . . . Benny Yonngman said at O’Neal’s Bdotm be may get his biggest break as summer replacement for “Laitgh-Bi”. . . Agents fw Barbara Bonchet (of “Sweet Charity”) are asking Play^y for lOGs for a nudie layout... Robert Mitchum’Il get $750,000 for his new MGM film, “Michael’s Day.” Film censofs rejected the title “Rape Upon Rape,” so the ChrisUqdier Plummer film’ll be called “Lock Up Your Daughters” ,.. George Raft sent back a bottle of champagne to a fan at Joe’s Pier 52, explaining, “Soiry—I don’t drink”. . . The Supremes, who made their TV debut en up a store, “and one night he did.” That’s earl, brother. R -- Rerun C — Color MONDAY NIGHT •:l0 (2) (4) (7) C-News, Weather, %kh1s (9) R - Movie: “Along the Great Divide” (1951) Five men and a girl fight the elements in the Mojave Desert as lawman returns prisoner for trial. Kirk Douglas, Virginia Mayo,J(dmAg9r (50) RC — FlIntstones , (56) Friendly Giant (62) R - Sea Hunt 6:15 (56) Time for John 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronkite (4) C — News - Huntley, Brinkley — Program is extendi to WWJ, Nswi, Sports WXYZ, Newsim CKllW, Tom Stannon WJSK, Nows, Hank O WCAR. Nows, Ron RO WPON. Nows, Phono 0| S;4S-WWJ, Rovlow, Emphasis WJR, Lowoll Thomas, Auto-soopa TiM ^ WJBK, NOWS, Tom . Oaan WCAR, News, Rick Sfai WJR. work) Tonight WWJ, News, Suburban SaiMta T:1S-wjr, Business, Sports TilS-V,— —— ■ —‘-■— WWJ, •:1B-WJR, ShowcM, Closo, t;H-WHF CKLW, Si WJR. N lt:1S-WJR, Focus Encore I1;W-WJR, Nows n:1S-WJR. Sports l1;ig-WWJ, Owernloht WJR, Music Till Dawn hAo-CKLW, Mark Richards WCAR, Wayne Phillips WJBK, Nighttime WXYZ, News, Jim Davis TUESDAY MORNINO i:IB-WJR, Music Hall OalSfr,*ferl|a van OykB WPON, Nows, Arizona Waslon V , ,, WCAR. Newt. BIH Dahall MB-WHFI. Oary Puraoa Itll-WJR. Sonnyslda, Al filS-WJR, Open House WJBK, News, Conrad Pat- WPOjt, Naws. Jerry W|ilt. lliSB-WJR. Haws, KalaWo- WWJ, News, Emphasis lisiB-WWj, Marty McNaale l:W-WJR, News, At Homa lilS-WJR, Arthur Godfrey 1i4S-WJR, SunnysMa ttir,- WPON, Naws, Do WhSITbiII Lynch WJR, Naws, Dimension WXYZ, Mike Sherman t:1S-WJR, Music Hall 2:SS-WJR, Dimension S;W-WCAR, Naws, Ron WJBK,°^aws, Hank O'Neil Go-Round (56) Interviewing Results 8:95 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R C - Movie “Jupiter’s Darling” (1955) Estlier Williams, Howard * Keel, Marge and Gower Champion, George I,'^«n9ar^ (7) C — Outcasts — Jemal David is arrested for a murder committed by a former slave of Earl Corey’s. (9) C-What’s My Line? (50) R — Perry Mason (56) C-(Special) Black Journal—Blacks’ medical care, fashion, Malcolm X, and an amateur night are reported on. 9:30 (2) C - Family Affair. — While Uncle Bill frantically searches Spanish countryside for missing twins, they find refuge with peasant couple on isolated farm. (9) C — Tommy Hunter 10:00 (2) C-Carol Burnett-Soupy Sales and Barbara McNair guest. (7) C - Big Valley -Victoria commits herself to notorious prison in order to expose its corrupt regime. (9) C — Front Page Challenge (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) C — Decision at Delano — Film records drama and controversy of the historic Delano grape-workers strike beginning in 1965. 19:30 (9) R — Danger Man Drake goes to London to act as security agent for foreip ruler and his “loving” wife. (50) R — Alfred Hitchcock (56) R-Folk Guitar (62) R—Star Performance 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (50) R - Movie: “Call Northside 777” ( 1948 ) Small ad in personal column marks beginning of reporter’s efforts to free innocent man from prism. James Stewart, I^ J. Cobb, Richard Conte (62) R — Movie: “Come Fill the Cup” (1951) Newspaper man loses his job and his girf due to drinking problem. James Cagney, Phyllis Tbaxter 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Raquel Welch and Vic Damone head guest list. (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R ^ Movie: “Ladies Who Do” (^tish, 1963) Cleanfaig women in financial offices get tips from wastebaskets, and then form stock-buying syndicate of their own. Robert Moriey, Peggy Hunt 11:35 (2) R - Movie: “The Joe Louis Story” (1953) Sory, of |he former heavywei^t champion. Coley Wallace 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R —Texan (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:39 (2) R-Naked City 2:30 (2) C-News Tuesday MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C - On the Farm Scene 6:90 (2) C — Sunrise Semester 6:30 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C —Classroom 6:45 (7) C-Bat Fink 7:00 (4) C-^ Today (7) C — Morning Show , 7:30 (2) C - News, Weather, Sports 7:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:00 (2) C - Captain ' Kangaroo ' (9) C — Morgan’s Merry- for (9) R — Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) (%ez Helene 8:50 (56) Americans From Africa 9:00 (2) R C - Beverly HillbilUes (4) C-Steve Allen (9) C —Bozo 9:20 (56) Singing, Listening, Doing 9:30 (2) R—Dick Van Dyke 9:40 (56) R — Book Parade 9:55 (56) Tell Me a Story 10:00 (2) R C - The Lucy Show (4) C—Snap Judgment (9) Ontario Schools 10:10 (56) American History 10:25 (4) C-New9 10:30 (2) C - Mike Douglas — Buddy Greco is cohost. Morton Sobell, convicted in the famed Rosenberg espionage case, talks about his experiences. (4) C — Concentration (7) C—Anniversary Game (9) Canadian Schools 10:35 (56) Science Is Fun 10:45 (7) C - (^cial) Nixon’s European Tour 10:50 (56) Listen and Say 11:00 (4) C — Personality (7)C — Galloping Gourmet (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:20 (56) Americans From Africa 11:30 (4) C - Hollywood Squares (7) R — Bachelor Father (9) Take Thirty (50) C-Kimba 11:50 (56) Friendly Giant TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12UW (2) C-News, Weather, Sports (A) C — Jeopardy (7) R-Bewitched (9) C — Bonnie Prudden (50) C —Alvin 12:05.(56) Misterogers 12:25 (2) C - Fashions 12:30 (2) C - Search for Tomorrow (4) C - News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Funny You Should Ask (9) R — Real McCoys (50) R - Movie: “Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid” (1948) WUliam Powell, Ann Blyth, Irene Hervey 12:45 (56) Singing, Listening, Doing 12:55 (4) C-News (7) C — Children’s Doctor 1:00 (2) C-LoveofUfe (4) C-Match Game (7) C — Dream House (0) R - Movie: “Inside the Mafia” ( 1959) Cameron Mitchell, Elaine Edwards 1:05 (56) Tell Me a Story 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) Listen and Say 2:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C ,— Days of Our' Uves (7) C — Newlywed Game (50) C — American West (56) Science Is Fun 2:15 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 2:30 (2) C-Guiding Light <4) C - Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 2:40 (56) R-All Aboard for JACKSON (B - “Groovy Little Thing Let Me Light Your Candle, ’Cause I’m Sure Hard to .'Handle. Now Yes I Am.” That’s the name of a painting, done by a Southern Michigan Prison inmate as part of a program to give prisoners a more aesthetic life in a world of gray walls and iron bars. ■k * -t, The oil pointing, a psychedelic Convict Artists Add Color to Gray Prison World 3:99 (2) C - Secret Storm (4) C-Another World (7) C — General Hospital (50) R — Topper (56) R — Bridge with Jean Cox 3:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C - One Life to Live (91 C — Bozo’s Big Top (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Efficient Reading 4:00 (2) C-^kletter Show (4) C - Donald O’Connor (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Tom Shannon (56) C — Bryan Beavers: a Moving Portrait — Thoughts of a Maidu Indian, who lives in a wilderness area of Plumas County, are translated from old Indian traditions into the language of our contemporary culture. 4:30 (2) C-Merv Griffin (7) R - Movie: “All the Young Men” (1960) Alan Ladd, Sidney Poltier, James Darren, Mort Sahl, Ingemar Johanssen (50) R - Linie Rascals (56) What’s New (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (9) RC-Batman (50) R —Munsters , (56) TV Kindergarten (62) R — Robin Hood 5:30 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Midgley Explores Utah” (9) RC-Gilligan’s island (50) RC —Superman (56) Misterogns (62) R — Leave It to Beaver 50 Students Pull 'Lock-In' in Alabama TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) About 50 Stillman College students locked themselves in the Student Union building Sunday night aRer the president closed the school because of continuing student unrest and ordered all students to leave the campus. * * k President Harold Stinson said the group would be allowed to remain in Qie building until p.m. today but did not say what action would b|» taken if they did not leave. Stinson announ^d the closing of the predominantly Negro school after four days of boycotts and sit-ins by students making several demands. The students used a chain to lock themselves in the Student Union when a 6 p.m. Sunday deadline for leaving the campus passed. Other students later entered the building carrying food, blankets and pillows. A student spokesman said persons would be allowed to enter, but not leave. HALF HAD GONE A school spokesman said that about half of the 800 students had left by late Sunday. Students presented a list of demands to Stinson Tuesday and began a boycott of classes Wednesday. A basketball game between Stillman and Dillard Univerrity of New Orleans was canceled Friday night when students sat on the court and refused to move. They later moved into the Student Union for a sleepJn. k k k Among the demands were better food and cafeteria service, more courtesy to students by certain faculty members and the dismissal of an acting dean and a maintenance supervisor. A Look at TV Phis Follow Headlines NEW YORK - 'There is, perhaps inevitably, a close kinship between newspaper headlines and. television plots. .Sunday night’s “FBI” on ABC was based on an irresistable circumstance—the hijacking of a commercial airplane. Since ■ a too-close imitation of life might result in complaints—this plane crashed—and since a cast of a hundred or so passengers would have been unwieldy, the TV hijacking involved a four-passenger plane of a small, unnamed Latin-American country. After the hijacking, however, the story resolved itself into a more routine form as the bad guy killed and the ,FBI guy caught up with him. “Deadlock,” the two-hour “wdrid premiere” film feature on NBC Friday, worked in the how-familiar background of a tension-filled slum area with its suspicions of Itoth police and civilians who lived outside the area. The program served as a pilot for a series and the two principals, Hari Rhodes and Leslie Nielsen will continue in their roles next season in NBC’s upcoming “The Now People.” Like far too many of these NBC movie features, a good one-hour story' rattled loosely within the two-hour frame. While both Rhodes and Nielsen are excellent actors, they created and sustained a mood of such raw hostility for each other that tended to make the viewer, after a time, become edgy. Rhodes played a Negro district attorney seeking to prevent a riot by talking reason to his people, and Nielsen was a tough, zealous police lieutenant determined to keep order, by force " necessary. CENTROMarks T4th Anniversary ANKARA, iWkey (AP) -The Central Treaty Organization .(CENTRO) celebrated its 14th anniversary today with messages exchanged by the secretary general and five member nations Reflecting continuing change in the pact’s emphasis from military to economic. In bis message ^ Turkey, Iran, Pakistan, Grrat Britain and the United States, Secretary General Tbrgut Meneihencioglu said CENTO, formed “in a period of great anxiety for the preservation of sovereign independence,” now is a valuable instru-moit for both “common security and common welfare.’ blast of hues that looks like the aurora borealis reflected in a ripply pool, is the work of Glenn Price. Price, a large man with a wife and two children to Chicago, was a milkman and an electric company lineman before he was picked up for armed robbery 19 montle ago, EYES CAREER "That might have been at the , bottom of all my troubles all along,” he says. “Maybe I want^ a more aesthetic life than I had.” Price—an art instructor at Jackson—says he wants to be a professional artist when he gets out. 'There aren’t many landscapes or seascapes in evidence at Jackson. Prisoners favor abstract work, much of it in the cubist style, obviously influenced by the forms that surround them. Hanging in the prison’s academic school hallway is the work of Vernon Maxey, an assistant instructor, who has served sevoi years of a life sentence for the armed robbery of drugstore. SYMBOLIZES LIFE Maxey says his giant tulip with an Insect |n the middle symbolizes life in whlch^man, like a flower, is bom, withers and dies. “Art is bigger than life,” he adds. The program, which ofticials call a rehabilitation project, is funded with $300 a year. Students pay for their own supplies out of their wages from prison jobs. Instructor price earns 60 cents a day. Backwards Youth Won Bicycle Job ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - 'The man shouted "go” and young Lester Maddox took a flying leap which landed him backwards on his bicycle. Undaunted, he peddled onwards to win a contest for a delivery boy’s job. “It was immediately obvious to me that I had mounted my bicycle backwards,” the Georgia governor recalled. “Hoping that the man would not notice my error, I just rode off—looking over my shoulder.” k k k The revelation about the origin of his ability to ride a bicycle backwards came to remarks for a ribbon-cutting ewemony at the new sales office of a tocy-cle firm. Although reason prevailed, murderer was caught and a heroin pusher put away, presumably the two men will continue ' be at each other’s throats every third week next season. The new series will have three different segments and casts to be seen in rotation. Another popular 'TV theme the generation gap—that cliche is even the name of a game show—and CBS’s “Playhouse” already has devoted two evenings this season to the problems of the younger generation and 'Tuesday proposes to explore still anotiier facet of the subject. "The Experiment,” an iMigi-nal drama, takes a look at the conflict between youth and age in tog business. I k Heart transplants, that dramatic advance of medical science, will be reflected in the next NBC “On Stage.” This original play will tackle the dl-who must he should NY Will Hire Slum Youths NEW YORK (AP) - 1 Y«:k City has made plans to hire Brooklyn slum youths as police cadets and private guards and other slum residents as sanitation trainees^ A city official said Sunday the federal government has allocated $65 million for New York City’s Model Cities programs. * ★ k 'The youth program calls for youths to work as police cadets, earn high school equivalent diplomas and go on to become city, state or federal policemen. Others wotod serve as private guard trainees protecting local merchants, and ' would be trained to enter private guard organizatiems. Adult men and women will be trained to enter the sanitation department, these people will earn about $5,200 year^ The youths will be paid about $80 weekly. Police Find Fetus in Narcotics Paid Come in or caH (6814111) C & G Auto Clinie Elixabatb Lake Rd. COLOR TV SALE RCA 23" Console Wot...$439.95 RCA Portable Color $279.00 B & W RCA ......$ 89.00 19" B & W RCA .. .$129.95 RCA Tronsistor radios .........$ 4.95 Lots of other borgains CONDON'S TV Soles and Service 730 W. Huron FE 4-9736 I* lemma of a surgeon v i- decide which patient h ‘•try to save. DETROIT (AP) - Police in Detroit said they made a routine narcotics raid Sunday and found, in addition to several marijuana^ cigarettes, 'a human fetus suspended to solution in a jug. * ★ * Phillip Schirmef, 25, from whose apartment the unborn baby allegedly was taken, was quoted by police as saying it had been given to him by friend who is a medical stu- dent. w ★ * Schirmer also was charged with violating the state narcotics law. AVOID GARNISHIIEIIT Lai ut help ]WH...Wa am tat yau a fresh start hy aha-ir debts hita aaa Ha liaiO ta the aamwil awed er number at eredNon. Oat a lean. Call or step in. Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. 914 Pontiae State Bank BMf, c~ie THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 24, 1969 AFLdO Fears Cuts in Social Programs 'Slain by Spousa' DETROIT (AP) - Eula Mae Crump, 3S. was shot to death by her husbami, Ehde, as she danced with a doorman in a Detroit bar Sunday, police said. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Ihe An^O said today ttwt the rason admlidstration and the Dnmntic Congress could tnmpt nahonai disas^ tt ttwy get hde a budg^-cutthig conteet to dadi federal funds fer aodal Hn labor federathm’s executive ooundl said fedoral pro-^ grams for dum desraioe, education, housing, }ob trdning and welftfe were caufdit hi last y«nr% budget “cninch’’ of former President lyndon B. Jota-aen, and “alrea^ tiw cry for budget-cutting has been heaod fRun wlthhi die new adminfed’o- "For Congress to enact new progruns which hold f of a better life then to cruelly deny the n swy funds is to tein^ a disaster would shatter far more than the nation’s budget stability," the council’s atatement said. "The political fact of a Repub- ocratlc congress provides an arena of great politico tempta-Uon, which will require great stab The council of the I3.frmil. fedm-al aodil programs face a aevm onriauibt hi the drive to ty to resist,” it sakl. “BudgetrOutting for political one-uptpanship roust not become the sport M Congress and the administration," the council Ided. It said the labor federaUon will fight for full funding of programs aimed at social progress f Waterford - Union Lakt, 'flf' .V." Thm W«affi«r U.S. WMiiitr ■«««• PmcHt Cloody (DMIit Paia » VOL. m - NO. 15 ★★★★★ ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, FLBttUARY 21, 1069 I PAGES Nixon Definite: Soviet Talks Ahead I (AP) — President Nixon toid America’s European aliies today that he later will “enter.lnto negotiations with the Soviet Union on a wide range of Issues,” and he promised to consult with them both before and during the talks. Nixon, in a speech to the council- of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization during the first stop of his eight-day European trip, did not hedge about prospects for eventual Soviet-American talks. He said there will be negotiations “in due course, and with proper preparation.” The President made no mention of two crises of paramount concern to the Atlantic allies: the new dispute between the British and French governments, and the possibility of an East-West confrontation in Berlin. Instead, with the aim of revitalizing the Atlantic alliance, he emphasized a pledge that “the United States is determined to listen with new attentiveness to its NATO partners.” To underscore this policy declaration. he said that because American-Soviet talks would directly affect the nations of Western Europe, the United States will approach Moscow “on the basis of full consultation and cooperation with our allies, because we recognize that the chances for successful negotiations depend on our unity.” He went on: Crashes Fatal to Pontiac Man and Detroit Girl A Pontiac man was killed in a two-car accident in the city and a Detroit girl died in a four-car crash in Bloom-_________________ field Township yes- Oakland Highway Toll in ’69 22 Uit Y«*r to Dm* 18 terday. Killed were Willie Hiley, 43, of 266 Os-mun, and Diane Macchietto, 15. Hiley was a passenger in a car driven by Delbert Stovall, 56, of 266 Os-mun. Police said Stovall was trying to make a left turn onto Nebraska from Bagley when his car collided with one driven by Spurgeon Grazes, 46, of 566 Nevada. IN SERIOUS CONDITION Another passenger in ttie Stovall auto, James Stovall, 41, of 460 Nebraska, is in serious condition at Pontiac General Hospital. Delbert Stovall and Grazes were treated at the hospital for minor injuries and released. Miss Macchietto was a passenger in a car driven by her mother, Mrs. Pauline N. Macchietto, 43, of Detroit, which struck a parked car on Telegraph near Hickory Grove, careened across the road and hit two others headon. Township police said. Seven people received minor injuries in that crash. ■> ADDRESSES NATO COUNCIL—President Richard Nixon addresses NATO Council meeting at NATO headquarters in Brussels this morning. He is flanked by Secretary of State William P. Rogers (left) and Ambassador Harland Cleveland. No Rain in Sight, /kes Operation Is 'Successful' Says Weatherman Take heart, this morning’s clouds don’t mean rain, according to the weatherman’s forecast. Ttie clouds will persist through tonight and tomorrow morning, however. By WASHINGTON (AP) - Emergency abdominal surgery on former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, complicated by his age and repeated heart attacks, was pronounced successful today by a team of Army doctors. A report issued at Walter Reed Army Hospital shortly after midnight omitted any indication of the 78-year-old five-star general’s chances for recovery. tomorrow afternoon a breakup will occur and skies will become partly cloudy. The springlike temperatures pushing tulip and crocus bulbs through the ground in protected areas will continue at least through the weekend, according to Weather Bureau’s five-day forecast. Tonight’s low is due to fall into the mid-20s with tomorrow’s high in the upper 30s. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are 10 today, tonight and tomorrow. But use of the word was taken to mean that Eisenhower, who six months ago had appeared near death, was not in imminent danger. {^resident Nixon, in Brussels on the first stop of his five-nation European tour, was described has been bedridden in the third-floor presidential suite since May, went before newsmen to say: “Gen, Eisenhower underwent surgery for intestinal obstruction this evening. The procedure began at 9:10 p.m. and terminated successfully at 11:30 p.m. The obstruction was found to be due to two large adhesive bands resulting from previous surgery.” SCAR TISSUE : The five-paragraph statement, steeped in medical terminology and naming members of the surgical team, boiled down to a report that surgeons had cut through scar tissue blocking the j of food through the intestine. During the hours-long blackout newsmen never knew whether Eisenhower was on the operating table or not. Maj. George Foster, hospital public information officer, gave the first clue that the former president had survived when he introduced Hughes by saying: “Gentlemen, Gen. Hughes has some good news for you.” Thus Eisenhower continued an almost incredible string of triumphs over medical adversity that has included seven major heart attacks, a cerebral stroke, gall bladder, an appendectomy and an operation for ileitis. Related Story, Page C-T6 Low mercury reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 31. By 1 p.m. the thermometer reached 38. In Today's Press "pleased” with the report. Aides said he was being kept constantly informed of the condition of the man whom he served as vice president for eight years. RUSHED TO HOSPITAL ' The two-hour and 20-minute operation, performed by a seven-member surgical team, had been accepted ‘'with equanimity” by Eisenhower and his wife, Mamie. She had rushed to the hospital earlier yesterday from their farm home in Gettysburg, Pa. Birmingham Vote on purchase of site for historical park is April 8 — PAGE A-4. Romney HUD job tougher than running state, he says — PAGE A-8. Study of Police Most white officers downgrade blacks, says Detroit psychologist - PAGE A-11. Eisenhower also had been visited by his son John and his brother. Dr. Milton Eisenhower, before undergoing the delicate operation that was described by one authority as a “terrible risk” for a man of his age and medical history. The condition was first reported Saturday night, but the decision to operate was not announc^ until shortly before 8 p.in. yesterday. It was 4t^ hours later, that Brig. Gen. Frederick J. Hughes Jr., commanding officer of the hospital where Eisenhower Area News ........A-4 Astrology C-6 Bridge ...,....C-6 Crossword Puzzle .. C-15 Comics ...C-6 Editoriak A-6 Lenten Series B-11 Mai^ets .07 Obitaaries ...... B-8 Sports ..C-l-C-4 Theaters C-5 'Nigerig Jets Killed 67' UMUAHIA, Biafra IaP) - Official figures issued today claim that at least 67 Biafran civilians were killed in the last week by federal Nigerian air attacks. TV and Radio Programs . .C-15 Vietnam War News ..,.... A-2 Women’s Pages .....B-1—B-3 According to the figures, 27 of these were women and diildren who died in an attadc on jUmuahia 'UMirsday when a bomb from a four-engined Nigerian jet hit a children’s welfare clinic. ’Vs .11 “I realize that this course has not always been followed in the past. But I pledge to you today, that in any negotiations directly affecting the interest of the NATO nations, there will be full and genuine consultation before and during those negotiations.” Nixon said he knew the allies had felt “that too often the United States talked at its partners instead of with them, or Rome will go to Paris Friday to meet with President Charles de Gaulle. Ziegler said Nixon, during his 10,508-mile trip is keeping closely abreast of latest reports from South Vietnam, where a new wave of enemy attacks has been launched, apparently to bolster the Communist position at the Paris peace talks. Related Story, Page B-6 merely informed them of decisions after they wqre; m^ide instead of consulting with them before ^ciding.” r “The: United States is determined’ to listen with a new attentiveness to its NATO partners,” he declared, “not only because they have a right to be heard but because we want their ideas. And I believe we have a right to expect that consultation shall be a two-way street.” INTERCHANGE OF IDEAS Summarizing the approach he wants to take in his European meetings, he said: “I have come for work, not for ceremony; to inquire, not to insist; to consult, not convince; to listen and learn, and to begin what I hope will be a continuing interchange of ideas and insights.” White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler was asked if Nixon had discussed with Belgian officials the latest chill in British-French relations, he replied: “I don’t have any information on that.” Nixon flies to London tonight for talks with Prime Minister Harold Wilson, and after visits to Bonn, West Berlin and U.S. COUNTERMOVE Nixon, discussing the countrywide rocket and mortar attacks yesterday, indicated to newsmen during his flight from Washington that in some circumstances such assaults could result in an American countermove. White Hoqse sources said the President had ordered a careful study of the attacks, one purpose being to determine whether they violated the secret understandings with North Vietnam under which the United States halted the bombing of the North. But these sources emphasized Nixon would move with caution and was “not looking for an excuse to do something.” The sources obviously were referring toa rfesumption of the bombing of North Vietnam. The President also was getting frequent reports from Washington on the condition of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Arriving in Brussels last night under a half moon in 43 degree weather, Nixon was greeted by King Baudouin, a military honor guard, several hundred enthusiastic citizens and a small ibut noisy group of demonstrators who chanted “Nixon go home” \from the terminal roof. Three of the demonstrators were' arrested following scuffles with police. Israel Planes Attack Two Bases in Syria JERUSALEM (fl — Israeli warplanes struck in force across the Syrian ceasefire line today for the flrst time since the 1967 war, bomhed two Arab guerrilla bases and engaged in dogfights with Syrian MIGs near Damascus. Israel claimed its planes returned unharmed after shooting down one Syrian MIG17. Damascus radio said three Israeli jets and two Syrian fighters were shot down. Communist China, from which “they are sept to carry out sabotage actions against Israel.” Syrian exiles in Lebanon said El Hamme is also the site of Syria’s largest munitions plant. Israel did not announce how many Israeli planes made the raid, but a spokesman said the Syrians sent up about 10 or 12 MIG17s and MIG21s. This announcement and broadcasts from Damascus indicated it may have been the biggest Arab-Israeli air clash since the 1967 war. Parocbiaid Gets 'No'From Dems RELATIVELY QUIET The cease-fire line between Israel and Syria had been relatively quiet since the June 1967 war, but the Israeli army said the raid was in retaliation for a sharp increase in guerrilla attacks along the border since Jan. 20, including the machine gunning of a civilian bus yesterday. The Israeli army said two soldiers were killed and three were wounded in 12 incidents of mining and shooting in the occiq>ied Golan Heights, which Israel captured from Syria in the six-day war. EAST LANSING (AP) — State aid to private and parochial schools probably wilLbe passed by the Legislature this session despite official disapproval by the Democratic parly, observers agree. The Democratic State Central Committee Saturday came out against the so-called Parochaid. State House Speakw William Ryan of Detroit had urged the committee to reject a resolution opposing the bill. But State Sen. Coleman A. Young, D-Detroit, who opposes the measure, said he expects it to be approved by the Legislature “unless there is a ground-swell of opposition. FENCE MENDING EFFORT A spokesman said the Israeli planes bombed two locations — Maisalun, on the main Beirut-Damascus highway 10 miles west of the Syrian capital, and El Hamme, on the Syrian-Lebanese border. He said El Hamme was the headquarters' of the A1 Fatah qommando organization for both Syria and Lebanon, and Maisalun served as a training base. The Israeli army claimed guerrillas from El Hamme fired on a bus "carrying 50 laborers yesterday and wounded one. The spokesman charged El Hamme is a staging area for guerillas reining from training in Egypt, Algeria and In other action, the Democrats elected two new officers in an apparent effort to unify the party regulars and the dissident New Democratic Coalition. The new officers, whose titles and duties were not outlined, are James Harrison of East Lansing and Zeline Richard of Detroit. The party also called for liberalization of abortion laws in Michigan and disavowed “any and all action whereby the salaries of some county supervisors Were set without a prior determination of their duties or at a level inconsistent with their duties.” Another resolution approved by the Democrats was one denouncing a Senate investigation headed by Robert Huber, R-Troy, aimed at probing activities on Michigan college campuses. 'Stadium Beautiful Thing' James Clarkson, president of First Federal Savings of Dakland, described the proposal for a domed sports stadium in Pontiac as “a beautiful thing if we can get it.” , Clarkson of 3111 St. Jude, Waterford Township, praised the idea of a stadium at the I-75-M59 interchange as a potentially tremendous for the city. REPORTS ON SURGERY ^ Brfe. Gen. Frederic J. Hughes Jr., commanding officer of Walter Reed Army Hospital, announces early today that former President Dwight D. Eisenhower successfully was operated on for the alleviation of an intestinal obstruction “It would be a real help to the economy in a growing area and would bring in more new businesses,” he said. Clarkson called the site a good choice, pointing out the availability of parking and the proximity of the expressway network. A-:f 0 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY U, 1969 Apoll6'9 Crewmen Get W. Berlin Crisis Area rk /!• I r\i • I Eases as Result Last P ref light Physical of New offers School Architecture Shown CAPE KENNEDY. Fla. (AP) - Tlie Apollo 9 astronauts today undenp> their final major invfUg^t ph)«ica| exam while Iaun<* crews {H^pare ft«r a apace tripicheader starting tonight wiUi a probe toward the planet Mars. Air Force Lt. Col James A. McDivitt and David R. Scott and civilian Russell L. Schweickarl plan several hours with space agency doctors, who want to be certain they are fit. The trio’s mission will be to circle the earth for 10 days after their Saturn 5 rocket blasts off at It a m. EST Friday. The physical exam also provides medical data for in-fUght and postflight comparison. Seeking cities to possible life on Mdrs, Mariner i is to rocket toward that distant planet at 1:14 p.m. tonight. After an Interplanetary voyage of nearly five months, it is to sweep within 2,000 miles of the Red Planet, snapping pictures and gathering scienftfic data. ESSA SHOT WEDNESDAY Sandwiched between Mariner and Apollo will be the launching of the ^A Viet Red Fire Rakes Towns “Spring Offensive Feared SAIGON (API - Vielcong and North Vietnamese troops raked more than ^ towns and military posts with rockets, mortars and light ground attacks today Board to Review Its Site Choice The Pontiac Board of Education will review its November decision on the site for the proposed west-side high school complex, at a meeting tomorrow night at 7:30. in the Northern High School auditorium. Each board member is expected to review his position and the reason for his decision. This action was asked of the board at its last meeting, Feb. 6. The board selected a site on state hospital grounds over a center site at Bagley and Orchard Lake. Contracts for construction of the Northeast Oakland Vocational Technical Center, on North Perry near Arlene, are expected to be award^. This action had been postponed from the last meeting to allow time for review and clarification of the bids. Also on tomorrow night’s agenda is a progress report on the planned Human Resources Center, including site acquisition anid planning, financing of the project and architectural progress. A ' * a Ten more proposals based on recommendation in the Equality of Educational Opportunity report of the Citlxens Study Committee are included on the agenda. B29 Bomb Unearthed TOKYO tJi — An unexploded bomb, which officials said was dropped by a U. S. B29 bomber during World War II, was unearthed at a park in suburban Tokyo today. U.S. bomb disposal specialists .safely removed the ignition cap of the 550-pound bomb in the hole where the bomb was found, military officials said. in the second day of countrywide attacks. American officers said the enemy had started a spring offensive intended to generate pre.ssure from the American public for concessions at the Paris peace talks. President Nugyen Van Thieu said the offensive had been "completely foiled’’ with heavy losses to the enemy. The U.S. Command announced that more than 1,000 Vietcong and North Vietnamese had been killed since the attacks began Saturday night. * ★ A Allied casualties include about 100 American soldiers and an equal number of South Vietnamese troops killed, at least 146 American soldiers and more than 100 South Vietnamese troops wounded, and at least 66 civilians killed and another 250 wounded. Military spokesman said enemy gunners had shelled Saigon and Da Nang, South Vietnam’s two largest cities, 20 provincial capitals, and 29 district capitals. Some towns were hit several times. EYES BOMBING RESUMPTION Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky, taking a plane to return to the Paris peace talks, said he would recommend a resumption of the bombing of North Vietnam If shelling of South Vietnam’s cities continued. He said his South Vietnamese air force could do the job alone if necessary—“they are ready.’’ Allied spokesmen said the second round of attacks today was considerably less than the opening onslaught and caused only light casualties and damage But it was felt the enemy might try to keep up the effort for as much as 10 days. At the outset, more than 150 towns, bases and outposts came under attack Saturday night and yesterday. It was the heaviest enemy blow since last May. U.S. headquarters also announced that enemy gunners shot down and destroyed two big U.S. Marine CH47 helicopters supporting Marine infantrymen sweeping near the Laotian frontier yesterday in «i) operation to cut enemy supply, lines. There were no casualties, but the two losses raised to 2,362 the number of American helicopters lost in the war. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VIClNITY-Considerable cloudiness today and tonight, becoming partly doudy tomorrow afternoon. High today and tomorrow in the upper 30s. Lows tonight mid 20s. Wednesday’s outlook: partly cloudy and a little warmer. Winds west to northwest 5 to IS miles per hour. Precipitation probabilities: 10 per cent today, tonight and tomorrow. TODAY IN eONTiaC OiM Yt*r At* In e*ntl*c , DttroU I Duluth H (Qhff si fempertturc SuMay's Alptna i5 30 Escanaba 42 31 Film 32 33 Gr'd AaoiCll 35 V HtHh3h1on 32 27 Jackson 4\ 32 Lansing 37 M Martiutttt 36 39 Mushagon 36 31 Oscoda 34 30 IHMston 35 17 S. stt. Marla 35 17 Travarsa C. 36 31 Atbany 36 30 Aibuguarque 46 25 Chariotta. N.C, > SO 31 Chicago 39 34 ______ 35 26 I Fort Worth 70 39 ' Indianapolis 33 Jacksonviiia 59 49 Kansas City 41 3i Las Vagas 31 32 Littla Rxk 43 31 Los Anpatas 54 50 Loul^vUia 44 39 Miami Batch 77 62 Milwaukaa 31 27 Ntw Orlaans 61 40 Naw York 35 34 Philadelphia 34 32 PhotniR 56 39 Pittsburgh 39 34 St. Louis 40 36 Salt Lake C. 42 33 -S. Francisco so 45 ; AP Wiragbaie NATUKNAL WEATHER — Snow warnings have been po^ (or the California mountains and parts of Nevada, Idaho and Utah tonight and travelers warnings have been issued for eastwn Pennsylvania and New Jersey to southern Maine, light snow and drizzle is also expected to continue in the upper Plains states. 9 weather satellite at 2:34 a.m. Wednesday. Whirling through a north-south orbit 900 miles high, the craft’s cameras and infrared sensing devices will look at storm systems over the entire globe. McDivitt, Scott and Schweickact have the complex task of proving the flight readiness of the lunar module (LEM), the spidery four-legged vehicle which is designed to land two men on the moon and get them off safely. AAA If they succeed, the way will be deaf for the Apollo 10 crew to fly a LEM on a lunar orbit mission in May and for Apollo 11 to attempt a moon landing in July. Mariner 6 will be followed March 24 by a twin. Mariner 7, which will zip by the edge of Mars’ southern polar cap on Aug. 5. Mariner 6 will pass near Mars above its equator on July 31. They will gather .scientific data and snap scores of photographs for 25 minutes each before streaking into orbit around the sun. MISSION OBJECTIVES The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said the objectives of the double mission “are to study the surface and atmosphere of Mars to establish the basis for future experiments in the search for extraterrestrial life and to develop technology for future Mars missions.’’ The agency emphasized the probes will not detect life “but will help establish whether or not the Martian environment is suitable for life.” A A A The photographs might provide information on the canai-like streaks that crisscross the planet. BONN, West Germany (AP) — ’The latest l^lin crisis eased to^y after both West Germany and East Germany offered concessions. , The situation was this: If West Germany calls off plans to elect its next president in West Berlin March 5, then East Germany will allow West Berliners to cross the wall into East Berlin for the first time in three years to visit their relatives ohring Easter. West German Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger accepted the Communist offer to negotiate but indicated he wanted a “lasting settlement” going far beyond Easter. Informed sources said a decision had to be reached quickly if the elections were to be relocated. SECOND MEETING East German leader Walter^UIbHcht made the offer of ccmcessions this weekend through the Soviet Ambassador to West Germany, Semyon Tsarapkin, who met in Stuttgart yesterday with Kiesinger for the second time in 24 hours. The Soviet Union and East Germany both warned repeatedly that election of a successor to President Heinrich Ludbke should not take place in West Berlin, which they consider a “third German state.” AAA Tsarapkin first came to see Kiesinger Saturday to receive a reply to the Soviet protest against holding the elections;. The reply was said to have rejected Soviet objections. When Tsarapkin came yesterday, he apparently was acting as official bearer of the new East German offer. West Germany has only economic and business ^ies with the East German government. URGED SECRECY /; BIRMINGHAM - An exhibit showing the architectural features of West Maple Junior High School, Birmingham’s newest ^emoitary school, was one of a select number displayed at the annual conference of the American Association City, Strikers Resuming Talks CONFERS ON CRISIS — Christopher Soames, British ambassador to France, enters a car yesterday after arriving from Paris. Soames flew in for a quick roiind of consultations with British Prime Minister Harold Wilson and Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart in the current Franco-British crisis on the future of the Common Market. Soames is reported furious and considering resigning over British handling of the affair. France Tries to Undo Damage to Euromart PARIS (*, — France meets her Common Market allies tonight in an attempt to undo the damage done by Britain’s disclosure that President Charles de Gaulle wants to scrap the economic community. Foreign Minister Michel Debre scheduled talks with representatives of Italy, Belgium, West Germany, Luxembourg and the Netherlands to give the French version of De Gaulle's, proposals to British Ambassador Christopher Soames. ' A , A, : , A The British version is that De Gaulle wants to replace the Euromart with a loose .free trade Union led by a four-power political directorate made up of France, Britain, Germany and Italy. ’This ultimately would lead to dissolution of the North Atlantic Tr.eaty Organization when a true European independence was built up. DRESSED DOWN The French Foreign Ministry said Soames was called in Saturday evening and Debre gave him a dressing down for Britain’s “leaking” his talk with De Gaulle. Soames flew to London for consultations with his govemmerit yesterday and returned to Paris last night. A A a' France made a formal protest today. Herve Alphand,, secretary-general of the Foreign Ministry, handed ^mes a note protesting the “utilization made successively through diplomatic channels and through Die press” pf the memot'andum Sobmes had made of his discussion with De Gaulle on Feb. 4. .Soames, a Conservative, was reported furious and considering resigning because of the way Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s labor government had handled the affair. of Schopl Administrators in Atlantic City, N.J., last week. ' The single-story school features a multiplicty of flexible building characteristics Which encourage continuing development of educational programs without fixed barriers. A A A ' ' Academic and nonacademic areas are separated by a central connecting unit which houses administrative offices, conference areas, corridors and a landscaped court. ^ The city and its three employe unions returned to the bargaining table at 10 a.m. today minus one of the chief negptiators. David Burgess, a Detrmt lawyer representing the city, suffered a heart attack during Friday’s session and was in fair condition in Pontiac General Hospital today. A A A The two unions representing. city service employes remained on strike and most city departments were unmanned except with skeleton, emergency crews. The Pontiac Firefighters Association stayed on the job by court order after firemen walked off their jobs twice the weekend before last, just after the strike began Feb. 14* ' A A A- Talks have been carried on intermittently since that time. With the biggest interruption occurring during the weekend due to Rurgess’ illness. Gilbert Cox, a lawyer with his firm, is taking Bui^jess’ place. Some progress — but no agreement — was reached last week. MATCHING OFFER WANTED Firemen are still holding out (or the same offer reportedly made to Pontiac police, which would give them $10,300 a year m July 1. The city employes* unions are seeking raises that average 35 cents per hour plus fringe benefit adjustments. The city reportedly has offered the firemen $9,900 and the employes’ unions 30 cents an hour. A A ★ Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. has issued a statement warning city residents about handbills being distributed by the unions. He claims the handbills are “misleading” in regards to pay levels. The city continued posting garbage trucks from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily at strategic points to prevent dangerous pileups. They are posted at: • Pontiac General Hospital parking lot. • Pontiac Golf Course clubhouse. • Murphy Park parking lot, Reed and S. East Boulevard. • Incinerator site, Featherstone and East Boulevard. • Jaycee Park, Walton and Joslyn. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Mary Grace Basson of Fleasqpt Ridge has been ap-pmnted chairman of the English De{»rtment at Kingswood School Cran-brook. In her first year at Kingswood, Mrs. Basson holds a bachelor of arts degree from Villa Madonna College, Covington, Ky., and a master’s degree from the University of Detroit. A A A Mrs. Basson supervises the Drama Club and is coadvisor to Acorn, the school’s literary publication. ' BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Norman F. Uhlir, 2278 Lost Tree Way, has been named sales manager for the Chevrolet passenger car account at Packard Electric ttvision of General Motors Cwp. Uhlir was graduated from General Motors Institute in 1950 and has worked in the sales department at Packard ever since. He was promoted to sales engineer in 1956. H. John Lowry, board chairman and chief executive officer at Michigan Mutual Liability Co., Detroit has announced his retirement from active management, effective March 27. Lowty, of 293 Westwood, joined Michighn Mutual in 1923 as a clerk and moved to chief accountant, auditor, assistant treasurer and vice president-personnel manager. He was elected to the board of directors in 1952, became president in 1958 and chief executive officer in 1961. He was elecled board chairman in 1966. Public to Get Look at Pontiac Plan The Pontiac area public will have an opportunity to learn more about what the Pontiac Plan is all about at 8 p.m., ’Thursday at the City Commission chambers in City Hall, at East Wide Track and East Pike. Sketches, slides and a talk will be presented on the plan developed for the city by Bruno Leon Associates. A ,A* . ■ * Approximately $100 million is expected to be spent on construction in the 27-acre section of urban renewal land south of downtown. The plan calls for a variety of enterprises to be located at the site including, apartments, a hotel, arena, restaurant and office buildings. All the buildings are expected to conform to an essential design and parking is to be provided underground. ' ■ , A A A The concept is expected to revitalize the entire city, according to officials. The first phase of it may Iwgin with land sales as early as three weeks from now, it has been indicated. AARON S. BROWN Ex-Envoy Dies; Native of City Former U.S. Ambassador to Nicaragua Aaron S. Brown, a former Pontiac resident, died Saturday at his home in New York City. He was 56- AAA Brown, who was a reporter for The Pontiac Press from 1936-37, was appointed to the foreign service office in 1937. He served in Bangkok, Lisbon, Mexico City, Dublin and Bogota, Colombia. .AAA He was appointed ambassador in 1961 by the late Presideftt Kennedy, and left his post in 1967. Funeral arrangements are pending. AAA Surviving are his wife, Dorothy; two daughters and two sisters. Quakers Call for Probe WELLINGTON, New Zealand ® - A Quaker peace committee called today for an impartial investigation by a U.N. observer to determine if a proposed U.S. Navy navigation station in New Zealand would be part of the American nuclear missile system. A. A A • The Quakers said the station could be used by submerged Polaris submarines to determine their position in order to Aim their missiles. They said this could result in' a /ttuplear; attack cm New Zealand." ■ . '; / Race, Religion Off as Voting Issues WASHINGTON (fft — The nonpartisan committee that watches over political campaign tactics says there was a major decline in appeals to racial and religious Sources in London said SiOames had advised Wilson and Foreign Secretary I Michael Stewart not to disclose De Gaulle’s plans to Britain’s allies—including the United States—becaute France would consider ; it a breach of confidence. British sources here sakl London’s publication of De Gaulle’s plan followed a “one-sided” version leaked by the French to a Paris newspaper. And the British government felt its action was vindicated by the reaction in the Common Market countries. ■ ■ ■ A " A .A British government officials said Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger of West Germany was shocked and upset when Wilson outlined De Gaulle's thinking during Wilson’s visit to Bonn on Feb. 12. Infbrmants said Wilson and Stewart left De Gaulle was setting a diplomatic trap for Britain by proposing that Wilson, not the French president, should take the initiative publicly by proposing British-French talks on De Gaulle’s plan. Strike Ends in Spain BILBAO, Spain (*—A 21-day strfice of 22,000 steel, construction and shipyard workers in this north Spain industrial the election, city ended today. : congi-esrional electicms. In a report released today, the Fair Campaign Practices Committee said only 6 per cent of the unfair campaign complaints involved appeals to'racial prejudice, Ond only 3 per cent ccmcerned religion. A A A The committee, noted that racial and religious prejudice wCre the “two political pitches” which haus^ the mo§t complaints in previous campaign years. “Most of the complaints filed witii the committee during the 1968 campaign period were based on misrepresentation, dist(H'tion or falsification o( edmpai^ material,’’ the report said. And most of these came in the closing dajrs before The strikers returned to their jobs in all five struck plants — three plants of Altor Hornos de Vizcaya, Spin’s largest steel firm; Babcock and WUcox, a heavy construction firm; and Constructora Naval, a privately owned shipyard. d Lat dirt M The FCPC staff concluded lihat dirty politics really doesn’t pay off. It said 81 per cent of those who filed what tiie committee considered valid complaints won their election contests, vrtille 87 per cent who filed invalid complaints lost at the polls. g f I THE PONTIAC PRESS. MON DA V, FERKIARV Jk VMW) ofMINOR niROA^ Weekly Reminder 21 Arrested in Narcotcis Raid SORE THROAT due to a cold, Hwre ing, yat potent orol onNieplic that really works. And, It's a greot imtith-wasKtoo.___________ Gargle and ISODINE ABILENfi. Tex. «AP) Members oCthe Big.Country Cal (calories) Cutters Club have an inducement not to eat too much. A huge pink pig labeled PIG LIVES HERE is Port Huron Hippie Hangout Hit PORT HURON (AP)—An in- persons Sunday at what police were charged with posso.ssion of Guiuiiii^liamssTo» hippie displayed on the front lawn of vestigation lasting several said was (the member who gained the months resulted In a narcotics hangout, most weight the previous week, raid that led to the arrest of 21 Seventeen of those arrested | marijuana and four weif raigned on a charge of frequenting a place of illegal occupation. Five different varieties of drugs were discovered on the raided premises, including a substance believed to be the hallucinatory drug LSD, according to Ron Flanigan, head of the St. Clair County Sheriff's Department intelligence squad. Flanigan said additional charges of selling harmful drugs may be leveled against some ol the arrested, who ranged in age from 15 to 25 years and attended high schools and colleges in the Detroit and fort lluroii areas.. I,ED TO AIUIAIGNMENT — Officers staggered to the bathroom i lead several of the persons,, charged in a ol their home in Detroit, where I narcotics raid in Port Huron, to arraignment he died in the bathtub, Detroit in District Court yesterday afternoon. All 17 police said. charged with possession of marijuana stood mute before Disfrict Judge James M. Kelpy and examination was set for March 4. Four others were charged with frequenting a place of illegal occupation. People in the News j By The Associated Press Raymond Burr, known to television viewers as the tough police chief named Ironside, left Singapore for his private island in the Fijis with a lot of flowers. Burr took 50 orchid plants (or his 4,000-acre Naitaunba Lsland. "My interest in them (orchids) goes back 20 years,” said Burr, also known for his television portrayal of Perry Mason. "We have brought back about 200 orchid plants from Singapore during the past two years. But this time we thought we would pick them ourselves.” Pope Pleas tor European Unity Pope Paul VI began, a week of Lenten retreat with a plea lor approach to achieve European unity. B. Speaking from the window of his Vatican ^ City apartment before giving his Sunday blessing, the pontiff called European unity - ‘ the "subject of this present historic hour” and said the cause of peace is linked closely to this unity. He hinted that the whole issue of European unity, East-West relations and the effects on world peace would be at the POPE center of his meeting with President Nixon March 2, one day after the Pope’s Lenten retreat ends. Navy to Fete Master of Pearl Harbor Attack The man who planned the Japanese attack on Pearl Harhor will be honored as a distinguished visitor at the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md., March 3. Gen. Minoru Genda, 65, who retired from the Japanese air defense force in 1962, will be the guest of the U.S. Naval Institute, a professional society for Navy personnel. The institute is also sponsoring Genda on an eight-lecture series during his 21-day tour of the United States. Paul Newman Picked as "Best Producer' of '68 Paul Newman is the Producers Guild of America choice as motion picture producer of 1968 for his film "Rachel, Rachel.” George Schlatter and Ed Friendly, in I the guild’s view, are the best television I producers for "Laugh-ln.” 1 The awards by the guild’s 400 members | I were presented at a dinner Saturday | I night in Beverly Hills, Calif. k Member Fvderof Dcpoii :• Corp. With Deposits Pontiac State Bank NOT ON THE BANDWAGON ~ Sitting next to the drum section of a high school band is bad enough, but when it's from the other team, well . . . six-year-old Mark Oshie of Minneapolis attended the state high school hockey tournament in Bloomington, Minn. Saturday night. He was right next to the Edina High School band. Edina was playing Warroad High. Mark was rooting lor Warroad. Edina won, 5- 4. SEPARATED SIAMESE TWINS - Capt. Jolin Ibach deft) of Philadelphia and Maj. Vincent de Angelis of Babylon, N.Y., hold a pair of newborn Siamese twins they separated in a two-hour operation at a U.S. Army hospital in Vung Tau, South Vietnam, Friday. The infant Vietoamese girls were joined at the abdomen and had a common liver. A' No newspaper anywhere gives us the news of schools in this area the way The Pontiac Press does. Pictured left fo rif-ht: Churlene Itantelle. lioche.slen Sandy tt lute, liochester. u You're so right, Charlene." Of course Charlene is right and all the THE PONTIAC PRESS For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 THS PQI^TIAC 1>E^SS, HONDAY, FEBRUARY 24. 1969 smum kB~n Lenten Guid^posts^S Ex-Boxer Champion for the Young FREEMAN By DONALD FREEMAN Newspaper Reporter, San Diego, ^lU. The speaker was Negro. So was his audience. His subject was freedom. Midway through his talk, he quoted from memory the entire 20th chapter of Exodus. When he reached the Tp Commandments, a group of boys who occupied the platform with him started to call them out with him. Suddenly, a voice in the au'" dience objected. “What’s this got to do with our freedom?” A taut silence fell over the auditorium. Hie man before the lectern smiled. “My friend, you have your freedom now-only you don’t know it.” The audience erupted into loud prolonged applause. NEW ROLE This was Archie Moore, former light heav3Tweight boxing champion, in a new role—trying to inspire youi^ men and women to realize the opportunity that is theirs. Moore heads a program in San Diego named ABC, “Any Boy Can.” “And any boy c*n improve himself if he wants to,’ says Moore, a man who speaks from experience. ★ ★ 'The idea of ABC had been simmering in Moore’s mind ever since he was a teen-agn* and a self-admitted delinquent in the Nejro ghetto of St. Louis. “I’ve been no angel,*’ says Archie, a high school dropout. “Once I stole $7 from a streetcar coin box and ended up in reform school. But there one night I had a dream—I saw , myself helping other boys vdio were in trouble. It wasn’t clear how I was helping them, but I knew that someday, if God would use me, 1 would figure out a way.” IMPORTANT CALL Years later, in the sununer of 1965 — during the same week that the Watts riot exploded Archie received a phone caU that helped him figure out the way. A friend, a real-Ostate promoter, asked him to sell hooies in a new housing development in the Negro section ‘ Valiejo, Calif. Arriving there, Moore learned some of the mdgbbortiood’s problems. Boys would tlvow rocks through windows of the vacant new houses, dislodge tho plumbing and steal anything they coidd pry loose. ♦ ★ ★ “I remembered my dream in reform school,” Archie says, ‘and I began to think.” He set up a punching bag in makeshift outdow gym. A young Negro boy came to watch the former champion chalantly puncMng the bag. can do tbat,” the lad piped. tablished an ABC club in San Diego. far, ABC has been financed by city ftmds, service clubs, private industry and by Mowe himself. He hopes to develop a training [vogram so that ABC projects can be set up throughout the country. I’ll fight the man who calls me an Uncle Tmn,” Archie declares. “I was bom in 0 — but 1 refused to stay there. a Negro and proud to be one. 1 am also an American m proud of that. Granted, the Negro still has a.long way tp go to gain a fair shake with the white man in this country. But believe this; if we resort to lawlessness, the only thing we can hope for is bloodshed and the end of our dreams.” At a ci Moore as “Mr. San Diego,” an admirer came forward to shake his hand. “Youf were a real champion in the ring; Archie,” he said, *'but what you’re doing now is much greater. God bless you.** Next — John Ridgway, Briton who, with a companion, 1 acroes the Atlantic in a rowboat, tdla Mw instaiaed them when all IREGISTER^^ |NOWfor«DULTEVll^OUIISES| 97 Cpntinuing Education Courses are still open . . . call now and reserve yoOr class. Choose from 42 Liberal Arts qnd 55 Business and Professional Development Courses. Call 8 a.m. to 7p.m. daily. OAKLAND UNIVERSITY nwM3ii-mi.Eitnni 30 KIDS “Maybe you can,” Moore re->lied. “Come back With 10 more (ids tomorrow, and we’ll see.” The boy retoned the next day with 30 other kids. Holding out the punching bag, Archie explained that learning to box is as simple as ABC. “But before the B and the C,” he said, ‘you must first learn the A.” For the next hour, using parable and wry humor, Moore taught the eager kids lessons in moral behavior. .★ “All right, students,” he concluded, “I’ll see you all tomw^ row at the same time.” Twenty-four hours later they were back. Soon Archie was teaching them how to shadow-box —“but not necessarily how fight,” Mocsre insists. “The mrpose is self-defense, not will-iul harm. The goal is to be strong so that toey can walk away from a bully cowardice but witti dignity. SENSE OF PRIDE Gradually he began to instill in tile kids a sense of pride and moral responsibility. Secures of other kids, white as well as black, came around join ABC. Archie accepted them all. He asked the boys call him “Instructor Moore," and they are known as his ‘students,’’ Explains Archie, ‘It’s a subQe way of telling them to be students, not dropouts.” ★ ★ ★ He established .religious as the cornerstone of his program, and called on the boys to memorize and recite passages from the Biple. He pounded away at the importance of education. Teachers' in the Vallejo sdwols were amazed at the sudden enthusiasm for studies. For two years, Moore commuted to Vallejo from his home in San Diego, where Ito lives with his wife and five children, instructors in charge of VaUejo group, Moore In Smokers' Families Illness Link Is Found DETROIT (UPI) - Children who live under a “tobacco cloud” are more susceptible to respiratory Illnesses than the children of non-smoking parents, a Wayne Btate University psychologist has concluded. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Paul Cameron said Friday a study he and Dr. Donald Robertson of California State College at Long Beach, Calif., conducted in Detroit and Los Angeles showed children of smokers in Detroit had 39 per cent more respiratory illnesses than children of nonsmokers. ★ ★ ★ In Los Angeles, he said, smokers’ children had 20 per cent more resipratory illnesses. Cameron said the survey was conducted at random by phone in both cities, and 2,130 families with 4,601 children were terviewed in Detroit and families with 1,010 children interviewed in Los Angeles. MorcComfortVfedrlng FALSE TEETH ■ Tn Av^reom* aiMomtort wbaa flrmar. Tou Mt brttw, teal nuna aomlartoble, FABTOrm !■ alkallii* —won’t •our.Hetaaclj—- DontuzM thtt at u hMltb. Bw your d«a 0«t FABTEBIH at «U RINTNBLLrS CONN Available on Grinnell's INSTRUMENT RENTAL PLAN if your child takes bor>d this term, you eort RENT d Conn trumpet, cornet. Clarinet, trombone, flute, or violin, for ^ # os long os you wish with unlimited return y privilege! If you then buy, oil poyments ^ month opply to purchase! Better select rK>w! (mtailimim S mentta GRINNELL'S, The PonKo« Moll, 682-0422 0p^ Every Evpning to 9 ALL600DSUCED BACON OR SUNNYBROOK GRADE MOIUIIRZE FRESH EGGS “SOPBt-RIGIIF LARGE LINK Sausage 69‘ FriMich fries. . Awmozen Frozen Woffles. .2 .3; 43* 29* PORK CHOPS CHlfriei(/4PGfl[ Uhi^ 0 iG II Ch^ lo ERdt and Cgrwis Mlznd Wholo Fryer Legs Ac or Fryer Breasts.. (lUboamI BadaAttaeboin Monday, Fob. 24ih and Toot., Fob. 25th Only CHUCK CUT Boneless Beef Roost... t9* itoHhiirBerf. ....... *^29* AH-lltoatfi^to. ..... *^69* BCmHCN SmorgosPack...............^t9* 4TQOLB. MZtB SnekedKcaicf. ___________*^49* 0^Perch............... . ^69* paozm cco OR ociAH KRCM aoao* niMt... .... wi” ‘39* the PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 24. 19 I C—T *n>e following are lop prices cevertag wles of locally grown produce iQf growers and sold by ttiim in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Stocks Open Irregularly Lower NEW YORK (Urt) ~ Stocks Some bright iwws items and belief that a technical rally may be in the cardi following last [week's sharp setback are among the naone cwistructive jfactors. The news Included a 20 per ^”lceiit jump in sales by General ‘ iMotors in mid-February versus year earlier, reports that [machine tool ordering Is holding ,.„:at a healthy pace, and con-igtinued heavy demand for steel. However, concern over the Middle East and Vietnam could be overriding influences. Shortly after the opening, the UPI stock market indicator showed a loss of 0.23 per cent on 329 issues crossing the tape. There were 156 declines and 100 advances. BLECTRONCS MIXED Electronics were mixed. Steels showed a steady tone. Chemicals weakened. General Electric dipped % among the electronics Squath, Acorn, bu MiM 31. Uvestock "sr sr-.n. .. ________ far pric# tail. Vt*l«r*i not Owugh »P mfi---ShMPj miuNtant Mppiy M (Mt pricM oeTaeiT pooltsy DSTROIT (APT-tU»r- -per pound far No. I roS5:rr ' c»lpt» Thuraday wara a.W)< 5K***“7.J* 10 » htBhari aariy ••'f'v, jeffw. raltiar alow ahippara took 77S lb bufenara iiSi ao hjad •'»«*» ^ Jl )4MiD lba.».IM>^» itw?!a.iK‘ Jwi*tl*h“ilMr^ y'-K boon l4.te.lS.00. Cattia NOi talvai ,nona; iiauehfar afaari or hallara i r,5y’*;J'»*TlV7n'"':j7.?.y tra'OJ mmir bno and Eggs ■"®'OSO?f^ egg prl Poultry DSTI... DiTSOIT (AP)-lj paid par doMn by il '"Srada' A lumbo 42U4( aytra lano* »• 4i< CHICAGO (API - CMCW M*rcantlla eachanga-sutfar tlaadyi wholaiala buy- lYir. “'■- Am Ainm .vo Am Can 3.30 AEnka 1.90a ‘ Hama l.40 m Haap .19 mMPdy .W Mat Cl l.fO m Matori iiNatOH t TiPboi .0«g Small 3.00 m Small wl n Sid I r^aUI MK Cp .10 MKCp Wl VI Pine .40 npax Carp lacond 3.S0 ...chDan 1.40 Armco $11 1 Armour 1.40 ArmCk 1.40a AihIdOII UO And DO 1.30 All Rich 1.00 AIIRIchId wl Alla> Ch .10 Allot Carp Avco Co 1.20 American Stocks >IFW YOR KIAP) * Amarican Sic Stchtnga aalatl* noon pricat: ^ (MSIllMbLaw Lad C -.KMa Jla J M 11 AnPIr .70a 37 37^- i2!f2?a*S AtalQll A " AllaiCorp ---.;orp .. Mflw"*! Brit Pat .S7a CamtM Chib MT'" Craok 3.40a Data Coni OUllyi Corn Dynakitlrn Cquittp .OSa Fad RMitat G«n ^Vwood OlantYVl .40 K«.io ITf purp Kalair lad McCrory wl Mkh Sug ,10 11 11VI 30ta 10»« - ,3!K r !K5 . 11-10 aw aw - w 41 14W 15W uw 47 13'y 13’» 13H 11 liw MV. 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Jersey Standard a^ Cities Service added H and The New York Stock Exchange WASHINGTON (AP) - Prl-vate contractors deliv»ing U.S. military fuel in Southeast Asia have failed to return millions Of dollars wor^ of reusable steel oil drums as required by government contracts, according to Sen. William Proxmire. The Wisconsin Democrat, a consistent critic of what he says are wasteful defense contract* ing procedures, made the charge in a letter to Secretary of the Navy John Chaffee. NEW YORK (AP) -------- wlfCluC ---- —A— ^ High Li ' ”51' Q 71*4 71" 94U 94" ■ Ind 1,40 *11 L. - - . 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(AP) — A!Dyna‘‘Am'“40 .lacKoonville, Fla.. teen^«er has learned that Eastern Airlines takes seriously jokes about side trips to Qd>a. Buddy Grig^, Ea^m’s station ! anager in Augui^. said a youth of “high scfKxri” age was removed from/ fli|^t SII Friday , Bight after be aflegedly re-marked: ‘^ITiis plane is not ^ going to JadksonvUle-ifs going « to C jOa." Flreftne i-40 , , , X ' FsfChrt I.*5t ' * W » Flinfkoie 1 The flight origtiated in Wash- 1° ingtexi, D.C., wifti stops in Co- ^ lumbia, S.C., and Augusta en F^dtw i-jo >Bute to Jadtsonyillr iFreeosui i*o Griggs said the hoy was notI ™ turned over to poilce after hejoAc cp i.so was removed fron the plane. 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US Steal 2.40 UnivOPd .50 Uplohn 1.40 Varlin Also Vando Co .4L VaEIPw IDS Fuel Suppliers 'Bilking US.' Defense Contracting Procedures Blamed Economic SloYfdown Likely to Be Painful .. ... unolflclal. rwit* notad, “*■ foragolng tal nn«n,B bsapd on ., ,Z*I PepsiCo .30 34 47*4 47% "J*- ji'" rX*;? f.!S: « n* F-» gik + s 23 S4*« 24** 14**.r-1* 5, a*4 23*4 23*.--I* II 23** 211* 23»* t W xIO 231* 313* 23, 126 341* 241* 241* XV 34*4 34 Treasury Position .WASHINGTON (AP) - Th* cath pot!-ion of th* Treasury Peb. 17/ 134* ^ Bred to Fab. IS. 1345 (In dollars); 5.4)5,515^45.65 4,343,052,753.53 Deilosits fiscal yair July 1 114.552,313^4151 32Jtt.14737.41 withdrawals tlaclt year 13534J31.M1.S7 11S4)7.0I435J7 Total d*M x-mtai.VS.304.15 S47J53JSSJ45.32 •“WSO*.35435.41 11J54m5N.t5 ) 23'. »s< 23>. — if 15 15 » 15 Rails m UNlj Fga. L. Yd. 1 sJlNionlThiri. 44.1 54.3 MJ M.4 mIj H ij'Prey. Day 44.1 54.1 M.3 ”* 1, _ !.,'lMW3*Rtoh 6^3 JL5 ^4 OU 52.3 jipnir 2-t GM Workers' Suggestions Pay Off Big Making suggestions ipeant record rewards for General Motors Corp. employes in the United States and Canada last year. Awards for good suggestions netted GM personnel a total of 614,295,387, including 61,147,083 in Pontiac. This exceeded toe 613.6 million in awards in 1967, according to Louis G. Seaton, vice president in charge of personnel staff. Seaton announced that 247,109 suggestions earned a)vards year, including 100 maximum awards. Thirteen of the maximum winners received 610,000 by submitting suggestions in oT after October, when the maximum was raised from 66,000. 9,667 LOCALLY Locally, 9,6 67 suggestions were accepted, with 180 winning awards of 61,000 or more and six winning the maximum. Since the suggestion plan was initiated in 1942, more than 61H million has been paid employes for more than 2.3 million suggestions adopted by GM. it *' it Suggestions .pertain to many aspects of toe corporation’s operation including safety improvements, metoods, cos" reduction, improved charges. ‘MISINFORMED’ Proxmire wrote Chaffee that he has indications the secretary has been misinformed. Hie senator gave this explanation in statement: “if the U.S. buys 10,000 gallons of jet fuel at a temperature of 60 degrees Farenheit, the laws of physics tell us that we should own about 10,150 gallons at 90 degrees Farenheit. opWJOH«,AVRR*OB» 30 Indus . ........... 20 ROMs. . .. ........ 15 UHis ..... ........ 45 Stocks ............ RONDS To p^i^ uTiHfl*.' ralU . Emhart Coro ! t OivMi^ DK^ Rata £M IMcjrt 2Si* BGULAR .12 Q 3-7 . . .30 0 3* ... .45 O 34 .3333 O 3-10 345 . IS Q 3/11 4.15 . J25 O 34 Waek Ago vrA& ---a Wgh 44.4 54.1 75.0 I -2.0 -.1 -J -1.3 435 3 206.1 151.3 144.3 497.3 204.3 154,4 345.2 513.5 314.1 155.4 340J 503.1 313.5 155.3 157,1 4«.0 171.2 144.7 3IS.4 531.1 3)7.7 140.4 345.5 435.4 M5.4 135.1 233.' 431.2 303.4 1S3.I 143.u 413.4 153.4 134J M3J housekeeping, material saving and job improvements. Ford Workers Near London Call for Strike LONDON (UPI)-Militant unofficial leaders of 20,000 workers at Ford Motor Co.’s huge im car plant near London yesterday reaffirmed their decision to stop work today. The workers are demanding renegotiation of a 612-milIion package pay deal between the company and official union leaders. ★ ★ ★ Ford earUer offered to reopen talks with official union leaders tomorrow in a bid to head off toe threatened stoppage. But unofficial leaders, meeting in Dagenham yesterday, decided to go ahead with , the unofficial strike. A spokesman for the group said after the meeting that about 11,000 Dagenham workers had already agreed to stay out. News in Brief Delois Harbert, 24, 17 Mich- igan toid Pontiac police yesterday that someiuie broke into her residence and stole two color-television sets, valued at a total of 65S0 . Steel Output Pushes Ahead Freight-Car Shortage, Weather Problems CLEVELAND (UPI) Magazine says shipments of finished steel from U. S. mills are being held up by freight car shortages and adverse weather. The magazine said that despite the hampered shipments steelmaking operations , are pushing head, reflecting continued strong demand. ★ * * Production of raw steel is estimated by the magazine at 2,720,000 net tons in'the week ended Feb. 22, up 0.9 per cent from the preceding week’s output of 2,697,000 tons. it it ■* Steel Magazine noted the spurt in steel buying appeal easing slightly and demand seems less urgent than it was in late January and early February, indicating some consumers may have completed their first quarter procurement programs. PRICE TRENDS Steel noted all major producers have followed Bethlehem Steel Corp. in raising hot rolled sheets 612 and hot bands 614 a ton, at the same time revising extras for size and Jowering pickling In restoring former price standards, one producer raised toe base price of hot rolled strip 66.50 a ton and adjusted extras while a second put the new hot rolled steet price into effect on hot strip, and revised e: * * it Steel’s price composite on the No. 1 grade of steelmaking scrap continued steady at 628.‘" gross ton for the third straight week. EXPANSION VS. SLOWDOWN The problem risii^ interest rates — and at toe same time a slowing of the percentage by which the money supply is growing — is that they come at a time when many coiT>orations have enormous sj^nding plans. Expansion and slowdown may so