Th0 Weather U.I. WutiMr •HrHii.Pww P«rUy aoNy PONTIAC PRESS Home Edifion VOL. 127 NO. 11 ★ ★ PONTIAC^ MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 19, 1969 —60 PAGES 10» 2nd HUD Exec Gives Approval to Pontiac Plan A promtaent official in the office of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has flashed a “go-ahead” signal for the I comprehensive $100-I million Pontiac Plan. He’s the second I high HUD official I in a month to visit I the city and express approval of the de-I velopment concept I for thfe 27 acres of I vacant downtown ' urban renewal land. WILCOX Yesterday ’s visitor was Kenneth Wilcox, planning director for the HUD 10-state regional office Chicago. On Jan. 20, the city was visited by Thomas Kilbride, director of the same-office. In Wilcox’s estimation the plan was sound, he said, and the full cooperation of the Chicago office in implementing it was pledged. He met with the City Commission and , staff members yesterday afternoon. The commission was urged by Wilcox to go ahead with some first steps — selling some of the land. James L. Bates, city planning and urban renewal director, told the group he had been contacted by two agencies interested in purchase and development of two portions of land. The sale could take place and construction begin as long as the developers ((Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5) Nixon Strips OEO di 2 Key Programs WORK PILES UP—Pontiac’s rubbish collectors will have a lot of catching up to do when their stfikfe against the city ends, and rubbish continues to pile up at residents’ City Bargaining Recessed homes. Workers in most city departments have been on strike since Friday. Firemen Set News Confab Downtown Group Backs Stadium Bid The board of directors of the Downtown Pontiac Business Association unanimously endorsed the Pontiac site for the proposed domed stadium, association President Jack Simon said today. 'The board is preparing a letter of endorsement for the city’s suggested site located near 1-75 and M59. ★ ★ Simon said the Pontiac site offers land availability and easy access and is the center of a highway network near a large population center. “Economically, it would be great for P'ontiac if the proposed stadium were constructed here,” he added. A spokesman for the Pontiac Fire Fighters Local 367 announced at noon that a news conference was to be held at 2 p.m. today at Holiday Inn, 1801 S. Telegraph, Bloomfield Township. No de^ tails were disclosed. By L. GARY THORNE Assistant City Editor—Suburban Fatigue and lack of progress at the bargaining table have forced a 24-hour recess today in talks between the city and three employe groups embroiled in a five-day-old labor dispute. State Labor Mediator Leonard Bennett adjourned negotiations about 2 a.m. after the fourth consecutive night of continuous bargaining failed to bring any noticeable break in. the dispute. The talks will resume at 2 p.m. tomorrow. ★ * * Two unions—Local 100, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes and the Pontiac Municipal Empl oyes Association-remain on strike. Members of a third union, PUfftiac Fire Fighters Local County Taxing Units Get Edison Letters of Protest 376, returned to work Sunday under a court order, after staging two walkouts. Garbage and trash continued to accumulate in Pontiac at the rate of 4,000 homes per day — the number of homes serviced for collection by a full force of blue collar workers. / Negotiations resumed about 7:30 las( night, although both sides met again behind closed doors with Circuit Judge Philip Pratt in the afternoon. Pratt declined comment on the series of conferences. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr., who canceled last night’s regular City Commission meeting so as not to jec^ardize the talks, addressed union negotiators briefly at the start of last night’s sessions. - Taylor, who was accompanied by District 5 Commissioner Robert F. Jackson, cited the commission’s con-bdence in its negotiating team and told the unions the negotiations “were extremely important to the welfare of the community.” There was a definite slowdown last night in the speed of the negotiations, whjch are being held at the Holiday Inn, 1801 S. Telegraph, Bloomfield Township. At one point, it took moFe than two hours Detroit Edison Co. has sent letters of protest to taxing units in Oakland County regarding the levy of nonvoted taxes .over the 15-mill limitation. ★ ★ ★ A spokesman for the company said this morning it was his understanding that thfe company has 30 days in which to file suit to make the protests valid. He said he did not know whether such a suit will be filed. , The letter sent out to local governmental units by C. P. Allman, Edison’s manager of taxes, read: “The 1968 property taxes paid herein are paid involuntarily and under protest for the reason that said are illegal and void.” The State In Today's Press 'Rochester Hills' Series of meetings^scheduled on proposed charter — PAGE A-4. Labor College? AFL-CIO setting up student center — pAGE B-4. Bridge Suspended Work halted on out-edal message to the Legislature. “It is a question, of saving our cities . . . from the decay and despair that is having an adverse human and economic Impact on all of Michigan." Milliken said his administration would concentrate its urban affairs efforts in eight areas — housing, welfare, mental health, civil rights, transportation, consumer protection, manpower and education. Declaring that his 1969 70 budget recognizes the pressing needs o f Michigan cities. Milliken said he neverttteless realized that even more money is needed. “Realistically," he said, “we simply do not have more money to spend. Cons^uently, we miwt first attempt to redirect our existing programs and improve them." The governor said he was placing a very high priority on efforts to eliminate crowded .and un.snfe housing conditions, particularly in uriian centers. One of the things that must be done, he said, is a review of what he described as the outmoded housing laws in Michigan. Such a study already is underway by a special commission. “Without an effective statewide, modem housing code, we cannot hdpe to meet the housing needs of large numbers of poor families with necessary speed and efficiency," he explained. On the subject of•'itielfare, Milliken said the present system i.*: inadequate, demeaning, inefficient and has,.so many disincentives built into it that it encourages continued dependency. Artificial Snow Ready for Press Ski School Mt, Holly snow machines have been busy the past Tew nights manufacturing goiyi ski conditions for the third February session of The Pontiac Press Ski School tonight. ' ^ Cla.sses begin at 7:30 p m. at the ski area, B-Me S. Dixie, Grovel and Township. was a foregone conclusion that Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird would face the same criticism of the Sentinel when he goes before the committee tomorrow to continue the administration’s campaign for quick ratification of the treaty. NUCLEAR DEFENSE The Sentinel system would use nuclear-armed defensive missiles to • destroy enemy missiles. The Nixon administration halted work on the system two Weeks ago after criticism in the Senate and from residents of areas being considered as Sentinel sites. '' * * Laird has Indicated work will resume after the Pentagon completes a review of the ys.S-billion system begun by the Johnson administration and approved in the last Congress. Since there Is little doubt the treaty will be ratified, committee members concentrated on how the United States will implement its terms, particularly Article VI, which says, in part: "Each of the parties to the treaty undertakes to pursue negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a treaty on general and complete disarmament...” •UTTERLY INCONSISTENT’ Chairman J. W. Fulbright commented, “I can't imagine, if this treaty were in full effect, that we can proceed with the ABM unilaterally ... It would be utterly Inconsistent.” Fulbright and some other members urged that the Nixon administration hold up on the Sentinel an|J concentrate instead on bringing about U.S.-Soviet talks on missile disarmament. “Why is the United States reluctant to begin these conversations?" asked Albert Gore, DTenn. "We're not reluctant,” Rogers said and expres.sed the hope the talks could begin in six months or less. A Hero Holds Hope for Youth DETROIT (AP)-^ Dr. Harold A. Furlong a practicing obstetrician and World \Wir I Medal of Honor winner, looked at^ large, oval frame containing his photograph that appeared to have-dark shadows reminiscent of a Boris Karloff movie. “Isn't that horrible," said the Pontiac doctor with a chuckle * * * The picture was one of ten that served as a backdrop Tuesday night at a dinner in Detroit’s Cobo Hall to honor Michigan’s only Vietnam Medal of Honor winner. Army Sgt. Dwight Johnson of Detroit. Furlong, of 2260 E. Hammond Lake, Bloomfield Township, won the honor, highest the country grants, for destroying f(Hir machine gun nests and capturing 20 German soldiers in World War I. Now, some 50 years later, Furlong says' he’s not discouraged by today’s youtfif. * “They’re all right. We've heard too much about the guys who are making a lot of racket, but there are a lot of good guys around.’* “Don't underestimate these kids. They’re wonderful.” he said, pointing out a IXMroit youth who finished as the top high .school IlOTC candidate in nine .states. But why the dissent? “The kids now are better educated^ the doctor said. NOT SEGOND His opinions, howevety^ were not The Weafhi Full >r^Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY cloudy today, little temperature change. High 37 to 42, Partly cloudy liUle co«»ler. low near 26. Partly cloudy Thursday and pleasant, high j iday’s outlopk: cloudy, little temperature change. Winds northwest fivp,d per hour today, tonight and Thursday. EMPTY ‘SADDLES’ AT CITY HALL - Most Pontiac City Hall offices empty, lonely places these days because of the strike by the Pontiac Municip^F^mployes Association. Also on strike are blue-collar workers. Commissioners Mjss Out on 'Welcome' by Pickets The Pontiac City Commission cal^ off last night’s meeting at City Hall. The commissioners had a r^e^ption waiting for them, but none show More than 100 picketep^ carrying NATIONAL WEATHER - Ram and snow are predicted tonight for; the Southwest from western Texas to southern California and snow flurries are forecast for the upper Midwest. Ram mixed with snow flumes is foreca.st for/an area stretdhing , from New Jersey to Maine m the Northca'-t. seconded by some of the other Medal of Honor winners from Michigan. Robert Guy Robertson of St. Igjia^e said he believes youngsters tod^ different Ideas of America th^arhe had during World War I. Robertifbn was a gunp^ in a U. plane attacked by sey^ German Fok-kers. His pilot waa-mjured fatally, but despite wounds/in the abdomen, chest, legs and lefCann, Robertson downed the enemy plaries and drove off the rest. Abou^ietnaml? like that guerrilla fighting. It’s man against the other. You’re •"^sneaking around looking for them and they’re looking for you.” J Albert J. Smith of .Detroit, who rescued a sailor from a crashed burning seaplane in Pensacola, Fla., in 1921, said "I don’t know what’s upsetting the whole country like it is. This country needs a lot stricter laws and better sentencing when the judges get to it.” LITTLE PATRIO-nSM Francis Pierce, an inspector in the Grand Rapids Police Department, said ' "I don’t believe the home is teaching patriotism in the manner it was taught a few years ago. 1 think the parents themselves don’t believe in Ihe amenities of the flag or of our country." At Iwo Jima during World War 11. Pierce faced Japanese fire to lead wounded men to safety. The citation for the Navy Pharmacisf Mate l.C. reads: "completely fearless, completely devoted to the care of his patients, Pierce inspired the entire battalion.” •k * ★ John C. Sjorgren, manufacturer's representative in Grand Rapids, said “I don’t think patriotism has changed, but people have changed the meaning of patriotism. I think it goes back to the fact that we have a breakdown in our educationai system.- You have the same thing in the military. You have a-lot of boys that are burning their draft cards and making disparaging remarks. Sjorgren won the blue ribbon around his neck in the Philippines during World War II. He attacked dnd destroyed enemy pillboxes and small ditches called spider holes. SERVED IN KOREA Robert E. Simanek, now a Farmington accountant, wal a Private First Class in Korea in 1962. He jumped on a grenade to save others caught in an ambush, then despite his wounds operated his radio, for seven hoqrS directing mortar fire. Oscar G. Johnson of DeWitt, who > serves with the Michigan Army National Guard, almost single-handedly broke through a German line while fighting in Italy in 1944. * * * Duane E. Dewey, owner of an office nwchine repair service store in South Haven, also smothered a-grenade with his body during the Koreln War. Dirk J. Vlug, a Grand Rapids mailman, attacked antj destroyed five Japanese tanks on 1 Leyte, the Philip- i pines,in 1944. Informer Calle4 inSribe Case Underworld informer Peter Lazaros is scheduled to testify when the preliminary examination of reputed Mafia leader Anthony J. Giacalone and Louis Koury on gambling and bribery charges resumes at 9 a.m. tomorrow in Pontiac District Court. The hearing began yesterdaf before Judge James R. Stelt, who vfill decide if there is sufficient evidence to bind the pair over to Oakland County Circuit Court to stand trial. ★ ★ A Giacalone, 50, of Grosse Pointe Park” and Koury, 65, of 1515 Midwood, Commerce Township, are accused of being Involved in the gambling operation of the Seaway Civic and Social Club and the bribery of a Pontiac police officer. A * ★ * They were charged with conspiracy on both counts on information provded by Lazaros, who has been under protective police custody in his home at 2410 Dalesford, Troy, since last November. NAMED AS COCONSPIRATOR Lazaros was named as a coconspirator with Giacalone and Koury but not as a codefendant, which means that he will not be prosecuted in fhe case. AAA First-day testimony came from Pontiac Police Capt. Raymond E. Meggitt, who detailed at length the five-month role he played as an undercover agent, leading to a raid on the gambling establishment on Oct. 2,1965. A A A Meggitt was paid a total of $2,050 by the operators of the club to inform them of pending raids. Three men were later convicted of conspiring to bribe Meggitt. ' A A A Chief Assistant Prosecutor Ronald E. Covault refused to have Meggitt’s testimony w'aived as requested by Giacalone’s attorney, Joseph Louisell of Detroit. signs, picks, shovels, wheelbarrows and childrefft were marching around City Hall prior to the scheduled hieeting.. The picketing was in support of the Pontiac Fire Fighters Association and the two striking unions representing city whit'e- and blue-collar employes. POINTS TO NEGOTIATIONS , ' Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. announced that the meeting was canceled so as not to interfere with the bargaining process then going on between the city and the three unions. After hearing the commission meeting had been called off the picketers dispersed. AAA The protesters parrying the picks, shovels and other equipment were objecting to comment attributed to City Manager Joseph A. Warren that firemen were “pick and shovel” workers compared to policemen. One of the major disagreements over proposed contract terms with the firemen is a demand for parity pay with city police. Birmingham Action Delayed on First Project in Urban Phn BIRMINGHAM - The City Commission will defer action for at least two weeks on the initial project called for in the city’s proposed Urban Design Plan. Johnson, Johnson and Roy of Ann Arbor, city planning consultants, submitted plans for a Henrietta Street experimental block to the commission this week. Estimated cost is $35,000. AAA The Henrietta project would be an ey perimental prototype exemplifying/' park-like pedestrian atmosphere/which the Urban Design Plan proposes for the downtown shopping district. The experimental block/would Include a widened sidewalk, cencrete planters, modern street-li^hung fixtures and benches. The plannjilg consultant’s initial project on Henripda is in accordance with the plan’s/Original concept, a commission spoj^man said. He added, however, tbdt the commission plans to consult , with merchants and othm" interested groups on the experimental block plan before final approval of funds is made. If approved, the experimental block would be developed this summer. bLoOMFIELD HILLS — Calvert Thomas has been elected chairman of the board of directors of Kingswood School. He succeeds Richard C. Van Dusen, who was recently appointed an undersecretary in the Federal Department of Housing and Urban Development. Van Dusen will continue as a board member. AAA Thomas of 31275 Franklin, Frqnklin Village, has, been a member of the Kingswood board since 1965 and was elected vice chairman last year. He is a member of the legal staff of General Motors. Thomas earged his B.S. degree from Washington and Lee University in 1933 and received a law degree from the University of Maryland in 1942. A A A E. Ross Hanson, 660 E(igemere, Ford Motor Co. marketing institutes manager, moves up to Thomas’s former vicechair-nianship. Hanson holds a B.A. from Yale University and an M.B.A. from Harvard University. Pontiac Plan Gets Approval (Continued From Page One) conformed with the over-all concept of the Pontiac Plan, it was indicated. The plan, adopted by the city Jan. 7, was developed by Bruno Leon Associates. It calls for a variety of buildings and services to be located at the site including apartments, office buildings, an arena, hotel, convention center and restaurant among other facilities. PROGRAM ‘SOUND’ It is expected some $100 million will be expended by private developers at the site. As a HUD official, Wilcox said he felt the piecemeal program of construction called for in the plan was sound and similar to a procedure followed in In his discussion with city officials he was able to answer many specific questions on the development. In addition to urging the city to get started quickly, he advised them to keep the plan flexible. He vowed HUD support if changes were needed in the future. After Zurich Attack Israel Threatens Arabs' Airlines TEL AVIV (AP) - Another Arab gqerrilla attack on an Israeli airliner brought 9 threat today of retaliation against Arab airlines. ' Following the machine gunning of an' ,E1 AI airliner in Zurich, Switzerland, yesterddy, Israeli Transport Minister Moshe Carmel said the Arab governments would do well to hold back the saboteurs, and thus avoid destruction of the airways of the Middle East. AAA Carmel was the first Israeli official to blame Lebanon for the; attack in December on an Israeli airliner in Atlsrts. Forty-eight hoiirs later Israelii commandos ^ided Beirut airport and destroyed 13 planes of Lebanon’s Middle East Airlines. , / ' ^ A 'A/. . ■ -jJ'l" The U.S. State Department and U.N. Secretary-General U Thant~condemned the Atab attack in Zurich, and Thant expressed hope there would be no reprisal. 6 ABOARD INJURED Six of 27 persons aboard the plane in Zurich, most of them Israelis, were wounded. Most-seriously injured was trainee pilot Yqran Pees, hit in the abdomen. He was! reported out of danger following an emergency operation., Nixon Unlikely to Visit S. Viets PARIS (AP) — Much as South Vietnam’s delegation to the Paris peace talks would appreciate even a few minutes with President Nixon during his visit next week, experienced diplomats think there is virtually no chance of such a meeting. One explanation is that it would peeve the French. AAA And to avoid doing so, the diplomats say, seems good enqpgh reason for Nix- ’ on to skip an encounter that would not be especially educational fpr him and would serve mainly to buck up the South Vietnamese regime on its home front. ■ A ' A ■ A A meeting between Nixon and a Saigon representative would annoy the French for two reasons. NODESIRE First, Nixon’s scheduled discussion with his peace talks envoy, Heniy Cabot Lodge, will take away sdme of the emphasis from his talks with President Charles de Gaulle. There apparenjtly is no desire on the American side to push this even farther by adding the South Vietnamese to Nijpij’s conference list. AAA • Second, South Vietnam broke off diplomatic relations with France in 1965. It would be something of a breach of diplomatic courtesy for a visiting chief of state to take official notice of what is technically a nongovernment as far as concerned. Public May View Downtown Plan What is the Pontiac Plan? It’s more than a construction plan for urban renewal. It’s been called a concept that yan change the; yWholef aspect and personality of the city. i)‘; A A A ■ 1 because many residents have not Ijeen ei^osed to its details, the City Com-mlfesion has called a public presentation of'it Feb. 27 at 8 p.m. at City Hall, East Wicie Track and East Pike. A spokesman for creators of the Pontiac Plan, Bruno Leon Associates; will be present to discuss its many aspects and show slides. • A, , A , A * . ' ' Using the 27 acres of vacant urban renewal land downtown." tHfr'plan calls for developipent of $100 million in buildings at the site. f Budget Director Sees Surplus Ne>(f 2 Years THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 19, 1969 WASHINGTON (AP) y'The federal government stay out of the red this and next despite crefepin^Z&srts and , accwding to ■ Robert P. Mayo. Tuesday before the^<|6int Senate-House Econom-Cbnunittee, which contuniflld Its hearings todav with testimony from Treasurt Secretary David Kennedy. ★ Mayo told the committee that government oUtlaya-espedally the cost of interest on the federal debt—apparently will exceed the budget estimates made by former President Johnson for both^iscal 1969 and 1970.' This prompted speculation that the slender $2.4-biilion surplus bequeathed by Johnson might skid into a deficit before 'the 1969 fiscal year ends June 30. Mayo,told a reporter he did not intend to give such an Impression. NOT VERY ROBUST “I think we’il be able to preserve a surplus, though not necessarily a very robust one,” he ■aid. A deficit is always possible, he conceded, “but I do not expect it.” He said the small surplus “could be either doubled or wiped out if the receipts esti-lly. niate were off by as little as IH per cent.” A slightly larger error could cancel out the ^.4-billion 1970 surplus asjkivell, but Mayo indicated he expects to stay in black ink. So far the committee, though dominated by Democrats, has treated the Nixon men gently, even cordially. There have been critical comments, however, on the number of former bankers among Nixon’s appointees to economic policy-making positions. Kennedy is the former boaird chairman of the Contihental Illinois National Bank, and several of his aides were banking officials. ' SUPPORT SURTAX All the administration witnesses so far supported extension of file 10 per cent surtax beyond its scheduled June 30 expiration date, though President Nixon—who made campaign speeches calling for its elimination or reduction—has not declared an official position. * ★ ★ Mayo testified flatly that It Is ‘our administration’s current position” to support the extension, and hinted that he would like to see Congress act prompt- General Says Y'let Objective Accomplished DETROIT (AP) - Army Chief ol Staff William C. Westmoreland said Tuesday nlgh^ that the “eneipy has come to the conference table and that was our objective” in Vietnam. * ■* * The former U.S. commander in Vietnam said in a pre{mred speech that “We are in a {xM sition of undeniable strength on the battlefield. ^ ★ # * “Therefore, and fortunately, our negotiators can talk at the table in Paris front a portion of impressive strength,” Westr moreland said at a banquet honoring Medal of Honw winno' Army Sgt. 6wight Johnson of Detroit. ★ ★ ★ Gov. William Milliken, Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh, nine other Michigan Medal of Honor winners, and Semon KnudSen, president of Ford Mothr Co., were among other dignitaries at the banquet. READY FOR ANYTHING’ In his prepared speech, Westmoreland warned the enemy in Vietnam may attempt to mount another offensive, such as the Tet offensive last February. He added, however, the allied forces are “ready for anything the enemy can throw against them.”' Won'f Swallow Health Report Arsenic in Water Stirs Town FALLON, Nev. (AP) - For, almost 30 years, this tourlst-or-! iented cattle town’s drinking water has come from two 540-1 foot deep wells. iSo it sparked quite a furor this week when the state health officer, Dr. Edward Crippen, said he found harmful amounts arsenic in the water—almost twice the maximum allowable under federal standards. it * it 'There has never been a case in Fallon that medical doctors know about where any harmful effects resulted from drinking the water,” snorted Merton Do-monbske, acting mayor. “There’s absolutely nothing wrong with the water in this town,” said bartender Johnl Mluahall, adding that Just as many customers as ever ask for a shot of whisky with a water chaser. GOVERNOR APOtXlGIZES ! Gov. Paul Laxalt apologized for what he called Cfrippen’s 'highly Irresponsible action,” stayed Crippen’s order, that the city get a new water supply, and directed the state board of health to look into the water supply promptly. He also asked for an evaluation of Crippen’s action and a report “for disciplinary purposes.” Crippen, who became health officer last August, declined and the mineralization Is quite comment. low.” The U.S.. Bureau of Public Fallon, a community of about Health reebmmends a maxl- 3,000 some 50 miles east of arsenic per Reno, bases its economy on cat-'*"*"*”"-tie, farming, tourists, and deer! ^ and duck hunters. ‘he same drinking “We’re upset that Fallonir®]®'^,.'^^’''® p,’’ Should become the target for'®‘^‘‘® ‘he mayor, “and until now this kind of publicity,” Domon-i‘he s‘a‘e health officer at each oske said today. “We would has shown the water to have thought the health depart- h® acceptable ... you w^ld ment would have ascertained ‘h»"h that over a period of 29 that there Is a health dangeriy!"® ® problem would have, here.” shown up.” MAYOR AGREES What’s more, says Domon-j Domonoske agrees that the oske, there is far more arsenic city’s water has .09 parts arsen- on fresh vegetables that have ic per one million gallons, but been sprayed with certain jsays it is “pure, free of bacteria chemicals to control insects. SAVE* MONEY ON USEO . . . AUTO PARTS Wm'n Now Buying Scrap COPPER-BRASS-ALUMINUM (W* Also Pick Up Junk Cart) FE 2-0200 135 Branch DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKINC ON THE PONTIAC MUNICIPAL LOT (CORNER SA6INAW and HURON) tarnished by the Following Merchantai ARTHUR'S 48 N. Saginaw §t. OSMUN'S MEN’S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St. BOBETTESHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 51 W. Huron St. CONN’S CLOTHES 73 N. Saginaw THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. WANT TO SELL SNOWMOBILES, TOBOGGANS, ICE SKATES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CI.ASSIFIED AD---TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac SIMMS You'll coo overthe coupon savings at Simms —> •ojgroat that wo must reserve the right to limil quontitios. Clip Zliis Coupon 2-Key Wind-Up Luminous Westclox Alarm Clock 211 Westclox 'Siesta* alarm clock With luminous diol, 2-key wind up etylo. Factory guaranteed. Sundriot - Main Floor Clip XIlls Coupon Long Wearing Nylon Bristle Tooth Brush 69c Value 23 Pro tufted tooth brush with nylon bristles. Replace your old worn out one and have cleaner teeth. Drugs — Main Floor C/lp Zhis Coupon For Radios, Toys, Flaslriights Mallory Duracell Batteries Clip Zhis Coupon Get Excellent Lubrication with 1 Warco Brake Fiuid I ' With ^/10 Coupon A Hesvy^ Jt 12-oz. con Warco broke fluid is not in-furious to brake par^ Gives excellent lubricotiork AutemoHv — 2nd Floor Rig Sound for Transistor Radios Eictension ^Speaker Tube 120' ioupon H I Extension tube produces stereo like sound, fits all transistor ^radios. 12-inch length. Radios r-Main Floor ^ Rights Rasarved to Limit Quantities .. ■ ' . '■ .. DUTfiNGj Clip Zliis Coupon Gives a Satin Finish Bourjois Cake Make-Up $1.00 value. Choice of brunette, rachel. Ivory or cream Bourjois Finish cato make-Cosmotics — Main Floor Clip Zliis Coupon \ Attention Young Musicians Bongo Drums $2.95 value real rotwhide drum head, one 4" and one 3Vi" drum iVt" high. $3.95 Bongo drum eot, one 51^“ end one 4'/4"-5" toll..............2.22 (Not Ol shown.) Sundries — Main Fleo* ------------ 4. Clip Zliis Coupon increases Engine Performance STP Oil Treatment With Coupon 15-or. size STP oil treatment for your cor, pre-. vents ond stops oil burning ond oil leaks, increases eqgine performance. ■_______ Automotivd — 2nd Flopr C/ip Zliis Coupon Regular or Menthol Barbasol Irum With Coupon 30' 11-oz. size Barbasol aerosol shave cream, the 'beard buster* in regular or menthol types. Drug* — Main Floor Clip Zltis Coupon prestone Windshield Washer Solvent and Allti^eeze With Coupon 3i88* Genuine Prestone windshield washer solvent and onti-freeze gives a safe, clear vision down to (30 below zero. Automotivo — 2nd F|oor Multi-Grade All Season Mobiloil Special 49^ With Coupon 10W30 Mobiloil, a multi-grade oil that provides outstanding all season performance. Limit 5 quarts. Automotivo — 2nd Floor Clip Zliis Coupon Plastic Coated Playing Cards Regular 39e bridge___ tic coated cards with fancy backs. Regular deck only. Until 3 decks. Sundries — AAaln Floor ^ Clip Zhis Coupon Dry Skin Treatment Jergens Moisture Cream With Coupon 63 $1.25 value, 4-oz. size new pink Jergens facial moisture cream for dry skin treatment. Cosmotci* — Main Floor c/ip Z/n's Coupon Rawhide Head 10-In. Tambourine $2.95 value 6-In. tairibourine with 5 |ingles...«. ^ ....1.22 Sundries — Main Floor Clip i. his Coupon Viscount Cartridge Play Tape Machine ,/$ 17.95 value. Viscount model #77 play tape machine, ploys the easy-loading drop-in cartridge. Radios — Main Floor TOMORROW, THURS., 9 am to 9 pm Only PARK FREE t-HR. in Downtown Parking Mall -*• Have Ticket Stamped at Time of Purchase Clip Zliis Coupon Choice of Fitch Shamiioo - or Rose Hair Dressing With Coupdn Your choice of 33c value, 2*oz. Fitch shorn-poo or 19c value 2-or. Fitch rose hair dressing. Drug* — Main Floor Clip Zhis Coupon For 35mm Slides - Batteiy Operated Midget Slide Viewer Battery operated midget slide viewer for 35ttim slides. Operertes on 2 penlight batteries at slight extra cost. Cameras — Main Floor Clip Zhis Coupon For 12-Volt Dual System Only Auto Headlight Bulbs Replace old headlight bulbs now with a new GE or Westinghouse bulb. For dual headlight systems with 12 volts. Limit 2. Automotive — 2nd Floor Clip Zhis Coupon Plastic Page Holds 48 Prints Photo Aibums With Coupon |35 Plosfic page olbums for Swinger, Big Swinger, Kodak. Instomotic prints. Holds 48 prints. Covers wipe cleon. Limit 2. Cameras — Main Floor Regular D Size Leakproof Heavy Duty Batteries With Coupon Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac 15c value, I'/z-volt heavy duty leak proof batteries for tOyv radios and flashlights, etc. Fresh Stock. Sundrio* — Main Floor Coupon* for Thurt., Feb. 20, Only Approval 2nd Sfep in Becoming City Avon Twp. Charter Discussions Set AVON TOWNSHIP - Otliens for Better Government, a citirens' group organized to Inform township voters about the March 10 vote on a proposed charter, will hold a' series of open meetings during the next three weeks on the question. . The first meeting, primarily for voters of Precinct 2, will be tonight ai 8 at North Hill School, 13Ar) Mahaffcy. All meetings will be open to the jaiblic. Township residents voted In favor of incorporation In January, 1968 However, cityhood (under the name Rochester Hills) will not become official unless a proposed chartei;' for the new city is ap- proved by voters before January 1970 (two years from the initial incorporation vote). “Various members of our group have been assigned to obtain information on many aspects of the ^ incorporation i.ssue,” said Charles W Vigor, 761 Ironstone, a member of the organization. Vigor added, “We have found that the issue is complicated by several different considerations. Problems of rapid area growth have become embroiled In old political quarrels and hard feelings involving assessment practices and tax matters." After further lnye.stigation. Vigor said, the group decided to prepare a presentation of its findings and schedule a series of public meetings to discuss incorporation. Meetings for other areas of the township are planned as follows: Precincts I and 5, 7:30 p.m. Monday at Rrooklands School, 480 E. Auburn; Precinct 4, 8 p.m. Tuesday at North Hill School; Precinct 7, 8 p.m. March 4 at Meadowbrook School, 2350 Munster; Precincts 8 and 10, 8 p m. March 4 at I.qng Meadow School, 450 Allston; Precinct 9, 8 p.m. March 5 at West Junior High on Old Perch Road; and Precincts' 3 and 6, 8 p.m. March 5 at the Avondale Fire Hall, 400 Sixth, Rochester. ^ .. ,1 s« ■ : Group to Push Traffic Control Bl/XlMREf.D township - A group of residents will meet with the Township Board Monday in an attempi to get action on the traffic control problem at the I-onc Pine Road — Telegraph intersection. site of the township's recently opened new library. The residents, headed .by Michael Barto of S0S5 Kellen, will ask for recognition of a citizens committee to work with the board In getting a traffic control system for the intersection. ccmtrol which would allow cross traffic and left turns. The mo.st feasible procedure, Barto feels, would be erection of a traffic light, creation of turning lanes and ai» rangement of a loop left turn beyond the intersection. COMPIJCATED PROCESS Barto's group is calling for traffic THE PONTIAC PRESS haJHews WEDNESDAY, FEBRUAHV 11). IDtil) A—4 Hart Disputes Laird Estimate of Soviet Antimissile Outlay WASHINGTON (I Pl) - Michigan Sen. Philip A. Hart yesterday challenged an estimate niade by Defense Secretary Melvin I..alrd that the Soviet Union was ouUpending the United States 4 to 1 on strategic defenses. The estimate Was made by Laird in Avon-Rochesfer Dems Set Forum Tomorrow on Incorporation Issue ROCHESTER - The Avon-Rochester Democratic Club will spon.sor an open forum on the Avon Township incorporation question tomorrow night. The meeting will be held at 8:30 at the Avon Township Free Public Library, 210 W. University. Speakers from groups favoring and opposing the proposed incorporaUtm will appear, according to club chairman pjpter Vemia, 2763 Tallahassee, Avon Township. Avon Township residents will vote March 10 on approval of a proposed charter for the City of Rochester Jfills (to include the entire township except for the present City of Rochester I. Speaking in favor of incorporation will be representatives of Citizens for Better Government, a group formed b y township residents to investigate the question. The opposition group has not been announced. The meeting will be open to the public. •UNFORTUNATE IMPRESSION’ ENGINEERS HONORED — Troy Mayor Jule Famularo (second from left) presents a plaque prociaiming National Engineers' Week (Feb. 16-22) on behalf of the city to Clifford W. Holforty, vice' president of the Michigan Society of Professional aigineers, Monday. Also present Vf?re James H. O'Neill (left), a member of the Detroit MSPE Chapter, and architect Minoru Vamn!ed Rus.sian expenditures on the ABM, antiaircraft missiles, interceptor aircraft, civil defense and air warning and control s>stems to get this estimate. 2 Collegians Get Graduate Grants The D&R firm was engaged last June at a cost to the county of $5,000 plus planning commission staff resburces and an $80,000 federal grant from the LIST OF REFERENCES He cites a list of references which Include thfe control of the Cauca River in Columbia for irrigation, flood control and hydroelectricf power, the development of the Khuzestan area in Iran, and 12 other, projects in nine countries. What D&R will be able to help Oakland County accomplish • for the future depends largely on the ideas offered at area “think-tank” sessions running through April 2. Yesterday’s topic was economics and at least one ol the discussion groups got into a discussion of “new towns” versus unorganized suburban sprawl. How do you get the approximate 15 square miles needed to allow a total city development? How do you get local governments to agree to cooperate? Where do you get the financing, the millions of dollars necessary, for a new town development? How do you proceed with construction? ■ And given a new town, are you responsible for the deteriorating inner cities,' many of whose people will populate the new town? School Board OKs Two area collegians were among over 1.100 United States and Canadian college seniors designated by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation as among the best fpture college teachers. They are Larry K. Benninger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh H. Benninger of 7226 Arrowood, West Bloomfield Township, and Thomas W. Cobb, son of Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Cobb of 4415 Motorway, Waterford Township. What is to happen to areas like Royal Oak and Madison Heights — areas already built up in the county — and, according to some reports at yesterday’s meeting, rapidly beginning to deteriorate? Are new towns feasible? Can the zoning cooperation be obtained? Should zoning be put in the hands of the county or of the state? Salary Adjustment PONTIAC’S PROBLEMS “This leaves the unfortunate impression that it is un missile defenses alone thslt the comparison in defense spending is made,” tlie Michigan Democ rat said. In a letter to the secretary, Hart asked for clarification. He said his understanding was the Soviets had “obtained remarkable little return fcH* their investment” on the ABM. In Lansing, a group opposed to the antiballistic missile site in Oakland County yesterday urged the Michigan Legislature to hold hearings on the issue. Richard place, a Wayne State University history professor, said the federal government preempted the state's function of protecting its citizens by selecting the locale. "Hearings wold serve to educate the public, state officails and the legislators,’’ he said. Benninger is a seni9r in chemistry at Michigan State Universtiy and Cobb Is an English major at the University of Michigan. They were finalists in a competition for which 11,704 • candidates were nominated last October. All those receiving designation by the foundation were interviewed by panels of college professors arid,academic administrators. WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -The board of education has adopted a two-year — 1968-7^- salary adjustment, totaling $3,812 fjprfood service personnel. The pay increases are retroactive to September 1968. This Will cover the additional five cents an how> for all food service personnel which was won in recent negotiations between the workers and the administration. The minimum hourly rate for the lowest grade of food service employe is now $1.75 while the food service manager receives $2.55. Jn other recent action, the*board has authorized the Ealy School PTA to continue planning its 1969 self-supporting summer activities program. The curriculum includes arts and crafts as well as organized outdoor activities, planned along the lines of last year's program. Plea Is Withdrawn for Miracle Mile Theater Complex Novi Vote OKs Charter for City ATTENDED BY 350 Open to .ajl public and private school kindergarten through sixth grade students, last year’s summerlong program was attended by some 350 students. Each student paid a fee of $8 for a half-day — three-hour session over two weeks. The proposed program for the summer of 1969 will be staffed with West Bloomfield teachers backed up by college students. A program director may also be hired. Why hasn’t Pontiac’s urban renewal moved faster? “It’s too cosily not to rebuild Pontiac, but it’s too costly to rebuild Pontiac in terms of rebuilding exactly those economic functions it formerly supplied. Should new town^ provide all the industry necessary to keep all its inhabitants employed? Does that include heavy industry? What about rapid transit systems? Can you attract the people to a new town? Can you get people who would feed the employment market for industries providing a greater diversification than the auto plants we now have? How do you get those new industries? DETROIT’S ROLE , BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - A petition requesting permission to build a two-unit Cinema I and II theatre complex at the Miracle Mile shopping center on Telegraph has been withdrawn. Township Supervisor Homer Case said the bon Casto Corp., Columbus, Ohio, development firm, withdrew the theater petition one day before the zoning board was to hear the request. In a letter to the township, the Casto organization said negotiations for property in another area influenced theif thinking not to pursue the Miracle Mile project at this time. The movie theaters would have been located next to the Pontiac State Bank branch near the shopping center entrance. // Case said the toning board's main concern with the theater project would have been whether adequate parking facilities would have been available. He added the petition probably would have been approved if the parking requirements were met. NOVI — A charter fbr this village to become a city was ratified here yesterday by a vote of 629 to 283. Only 980 of the 2,868 registered voters went to the polls. A mayor and six councilmen were also elected. Chosen mayor was Joseph Crupi of 23790 Maude Lee Circle with 507 votes. Defeated candidates J. Philip Anderson of 50250 W, Eight Mile and Leo Har-rawood of 24042 Willow Brook received 240 and 149 v()tes, respectively. Three-year terms on the new city council were won by Donald C. Young Jr. of 43775 W. Nine Mile, who received 634 votes; W(jliam L. Duey of 45385 W. Nine Mile, with 614 votes; and William R. O’Brien of .41131 S. McMahon, with 554 votes. Seated until the next regular election in 1970 will be David S, Harrison of 25600 Strath Haven, with 544 votes; Dennis M. Berry of 41163 S. McMahon with 539 votes; and Edwin E. Presnell ot 23740 Maude Lee Circle, with 529 votes. A fee of about $10 will be charged to cover program costs. The figure is based on last year’s cost experience, according to John C. Evans, Ealy PTA president. The board also congratulated the Ehly PTA for its effort to assist the school district in promoting fuller utilization of existing facilities and staff in the best interests of youth.' ' • Gifts from the Green School PTA of $264, for furniture to equip a teachers room and $144, for the purchase of. library books, were accepted by the board. How does Detroit fit into the Oakland' County pattern? bo we lose if Detroit continues to slide downhill? Before the seminars are concluded, D&R officials hope to have concrete local thinking on these and other areas including^ housing, health, welfare, pollution, recreation, government organization and finance. Zweig seems to have no fears that study recomnien^ations can be implemented. “We’ve just got to define the Impossible from the difficult,” he said. 4 Seek Milford Seats MILEORD — A village election for president and two eouncilm«u positions will be held March 10. The only candidate filing for president is Wilbur Johnson, of 648 Atlantic, Seeking the council'«(als are Charles Parks of Liberty, Dale Barr of 767 Friar and Paul Plotzer of 618 S. Main. START MONDAY The mayor and councilmen will take office Monday. The mayor will recive $15 and each councilman $10 for every tneeting attended, accordihg to provisions of the new charter. p. The new charter sets a limit, m not more than 6Vi mills while the old visage charter called for 5 mills with the township collecting another Hi mills. A city manager-council form of government is estaWLshed by the charter. The, township’s property ami assets will be divided between the new city and those property owners remaining m the township. ,N*w Zonith "Zonttto* can matia Ufa (un again. • from 2 Miero-Lithie* ciicuiti. Waigho only t/6 o__________,____ “ “4 lauao. Camo in far a damonitrotlon of Zonith'o now ZontHo. II ...........aryou! The qmJUytofi in htforr Ihf a«w fan ■ Ponfiae Mall dptieal ft Hearing Aid Canter 882.11137 k,' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY T9, 1969 'At—5 ACCUTRON (By Bnlova) •ory-TroinmaMmpairmem Residents Rejurn as Deadly Gas Abates; 8 Dead Cr/s/s Is Over at Derailment Scerie CBGTIE/Neb. (AP) ~ R«il-|spraad ltt» fog from a tuk (!ir I aboard the train who were dents began returning to their in • train derailment. found ln4he tangled wreckage, h(»nes today after fleeing from El^t persona died, three of railroad offlcUd^id, deadly ammonia gas that) them unidentified transienta| Nineteen can of a 94.<»r Den- ver-to-C3)lcago B u r 11 n g t o n the scores evacuated from the I the early morning darkneSs tak-Ffeight train left the r^ls Tues- area. “The gas Just about ing residents to safety. ots!sOO.“'‘' ”* T "We tett the house with to.eIs * * * trapped around our faces,” tu™* II* struck Rescue workers wearing gas said Mrs. Raymond Foreman, three 40,000-gallon tank cars of masks traveled door to door in “But We had to give it up after anhydrops ammonia, rupturing • . j/ ™ onr of them with a shattering explosion that hurled chunks of we got in the car. We couldn’t GOVERNOR AT SCENE The family closed themselves in their house until rescuers arrived. twisted steel into yards on each side of the right-of-way. LIKE DEADLY FOG The ammonia spread like a deadly ground fog. 'I opened the front door and I couldn’t see anything,” said Mrs. Mamie Littler, 60, one of RUPTURED TANKER -This is part of a railroad tank car that exploded after a derailment yesterday in Crete, Neb. Ammonia fumes from the ruptured car spread like a deadly ground fog. Grid Star Tells of Paith Help M ' .. ... . ........ (Continued From Page One) As the coach talked, you could see the guys straightening up to take a closer look at this intense man. “But first, of all,” he went on, “you are going to prepare yourself up here.” He put his finger to his temple. MENTAL READINESS “You can’t Win if you’re not ready to win mentally Therefore, I expect you to think about only three things while you are part of this organization: your family, your religion and the Green Bay Packers.” [ for one walked out of that meeting feeling 10 feet tall and I ha*dn’t played a lick for him! All of us caught his enthusiasm. Just as he said we would, we started working harder on the field. Coach Lombardi doesn’t make secret of those principles. Wherever he Is they come out in the way he lives his own life and in the way he thinks. I can never forget, nor will ever stop being grateful w what 'Coach Lombardi diy for me. As I look back to th# first question mark of a ye^under him, I am quite suraf he had never seen a three-yepr veteran who knew less tha^I did. But he brought out son^thing in that changed myareer and my life. Confiden* tagious, losing.” ' Vincent^mbardl is a sincere and belismng man who goes to chur<^very day of the week, who ')%ldom talks in religious but whose religion is as Ijind as integral , a part him as are the prayers we lay together before and after every Packer game. and of note-making and of drawing diagrams, after all these things have been completed, the Lord’s Prayer said in unison becomes a unifying force pulling all om- efforts together. And I have yet to come up from my knees without feeling personaliy that we were going Those pra-^erS are something ^ do ail the things that Coach Ise I have i^ed from Coach|L<>»"bardI had prepared us to Lombardi’s wmple. j“°' * ^ * I Next — Daniel Negris, former After the week’s preparations Jazz pianist, tells how the Bible are over, after thereat of the'help^ him make a conteback practice field and after the from a life centered around groggy hours examining movies'drugs. We started our . games. ’The tempo rose. Suddenly we won a game and our spirits soared. They kept on soaring. By the end of the ir season, we had won seven of 12 games with virtually^ same players who had 1< games the year before. Mind you,# was always sure of my tamt. I never really doubted ,^t I could play l football,/ut I lacked the kind of confidafce that Coach Lombardi himsgn had, the kind that o others. [ON OF COMMAND *A quarterback is Jn a position jf command: it is he who calls the plays. He must be alert and ready to adjust to the sudden and the unexpected. ■' :>-> r -A "• ’ Coach Lombardi started building my confidence by first giving me the enthusiasm to work harder. He spent a lot of time Just talking to me, examining the “hows” -and ♦‘whys*^ of the game. ’Then he began to bear down on my In 1960 we won a WlrwhSlo ICY GRIP BROKEN - The tanker Detroit heads its Chicago berth yesterday after the Coast Guard cutter Arundel (top) cut behind the Detroit’s course. Packed fl(^ ..........................................................i «he Lake Michigan opened when the Arundel circled i Detroit, which had been lying dead in ice off Chicago. ■i THE PONTIAC PRESS i West, Huron Stiwt Pontiac, Michigan 4805$ WEDNEvSDAY. FKBFUIARY 19, 1969 Jnwi* A. Riht itlw Vt«» er«iUI*nt Check Your Tax Expert As if you didn’t know, it is inc ome tax time again, and "tax consultant’’ signs are blooming in storefront windows and other unlikely places like the crocuses that will soon herald the onset of spring. But while the latter bring delight, the latter can bring a headache. For there are many breeds of tax consultants; experts who are certified public accountants with tax-law experience: others who are conscientious but inexperienced; .still others who are ^auds. / WJifch should alert an Income ta^ payejF to the necessity of jiickin^ qualified tax consultant,/« he is in need of such service; ihe majority of fly-by-nighters whose signs proclaim their tax services are not W censed by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and hence cannot represent a client before that bureau beyond the preliihinary examination stage if his tax return is questioned. As in so many other areas of personal service, those who consider them.selves unqualified to prepare their own i^x returns should patronize only established and reputable tax consultants. Clients doing so will in most cases be money ahead and perhaps spared an unpleasant tote-a-tcte with the IRS. eart Month Lists Gains Pandora's Footlocker! It’s Heart Month again. This is the 20th such anniversary, which will be observed throughout February and reach its climax on Heart Sunday, Feb. 23, when more than lt4 million volunteers will call on their neighbors to distribute heart-saving literature. The American Heart Association reports that there has been a decline of 18.4 per cent in the cardiovascular death rate for persons under 65 since 1950, when massive research pro-gram.s were initiated. •k -k -k Put another way, about 49,000 more lives are being prolonged yearly than would have been the case had the 1950 death rate continued. Among the long list of advinces achieved in the past 20 years are: • Drugs for controlling high blood pressure. • Heart-lung machines to take over the circulation during heart surgery. • Artificial heart valves and synthetic artery grafts. • Artificial pacemakers to maintain regular heart rhythm. Additionally, there have bieen suc-' cossful kidney transplants between identical twins and the development of the artificial kidney; the refinement of t’oronary Care units which monitor heart patients and have improved the survival rale by 30 per cent; and vastly improved,diagnostic techniques. Much remains to be done, however. More than 25 million Americans are afflicted with some form of cardiovascular illness, a total that surpasses any other complex of diseases. But the forogoing is .sound basis for those suffering heart ailments to take heart. David Lawrence Says: Agnew Duties Exceed the Law WASHINGTON-An amendment to the Constitution may be found necessary If Vice President Ak-new is to assume some of the functions of administra-tive supervision which have already been delegated to him by President Nixon. LAWRENCE For the Constitution specifies merely that the vice president shall be “president of the Senate” and that, in the case of a tie, he may cast a deciding vote. It is plain that dent is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office. ★ * ★ But under the provisions of he Constitution, the vice president himself cannot become an integral part of the executive branch of the government while the president is able to exercise the powers of his office. Unquestionably the .idea of training the vicq president in the duties of the presidency is a sensible (me. NO OBJECTION the chief executive at any time, and not just during an emergency due to a president’sdisability. The Vagueness of the Constitution op the subject of filling vacancies in the office of president was cleared up by the 1967 amendr^nt, but there are some areas in which the powers of the vice president require further definition. ★ ★ ★ ' Public opinion undoubtedly would support an amendment to the Constitution authorizing the president to turn over at his discretion certain Voice of the People: ‘Many Apathetic Toumrd 1970 Census Questions’ Many people seem tolerant of anything the • Federal Government does, believing that it works only for the "good of the people.” This includes apathy toward the ridiculous questions being put on the 1970 efepsus questiopnaire—such questions as whether you enter the house from the front door or the back; intimate questions on income, marital status, education; and whether there is a telephone, washing machine, freezer, etc. in the house. ★ ★ ★ Perhaps people would be less apathetic if they knew that large corporations are behind the extensive questions on household utility items. Maybe people will ask that these questions be stricken from the 1970 census questionnaire so that a few thousand in business will not know every detail of our personal lives. CAROLYN JEAN DAVIS^’ EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY ‘School Custodiau-Engineer Is Key Position’ The Custodian-Engineer occupies a key position In a school organization.’ He is responsible for the physical plant. Prom a physical point of view, no other Individual in the school system needs to have suck,a clear conception of his job andi such sound judgment for carrying out his responsibilities. SAMUEL D. KILLINGER CUSTODIAN-ENGINEER Corrects Information on Waterford Schools Recent letters contained erroneous informaUon about the Waterford Township School District. Half-day sessions will result in secondary schools losing their accreditation. These standards are set up by a non-tax-supported agency and local school boards have nothing to do with setting them. The reference to youngsters from a Class D school attending college has nothing to do with accreditation. Class D refers to a classification for athletic scheduling. Letters that protest, against driver training and special classes for mentally handicapped youngsters and others vvho have special needs seem hard to reconcile in this complicated age. To criticize all educators and youngsters from Waterford Township is most unfair in view of the splendid record thnt almost all of our youngsters achieve. ★ ★ ★ The Waterford Township School District always tries to provide answers to questions that any citizens have and we encourage you to seek out the facts. The fate of your schools depends on it. ROY J. ALEXANDER ASST. SUPT. SECONDARY SCHOOLS WATERFORD TOWNSHIP SCHOOL DISTRICT Discuss Possible Influence of Appointment James Farmer, ex-head of the Congress of RaciM Equality i (CORE), has been appointed as assistant to Robert Finch, There would be no objection resnonsibilities to the vice Secretary of Housing, Education and Welfare (HEW). AU of a wtara . .. ...... iirtiiia eithiirKia nan now lonlr forward tn in thn DOWer to the adoption of a more detailed provision of the he is considered to be a mem- stitution enabling South Vietnam Future Dim Given $30 billion and 10 years of peace, South Vietnam could be made self-supporting. Or .so claim.s a report prepared for I’lcsident Nixon by Daniel Lilienthal, former chairman of bothilhe Tennos.see Valley Authority and the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and now head of a consulting firm, and Prof. \’u Quoc Thuc, South Victname,se economist and minister of .state. Although the plan envisions much of the money being raised by the Saigon government, by private enterprise and by foreign investors, one’s first' impulse is to dispatch a telegram to Washington urging that we send them a cheek in the full amount forthwith. It would be cheap at several times the price. ★ ★ ★ U would, in fact, be about one-tenth of what the United States will have spent in 10 years prosecuting the war at its past and current rate. That a mere $30 billion could, in the opinion of these experts, render South Vietnam self-sufficient, underscores how wasteful and counterproductive war really is. The military investment the American taxpayer has made in Vietnam thus far could have made wealthy people of every man, woman and child in that country. by their standards. The e.ssenlial premisp,*upon which this economic master plan is predicated is, of course, peace. And that depends upon the willingness of North Vietnam to permit her sister nation to develop independently and unmolested. ★ -k k Years of war have not achieved thaf result. Months of negotiations in Paris may, according to the mpst realistic outiook, bring only a respite from concentrated harassment from the outside. It could be 10 yeare and many times $30 billion before South Vietnam attains the internal politiral stability and tranquility it must have before it can even begin enjoying economic health. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Dilemma Holland Sentinel Some months ago we discussed the problems of a democracy In an age geared to highly scienFific decisions bas^ on computerized jn- purely oii scientific grounds? it is time to follow the Middle Can we allow our emotions to Age.s and to some serous decide what we ought to do? Can the decision be left up to people who • really don’t understand the merits of the systefn? These are not theoretical problems, they are moral and ethical questions: This may yet be our salvation. forajation. We are called upon facii^ the naUon, Mini-Vacations to vote billions of dollars for programs with nothing more than the word of if handful of experts. Eyen though Congress may hold hearings, the hard facts are that a reasonable decision can not be made by men not ac-quainted with the sophisticated hardware that will be used. and they need answers. her of Congress rather an official in the executive branch of the government. President Nixon, in his statement accompanying an “executive order establishing an office of intergovernmental relations,” stipulates that these. operations will be “under the immediate supervision of the vice president.” A reading of the Constitution, however reveals that ttife delegation of such authority to a vice president is nowhere provided for,-or even implied, in any part of the Constitution. LARGELY CEREMONIAL Up to the lime of the lYuman administration, the vice president —, outside of his duties as presiding officer of the Senate — confined himself largely to the making of addresses on ceremonial occasions as a representative of the president. Until Presideht Harding gave Vice President Coolidge a scat at the Cabinet table in 1921, vice presidents did not attend such meetings. ★ ★ ♦ In setting up various advisory boards in the executive branch in recent years, Congress has provided for participation by the vice president. Thus, he is a member of the National Sri:urity Council and is chairman of the national advisory council of the Peace Corps and of the National Aeronautics and Space Council. But these provisions of law do not bestow any authority on the administrative side. ILL OR DISABLElfe The 25th Amendment to the Constitution, a d o p t-e d in February 1967, provides that if the president is ill or .disabled and acknowledges president to perform certain acts and duties in behalf of president, even though official acts would still require presidential approval. (CopyrlgM, Ittf) (eubllslwri.R*lt - Bob Considine Says: Vietnam Foes Feel War May Simply Fade Away CONSIDINE y . ^ An airline fondly hopes that .. We have reached the point niini-vacations will prove just that he is temporanly unable where our scientific knowhow ,^5 popular >s mini-skirts, to perform the duties of his stands in the way of our self- Northwest Orient Airlines now ............... ................. government. • offers a series of three and In the Middle Ages reason four-day holidays to fun cities and faith were one. Today we ©n its coast-to-coast routes, have not only divorced them, designed especially for the but we have carried reason to person who likes to travel but the point Uiat we have en- whose time is limiled. ’ It throned it as the final arbiter niay .be the tempo of our in all our problems.. Perhaps times or the pace, of business floor bf Congress, in dozens of nothing shows the impasse of these days, but busy peo^ suburbs, and in scores of our present Situation as much are lookmg for the shoii discussion' groups, the pro- as our feeble attempts to blem of the Sehtinei an- carry on a discussion in- airlmes spokesnian. Nortflwesi tiballisUc nusslie system is up volving billions of dollars,'and may have an idea that wuii tegrab*. iodtelmg that we are doing calrah on, just as mim-sKins Can we make our decision in a rational way. Maybe did. ’The nation is now facing just such a dilfflnma On the office, “such powers and duties shall be discharged by the vice prissident as acting ** U also prescribes a formula peace for centuries, customs whereby Congress can em-power the vice president to serve as acting president if it is determined that the presi- NEW YORK - Nobody at Paris has mentioned it as yet, probably because it would sound too infantile, but there is strong feeling on both sides that the war in Vietnam will simply fade away. This is not a new idea.. 'Two years ago in Saigon, in talks with the Vietnamese leaders and the American military and diplomatic leaders, I was assured that the “Oh, what the hell!” spirit would soon prevail. ■k -k k . It is unthinkable td many Americans that a war that has cost more than 30,000 dead, more than 10 0,000 woUnded, more than 1,000 planes, more than 1,0 00 helicopters, and more than $2 billion a month since 1965 could simply peter out ... go away ... as if it had never happened. But it could, and for reasons both easy and difficult to understand. MUCH IN COMMON For example, the North and the SouUi Vietnamese have much in ctanuton. Many South Vietnlmese have roots that reach Into the North of the land of their origin. There As, of cdurse, the persuasive matter of a common language, a mixture of Buddhism and Christianity that has existed in relative thaf recognize no such arbitrary liJ» as the 17th Parallel. Interchangeable dress, appetites, likes and dislikes. white suburbia can now look forwaid to increases in the power of HEW over our school systems. Once again the minority will push, force and intimidate the majority by teaching the majority’s children the desires, ways and habits of the Negro race.. GERALD BORGQUIST 1247 ORCHID Radical Students Should Look at Real Issues It’s time for the radical students to stand back and look at themselves and the issues. They are being used to tear down their freedoms in the name of freedom; to destroy their heritage and the loyalty of their comrades with manufactured grievances and protests; to spread dissent by verbal garbage; to create a vacuum of authority by mob rule and chaos; to cry "police brutality” when those charged with maintaining order tty to do it; to protect themselves from prosecution by cjj^titutional amendment, meanwhile seeking to uproot its vw foundation. readily accept Chinese arms and food supplies. But he wants no Chinese troops or “volunteers” inside his hard-pressed country. He’s afraid Demonstrations cropping up spontaneously in unison sug-that if they came in and hiS(***'gests some master planning behind the scenes by a well-side “won” they’d remain ipr regulated organization. The enemy is in a hurry. He knows another thousand years. i-‘ time is running out. Let us not destroy one another for his * ★ benefit. EDWARD L. SORENSON 4D11 BAYBROOK, DRAYTON BLAINS Both sides have mutual suspicion of whit q'- faced foreigners, andg^or good reason. They wece dominated by the French for a century. ' LOOK LIKE FRENCH To the Vietnamese eye, we look a great deal like the F r e n q h , ‘ physiologically. HencCji^ they often wonder aboql us. |(|ur military has frequently been flabbergasted and frustrated by the methods and manners of our noble allies, the South Vietnamese. But the same is true in the North. k k k Ky once tried to explain the fading-out thesis to me. It went someting like this: The fighting one day would drop off, then drop off more the next day. There would be fewer ambushes, fewer acts of terrorism. Then none at all. The traffic along the many Ho Chi Minh trails would dry up and wither. Saigon would tap the puzzled Americans on the shoulder and tell us to ptop pushing so aggressively. Hanoi would tap Moscow/ and Peking and say, “Thanks, but no thanks.” (Continued on Page A-8, Col. 1) Verbal Orchids Mrs. George Pickering of 2888 Churchill; 88th birthday. Both Vietnams have a dread of China, which once ruled them for a thousand years. Ho Chi Mlnb will Question and Answer Mr. Donaldsqn says mail to the Pacific isn’t affected by the strike, but my son stationed in Okinawa has difficulty receiving mail, We write every day but sometimes he goes a whole week with no mail and then gets only one or two letters. I mailed two boxes air lift Jan. 11 and he still hadn’t received them Feb. 6. Can you help get us an answer? My son’s A.P.O. Is San Francisco. MRS. DOROTHY SANDS OXFORD REPLY Postmaster Donaldson says first class mail to servicemen is flown to the A.P.O. center, andlhe armed forces take it from thire. However, he will be calling you to see about running a check on some letters to try to find an answer for you. Question and Answer I’ve lived in Pontiac 40 years and the center of downtown has always been Lawrence Street with all bnildiug numbers north of that being called North Saginaw and those south of of it called South Saginaw. Now Auburn Avenue is continually referred to as the center of downtown Pontiac and also as the ceatral business location. When, why and by whom was the center of downtown changed? ' ■ \ / J. T. '■ ' ’ „ ' ' ' REPLY , ■ / '■ We talked with Mr. Smith in the Planning and Urban Renewal department, and Ke tells us there’s no “official” center of downtown Pontiac that he knows about. While you’ve always thought of it as Lawrence Street, others consider Huron and Saginaw the center. Some references are made to the Auburn-Orchard Lake-Wide Track intersection because it's the center of property available for urban renewal. Still others must have consid' •ered Pike. Street the center, because that (not Lawrence} is where SaginaH) numbering is divided into north and south. , ' . Seniority Holdsi Sway tn Senate Key to Privilege, as Well as Real Power WASHINGTON (AP) ^ They may be statesmen back h6me on the banquet circuit, Iwt new-{ comers in the U.S. Senate soon leam they have to climb its status tadd^ from bottom rungs. There! is no mention in Senate rules that seniority affects corn-mittee assignments—or anything else. But the men who' know it best say it is an unwrit-1 ten numbers game tearing on a wide range of sU^s and privilege—as well as real power tied to choice committee positions. I No one knew this better than former President Lyndon B.: Johnson, who kept a list of sena-| tors and their seniority ranking under the glass top of his desk| for ready reference when he ' was majority leader. | Another intimate of the sys-| tern—his livelihood depgi^s on knowing it—is Gordon F7ila|Ti-! son, staff director of the Senate Rules Committee and the man in charge of providing office space for senators and fielding their day-to-day housekeeping grievances. i ARE YOU HAPPY? * “Before we offer a suite of rooms to any senator, for instance, we go to Sen. Ru! and we say, ‘Senator, would you like this suite or are you happy where you are,?’” Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., is the S«Jior member of the Senate, having been in office 36 years. j iches whirlwind proportions. “It’s like moving one family! In with another family and tell-i ing the original family to movej some of its members into the kitchen and add a few others in the bedroom,” he said. FATHER’S SUITE i Harry F. Byrd Jr. D-Va., in the Senate less than four years, would like someday to get the suite formerly occupied by his: father, who was a senator from I 19.33-65, Harrison said. That suite is occupied by Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss., who took it when Wayne Morse, D-Ore., was defeated in 1968. Stennis is No. 12 in seniority. Byrd is No 76. Sen. Claiborne Peil, D-R.I., is thought to have his' eye on the suite once occupied by his predecessor and good frjend, Theo-; dore Francis Green. But it is now occupied by Edmund S. j Muskie, D-Maine, No. 47 in seniority. Pell is 58. BlackStudies Workshop Set at Jefferson “Making Education Relevant to the Students of Jefferson Junior High” .will be the theme i for a Jefferspn Workshop Fri-' day from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The keynote address Will be given by Dr. Robert Greene of Michigan State University. Mrs. 'Annamarie Hayes, program specialist for the Morel Organization in Detroit^ willj present Afro-Americ materials and methods utilizing the material in Educational program. Black professionals will lead panel discussions in the areas of mathematics, English, social studies, science, special education, reading and music. The workshop will Include parents, teachers and gome selected students from Jefferson. Some 30,000 automobiles are expected to* be abandoned on the streets of New York City this year. “Then we go down the list,”, Harrison said, ^‘next to Sen.! Ellendcr.” Allen J. Ellehder, D-La., is No. 2 in Senate seniority with 32 years behind him. MINOR COMPLAINTS Harrison, who has held the Job for 14 years, has other duties but much of his time is spent tending the minqt- complaints of the status-conscious senators. I His voice changes from plaintive to anguished when he discusses the start of a new| congressional session, the time every two years when the seniority standings undergo major, changes as long-time members! retire and newcomers arrive. I 'pie shpffle of office space, ‘ refehes - ' ' 36”x6’ plastic window shade 84' White textured vinyl, wooden roller. Reg. $1 Washable cotton chair pgds Colonial or .floral ^ Z for D print. 14x14x2", Extra-weight 20x40“ Cone bath towels in gay striped patterns 2. n Extra-weight cotton towels with fluff finish in pink, blue, green, gold, coral stripes. 15x26“ guest towel ' 12x12" wssh cloth 3/$1 4/11 Washable tier curtains in 24”, 30” or 36” lengths Many drip dry in heavier textures, fringe trim or embroidered designs. Many col- — ^ - or and styles. 88'p, Satin pillow protectors Feiction-free acetate satin, saves hairdo. 99' Plastic mattress covers Moisture-proof, fitted, full/twin. 67' Little girls' regular 2.99 slack sets in solids, novelties 1.97 Choose these long-wearing: play sets in assorted so|ieJ*and nOv* elty colors. Cotton Icrtit tops match cotton corduroy slacks. Sizes 3 to 6x. Big savings! Infants’ $3 to 4.50 famous make sleep ahd playwear ' Choose 1 or 2-pc. sleep and play sets itScluding stretch coveralls, sets. Infants' ^ sizps S-L. * for mE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19. 1969 ■ / WASHINGTON’S BIRTHDAY SALE 2 Values to 3.39! Infants’ snug cotton knit sleepers Fleecy brushed or thermal knit. Choose cheery pastel solids or prints. Sizes 4 to 8. Save! for OPEN 10 A.M.TO 9 P.M. (Set. 9:30-9) Drayton open jSui^ay Noon to 6 p.m. (Downtoim elojiM 7ihw, Wtd. at 6 pM./ THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY Don't miss this fantastic opportunity to save on men's, ' women's, children's clothing as well as household needs. Limited quantities ... bn sale while they last. m Win an ail-expenses-paid vacation! Win an all-expenses-paid vacation for four (2 adults, 2 children under 21) in California ^via American Airlines. Pick up entry blanks “'at our store. Coritest ends March 1, 1969. 12x14” waterproof lap pads Cotton flannel. CTT® ^for D/ 4/1.49 if perfect Reg. 75c receiving blankets 47' Of soft cotton flannelette, 30x40" Assorted gift sets for baby 1.57 Receiving blanket, bibs, and more. Assorted pretty new spring dresses for girls and little girls 2.88 Pick a pretty style from an assortment including straight and waisted styles, many in no-iron spring fabrics, assorted colors.. Sizes 3-12 in the group. Infants’ reg. 3.69 to 5.00 zipper-front blanket sleepers Snuggly warm blanket sleepers . have non-skid vinyl' feet, full front zip. Pastpis. ^ Infants' sizes. Infants’ reg. 5.50 to 7.00 1st quality no-iron playwear CottonI double knit bubbles for gWs, rompers for boys. Pastels. Infants' sizes ~ M-L-XL. Save! 2.57 Boys’ regular 3.50 first quality acrylic knit shirts New spring short sleeves, mock turtleneck style in solids or stripes. Boys' 2.88 sizes 8 to '18. Boys’ reg. 3.99 permanent press ivy style casual slacks Cotton sateen in black, green, gold and blue. Sizes 8 to 18 regula^ and 2.97 B to 16 ^lim. 1.39 Clairol, Nice and Easy Shampoo in Hair Color 1 by Clairol. I • Misses’ regular 6.00 to 9.00 assorted wool, acrylic skirts Reg. $6 to $9 ! Wide assortment of styles in solid colors and novelties. Misses' ^ A A sizes 8 to 16. likaWW Values to 2.99! Ladies' permanently pressed sleepwear assortment Shifts, 2-pc. baby dolls and mini dolls and more in poly-ester/cotton or cotton batiste. Assorted colors and styles. Sizes S-M-L, 34-40, 42-48. Save! Ladies’ 2.50 stretch gloves Famous-maker nylon; 159 many lengths, colors. Ladies’ reg. 3.00 handbags Special purchase! 4 A A Save up to 33% ! ▼ r' 1.49 pr. if perf. Lady Caroline nylon mesh stretch panty hose 89 pr. Fabulous run-resistant mesh nylon panty hose have slight imperfection's that won't affect wear. Fashion shades. Short, Average, Tall lengths. 89c pair if perfect! Lady Caroline seamless mesh hose Our exclusive seamless mesh nylons have slight imperfections. Fashion shades. 9 to 11 med. pr Ladies’ reg. $5 trim-fitting pull-on $-f-r-e-t-c-h pants Reg. $5, Popular style in basic fasnio jnion colors, pull-on waistband. Misses' sizes 3 99 10 to 18. Ladies’ $5 Orion* acrylic or Buccaroni* nylon pull-overs Turtleneck and mock turtleneck styles, fashion colors. ^ tg Sizes 34 to, 40. Save! it D Special purchase! Assorted jewelry from famous maker Right-now styles! Chains, tailored pins, earrings, bracelets in enamel, gold tone. Values ~ ~ up to 3.00. Save! 99' Jewtiry not it Drayton Plaint ‘^en’s regular 2.99 short sleeve Waldorf dress shirts Permanent press polyester/cotton dress shirts with soil release. Men's sizes 14'/2 to 17. 2.44 Men's regular 12.99 permanently pressed 1st quality raincoats 1088 Great' way to beat the raiVi! Choose black, tan or navy polyester/cotton raincoats in men's ■ sizes 38 to 44; regular, long and short lengths. Charge it! Reg. 15.98 4-drawer pino chest is ready to finishr Smoothly sanded clear ■ pine, wood drawer bottorris, wood set in back. Roomy 4 4 A A 15x11x27'/z" size. 11.77 YOUR CHOICE Toy wheel barrow or wagon Wheel -barrow and wagon both have brigh) red enamel finish, safety grips. While they last ! 3.32 Famous maker toys at dramatic Savings . . . tjow! Dolls, trucks and other toys for girls and boys. Save now ! 50% OFF DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS I -L / A ’8' THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 19OT (Omtlnued from Page A-6) Toor Ventilation in Many Collision Shops’ Voice of the People llaymen Conlroli . JL D ^ ^J students forced an ad- (“■“«* tteir way into the «bniii-|condition at that college iwtar to rordhdiTi DO0ra «7°" ^ ~ j der threat of physical violence .yg admitting a group of atu-(*®”** state of confusion.” Dr. 8. NEW YORK f Apj — Ford- Francisco State College, gents adiich he, perhaps, we«M.^' ham University has a board fhancelJor of Califomia'not have” Neit^r Dumke nor trustees controUed by laymen colleges indicates. Reagan would detaU the Incl- for the flrat time in its 128-year I ■ „ * ,. 1 * u j m i history Gov. Ronald Reagan had dis- \ it * [closed the incident previously However, when asked if the With fk. refused to say which canp illegally enrolled stiHlents «i I?'!** P“» Involved. Chancellor still on the campus, Dumke said ihr« Glenn S. Dumke hinted Tueiday “My unofficial understanding is Jesuits. Why are collision shops allowed to operate without proper ventilation? TTie men breathy paint fumes and bondo dust constantly. I was in a shop for' just a few minutes and I don’t see how they can stand if all day. I think the owner should spend a few hours there and maybe he would decide to stop breathing or make the a)r fit to breathe. Surely a business like that can afford a vent fan. CONCERNED San Francisco State iber. The largest of .all insects Is the “Goliath beetle” found in West Africa, which meas up to 5.85 inches in lengtii weighs up to 3,4 ounces. ‘Church liicoiTPCily Linled in Directory’ A church directory sponsored and published by the Pontiac Area Council of Churches indicates that every person and church listed in the directory is a supporting member of the Council 1 was saddened to find my , name and the nanrie of the church I pastor listed. 1 am not a member of the Pontiac Council of Chutx'hes, the National Council of Churches, or the World Council of Churches; nor is Sunnyvale Chapel and the B.'iO members that make up its membership. I .strenuously object to their putting my. name and the name of our church in their directory. We are members of the Greater Pontiac |iast December to turn over con-Evangelical Ministers’ Fellowship and the Independent Funda- trol to laymen following a ' ‘ mental Churches of America. by two outside professors. REV. V L MARTIN, PASTOR SUNNYVALE CHAPEL However, the Jesuit board, said that Fordham .would re-1 main “Catholic and Jesuit.” ' Joseph A. Kaiser, a bank president, was elected the first lay chairman of the board earlier this year. The Jesuit trustees decided Detroit Schools Believpa Fliera ?^iotil(l Pay for Thrir Sport The City of Pontiac has subsidized the Oakland-Pontiac Airport with hundreds of thousands of dollars, all paid by the taxpayer, or there would be no airport. Anyone who wants to play with airplanes and can afford to fly one should pay|full cost and not a.sk ^anyone else to pay for his fun. Will you fliers of small planes explain how your sport will help the Brea? A. J. DEXTER 2634 MOHAWK LANE. ROCHESTER to Mark Death of Malcolm X DETROIT (AP) - The fourth anniversary of the death of Malcolm X will be observed in some Detroit high schools Friday. I Special assemblies and class- ... rv,a . # nr . mr . ^ iki - \wT ^ 1 ,'room study sessioHs were en-' ‘Hnpr Thief Was in Need of Nurse a Wateh couraged by the Detroit public| ... 1__i____t avs^ginn iv^inh «iicr0Mtibfl' I hope the person who took the small box my husband left on the seat of our car needed my nur.se’s watch more than 1 do. The 54 75 he had paid to pick it up had to be my valentine. GAIL BARBE 5416 FARM schools system which suggested: such observances in an internal bulletin Issued two weeks ago. Malcolm X grew up in Mason, Mich., south of Lansing. He spent some of his early life in . 1 o. I>etroit. The black militant was; Several Give Opinions on High Sehool bile shot to death Feb. 21,1965 as he , ui u u 1 » ispoke to followers in New York You people who are pushing for fhe new high school at i Orchard Lake and Bagley, where are you going to live if * * * your honles^and businesses are torn down? You won’t be near ^ the high sehool then. 2j ^ declared a holiday and BERNADlNE Lrrn..E have encouraged absenteeism! 107 WALL jfrom school and jobs to drama-1 — tlze the request for such a holi-' I wish Pontiac would decide where to build the new super l(jgy high school instead of boycotting and arguing. It could be ^ ^ decided in a peaceful way. j Detroit school officials said 1968 PONTIAC CENTRAL GRADUATE they hoped the schools’ special ------ services would keep absen- I heard that VOCAL plans a student prolc.st about the new teeism at a minimum but that if. school site. Protests and demonstrations seem to be a way of life What will education be to children who see their parents perform thlii way? I believe in dissent but not in this nianner. Some of these people would be doing .something if they .were home cleaning up their homes and trying to build instead of tearing down our society, MR. AND MRS. R. C. REID child is ab-sent, a written note! from the family will excuse the: absence. So our Btalwart band on the Board of Education is giving in to a minority. The decision was made but not for long. Pressure changed the minds of those representatives we voted Into office to weigh and consider the best possible methods of serving the people. We live on another side of town, but after hearing the pros and cons and seeing fhe proposed site and realizing these people truly believed this was best, we-were ready to acknowledge their, selction. They were voted into office because the majority |vas willing Ip place decisions in their hands I am sorry this is how they rale their own ability. MR AND MRS LAWRENCE HANSEN 29.35 UNlVERSm' DRIVE OP€N 10 AM. TO 9 P.M. (Sot. 9:30-9) Drayton opon Sunday Noon to 6 p.m. (Downteum closei Tue$., wed. « 6 p.m.J DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS We delivered his new Imperial today. On the! proposed site of the new high school, it’s time we forgot our prejudices and do what’s right. To pay a man thousands of dollars to choose between the downtown site and the State Hospital site and then do the opposite of what he advises is wrong. The school is loo far from the^ black community and by the. time it’s built there will still be no bus service to black students. WILLIE LEWIS 3 HOWARD McNEILL Imperial for 1969 is not only a beautiful automobile, but an eminently comfortable family car as well. It is the largest American luxury car in iu price class. With more head room, leg room, and shoulder room than in any previous Imperial. It comes with a torsion-bar suspension for an unequalled highway ride. And, there’s a host of comfort options available. Such as separate heating and air conditioning for both front and rear compartments. Drive our new Imperial. See just how luxurious s great family car can be. It was a family occasion. ‘Draft Ord M HOWAl Blirnrrs S Should I,rave Country* Any man who bums his draft card should be sent out of the United States. If he is not willing to keep his country free he should not live in a free country. The United States should pul everything we fiave into the war or pull everything JIM SMITH 88 N. ASTOR Reader* Diaeiiaa Ineoiiie Tax Dediietions I read that when a woman has an illegitimate child she gets raised only $1 per day. I work for a living and Unde Sam gave me a $600 deduction. It figures out to 30 cents a day or less for my legitimate child. KENNETH MASON 32 S PADDOCR Sinfe 1 started my petition drive to raise the Income lax deduction to $1,200. I have received hundreds of letters from people who feel $500 is an absurd figure considering the co^t of living. ROY CARPS 28113 STUART, SOUTHFIELD ‘Disagree With Critirism of Student Paper* I was outraged by a letter concerning the student newspaper, “The Drayton Good Earth.” Certainly the paper does not represent the established, acceptable and “proper” attitude toward the draft, etc., but why must a person be considered radical, left-wing or unpatriotic simply because he questions the actions of the United States? This cannot be any worse than the altitude that ’’the U S. can do no wrong.” ' j: t. .. ‘SrhortI Lunchtime Regiiialiou* .\rc Unfair* I am a parent of a H[ontiac Northern student He tells me he cannot come home for lunch, and we live oply across the street from the school. I think this is unfair, especially since Pontiac Central students can leave for lunch. W^y is it that the board of education gives Pon|iac Central more ire^om ' than Pontiac Northern? > ! MELVIN MCHOLS 690 E TENNYSON OAKLAND I OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOdTH, INC. 724 OAKLAND AViNUE N PONTIAC, MICHIGAN .y'?' THE FONTIAC PRESS. WKDNKSDAV. FEHKUARV 19, 1969 A- WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1969 Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas August A. Brisch Safe Is Looted in Waterford f^ndry worker at Ford Motor Adrian A. Nobllel Mri. Irving M. Walter Burglars cracked the safe at August A Brisch. 76, of 3377 Surviving are his wife. Requiem Mass for Mrs.j LAKE (MIION — Mrs. Irving WaTerford^^ToroSip**^^ Shawnee Une. Waterford Jeanette; a .son. Noriqan T. of Adrian (AppolonieE.) Nobile,l eih-, been chareed with robbing "Did your giving that informa-1 reviewed at tomorrow’s meeting tlon also vloSte the code of con-'of the township schbol board. At ^ 50 n m duct, in your estimation." jf fhe volume of return Is "Yes sir.” considered large enough to be ^ * * * “Do you have any idea why ponpjusjyp R,e board will _ ,, , this was volunteered by the offi-decide whether to retain the ,1 cers;”’ March 26 election date set at its ' AN EXPIANATION Feb, 26 meeting. Tt. Ma^in McLaughlin of the "We felt we had to give some ,. * . Bloomfield Township police said explanation since they had cap- ^e questionnaires hi- believe Poyrell also may tured the ship and the 82 of us.” <*l""te a favorable response,jjppj, involved in a $231 Harris gave a similar ac-''"ter® P^en “e "p-|^^gjj mbberty at Mick’s count, adding as his reason: portunlty to pass a nine-mill tax Station, 1881 S. "I felt at that time there J**® Bloomfleld| ihwild be an explanation” “V Township, where two men held; * * * were defeated Dw. 7. ^ up two attendants at about 7:45 The Crde of Conduct, promul- , *" "te®5„ l»"siness schedu ed ^ gated by former President ‘ ‘ senhower after the Korean \yar. *®l’""l ^ McLaughlin said the youth DriliMviri ^iiri me i\u.i ^an v»ai, , , , . ... »*ivxixxvip,iinn ouiu forbids U S. servicemen to tell''^****”* *1!^ k bas not been charged in the sec- but "* te" building for robberv. which is still under adult and community .school invesiiBalion their captors anything name. rank, serial nuniber and , , date of birth pro^am.s and will hear pro- Harris said his oonfession^^®J^"«";®« came after they forced him to "^® squat <«i his knees holding a SS’.dr.rS .r.b^utl City School Board furore SQUAT ' Meeting Is Reset Sdhumacher said he Wifessed! after he was forced to squat in a' The Pontiac Board of Educa- 3 Elected to Board of Credit Union Three new members have been elected to the board of ------------------------------- , , . .“ directors of the Chief Pontiac semi kneeling position with hisjtion meeting regularly sched-; credit Union, Gordon hands over his head uled for tomorrow night has ^ president of the credit “’niere was one on the left been rescheduled to next Tues- announced today, and one on the right,” he Said, day at 7:3(1 p.m. in the audi- -pbe new officials are Norman "Both had cocked machine guns^torium of Pontiac Northern High p Rvden of 7375 Pontiac Lake, aimed at my head ... 1 got a School. Waterford Township, vice backhand across the mouth a Supt Uf Schools Dr. Dana P. president; James P. Harrington couple of tirhes . . . two guards Whitmer, Assistant Supt. WU- of 2371 Depby, Waterford started kicking me in the ribs liam J., Lacy and several board To wnship, treasurer-general ... they called in two more members are attending the manager; and Harold Kline, 560 guards, American As.sociation of School Lenox, fonliac, secretary. "And tf^ I said,‘OiC, I’ll tell Administrators meeting |n At- Geher UwWy. 2353 Universl-j you. Stop kicking me. I’ll telliilantic City, N; J., whichi lasts!tv, Pontiac Township, ■ * I did/‘ ' .... ........................................... you,’ which I ! until tomorrow; elected to the credit committee.! Final Sale TOPCOATS Pure Cashmeres Included iANfrUirH X. Mutmaain ciii,tlolHTaiion4Jolllier*-l!«if<>rnM MvnAFeraialWMrRwiUb ' 908 ▼. ETtiRON mTELEGRAPS. FOmiAG '■“'•At-./; '■m. Twice-a-year savings on our own luxuriously quilted Hudsonian bedding $' 49.90 mattress or box sprirtg, full or twin the * Loaded with quolity features found only in costly bedding, now at great savings. * Special weight-balanced springs provide proper support to the various parts of the body. * Extra thick layers of cotton felt, specially inner-quilted for better body conforming comfort. * Luxuriously quilted outer cover to odd still more to your sleeping comfort. * Patented locked edges to give mid-mottress comfort right to the very edges. * Seat edge borders buiU-in to resist sagging. * Box spring designed for correct support for this fine mattress and to gain full comfort ond wear. * No down poyment in Hudson's Sleep Shop. SAVE, TOO, ON SUPER SIZES Quaan tiza, 60x80", mattfast and King slza, 77x80", maHrait and box bax tpring sat, SALE .....149.90 spring sat, SALE ..........199.90 HUDSON’S GREAT HOME SALE NEW ORLEANS AND ALL THAT JAZZ; Flower Show Extravaganza! >flJN! MUSIC! February 10-22, 12th Floor Downtown Detroit! ^ ; Downtoum DetrvU NorlkUmd Center Eruiland Center WaUand Center PonliaeMHa Oaldand Mall 'if'iilh'!' ''' PRE-SEASON SAVINGS ON HETTRICK TENTS, SLEEPING BAGS Buy Now ... Hudson’s Layaway will hold your tent until June J2th Now, enjoy savings, savings and more savings on Tourister’s Tiara 1000 series. Every piece is on sale! Every piece is mighty attractive, highly resistant to all types of scuffs and scratches. Every piece is strong but lightweight. Hurry to Hudson’s this week. Sale ends Saturday, February 22. Hurry and comejuin and scoop up the savings in Hudson’s Luggage Department. BERS • 24”Pullfflan. ... 32.25 • Train case .... . 26.25 • 27" Pullman_____39.75 • Hat box....... . 14.95 • 30" Pullman_____44.95 • Totes . . . 18.70*22.45 ^ 54"Garmentb*g . 56.20 • 18" Fitted case. . . 24.7oJ,T^COLORS:Blue. white, fawn, • Hat* Shoe case ,. 26.20 ^^dorgreen. • 2Ll"Vf'eekend . , . 26.25 • 21"Wardrobe. . . 37.45 V Attaches i 22.45&24.70 * 21 "Companion. . 26.25 ► 25"Two-suite'r . . 39.75 • Three-suiter . . . , • 24” Companion . , • 27" Companion . , • 44” Garment bag , COLORS: Dusk, and walnut. 43.50 32.25 39.75 52.45 olive Camp-out Tent has nylon screen door with zipper, canvas storm flaps, sewed'in floor, steel stakes and is water repellent, sale..A.. 11.97 Umbrella Tent 7’ X 7* has wood center and awning poles, Vi nylon screen door with fasteners, nyloii screen rear window, awning extension and Polystrip gommets. sale.................................... . . .B. . 19.97 Umbrella Tent 9* X 9* has flip-top frame construction, nylon screen and canvas door with zipper, nylon ropes, fully zipped door, awning-extension. Poly-strip grommets and lock-tite aluminum poles, sale... . C. . 39.97 Watkins Glen Tent 10’ X 8* has aluminized top, nylon screen and canvas zipped door, 3 nylon screen windows with storm curtains, wind-spill side-walls. Poly-strip grommets and lock-tite aluminum poles, sale . . .D.. 59.97 Comforlable Sleepinff Bag has outer shell of brown cotton twill, flannel lined, all around zipper and detachable canopy, sale . ....... . 16.97 / Hudson’s Sporting Goods Dept. / Oihtr TmI itylMt • PupT«ni........... • frame Tent , . . . . • Dining Canopy. . . • Screen House . . . . ........ 4.97 .........66.97 .........UL97 .........69.97 f Sheik Tent............ . . .\ . 107.9' Olhai Bag SlyU*: . ’ / • Sleeping Bags. . 7.97, Ut9|f43.97, 22.91 HC XJ ID S O N ’ S DOWNTOWN DETROIT Woodward Ave. and Grand River NORTHLAND CENTER 8 Mile a^^^North^yestern EASTLAND CENTER 8 Mile and Kelly Roads WESTLAND CENTER PONTIAC MALL Warren and Wayne Roads Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road OAKUND MALL 1-75 and 14 Mile Road ( y/i A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1§, 1969 Many Muslims Pilgrimaging to Mecca by Jet LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) - The ]et-age is It is the time . for Muslims to make a pilgrim< j age to Mecca, the thing that every SW1 of Islam wants to do. “I don’t call it a season, 1 call it a crisis," wails Abdul Latif Hamandi, sales manager here |or Middle East Airlines. During the first three weeks of February, jets from his and other firms will carry about 20,000 of black Africa's Muslim faithful to Mecca. They will fly in five hours over ground a scattered few Af- ricans once wandered for years, braving the Sahara to obey the Koran's commands ‘ Pilgrimage to the Hou.se is a duty which man owes to Allah” FASHIONABLE THING "The hadj is getting fashionable," said I. 0 Agoro, head of Lagos Pilgrims Welfare Board and holder of the alhadji title by right of his pilgrimage last year."We are getting more and more younger women." ! At least 22, million of Nigeria’s more than AO milliQjj, population are counted as Muslim, About 9,000 will leave in 200-seat Jets from Hano, a thousand-year-old Muslim walled trading city at the edge of the Sahara 700 mile.«Mrom here. Perhaps 2,000 more will go from Lagos. ■ Religious enthusiasm about the hadj does not hide the disced or the fact it is good business. The Nigerian government took over the operation in 1966 from private travel agents and made the state-owned airline sole carrier Nigeria Airways never has had the airplanes and has licensed the business to such carriers as Siabena, Middle purchase two gallon-tins M Med-ior 30 days of “the month of the East and United Arab airlines. |iha dates and a gallon tin of'pUgrimage.” PIIXIRIMS STRANDED ip™ Zam water, supposedly * * * The government acted f» S the because pnvate agents^ often ^ich encloses the Kaaba. the2“*™* W.lWaS stranded pilgrims in Saudi Ara-jg„^, j^e pilgrimage and the,*’®''* in sJj !po‘nt towaid which Muslims thrnnffhniu nnria Him orh^n Arabia to faisure he has some money fm* expenses. Pilgrims pay $372.40 a round- throughout the world turn when trip from Lagos; $315 from they pray Kano, considerable sums in a i„ various taxes. Saudi Arabia land where the annual averse „ceives about $50 fop each ar- _. . , rival not only fromthe Africans______ Thousands of pilgrims save for than 300,000 ultrasimlc dental drill and a A new method nf deaijtng old stained glass windows uses an years for the trip. other pilgrims who'converge on tiny jet of water which carries j Mecca from the rest of Islam, 25,000 dltrasonic vibrations each | For $6.60 extra a pilgrim can The trip must be made in the 29 second to the working purface. 1 TOVIG MMRIEOS N0*d Furnitur#? Und*r 21 ? We cqn get you credit without eo-sjgner*. Houte-hoid Applionce# 335-9283. HOUSEHOLD APPLUNCE 401 Elixahfth Lake Rd. «er*M rrwi tlw Santla* HM DailyDaily Foam or Innerspring Mattresses and Matching Box Springs SAVE 10.07 Firm 432-Coil Innerspring Mattress You’d expect to pay much more for a quilted mattress with so many comfort extras. Beige floral, quilt top covers 432 coils in the full size mattress and 297 in the twih size. You’ll enjoy slumber-smooth comfort, firm posture support. Box spring has heavier coils in center section which supports most weight. Reg. 59.95 Twin 6r Full Size 59.95 Matching Posture-Mate Box Spring..... 49.88 SAVE 15.07 Quilt-Top 514” Serofoam Mattress You’ll easily slip into blissful slumber on a plush Dacron^ polyester quilt-top, while a 5Mt-inch Serofoam polyurethane core gives deep, firm posture support. Serofoam is cool, noii-allergenic — never needs turning or airing. Full size box spring has 72 coils; twin size has 54. In matching floral design covers. Reg. 69.95 Twin or Full Size 69.95 Matching Posture-Mate Box Spring. NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan SAVE 20.07 Sears 6-liieli Foaiii Latex or Deluxe 960-(ah1 Iiiiierspring Mattress Reg. 89.95 Twin or Full Size ScicnliliiitlK fur iiriii support, \cl lliPM* iiianrcsso. (■radlc ypu on buoxant ipiiltcd tops. Lluiosc tlie firiti (t-incli foam latex or the deluxe riincrspritii; luaUress xxiili %U coils in the full size und ihW ill the Ixxin. Hutli have luxurious floral-prim poxcr..; Matching Posture-Mate Box Spring, Twin or-Full, Regular 89.95...................... 69.88 rpg. 319.95. Save $60 on 2-pc. Queen Size Set: fiOxKO” inattrrt,s and box spring, reg. 239.95.. ^,. ......... 179i8 Save $10 .on 3-pc. King Size Set: 7f)xH0” niattre!.s, 2 box springs. ^ ^ . 249.88 Sale Ends Saturday Open .Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9. Tucadav. 'R'cdncfeday 9 to .5:30 :>CAR$, ROEBUCK AND CO. Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 ■r Margaret Paulus (left), owner of the Mar-Len frame chosen I Millinery Shop in. Birmingham suggests a spray of ville. spring flowers to trim the off-the-face picture hat I Mrs. Robert Froelich of North- Faculty Wives Hold Bonnet Spring-In By JEANNE NELSON Walking into the Mar-Len Millinery Shop in Birminghani, I felt like a kid locked in a candy store. Row Upon row of lovely fabrics hung against the wall while spools of gay ribbons lined the shelves below- It was a “fun” evening with members of the Oakland Community College Faculty Wives who turned their regular meeting into a creative workshop. Owner Margaret Paulus had her staff on call to help with decisions for the “Wives” who were making their own spring hats. * ★ ★ Although the shop is in the throes of moving, stock supplies seemed unlimited. Naturally I had to try each shape available. Being a non-hat type, I felt strange atJirst, but after the first few tries, discovered that some types are great camouflages. The materials needed for hat making seem endless; chicken wire, fabrics, feathers, ribbons and even funny things called bills for the new Oliver hats. Intent on making their headgear in one evening, the members of the group were a quiet bunch as they cut, glued and pinned together all sorts of combinations. * ★ ★ • Frosted beads and berries were favorites when it came to trimming, with velvet polka dotted ribbons a close second. Some of the combinations got a little out of hand and when this happened one of Miss Paulus’ staffers came to the rescue. Most of the women were new to the i- ■ ■ Wometb THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1969 B—1 Choose Music Appealing to All Guests By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute . Dear Mrs. Post: I have recently attended several wedding receptions, some of which were lavish, yet at all of them the rock and roll music (and you know what it is today) plays without letup. Conversation is impossible. Shouldn’t there be sorne time during dinner when .. music should be in the background^ allowing people to talk without shouting?—Mrs. S. Dear Mrs. S.: Guests at a reception are usually a mixture of all age groups. For this reason alone music should be chosen that appeals to everyone, not just the very young. Apart from this, any party benefits from a change of pace, and at a wedding reception in particular the music played should fit the occasion and the mood rather than being one long festival of jazz or rock and roll. WHO CALLS? Dear Mrs. Post: I have .just returned home from a foreign country after being away for two years. Should I call other members of my family who know that I have arrived, or should they call me and welcome me home?—Jim ★ ★ ★ Dear Jim: Really what difference does it make who calls whom? The important thing is you’re safe, you’re home, and you’re glad to see your family. Call them—right away—and tell them so and stop worrying about whether they should have called you first. AAedical Group to Meet Members of the Oakland County Osteopathic Medical Assistants’ Associfition will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Ponyac Osteopathic Hospital. This meeting is to all osteopafhic Siedical assistants and Osteopathic ospital epiployes. By JUNE ELERT “Relax. Close your eyes. Try to still the senses. As things become still, you wDl become very aware of the body functions. Your stomach makes sound like a pot boiling on the stove. Inside your head, all sorts of noises are going “‘Quiet your mind. Stop thinking — let go. Soon it will be quiet and you will know that you are you, separate from your mind and your body. * # “Now you are meditating. You will feel a power. Whether in your\iead, or your heart area or perhaps in your solar plexus, it is there. * ★ ★ » “Unfortunately, it will go away. But it can be brought back and with practice, soon you will be able to open your,eyes and retain this power. ★ ★ w ‘S40 All Weather and Car Coats Rag. to $30.00 ♦14 ; i -DRESSES- Rag. to $40.00 ♦9- ♦15 Rag. to $70.00 ♦21 - ♦ST = 1 Opera Tendr Featured Metropolitan Opera tenor: William Lewis will be featured artist with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra Thursday and Friday in the Orchestra’s first Ford Auditorium concerts after three-week tour of the Southeast. * * ★ Sixten Ehrling will conduct the program, which begins at 8:30 pm. The Rackham Symphony Choir, directed by Maynard Klein, will also be featured. I.«wis and the Rackham Choir will be heard /-in Kodaly’s “Psalmus Hungaricus.” Other works on the program are Beethoven’s Symphony No. and Bach-Schoenberg’s Prelude and Fugue in E flat (“St. Anne”) and the choral prelude “Komm, Gott, Schoepfer Heiliger Gelst.” -YOUNG FOLKS- Girls’Coats R*i. to $30.00 •10 - *18 Girls’ Jumpers "y andDresses Z/2 Infants’ Wear off —^FOUNDATIONS--- DBAS R.,.$5 ♦3*® GIRDLES ♦6®® ii -HATS- R*g. to $22,50 *5 *10 • Special Selling 48 N. Saginaw Pretty youftg loot forpractical ymmgbudgetsl Little Heels! Reg.$12 ... Jnit tlw fmlia^prinrim jmn warn M wmt whli iwhmtlMrtridrtw piniKne protprain bow pamp oa a Mraiidii bool fat paNatappwa of Block, and Blno or AlaluMer kid ... llio auiy-joao bat a catrod btutad lo-lo tidat in kid appan of Blaa or Bli|ek ptionL THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1969 B-3 - Y*il N«w it* ewy to quickly itep into a alamorou*. welKiNiid Mratarui poiiuo^ Loarn Siieodwritina — wa modem ibonhand/ I “‘•/■miliar abc’*. S|i«edwritiii|t i* offered excluuvely P.B.I. Day or evening claiaea. Nationwide ruE Ufelime Placement Service. Vliit, |ihone or write- Next Claaa Besine March 10 18 West Lawrence Street FE 3-7028 Trainiiqr/ar JtiifincM Cnreera Siiic«-jf96 Polly's Pointers Single Frame Answer DEAR POLLY — If Mrs. R.|Youngsters seem to love this..— D. B. wants to hang framed|MRS. C. P. pictures of her children, she can J "i? . p.ner.1 hard board, paint it the samejiargg picture frames, put a color as the wall and hang all typed poem called “What Is a the school pictures on the little Boy?” in the middle of the one hooks tha( are for inserting in son> leaving enough .. . , ' room for pictures to go all ★ It ★ around the poem. To hang unframed pictures.! Th® “ \ ’ niM>m cnIlpH “Whnl Te n fllrl?” V*/ ; poem called “What Is a Girl?' she could taok « length of ^ SKI WEAR SALE! 70% 40% 30% OFF Famous Brand Names DONN’S SKI HAUS — Corner of — Walton ond Soshobow Drayton Plains hopsacking to a one-inch lath, hallway where they are real attach picture wire or a pretty conversation pieces. — MRS. C. cord to each end of the lath and D. P. hang. Pictures could be ★ * ★ mounted on this with gold, j DEAR POLLY — Mrs. R. D. silver or colored p 1 a s t i c B. should get one large picture adhesive-tecked tape, outlining frame for all of each child' each picture like a frame. | pictures. The size will depend ■ ■ ■ ■ lures she MR. AND MRS. JAMES McBROOM Home Wedding hr F. F. Dukes Vows were exchanged Saturday between Mrs. Joan H. Hoyt of Chamberlain Street and Frank F. Duke of Brunswick Drive. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mejritt of Oak Knoil Street served as attendants for the couple wed in their home and honored at a reception later that day. Make Your Appointment Nowl PERMANENT and • HAIR STYLE Tinting—Bleaching Cutting IMPERIAL 158 Auburn Ave. Park Free FE 4-2878 Edyth Stenion, owner on the number of picti thinks she will want in it.-My only child, a daughter, is now a nun and I had pictures of her all oyer the living room so that it looked like a picture gallery. They started when she was a baby and went through school, beauty contests, various! Five Points Communityistages in her religious order Evening Rite Unites Pair Plan Dinner for McBrooms Oiurch was the setting recently u^til obtaining her nun’s habit, for vow uniting Bonnie Joy y^u can imagine what the pic-| Lambert ^d Billy Gene Cross, (nfes looked like. A priest came to call and,' when he saw them, asked if he I For the evening ceremony, the bride chose a satin gown accented with handsewn pearl trim. A bubble veil and chapel length train complemented her ensemble and she carried white carnations centered with miniature red roses. could make a suggestion, said, “Take all those pictures out of the frames, get one large one and put them all in it.” I did and it is beautiful. My living room is no longer cluttered as 11 of my favorite photographs ! * ★ * ' are in one frame, with space ! Honor a 11 e n d a n t s for the left for some more. - MRS. R. ; daughter of the Robert Carrys K. of Genes Drive and the son of DEAR POLLY - I, do think Mr. and Mrs. Orville Cross of ^ this sharing of ideas is such a Holcomb, Mo., were Mrs. Allen'wonderful thing. I, too, have Today marks 50 years ol marriage for Mr. and Mrs. James McBroom of S t a r r Avenue. Residents of Pontiac [since 1929, the couple was married Feb. 19, 1919 in Portland, Me. A faniily dinner Sunday in the Lincoln Street home of their daughter, Mrs. ^’red Putnam, will celebrate the event. Their other children are Mrs. Harold also of Starr Avenue, Mrs. Wilbur Carrier of Pioneer Street and James McBroom Jr. of Milford. There are 14 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Hubbell and Douglas Turvey. 101 N. Saginaw StfMtFE 3-7165 Shppand Graanhomatjn Lok* Orion Other members of the wedding party were Mrs. Marvin problem. Can a wall-type can opener be sharpened? --- Beaudry, Mrs. Barbara Overbay and Sharon Winters with Charles Lambert, Jack Howard and Robert Menton as ushers. Alona Hubbell and Mark Beaudry were flower girl and ring bearer. The couple was feted at Guinn’s Banquet Hall. U.S. spending on health education and welfare is 18 per cent of the gross national product. African Film and Discussion Are on Program An African travelogue, depicting native art, handicrafts and modes of dress, will conclude the week-long Human' Relations prograrh held at Mark| Twain School Thursday. Nar^j rating the travelogue beginning at 7 p.m. will be Mrs. Catherine Blackwell of Wayne State University. Also slated for the evening [ will be a discussion on “The' Changing Role of the Black] Man in America,” by panel members Albert Shaw VOCAL, Jay Crayton, assistant professor at Eastern Michigan University and R. Clayton Jones of the Pontiac Public Housing Commission. William White school counselor, will act as moderator. Choral readings and songs by the third, fifth and sixth grade students will conclude the pro-' gram. PTA Best way to take your mind off your feet a*-a y|/w\ while you’re on your feet. Ripple Soles Ip I “soften” hard floors, take the work out of walking or standing. PAULI’S SHOES 35 N. Saginaw St. Across From Community National Bank Wc Paj/ Our Customers’ Parking in the New Downtown Mall LAST 8 DAYS Pontiac Emerson, 7:30 p.m. Men’s night to include election of officers. Children will present gymnastics program directed by Ronald Beyers. Waterford Silver Lake, 6:30 p.m. Spaghetti dinner, tickets to which are to be presold at the school. WANT TO SELL SNOWMOBILES, TOBOGGANS, ICE SKATES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD---TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. Sew discarded shoulder pads to wire hangers and you will find they are ideal for hanging jersey, slippery or sheer ggrmepts. They hold the gar- ment on the hanger without stretching or drawing them, and this stops them sliding off the hanger. MID-WINTER SALE! SAVE 105* when you buy Sgt. Charles F. Hoff, of Keansburg, N.J., admires his adopted daughter, 13-month-old Tammy Thu. Hoff adopted the girl after seeing her nearly every day at an orphanage in Da Nangj He said he felt so sorry for Tarrimy that he has decided to bring her bewk with him to New Jersey when his Vietnam tour is over. Hoff has two daughters. on America’s Finest Furniture •HERITAGE • DREXEL •DUNBAR • DUX •HERAAAN AAILLER you’re always ^ at least two feet ahead Jnit test walk this beantifdl, burnished bourbon brown Becket and you’il see why. In sises 12Vh to 3 at $14. Sizes 3Mt to 6 at $15. In C-D-E widths. take one for a test walk.. •today! Stapp’s where the experts work 931W. HURON ST. PONTIAC For ovonfaig hours phonoJI82-3208 r This gives you a rare opportunity to save on bedroom, living room, dining room and occasionol furniture you hove always wanted. Special orders including Custom upholstery are included in this sale! •GLOBE •TOMLINSON • KNOLL • BAKER •NORTH HICKORY FLOOR SAMPLE SALE The construction of our new store on Woodward Ave. in Bloomfield Township is nearing cotnpletion — which means vm must clear out more Floor Samples at Big Reductions at our present location. Reg. $380 S.elig 3-Pc. Living Room Group. Mr. ond Mrs. Choir ond Otto- group. Contemporary styling in olive green or §old Fabrics. Now *288 Reg. $489 Globe Traditional 92" sofa with 'oIl zip covers. Foam cushions hostess pillows. Rust long-wearing fabric. Now only....................... Reg. $815 French Provincial 3-pIece group. Sofa In Bronze gold fabric; Beautiful red print chair and handsome gold velval chair. All selMecked with nutmeg wood trim. Now only........................................... Reg. $750 Pennsylvania Dutch Dining Room, 7 pieces. Bone white with gold trim toble. 2 filler leaves, 4 high bock choirs, S6" buffet with hutch top. All Formica tops. Distressed finished............................. j. $850 Solid Cherry French Dining Room.' Solid cherry wood. 9 pieces ^ fncludei Buffet, gloM front china cabinet. 60? oval tdblb with filler leaf, 2 choirs, 4 side chairs........................................................ *375 *655 *520 *693 Reg. $487 Drexel Round Pedestal Dining Room Table in sable mohogony, $OQO' Joble^po^n^^openbocl^hah^/^owOnly^^^^^^^^^^^^^ LEWIS FURNITURE CO. DESIGNERS FOR HOME AND BUSINESS INTERIORS S. Saginaw St. at Orchard Lake Ave.—Ponlicjic, AAi<]^igan—335-8174 TAE PONTIAfc PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FUBRUARY 19. 1909 Wew 4FL-C/0 Studenf Center May Become 'Liibor College MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -The AFLrCIO is br^viag the perils of the academic world ^In these days of student demon-stations by establishing a stud-’ ies center that may eventually become the first "labor col-lege." "You may question our sanity, but you can't question our courage,” jested AFL-CIO President George Meany when asked if he would expect student demonstrations from union officials who will attend the new center to be established in Washington. ^ "We’re not going t,o allow any during student involvement” in admin-, ha grinned ‘istration of the studies .c«iter, conference. 'said the 74-yehr-otd head of thel Will it be coed? jl3.6 million member labor fed-| "No,” he first said, but when eration. "I'll be chairman of the a lady reptnter appeared ready board." |to launch a protest on tlw spot. Meany won’t be a student but '1 may be a visiting iectufer,” Meany smiled and said, "It will bB|,^peducational. CdliforniaSues for Oil Damage SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) — California is suing four oil firms and the federal government for $1.3 billion on charges that negligence caused the giant ocean oil slick that damaged beaches and killed .sea life. A $500 million claim against the Departmeiit of Interior was filed personally Tuesday by Charles A. O’Brien, chief deputy California attorney general. In a more serious vein, Meany said die purpose of the studies center will be to improve the skills of trade union officials in! dealing with the increasingly' complex problems of labor af-' fairs. I "Today’s type of Industrial life in this country calls for bet-| ter-educated trade union officials,” Meany said. The first year's cost of operating the school, to be (^ed next Labor Day, will be $^,000, rising to some $600,000 by the third year. It will handle about 400 students at first, increasing later to 900. Meany said union officials, and staff members, and perhaps later rank-and-file union members, will study a variety of general and specialized subjects including labor economics, U.S. history and the history of the I movement. O'Brien said an $800-million damage suit would be filed today against Union Oil Co,, operator of the ruptured offshore well, and Texaco Inc. and Mobile Oil Co., Union's partners in the federal drilling lease. NOTHING LIKE THE REAL THING For centuries scientisU have made perfumes, trying to imitate t^ lovely framnce of ~ a, lilies, and flowers. The rosea, lilies, hyancinths give off the nicert ■cenU around and they were once used in the producing of perfumes. No one has yet, with all the ecientifie discoveries, been Uhl* to capture the lovely fragrance of flowers in a bottle. The scent of an orange iFbva gives off a scent that you oould smell all night. A special scientific panel dispatched by President Nixon begins a two-day investigation of the oil spill which reached square miles in size before the well was capped Feb. 7. Now crews are working to relieve pressures that have spewed a new slick into the polluted channel. Bbwevor, there is nothing like the real thing. We keep the fireshest flowers possible, so you can better say, "Get Well Soon,” or *T I.ove You." For any floral assistance call FE 2-0127 and we will be at your service. Wo also will deliver your lovely arrangement. PEARCE FLORAL CO. 559 Orchard Lake Ave. The city and county of Santa Barbara and the city of Car-jplnteria join in thn action, O’Brien said. The claim and the suit, he added, nsk payment for damage to fish and wildlife and beach cleanup plus general damages; including damage to tourist potential. News of Lansing in Capsule Form Outllnsd whst he IsrmKl s bluiprint >r >V;iy(^'2Mi"^V'STSTe -wlorlits thst Feb, 3t U the purcheiing 19M Mlchlgen for coiutructlon o« s fwo-ilory sdditlon Ivast year was the first in which no death from trichinosis was reported In the U.S. The illness is caused by eating pork which has not been sufficiently cooked. a man can count on Q OMEGA .. .Y”* on Omega SeanMstertIme as rnitomatl^ly as sunr^ and sunset Just your everyday ^st mtmmsnt^ and this force of gravity, power minlamiu of automation. Wear one! Count on iti Square Saamaster in 14K gold, $175.’ Sesmaster Da Villa with date-tAingdial in ling dial in stainless steel, $135. Other Seemssters from $95 REDMOND’S Jewelry 81 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC #>*• Parfcirng in Hfar o/ Star* The AFLrCIO will pay the entire cost of the school, Including living allowances for union sti dents from all over the nation. REDUCE FAST! THE EASY, FUN HOLIDAY WAY ENROLL DURING OUR OPEN HOUSE Celebration CALL TODAY OR DROP BY FOR A FREE TOUR NO OBLIGATION A Oivisien af tba S. S. Krasga Company wMi Sforae thravghewt tha UnIfad States, Canodd and PMtrta ^ ^ ^ Double Discount Buys Take Advantage of Big Savings—Buy Now on Sale! BUCK and WHITE PORTULE \Z” TELEVISION BY “The Cascade” model features 172 sq. in view, able picture. With slim line design, beautifully molded two-tone cabinet, and front mbunted speaker. Don't hesitate, see it now! Trim-Line “Sportabout” Portable RCA COLOR TV SET 359" Kmart Priced at Superb color, beauty of design, exceptional value. RCA New Vista color in 18” diagonal 180 sq. in. viewable picture; Solid State UHF, automatic VHP tuning; “Golden Throat” sound. 17V4x23%xl9Vi” deep. Specially priced at Kmart. Model EL 442 SALE! RIVAL AUTOMATIC 2-WAY WAFFLER ’R GRILL Our Reg. 18^2 4 Days Only 75" Teflon® coated grids bake golden waffles without sticking, reverse to grill -sandwiches, steaks, burgers, eggs R I'k/A.K.O^ "u elegant rc 1 -w chrome and black. Enter a New World of Health, Fun and Recreation BEGINNERS COURSES START DAILY Enjoy Entire Club Facilities at NO EXTRA Cost • ROMAN STEAMS 0 FINNISH SAUNAS • ROCK STEAM ROOMS a PRIVATE SHOWERS a PRIVATE DRESSING ROOMS a SUNTAN ROOMS a ELECTRICAL MECHANICAL MASSAGER • PERSONAL SUPERVISION Facilities for MEN Facilities for WOMEN OPEN; 10 to 10 P.M. Over as Affiliated Studies Ceost-te-Coest and WoHd Wide 3432 W«tt Huron St. Just West of EliMbeffi Lake Rd. ot Higtiland 682-5040 SALE! 30-CUP PARTY PERK 7.44 Our Reg. 9.27 4 Days Only SALE! 9-PUSmON TU Our Reg. 11.47 4 Days Only 9.97 Automatic West Bend perka 12.30 cups flavorfnl coffee, aignala when done, keeps brew hot for hours. Measuring gauge; 2-Way faucet! Mirroivbright elegance, plus extra savings! Elegant gleaming GE 2-alicer features 9 selections for toast to your exact taste, wider slots, extra high pop-up lift, clean-easy hinged crumb tray cool recessed handles! Big savings, too! SALE! S-TRANSISTOR RADIO 2.97 Our Reg. 3.67 4 Days Only SALE!GEAM-FMHINI-liADI0 12.46 Our Reg. 13.97 4 Days Only Hard to believe bat Ime-flne 6-transislor Jade pocket GE’i Solid State “mini radio, has 2W» dvnamic snei radio complete with carrying case and 9-voU battery, er, battery-saver circuit. AM automatic vol^r ^ for just 2.97! Get it foT you, for gifts, at double-dis- free FM! Two antenn;;’, 20” SSrwirfor f count Kmart savings! built-on ferrite rod for AM. Save now! You*re Safe when you Save at Kmart! GLENWOOD PLAZA-NORTH PERRY '*1 /V* 1 , 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1969 B—« Double Discount Bonus Buys BETA® FIBERGLAS PANELS Our Ref(. 2^96 4 Days Only 2,44 60x«4” 100% Beta* live iieonielric putlern. You ■Coming TM “CELANESE® ACETATE” DRAPERIES 4,33 Our Reg. 5.27 63" 4 Days Only Length "CELLINI” FIBERGLAS® DRAPERIES 2,97 63" Length . Our Reg. 3 pr. 1.06 4 Days Only “DORSET’SHOWER CURTAIN 3,57 MEN’S GUSHMM FOOT SOCKS 3’s87* (\)tlnii cushion foot socks insvhilc and colors. 3 pair per bundle. Choose from sizes lOVi to 13. BOYS', MISSES ORLON^' SOCKS 32* 28x16V2x14" Size STORE ALL CHEST 1.24 OurReg.42c-“4Days Orion* acrylic crew aocka in vTiite.colors.Stoll. I DuPont TM OnrReg,l.S7 — 4 Days . BeSnforred fibre board con> ttructed witli plastic handla. 9-INCH SPONGE SOUEEZEMOPHAS WOODEN HANDLE DUcount Price 2,94 Charge It WOOLITE POWDER 88^ (turKef. 1.27 X3V4-oz.*coId water woolite. •Notwt. IRONING BOARD PAD, COVER SET 63 METAL IRONING TABLE 2,96 Our Reg. 3.97 4 Days Only Our Reg. 2 for 88c 4 Days Only CHOICE OF BAKEWARE OUR lOICE . ... Our Reg. 2 for 41c each :!:} 4 Days Only RT FACIAL TISSUE Ml Our Reg, 78c. —, 4 Ihiyt rriex iropiii)! bouril pud with icoMC cover. 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Give new life to your high back dinette chairs with slip'-on type replacement kit for hightback chairs. Patterns include ■White Fern, White Dawn, Gray Pearl. Hardware included. Elegant reproductions on canvas of your favorite subject matter painted by well known artists. Appropriately franilsd in 2” walnut, gold color trim; Early American; Cohtemporary frames. You’re Safe WTien You Save At Kmart GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD 4 'I'.: t. .'.inf THE PONTIAC PRESS, WfepyESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1969 -f State Senator Ready to Ease Riot-Cpntrol Measure LANSING (UPIV — The chief local officials to ban thS^Mlc rf sponsor of a controversial riot- nquor, firearms, ammunition control bill was ready today 10 3^ flammable liquids during offer a “compromise ’ measure «rhi<^h to the Michigan Senate perM jUch satish' State Police objections. ‘I® longer than 4« Sen. George W. Kuhn, R-West hours unless extended by the Bloomfield Township, said he governor, hopes the substitute plan will e ♦ * assure ^nate ,«ssage of the ^ Ul A final vote could come state Unsweek. officials complained to Kuhn said he will offer j^gj^jative'leaders that it couldj amendments to: jo more harm than good by I • Permit counties, cities and creating overlapping! townships to declare a civil authorities. emergency only when a riot ^ similar bill was passed by “appears imminent" and not Ugislature last year, then when a riot is "threatened." vetoed by former Gov. • Require local officials to George W. Romney. Gov. contact the governor Im-William G. Milliken has not In-mediately upon declaring a civil dicated what he will do with the emergency. revl-sed version. • Provide protection for: a a * unsusf^cting persons passing; oie Senate yesterday, Kuhb tlmough an en^rg^ ponsored a bill to wipe out the when a curfew is in effect. jgi.200 state income tax ex- tt-HOlJR UMIT ’emplion for dependents and. The legislation still authorizes drop the 2.8 per cent Income tax' Student Unrest Spreads; Berkeley Erupts Again By the Associated Press | Jhere was no violence, but A new outbreak of violence protest leaders said their pro-and vandalism hit the Universl-|test would conUnue today with a tv of California in Berkeleylboycott of classes. Tuesday and the current waye| Elsewhere ther# were thesej student unrest spread to pre-]developments: dominantly Negro Howard Uhi-' Madison, Wls.—Black stu-j versity in’Washington. dents called for a ternporary Thirteen persons were arrest-1 halt In the class boycotts andj ed on the Berkeley campus afH‘>‘s«'“P“o"» er three stench bombs were set; turmoil on campus, off. I The Negroes urged whites to Bottles, rocks and dirt clods return to classes and win facul-were hurled at policemen dur- ty over to their cause but vowed Ing the latest incident on the they would continue their own campus where the Third World:boycott to back a list of 13 de-Liberatlon Front has been seck-jmands including creation of an Ing Improved educational oppor-i autonomous black studies de-tunities for minorities. I partment. At Howard, several hundred! Chapel Hill, N.C—Leaders of students occupied the law school; the Black Student Movement at building Tuesday morning, seek-1 the University of North Carolina ing a meeting with the faculty.said they would resort to “revo-to discuss demands. They left lutionary tactics" If their de-early today after a U.S. mar- maiuis of a black studies pro-shal read a temporary court in- gram and other concessions Junction ordering them out. not met by Friday. rate to 2 per cent. The measure has little chance oi passage. AIMS AT WRITE-INS Sen. James D, Gray, D-War-ren, Intri^uced legislation to abolish write-in candidates at all elections, unless a nominee • died before the voting or other circumstances resulted in his removal from the ballot. Other noteworthy bills introduced would: • Set up extradition ]WO- ceditres for persons charged wjth honsupport of d^mdents Within Michigan. • Allow married couples to waive future rights of estate in the event of the death M one partner. to roali noticos to prop-specifying ■ • Provide that a person ahali| not have mn than <»ie for action" fw damages libel, shuider or invasion ... privacy case over a singlej • Grant divorces even if both publication (W utterance. parties are guilty of omduct - Provide for the taxlformlnggroumi^for adivorce. m anau I assessor 10 mau noocn s cauM ^ , Ipalige in property asst lion ofl * * ★ N«w Maiy Wtor FALSE TEETH WHk Mara Camfort TO oTOreoma diMowtort whan danturaa alip. altda or looaan. luaa aprimaa a uttia rawMwni iSataa. VABliiwni holda d Bmiar. Twiiaat battar, iai oamfortebla. PMTOTB' —won't tour. iBalpa obaek htaltli. Baa your dantltt Nsulariv. 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See our-out-of-thls-world selection of spoce-sovers ... our "space people" ore very friendly (highly skilled decordtors, too) . .. the/ll help you with your space problems. dll wdii ora naaibAU/br ii OPEN AAONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY FROM 10 AJIi TO 9 PJIA. CONVENIENT TERMS TO SUIT YOUR |UDGET owne R U FR 1X1 ITU r=l 4107 T«l9grdph Rd. — Just South of Long Lake Rd» — Bio6mfi«ld Hill* — Ml 2-S822 23600 Michigan — jtui Etut ofTei^pt^pk Rd, - Doarbom - LO 5-3400 THE PONTIAC PRESS/ WEDNESDAY^ FEBRUARY 19, 1969 B—7 S, Carolina Senator 2 Are Favored] Sfafe House Ducks Controversial Items Asks Drive on Hunger for Bliss Post LANSING (UPI) — The over rules for acccv.^11 ng patients because of payment • Open up bear hunting ln| Michigan House yes ter day, Medicaid patients. In August, problems. the Lower Peninsula. ,, afternoon ducked controversial hundreds of , . ★ * * | • Require auto manufac- | I Quick Relief from Pile Irritofion WASHINGTON (AP) - A Ident of the plant In New York Southern ^senator yidio admits .to know the burdens" of,locaL once covering up a huriger prob- in South Carolina, he said, lein in fill state says the federal ®PP®r- government should put theiS‘‘‘!u7"“*' , try with worms—maybe fish, same effort into endmg malnu- but not industry.”, trition that it expended sending men to the moon. S^. Ernest F. Hollings, D-S.C., Tuesday told a Senate committee investigating malnutrition that just as the United States 10 years ago set out to conquer space, the government Now, he said, “We should be asbamed of this hunger. I know ................. lateto as a public official I am this problem.” But "l ment is the art of the feasible and, financially, it is impossible President Nixon, however, apparently intends to wait until returning frinn his European trip early in Mardi before naming a replacement for Ray piiss. 3d S as, TnaKa”; this prob- Uie elimination of, hunger and , * * * slum conditions in America.” l * * . * ' ' The federal government Last April, a group organized “”™“st cut through the bottle- by the Citizens’ Crusade Against •'®eks and coordinate so that Poverty reported that 16 of reaches the hungry rather South Carolina’s 46 counties ^1'®" giving them scientific stud-were “hunger counties” with se- ®s why we think they may rious nutrition problems. i*c hungry,” he said. “The fed- * * * era! red-tape worm should be Hollings admitted to the select ” committee on nutrition and hu-j * ★ * man rights that as governor Noting that 10 years ago the from 1959 to 1963, he and other [federal government set out to South Carolina officials deliber- conquer space and build a na-ately covered up the state’s tionwide highway system. Holi-problem in an effort to boost its ings said the end of hunger and industrial development. slums should be a new national “We didn’t want the vice pres-i priority for the next decade. ». !4 j • » ; uie Homes evicieu nuiiuieus or WASHING-TON (AP) - The items on its agenda m fevor of | because it claimed the ames of Maryland Congress-a^ brief b 111-introducUon did not pay operators 'w®®, •. . . ... enough to keep them. Following Left untouched was final ac- • • ■ - ■ - • tion bn a bill that would give government employes at legst names of Maryland Congressman Rogers C. B. Morton and sesssion. former football coach Charles (Bud) Wilkinson were prominent today in speculation over a new Republican nationaL chair- five 3-day weekend holidays a year. The measure, which would bring Michigan in line with a federal act outlining holidays, is expected to be the center of brisk debate today. Bliss, who served as national chairman for four years, told Nixm in a letter released by the White House Tuesday that he plans toTesign by mid-April and return to his insurance tosiness in Akron, Ohio. Morton aides said he remains in the dark about whether he will be offered the assignment. Morton himself declined comment. A Nixon associate who predicted shortly after the November election that Bliss was on his way out named Morton and Wilkinson, former IJniversity of Oklahoma football coach and now GOP national committeeman from that state, as frontrunners. that crisis, homes refused Feb. 1 to accept anymdre Medicaid A temporary settlement was,. turers to provide wastebaskets t, reached earlier this week withi , p^^sons over 65 aao « Buffalo druofliat craated t to relieve Itching and amart-I. It brought auch quick, cooing, aatrlngent relief thaf Ita ad acrosi the land making Ointment a favorite In thou- aanda of homea. Ask yi the governor’s office. Other bills Introduced would: Istate park fdmission. from the 33 fee required for Idi • ■ ★ ★ New bill offerings included Rep. William P. Hamton’s proposal to create a nursing home licensing board, with power to review licensing rules and act as a hearing body in disputes between nursing homes and the state. . Last year. Gov. George Romney vetoed Hampton’s WH after months of legislative wrangling and a Joint Senate-House conference committee «m the measure. BOARD NEEDED* Ham pton, R-Birmlngham, said: “We need this board. We’ve got to keep the lines of communication open between nursing homes and state offi- Nursing homes have battled with the state for the past year Power Tool Sale a. % HP Power Plane, Reg. 36.99 2.S.000 RPM entter plane* path 1%” wide. Two fenees: 9B* for square cuta, 95* for beveling b. V5-in. Reversible Drill Res. 34.99 Squeesetriglterlo increase speed and torque. Motor develops W HP at 600 RPM. 19.99, V Drill 15.99. r. 7-iii. 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W.inm*w 9 M SiM ScBrsI Downtown Pontiac • FE 5-4171 THE POXTIAC l^RKSS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 19^9 Ex-Leader of Canadaj Criticized in 2 Books ■ ' - ■ ^ , ,|;: OTTAWA (AP) — Uster B ed and disillusioned; the better,' Pearson is the target for harsh the more disillusioned.’’ | criticism in two recent *woilST THING’ I that have received wide atlen- ^ . | 11 IT,, „„„„ __ said the worst thing Pear- hev * hive hTen’^ shSJ S ^0" »as his failure to' eai‘ «hev ciiooesi ihni71 tell the countcv that hls minister cause they suggest that the 71- __ ^ _ ,, year-oW Nobel Peace Prise win- f ner was not much of a prime ‘ , u ik® t a®« a’ , . about attempted bribes to get a Judy LaMarsh, a member of the Pearson Cabinet, calls bim o" “®"- - i tofgMtuI >nd childUk." bid id. sists that she admired him any- Newman said that i Pearson achieved some of his| In his "The Distemper of Our objectives, ' the Pearson methodl Times,” Peter C. Newman de-was undignified, creating the] Bcribes Pearson as timid and'•hpresslon of a bumbling, in-j vacillating, fussv about personal competent administration mak-i matters, “a politician drifting >"« the worst of each bad situa-with the tide of event*,” New- lion. Pearson’s manner left the! man, Canada’* best-known pollt- residual impression of a prime; leal columnist, is the new editor minister who could h^f^rip! inchief of the Toronto Star. eveijts on the move and was Pearson stepped down lastfOnUnually sprinting toward; Aprt and is n' “’TMs washot a time for herow. Td-*tU uS inToH ' mlno4> aailt I’iti.Wi Intlro ttniilipa Sot know it. formi, t.l)py mu«i Kirat -a Koiantine roatinr rar I ho tab lilt N fnto th* bowPlN h»( ‘ p. Tbpn - .Jaynp'a m GOD’S LOVE-IN GIVES YOU HIS ONLY SON . . % rOUM«,pBI LfC LIKE THIS FOREVER... SAVINGS ACCOUNTS Sov* rwgularly for your now homo or for that trip you always wontpd to toko. 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Donald J.' Md^cleaf. Richard L. Salvaia, Waterford. Petri A^ Voting, Wdlidd Ldka. II Cadillac, TRAFFIC JAMNICRS SPECIAL WHILE QUANTITIES LAST! 4 Days Only — 39c Value SPECIAL CANDY PROMOTION Our Reg. 2.96 Chenille Bedspreads Cotton and rayon with throo fringod sidot Twin and doublo bod sizOB. White, colors. 1 89 LOUNGER PILLOWS Cotton-covwred poly foam. In Early American and floral prints. 4 Days Only — Women's Rog. 2,Bc Acetate Panties, 5-8 Contour for fino fit and comfort when strotching, bonding, sitting. Run-roiittont ocototO; whits, pottslt, high fashion colors. 4 Pays Onlyl 19; Our Rog. 3/4? Solid State / / 6-TRANS. RADIO Pockot size. Powtorfui 214" spookor, yth COSO and 9-V pattery. Buy Now and Savol 2’ 4 Day$ - Reg. 3.97 ADJUSTABLE IRONMG TABLE All matal with perfo rated top/ height / adjusts/ DOWNTOWN TEL-HURON /to ^ m . mii |^0ccrir DRAYTON ROCHESTER BLOOMFIELD PONTIAC CENTER AT All DTOteS PlJkZA MIRACLE MILE ,7. !:V- I THE PONTIAC PRESb. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1969 B—11 Portugal Students Taking Wait-and-See Attitude on Premier USBON (UPI) ~ Riot police carrying machine guns marched into Lisbon University campus not long ago to qu^ student protest meetings on orders from Portugal’s interior minister. Half an hour later they marched out on orders from the prime minister, and the studoits exulted. That is one example of the way newly appointed Premier MarceUo Caetano has built up a fund of good will and respect with Portuguese students. Ck>imbra are demandh^ a free imiversity, free academic elec-more teachers, more conference rooms and better accommodation. Students at the Higher Technical Institute went further than most by passing a resolution for the defense of their interests. On that baisis, Portugal has stayed on the quiet side of that thin line that separates studoit protest from student rioting. To be sure, students in Portugal have some of the same grievances that have flared out of control elsewhere from neigtdxnring Spain to Berkeley and T(*yo. But they have been impress^ with the careful attention Caetano is giving them and are inclined tO'wait and see how his programs work out. FORMER TEACHER Caetano, a former teacher himself, took office last Sept. 27 to fill the vacuum left by ailing ex-PremiCT Antonio Salazar, who then lay in a coma from the effects of a brain hemorrhage. Salazar ruled the nation with an iron hand for decades up to that point. Students say that the fact they are waiting to see what happens to Caetano’s programs does not mean 'they are giving up their claims or that they are dropping their campaign to achieve them. Caetano took some heat off the situation recently by ai nouncing in a nationwid television broadcast that the biggest increase in the 1969 budget would be for education: The appropriation is 3 6 30 million escudos ($127 million) an increase of 700 million escudos ($24.5 million). As former professor of law and a former rector/of Lisbon University, Caetano, 62, knows a good deal more than the average statesman or politician about the wakings of the education system. y flexibilitV Since taking office, he has used this to background his flexibility in public affairs in general and student questions specifically. With a possible student strike mally after the holidays. A gen- looming, the government took action to for^tall it by closing the institute on Dec. 8, 10 days before the Christmas holiday. Police entered the building and seized the files of the Students Association. The institute reopen^ nor- eral meeting of students then called for cancellation of the government inquiry into the activities of the association and in the university organization. PROTEST MEETING The closing of the institute touched off a protest meeting at Lisbon ' University where students petitioned the ministry of Education and decided to carry on a campaign to enlighten public opinion. But they did not d e m 0 n s t r a t e outside the campus. Caetano’s sympathy for the students was evideilt Dec. 9 the police in, but the premie^ when riot police, with helmets and machine guns, appeared on the Lisbon University campus. They were withdrawn half an hour later. Informed sources said that the Ministry of the Interior sent got them out. Students booed as the police left. This was an unprecedented victory for them. Under the previous Salazar regime, they were treated with a strong hand. 1962 when Caetano was rector of the University, police invaded the campus to curb a student demonstration. Caetano, who had not been informed of the move, resigned.) Remembering this, Portugese students are willing to wait and see what the government actually does. Nationally Advertised Brands 4 Doys Only—Our Regular 68e Junbo Terry Both Towbls Thirsty cotton terry in decorator solid colors and multi stripes on white. 22x44". Porti^ese students in Lisbon and in the old University 30 Casualties of Viet Mtion Ate Identified WASUlNGTClN (AP) - The Pentagon ha/ identified 30 servicemen killM in action in Vietnam. The Ij^t includes eight men from ^ Midwest killed in action. [ in action: lAtNOIS—Pfc. Ronald E. Boyar, Lanai .1. Gary E. Raynolds, Clinton. yiNOIANA—Spac. 4 Charlaa K. Larkina, mdlanapolla. / MICHIGAN—Smc. 4 William D. Gc Gbuoar zloraki, m1nNE»TA — Pfc. Staven R. Bauer, (t. Paul. OHIO^t. John L. Wahr, Oxford. WISCONSIN—Spac. 4 Michael W. Schu-mwher, Janeavllle. Died of wounds: MARINE CORPS . MICHIGAN-Pfc. Mtehaal M. Davidson, Bay City. OHIO-PIc. Darla W. NIckals, Chllo. Changed from missing to dead —hostile: ARMY , ILLINOIS — Pfc. Laonard A. Moraa, - Spac. . INDIANA -Deputy. MICHIGAN - -K—. .— - -------,■ RockwoSd Missing in action: ARMY Spec. 4 Kennath C. Hess. Changed from missing to dead -nonhosUle: ARMY OHIO-WO Gao/gd E. Hayward, Mantor. School Bond Vote Sought CADILLAC (AP) - The Cad-intemei - • ’ iliac supeiintement of schools, Stewart Olmstead, said Tuesday only state approv^ is needed place a tf-S^nillion bond issue for school remodeling on the ballot. ■k -k k ■ Re said it is hoped the issue could be placed on the ballots to be cast in the April 8 school; millage election. 4 Days OnIjA-Our Reg. 97c Bdl. Connon® Terty Kitchen Towels Turquoia, red or yellow checkerboard pattern. Cottod terry. 15x30". 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Window Shades *•9.1J9 Four^gauge white vinyl shades', rollers. 36^0. ^i4nio^[nlM»es Lnbek On Tape Reg. 2 J8 237 Embosses on adhesive-back colored vinyl tape. Bk” Boll Ponl Pen Bwgoii Pock t2h 96* With plastic clip tops. Made by Waterman. Brush Rollers Reg. 74i 6curlers,2-3/ 4x2>?tol4 curlers, 2-l/2xll/l6" H«^CMted Bridge Decks S-43f ipays —IReg, 27t es, lo attractive patterai. Hershey Gkinr Bor Specials R.9.39* 28i. Almond, Milk Chocolate,,Mr. Goodbar, etc 20-0rXhocelal( CoYored Cherries Red- 97* 00® OU. H0t Ult. Cordial cherries in light, dark chocolate; *net wt. 4 BIG DAYS . . . while QUANTITIES LAST . . . WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY PI{ans call for remodeUfig ati Cadillac High School, two junior high schools and also various other education buildings. I PONTIAC MALL ^NTur "cENT^ At All KRESGE Stores DRAYTON ROCHESTER BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE Jt. ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1969 Coming of Age—^3 Apartment Lease Important Contract to Young Adult Ify Sn>NBY MARIfOLIVS ,Mmt? If jnwr subtenant does not Othw than buying a car, W the rent, will you still be rifling a leue for an apart- Uable? ment may well be yur most Impratant contractual transac- • On what day is the rent tion as a young adult. due each month, and do you A lea«f Is an agreement by have any days of g ra c e which an owner of property — Oie landlord — allows you to “possess” it in return for a stipulated amount of rent, and, on tiie basis of specified con-; _ you to be late a number of days if necessary)? • Any redecorating or new equipment which the landlord agrees to provide If you r«it the place should be listed in writing and made part of the lease. Verbal -promises are hard to prove. charges, sueh legal expenses or hi: preparing the prei rerental? If you default ( obligations under the lease, are you liable for any additional a Does the lease renewal at your fftr ^ce at the / end of the term, and if so, at what rental? Are you required to put a deposit as security; for example, a month’s rent? Take note of, in the finm you will be asked to sign, what potential may be listed for withholding your deposit. with Pernniulon ot Iht Mjemlljjn Company from "Tht Now Adult Guido to 1940 by SIdnoy by >»Nowipaoof Aoiiclotlon) (NEXT: Personal Finances.) SMIftWU.TER Dclieiouo Souoaio Carry Out* —- a8X-9iI 1 PONTIAC MALL MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE It Is these “cimditions” which; you need to understand, andj periiaps negotiate, even though, the lease fwih may be a stan-; dull one devised by the local real estate board. Most standard leases are needlessly long and complicated, legal authorities themselves admit. Standard leases also tend to protect the landlord mwe than the tenant,; to put It mildly. aUl. you needi to read thrwgh the lease thoughtfully before you sign it in order to know what you will be obligated tw. EASY TO AMEND Leases can be amended by agreement too — especially if changes are reasonable and the laixUord Is anxious to rent -simply by crossing out or adding new material. Both you and tiw landlord Initial each change. If you have any doubts about the responsibilities placed on you by the lease, it is worth having a lawyer read it. In muit states a lease can be made widly if It Is for no longer than one year. But authorities advise that a written lease Is safer, to avoid disputes and misunderstandings. Ymi should settle beforehand these points-in particular: a Any restriction on occupancy other than by yourself and your immediate family you may want to make. • Any restriction on alterations you may want to make, and an understanding regarding which kind of improvements or fixtures you add become the; property of the landlord when, you move. For example, are, built-in bookcases or additional electrical fixtures to become the property of the landlord? • What your responsibilities; are, and those of the landlord, for any needed repairs and. in general, for keeping the pro-; perty and fixtures in good condition, For example, who is responsible for painting and for making ordinary repairs like fixing the plumbing? • Are you allowed to assign the lease or sublet if you want-to move or will be away tern-1 porarily? Will you need the' luidlord’s consent? Must it be in writing? What are the conditions for obtaining such con-| i Army Provided! Key Navy Ship! PEARL HARBQR (UPIl An awkward-appekring Navy vessel is hard at work keeping vital landing ship areas clear in Vietnam. But In addition to its unusual appearance the side-caster dredge Sandcaster came into being in a manner not normally used by the Navy. It was designed- by and built under supervision of the Army It was the first such construction Job performed by the Army for the Na\7, according to officials of the Naval Facilities Engineering Com mand of the Pacific. The 104-foot vessel has a 3(V foot beam and draws only 4 5 feet of water, allowing it to operate in shallow inlets. NEW CONCEPT Side-casting is • < paratively new concept o f dredging. The Sandcaster has long drag arms reaching frcnn eitho' side. The dredged material 1 s sucked through these arms into a centrifugal pump and then . discharged tluough a boom that can be rotated 180 degrees around the bow to either side The Sandcaster is being qierated by a civilian crew of 11. The Navy called upon the Army’s Corps of EIngineers for help in buildup the Sandcaster berauae of the Army experience with this type of dredge on the Coast and out of New OrleiSDB. WRIGLEY . '/mvf, Sti iMiimfimR jmmtii ••• #4lii ttw piwcliMa •! lO-lk W| U4. N*. 1 Mkk POTATOES THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, EEBRUAB^Y 19, 1969 B—13 Pleasure Cruise Is Mainstay of Ship Passenger Operations By ROBERT HAWORTH AP BnsioeM Writer new YORK - Going to Europe? Why not fiflfe a ship? 'Not enough time,” .. saU Marsha Mack, an employe of American Telephone & Telegra^ Co. in New York, took a pane because I wanted get there in a hurry. 'I wanted- to see as much of Europe as 1 could during my three weeks vacation.” Therein lies the predicament of today’s passenger shipping lines. Because of the time element. Miss Mack and millions of other overseas travelers each year have turned to tl)e airlines for their transpiration needs^ * ★ ★ Does this mean tha passenger ships are on their way out? Not by a long shot, say sources in the industry. But the emphasis has changed from providing point-to-point transportation to round-trip vacation cruises with the ships becoming floating r e S o r hotels. "The airlines provide the bulk of overseas transportation today,” said Ken Gautier, vice president of United States Lbes. “The mainstay of ship passei^er operations is the pleasure cruises.” NUMBER DWINDLES In 1957, the year before the big jet airliners arrived passenger ships carried over a million persons between the United States and Europe. Ten years later the number had dwindled to fewer than 400,000 a year. Transatlantic air travel surpassed sea travel for the first time in 1957, and by 1967 the airlines were carring six times as many passengers as the shipping lines. While the use of ships for transportation has been declimng, the number passengers taking ocean cruises for recreation and relaxation has been steadily increasing. The Transatlantic Passenger Steamship Conference said its member lines carried 29,000 pleasurecruise passengers during the 1957-58 cruising season. In 1968 member lines carried 246,000 cruise passengers. ★ ★ ★ The most famous casualties of the new emphasis on pleasure cruises were the 81,000-ton Queen Mary and the 84,000-ton Queen Elizabeth of Britain’s Cunard Lines. Unable to adjust to the cruise business because of high operating costs, the queens were retired to become h ote'1-convention-muSeum centers, the Mary at Long Beach, Calif., and the Elizabeth at Port Everglades, Fla. Cunard built only one ship t( 'Budget Climb Likely Even if War Ends‘ ANN ARBOR (UPI) - A University of Michigan economist said today federal spending would most likely increase even if the Vietnam war ended. “If a reduction in ^military activity in that faraway place can in fact "be managed, it would not lead to a fast, large reduction in expenditures," Prof. J. Philip Wemette said in an analysis written for a bank. ★ ★ ★ “For one thing, some of the military pipelines have been depleted, and the Pentagon naturally would like to have these supplies rebuilt,” he said, “For another, if national defense expenditures, in fact were decreased, immediate demands for inefeased federal expenditures on nondefense objectives would be heard. “Despite the policy of fiscal restraint that can be expected, some of these demands* undoubtedly would be a( commodated. w ★ ★ “It would, therefore, b unreasonable to expect decline in f e d s' r a 1 ej pendltures,” Wemette said. “ 5 per cent increase seems more likely.” replace the two queens, the smaller Queen Elizabeth II. The K,000-ton liner will sppnd two-thirds of her time on luxury cruises and will serve transatlantic trade only during the summer months. OPTIMISTIC The only Amerlcan-flag ship left „ In the transatlantic service is the SS United States of the United States Unes. The liner now operates pleasure cruises six mmths out of the year and has only 17 transatlanUc round-trip voyages scheduled for I9f8. Despite the contraction of the American-flag passenger fleet in recent years, Warren Titus of American President Lines in Francisco is optimistic about the future for U.S. shipowners. ★ , Titus, who heads American Preident’s Passenger Service, Inc., noted that subsidized U.S. shipping lines had been unable to take good advantage of the upsilhge in the cruise business until last year. Prior to 1961, U.S. shipping lines subsidized by the government had to operate over designated trade routes. Congress pa cruise bill in 1961 authorizing these lines to operate outside their regular trade routes three mhnths out of the year. Last year the bill was revised to permit off-route cruises eight months a year. American President Lines, which once operated year-round scheduled routes to the Orient, set up Passenger Services, Inc^ seven months ago to exploit the cruise trade. ‘We no longer are just in the transportation business,” Titus said. “We market our ships as a resort facility. We have competitive product when you compare the cost of a cruise with the cost of a vacation at landlocked resort.” He estimated the rninimum cost of a cruise on one of the line’s three passenger ships — the Prssidents Rooisevelt, Wilson and Cleveland — at $30 a day. ★ ★ w “We have around $16 millitht" in advance bookings so far this year, an increase of 29 per cent over last year at this time,” Titus said. H«w in FiH SiyiMif 2375 Orchard Lake Read, Sylvan Lake t040 Cqeley Lake Read, Unien Lake 45 S. Telegraph and Huren, Pentlac 1495 N. Main, Rockesler WRIGLEY ^ . [JmJj , Sfty Ethel L. ti Cleudin* fi Sherle A. ! Irene E. fi Mary Ad. f Faye M. fi Marilyn J. Christine f Lama I. ' Divorces om George D. Hallett. I MIcAael Lleberman. \. from George R. Bell, n Robert DIckman. Robert AAtLInInck. tm John P. MIckel. om Jamei H. Haute, am Alvit R. Johnson. Tom Richard W. Smith, am Mark O. LaForge. rom Harvey W. Edson. ■om Jack AA. Grieve, from Harold R. Tardiff. rom Edwin Barnes, om Patrick C. Stinson. Ichoyvor. Ivory M. Joyce e. Cheryl J. Clara from from Jarrtes E. Mobley, from Jack B. Ullery. from Duarte C. Baker. - ‘Hafold Lindsey. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1», 196» Trans-Pacific Plane Routes Still Up in Air WASHWGIW (UPI) - the trans^Padflc elrlfne route case is burning to read like a bestselling novel. It llhvolves politics, diplomacy and four U.S. presidMts. ' There have been reports of high-pressure lobbying and cronyism hi the competition for new and expanded sir roi|tes acnws the Pacific, which couM mean a multimillion-dollar jackpot for the winners. For ordinary air travelers, the case may seem to be only a confused chapter in government-business maneuvering. But in fact the public hds an Important stake In the final outcome. More competitors on long-haul Pacific routes could eventually bring lower air fares ECONOMIC BOOM Combined with Jumbo Jets and supersonic airliners, cheaper fares could touch off an economic boom in the Pacific that would baiefit the American economy. The outcmne of the case Is ev«i more Important to *thei airlines involved. To some, the^ revenuM from a new or ex-, panded route may be the last| chance to stave off merger with' a biggar competitor. To others, an award represents a chance for needed new income in a period when airline profits are down and costs up. What happens next Is up to President Nixon. But the past is the key to Uie controversy. Simply put. the airlines want' to link up major American cities with points in the Pacific. | President Elsarthower started the tangle when he refused to! approve the original Civil Aeronautics Board ( C A B ) j awards made In the transpacific case. NEW DECISION The case dragged through the Kennedy administration while the board reviewed the entire proceeding, finally coming up with a new decision which it referred It to President Johnson. Last Dec. 17. Johnson selected Continental. Northwest, Braniff. Pan American, Trans World, and Flying Tiger for cross-' Pacific route,s worth a n estimated ISO million a year. But Johnson turned down the board’s recommendation that American airlines be given a route to Japan, attributing his decision to foreign policy considerations. The controversv look a new turn when Nixon recalled the entire case for review | RUMORS UNFURLED Just days before Nixon’s ac-| tlon. Sen. Boberl P. Griffin. R-Mich,. brought to public attention rumors that former Johnson aides who now work for airlines, influenced the decision. Griffin pointed out newsnaner stories reporting that Walter Jenkins and Cliff Carter, two former special assistants to Johnson, now work for Braniff He said Continental was! r^nresented bv a law firm in^ which Clark Clifford. Johnson’s defense secretarv, is a partner, | Others pointed out, however, j that American lost out even, though C. R. Smith, its onetime | president, was commercei secretary under Johnson As: soon as Nixon recalled the case, there were rumors that his, derision was Influenced by lobbyists for the l(»lng airlines. | The President himself made one thing plain last week —; there is tremendous pressure oni the White House from all sides ! NO COMMUNICA'nON In a memo sent to the airlines and key members of Congress.; Nixon said he "will not receive! communications from any source on the subject of the transrPacific case’’ His decision, he said, would be based o n recommendations from the Stale and Defense departments and his nation security advisers But no matter what Nixon, does do, the record shows that he will make more enemies^ than friends in the airline business. ! Marriage Licenses J WhMiw, Hlshl»n , Telegraph & Square Lake Roads Open every nite til 9 Miracle Mile Shopping Center OPEN SUNDAY *12 to 6 \ OTHER STORES IN DETROIT • ANN ARBOR • FLINT • JACKSON e FORT HURON • TOLEDO t ' f > />, THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARy 19, 1989 .4 c—i Fancy Pancakes Will By JANBT ODELL Food Editor, The Pontlae PreM Pancakes have long been associated with the beginning of Lent. In the Middle Ages, ‘English housewives were forbidden to use meat, milk and eggs during the 40 4ays preceding Easter. So they us^d up all their suM>lies fo one grand pancake spree the day before Ash Wednesday. With the lessening of dietary mtrictims during Lent, this practice hu diminished. But this week is still a good one in which to feature pancakes. for a leisurely Sunday morning brunch. TANGY STRAWBERRY ROLL UPS Filling: 2 cups sliced fresh strawberries 2 teaspoons sugar Topping: ^ 114 cups dairy sour cream \k cup sweetened condensed CORNMEAL PANCAKE ROLL-UPS French Fry Onion Rings Inside or outside any hearty sandwich, batter-dipped French-fried onion rings make natural companions. To prepare, mix an “eggy” batter from a favorite pancake recipe or mix, or combine the following: 1 cup sifted flour, 1 egg, % cup milk and 14 teaspoon salt. Peel and slice 2 medium-sized onions, separate the rings and gently towel diy to remove excess moisture. This will allow the batter to stick more readily. Pancakes taka their rightful place in any meal of the day. Perfect for breakfast, they are Just as welcome as a lunch treat or dessert at dinner. Consider some of the USE OIL Fill an electric fry pan about one-third full with a vegetable cooking oil and heat to 375 degress. Heat fry basket in the oil, keeping the onion rings in the batter. When the temperature light on the thermostat blinks off, raise the basket and cover the bottom with one layer (uncrowded) of dipped onion rings. Lower the basket into the fat. If the onions bubble t-they probably will as they have a high water content — alterimtely lift and lower the fry basket until the bubbling subsides. Fry about thre minutes, turning if necessary, until the rings are a golden brown and are cdoke ' tltoroughly. Remove the onion rings and drain on several layers of absorbent toweling. Keep in warm oven until the remaining rings are cooked. To make a tempting, healthful surprise for school children, stuff pitted prunes with chunky peanut butter. Pack them in tiny paper cups. recipes as a good way to vary your menus. Last summer, at the Mrs. America Pageant, Quaker Oats Company sponsored a pancake contait. The first prize went to Mrs. John E. Cole Jr. (Mrs. Cs^fpmia) for her Tangy Strawberry Roll-ups. Try them 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1 cup pancake and waffle mix One 3% oz. pkg. lemon pudding and pie filling 1 cup milk 2 eggs 2 teaspoons melted or liquid shmitenlng Whole fresh strawberries Fch' filling, place sliced In small bowl; smooth. For each pancake, pour about V« cup batter onto hot, lightly greased griddle to make pancakes. Turn pancakes when tops are covered with bubbles and edges look cooked. Turn only once Place filling across “center of each pancake; roll up. Spoon topping over roll-ups; to eaeh\ roll-up with astrawberry Makes 4 servings. NOTE: If fresh strawberries are not available, substitute sliced frozen strawberries, thawed and eliminate sugar from filling recipe. Another rolled pahcake, th time a cornmeal version, heartier. qn:inkla with sugar. For topping, combine sour cream, condensed milk and lemon juice in small, bowl. For pancakes, place pancake mix, pudding and pie filling, milk, eggs and shortening in medium-sized bowl Beat with rotary beater until fairly CORNMEAL PANCAKE ROLLr UPS ciap sifted all-purpose flour tesispoons double-acting baking powder cup yellow cornmeal 2V4 cups milk egg, well beaten V4 Cup shortening, melted 16 brown *n serve sausages, browned. Applesauce, warmed. Maple-blended syrup, warmed. 1ft flour with baking powder and salt. Mix in cornmeal Combine milk, egg, and shortening; add gradually to the flour mixture, stirring only until smooth: TANGY STRAWBERRY ROLL-UPS New Italian Dressing Fine in Potato Salad An adventurous family can travel the world via their salad bowl. The vast array of bottled dressings so readily available provide the perfect passport for a salad safari anywhere around the globe. Right now is a good time to take a trip to colorful Italy for a hot potato salad inspired by the new on-the-market 19M Italian dressing. This salad innovation blends sliced cooked potatoes with chopped green onion, green pepper and sliced radishes. It’s perfect for main dish service when ringed with a string of Italian sausages. For a salad safari to Spain, the flavor passport is mildly spiced French dressing with a hint of garlic. The bottled dressing is used as a marinade to create Gazpacho Salad, t blend of tomatoes, cucumbers, celery, grem pepper and onion. It’s a perfect prepare-ahead salad for a dinner with Spanish adventure. The secret of the salad’s Italian flavor accent is in the dressing — a mixture of golden oil, two kinds of vinegar, garlic and bits of red pepper. For flavor balance between mildness and bite, there’s a of lemon and selected salad herbs. ,!" V“. HOT POTATO SALAD ITALIENNE-Take a trip to Italy for some salad inspiration. The passport for good flavor is Italian Dressing. For a hearty salad, Italiano, it is heated with onion and green pepper, then tossed with potatoes, bacon and radishes. Add a border of Italian sausage to make it a meal HOT POTATO SALAD ITAUENNE 2 tablespoons sliced green onion 2 tablespoons chq>ped green pepper ¥« cup Italian dressing 4 cups sliced cooked potatoes 4 slices crisply-cocdc^ bacon, crumbled % cup sliced radishes Cook onion and green pe{q>er in dressing until tender. Add potatoes, bacon and radishes toss lightly. Heat, stirring occasionally. Serve with Italian sausage or frankfurters, i desired. 6 to 6 servings. GAZPACHO SALAD 2 cups peeled, choppe tomatoes % cup scored, sliced cucumbers ' % cup sliced celery V4 cup chopped green pepper 2 tablespoons chopped onion % cup French dressing Lettuce cups Marinate tomatoes cucumbers, celery, green pep-jper and onion in dressing for several hours; drain, reserving marinade. Serve salad in lettuce cups with reserved marinade. 3 to 4 servings. The homemaker in a hurry who likes to serve food with a flair can sit back and relax there’s a new, full-color booklet on the market, “Time For Seafood,’’ that is brimming with quick, easy, and nourishing main dishes. Easter Flounder, i citingly different recipe from the booklet, is a savory choice that fills the bill with please-the-family and easy-on-the-cook versatility. Tasty fish fillets are broiled under a blanket of grated onion and tomato pieces flaky. Funnel Helps You Keep a small funnel in the kitchen and use it to break eggs in. This makes egg separation much easier, for tlw yolk remains in the funnel while the white goes into the dish below. ' i'' ' DUTCH PANCAKE WITH FRUIT Fish Fillets Are Broiled With Tomatoes, Cheese 1 cup shredded Swiss cheese Thaw frozen fillets. Place fillets in a single layer on well-greased bake and serve platter, 16 x 10 Inches. Sprinkle fillets with miion, salt, and pepper. Cover fillets with tomatoes. Pour butter over tomatoes. Thrij they are topped v^ith cheese, for added goodness, and popped under ttie broiler again just long enough to mrit the cheese. FASTER FLOUNDER 2 pounds skinless flounder fillets or other firii fillets, fresh or frozen 2 tablespoons grated onion 114 teaspomis salt 2 large tomatoes, cut into H teaspoon pepper small pieces V4 cup butter or margarine, melted Broil about 4 Inches from source of. heat for 10 to minutes or until fillets flake when tested with a fork. Remove from heat and sprinkle with cheese. Broil 2 to minutes longer or until cheese melts. Makes 6 servings. ' ■ V “Time For Seafood published by the United St* Department of the Interior’ Bureau of Commerci Fisheries, is filled with mouth-watering recipes f o today’s busy homemaker. Send 45c to the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. 20402. Ask for Fishery Market Development Series No. 12 (catalog No. 149.49-2:12). It makes cooking with imagination so easy to do Shrimply Delicious GULF KIST SHRIMP So convenient because they’re CLEANED! BACK STRirS RCMOVED. READY-TO-SERVE Keep chilled and handy in your refrigerator always. For salads. Appetizers. Cocktails. Use V4 cup batter for each pahcake. Brown on hot griddle until bubbly on top. Turn to ‘ rown other side. Roll each pancake around a hot brown ‘n serve sausage. Serve with applesauce and syrup. Makes abwt 16 roll-ups. In Europe, one large pancake filled with fruit, is served for dessert. Bake it while you’re eating the main counie. DUTCH PANCAKE WITH FROZEN FRUIT Vt cup all-purpose flour V4 Teaspoon salt (4 Cup milk 2 tablespoons melted butter or margarine Confectioners’ sugar 1 package (12 ouiices) frozen sliced peaches, thawed and drained I package (10 ounces) frozen halved strawberries, thawed and drained 1 package^l6''bunces) frozen whipped topphg, thawed Brown sugar, cinnamon or nutmeg * Beat eggs until blended. Add flour, salt and milk; beat until smooth. Stir in melted butter. (If not baked immediately, cover and refrigerate). Pour batter into a well-buttered 10-inch pie plate or a shallow skillet with a detachable or ovenproof handle that measures 10 inches across the top. Bake in preheated hot oven (450 degrees) for 20 minutes on bottom shelf of oven. Prick pancake with a fork; reduce heat to moderate degrees) and bake 10 minutes. Sprinkle with confectioners’ sugar and fill with drained fruit. To serve, cut into wedges. Pass whipped topping and a shaker of brown sugar, cinnamon or nutmeg, separately. Makes 6 servings. RED , .KIDNE)^ BEAN) ''‘'ATER, onion, salt, spice and SAVE10« ( on one 1 pound can \ or two 8 oz. cans J Van Camp’s New Orleans Style Kidney Beans are made from a recipe created by an old New Orleans family. Cboice red kidney beans in a piquant sauce bring you the dislmctively delicious flavor of authentic “Old Wi^d” cooking! Se^e them alone, or in nourishing salads that i^ffl3ke,br as the main ingredient of many bean dishes. THIS COUPON Worth 104 when you buy one 1 lb. can or two 8 oz. cans of Van Camp’s New Orleans Style Kidney Beans ________lit ef Vin Ctiiip’t Ww Orl.liM St*K MAIL THIS eOUNN TOi Stoktly-ViB Ctmp, Inc., P.0.163, Clinton, 2->• 89^ JONES DAIRY FARM Link Sausaga - 89< Center Cut Pork Cfiops T*»toafor7KACcM.«rf,.:r W.S. 'CHoia*. mciAL cut Tender Bib Steak (1/^ iledoreA Big Sovingc! KRAFT FRESH DELICIOUS ^ Poach Slicos lb.jar4p Jr KRAFT NATURAL sliced g QZ. ^ Swiss Choose ^0. midget COLBY STYLE JEL^bC Longhorn Choose 09 ' FARM MAID AMERICAN OR PIMENTO goZ. Choose Slicos KRAFT NATURAL SLICED * jg Ob# Mouarolla Choose md. 39' Chocolate Milk Mf OALCTN. g Big tUadiingtoitBargaiiisi VLASIC BARREL CURED Tasty Saarkroat 44< CHUB 14 OZ. WT. PKG. 12 OZ., WT. PKG. 14 OZ. WT. PKG. OLD FASHION H OALCTN. Farm Maid Buttermilk 39' INTRODUCTORY OFFER SAVE 10<- u OZ. VANILLA CUSTARD OR CHOCOLATEi yyr. PKG. Jb Ob* Quaker MMd Puddln* 29* Liver Sausaye MR, PITTS GRADE 1 Skinless Franks TIGER TOWN CENTER SLICED Boiled Ham MR. PITTS, GRADE I REGULAR OR THICK SLICED Largo Bologna INTRODUCTORY OFFER SAVE 10^ ALL MEAT SKINLESS GRADE 1 i tB. ^ ObC Bose Franks 09 ECKRICH HONEY OR PRESSED SLICED LvnchoSn Loa¥OS / , MR. PITTS BRAUNSCHWEIGER STYLE FRESH OR SMOKED 4P 9P 4P Big Bhtliiiag 6it>cery Bugs 1 TASTE O SEA FROZEN COMPLETE g OZ. SO Ma Porch Dinner SLIM JIM FROZEN 59« S5< Shoestring PotatoosPK|/ PKG.Q PKG. 4 Liver Sausage 6P 4P SKY VALLEY FROZEN Onion Rings SINGLETON FROZEN * Shrimp Creole FRESHFROZEN 140Z. Jp —A Mrse Paul Fishsticks pi^. OO' MRS. PAUL FROZEN FishFllloffs CAPETOWN FROZEN Lobster Tails FRESH FROZEN CLEANED Pan Ready Smelt 14 OZ. WT. PKG. PKG. 65« $3** g:33^ KRAFT SPECIAL L Soft Pgrkayj PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., FEB. 22 Margarine . BusKfil onfl CftsePi'ices at Fai-mei-Jack's OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY I SAM ^ 9PM MOSTSTORES OPENSUNDAY 10AM - 5PM FARMER JACK'S i . Basket anxl Cose Pfices at Foj'incj'Jack's FONTIAC mall IjHOPPING CENTER • GLBNWOOD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER • MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Q 'OIXIE HWY. AT WILLIAMS LAKE RqAD • NORTH PERRY AT ARLEN r- THE PONTIAC? PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1969 University-Reform Vote Pits French Regime, Student Left park (AP) - A quarter-mile cMTidor runs through Nan-terre University’s literattire building like a turnpike tumiel. Its wslls are a delirium of piUnt smears and slogans, a political art show gone mad, a 400-yard Jackson Pollock action painUng splashed by dozens of different hands. When vacations come or the backed the rioting and demands for reforms. It will idiow what percentage of Frances’s students are willing to accept government proipises of reform on good faith—and how many are committed to combatting anything that is less than complete student control. Hie latter is the position of the revolutionaries at Nanterre, the Union, nods gravely when Udd the threat story, but aaysi "Even If it were so. It Is nothing compared to the constant repression that the forces of order direct toward us.” workers. There will be rations and strikes, moving from one city to another, but without aomeOiing Important developinfl ■ don’t I school is closed, government|Paris University branch in thei painters head into the buildingidLsmal western suburbs, and slop a coat of gray over thej * / * "l^g Live Maos" and the Jacqueline Marson, a girl who "Down With De Gaulles.” Then, said she waved a tricolor last within weeks, the slogans andlM,iy wli«i everyone else was the daubings are replaced. ^shaking red and black flags, spoke despairingly of getting These days, the walls at ^lan-terre shout "Non,” the answer of the student far left, the be-yond-Communlst left, to the university reform elections now taking place ihroughout France for student-faculty governing committees. These new committees will decide, in principle at least, on curriculum, scholarships and some budgetary questions. They fill In the details of the very broad university reform law that leflksts consider insufficient because, among other things, students have no say on the choice of professors or their teaching methods. HOW MUCH SUPPORT? The voting will measure how much fore# the government or the left wing can muster from the vast student middle ground that slid leR last spring and out the vote for the moderates. In a country where President Charles de Gaulle has scorned oolitics as a base pursuit, she said many students share the same idea and won’t participate In the election because they believe all sides are dishonest. If a student does not vote, he automatically backs the wall-poster left, which urges a boycott of the election. So far, with about M pei' cent of the total vote in, some M p«r cent of the students took |mrt In the schools where' voting was scheduled. The government started the polling In traditionally epnservative facplUes, such a<^ law and medicine, so ^ results are not regarded n a pattern. fidgety young man who wears a very bourgeois gold signet ring, Benard is spending much of his time figuring out what his organization will do if the elections are lost and the left’s prestige bruised. ATTITUDE CHANGES We’ll have to change some of our attitudes, some of our positions In that case,” he said-But the question that is more otten asked is whether a defeat (he university, another May can occur.” This is a pragmaUc aqhiysls by the leR and not one that makes them happy. Rebel student leaders leam^ from the occupation and vandalism in the Sorbonne rector’s office Jan. 23 pnd recent battles at Nanterre that they had alienated the average Frenchman. This was the same man who thought for RED THREATS Tf you participatP, the Cocos (Reds) threaten you," Miss Marson said. "I tried to hand out some leaflets at the Sorbonne. A guy told me that if I were a boy, he’d smash my face.” In his yellow-painted office, its floor deep in dust, cigarette butts and pistachio nut shells, Jean-Daniel Benard of France’s _______ student organization, the left-wing National Students for the left could mean new riots Benard, without indicating if he thinks they are desirable, said he believed no big explosion like that of last spring could come soon. "The climate,” he said, “Is moving relatively toward confrontation with the forces of order. But I don’t think situation is developing like that of last May. I don’t believe it could explode ^all at once, without the support of the at least ■ while last j l^etv really was • good reason iffdr all the shouting about university rvform. OOCUPAtfON IS OUT To (ht extent thst any leadership group can control bxtremiats who lump Nikita Khrushchev and Calvin Cotdidge in the aame “enemy of the working class,” baMcet, the left has decided for the time being to drop classroom occupations. Authoritative sources reported that this decision, accompanied by one to take student railway stations, meeting halls, etc. , came at a joint meeting of commlttfeek revoluttonary action comi from the Swbonne, Nanterre and Vincennes, another suburban branch of the University of Parb. 'to the public at A friend of the left students, Bernard Herszberg, secretary general of the National Upton of Teachers of Higher Education, a group that occupied a Sorbonne leimn’e hall last week, said: “The flux has changed b one week. The student activists said to themaclves ‘We have to get away from the kind of action which the public doesn’t understand.’ The Mudent movement had split off from the population. The studenb had no more relation to the average Frenchman.' But now the students will show more interest in organtzati