Th9 Weather
THE PONTIAC PRESS
★ ★ ★ ^	• ‘ POB^AC, Michigan! jtfpaV. fkbruary 14. imo -4o pages '
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Rabbi Opated On Second Time
VIEW SITE PLAN - Dr. Alan M. Potts (left) and Dr. Stuart F. Harkness view the site pjan for the projected Michigan College of (Osteopathic Medicine (MCOM). Dr. Potts is president of th(j MCOM Board of Trustees,
while Dr. Harkness is assistant dean of clinical sciences. An estimated 300 attended an open house Saturday at the College Development Center on the 164-acre site at Auburn and Opdyke.
At Milford Proving Grounds
GM Plans to Add Facilities
LBJ Asks Funds for 3 Efforts
WASHINGTON (A?) -^fesi-dent Johnson made a threepronged request to <>ongreaa today for urgent action to pro^ vid^ 655,881,000 for a rent subsidy program for the poor. Teacher Corps and expansion of. the Selective Service System.
Johnson said the first two are ‘vital to our efforts to improve
Condition Still Very Critical Say Doctors
Accused Assailant in Southfield Shooting Remains Unimproved
RABBI MORRIS ADLER
the quality of life in America”] and the third is “a direct effort
of our commitment to freedom in Southeast Asia.
The funds the President requested will provide extra money for the present fiscal year ending June 38, $30 million for the rent supplement program, $13.2 million for the Teacher Corpi and $12,«1,M0 for handling the added load on the Selective Service System. Hie rent subsi(b' progj*am was approved bf the last congressional session but not the funds to finance it.
It is aimed at overcoming some of the shwtages in decent, ^low-cost housing in cities, i SUBSIDIZE RENT *
54 Vietnamese
Mines Set Off Near Guarded Rice Area
DETROIT — Doctors at Detroit’s Sinai Hospital today operated a second time on Rabbi Morris Adler, shot in the head Saturday by a young member of his congregation. | The hospital said it was a decision “of the team of attending doctors and consultants to reoperate on Rabbi Morris Adler to inspect the site of the injury for the possible relief of ac-i cumulated pressure.”
“His condition remains very critical,” the statement ende<L The team is headed by Dr. Harvey Gass, Sinai chief of neurosurgery.
The 59-year-old/ipiritual leader of 6,000 Detrolt-area Jews was
MISS OU — Kathleen Longeway, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Longeway of 2076 Kennoway, Beverly Hills, wears the new Miss Oakland University crown. She was crowned Saturday at midnight. Kathleen will represent OU in the Miss Michigan Contest to be held in June at Muskegon. (See additional photo, page 2.)
j Private enterprise would build harvest. I and . manage such housing and
General Motors Corp. an- The company said its planned dally in critical situations and jK*®''?™”'*”^ subsidiM
nounced plans today to build additional car-testing facilities at its ‘Milford Proving Ground in Miitmil Township.
The DOW facilities*will be added in tfae< center of the' complex of buildings on the 4,on-acre test area.
Plans lor the testing lacW-ties were announced in the midrt of a controversy over how safe U.S.-bnUt autos really are.;
CMt of the building pro^am, described as a two-year effort designed to expand GM’s safety flffhrts, was not disclosed.
testing area would be unique in the industry, permitting, testing of autos at all speeds and making possible better evaluation of
contrOUabiUty of vehicles, eape4indiatry.”
unfavorable weather.
The new program, Roche said, “will maintain GM vehicle safety testing facilities as second to none In the automotive
SAIGON, South Viet Nam iJB-The Viet Cong mined three buses today, killing 54 Vietnamese civilians and wounding 18 in retaliation'for an allied operation ithat is guarding a huge rice|”pe“ra'ted on Saturday shortly after he was gunned down during services at his synagogue. His accused assailant, Rich-
Area Beauty New Miss OU
AskdOMillion
forAutoSafejy
Bill May Be LBJ Drive on Highway Dangers
Planned facilities included a; safety test engineering building, a tire - testing laboratoi^ and an added paved test area on which maneuvering, handling and emergency situation tests can be performed, the company said.
WASHINGTON (AP)-Author-^ization for $10 million which ^ would be spent to study auto s and highway safety is Included y in a draft of a bill the Washing-Iton Post says may become the S A PERCENTER	| President’s attac|f on the auto-
JorawM, Roche, president ofproblem.
Jorow M. Roche, president of the,auto industry giant, said the 88,000 - square - foot building would .become the coordinating center for all GM vehicle, driver andhighway safety efforts.
Pressure has mounted on the 'hnto industry this year from critics, including some in .Congress and the federal executive branch, who contend American-fnade autos should feature added safety equipment. .
GM last, week announced plans to make collapsible steering' columns and dual braking
A Post article today by Morton Mintz reported that the bill also authorizes $20 million for the year ending in June 1968 to help states establish highway safety programs.
'The $10 million would expand federal “highway safety research and development activi-to include all aspects of highway safety systems research and develofment relating to vehicle, highway and driver characteristics accident
systems standard equipment on 1967 models.
investigations, communications, emergency medical care, transportation of the injured, and any other elements of the high-
' In Today's Press
Goldwater Urges determination, not ‘groveling’ peace bid, in Viet - PAGE C-3.	,
Space Program U. S; project to soft-land spacecraft on moon snarled - PAGE A-3.
Cash on Ham Americans holdingji ready currency r M.
Area News y..		A-4
Astrology		C4
Bridge 			C4
CrMswiM Puzzle	. D-11
Oonllc|/	C4
EditoriAli 			A4
MwWi 			C-7
WitnarlM 			C-2
/porta 		D-1-D4
' Theators ........		C4
TV-Radio Programs D-11	
$$ils6n. Earl		D-11
Women’ Pages	B-1-B4

A Pontiac man was killed and two other area m^i critically injured in-separate traffic accidents in the Pontiac area over the weekend.
Roger A. Madou, 28, of 900 S. Bast Bbgl. was dead on arrival at William Beaumont Hospital last night after the car he wa$ driving struck a tree in Bloomfield Township.
Ihe accident
his passenger, John T. Neylou, 24, of 1813 Beech, Troy, were traveling west on 14 Mile Road (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2)
m safety problem.” ■rhe Post
...„ Post said the 20-page f draft, stamped “for official use ij only,” does not request author-ity for mandatory automobile Safety standards or specifically for the construction dt, prototype safety cars. But both could be accomplished /under the proposed lejdstatfon.
Snow Flurries, Colder Trend Forecast for Area
Partial clearing and colder toidght with possible snow flurries is the weather forecast for Pontiac and vicinity.
’The low this evening will be from 12 to 20 degrees, while tomorrow’s high will range from 25 to 30 with partly sunny skies.
Winds north to northwest at five to IS miles will become variable tonight and shill south to southwest Tuesday.
Mostly cloudy, windy and colder with show flurries is the outlook tor Wednesday.
Downtown Pontiac’s lon«a» 11 temperature reading preceding 8 a.m. was 23. The mercury was pushing 32 degrees at 2 p.m.
Driver Killed, Two Hurt in Area Wrecks
Oakland Highway Toll in ’66
16
occurred at 14 Mile Road and B e a consnejd, opposite thp' trance to the B i r rhlngham Country Club.
Madou and
It would, the President said, make np the difference between the rent for modestly designed dwellings and 2S per cent ef the eccnpaat’s taeone.
The President said the housing and urban development department already has received proposals to build nearly 70,000 housing units under the
These involve 424 grojttts In --------------------- f*tol
43 states, the Districtid bia and Puerto Rico.'' GUIDELINES The responsible federal Alfi-cials, Johnson said, have^Oet up these guidelines; / , Income limits -/^ family must have an to^e level below the limits^tabHsbed for those in public housing pro] ects in the/iarioiis conununi-
Allied ground forces reported killing ISO Viet Cong in scattered clashes elsewhere in South Viel Nam in the past 24 houpO, while U.S. pldnes hammered Communisit targets in Nprth and South Viet Nam. / Guerrillas attad^ a government outpost in the Mekong River/^elta, at Diah Mon, aqd /MHed or captured all 11 decoders.
The >^ath-dhaling Viet Cong mi&e^were set off on a road 10
n^s southwest of Tuy Hoa, on the ce........................
limits — These, he e well wlthfti boijndarlqs blic Tiousii
Changes in income — All tenants receiving rent subsidies, except the elMrly, 'must'reoar-tify their incomes annually. Supplements Will hie changed or eliminated oti the basis of changes ip the incomes.
modest design and cost will be required: No swimnning pbob, no more than one bathroom.
rWishnetsky, 23, remained
i'
central coast where the U.S. 101st Airborne, South Korean mariqes and South Vietnamese troops havA been roaming the countryside for several weeks while the rice was being harvested.
An American spokesman said the first blast was toudied off about 7:30'a.m., catching a busn load of farmers and kuling 27 and wounding 11.
About an hour and a half later, the spokesman said, a three-wheel vehicle used as a bus and jammed with passengers drove along the same stretch of road and touched off a second mine. Another 20 Vietnamese were killed and seven wounded.
An hour and a half later a
Housing quality — Housing of second three-wheel bus drove
ionto the scene and set off third mine. This time seven persons were reported killed.
the critical list at nearby Providence Hospital where he was taken with a self-inflicted bullet wound.
Crowned Miss Oakland University during Saturday’s Snow Ball festivities was Kathleen Longeway, a sophomore commuter student.
Sponsored in the contest by the Newman Club, Kathleen dazzled judges with her dramatic presentation of Joan of Arc’s solilo-
At Shaarey Zedek synagogue in suburban Southfield, scene of the tragedy Saturday, the 1,000 children of the congregation prayed for the recovery of Rabbi Adler.
And, said Leonard Antel, the school administrator at the synagogue, many words of sympathy were said for Wishnetsky, brilliant honors student and recent psychiatric patient, who shot the rabbi, then himself, during a Sabbath service.
IN MOST CHURCHES A spokesman for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit said there were prayers W most Catholic churches yesterday for the recovery of Rabbi Adler and his assailant.
Some 12$ persons of the Catholic, Congregatlonalist and Methodist faiths were among the approximately 106 who watched helplessly Saturday as Wishnetsky shot down the rabbi, then turned the 3^ caliber pistol on himself.
The ChrisUans had been invited to Saturday’s ecumenical service at the synagogue.
One bullet smashed into the left side of the rabbi’s bead, shattering part of the skull and sending splinters tearing into the brain.
quy from George Bernard Shaw’s, “St. Joan.”
“You know,” confided the 19-year-old beauty, “I never saw myself as Miss OU.
'I was so pleased and excited to be a j/nalist, I just
“When my name was called out as Uie winner, I couldn’t think, I didn’t have time.”
Dramatics have always beqp favorite hobby of Kathleen’s. A 1964 graduate of Wylie Groves High School, Birmingham, she was active in “Dramaticus,” ‘ school's drama club, serving one year as its president.
INITIAL INTEREST “Groves’ teachers Katy Bigge and Georgeann Jordan were sponsible for developing my initial interest in drama,” said Kathleen.
“And Tom Aston, OU’s drama director, helped me a great deal in polishing St. Joan’s speech,” she added.
Kathleen was awarded an Olivet College dramatic scholarship the summer she graduated from high school.
OOBy-4)ODEY^A sUppln’ and a siidip’ fbod tintoMrw
h^ by an ia,Oaklaod Unlvfcrsity’a,tug-^-mud b^jSa^ >
afternoon. Warm weather forced offiqUla of the t
Winter Carnival to replace the skiing events with the tug-of-mud rally..
never even thought I’d be chosen.
Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Longeway of 20706 Kennoway, Beverly Hills, were on hand to see their daughter crowned by the university’s first Miss OU, Sharon Snyder of 6765 Woodbank, Bloomfield Township. SCOOP NECKLINE Kathleen’s gown of silk organza, featured a pale, pink floor length skirt and a fitted bodice of white with pale pink beading framing the scoop neckline.
An elementary school major, Kathleen hopes to teach the third or fourth grade.
GELSTON V. POOLE
Death Claims Firm Chairman
Directed Company Over Lengthy Period
Gelston V. Poole, chairman of the board of the F. J. Poole Co., died yesterday. He was 69.
Poole of 4306 South Shore, Waterford Township, was born in Pontiac and, for many years, headed the 1 u m b e r and hardware ffrm founded in 1895 by his father, Fred J. Poole.
A graduate of Pontiac High School and Ferris Institute, Poole also attended Michigan Agricultural College, now Michigan State University.
He was a member of the Pontiac Exchange Club, past president of the YMCA board of directors and a member of 1, -k *	-	I Masonic Lodge No. 21, F&AM.
School was the most fun forj	a's® served as a mem-
me at that age.” said Kathleen, b«r of the Clinton Valley Coun-And 1 think it will be fun as a|cil, Boy Scouts of America.
teacher too.”
[SERVICE SET Service will be Thursday at
Waterford Wife Evens Things Up
11 a.m. at Central MethodlsT Church with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery by Don-elson-John6 Funeral Home.
Surviving are his wife, Marie; two sons, Frederick J. and Rich-....	„„	iard C., both of Pontiac; a sis-
A little over 20 months ago. u„
Aprl 29. 1964, the wife of Rich-lp^ntj^^..	grandchildren.
^	F'riends may make a contri-
origlnal birthday present: Rich-,bution to the Central Methodist ard L. France II.	I Church Building Fund.
Saturday, Feb. 12. Patricia^ France, 20, celebrated her own
birthday with the birth of the couple’s second ton, Douglas.
France, 19, and his wife live at 1229 Muskingum, Waterford Township.
Tokyo Is Crackling Dry
TOKYO (AP) - Tokyo is crackling dry after 41 days with neither rain nor snow. It is the Japanese capital’s longest dry spell in 85 years.

A—2
THE PONTIAC PltKSS. MOXUAY, FEBRUARY 14,,10W
Chaos Developing in Santo Domingo
Two Soviet Writers
Given Prison Terms
MOSCOW (AP)-Two Soviet writers were convicted today of anti-Soviet propaganda because of books they published abroad under pm names.
Andrei D. Sinyavsky was sentenced to seven years at hard labor, and Yuli iy|. Daniel was
Prosecutor Oleg Temushkin had recommended the seven and five-year sentences but in addition demanded that Sinyavsky serve five more years
CECILS. McCALLUM
City Municipal Judge in Race
Sjbmian exile and" Daniel three years.
Tass said Judge L. N. Smirnov sentenced both to what was called “a strict regime corrective labor canjp."
PENAL CODE
They were' sentenced in the Supreme Court at the Russian F^erai^n under an article ol the poMl cgfte that was originally written for use against inteinal opponents of Communist power. The article makes 00 mention of publication abroad.
The case has aroused protests from writers in the West and caused considerable concern in Russian intellectual circles. 'Hu^ghout t h e trial young people gathered outside the Courtroom in support of the defendants, although they were outnumbered by plainclothes policemen and Communist party youths.
Nominating petitions were filed today by one of Pontiac’s two municipal court judges.
Cecil McCalhim, 65, of Cherokee will be seeking his third six-year term on the local bench. He was first elected in 1954.
The terms of both judges expire fl|is year. The other inomheat, Manrke E. Finne-ffen, reportedly has taken out
not yet filed.
Five candidates must file nominating petitions before a primary vote will be necessary.
If a'pri°>vy becomes necessary, it win be held at the same time as the March 7-City Com-mission primary.
GENERAL ELECTION The general election is April 18.
McCaUnm received his law degree from the Detroit College of Law ia 1933. He graduated from Pontiac High school in 1920.
He is married and has two children.
sentenced to five years of ordinary labor, the Soviet news agency Tass reported.
The defendants were arrested Sept. 13 and their trial began last Thursday. The fweign press was barred, and received only reports from the Soviet
The prosecutor called them ‘slanderers and renegades."
Area Quieter,
People Angrier
Old Rebel Enclave Is Restored in Spirit
BIRMINGHAM - Among the items to be discussed at the City Commission meeting tonight will be the Birmingham-Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce request to hold a 1966 Village Fair in May.
^ARTFELT VALENTINE-Lotus Lake school pupils Wanda Norton (center), 10, of 6526 Cloverton and Donna, Wherritt, 10, of 6544 Cloverton, both of Waterford Township, present local Marine recruiter M/Sgt. Kirk Wolford of 48611 DeQuindre, Avon Township, with |70 for CARE at a special ceremony at
PtnllK Pr#«» Phot*
the school this morning. Pupils in the upper three grades at the Waterford Township elementary school collected funds to aid South Vietnamese refugees, using money they normally would have used to buy valentines for classmates.
Candace III Again as Convict Testifies
By ROBERT BERRELLEZ SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) — The disquiet and smell of disaster, ,so familiar at the height df last April’s Dominican revolution, pervades the heart of Santo Domingo.
Streets get dirtier and emptier, people seem angrier, shuttered homes even more hostile and quivers of apprehension increase as one drives from the western part of the city toward the downtown dbctor.
Plumes of dirty gray snioke give off an acrid smell as-they rise from burning rhounds of garbage uncollected for weeks. Many people are in black — some mourning lost ones, others the occupation of the city by foreign troops.
Gunfire crackles sporadically here and there in the old part of town laid out 470 years ago. Amid the carnival of disorder and hate, authority seems an anachronism.	i
Area Wrecks Kill 1, Hurt 2
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Candace Mossier became ill at her first-degree murder trial today while an Arkansas penitentiary convict was testifying that he received a bid in 1962 to kidnap nd kill her husband.
The trial of Mrs. Mossier and her nephew, Melvin Lane Powers, was recessed until later today.
solicited the kidnaping of Mrs. Grimsley denied this and Mossler’s husband and told when asked who Ananias was, him: ‘‘We don’t want him back,|said: “Well, I can’t tell you ex-we want him killed."	jactly.”
*	* it	j "He was the biggest liar of all
r	....
Grimsley testified that he has
(Continued From Page One) at a high rate of speed when the car left the road, accord-to Bloomfield Township police. Neyloii was listed in critical condition at the hospifal today.
In critical condition at Pontiac General Hospital is Richard A. Gracey, 26, of 2461 Georgeland, Waterford Township.
Gracey received multiple internal injuries when his motorcycle rammed into a bridge on Hatchery Road near Georgeland in the township Saturday nj|ht.
According to State Police, Gracey lost control of his motorcycle on a curve after ing a car.	'
The Weather
LANSING (AP)—Gov. George Romney today approved two federal antipoverty grants, for the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity and the National Legal Aid and Defender Association.
The Oakland Commission will receive 1107,983 for administrative expenses. Twelve persons will be employed to coordinate and administer county programs.

Full U.S. K^eather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - MotUy cloudy and colder today with a chance of snow flurries mainly near Lake MichigaB. High 28 to 34. Partial clearing and colder tonight with snow flurries near the Great Lakes. Low 12 to 20, slightly colder northern interior. Partly sunny with little temperatnre change Tuesday. High 25 to 30. North to north*-west winds 5 to 15 miles becoming variable tonight and south to southwest ‘Tuesday, Wednesday outlook: mostly cloudy, windy and colder with snow flurries.
A $32,381 to the association will be for aid to communities throughout the state which request technical assistance in formulating legal services programs under the Anti-Poverty
Act.
Lonmt temiwriturt preceding I e
HIgheit remRcretui'e Ldtuett temwalure Mean temperlture
(aWraearM HIgheit (enTperalure Lowest temperature
Weather: Fair.
Kansai City 35 30
I Rock M
43	31	Lot ________
35	IS	Miami Beach	..	..
43	33	Milwaukee	M)	30
31	16	New Orleani	64	47
Trav.	City	35	30	New Y
AIBuguerqua	34	13	Omaha
NATIONAL WEATHER - Snow will cover much of the eouDtry Intm the Rbcfcics across the northern jAalns and over tlw Qreal Lahm tonight It will change to rain south of tlie lakes to the aaatern Gulf Coaet Cojder tetpperahires are pre-dictod over the eestem third of the nation and the southern
It was the fourth time since the trial began a month ago that Mrs. Mossier had been stricken by nausea and migraine headache. She had returned to court only this morning after similar attack forced a recess of her trial last Friday.
Testifying at the time Mrs. Mossier became ill was Arthur I Grimsley, who said that Powers!
been convicted of eight crimes and arrested at least 50 times. He currently is serving a term for burglary and larceny.
times," Foreman declared in the face of a state objection.
ON TRIAL FOR SLAYING Powers is on trial with Mrs. Mossier for the slaying of mil-
Percy Foreman, Powers’ de-i|ionaire Jacques Mossier in fense attorney, suggested in 1964.
cross-examination that Grim- Billy Frank Mulvey, 35, serv-sley’s arrest record totaled ing a thievery sentence in the more than 200 entries. When the Texas State Penitentiary, was convict denied this, Foreman brought to court earlier in the asked:	jease. He testified that Mrs.
HOW MANY ‘TIMES?	Mossier gave him a $7,000 down
“Can you tell this jury how many times you have been arrested?”
“I really don’t know,’’ Grim-
payment in 1962 to kill her husband, but that he spent the money and never went through with the deal.
sley replied.
County Poverty Grant Okayed
Turning to Grimsley’s Bible' studies. Foreman asked the wit-	i i
ness if he had studied 0bout P/clC LGV/D 111 Ananias, a biblical liar.	'
When Grimsley replied that| he had. Foreman asked:
"Have you modeled your ministry after this individual?"
State Jaycees
Birmingham Area News
Commission to Discuss Request for Village Fair
with MacMafnis, John and Adams since 1939 following his graduation from the University of Michigan. He has been president since 1955.
Knowles B. Smith, executive director of the Chamber of Commerce, has requested that the fair be held May. 19-22 during the city’s observance of Michigan Week.
The fair was held last year during the same period.
Smith believes that several hnprovements can be made this year which would be mutually advantageous to the public, the participating community organizations, concessionaires, and the city administration.
The chamber proposes to submit a point-by-point communication to the City Commission covering the specifics of the fair soon as possible.
The Women’s Council of Holy Name Church has announced plans for the annual fashion show to be held Thursday and Friday.
The show will consist of two parties, the first to include a
RES’l*ORED IN SPIRIT
The old rebel enclave has been restored in spirit, if not in actual form. Mounting resistance to the country’s military leaders is finding its most eloquent expression in the 20-square block area where for four months last year rebel “constitutionalists" fought for survival of their ideals.
Although the old military checkpoints have disappeared, it is difficult and probably more dangerous to get into the central sector these days. Roving bands of teen-agers throw rocks at almost every passing vehicle.
luncheon and fashion show Thursday and the second, a dinner dance and fashion show on Friday.
Both parties will be held at the Oakland Hills Country Club and will feature Eddie Shick and his five-piece orchestra.
The event is held yearly to raise funds for the projects of the Women’s Council and this year will display spring clothes, furs and children’s clothing.
WILLIAM A. GARUNQ
Enters Race in District)^
Seeks Noi^ation in Commission Primary
A 40-ye^-old real estate sales manag^ filed petitions today for th^ District 1 nomination in thyMarch 7 City Commission tmary.
Snipers fire with apparently less concentration on specific targets and stray bullets are th^ norm, not the exception.
For this reason, traffic into Jones, 41, the center of town is at
BLOOMFIELD HILLS nest A. Jones, president rf Mac-Manus, John and Adaois, Inc. will be guest of hon^anid featured speaker at t^ Economic Club of Detroit jjmeheon next Monday.
William A. Garling of 502 Bloomfield is sales manager for the Marshall Realty Co. of Pontiac.
Tuesday Final Day for Filing Petitions
AP Pholo<*x
Tomorrow is the last day for candidates in the March 7 city primpry to file petitions lor their district nomi-natioa.
Nomiaatiag petitions must be filed with the city clerk. The clerk’s office wili be open until 5 p.m. tomorrow.
•OUTWITTED FBI’ - Col. Rudolph Abel, former Soviet spy, said yesterday in Moscow he was able to outwit FBI agents and destroy an important decoding device and other evidence during his 1957 arrest in New York, He was convicted of spying for Russia and exchanged for U2 pilot Francis Gary Powers in 1962.
5 Top Men
State Sen. Sander M. Levin of| Berkley, Denfocrat, was among the five outstanding young men of the year named by the Michigan Junior Chamber of Commerce at its convention in Saginaw during the weekend.
The others are Robert J.
Bradshaw, credit manager of the Flint Journal and: state chairman of the Jaycees;
Donald E.
Dodge, a clerical administrator and linotype operator in Algonac; Loren E. Gray, a Mount Pleasant attorney; and Wendell E. Smith, industrial engineer from Plymouth.
Levin, an attorney, represt the I5th Senatorial District Oakland County.
mum. Foreigners, particularly Americans and especially newsmen, are not welcome. However, the Americans are represented right in the middle of it all by a company of 82nd Airborne paratroopers.
"It gets pretty lonely in even at noon.” said Lt. Counts. 24, of Denver, Colo,
The Americans are undei |ders not to fire without sph ific orders.
LEVIN
f/oc Man fsks Exam on '^Assault Charge
Garling is making his second bid for public office. In 1958, he was an unsuccessful candidate for the City Commission.
A native of Pontiac, he graduated from Pontiac Senior High School in 1944. He served 30 months with the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II.
The angry mood dc^town is the result of-a wave disorders that began last WMnesday and has taken 17 live/ so far. The violence set off ^trike, mostly in government yotfices and the sugar industry Its chief purpose is to foixe two more military leaders^ obey a presidential order/transferring them abroad.
The ch^f target of the consti-tutionalijlts, Armed Forces Minister F/ancisco J. Rivera Cam-finally left the country last ^eek. To get him Pro/islonal President Hector feia-Godoy rescinded his or-transferring two of the three :fs of staff.
A 23-year-oId Pontiac m held for investigation of kidnaping was arraigned Saturday on a reduced charge of felonious assault.
Gary J. Rappuhn of 302 Clifford demanded examination at his arraignment before Waterford Township Justice Patrick K. Daly.
Daly set examination for Feb. 23 and ordered Rappuhn held on $10,000 bond.
Garling is a charter member of the Neapolitan Club and its immediate past president Ha was one of the organizers of the group now known as the Progressive Action Committee for Equality.
SERVED 3 TERMS Garling served thredi terms, 1952-55, as a member of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors. He served on the juvenile committee which established Camp Oakland,
He has three children.
Pontiac post State Police said Rappuhn forced a 48-year-old 0Toman off the road early Saturday, hit her on the head and drove around with her some 30 minutes before being apprehended.
He Is a member of the Pontiac Area Urban League, Gibral-ter Masonic Lodge and Trinity Baptist Church. He is athletic director of the church.
Garling said Pontiac must fight its inadequacies in housing, health facilities and communication between city government and the citizenry.
Named by Capitol newsmen 'the outgtanding freshnum/seD-ator,” Levin is chairman <n the Senate Labor Committee, vice chairman of the education committee and member of the judiciary and election committees.
Former President Juan | Bosch, the leader of the consti-1 tutlonalists, said the strikers | don’t want to destroy the mill-« tary because “wjthout armed f forces there can be no country.” | But he added that iRost Domin-1 leans “also know that there can | be no country if the military I does not respect civil author- f ity.’’
Customer Right? Machines Soy No

Some inhabitants of Pontiac’s hilltop City Hail are : grumbling, but not because of complaints from taxpayers.
The automatic vending machine haik taken over the favorite and only spot for a coffee break on the hill.
Nine vending machines and a can opener have re- !
placed two waitresses who formerly ran the small
employe cafeteria.	!
The results:
•	One day, coffee drinkers received hot water without ’ coffee.
•	Then the dollar changer returned only 95 cents.
•	A 65-cent chicken sandwich was sold by a machine for 50 cents.
No complaints, however, have been noted against the cigarette machine.
A SPECTATOR
'This device, which coexisted with th^ former human | help, has been a‘spectator to the switch from girl-type service to machine-type self-eervice.
He’s a mechanical veteran of the preautomatioB era.
He bean the employes whispering behind the backs of 1
his mechanical friers.
A sample of the comments?
^	• “T^ey (the machines) don’t lend money.
OU BEAUTIES ~ Finalists in Oakland University’s Miss OU contest in the order of their selection are (from left) Kathleen Longeway of 20706 Kennoway, Beverly Hills, Miss OU; June Lorimer of Northville, first runner-up; Kathleen Sullivan of Oak Park, second runner-up; Carol Hofler of
Alexandria, Va., third runner-up; and Suzanne Wibby of Berkley and Janis McLeod of SL Clair Shores, tied for fourth runner-up. The finalists wore revealed at Saturday night’s ■ SnowBaU.
•	“They don’t agree with you that you’re overworked."
•	“They don’t hand out aspirins.”
•	“They don’t smile."
But, secretly, the wise old cigarette machine smiles. He knows.
It will take lime. Acceptance comes hard In this busl-
Waitresses are softer.
■ I
THE PONTIAC PREJiS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY U. 19«fi
Surveyor Program Is Skeleton in NASA Closet
By HOWARD BENEDICT	^General Accounting Office began building the spacecraft. !dig up and analyze samples ofj The space agency said it' "nre officials said the mission
AP Aerospace Writer	|/;harged NASA and the rocket’s! This led to several major modi- jj,e terrain.	* , |Would not be possible to develop is extremely difficult and seven!
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. -builder, General Dynamics-As-lfications and program reorien-, |„	to |aU seven of thei spacecraft 4or identical shots with the simpler
>oi SArnnaiitin* anH tronautirs with Hiinfflinff whirh tations throUchout the “stormy I	♦ cevan mf* „! launching by the end of 1967 un-vehicle would enhance chances
le nrn-®	®	^	less all were the basic model, that at least one will succeed.' !
Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St.
The National Aeronautics pnd fronautics, with bungling which tations throughout the Space Administration generally delayed the program two years [4^4 year history” of the pro-
haS an excellent record launch- and cost the taxpayers an un-’gram as technical difficulties neering models.
ing spacecraft and making them necessary $100 million, work. But there’s a skeleton ii
the closet; the hapless Surveyor program whose goal is to soft-land an unmanned vehicle on the moon.
The recent gentle landing of the Soviet Union’s Luna 9 on the lunar surface focused attention on Surveyor — a program which a congressional subcommittee recently termed “one of the least orderly and most poorly executed of NASA’s projects.”
Additional problems cropped up, but a fully successful test flight last summer indicated the rocket was ready to boost a Sur-
were encountered.	i Officials said this was done in
—Major spacecraft problems order to concentrate the effortj . involved heat protection, vibra-	' ~
tions, the retro-rocket system, a radar device to sense altitude above the moon and small ver-
veyor.
was erected on a Cape Kennedy launch pad, slated to attempt
Another Atlas-Centaur engines designed to guide
in * developing ' a vehicle that' could be soft-landed on the moon, because lunar bearing | surface information must be obtained by the end of 1967 to support the Apollo manned lunar landing program. The data is essential for building suitable Apollo landing gear and to help select a touchdown spot.
the craft to a touchdown on the
----- p„u.
the feat last October. But Sur-| “The test program was “too veyor wasn’t ready, and the;®^®^''® ” "^his has been cor-booster was carted back% g rected and recent drop tests of hangar.	vehicle from an airplane
That’s when the Karth sub- ORIGINAL PLANS	WomenPast21
Originally the first four Sur WITH BLADDER IRRITATION
AfUr 11, common Kidney or Bl.dd.rlr-
Had Surveyor done what it committee went to work, start^ out to do, the first craft MANAGEMENT	jveyors were to be engineering
would have been on the moon in	blamed the troubles	carrying only television
^ cameras and basic instruments
1963 and the Soviet Union would;. report not have reaped the propaganda!®® management by NASA
value of achieving this historic |*’®®‘^‘l®®cters, neglect by feat first While a similar Ameri-1 NASA’s Jet Propulsion Labora-can attempt foundered.	which directs the program.
The first Surveyor now is evidence of disappointing scheduled to rocket toward the|P®*'^®™.®®ce by Hughes Air-moon in May, but chances of a craft Co., which makes thej successful soft landing on the
- initial attempt are not great. "^® subcommittee said the ' Project officials noted the com- Program as originally conceived plexity of the mission and the was overambitious considering fact the Russians failed qt least ‘b® limited knowledge of space four times before recording a ^*'ght in 1960. success.	★	*	*
Other conclusions of the re-
to test the bearing strength of the lunar surface. ’The last six were to be more mphisticated and would pack equipment to I c
rit.tlon. .liKt_______________, ..........
men .nd mny m.ke you Unit uid nervou. Irom top frequent, buroln. or Itching urinitlon both dny .nd nlghi Becond.r-lly, you m.y to.. ilMp .nd .uffer from ]le.d.ehei, B.ck.ehe. .nd fMlold, tired, depreued. In tuch Irrit.tlon. CY8TEX u.u.lly bring, fnat, rel.xing comfort by -------------------------ju itrong, odd
I YEARS BEHIND
port:
Not only is the program three -Perhaps direction of the
years behind schedule, its cost has spiraled out of this world. Originally conceived in 1960 as a ISO-million program for seven launchings, the price tag already has reached $350 million and is expected to surpass $725 million by the time the present-
All This Week at Simms
program should have been shifted from JPL to another NASA center. During the first three years of the program. JPL concentrated key manpower on the Ranger moon probes and Mariner shots to Venus and Mars and virtually turned Surveyor ly planned 10 launchings are over to Hughes. The number of completed. ^	JPL personnel on the program
To find out What went wrong, during this period ranged from the NASA oversight subcommit-20 to 100 After an extensive re- /!?!?!?! lee of the House Space Commit- view in 1964. JPL assigned 500 * lee recenlly conducled a probe. |o ihe project The group was headed by Rep'	a *	*
Joseph Karih, D-Minn.	l
h 1, i,	—At the beginning there was
Ti,« r«...i* Q Kii.iorinn qi;.liaison	between
The result was a blistering 35--.-e. uj	j
____w„n._____________NASA headquarters and,
Hughes. NASA later was 0is-l pleased with Hughes manage-
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page attack on both government and industry management, nutshell it said:
project as troublesome as Sur-.r"'
?eyor demands vigorous cen-jS"
tralized management and effec-	P«''“>»y
tlve control from the top. From	''^'®m®n<l»t'on.
—Not enough preliminary study was done before Hughes.
POWERFUL PtUlWBI OIARS
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all appearances, the.se impor tant elements have been largely missing right from the start.’’ APPEARS READY
The report said program management has been strengthened in recent months, most technical problems seem to be solved and the first Surveyor now appears ready for flight in May.
The Karth subcommittee dealt mainly with the spacecraft. But the program’s di(^i-culties aLso involved the launch vehicle, the Atlas-Centaur rocket.
In 1960 no U.S. rocket was powerful enough to send the 150-pound Surveyor to the moon.
So a new stage, the hydrogen-powered Centaur, was developed for u.se with the Atlas.
High-energy liquid hydrogen was an .untried rocket fuel and engineers had trouble tan\jng this frigid fluid which must be kept at 423 degrees below zero, even in flight.
A YEAR LATE The first test launching was more than a year late. Then the rocket expired high above Cape Kennedy and 18 months were required to redesign the vehicle.	I
During this period, congres-■ional and government agency investigations resulted in transfer of Atlas-Centaur m®nag^-||p^ ment from NASA’s Marshall! |}	1 II iW l 1 1 i i ! I
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A—4

THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY U, 1966
4 Are Killed on Freeways
Weekend Death Toll Across State Is 14
r
4-
By The Associated Press Two cars, in separate mishaps one day and 30 miles apart, sailed off Michigan freeways during the weekend, killing four persons and helping boost the state’s weekend traffic death count to 14.
The Associated Press tabulation began at 6 p.m. Friday I, and ..ended at midnight Sunday.!^ A young couple from Howell,!.A Mr. and'Mrs. James Stopa, both v 26, died Sunday when their auto!I flew off 1-94 near "Brighton and I* rolled over. Both victims were', thrown from the car.	I
That same day^ two Detroiters died in a hospital of Injuries suffered Saturday night in a|’^ similar smashup.
ON JOHN LODGE The victims, Thomas H. Harper, 44, and Thomas Jones, 15, were fatally injured when a car driven by Harper smashed into a utility pole beside the John Lodge Freeway in Detroit.
TO REMEMBER THEM BY - Surely each woman holds in her heart the memory of at least one valentine that is special. Mrs. Jack Tocco (at right), has two, while Mrs. Dora Wood (left) has more than 2,000. Mrs. Tocco, 5026 Carroll Lake, holds in her lap the large card given to her mother by her father,'Louis Naneville, 63 years ago today. The smaller one, given
Also killed:
John Driscoll, 17, Saginaw, when his car hit trees and a utility pole in Saginaw Sunday.
Robert Pawloski, 22, Harbor Beach, early Sunday when his car left a rural road near Port Austin in the Michigan thumb and rolled over six tiipes.
UnCA RESIDENT
John Schultz, 53, Utica, two-car crash in Macomb Township, near Mount Clemens, Saturday.
Robert Lee Yale, 25, Chicago, struck by car in Hermansville, Menominee County, Sunday.
Lesley Rogers, 40, Manchester, when his car left a road near Napoleon in Jackson County and struck a tree Saturday.
Walter Shafer, 77, Berrien Springs, struck by a car Saturday while crossing a street in Berrien Springs.
DETROIT MAN
Jack C. Baker, 59, Detroit, when his car struck a utility pole near a Detroit intersection Saturday.
Mrs. Ann Bousley, 40, Ann Arbor, two«ar, head-on crash on 1-94 near Ypsilanti Saturday.
John Albert Yeager Jr., 34, Whitehall, when his car left U.S. 31 and smashed into a tree in Montague Township, Muskegon County, Friday.
Clean R. Brant, 43, Detroit, when struck by a car while walking near a Bedford Township intersection Friday.
AVON TOWNSHIP - There is going to be"a traffic light at the intersection of Rochester and Tienken roads if Township Supervisor Cyril E. Miller has his way.
to an uncle when he was a boy. Is 60 years old. Mrs. Wood, a third grade teacher at Decker Elementary School in Walled Lake, has saved every valentine given her by pupils since she began her career in 1925. Her collection, which also includes cards .dating back to 1911. IS on display at the school. The valentines, she said, "were just too pretty to throw away.”
Firm Planning Fight^ Over Gravel Rights
I
i OAKLAND T 0 W N S H f P Awqod and Hixon to allow gravel Cooper Supply Co. of Detroit^ is mining.
lapparently going to carry jthrou^ with its threat to '‘io to court if necessary” to ob-
necessary’ tain gravel mining rights in jOakland Township.
I John Cannon, attorney for the {Texas Industries subsidiary, I said he plans to file a complaint in Oakland County Circuit Court this week against the township.
He said the Township Board’s recent decision not to rezone part of die township for gravel mining is depriving his viient of “the ri^t to use the property in the manner to which we feel it is best-suited.”
Avon Chief Still Seeking Crossing Light
'Annie Get Your Gun'
Avon Players Plan Gala 'First Night'
gala evening for opening night of their performance of “Annie Get Your Gun” on March 16.
AVON TOWNSHIP - The back to the restaurants for af-Avqb Players are planning a ter-theater dancing.
The Township Board was Informed by the State Highway Department last month t h a traffic conditions there do not warrant a light, but Miller feels they do.
He admits that a iight there now might create a bottleneck for motorists entering Rochester Road from Orion Road just a few yards north of Tienken. ’This problem can be eliminated, he feels, by relocating Orion further to the north.
Festivities will begin with cocktails, hors d’oeuvres and dinner at two local restaurants, followed by bus transportation to the Playhouse, an “afterglow” on the stage following the per-iformance.
Alt will be included in one ticket price, proceeds of which will go into the building fund of the new Rochester Unit of Crittenton General Hospital, now under construction on Walton Boulevard.
He will discuss his plan with representatives of the Highway Department and the Oakland Coimty Road Commission at a meeting scheduled for sometime this week.
He says a light is "definitely needed” at the corner, particularly when the Holley Computer and Parke-Davis plants are let-tin^ out.
TABLED REQUEST
The evening's entertainment is intended to honor all those
. ^	... individuals who hgve contribut- —.........._...,
and transportationlg^j	making the hospital arrangers.
' a rehlity.
ton General Hospital, Rochester Unit, P. 0. Box M, Rochester.
Listed amobg for turning down the request were that gravel mining wou|d be a detriment to neighboring property and wtald constltate spot zoning, that it would destroy the topography, of the area and adversely affect the natural drainage system, that townsh^ roads are not bnilt
Cooper Supply contended that there would be no truck traffic igh the township and that after 10 or 15 years the land would be completely restored.
’The zoning ordinance as it presently exists, he claims, is “arbitr^ and unreasonable as it applies t6 the property we want.”
He plans to enjoin the enforcement of the ordinance
5 Officials Unopposed in Wood Creek Farms
. . ^	- W(X)D CREEK FARMS-The
against Cooper Supply. He says five village officials whose two-
to car^r heavy gravel trucks and that the trucks would bo a hazard to children.
The board noted that it is Im-isslble to predict accurately what will take place that far in the future. ..
ANGERED BY REQUEST ■township residents, angered by the rezoning request, formed a group known as the Citizens for Oakland Township to fight the rezoning.
A spokesman for the group said last wlek that members of the organization felt the Township Board’s decision was a fair one.
The group had threatened ear-» lier to go to court if necessary to bar the gravel mining operation.
Township Supervisor Frank Voll said today that he had expected Cooper to tqke the mat-
It is “unreasonable restriction j yga,. tefnjg gjpjrg yg„ of the use of the property’ and ^ be unopposed in the March 14 “unconstituUonal because it de- Lpring elections. •
; fore the deadline Saturday were ter to court.
REQUEST DENIED	{incumbents Mrs. Alice BiUiu, He said the Township Board
’The Township Board last week clerk; Thomas Jennings, trea-jwill have to wait until the court denied a request from Cooper|Surer; Robert J. Swift, assessor:'makes a decision, “but If It goes Supply to rezone the northeast and Counciimen Philo D. Wright against us I am certain we will ’There is a limited supply of.sector of the township at In-and Alvin Albertsen.	appeal.”
tickets and those interested in attending are urged to order tickets now.
Dress is optional but formal evening will probably be pre-i dominant, according to party
Debate Slated\^‘^r'“
the original group of Rochester residents who first planned a
on 14B Reoeol	Rochester, as well
FARMINGTON - Repeal of Section 14B of the Taft-Hartley Act will be the subject of h debate to be held at 3:30 p.m, Wednesday at St. Francis Council Hall, 21900 Middle Belt.
as the staff, directors and executive committee of the hospital. CO-CHAIRMEN Co-chairmen of the evening
Speaking In favor of repeal will be Rev. Edward A. Keller, professor of economics at Notre Dame University. Father Keller is nationally known as an outspoken advocate of right-to work legislation. "
.... , .	..	..	The education department of'—	■—t,-- — B.—r-
M Its last meeting, the Town-1 the AFL-CIO will provide a employes from large industries .................................. ^.......
ship Board tabled a request for, speaker of equal stature to urge and other groups to sit together, except the March 20 2:30 p.m. a gas station at the corner of repeal of this controversial pro'	*	★	♦	matinee.
TloniTAn on/4 Rn/tViActAr	^	^
Daniel S.. Holefca and John J. Cochran.
Volunteer ticket chairmen will be busy in communities throughout the area providing tickets and coordinating tables for the dinner party.
Seating arrangements for dinner will provide for a maximum of eight persons to a table. This is to make it possible for neighborhood groups.
STAR IN SHOW Starring in “Annie Get Ydur Gun,” the Avon Players second production in their new Playhouse, will be television star Jerry Booth and Sherrie Elliott *j^f Royal Oak, recreating the role of “Annie,” which she previously played in a Berkley High School production.
The show, which will have a 10-day run, March 16-20 and 2^26, has a cast of about SO persons. A 10-plece orchestra will supply musk.
’The play is directed by Jarvis Ljimb. Producer is Mrs. Edward Ramsay; choreographer, Mrs. Earl Montross; and vocal direction is by Mrs. George
Curtain time is 8:30 p.m..
ROBERT 0. SAFFORD
150 Are Expected at Jaycee Banquet
CLARKSTON -Approximately 150 persons are expected at the Clarkston Area Jaycees fourth annual Bosses’ Night banquet Wednesday in the Community Activities Inc. Building, 5640 Williams Uke, Waterford Township.
Robert 0. Safford of Plymouth, vice president in marketing of the Alexander Hamilton Life Insurance Co. will be guest speaker.
Two men will be honored at the 7:30 p.m. fete with the naming of the community’s outstanding young man of 1965 and the boss of the year.
Commander Named for CAP Squadron
WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP William P. Welke of 7520 Pontiac Trail was recently promoted from education officer to commander of the Civil Air Patrol of the Walled Lake Squadron.
Welke, 43, has been affiliated wl^ the Civil Air Patrol for the put two years and has been flying for over 30 years.
Tienken and Rochester.
The request was approved by; the Oakland County Coordinating Committee but denied by the planning commission -and the zoning board.
Miller said the board wants to study the request.
Slate Special PTA Program
BRANDON TOWNSHIP - An unoccupied house at 4129 Poll burned to the ground yesterday despite the efforts of volunteer firemen from the towpship.
All local Avondale-PTA units will meet with the PTA Council for a special program at 8 p.m. Thursday at Avondale High School.
Guest speaker will be Dr. D.L. McKinney, principal of the Wayne County Youth Home and the D. J. Healy School.
Special recognition will also be given to teachers who have worked in the Avondale system.
Vacant House Hit by Fire in Brandon
Party arrangers who have not completed their plans may indicate their desire to sit with a specific group, or they may leave seating arrangements to the commute^
TICKET REFUNDS Refunds will be made tickets until March 1, after which time all reservations will be final.
The home, owned by Emil Di-rqitrie of Warren, was discovered iti flames about 5 p.m. by a neighbor, Hiram C. Minard of 4029 Poll.
Poll told>Oakland County sher-a neighbor, Hiram C. Minard of 4029 Poll.
Poll told Oakland County iff’s deputies the blaze was well started by the time he saw it and callcri the Township Fire Department.
Additional information on the ticket price or dinner reservations may Mt obtained by calling or writing the Critten-
Pdst Presidents to Talk to Proper School PTA
TROY — A meeting of residents interested in forming an historical society will be held at 8 p.m. Thursday at the city hall. •
The meeting is being ranged by the newly organized Historical Committee to give interested citizens an opportunity to help in recording the history of the city and to help make plans 'to preserve and mark historical sites.
LAKE ORIO^I - Past presidents of the Proper School PTA will speak at the Founder’s Day meeting at 8 this evening.
The “Little Theater” o ing of fourth, fifth and fixth graders wjll present a play for the members.
For National Contest
Boys' Club Names Finalist
Auburn Heights Boys’ Clublthe amount and quality of hlsi If he is tiamed national “Boy member Charles Devereaux has "“"vice to home,'school, church,Lf the Year,” he will receive, been selected as a finalist inl^onununity Boys’ Club. gjjjjtjon jh^ u qqq gcholar-
the Boys’ Clubs of America’s 20th annual “Boy of the Year” contest.
Sixteen-year-old Charles will compete with nominees chosen by 675 Boys’ Clubs throughout the country for $3,200 in scholarships awarded by the. Reader’s Digest Foundation.
He is now eligible to win either national, regional or sectional honors. ’The national “Boy of the Year” will receive $1,000 in scholarship aid; each of seven regional winners will receive $200; and each of eight sectional winners $100.
Charles was chosen to represent his club on the basis of
ship, a trip to Washington, D.C., and New York, where he wl!|l take part in newspaper, radio and television Interviews. niADmONAL UEREMONY
In recent years, it has become traditional for the President to "install” each new “Boy of the Year” in ceremonies at the White House.
Among other events, he will be guest of honor at the 60^ annual convention of the Boys’ Clubs of America to be held in New York in May.
History Group Plans Meeting
Morris Wattles, chairman of the Historical Committee, has asked that residents bring to the meeting any information they may have about the history of Troy.
Shotgun, $55 Cash Reported Stolen
ORION TOWNSHIP - Mrs. Norma Metz of 939 Hemingway reported to Oakland County sheriffs deputks yesterday the theft of $55 in cash and a $300 shotgun from her home.
Mrs. Metz said she left her home Saturday night and returned early yesterday to find the front door of ^ the house standing open.
The money was taken from a purse in the home and the shotgun from a room on the first floor.	;
CHARLES DEVEREAUX
Winners will be during National B<^s’ Gub Week, March 27 to April 2.
More than 10,000 Americans across the country are proba-| bly alive today because of a tiny device that has been implanted in their bodies, an electronic pacemaker which generates impulses that replace nature’s organic heart pacemaker.
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/■.

THE PONTIAC PRKSS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1966
A—5»
Hand of Mate Sent to Wife
Estranged Husband Is Found Near Death,
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPD - The package was soaked with blood. Inside was a human hand and a note that read; “This is the hand that caused the trouble."
Dr. Margaret Ansari stared at the package’s nisly contents yesterday and called police Who found her estranged husband, an Indian neurosurgeon at Barnes Hospital, near death or the bathroom floor of his home.
Tlie couple had been married tor five years but lor the past two months had been separated.
Police said Dr. Kjurshed Ansari, 30, apparently had used a hacksaw to cut off his right hand and had then sent his hand to his estranged wife, an American.
Hospital authorities said today Ansari remained in critical condition but was improving. WITH FRIEND Mrs. Ansari was staying with a friend.
Yesterday, a cabdriver knocked on the door and left a package, from which blood was trickling, with the friend, who opened the parcOl and gave it to Mrs. Ansari.
Police said they found four notes in Dr. Ansari’s home. They were addressed to the city coroner; to whom it may concern; Nazir Ansari, the doctor's brother: and William Cox, an associate of Ansari at Barnes Hospital.
Police did not reveal the contents of the notes.
Scout Will Get Eagle Award
Seventeen-year-old David L. Bone, son of Mr. and Mrs Howard Bone, 1634 Inverness, Sylvan Lake is to formally receive b 0 n i g h t his Eagle Scout award.
The youth, also a winner 0 f scouting’s God and Country Award, is presently assistant scoutmaster of Troop 9, First Methodist Church, Pontiac, where the ceremony will take place.
He is the first Scout from the troop to attain Eagle ranking since 1942.
BONE
PASSES INSPECnON-Mrs. Charlotte Korte, teacher-manager of the Skyroom Restaurant at Pontiac Municipal Airport, and food service students Charles Lang, 86 Riviera,
Waterford Township, and Sharon Lee Roberson, 1662 Waterford Township, signify all’s well on the cooking
Irwin,
front.
Student Trainees at Area Restaurant
Ex-Ambassador Dies i WASHINGTON (AP) - Orme Wilson, 81, a former ambassador and a member of the State Department from 1920 until 1946, died Sunday. Wilson was appointed ambassadoi^ to Haiti by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1944.
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Too Mony Cooks Don't Spoil the Broth
Extra help, although inexperi-' year program “are in high enced, has fortified operations demand,” noted Thorn, at the Skyropm Restaurant at They go direcOy Into hotels Pentnte Men,c,pal Airport.	'
*	*	. 'assistant managers and dining
The newcomers — lb students room supervisors, starting ( " from Waterford Township and ^i salaries ranging from $100
The students work in two I Soon cards will be placed on three-hour shifts at the restau-| tables so that customers can rant. 8 a m. to 11 a m. and n evaluate the operation, a.m. to 2 p.m.
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SALES—SERVICE Aatobaha Motors, lie.
1765 S. Taltfraph Rd. RenriK	I3I-4S93
-Waterford Kettering high I schools — began training lastj I week with the start of second semester classes.
Mostly juniors, they have their hearts set on culinary careers.
Upon completion of the two-year program, most can be expected to seek employment in local restaurants, according to Dr. Burton K. Thorn, director of vocational education of Waterford Township Schools.
★	4 fk
But some, he predicted, will further their education, enrolling in outstanding courses as offered by Oakland Community College and Michigan S4ate University.	I
MORE PROMISING
Employment in the restaurant! field is more promising than many believe.
Products of Detroit Chadsey High School’s model three-
$150 a week.
LEASED FROM AIRPORT
Leased by Waterford town-' -owned I
ship Schools from the city-oi airport, the restaurant is
Besides learning the fundamentals of cooking, they receive dining room training.	^ Waterford - Kettering
In fact, ^uch emphasis is High School.
Mrs. Charlotte Korte, a one-placed on me customer. Thel	4	★	★
time teacher at Chadsey, is restaurant is planning a work-1 Restaurant hours are 7;30 manager of the Skyroom and shop on “How to Put the Cus-a to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday also instructs students.	itomer First.”	through Friday, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Saturdays and 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sundays. ’The restaurant is closed Mondays.
Should Draft'
Says Selective Service Director
Griffin Opens Bid for Senate Nomination
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WASHINGTON (UPI) - Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of the Selective Service System, says “minor criminals” should be drafted as part of the push to satisfy Viet Nam manpower needs.
Hershey said yesterday local draft boards have been jRobert P. Griffin, claiming ordered to reexamine men rejected on a moral basis in con- support of at least half the junction with the over-all lowering of mental and physical [state Republican leadership, has^ standards for military service.	[opened his bid for the GOP Sen-'
According to Hershey, there have been incidents of “young men committing crimes to escape the draft. I feel the armed forces should take some of these minor criminals.”
I ate nomination.
Griffin, nine-year veteran in Congress: said he was confident he would get the GOP nomina-The downward revision of draft standards was made to Uon for the seat now held by facilitate induction of 360,000 men in the current fiscal year. Democrat Patrick V. McNama-and another 160,000 in fiscal 1966-67 which opens July 1, 1966. ra.
Defense. Department figures show that more thad 200,000 men have already been A^ed to the service in the buildup. AUTHORIZED STRENGTH
With the additional 150,000 or more to be called before 4uly 1, authorized troops strength in the fall wouidjbe 3,093J)00, 453,000 more than planned a year ago. > -T
In a related development, a House Education subcommittee scheduled Wednesday hearings on the Impact of drafting college students on the reservoir of trained professional manpower for civilian programs.
Hershey has said that college students In the lower ranks of their class would lose their deferments and be subject to the draft. This prompted the committee hearings.
AAA
Hershey also said yesterday he has had “several phone calls” on the subject of deferments or rejection of those who have been involved in minor crimes.
The 42iyear-old Traverse City attorney said he did not expect ride on the governor’s coattails’’ if nominated. However, he admitted it would be an advantage to be on the same tick-rith Gov. George Romney and Lt. Gov. William Milliken.
Uriffin spoke at a Lincoln Day dinner in Ionia Saturday night.
AAA
Griffin said he decided to run for the Senate, giving up a ,^afe congressional seat, becau.se of "a growing concern among the Ai;nerican people that the two-party system is too weak for the good of the country.”
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the^onti^c press
48 West Huron Street
HowAim H. rrricauLii n Executlv# Vice Prclldent • Buslnete Menecer
Pontiac, Michigan
MONDAY. FEBRUARY 14, 1966
HAROLD A FITZGERALD
It Seems to Me___
Legalized Lotteries Gaining Throughout United States
Las Vegas lives off gambling.
New Hampshire legalized lotteries. Many states approve horse racing and the easy taxes therefrom. Now New York State will probably make lotteries official and provide $400 million a y e a r for education. In Maryland, this will be a major issue in the gubernatorial race.
★ ik- ★
Objections to gambling are well-known. In a legalized lottery, those who don't believe don’t have to pay a cent. The whole cost rests on the partici-
pants and yet everyone shares in the money that accrues.
★ ★ ★
Some gambling attracts undesirable elements, but the lottery is largely bookkeeping. A New York legislator has had a national lottery bill ready, but it remains bottled up for fear of violent opposition. If the proceeds of a national lottery reduced the national debt, the move might claim a wide circle of adherents.
,It may become a red-hot Issue. What do YOU think?
Reaching a New Low.
One of the most despicable occupations in tma hysterical era is the theft of chUdi^’s pets for quick sale to laboratori^for scientific research. ,
It isn’t new or tiny\
It’s a big time deal. \	'
★ ★ ★
There are gangs that definitely earn .a hving through the theft of puppies and other dogs. The labs used 2,250,000 dogs and cals last year. “At least half are
family pets,” says Pageant Magazine, “and documented cruelty precedes sale to the yawnYng maws that await them.” A half-ton pickup truck in Missouri was jammed with 99 dogs, 19 of which were injured to the point they, were destroyed right there by Humane Society agents.
★ ★ ★
Some are sold as pets. '
But labs get the bulk.
And they’re stolen from children.
Cost of Public Interest? .
Professional athletics may have reached the zenith, of financial largesse.
★	★	★
NBC is through paying e>-horbitant fees for TV rights. Carl Lindermann, VP in charge of sports, declares thw’re h(M)ked with speciTic commitments but they’re l(M>king elsewhere for the future. The stupendous charges far outweigh public interest.
★	★	★
Some of the money paid untried college football players bordered on the realms of mild insanity. (O. K I take out the “mild.’’) The current
Lions flareup, stems back to the idiocy of a few pro moguls. Huarte, Notre Dame, was one of the bt^ys in the astronomical bonus division and he couldn’t even make the team.
★ ★ ★
If the National Football League ever gets bright enough Jo wave an olive branch in the direction of the American League and works out a mutual draft, the situation will return to normalcy. Olherwi.se, it will bankrupt some of the clubs or place them in the doldrums, .said-dled permanently with the , weakest squads in the two leagues and a future of dismal financial failure.
Speeding Talk....
Speed-talk Is the latest.
★ ★ ★
Any verbal announcement is fed into a machine that compresses each word into half the time and an electric device removes distortions. Then the listener will sit with jaws ajar as the same remarks are deliv-
ered twice as rapidly. This compressed voice is very commanding and demands attention.
' ★ ★ ★
Most of the people that tell me off, talk too rapidly and with too great assurance as it is.
Can this process be reversed?
And in Conclusion....
Jottings^ from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter:
Watch for this: LBJ wants the post offices open a trifle longer in
the evening . .......There’s a
chestnut street vendor in New York that has this waggish sign on his little wagon: "Eat now. Pay Now.”
......! . . . Overheard: “A recent
wedding In Rochester lasted three days. That’s longer than some of Tommy Manville’s marriages.” . . .
.........Chicago schools want a
$75 million bond issue. Just for buildings.
★ ★ T r u 8 t .e d Scouts ad-viHC me Linda Morse deserves mention as one of our attractive young ladies........
.... If the room temperature sinks to «7, why is.it
LINDA
th8 little woman thinks it w'ill
warm up fa.sler if she pushe.s
the thermostat to 88?.......... ,
... The other day we ran a list of TV programs that had been frowned upon for children. Several protests were phoned in but they rarely agreed on the .shows ,
that were “right.”.............
Overheard (in\Cuba): “There's nothing like a fine cigar after no dinner." •
★ ★ ★
The A. C. Nielsen TV standing.s only phone 1,100 homes for
their official ratings..............
Sporty looking automobiles are re- ■* celving increasing customer acceptance from the public. The “teenage” demand is reaching into the older brackets.............. . Over-
heard: “Substandard homes are
those without color TV.”............
. . . Dept., of Cheers and JeerS: the C’s—our own Bruno Kearns‘ sports arena; the J’s—thei Junk mall from the Harvard University Press which sent us sixteen , (16) (XVI) duplicate pleas to buy a certain some-thing-or-other.
—Harold A. Fitzgerald
. 'Coll The U.N.!' David Lawrence Says:
Viet War Could End Suddenly
\.
WASHINGTON - Nobody can predict just when the Viet Nam war will end, but It could hap-d e n suddenly.
An unexpected # brCak has often come in the past.
Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, one of the advisers on Viet Nam who accompa-i nied President I Johnson to Hon- LAWRENCE olulu, makes this very point in a copyrighted interview published this week by “U. S. News & World Report” He said:
“I can remember how quickly situations have changed in the past. Take the Berlin airlift — how quickly it stopped once the other side made its decision. And we had no intimation that it was going to end, or very little.
“The opening of negotiations in Korea came very quickly, although the negotiations thereafter dragged interminably.
“So we’re never quite sure. When you’re in action against an enemy and you’re hitting each other day by day, the only thing you know is that, if you keep hitting him long enough, some day he’ll give way. And I hope we're approaching that day”
IN COMMAND
Gen. Taylor was commander of our forces in Berlin during the latter part of the blockade crisis there. He later was U. N. commander in Korea and then became chairman of the U. S: Joint Chiefs of Staff in 1962. He served last year as American ambassador to Viet Nam.
He is very knowledgeable on the whole Viet Nam problem, and believes that steady, unrelenting pressure is more significant in its effect than some single action or dramatic maneuver.
But even a policy intended to be resolute can fail to convince the enemy that it’s time to quit.
If, for instance, the highbrow d e b a t e s' by professorial witnesses before the^Scnale Foreign Relations Committee continue to belittle our strategy and, , to give an impression of irresoluteness or weakness, the enemy will be encouraged to stick it out)
HIGHER PRICE Only when the North Viet Nam government makes up its mind tHIit the punishment being inflicted on it daily is not to be relaxed — and, instead? that the price is going to be’ higher in lives and damage to property-will there come a sudden decision to be realistic and arrange a cease-fire.	\
Gen. Taylor explained America’s military position as fol- ' lows:
“We’re trying to create a situation which, in the eyes of the leaders in Hanoi, will be more disadvantageous than what would arise If they give up their aggression. So we have indicated there can be compensations, in terms of economic aid, participation in the development qf Southeast Asia' and other advantages.
“One would hope that this will
be tha ‘silver bridge,’ which is always open to them, to withdraw from their situation.” 4-POlNT STRATEGY Gen. Taylor, in his inter-V i e w, outlined the four-point strategy which the United States is pursuing in Viet Nam—the u.se of ground warfare, the effective employment of air power, the advancement of non-military activities and the continuance of the effort through diplon^acy to find "an honorable, peaceful solution at the negotiation table.”
He said th^our components together make up what he calls “the American strate-. gy in South Viet Nam."
He called it a "package” and remarked that one component can’t be separated from the other.
The general stressed also one .of the significant steps that has been taken by the United States in sending 1,200 American civilians to Viet Nam to help in the development of a program in agriculture, health. Vacation and economic,expansion.
WILI. CONTINUE This form of-help will continue even after the war ends. The-objective is to hold free elections, unite the North and South Vietnamese and bring a better life to all the people in this hitherto underdeveloped area.
★ * ★
The policy of the United States indeed envisions Viet Nam as an example of how substantial progress can be made by. a small country when given guid? ance and direct aid by the nations of the free world.
Voice of the People:
'Recent Cooking School Was Beneficial to Many’
Being the lucky winner of a clothes dryer, I wish to express my gratitude to everyone concerned and to The Pontiac Press for its sponsorship of the cooking school. Not only'does it help the brides and inexperienced, it also''gives modern and new ideas-to the tired chef of the household.
MRS. D. G. RACOSKY WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
‘What Happened to America's Mothers?
Motherhood is the most renowned state of life a human can* possibly attain. What material frill can a working mother pr(^ vide that can possibly replace her love and ready open arms. What has happened to our mothers who want to hold and nourish their children both physically and spiritually? Where are the mothers who are satisfied with a uSed refrigerator, or can save half a week’s pay by darning a sock, altering growing childrens clothing, cutting a head of hair or fussing over a special pot of stew? Where are.)he mothers who really stretch dad’s inadequate paycheck and make him feel proud and needed?
A MOTHER	-	.
Sliidont Queslioiis Fig;htin){ in Viet Nam
"I am a fifteen-year-old girl, attend Isaac C. Crary Jr. Bjkh, and have a brother in the Navy fighting in Viet Nam. What are we fighting for and what is the purpose? Why do they have to ask United Nations’ permission for other countries to asstet. There was no United Nations in World War I and II to decide •whether we should help in those wars. Why are they spending taxpayers’ money and time when they could be assisting the war?
ALTHEA CRAIwER	Union Lake
Su{?{jests Turn Sign al (jty Iiilerseelion
We need a ' left turn only ” sign at Baldwin and Walton for the center lane: Driters use this as a through lane and a sign might help avoid an accident.
It would be a good idea to have cars safety checked before new license' plates are issued, considering the number with only one headlight and even more with no taillights.
CLARIS M. SHEPHERD	213 W. Sheffield
Say.i Parrnls ConM Help Reilm e Vainlalism
The new bond issue is upon us again in Waterford Township. Why don’t we protect what we already have in our community before we put out more money for something else for children to destroy’.’ The money that has been paid for repair of destruction by children would pay next year’s taxes for a lot of people. * * ★
Why dori’t taxpayers pitch in and see what kind of policing is necessary to stop this vandalism? II more parents knew where their children were at night and cared about what they were doing, this would be a beginning to at least rutting down the destruction.
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP TAXPAYER
Bob Considine Says:
'Friendless’ Billy Rose Had Orie Key Contact
‘Write (loiigressmen About Animal Cruelty'
How many readers saw the pictures in a weekly pictorial magazine of starving and frozen animals held by unscrupulous pet dealers, were shocked and sickened that conditions like these could exist in our country, but did nothing about it?
Eight bills are pending before Congress to prohibit this sort of thing, but the only way your congressman knows how you feel is by your letters, calls or telegrams.
GERALDINE PETERSON	Waterford Township
NEW YORK - Toots Shor, who is essentially a kind man, said the unkindest thing about Billy Rose. But he said it without malice about the i n-credible little showman who died the other day.
0 n up told Toots that I had heard a report that a mob was CONSIDINE going to kidnap Billy.
Toots made gruff noises that Indicated he didn’t believe the report.
I assured him that.it had come from a highly respectable hoodlum.
But still he wouldn’t believe it, even though Billy was the perfect kidnap ca.se: very rich, and easy to pick up and run with in case the bulls swooped down on the .scene at the time of the snatch.
SHOOK HIS HEAD
Toot.s shook his head and all of his jowls.
I asked him w|(at was wrong with the report that Billy would be kidnapped.
“Who would they contact?” Toots asked, spreading h i s
Billy hdard the story in time, was at first angry at the suggestion that he had no friends, but finally got around to laiggh-ing about it ^ with the same laugh he used during tirades directed against him as he wended his way to his broker’s place to buy another ton of AT&T stock.
WITH SOME HEAT
“I’ll tell you who ihey could contact,” Billy said to me with some heat, the last time I talked to him and heard him relate Toots’ story to my surprise. “They could contact Bernard Baruch.”
He spoke of hlsj close friend
and adviser, a giant in his time. Rut now they are dead, Bernie and Billy, his protege.
And as one who knew both of th^m, and wrote a lot about them, my grazing ground is diminished.
★ w *
And I am poorer, though you’d hardly know it with the brave front I’m putting up.
‘Kblerly Nerd InforimitiDii on Medieare Plan'
In regard to Medicare, section 2, why doesn’t the government tell the older people what this program will cost them befofe they get any returns? How are they going to get doctors to make house calls?
* * ★
A married couple will pay $72 a year dues. They will pay tha first $50 expenses and $10 ofihe next $50 of expense, 'hiat is, each year, with no carry-over, each couple will pay $132 before they get any return. I can’t see where the government is putting out very much.
ONE OF THE OLDER PEOPLE
Reviewing Other Editorial Pages.
Great
Expectations!
The Arnold Glasgow
Many a gal who says "no” ex-pects to he held for further questioning. ^
Government
Controlled
The Harlington (Tex.) Star
In view of the way the federal government Is taking over control of the federally subsidized public school system, any indication that the government is moving into the newspaper field via the subsidy route is' disquieting. That which the gov-ernqient subsidizes, the government will control. The Supreme Court has laid down that ultimatum.
*	★ a
According to the Chronicle-Herald of Hoopeston, Illinois, the federal government has used $188,000 of the taxpayers’ money jo set up a subsidized newspaper in Willow Run, Michigan, which, in the subsidized newspapers’ own words, was to provide “honest and true reporting the government feels of Interest.” That was bad enough. But now, the federal government is considering another $150,000 in tax funds to launch a newspaper which will be owned and
operated by a quasi government- All	U^ln
al agency ... a community	““U/o ntsip
action group. We quote:
★ * ★
“The pr^s is threatened by a request for a $150,000 federal grant to launch a weekly newspaper here. Rep. Donald Runs-feld, (R-III.) says.
“He denounced a proposal now under consideration by the Of-fioe of Economic Opportunity I GEO I for the demonstratton grant to a Washington community aefion group to sthrt the paper. The eight-page, 5-cent tabloid would serve residents of a poverty area.
★ * *
“Approval of the request would put the government directly Into the business of propagandizing, in competition with privately owned newspapers.
“This would amount to a violation of the constitutional guarantee of a free press. The next step could be for the government, to tell the newspaper what it can and cannot say in print. Just how far has the federal government gone in ■ process which c»uld ultimately result In nffirial Pravdas and Izvestins in the United States.”
The Baltimore Sun
Negro athletes have contributed a lot to improving the situation of all Negroes. This has been particularly true in prize fighting, from Joe I..ouis to Floyd Patterson. But lately, what a change!
Sonny Liston, despite some really decent impulses — his association with groups working with Negro orphanages, for instance — was a sorry champion. Cassius Clay has outraged and embarrassed Negroes and whites alike.
■It’s good to read, therefore, that Clay has hired Loafs to advise him. We hope Louis won’t limit his advice to ring
He’s quite wise in other ways. Once he was asked about his contribution to the civil rights movement. He said, “^ine people do it by shouting, sorpe march, some talk, some give lots of money, I do it my way, behaving. All ways help.”
Eventually...
The Richfield (Minn.) News
Some time you have to go out m a limb. Thai’s where the fruit
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Itdftt tMM • yMT. All IIMII uib. Kfipllon, p«y«bl. In
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THE PONTIAC press! MONDAY, FfeBftUARY u, 1966
A—7
Viet War Affects Nations in Asia Area
(EDITOR'S NO^E: AUhough not generally realized by Americans, the war in Southeast Asia tnvoives more than Viet Nam. Other potions in the area are involved in a variety of ways. The following dispatch by a UPi diplo--mat<p reporter examines this
Here is Ike sitoatiM try-by-cMBiry:
LAOS
In many ways the centerpiece is Laos. It has its own low-key war—« skirmishing between Communist Pathet Lao farces and the Laotian government The Communists are aided by
the infiltration goes on through the Jungle by oi^, largely immune from bombing. GROUND TROOPS Recently Moecow and Pddng radios have accused Qie United
aspect of the conflict and what gome 10,000 North Vietnamese the future may hold.)	troops.
-----	I In June 1961, President John
By DONALD H. MAY p. Kennedy and Soviet Premier WASHINGTON (UPI) — Iike|Nikita S. Khrushchev agreed in lava from a live volcano, the Vienna to leave Laos out of the fury of the wajr in Viet Nam cold war. Accords were signed has been spilling over into^in Geneva in July 1962, recpiir-neighbodkig natioos ever since it ing removal of all for^ erupted.	(bi^. U.S. military personnel
As die conflict has widened,|left Laos, but the North Viet-so has the Involvement of Laos.’namese never did.
Stetes of planning to put ground that some pf the infiltradon troops across, the narrow panhandle of Laos to cut the Ho Chi Minh TTaU.
Cambodia and Thailand. And the end is not in sight:
The role of these countries seldom has been publicly discussed because of diplomatic secrecy and Asian political sensibilities.
However, director David £. Bell of the Agency for International Development recently said for the record that North Viet Nam Communists have given ‘‘clear and open notice"
The Commui
made a major try to gobble up all of Uos. They hold Us eattem and ecoaomically an-desirable half. Bat this provides the corridor to Soutlr Viet Nam.
It is assumed that the main Communist military objective in Laos has simply been to keep the supply route open.
Laotian Premier Souvanna they are ready to wage wars of Phouma is a dedicated neutral-
liberation in Laos and Thailand. ★ ★ ★
‘‘It already has started in Thailand," he said.
ITEM—Laos is the main Infiltration route from North to South Viet Nam. Without publicity, its ‘‘Ho Chi Minh»TraU" has been massively bombed by U.S. planes. But the infUtra-tion continues and how to deal with it is a growing problem.
ITEM — Cambodia provides secondary infiltration channels. It seems to have made the political assessment that the Viet Cong will win and that Red China, not the United States, will dominate Asia.
ITEM — Thailand has made
Odea told us frankly that if
ward the Americans, Chinn will change its attitude toward
The United States is convinced
Tken k na deobt
wahted UB. treape. On pore-ly mllUnry greands the Idea k open ta debate.
Large forces would be ned-ed. ‘Ibe possibility of masstva-ly expanded Ninth Vietnamese invasion of Laos would have to be weighed.
ist who wants to stay out of a big war. He has said: ‘‘When the elephants fight, the grass is trampled."
INCREASINGLY OUTSPOKEN For a neutral, however, he' has become increasingly outspoken against Hanoi’s aid to the Pathet Lao and use of Laos as a corridor. Though it must have come hard, he asked for U.S. assistance in the form of military equipment and aerial reconnaissance.
He apparently In U.S. bombing of ply routes on condition it not be made public.
These flights, phis the 1
When U.S. Roving' ihw W. Averell Harriman stopped in Vientiane to see Souvanna last Jan. 13 during the peace initiative, a oomnumique was issued, the main paragraph of which said:
‘‘Contrary to the speculations I which certain sectors of the press have attached considerable Impwtance, Mr. Harriman pointed out that ‘the United States has no intention of sending troops to Laos in order to use that country as a base for attacking North Viet Nam.’ ’’ CAMBODIA Cambodia is
southward through Laos continues into Cambodia and then enters South Viet Nam.
Some prisoners captured in South Viet Nam said they took this route. Allied Forces say the Viet (fong have used the Cambodian Border as a refuge from pursuit.
SMUGGLING
Washington believes that supplies entering Cambodia by sea have found their way to the Viet Cong.
Long before there was a Viet Nam war, there was major smuggling in this wea.
Sihanouk’s response is to flatly deny it all. He said recently:
‘There have been absolutely no Viet Cong and Viet Minh in Cambodia."
H#Tias offered, to back up his statement, to have the ' international control commission, which has never been effective in Southeast Asia, expanded to inspect Cambodia. TTIAILAND
Thailand has involved itself with tiie American military ef-j fort more extensively than any; Asian nation cares to admit, i
President Kennedy sent 5,600; U.S. troops to Thailand in Mayj 1962, when a Laotian Communist offensive moved to the Thai! border. They were withdrawn the following July.
Blast, Fire Hit Jet's Engine on landing
Quakers Hold Vigil Outside White House WASHINGTON (UPI)^About 400 Quakers from 20 states stood silently throujih a heavy rainstorm outside the White House yesterday in a ‘‘vigil for peace
in Viet Nam" aimed at getting both sides to stop fighting.
For the first 30 minutes of Uie orderly, two-hour demonstration, a heavy rain soaked most of the Quakers but none of them
Gas Exec Is Killed LITTLETON, Maine (AP) -Lee* Schlossberg, 62, president of American Propane Gas Corp., died Saturday in the
left their positions in Lafayette wreckage of his small plane Square, facing the executive which had crashed a few miles mansion.	I from its airport.
DALLAS (UPI) - An ^plo-sion and fire ripped the N^l engine on a Braniff Internatii odds with al 720 jetliner with 121 passen-
most of its neighbors^ It and.gers aboard as it touched down Thailand have accused eachiat Dallas Love Field last night.
the opposite bet. It has become tlan air force’s own ________________
a major base for U.S. military J using converted training planes, operations in the area, and is have pulverized the visible itself a target of Ckmununist parts of the Ho Chi Minh •nwO guerrillas.	ri—the junctions and bridges.
other recently of border "invasions." Cambodia has a running border dispute with South Viet Nam.
It broke relations with the United States in a huff last May.
Its leader. Prince Norodom Sihanouk, has publicly ex-pialaed his philosophy thus: "If we contfame to quarrel with the Americans, we will enjoy security.
No injuries were reported and the passengers were transferred to another jet for the trip to Houston.
★ w ★
Tile fire was quickly put out by Capt. Lay T. Dutcher, the pilot, who turned on the plane’s automatic extinguisher.
WWW
The four-engine jet was Flight 464 from Denver.
logistic problems which nro-moted a major U.S. building program in Tliailand in case it should have to be repeated. Roads have been built, harbor facilities and airfields improved.
WWW
Now there are said to be 13,000 U. S. servicemen in Thailand. It has been reported — though never officially — that U. S. bombing missions over North Viet Nam started from Thai airfields.
ASSISTANCE	!
The Thais also give assistance in Laos, which neither th^ nor Ihe Laos discuss.
\Northeast Thailand has bmn the scene of what looks lik^the same kind of beginning \Communist movement that ^et Nam had in the 1950s.
A local "independent movement” and “patriotic front” have been formed. Incidents of terrorism have increased.
Last December Thai military forces began a police action in the area. Tliey have captured some Laotians and Vietnamese Communists in the process.
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A—8
THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, ^’EBRUARV 14, 1966
r
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THE* PONTIAC Press
PONXIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, FEBRUARY U, 1966
B-1
Valentines Are for Real and Cupid Scores-a Hit
MRS. KENNETH B. VALENTINE
KATHLEEN VALENTINE
By MADELEINE DQEREN Today has a special significance for some 20 families in the Pontiac area with the name of Valentine!
Historians are somewhat vague about the early observance of Valentina’s Day except for the fact that It falls on the feast of tw6 different Oiristian martyrs named Valentine.
Three hundred years ago on St. Valentine’s Diy in England, young ladies behaved in a most peculiar manner. And with good reason.
■k * -k
Their strange conduct was based on an old superstition: that the first man seen by an ynmarriecf girl on the holiday-was destined to be her spouse.
Some girls took odd precautions to ensure their seeing the ‘right’ man first. Some stayed home all day to await his arrival. Others were said to have kept their eyes closed for interminable lengths of time.
★ ★ ★
When the gentleman di(l appear, he usually brought a gift, perhaps a heart-shaped box of porcelain, enamel or gold, perhaps with a message inside.
It is from these tokens and missives that our present-day valentines and the custom of gift-giving on February 14 are derived.
* -k k
Mrs. Kenneth B. Valentine of Phelan Street, in Deer Lake Estates will undoubtedly pursue Valentine genealogy further, for she is the subject of one of our thumbnail sketches today.
She is an alumna of Butler University, Indianapolis, and earned her master’s degree at Bryn Mawr College, Pennsyl-^ vania.
■k k k
Her affiliations include Clark-ston Women’s Ouh, Clarkston Village Players, Waterford Book Review Group and 15 years with the Waterford Great Books Group.
(Continued on Page B-2)

Acapulco Honeymoon for Robert Vinces
Brid^Elect Is Honored
Flying to Acapulco, Mexico for a week’s honeymoon after Saturday vows in Christ Church Cranbrook were Robert Edward Vince	of	Detroit and his	bride,
the	former	Gail Lynne	Glover.
k	k k
They will return by way of Fort Lauderdale where her parents, the George H. Glovers of Bloomfield Village, have a winter residence.
.	W	★ A
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. God-lewski of New Kensington, Pa. are parents of the bridegroom. MANTILLA
A hand-embroidered miMtilla of Alencon lace complemented the bride’s gown and chapel train of ivory peau de sole. She
George' H. Glover Jr. was best man. Daniel A. Glover ushered along with Adolf Green, Melvin Bannasch and William Lockey
V
Jr.
couple has taken an apartment in Detroit. She is an alumna of the University of Michigan and earned a master’s degree from the University of California.
. Carolyir Julia Kraus of Sylvan Lak«'was honored at a recent bridal shower and luncheon in the home of Mrs. Dale Menear on Brunswick Drive.
She will exchange vows with Arthur Lyle Robinet of Barnes Lake, this evening, in St. Benedict’s Catholic Church.
Mrs. Charles Carpenter of Jos-lyn Road gave a recent evening shower and Mrs. Daniel Dunaj of East Pike Street also was shower hostess with Mrs. James C^ulson assisting.
Parents of the couple are the late Mr. and Mrs. John A. Kraus and the late John Robinets.
Plans Summer Vows
^ I	I	irain ot ivory peau c
I Calendar
TODAY
Soroptinlist Club of Pontiac, 6:30 p.m.. Elks Temple. Dinner meeting.
, ’TUESDAY Oakland County Chapter, National Association of Social Workers (NASW) 6:30 p.m., Devon Gables.* Vital issues of social work field to be discussed at dinner meeting.
Fashhmette Club, 7 p.m., Adah Shelly Li-brary. A nutritionist from Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital will speak.
WEDNESDAY Women’s World Series, 10 a.m., Pontiac Mall. “Exciting Lenten Maals’’ by Mrs. Clarence W. Kremer, home economist.
Veterans of Foreign Wars No. 1608, AuxUiary, 1 p.m., VFW hall on Auburn Road.
Waterford Fashion Your Figure CInh, 7> p.m., Schoolcraft Schdol. “Importance of Wills.”
North Oakland Association for Retarded ChU-dren, 8 p.m., Community Services Building. Silent
Attending their former classmate at Kingswood School (^an-brook, were maid of honor, Barbara Barker with bridesmaids Dorothy Godlewski, Washington, D.C.; Arine Coulter, Oxford: Mrs. Lawrence Heitsch and Mrs. James Fox, Birmingham.
k k ,k
Bonnie and Cindy Heitsch were flower girls at the afternoon ceremony, followed by a reception in the Village Woman’s Club.
ANN MARIE GENEREUX
Mr. and Mrs., Rolf- I mond H. Genereux of Lake Orion announce the engagement of their daughter Ann Marie to John Joseph Driscoll, son of the John J. Driscolls of Jamaica, Long Island, N.Y. A July 16 wedding-date has been set.
*Kingswood Has Traveling Art Coming Soon
Kingswood School Cranbrook' will host its first traveling art exhibiUon “Nine Utah Painters ” from Feb. 21 through March 18.
Sponsored by the Phillips Gallery of Salt Lake City, the show represents the contemporary school of painting.
k	k	k
Stephen Beck of the school’s art department who arranged for th^ exhibition was a class-. mate at the University of Utah •A' bf th# «hibltors: Darryl Barton, Don Olsoh,' Lee Deffebach, Bonnie Gile, Dennis Phillips. Don Athey, Don Shepherd, Earl Jones and F. Anthony Smith.
k	k	k
V. Douglas Snow, a graduate of Cranbrook Academy of Art and current faculty member at the University of Utah, was also in sending this ex-


B—2
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1966
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Valentine Is More Than a Holiday
(Continued from Page B-l)“
She is chairman of Independence Township Libary Advisory Board arid has been a Gallup Poll reporter since 1958.
This came about through an advertisement in The Pontiac Press.
Her avocations include birdwatching (she has logged 83 birds to date in the Peer Lake area); gardening, bridge and pinochle. A well rounded Valentine we would think!
★ * ★
Sixteen-y e a r-old Kathleen Valentine, the daughter of the John D. Valentines of Little Trail Road, Commerce Township is a junior at the Walled Lake Senior High School.
Her application for a summer of study in Europe is being considered by the Youth for Understanding Organization.
Kathy skates, plays tennis and enjoys both water-skiing and snow skiing.
★ ★ ★
Besides being president of St. William’s Teen Club, she belongs to the Girls’ Athletic Association, the Pep Club and the Ski Club. She has been ‘tapped’ for the school’s musicals in 1966.
Catherine,, age 17 and Rose-ann, age 10, are the only daughters of the Ramon Valentines who have seven sons and live on South ’Tilden Ave-
SUE ANN HATHAWAY
Are Facts Accurate?
Why the Curiosity?
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Recently, someone I know very well (I’ll call her Vera), made a 6,000-mile round trip ft . in order to be; ^ with her daugh-^ ter when she| g'ave birth to her first baby. |>
Vera stayed ten days, leav-f*^ ing her own husband at home with al heart condition. addi He didn’t want her to make the trip, but Vera convinced him that she had to go.
Vera returned exhausted, told her that she should have
Call FE 2-1424
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Miss Wilson Takes Vows on Saturday
An evening ceremony and reception Saturday in the Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church, marked the vows of Joyce Ann Wilson and Roger Wendell Crabtree.
Rev. William Palmer performed the rite for the couple whose parents are the George P. Wilson of Oakmont Street, Pontiac Township and t h e George W. Crabtrees of Auburn Road.
★	w	★
Re-embroidered Alencon lace touched with seed pearls accented the bride’s fitted bodice and chapel-length skirt of white silk organza. A crystal headpiece held her imported illusion veil. She carried white carnations, Stephanotis, ivy and lilies of the valley.
★	★	★
With Mrs. John Boehmer, her sister’s honor attendant, were bridesmaids, Trudy Palmateer, Detroit and Mrs. James Wilson of Palisades, Idaho. Kathy Boehmer was junior maid.
Mary Jo St. Clair was flower girt and Ttouglas Wilson, ring-bearer.
Laurance St. Clair was best mfin.Vith Robert Davis, Tom Williams and Richard Ambrose serving as ushers.
The couple will honeymoon at Island Lake Resort in northern Michigan.
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Cathy is a student at the Dominican Academy in Oxford and vice president of .the Student Council, also a member of the Glee Club, Future Secretaries and the Ski Club.
She is currently rehearsing with the ballet chorus for the school’s spring musicale on April 24. ,
Roseanh attends St. Benedict’s School and is a member of a Girl Scout troop. She enjoys ice skating and swimming.
See Expert for Advice on Travel
By The Emily Post Institute
Q: I am in my early 20s and plan to go to Europe this spring.
1 have never traveled before, at least not any distance, and am completely at a loss as to how to go about mdking rangements for this trip. Can you offer any helpful advice'
A; The best and simplest thing for you to do is to go to a travel bureau. Tell them just where you want to go and when and how — in fact, give all the details you can, and let them work out the best possible plan for you.	«
’This is their business, and they can do it not only better but much more economically than you can and at no extra cost to you, as they get their commission from the transpor-tStion company or hotel.
★ ★ *
WOMEN	1
Q: When writing to a busi-hess organization composed of women, what is the proper sal-i MRS. R. W. CRABTREE
utation to use? “Mesdames"	-------- —
Voesn’t seem right but neither! does “Dear Sirs ” and certainly,^|L,rnnae tO Help “Dear Ladies” isn’t correct. Is there an acceptable salutation?
A; Whe writing to a firm or organization compo.sed of wom-len, the correct salutation Is,
|“Dear Madams.”
stayed home and sent h g r daughter the money to hire a competent helper. And later on she could have made the trip with her husband to see the daughter and new grandchild.
Vera insisted that her presence at the time of the child’s birth was necessary and appreciated; and had not choice but to go. What do you think?
“CURIOUS’ ★ ★ ★ #
DEAR CURIOUS: I would have to know more about the husband’s “heart condition.' And how he really felt about Vera’s making the trip. Also more about the relationship between Vera and her daughter and their respective financial situations.
I would also havO to know how accurate your reporting is, who you are, and why you are so “curious.”
Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to Abby, in care of The Pontiac FTess for Abby’s booklet, “How To Write Letters For All Occasions.”
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August vows are planned by Bonnie Jean Shepard, daughter of the Erwin ..^Shepards of Verona Drive,
. and Stanley Richard Reilly, son of Rev. and Mrs.
Richard Reilly of Elkhart, Ind.
Both will dear FRIEND: Your friend graduate in Is a thief. Tell her what you
,	,	know and urge her to stop “col-
June from	lecUng” before she collects a
Bethel Col/egic, jail sentence.
Mishawaka,
all.
ora-jel
Cuuninahams"
DEAR ABBY: I have a friend, a married woman, who has a c 011 e c t i 0 n of hub caps you wouldn’t believe. She said she “bought” some, and others were given to her, but I found out different.
Last evening I saw this woman fltalk over to the curb, take a screwdriver out of her purse, and remove the hub caps from a parked par. What would you do in a case like this?
A FRIEND IN FAIRMONT, W. VA.
coiffures
by
donnell
Ind.
BONNIE JEAN SkEPARD
The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this column.
Here we are with February well launched^ and speeding along. Lovely ^ring clothes are already winking at us from store windows, reminding us of the soft, lovely, romantic days just ahead.
They also remind us that If we are to do the clothps justice we will have to work on. any bulges and rolls, overweight and droops, we may have.
This is the sixth week of my Eight Week Beauty Improvement Plan. Those of you who have been following it from the first must be happy by now, but don’t setttle for less than the best.
Keep on until you have reached your goal. Many of you started late and have several weeks longer than two to go.
Anyway, by now many of you are beginning to wonder how many calories you should have in order to maintain your ideal weight once you have reached it. When calculating the number of calories you will need you must consider two f|ctors.
First is the so-called minimum calorie need or the number of calories required just to keep your body functioning. Second are the calories needed for your daily activities, work and play.
AGE, SIZE FACTOR Alpha Chi Omega Alumnae oH The minimum calorie need is
North Woodward Area, Group I plan to stuff envelopes for the Oakland County, Society for Crippled Children’s Easter Seal project.
Mrs. W. W. Birchard and Mrs. James Henderson will be chairmen for the two-day project.
WILLIAM WRIGHT
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Influenced by age, size, and the composition of the body. Larger folks need more calories than smaller folks to keep the body running. Men usually need more than women and older people fewer than younger ones.
The number of calories required for your activities, of course, depends on the kind of activity arid the length of time-you indulge in it.
You can get a general idea of how many calories you need to maintain your ideal weight
if you are moderately active by multiplying it by 18 if you afe a woman and by 21 if you are a man.
If you are quite active you will need about one-fourth mwe calories. If most of your work or life is sedentary you will need about one-fourth fewer calories.
Here Is today’s sample menu I for those of you who want to lose 15 to 20 pounds in eigh^ weeks or about 2H pounds a week.
SAMPLE MENUS BREAKFAST
% medium grapefruit' with one teaspoon sugar
1	slice toast with one teaspoon
butter or margarine'
3	slices crisp bacon
Coffee with one teaspoon sugar LUNCHEON
2	scrambled eggs with one
teaspoon butter 1 slice whole wheat toast with
4	one teaspoon butter
Yi cup broccoli or other green, with lemon jlilce 8 oz. skim milk
DINNER 1 cup consomme Celery curls
5	oz. roast leg of lamb
Vk cup rice seasoned with onion salt or chopped chives Lettuce salad with reducing dressing % cup jello
Before retiring one cup tomato juice
If you missed my Eight Week Beauty Improvement Plan for a loss of 15 to 20 pounds in eight weeks (there’s still time before real spring) you may want to start now.
If so send 25 cents, plus 15 cents for postage and handling and your printed name and address to Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press. Ask for the Bip Kit.
DEAR ABBY: I seldom saw my daughter studying, so 1 wasn’t too surprised when shi? brought home a warning that she was failing in two subjects. Her teacher called and asked me to come to school for a private conference. I did, and this is what I learned:
.-RAW My daughter had told the teacher she was failing in school because of her “home situation.” She said her father and mother tight constantly about bills and his drinking.
★ -A R Also I sleep all day and she (the child) has to do all the ooking and housekeeping. Abby, 1 just don’t know what to do about this because there Is not one word of truth in it.
My husband and I get along very well. 1 am a competent cook and housekeeper and neither my husband nor I drink.
Why^on earth would a child make up such wild tales? Can you help me?
FUBBERGASTED
R R R
DEAR FLABBERGASTED Whether your daughter is just an Imaginative storyteller or is psychologically disturbed is something you should look into.
If her school provides a counseling service for “problem children,” utilize it. If not, ask your family doctor or pediatrician for his recommendation.
R R R
CONFIDENTIAL TO C. W.F., ILL.: Every man must do his own growing, no matter who his grandfather was.
R . R R
Problems? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 14, 1966
B—8
Lace Accents Ensemble
Imported French lace and organza over taffeta fashioned a gown and fan-shaped train for Virginia Ann Laidler who be-j came Mrs. Daniel Eugene Schweigert, Saturduy, in the' Calvary Baptist Church. I Completing an ensemble for the daughter of the Charles W.|
Laidlers of Hallman Street were a Swedish tiara with English illusion veil’ and a bouquet of white roses, carnations and Stephanotis.
The bridegroom is the son of the Daniel 0. Schweigerts of Watkins Lake Road.
Mrs. Robert Waelde attended her sister as honor matron, with bridesmaids Joyce Galloway, Anne Cogswell and Karen Pullins.'
With A1 f r e d Johnson, best man, were the ushers J<rf>n Nor-berg, William Forbes and Roger Johnson.
The couple left for a Niagara Falls honeymoon after the evening reception in the church .parlors.
Burleigh E. French (left)', president of the Pontiac Traffic Club, Mrs. French and Mr. and Mrs. Warner Canto of Huntington Woods are photographed at the 20th an-
nual presidents’ ball. The dinner dance was held Saturday at the Elks Temple for 500 guests. Canto was general chairman of the event.
OU's String Quartet Plans Concert
Oakland University’s award winning Meadow Brook String Quartet will present a special performance in the Gold Room Feb. 20 at 3:30 p.m.
The players are Mischa Mis-chakoff and Edouard Kesner, violins, Nathan Gordon, viola, and Italo Babine, cello.
The program will include the Mendelssohn Quartet No.
1, E flat major. Op. 12, Borodin’s “Nottumo,” and Hindemith’s Quartet No. 3, Op. 22.
Award of Merit” citation In recognition of its service to the area.
The concert will be dedicated to the “Crusade for Strings” of the National Federation of Music Clubs.
Single tickets are available at the university.
The Federation recently singled out the Oakland Chamber Music program to receive its coveted “Double
Mtet Friends for BREAKFAST and LUNCH Always Good Coffee
RIKER FOUNTAIN
Hiker Hldt- - Lobby
Is Working Wife Blessing or Burden?
MRS. D.O. SCHWEIGERT
By MARY FEELEY Consultant in Money Management Has somebody said to you lately: “Maybe you ought to give up your job because you’re putting your, husband into a higher income tax bracket — and it just doesn’t pay.” |
I’m talking toi you workingj wives. You hear and read^ a lot of s t u f f about whether a wife should work. Elconomists and psychologists both discuss the subject at great length.
I know a lot of wives who hold down a five-day a week job because they’re trying to pay
June vows are planned by Linda Marie Sutton, daughter of the Max C. Buttons of Emerson Drive and William John Auld, son of Mrs. Andrew Vefbanic of Farmington and the late Norman Auld. Her fiance is a pre-law student at Henry Ford College.
It seems to me that now’s a jod time to clear the atmosphere where Working Wives are concerned. Let’s skip over, for the moment, the reasons why you rdally want a full-time job in preference to staying home and being a housekeeper.
That’s your own private business. What I want to talk about is: are you helping or hindering your husband when he has to face up to income taxes?
This tax accountant says, in effect, If a man makes $1Z,-000 yearly and his wife makes $125 weekly this year for the first time, the tax on his income will amount to approximately what it was last year — If his deductions are
22 per cent bracket. The rest of her income will be subject to 25 per cent tax bracket.
For instance, his taxable income last year, let us say, was $9,400, with the amount of the
at $6,500, the part of her income .	*
that raises his figure to $12,000j
The tax on her Income of, say $6,500 a year, will be in the
off the bills or put the children!22 per cent bracket if she Tiles through school. They feel theirjseparately. If she and her hus-mcome is essential. Yet they*band file a joint return, part of feel guilty about “the income'her income will be taxed in the tax break.”
Now here comes a tax ac-
file separate returns, the t a x due would be $3,130. Unless: there are special circumstances involved, there is usually no advantage in husband and wife, both working, filing separate returns. But the Internal Revenue
will be taxed in the 22 per cent bracket. Then anything over ' that she makes will be taxed in the 25 per cent bracket.
To look at the picture in figures:
Joint Tax Return —
$12,000
6,500
Of course, there are other demands on a working wife's income in addition to income taxes. She can expect job-related expenses — clothing, lunches, office gifts,domestic help, transportation, food shopping — to absorb from one-third to 40 per cant of her income.
On the other hand, there may
,’«Uj be considerable compensation— in the form of future social «<*-
Taxable incoine — Tax due —
curity benefits, possible pension, “ company-spon.sored life or health
$3,085 "
TRY BOTH if Mr. and Mrs.
(You can write to Mary Fee-ley in care of The Pontiac 1. decide to Press.)
countant who uys; “The idea that a workiag wife raises her husband out of his normal income tax bracket is a mis-
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B—4
THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY U, 1966
'Life Is No Basketball Game'
Hal Boyle Sounds Off About Tall Bosses
By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - One of the secret ambitions of many, employes is to work for a midget.
They would give him total devotion.	l
They are weary of working for tall people.
It would be Cun for them as a change to look down on the boss —rather than up — while he: tediously explains why they don’t have the merit to merit a merit raise.
ONE OF TROUBLES One of the troubles of Ui^ average employe is that he rarely can see eye to eye with his boss.
All he glare? at is his boss’s belt buckfe. *	i
It is a foible of the busmess] world that there is a connection between a man’s altitude and the quality \of his brains.
*\
The thoughWems to be that j the higher a man stands the' smarter he is.\The executive should loom aboye the crowd. | This is supposed tONbuild morale and improve leadership.
Actually it doesn’t.'
NO PROOF
Height is no proof of'
Witness the dinosaur, the creature Ip stride the ear died in swamps.
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Every inch above 6 feet may i often, they come In the small i help a basketball player, but life [economy size,	|
is not a basketball game.'The One of the reasons that most I majority of njankind’s memora-itall men are predictably less
ble leader, have stood between
j , a • u age or less height is that the air
5	feet 7 and 5 feet 10 inches. L	^^ere heads|
*	*	*	I swim. They don’t get enough^
Example: Winston Churchill,'oxygen.	i
perhaps the greatest man of the	★	*	'
20th century, was almost nearer And another thing—	i
6	feet around than 6 feet tall.	'	__:!
Other disturbers of the com-. (EDITOR’S NOTE: Well, monplace, such as Napoleon might as well cut off this Bonaparte, Julius Caesar and i dithy ramb here. The facts are Voltaire, were of medium height' g^yig jg 5 fggi 9. nis boss or below. So was Einstein.	jg g j j
GETS THINGS DONE	-------------—
If you will go to a board meeting of many a gigantic corpora- Oppenheimer to Resign
yiw)wjiu)itfi(i tp (u..
, you will find it mhabited tall men. Then an agile.
Princeton Directorship
luirrelly little fellow, chunky a tree stump, coipes in — PRINCETON, N.J. (UPI) those big fellows haul Harvard economist Dr. Carli slves to their feet and Kaysen will succeed Dr. J. Rob-him.	ert Oppenheimer as director of
snap snap! He gets the Institute for Advanced Study things done.	at Princeton University Oct. 1.
★	*	*	Oppenheimer, who played a
Tall men often are like Christ- key role in development of the mas packages. The wrapping is atom bomb, will remain as first worth more than the contents, professor of theoretical physics The best brains don’t come in but resign his directorship to the large economy size. More devote more time to research.
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/

'll
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY U. mo
Foreign News Commentary

No Surprises by De Gaulle Expected
By WAJ.TER LOGAN United Presi International
French sources in Paris say no major bombshells are likeiy to be exploded in President Charles de Gaulle’s Feb. 21 news confer^ce.
They said there will be no offer to mediate in Viet Nam and no crockery-smashing over NATO.
Best bets are he will talk mainly about easing the economic squeeze in France and
Viet Nam peace moves are beginning to shape up.
The first will be made by British Prime Minister Harold Wilson during his Moscow visit later this month.
The other will almost certainly be made by French Presifh;at de Gaulle when he flies to Moscow in June.
While Wilson strongly backs the American line on Viet de Gaujle has his own views which are at variance with the
about the European Common
Market.
KOREAN WORKERS:,- The Foreign Organizations Employes Union, an organization of Korean workers at U. S. miltlary installations, is expected to push its Iqbor dispute with the U. S. 8th Army labor force until some sort of status of forces agreement is reached.
Mosonk Group Seeks Rebuttal to Marxist Talks
Diplomats say chances of any quick Soviet response to either is very slight at present.
EUROPEAN UNITY: - The French predict in Paris it may be some months before talks get started again on closer political cooperation in Europe.
The French government wants agreement first on financial terms for establishing an agricultural Common Market in Europe.
This Is expected to need long, tough negotiations. Without agreement on this, French officiais say there would be no point in discussing political
France, meanwhile, is expected to resume its seat at a ministerial council meeting of the Common Market in Brussels Feb. 28 for the first time sipce DETROIT (AP)—A Masonicjjtg walkout June 30,1965. organization wants equal tint|E| Much depends on whether the dispute remarks made!Belgian and Italian government
The fear is that such an agree-'
«,tli	oispuie remarKs maaejDciKian aiiu uanau guvc
erupt.
The draft agreement does not Include the Korean Service,	^	^
Corps, a para-military organiz- e *	,
ation, and future trouble prob-ably will center around its	^
jg	officers, can present some eight
persons to counter Aptheker’s statements, said Col. James ' Kendrick.
Aptheker at three Michigan universities and a church last BRAZILIAN LABOR — The week.	U S- Labor Department has se-
lected Brazil for its first worker-to-worker project which includes fashion shows featuring union made clothes and other attractions.
PARTY CONGRESS:-A plenary session of the Soviet Communist party's central comipit-tee will be summoned in Moscow, probably late this week, to fntke final preparations for the 23rd party congress March 29.
^ Viet Nam and the Sino-Soviet conflict loom as the main topics.
The Chinese are expected to ■end no delegates for the first time, but pro-Peking North Vietnamese and North Koreans are expected.
It would be natural for the Russians to take advantage of the presence of delegations from most of the world's 90 Communist parties to try for a showdown with China.
PEACE MOVES:-Diplomats, in I.ondon say two new top-level
Aptheker, director of the American Institute for Marxist Studies, spoke at Michigan, Wayne State and Michigan State
Informed sources in Rio de Janeiro say Brazil was chosen because the Brazilian labor unions have been the No. 1 target of Communist infiltration.
Thousands of Brazilians have
Universities qpd at Cedtralj turned up to see and argue with Methodist Church in Detroit. I visiting U. S. union leaders.
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B—6
THE PONTIAC FRESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY U, 1966
Americans Finding Viet Cong a Cunning Foe
By JOHN T. WHEELER
SAIGON, South Viet Nam (APt In Viet Nam. the U.S. military machine may take, on the role of a superbly conditioned but half-blinded heavyweight boxer pushed into a . strange ring full of trapdoors and stumbling blocks.
The opponent may seem like a cunning veteran lightweight with eyes in the back of its head.
This analogy was drawn by a U.S. combat commander after his troops had swooped down By
American, closed in from the north and south on a Communist strorigpoint.
HUGE OPERATION
Planning of the huge operation began last Decembor, military sources said. The operation was launched the last week in January.
U.S. 1st Cavalry, Airmobile, Division and Vietnamese airborne units moving from the south ran into stiff opposition near Bong Son. After a furious fight. North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops broke contact
pounced on the An Lao Valley, in Ignorance of what the other] There is the dilemma of| In some cases, the Americans Communist-dominated for near-?i*y ^as learned. Competing whether to warn civilians thatlhave proved less than adroit in ly 20 years. There were indica-j*"*®*’'.*®"^.® *8encies compUcate^g^ coming and allow them keeping secrets. A U.S. airborne, tions this was the operation’s^*	vi»*	^®‘
prime target. Special forces re- ^uch? It has long bee® accept-connaissance units prying .the jg,t the Communists
area were hit hard. When the
have infiltrated the Vietnamese'
Thousands of leaflets were
main American force finally|^h,g command, arrived, the enemy had disap- '
NOTIFICATION
peared.
disappeared.
dropped ahead of th^ advancing I allies in the Bong Son area ' warning the civilians to head for In a few cases, purely Ameri- safety because of impending ,, Neither the Americans nor the can operations have been]military operations. Safe-con-South Vietnamese have beeniaunched without notification tojduct leaflets were dropped in able to put together an effective!the Saigon milita^ — to guard the. An Lao Valley before the intelligence net to warn-of Vietjagainst compromise-	Jallies moved in, another tip to
Cong plans. Each often operates‘ But there are othpr factors, the Communists.
CQmbat jump was abandoned when it was learned that word it impending had spread all the way to the United States.
In most cases when the allies launch an operation, the Com-' munists have the choice of standing and fighting or of] breaking up into small groups and fading into the jungle over; camouflaged paths known only! Ito them.
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f Itews Analysis ^ The South Vietnamese had ^reported	that two Communist
helicopter in	a	carefully” planned''‘‘^^inients had dug in near ^ong
operauon aimed at trapping a January and it appeared laVge Viet Cong force.	‘^e Communists ^ther antici-
Aside from a hail of small or knew of the forthcom-arms fire from snipers, who	operation and wanted
later escaped, the reinforced ^	.	. .
battalion missed	the	enemy	the Communists had
completely	“’ey simply moved
. west into mountains where no, SAME PATTERN	allied force was deployed. None
The pattern is repeated con- was sept a fter them. It was stantly in Viet Nam. The major claimed some 800 Communists battles between the Communists were killed in the operation, and allied forces almost always ^ONG PULL OUT have been on terms of the Com-. ,	,	,
munists choosing.	moving down from
Intelligence over and over "onh fa“ed to run into any again has proven to be the most significant opposition. The Viet vital factor in Viet Nam since ^®ng in their area also pulled the Indochina war. Th Patto™ of^o west an^saf^^^ established during the French	‘ *
days remains unchanged. The enemy has lots of information from its intelligence sources, the allies too little. This was what the U.S. commander referred to when he described U;S. combat units as half-blinded.
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Then the two American forces
Air Force Honors to Area Recruiter
♦	*	staff Sgt. William H. Hines,
The fact that American mili- 5«26 Crescent, Waterford Town-tary operations are directed at ship, has been honored by the longtime Communist redoubts Air Force as the top recruiting prompted the reference to the officer in the southeastern Mich-weird boxing ring.	igan area.
A recent example of the situa- Hines is a graduate of Holly tion was in the central coastal High School, area some 300 miles north of He. won the award over re-Saigon where nearly two divi-'cruiting sergeants from six| sions of allied troops, mostly other area counties.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY U. 1966
FACTORY AUTHORIZED ONCE-A-YEAR EVENT
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WEST
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI)-About the only thing that makes February bearable^ at least in these climes, is an oc-| casional sign that spring is approaching.
I haven't yet< seen a crocus or a rosebud or a robin on thel wing to lift my winter- wearied' spirits.
But one day this weeir there blossomed npoa my desk the text bl, a speech by William V. White of the U.S. Publir Health Service. And all of a sudden my heart tang.
White was addressing himself to a gladsome subjict mower accidents. >	|
As the poets say. when the government starts warning us suburbanites about the perils of grass-cutting, can spring be far behind?
AT SEMINAR
^ite spoke at a seinar on power mower Injuries spo .sored by the health service and the Outdoor Power Equipment Institute.
His part in the program was to review the history and philosophy of lawa-trimmiag for what light It might shed on why so many pushers of these machines wound themselves.
The present casualty rate runs about 80.000 (f^r summer, give or take guys like myself whose hands slip off the starter rope causing them to stumble backward into the garden and impale themselves on asparagus spears.
i
Two statements in the white paper impressed me as being highly significant.
SHEEP GRAZED*
"Until about 150 years ago, he spid, "the only way thi men had to -keep theil' lawns trim was .to turn sheep out to graze on them."
It Is my view that lawn b-mming has been downhill ever since.
Foolish creature that he Is, man began developing mechanical devices, beginning with the sickle, retrogressing to the scythe, retreating through stages of horse-drawn and hand-powered mowers, and finally hitting bottom with electric and gasoline-powered machines.
Now he is being hoisted,| maimed and otherwise victi-| mized by his own petard. For.i as White pointed out in his^ other significant comment, “You can't make a machine idiot-proof."
★	★	★	j
Yea, verily. Man's big mistake was in not developing powered sheep.
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BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS
Former Actor Dies
LIVINGSTON, N.J. (AP) -Harry Cohen, 83, former actor in the Jewish theater and an Intimate of many of the theater’s great names, died Saturday.	'
The only thing that looks low-priced on a Pontiac Tempest is its price sticker.
Take it off, and there's not even a low-priced name to . give you away. Just a pure unabridged Pontiac in its Tempest edition: A unique split grille and clean, smart styling. Interiors that look like you just got back from the custom shop. Crisp Wide-Track handling. Plus the effervescent performance of Pontiac's new overhead cam 6
And that’s removable.
4
engine that puts out 165 hp with all the spunk of an 8. But saves like the traditional 6. And of course, being a Pontiac, Tempest allows you the luxury of choicfe. In erlgines, transmissions, suspensions, practically everywhere.
To let you pamper yourself. (That ought to do for now. We'll tell you the rest when you get here.)
Special safety note: All 1966 Pontiacs include dual-speed windshield wipers, windshield washers, outside rearview mirror, padded dash and feunvisors, backup lights, and se^ belts front and rear. (Be sure to buckle up before driving.)
Wide -Track Pontiac
COME IN AND TAKE ON A TIGER AT YOUR PONTIAC DEALERS-A GOOD PLACE TO BUY USED CARS, TOO.
PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE
GINIRAL MOTORS CORPORATION <5 MT. CLIMINS, PONTIAC IS. MICH.
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N. MAIN STRUT, CLARKSTON. MICH.
KeIgO sales and SERVICE, INC.
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RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES
89 (M-24)
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HOMER MIGHT MOTORS, INC.
1«0 S. WASHINGTON, OXFORD. MICH.
SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK, INC.
IS5 S.- ROCHESTER RD.,' ftOCHISTlR, MICH.
B—8
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOXDAY, FEBRUARY U, 1966
FREE 5 LBS. COFFEE IF FREHER CAN’T BEAT YOUR DEAL!!!!
TREMENDOUS ^750,000 STOCK OF APPLIANCES, TV’S, COLOR TV’S and STEREOS to be SOLD for m3,000 THIS WEEK iEVElY BRAND INCLUDED, NOTHING HELD BACK-
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jun HUSIHC OVER % MILLION DOLLARS WORTH OF APFLIANCES, TV’S, COLOR TV'S, AND STEREOS ARE GOINOTO ■E SOLD FOR ALMOST HALF PRICE. THIS IS A SALE THAT YOU DON'T WANT TO MISS. EVERYTHING IS INCLUDED AND EVERY STORE IS PARTICIPATING. WHY NOT HURRY OVER TO YOUR NEARnT FRETTER WAREHOySE (Mart art S al thaai yaa kaaw) CHECE AND COMPARE MY DEAL ON PRICE AND SERVICE) YOU'LL SOON FIND THAT I'VE GOT THE DEST DEAL IN TOWN. THArS WHY I CAN OFFER FREE COFFEE.* WHY NOT TRY ME AND SEE, YOU'VE RULLY NOTHINO TO LOSL
May Feel Neglected
Classroom Attenfion-Geffer Needs Help
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By LESLIE J. NASON. Ed.D. 'Attention-getters are the bane of classroom teachers.
With one or m d r e of these in the room, it is difficult for the' teacher to get on with tlje day's work.
It is easier to spot these children than it is to find out why they act tTTS t DR- NASON 'way or to decide what to do about it. Here are some of the ways you can spot an attention-getter:
His hand is always in the air whether or not he knows the answer.
He has a “smart” answer for every question.
BAD BEHAVIOR He tries, to “show off” by grimacing and extravagant behavior.
He resorts to unusual antics, such as whistling, whispering, poking his neighbor and dropping bis pencil.
He "has more to say than anyone else in the class.
He makes constant bids for attention by asking foolish ques-j tions.	j
WHY ATTENTION?
child a little individual attention When such a student gets sat-|will gradually cease to need each day. thus helping him to isfaqtion from being a valuable^the satisfaction gained by more
dispel the feeing. He may feel needed member of the class, he immature devices, that he must compensate for the '
Now Many Wear
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fact that his family lives in an inferior neighborhood or is of a minority racial group.
Both familj’ and teachers should help him be proud of his race and to realize that his ac-j tions as an individual are more important than the neighbor-ho^ in which he resides. CHANNEL EFFORT The child may feel that he can't do the classroom work very well and so tries for at-t e n t i 0 n. even in undesirable ways. In this case, the teacher must help him learn to do the work and thus channel his efforts into more acceptable patterns of behavior.
Regardless of the reasons for attention-getting behavior, teachers often get good results by using the following procedures;
no extra charge!
Help him feel he is one of the group by assigning him a part in class projects in which he can succeed.
Find something he can do unusually well so that he can excel in a socially-accepted way.
Give him some reponsibility Inj the classroom and compliment him before the class when he
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Why does the child want so carries out the job successfully, much attention?
It is more often the way he feels about his life in and out of school than the way things actually are. He may feel like an unwanted and unnoticed child at home and has never before felt as important as he does in school.
Parents should give such a
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Newspaperboys Learn What Schools Can't Teach
A young man who delivers a newspaper route learns a lot that many other youths miss. And these lessons of experience “sink in’’ faster and better than any classroom lecture.
A newspaperboy learns to become independent because he’s running his own business. Route management also offers him a range of practical experience in handling people, learning the value of money, keeping records and developing efficiency and self-assurance.
All these things books can’t teach ... but a newspaper route does. That’s why manyy school officials endorse route training as a valuable adjunct to formal education.
a boy profits ...a boy learns from his
in a
DID YOU KNOW?
Earl Warren wat a newipaperboy.
The Chief Juaticc of the U.S. Supreme Court is one of many prominent Americani wbo've be named to the "Newpaperboy Hall of Fame."
THE PONTIAC PRESS
Applications Are Welcomed From Any Boy Over 12 Years Old
Area Resident ilecteji Head of Contractors
The Detroit chapter of the Associated General Contractors of Amefica has elected- L. P. Cooley, 6860 Commerce, West Bloomfield Township, as its president.
Cooley, 40, is president of the John Cooley Co. As the 32nd president of the organization, he succeeds Alex J. Elkin.
Other area residents elected were: William Maddock, 2525 Chamwood, Troy, first vice president; Thomas Dailey, 4471 Middleton, West Bloomfield Township, director.
Other new officers or directors include John Rakolta, Shellmarr, Bloomfield Township, director; and Dort Pettis, South-field, treasurer.
Yowr best get-well card!
BUY, SELL, TRADE
: /
USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS
‘‘NERVES”
I lh« loiirh.
nurvr, go lo evrry oraun, niBM-ln and gland in the bod.e, Freuura on ikete aervet can caute a malfunction or ahorl elrruit lo tkeic part*. Ckiro-
•urr, relax the mun-ln, an( plare you hark on Ike road |i good health. Find out now I yon aro a Chiroprartie raae.
Dr. H. H. Aleiaher
Chlropraetle Phyilctan 1028JoalynAve.
FE 2*0111
This year, 1 out of every? people will becorrle a hospital patient. Almost 750,000 U.S. families will face hospital and medical bills equal to more than half their annual income!
Prudential’s new 1966 heafith insurance plans will (1) help you meet the high cost of normal hospital and surgical care, (2) help offset the heavy me(iical and other expenses . of serious sickness or injury, (3) help pay your every*day living expenses while you
are unable to work because of sickness
or injury.
These plans can provide higher amounts than ever before on hospital room and board charges, more liberal benefits for rhedical care inrand out of the hospital and for Convalescent Nursing Home care.
Ask a Prudential agent to explain how these new health plans can protect y9U and your family—and your budgetl
The Prudential
INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA
North Central Home Office • Minneapolis, Minnesota

TjHE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY u, 1966
B—9
Britain Faces F111-Flattop Dilemma
Power Line Falls on Guardsmen;
LONDON (UPI) - Prime Miniiter Harold Wilson met with his Cabinet today to decide whether Britain should spend $420 miUion for the U.S. Fill bomber or $192 million to build new aircraft carriers. The budget can not afford both.
The situation has brought about a struggle between the navy and Royal Air Force (RAF) over who would control Britain’s air-strike forces.
WUson was said to favor baying the Fill “swing-wing*’
bomber, on which the govern- position to provide air cover for committee, which W i I’s o n ment has an Option which expires next month for N to H of the planes.
2 Die, 4 Burned
The navy wants new carriers, arguing that the RAF is not in a
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the navy’s wide-ranging fleet.
’The government has decided to reduce defense spending to $5.6 billion for 1970, the year in which a major defense review is planned.	^
WASmNG’TON TALKS
Defense Minister Denis Healey will be in Washington Wednesday for talks in connection with the purchase of the Fill.
It was widely reported during the weekend that Navy Minister Chrsitopher Mayhew and top aides planned to resign if the proposed carriers were scrappM.
Representatives of the British air industry also are (^posed^ the Fill deal.
summend to No. 10 Downing St. ‘WHITE PAPER’
’The Wilson government plans
late this month to issue a “white on defense in which it will be explained how Britain plans to trim defense costs while maintaining its role in Western defense.
’The British Association of Scientific Workers last ni^t issued a statement condemning plans to purchase the Fill, saying it
BREMERTON, Wash. (AP) ■ ’Two National Guardsmen were electrocuted and four others suffered severe burns dur-i^ a drill Sunday,when a power line broke on the armory grounds and fell across them.
Two other Guardsmen endangered their own lives to pull the live wires off the injured men, a Guard spokesman said.
Roy Emery, 24, and Dennis Jerome Williams, 23, were killed.
Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain,
For tha flrat thne-----------
found a now healing anbatanea with the aatoniahing ability to shrink hemorrhoida, stop itch-Jng, and reliera pain - without surgery.
In one hemorrhoid case after
ments as“Pi1as have ce>sad to be <a problem!’’ And pmong these sufferers were a Very wide va-• riety of hemorrhoid conditions, •ome of lOib 20 years’standing.
All'tUs, without the use of narcotics, anesthetics dr astrin-
was “amvinced that such a de-| Ronald William Cleveland and cision would be a blow to the David L. Prouse were critically British aircraft industry and to;burned. Richard Seamans, 26, Anglo - French cooperation on and Lawrence Rood,^, were aerospace projects, from which [less seriously hurt All four are H would be difficult to recov-'at the Bremerton Naval Hospi-
fied by a doer’s obeemtiona,.
Pain was relieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual' reduction or retraction ishrinking) took place.
And most amaiing of all -this improvement was main.-tained in cases where a doctor's observations were continued over a period of many months I In fact, results were so thorough that sufferers were able to make such astonishing state-
Dyne*) - the discovery of a world-famous research institu* ' tion. Already, Bio-Dyne is in
wide use for healing injured Mssue on dll parts of the body. This new healing substance
went farm calM Preparatu .. H*. Ask for in^vidnsdly sealed ■ convenient Preparation H Suppositories or Preparation H Ointment with special applicator. Preparation H is soU at all drug counters.
Britain dropped plans for production of a similar plan v' it was decided money would be 'saved by buying the U.S. model. MULTIPURPOSE PLANE ’The Fill, made by General Dynamics Corp., is a multipurpose tactical aircraft capable oF] speeds exceeding 2,000 miles per hour.
At supersonic speeds, the plane’s “swhig-wings’’ tuck back $l68e to the fnsilage to miniltaize air friction and heat.
During landing and low-level | bombing operations, the wings are looked at a 90-degree angle'! to the fusilage.
The Fill issue was taken up ilast night at a meeting of the defense and overseas policy
n 2-2895
' Farm Blaze Kills Two

E. Stoinmon, O.D.	Op«n Dolly Pi30 to 5i30
lOPMSoginow	rrhioy Pi30 to Ii30
COLOMA (AP) - Two farm workers on the Albert Lietzll farm near Coloma burned to^ 'death yesterday when-their ten-| 'ant dwelling caught fire. Killedi [were Alfred Lowder, 54, and El-'
I wood Watson, 48.
Best sellers. Year after year, more people choose Cadillac than choose
any other luxury car in the world. Shouldn't this alone lead you to consider the worth of ownihg a Cadillac—new or used?
Hie reasons for Cadillac’s orerwhelming CadiI1ac->-a most important consideration popularity are numerous. Among the most at trading time. Finally, yvur nearby important are its advanced engineering Cadillac dealer is long experienced in and meticulous craftsmanship. Cadillac’s caring for Cadillac owners—and in styling and luxury a^e renowned for seeing that their every need is attended dignity and good taste. Its alert perform- to. Whatever you plan to spend on your ance and handling rival i^any spoils cars, next car, you should investigate the No other motor car in thb luxury car elegance, excellence and excitement field retains its value as long or as well as of a Cadillac, new or previously-owned.
II.
Standard of theWorld
SEE YOUR AirmORIZED DEALER’S ATTRACTIVE SELEOION OP NE^ AND USED CADILLACS
JEROME MOTOR SALES CO.
,1980 WIDE TRACK DRIVE, WEST '• .PONTIAC, MICHIGAN

THE PONTIAC PRESS, MON^E^AY, FEBRUARY 14, 1966
^ \ ^ ■
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOXDAY, FEBRUARY 14. 1966
B—11

QUESTION: How did the Paul Bunyan legend get started?
ANSWER: Americans have always had a sense of humor and a liking for exaggeration.
Perhaps it was these qualities, along with |uride in what they were doing, which led American outdoor working people, during the 1800’s, to invent tall stories about .^eroes connected with their own trades and occupations.
Some euUUnding character might be selected or invented, and all kinds of impossible yarns woven about him. Paul Bunyan was such an occupational hero, a creation of the lumberjacks of Minnesota and Wisconsin.
Was there a real Paul Bunyan? Possibly, but if so, he could have had little resemblance to the legendary Paul Bunyan.
Here’s what Paul Bunyan the folklore hero was like: He was so strong he logged off all the forests of the Dakotos single-handed.
’This made him so hungry he ate enough each day to feed an average-size city. When Paul was in the mood, he swung his axes so fast they got white hot
He had a special gang to take the hot axes down to the river to cool them. ’This made the river boil. But Paul didn’t mind; his cook,could go out with a skillet and scoop up fish already cooked.
Paul had a huge blue ox called Babe. The ten thousand lakes of Minnesota are simply Babe’s footprints which have fiiled up.
FOR YOU TO DO: Paul may or may not have been a myth, but the huge statues of him and Babe shown in our picture are real, standing near Lake Bimidji in Minnesota. Color this picture. Paul has a bright red jacket and red socks. Babe is bright blue with white muzzle, horns and hoofs.
r*
I People in the News
By ’The Afsociated Press
Think young and you’ll n^er get old—and look what it has done for Grover Cleveland Archer of Beech Grove, Ind. and Ella Cox Henkel of Ridgewood, N.J.
Archer was patching a leaky roof on an apartment building. When he started to climb down, he discovered his ladder was gone. He took the hard way down-eliding to the ground on a utility pole.
He Is 80 years old — and a relative youngoter compared with Mrs. Henkel. She was rated a “poor rm” and rejected for a life Insurance policy when she was 30 years old. But that was 73 years ago.
She turned 103 yesterday. Five years ago a friend remarked she was “in a class by herself,” and Mrs. Henkel snapped: “I hope it isn’t kindergarten.”
Eisenhowers Attend California Church
Former President and Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower attended services yesterday at the Palm Desert, Calif., Commnnity Church, where he is the honorary chairman of the building fund.
It was the first time he and Mrs. Eisenhower attended church since they began their annual winter vacation Jan. 10 EISENHOWER at the Southern California resort.
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B—1*
THE POXTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14. 1966

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THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. FEgRUARY U. 1966
Deaths'in Pontiac and Neighboring Communities

. MRS. FRED C. BRAY Requiem Ma'ss for Mrs. Fred C. (Kathryn) Bray. 59. of 155 S. Francis was to be at Id. a.m. today at St. Vincent de Paul Church, with buriaj in Mount Hope ^metery by’ Melvin A. Scliutt Funeral Home. ’
Mrs. Bray^died Friday after a long illness. She was a housewife and a member of the Rosary Attar Society of the League of Catholic Women.
Surviving are a d a u g fa t e r. Mrs. Joan Ann Goodwin of Cim-momanson. N.J., four sisters; and two brothers.
JAMES BURDER
Service for former Pontiac resident James Burder, 64, of Hollywood, Fla., will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy.
Mr. Burder died Wednesday after a short illness. A former superintoident at Timken-De^ troit Axle Division, he was a member of Pontiac Lodge No. 810, BPOE.
Surviving are his wife. Mary; a daughter, Mrs. H. J. Stephens of Pontiac; two brothers, William of Pontiac and Frank of Florida; two sisters; and five grandchildren.
^e Donelson - Johns Funeral «or
DENIS W. HASTED
Private service for Denis W. Hasted, 23, of 4096 Crocus, Waterford Township, will be nxMTow at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home.
Mr. Hasted’s body was discovered at his home yesterday.
He was a meat cutter for Stanley Morris Livingston Co. of Detroit
Contributions can be made to Boys Town, Neb.
MAX L. UVALLEY
Service for Max L. LaValley,
(». of 1474 Orchid, Waterford Township, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees-Sipie Funeral Home. Burial will be In Perry Mount Park Cemetery.
A retired carpenter, Mr. La-Valley died Saturday after a long illness.
Surviving are three sons, Maxi Church.
L. of Pontiac, Paul J. of Hadley Surviving are his wife, Irene; and Thomas G. of Highlandjtwo sons, Paul of Grand Blanc
Surviving are a son, John of Dryden; two daughters, Florence of Detroit and Mrs. Lidia Andea of Dryden; and three grandchildren.
MRS. LAWRENCE FERGUSON ROCHESTER - Service for Mrs. Lawrence (Norma) Ferguson, 71, of 308 W.-Third willbe 2 p.m. Wednesday at Pixley Memorial Chapel. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery.
Mrs. Ferguson died Saturday after a long illness.
Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Curtis Weiser of Detrpit and Mrs. Frank Trificano/(if Hollywood, Fla.; five grvidchildren; four great-grandchildren; and one sister.
russeLl a. held
WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Russell A. Field, 81, of 7876 Ck)mmerce wiU be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at
ime, Pontiac. Burial will be in Commerce Cemetery. C<»n-merce Lodge No. 121, FftAM, will conduct a memorial service at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home.
Mr. Field died yesterday after a short illness.
retired employe of Consumers Power c:o., he was a member of Commerce Lodge No. 301, OES, and a life member of the Oakland County Sportsman’s Club.
Surviving are his wife, Lu-cile; two brothers, Lester of Orchard Lake and Willis of Commerce; and a sister, Mrs. Naomi Kempton of Waterford Township.
FELIX H. GALUSZKA GROVELAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Felix H. Galuszka, 49, of 15178 Dixie will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Rita’s Catholic Church,,, Holly. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery by the Dryer Funeral Home. Rosary will be 7 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home.
Mr. Galuszka died yesterday after a long illness. An employe of the Ternstedt plant in Flint, he was a member of St. Rita’s
Park: a daughter, Mrs. Joseph Strzelecki of Lake Orion; three brothers; a sister; and eight grandchildren.
and Felix Jr. at home; two daughters, Diane and Barbara, both at home; and two brothers.
THOMAS E. LAWLER
Requiem Mass (or Thomas E. Lawler, 52, formerly of Pontiac, will be 10:30 am. Wednesday at St. Michael’s Church, with burial in White Chapel Cemetery. Rosary will be said at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Don-elson-Johns Funeral Home.
Mr. Lawler died Saturday. He was an employe of B. F. Goodrich Co.
.Surviving are his wife, Margaret, and two sisters.
JOHN EDWARD HARRIS SR. TROY - Service for John Ed-
Mr. Harris died yesterday after a long illness. A lathe operator at Acme Manufacturing Co., F^rndale, he was a member of the First Baptist Chdrch.
Surviving are his wife, Ellen; three daughters, Mrs. Raymond Voelker and Mrs. Leonard Ziegler, both of Troy, and Mrs. Ken neth Kuritch of SJjelby Town ship; and three sons, William F, at Home, John E. Jr. of Grand Rapids and Thomas L. of Madison Heights.
Also surviving are one ,sister and 19 grandchildren.
Surviving are his w i f e, Gladys; two sons, Donald of Dryden and Arthur Spies of Im-lay City; two daughters, Mrs. Leota Weingartz of Imlay fity and Marilyn Spies of Almont; two brothers, George and Ru|-
of 9600 Garforth Will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery.
Mr. Walter died yesterday after a lon^ illness. He was* an
employe of the Commander
sell, both of Oxford; and 10 Aviation Ce., Waterford Town-grandchildren.	' ®Hip.
PRpnn wAiTiTB I Surviving are his wife, Helen; f RED o. WALTER two sons, Douglas at home and WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP - Donald of Detroit; and two Service for Fred 0. Walter, 62, grandchildren.
Four Are Caught in School Break-In
Pontiac police and a school principal collaborated Saturday nigbt to apprehend four juveniles who used a stolen set of keys to get into Eastern Junior High School, 25 S. Sanford.
The four were caught by Theodore E. Wiersema, 62, principal at Eastern, who held them police arrived. ‘
faces arraignment on a charge of assault with intent to murder after allegedly shooting her husband last night.
Police said the four had entered thq^school with a set of keys taken in a previous break-in.
Woman Is Held in Shooting
A 24-year-old Pontiac woman when he attempted to intercede
in an argument which preceded the shooting.
Pontiac police said Mrs. James Mathis of 438 Howard McNeill shot her husband, James, 28, in the arm with a 22-caliber revolver.
Mathis was treate<f'’for the wound at Pontiac Hospital and was listed in satisfactory condition.
Another man, John Gosby, 41, of Detroit, also suffered a gunshot wound, according to police,
Gosby was not hospijjalized.
To Seek Griffin Seat
MUSKEGON (AP) - Wesley Tebeau of Muskegon has announced his candidacy for the congressional seat held by U.S. Rep. Robert Griffin, R-Mich. Griffin said he plans to run for the U.S. Senate. Tebeau is chairman of the Michigan Tourist Council.
HILON G. MUZZY HOLLY - Service for Hilon G. Muzzy, 71, of 104 Cogshall will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the First Baptist Church. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery by the Dryer Funeral Home. Masonic Memorial sejvice will
be 8 p.m. tomdFrow at the funeral home.
Mr. Muzzy died yesterday after a short illness. He was a member.of Holly Lodge No. 134, F&AM, and past master of Austin Lodge No. 48, F4AM, Davis-burg, and a member of the First Baptist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Thelma; one son, Landis Granger of Holly; one daughter, Mrs. William Wood of Essexville; seven grandchildren; one brother, Carl of Holly; and one sister, Mrs. Aden Highfield of Holly.
FRANK RUSSELL
LAPEER TOWNSHIP - Service for Frank Russell, 87, of 2451 Greenwood will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at Trinity Methodist Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery.
Mr. Russell, a former township supervisor, died Saturday after a short illness.
Surviving are two sons. Earl Russell and Norley Russell, both of Lapeer; one daughter, Mrs. Violet Brinker of Lapeer; one brother, Bert Russell of Davison; 12 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.
EDWARD D. VANDAWAKER ALMONT TOWNSHIP - Serv ice for Edward D. Vandawakcr, 67, of 6345 General Squiers will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Mulri Brothers Funeral Home, Al-' moot. Burial will be in Mount j Pleasant Cemetery, Dryden.
Mr. Vandawaker died Friday.! A Dryden High School bus driv- > er, he was a retired farmer and
ard Harris Sr., 58, of 2310	employe of Champion,
Tucker will be 1 p.m. Wednes-'Home Builders Co. of Dryden.
day at the First Baptist Church. Burial will be in Christian Memorial Estates Cemetery, Avon Township, by the Price Funeral Home.
He was a member of Dryden Lodge No. 150, F&AM; Dryden Chapter No. 338, Order of the Eastern Star; and the Michigan Fox Hunters Association. j
MRS. LEONARD D. PRIOR Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Leonard D. Prior,
86, of Bay City wiU be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Penzien and Vallender Funeral Home, Bay City. Graveside service will be 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in Perry Mount 4*arh Cemetery.	|
Mrs. Prior died Saturday after a long illness.
Surviving besides her husband arc a son, Glenn R. Rivard of Pontiac; 12 grapflchildren; and six great-grandchildren.
RALPH C.SEEGRAVES Service for Ralph* C. See-graves, 40, of 40 S. Paddock wiU be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery.
A baker at Tasty Bakery, Mr. Seegraves died Saturday after a short ilbiess.
Surviving are his wife, Hilda; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wiley G. Seegraves of C r o s s v i 11 e, Tenn.; five children, Ralph C.,: Linda Kay, Darrell Lee, Dale,
Alan and Robin Ray, ^all at home; a brother, Darrell t). of ijiliTi! Pontiac; and a sister.
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CASPER C. VERPOOTEN Service for former Pontiac resident Casper C. Verpooten, 77, of Fenton, will be 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at St. Trinity Lutheran Church, with burial at White Chapel Cemetery by Voorhees-Sipie Fnneral Home.
Mr. Verpooten died Saturday after a long illness.
JOHN BACIS DRYDEN — Servioe for John Bads, 79, of 4366 Hollow Corners will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the , Dryden Methodist Church. Burial will be in Mount Pleasant Cemetery by Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Almont.
Mr. Bads died yesterday after a long illness. A retired farmer, he was a member of the First Rumanian Baptist Church of Detroit
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- ■	.	_______________ THE PONTtAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1966	__*	■ f \
Must Convince Hanoi U.S. Means Business—Bci
C—9^
rry
WASHINGTON (AP) -j Geif. Maxwell D. Tayty, Former Sen. Barry Gold water, former ambassador to Saigon, of Arizona says an American | said the probability is “quite demonstration of determination ^Ipw” that increased military -and not what he calls “grov- pressure by the United States in
eling’’ peace offensives — will bring Communist North Viet Nam to the conference table.
“I don’t think it’s our job to get the Communists to the conference table by begging, by going through other emissaries, by going through other leaders,” the 1960 Republicain presidential candidate said Sunday in a radio-television interview.
Defense Robert S. McNa-| “By the same token.” Taylor, He said President Johnson mara. He said more authority 1®®^ t® » radio-television inter-l should offer to withdraw 10,(
viPUr	ic *'cAm* oAilino ah'171a*
Viet Nam would lead to a confrontation with Red China.
Administration officials reported that the United SUt^s has started blacklisting non-Communist and Polish ships that trade with North Viet Nam. PUBUC ATTACK Goldwater coupled his first public attack on Johnson’S peace offensive with another plea for more reliance on U.S. „	.,®‘r	power and less reliance on
I think well get the Hanoiground troops, government to the conference . ..	.	.
table when we convince them!„/®	PO^erjind
that we have the will to attack and that we are	V i e t n a m e s e 1
them,” Goldwater said.
“It is a very sad spectacle to see the (greatest power on earth sort of groveling,” he added.
with Cuba after Jan. 1, 1963,
____________________________^	_______ _____administration sources said. ^
for the direction of the fighting view, thert is “some ceiling on; American troops from Viet Nam 'The vessels are barred from should be given to “military!the strength that can be sup-|if the Hanoi government would transporting U.S.-financed car-people who have spent their Ported in.the south Viet Nam.'match the t).S. offer.	goes ffom American ports, but
lives studying the problems of tt is fairly low, I might	*	*	*	' these ships are not barred from
[strategy.	suggest,”	,	personally should	“P. U S -financed car-
•	*	.......	anA« in tnrpum rvirt* on/1 franc.
RAPS McNAftURA
I think men like the secretary of defenge,” Goldwater said, “should be removed completely from any part of this war other than the logistic part.”
G(m. Taylor credited his conclusion that Red China is not likely to enter into war with the United States to tho massive U.S. air power.
South
Taylor, former chairman of posed* Geneva meeting, make it the Joint Chiefs of Staff and now • a special presidential adviser, spelled out some of'his views on the possibility of war with Red China in a copyright interview in U.S. News and World Report magazine. ,
He said the situation In Viet
are not acclimated to that type of fighting.”
FREEMAN VISITS VIET FARM - Orville Freeman, U.S. secretary of agriculture, talks with a Vietnamese girl during a visit yesterday at her farm on the coast northeast of Saigon.
OTHER DEVELOPMENTS President jlphnsora’s peace offensive — and Us failure thus far — brought these other top weekend developments:
Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff, D-Conn., proposed that Johnson invite the participants in the 1954 Geneva conference to meet again to discuss a settlement in the Viet Nam war.
He repeated his suggestions that air power should be used to attack the industrial complexes in North Viet Nam, bomb railroads and destroy the Ho Chin Minh Trail and said North Viet Nam’s ports could be shut down by mining them or sinking ships in them.
Goldwater, a general in the Air Force Reserve, als5 renewed his attack on Secretary
Our air power has been belittled for its performance in Korea because\it didn’t stop the war,” he explained. “It didn’t stop the war, but it put a ceiling on the war.
ARMED CHINESE “There were at least a million more armed Chinese north of
'invite participants to the pro-i
'It is certainly not in the interest, of Red China to have a military confrontation with the United States,” he said. “It would simply be completely destructive for their country if they were so rash as to do so.”
TO QUIZ TAYLOR Taylor probably will 1 quizzed on his views Thursday when he is expected to at the Senate Fpreign Relations Committee’s current Viet Nam probe.
Ribicoff accompanied his pro-
- ______ -............. „ pQgal for another Geneva con-	_	.
the Yalu (River) who neverjference with a series of sug-jships in the Federal Register, came interaction because theylgested ways the United States
could not be supported on the could prove it “has gone to un-l The blacklist now in effect Is front under the pressure from precedented length to bring patterned after the blacklist the air.”	I about negotiations.’'	imposed against ships trading
goes in foreign ports and trans-................I other foreign
porting them i natiqns.
COMMENT, CRITICTSM The Viet Nam hearings of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee continued to provoke congressional comment and criticism.
clear that no subject would be " barred from the conference C agenda, and name the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, ;
Arthur J. Goldberg, chief nego- j tiator, Ribicoff said.
LETTER ’TO LBJ
The	former secretary of	*	»	♦
health, education and welfare]	Hugh Scott R-Pa., ac-
■said he had written Johnson committee chairman J.W.'-, about his proposals.	Fulbright, D-Ark., of being irre-
“I am sure the President i SBonsible - by Fulbright’s own wants ft) negotiate,” Ribicoff| standards - in criticizing the said, “and I believe I have giv-President’s policies in Viet en him a suggestion that might! Ham. open the way.”
. The blacklisting of foreign ships that have traded with North Viet Nam actually began Jan. 26, it was revealed, but only came -to light after the Maritime Administration had listed the first group of barred
'Three years ago, Scott said, Fulbright said “it^as irresponsible to criticize the administration, and he accused me of all the things he is doing now.
★ ★ ★
I am not one of those people who advises that we stop and halt and allow ourselves to be beaten to death,” Scott said, “and I’m not one of those criticizing the President. Sen. Fulbright is.”
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY U, 1966
Aussies Using Doilars, Cents
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) —i years of planning, leaves Brit-
Australia became a dollars and cents country today, and the changeover from pounds, shilling and pence appeared to be going smoothly.
The switch after nearly three
/:^KEEGO
U ilil and '/(otidct fiil'
ain and New Zealand the only major trading nations still using the sterling system. New Zealand plans to convert to decimal currency next year. Britain is thinking about it.
A British delegation, in Australia to observe the changeover, moved around Sydney today to see how people were reacting in banks, shops, trains and buses..
The chairman of the Australian Decimal Currency Board, Sir Walter Scott, was at a Sydney suburban railway station watching people buy tickets in the old currency and getting change in the new.
“Everything is smoothly,”, he said..
There was excitement in the air as people for the first time handled the brightly colored dollar notes, bronze 1 and 2-cent -nickel 5-, 10- and
EAGLE
20-cent coins and silver 50-cent pieces. ,,
Although banks as a rule now will issue only dollars and cents, if a rush on the new currency es a temporary shortage at a bank it can reissue the old money. The currencies will bei interchangeable for the next two years.
HE’S HITCHED - Mrs. Robert M. Goldberg, just married to the son of the U.S. ambassador to the Unit^ States, evokes a laugh as she points a finger at her h'iisband after ceremonies yesterday in' Chicago. Mrs.
AP P^etal•x
Louise Sproston, mother of the bride, and Ambassador and Mrs. Arthur J. Goldberg flank the couple. The bride is the .former Barbara L. Sproston of Crail Fife, Scotland.
Dorothy Malones Valentine
Hand in Throat Obstructs Lion
HUNTINGTON PARK, Calif. (AP) — An African lion attacked a young mother and her 5-year-old daughter, but was stopped abruptly when the quick-thinking woman thrust her arm down the beast’s throat, police said today.
Mrs. Paul DeVita, 27, of Hawthorne suffered only tooth-marks on her arm.
★ ★ ★
Her daughter, Nedlne, was I bitten about the head, right shoulder and right hip, officers I said. She was hospitalized and fisted in satisfactory condition.
Mrs. DeVita said the incident took place when the family vis-| lited a stable wher^^ an.employe! kept the lion as a pet.	1
*	★	★	I
Officers said an unidentified, teen-ager asked the DeVitas if they wanted, "to see a tame lion.” The family said yes and the youth brought the animal I I out of its corrai on a leash, | I police said.
I After the attack, officers said,' the boy was able to return the lion to its corral.
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By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - Just about everybody’s Valentine this year is Dorothy Malone, the plucky Texan whose Iheart shaped, then was revived {during an 11-hour lung operation last September.
The actress! now is working three full days each week “Peyton Place” more than her schedule before her illness — and enjoying it.
mji; back bathroom	are | feature movie. The sets are im-j
beginning to dirnihi^, but I’ve pressive, the stories are good,' still got tf^long way to go. Now'and everyone is well-cast; there! I’m starting to get thank-you are good performers on the
THOMAS
notes for my thank-you notes. I’m afraid those will have to remain unanswered.
Miss Malone was stricken Sept. 22' with back pains. By evening she was near collapse and she was rushed to Cedars of Lebanon Hospital, where here illness was diagnosed as blood clots In her lungs. FVompt action by a- team of surgeons and
show.
She has followed with interest the various nunors about the series: that it will reduce to| twice-weekly next season, thati it will be filmed in color.
“I haven’t talked to the studio about cirtting down frmn three week, but I think it might make I ■ sense,” she said.	» *
, u - u-	-...w»».... ‘Two shows a
use (rf a new heart-lung machine' eek would provide a better,.
^	rhythm and make the produc-i
Uniike some series stars, Miss|- • •	.	1
Malone is content with her lot.
>$0pHlAlPREN
^ i JuDiTh^^
JACKHAWKim
She is, in fact, one of the biggest boosters of “Peyton Place.”
“I do get tired,” she _____
ted. “And when I go out in thej*l'®‘RE^IVE SETS evening, they are very short “We have succeeded where dates. I usually go to bed at the! imitations have failed because same time as my daughters. I of quality,” she argued. “Our
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haven’t even watched ‘Peyton Place’ since I’ve been back on jthe show; I’m asleep by then!” Miss Malone looks wan, but 'beautiful as ever. Not onl^ did '^Ishe lose 10 pounds during the I illness; she dropped another 10 since through lack of appetite.
I “I just regained my Interest in food last week,” she reported. UNHNISHED BUSINESS Now she feels stropg enough to attend to some unfinished business: answering the thousands of get-Well messages that came to her in the hospital.
“I may take years to do it, but I’m determined to answer :all the letters,” she remarked.
shows are filmed with all the care and production value a
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FE 6-61S9
tion details mwe manageable.
“I have suggested that we film in color, and I hope we do.
Our sets would photograph | beautifully, and we could uae color to compete with the newj shows next year.”
It could be added that Doro-| thy’s tawny hair and bright-blue L eyes would enhance the show as ! ^ iSai
A
S'--..-:-.
■ Plus -i""
AUDREY
HEPBURN
■ToniANoiRMa •
WKJSINESSTOGETH0II •
.......
ANNE BANCROFT
iSUE LYON-MARGARET LEIGHTON ■ FLORA ROBSON-MILDRED DUNNOCKZi [smmmm Plus mmma\l
ILOLITAS1
SAoaMv • ■"'SOI cOSWfi m m i UMMOLMKISa ■
WINMCN :	■
HUMPHREY WILLIAM
TONY i MaclBWE.
RICHARDSON’S i BILLY WILDER’S
»mj|
suaiw ill________
Tom ■ miviu.. Jones y miuec
Javits Speaks at Rose Rites
NEW YORK (AP) - “The music of his spirit will go on forever as part of America’s anthology,” eugollzed Sen, Jacob K. Javits.
Javits spoke at funeral service for Billy Rose in New York Sunday while in Hartford, C^nn., another show business luminary — Sophie Tucker — was also being sent to her final | resting place.
★ * *
At Hartford, where she grew up, about 600 persons attended Miss Tucker’s funeral. Hundreds followed the procession to Emanuel Synagogue Cemetery in neighlwring Wethersfield.
In New York, more than 700 persons attended the funeral service for Rose in the Broad-jway theater that bears his name. After the 35-minute service, Rose’s body was taken to Westchester Hills Cemetery, Ardsley, N.Y.
SECOND FUNERAL Miss Tucker and Rose died within hours of each other, she on Wednesday night at her Manhattan home, and Rose at his home in Montego Bay, Jamaica, early Thursday.
It was the .second funeral for Miss Tuckef^who was 78. The first was held in New York Friday.	k
I	★	★	★
I Among her survivors are a son, Burt Tucker, and a brother, j Morris Abuza.
j Rose -> the 86-year-old 8on([-{Writer, producer, nightclub impresario and financier — was eulogized by a rabbi, Sen. Jav-lits, R-N.Y., an ambassador and I two close friends.
I Rose’s copper and bronze cof-|fin was on center stage of the theater, almost hidden by blanket of red roses.
Among those present were two of his former wives, Joyce Matthews and Eleanor Holm.
YOUR NEWS QUIZ
PARTI - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer.	\
1	Following hia Viet conference in Hawaii. President Johuon aent.....to South Viet Nam to help
plan the program dlacuased in Honolulu.
a-J. W. Fulbrlght b-Artfaur Qoldberg c-Hubert H. Humphrey
2	One question in atartlng Viet peace talks concerna the part that ahould be played by the National
Liberation Front. The NLF representa the.
in South Viet Nam.
a-Buddhlats b-communlata c-mllltary ruU^ group
3	The House unanlmoxialy passed a new 01 "Bill of
Rights,'* which was sent to the Senate. The measure concerns...
a-rules for military courts b-federal aid to Veterans ’ c-votlng by soldiers overseas
4	A report by the National Planning Association last week said tbat the states with fattest
econoMo growth are mostly in the.... part
of our nation.
a-Weatem b-Mldwestem c-Eaatam
5	The Labor Department said last week that the nation’s unemployment rate fell to four per cent
in mid-January. This represents about ...
jobless workers.
a-1.5 million b-2.3 million c-3.3 million
PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS
Take 4 points for each word that you can
match with its correct meaning.
a-person who judges
b-cruel or unjust use of power
1	..reform
2	..critic
3	..escalate
4..... tyranny
5...malnutrition
c-a change for better d-lack of proper food e-ralae to a higher level
PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS
Take 6 points .for names that you can
correctly match with the clues.
1...Nguyen CaoKy a-noted radio astron-
omer
.b-8eoretary of Health. Bduoatloa. and Welfare
o-Chlef of State, South Viet Nam
d-Premler, South Viet Nam
a-U.S. Ambassador to South Viet Nam * VIC. bie.. AAadlwn. Wlteemln
2...Bernard Lovell
S...Henry Cabot Lodge
4...John W. Gardner
6...Nguyen Van Thieu
Vol. XV. No. 21
The Pontiac Press
Monday, February 14, 1966
Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer.
new National Forest ■ki signs in use
MaiHl Gras period began Feb. 12
3	..
world iki-]umping contest iMglns here Feb. 37
4	..
bad tuok omen in Viet Nam
subject of feud between Cuba and Communist China
finding a new Prqmier IB difficult '
7....
Soviet craft gave u« new knowledge
8.....
Chancellor Erhard visited President de Gaulle
U.S. revealed sale to Israel
10.....
Agriculture Secretary attended Viet Ulks In Hawaii
FAMILY DISCUSSION QUESTION
Should the Senate change Its rules to do away with fillbusterlngT
HOW DOYOUUTE?
(Scan bek Sy* of Quit SepantoV) 71 „ «	. OeeA
tltolOOpainh-TOfSCORE!	61 Is 70palm*• Feb.
FOpelMH.EHMllMt.	40orUyer777.!FiM!
_	Save Thu PreeHed Examinatlen!
STUDENTS Valuable Reference Msteriql For Exsne.
ANSWERS
TO TODAY’S NEWS QUIZ
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02074462
THE PONTIAC	MONDAY. FEBRUARV 14, 1966
■ Cr—4i
military revolution.
Nigerians discusii' the new policies of the military governor, Maj. Gen. J. T. U. Aguiyi-Iron-si, while sipping palm wine between glances at “The Flint-stones” and “Wrestling from Chicago” on television.
AP PhatcUx
BURBANK FIRE — Flames erupt yesterday from the terminal building and flight control tower of the Lockheed Air Terminal in Burbank, Calif., the second largest commercial air facility in the Los Angeles area. The blaze broke out in the terminal restaurant kitchen. No injuries were reported as officials estimated damage at $2 million.
Life in Nigeria Has Returned to Normal g Month After Coup
LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) - Lifeyouths garbed In traditional i Trading stalls vending dvery-. Roadblocks inside the citiesi Nigerian newspapers, most of,Minister Sir Abubakar Tafawa las returaed to what pa^ forlBritish whites play cricket on’thing from auto parts to Individrlhave been lifted, and garishly the shrill political organs before Balewa and President Nnamdl
lou. nation a”mVnth”SterTe'"’'	^	space Azikiwe - who remains in Untrack.	'	early morning to far into the^"	the military regime, don - have been removed from
Few troops are seen. The night. Formidable -market	★	* government and private build-
^lice, ^ seemed to disappev mqpunies” run these businessesTRANSPORT	| jjail is no longer opened for
2kS?u?tteh^3M^TrLto	trading usually is conducted! Mammy wagons are basic inspection as it was for a week,	* ★ *
1^	high-pitchcd haggling with transport here. They are trucks after the revolt. But the govern-1 Nigeria’s building boom con-
saving. * .fitted with wpoden bodies de-|ment cable office exercises'tinues. Charity fund-raising ioin«*^ i" ♦ ^***^* **^*	*	isigned to carry passengers, I strict censorship on news dis-!drives have resumed,
ising inausiriai peace.	j prices qj st^pig	mg freight and livestock, usually at t»tches. All references to trihpl-l	Sr ★ ★	''
SMUG ATTITUDE	rice and plantains increased!the same time.	ism or corruption in the old| Schools opened on schedule
I Many civil servants have after the revolt but were rolled! Village petitions for “pipe-iiovernment are deleted. Onlyifor the spring semester. College Traffic clogs the narrow, adopted a smug and rl^teous back under army orders. Mark- borne water- and other ameni- ft®ttering descriptions of the [students have so far obeyed a odorous streets in this seaside attitude since the army ousted,et mammies complain Nige- ties” are now sent to military	rulers are accepted. i military rule against shouting
capital. Soccer games draw ca- niinisters and most political ap-.rians wearing “military looking authorities instead of politi-l(This story was airmailed.) slogans, carrying placards or paclty crowds and Nigerian'pointees.	'uniforms" demand free food, cians.	Photographs of sihin Primelholding political meetings.
KROGER PRICED MEANS
LOWER-PRICED
PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS
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SLICED BACON
Greek King, Ex-Premier Near to Power Showdown
ATHENS (UPD - The seven-month-long power struggle between Greece’s young king and its most popular politician in decades faces a showdown Wednesday.
Former Premier George Pa-pandreou has called a rally for then to show support for his fight to limit the power of King Constantine.
Outcome of the rally conM indicate the future course of the. monarchy In Greece and possihly break the political deadlock that has stilled Greece’s economic life since Septemher.
The date is the second anniversary of the elections in U64 when the Center Union party under Papandreou won an unprecedented landslide victory, polling 53 per cent of the vote. * w *
The public meeting was summoned within the framework of the “relentless struggle for democracy” which Papandreou made his battle cry when he was removed as prime minister last July 15 following a bitter quarrel with King Constantine. MILITARY JUNTA
The rift sprang from suspicions — now under judicial investigation — that Papandreou’s son, Andreas, was organizing a military junta in the army, with designs on the government.
Ever since, the domestic political situation in Greece has been deepening. It has taken the form of a direct struggle between the young king, », and the 7t-year-old Center Union leader.
3 Diphtheria Carriers May Leavje'Hospital
DETROIT (AP)-A health .official says three diphtheria carriers may be released from a hospital soon.
Dr. Paul Salchow, epidemiologist for the Detroit Health Department, said tests indicate Bozy Hill, 38, does not have diphtheria. Hill’s son, Lonnie, 4, died from the disease Jan. 30. I 0	♦ e	I
“We are treating him as a^ carrier and expect to be able to release him after, a feu[, days’ treatment,” he said.
Dr. Salchow said other patients due for release are Frederick Robbins, 23, and Algernon Tanner, 15, both of Detroit. Robbins is a roomer in Hill’s home.
Student Finds Room
at Dormitory 'Papered'
PUTNEY, Vt. (UPI) - Windham College sophomore Michael Resnick, 30, of South Fallsburg, N.Y., returned from a weekend at home to find his dormitory room littered with an estimated, 100,000 sheets of paper.	I
Nine of Resnick’s friends spent two hours Sunday morning filling the room from floor to ceiling and wall to wall with newspapers. One of them, Nell Deautch, 20, later explained, “We just had nothing to do.”
Papandreou has made the issue a simple^one: “Who governs in this country? The king or the people?” Papandreou has said he is not out to end the monarchy, only to make it the servant, not, the master, of the nation. -
* e ♦
Since his ouster from the premiership, Papandreou has carried his campaign to the country, making speeches in the provinces, demanding new elections — elections, he says, to answer whether “the king or the people rule.”
TROUBLE DUE?
There is fear among some government officials that the public rally could bring trouble.
There has been some thought of banning it but many think this would simply be an evasion of the basic conflict. If Papandreou defied a ban, the situatioo couhLbe made all the worse.
Trouble or not on Feb. 16, the political climate in Greece remains tense and uncertain, with crisis constantly in the air for these reasons:
The 72 days of political upheaval which began with Papandreou’s ouster on July 15 was “solved” in Septemher — after the longest such crisis in Greek political history —• by the formation of the present government headed by Premier Stefan Stefanopoulos*.
HAS MAJORITY
Stefanopoulos has a majority in Parliament of only 2 votes (152 out of a total of ^ seats).
The premier’s tenhous majority is an unworkable one, not anly because it is non-homogenous In makeup but because any pair of deputies can at any time try to pressure the government — the word “blackmail” has been used — for political or private reasons.
Most observers are agreed the situation cannot continue without disastrous results. Only two practical solutions are seen:
•	A broadening of the present government majority which could be achieved only If Papandreou decided to support it,
■ ■ ‘ he has adamantly refused to do.
•	New elections. This issue has been blocked by the king on the ground that, in the present tense atmosphere, the calling of elections might touch off a new national upheaval.
There is a second reason for King Constantine to be hesitant to call new elections now. They might ^alsc the “constitutional issue” of the monarchy itself, whether it is to be retained.
What takes place Wednesday may shed some light on further events.
For one thing, attendance at the rally will indicate just how strong a hold Papandreou maintains on his followers and whether, in fact, 53 per cent of the nation still is behind him
If the meeting is a flop, Papandreou may have to water down his demands, and thus pave the way toward organizing a workable government.
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■NbfiMfy 1*. I*M. e	^^1	1944.	^

GOLDEN BEAUTIES
BANAHAS
10
LB.

C—6
the PONTIAC PRESS. iMOXDAY, FEBRUARY U, 1966
Jacoby on Bridge
NORTH (D)	14
AAJ103 ¥ J 7
♦ AK10 54 4^10 2
EAST AKQ98 •VA5	¥632
4Q932	♦J870
4973	4Q4
SOITH
his partner but. somehow orliier a club niff. Down one."
I other, something bad always Our friend really was un-j happens to him. Here is his lucky. South would have ruffed
Percy Quits Camera Firm in Senate Bid
i story for today:
WEST 4 76 42
¥ KQ1Q984 ♦ Void '
4AK J865 Both vulnerable West North East South 1 ♦	Pa.ss	1 ¥
Pass	1 4	Pass	^3 4
Pass	3N.T.	Pass	4 4
Pass	4 ¥	Pass	6 ¥
Pass Pass Pass "Opening lead—4 7.
“Things were going pretty well. I had won one rubber and with both sides vulner-dbie in the second I picked up a nice hand. Nothing sensational, but a comfortable 13 high-card points pips a couple of tens.
“When my partner responded to my diamond opening with clubs, I bid a confident three, one heart, then jumped to three no-trump and was only slightly disturbed when he took out to
a third club and made the hand if the queen had not dropped. He should have ruffed it anyway. This would have insur^ his contract.
CHICAGO (API - Charles H Percy has stepped out of the management of the Bell & Howell Co. after 28 years.

Q—The bidding has been; West North East South 14 Dble. ?
You, South, hold:
454 ¥K J54 4Q 19C54 4S2 What do you do?	p
A—Pass. Yon only have sixi| points and your suits aren’t good enough to warrant bld-
four clubs. This forced me to	the two level.
itry four hearts. He jumped to [six and I stiH wasn’t really unhappy. My hand was certainly sound."
We looked over the hand and remarked that six hearts
y JACOBY AND SON The unlucky expert will star i seemed rather safe, in this week’s columns. If 5’ou play bridge at all yoU will know one of his pro-totypes — the man who never es a mistake but always
TODAY’S QUESTION You pass. Fourth hand bids two hearts. Your partner bids two spades and the man who has doubled goes to thw hearts. What do you do Answer T<
Sometimes he is really I lucky, as with today’s hand. Other times he helps out his own bad luck by making things difficult for
“Not the way my partner played it. He won the spade opening and promptly cashed the ace and king of clubs. The queen dropped and he smiled sweetly and spread his hand, announcing that he would play trumps and the defense could take their ace when ready.
“‘Play,’ said West. My part-| ner led a trump toward my jack 1 and returned to his king. West took the ace and gave his part-1
Astrological Forecast
■y SYDNIY OMARR For TutiRoy "Tho wlH moo coiRroli , . . AitroloRy Reinti tlw way.
ARIES (War. SI-Apr. 1*1:	C
maitrri an tnova again. Coincldas ralrast ol amotlonal log-|atn. Bull wild bair. Chacit dial, health raqulre-menls. Pay ho haed to groundlasJ rumor.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Financial ' T you itudy nacasiar
7 Prisoners Jam Cell Doors at Jail
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) Seven prisoners, including three accused murderers, sabotaged the automatic cell doors in Marion Couhty’s new $10-million jail ^linday with the handle of a mop bucket.
^VOU LAZY BUM 1 J ^^	/ DOMT WU ] EVER ^AKJT TO	/ u;hy ? do I \ LOOK UMSETTLED J you ?
		
a«-ci2)		
		
By Ernie Bushmirier
Workmen had to cut through a cell block wall to reach them. Sheriff pobert Fields said the jamming of the sliding doors had not been done in an escape try.
He said the prisoners were piqued at having to return to their cells after the afternoon exercise period.
Telephoning Is a Problem
By Bud Blakt
YORKVILLE. Ind. W -When the Rev. Charles Walsh wants to talk to neighbor Henry Alhaus, he finds it easier ' to open a window than to use the telephone.
Telephones used by Father Walsh, pastor of St. Martin's church, and Alhaus. who lives across the street, are operated by different companies.
Establishing telephone com-; munication between the two involves a long-distance call over 35 miles of telephone lines.
Fire Levels Restaurant
PIGEON (AP) - Fire destroyed the Pigeon Roost restaurant in this Michigan Thumb community yesterday. Damage was estimated' at more than $25,000. No one was injured. Firemen from Elkton, Pigeon and Bayport fought the predawn blaze.
By Walt lllanay

THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY U, 1966
C—7
TIm foUowlHg art top pricea
_____________I of locally
produoa by fiwara and aoM by
them in wbeiaaala package lota. QuotatioM are fumiahed by the Detroit Bureau of Marketa aa of Monday.
NEW YORK,(AP) - Raila dontinied to pace an advancing
Produc*

ApniM, MMOM, OOMWI. tt ApplM, Dtlktat, RM. btf. ApplM, JoiMthan, bu........

noon in fairly acthre<4rading.
The carriers were buoyed onde again by merger ]xx>e-pecta, good eaniinga and President Johnson’s Food for Freedom which gave promise of even greater rail freight reve-
IM'


Industrials followed somewhat raggedly, with many a loser breaking up the paNbm in such groups as steels, rails, chemicals, electronics, airlines,
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Poultry and Eggs
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which made them coiqiare less favorably with debt securities.
A scattering of special situations enlivened the list and brought about some fairiy big gains for the issues involved^
AP AVERAGE The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .8 at 368.7 with industrials up .6, rails up 1.7 and utilities off .6.
The Dow Jones industrial av-
989.25.
Prices rose in heavy trading on the American Stock Ex-(^ge. Valley Metallurgical was up another 3 points, Xtra Inc. and Syntex 2, Glannini Controls, Mt^ybdenum, Carnation, Conununlty Public Service, Coronet Industries, Dorr-Oliver and Edo Corp. "A” a point or better.
Corporate bonds were mostly unchanged in light trading. U.S. Treasury bonds resumed their steep decline.
Posts Filled at Consumers
Jackson Man Named Pontiac Supervisor
Edward A. Weliver of Jack-son has been named personnel and safety supervisor for Consumers Power Co,8. Pontiac division, Charles F. Brown, division manager, has announced.
The New York Stock Exchange
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Hartrick, also a Michigan State University graduate, has been with the Pontiac division since joining Consumers Power In 1052.
Both men will begin their new assipments Monday, Brown said.
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WELIVER HARTRICK
Weliver succeeds Phillip A. Hartrick, who has been named to a similar position with the company's Battle Creek division.
A Michigan State University graduate, Weliver Jollied Consumers Power in 1911. Before tiiat, he was a management employe with Keivlnator Division of American Motors Corp.
Loan Demand Ups Pressure on Rates
\
By SAM DAWSON AP Bnsiness Newt Analyst NEW YORK-As the business boom rounds out its fifth year, the demand for loans is rising and with it the pressure for still higher interest rates.
Many in the bahking field feel that another hike in the cost of borrowing is not too far off.
Involved would consumers^ business firms, buyers of new homes.
Put the other way around, rewards for savers and returns to lenders would be rising further. This runs all the way from the interest payments on U. S. savings bonds and bank savings accounts to the yield enjoyed by suppliers of funds for mortgages or for business expansion.
)ut its fifth year, ir loans is rising le II
iS
S
debating whether interest in-, creases all along the line are in prospect.
Banks borrowing from the Federal Reserve have been paying 4V4 per cent since early December, when the cost went up by % per cent. Dr. Roy L. Reierson, senior vice president, Bankers Trust C(Hnpany, New York, predicts this soon will be raised still higher. Other bankers express the same belief privately.
DAWSON
time deposits yet, but several have raised their interest rates close to it.
The Increase in the discount rate in December brought a rebuke from Washington but was quickly followed by an identical Vi per cent rise in the prime rate charged by the banks to’
DEMAND HIGH The reason banks and other lenders are willing to pay savers more these days is that the demand for loans has risen so high — and the interest that can be earned on bank loans has gone up so much, too — that lenders are competing for funds. To do that they Ime savers with higher rewards. ' Predictions that the demand for funds will goon growing — and that interest rates will keep in step — are based on the majority view in financial circles that the economic upswing
The administration is expect-
ed to oppose this, or to delay it as long as possible. It prefers money to be plentiful and fairly cheap to keep the economy expanding through a sixth straight year.
Some banks already are raising again the interest they virill pay on large deposits tied up for six months or more.
OTHER SIDE
On the other, side of the coin, the Federal Housing Administration has just raised the interest charged on mortgages it insures. Formerly this cost SVs per cent Now it costs 514 per cent. Lenders of conventional mortgages unbacked by the FHA get an average of 6 per cent. The building industry is
By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am a wUow of 53, livlBg comfortably on interest from money in eavlngt banks. I own 159 shtree Times Inc., which It now worth $15,0te. Shoold I hoU or seU half and pot the proceeds into the bank? What do yon think of New England Telephone? It doesn’t seem to do very much. My mother bonght it five years ago at 51V4 and it shows a lost.”	-H.C.
A) New England Telephone is in excellent income producer, but its growth—except for the past two years—has been only irtbderete. I advise your mother to keep the stock. The current yield is 4.5 per cept and since New England — particularly Boston — is undergoing somewhat of a renaissance, I believe the stock will show further appreciation.
You have an eKcellent growth holding in Time Inc. I believe you should switch half to Eastman Kodak for diversification purposes only. I advise you to add no more to savings, since these — unlike the two stocks mentioned — can offer you no inflation protection whatsoever.
Q) “I own 129,000 Series H bonds, maturing March 19M. Can yon tell me the advantages in savings bonds or good monlcipal bonds. I am in my 70s and interested only in lafoty.”	—C.F.
A) Your Series H bonds maturing next month have been promised an extension. The President has announced that the interest rate will be raised on all. bonds now outstanding, as well as on those to be extended. For a person in your position, there are great advantages in holding savings bonds. You get absolute safety combined with complete stability, which ia unobtainable in any other bond whatsoever. Municipals offer a higher tax-We equivalent yield if your In-lome is in the upper brackets. They do fluctuate on money conditions, which might disturb you. I advise you to extend your Series H bonds.
Roger Spear’s 41-page Guide to Soccesafnl Investing Is available to all readers of this column. For your copy, cHp this notico and send 11.99 with your, name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Peatiac Press, Box 1518, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 19017.
(Copyright, 19M)	^
MICHAEL R. BECKER
GM Credit Union Picks Officers at Annual Meeting
Michael R. Becker. Lakeland, Sylvan Lake, recently wu reelected president of the GMTC Employees Fed era* Credit Union.
Other officers elected at the group’s 30th efiniversary annual meeting were Harold Hudak, vice president; H. W. Reeve, secretary; and Harry J. Woodman, treasurer.
Named to the board of directors were Rudolph Hartman, Nick B. Skosich, Charles Talbot, WilUam J. Tobin and Donald J. Wilson.
Directors of the credit union declared a 4Vi per cent dividend on shares and a IS per cent interest refund, making a total of 1680,000 returned to the members for 1965. Assets at the end of the year were listed as $12,-712,482.
Business Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Jack-son of Jackson Equipment Rental Sales and Service, 62 W. Montcalm, will attend the American Rental Association convention Monday through Thursday in Washington, D C.
Appointment of George L. La-hodny, of 31771 Verona, Bloomfield Hills, assistant to chairman of board of Detroitl Edison Co. has been announced by Board Chair-j man Walker L.
Cisler.
Lahodny will' will continue as LAHODNY manager of sales for the company. He was named to this position last April.
their largest customers with the ^ continue through 1966. best credit rating. It is now 5	w
per cent. Dr. Reierson thinks it!. Spending for the Viet Nam will go up again. That would war will stimulate the economic mean that the great volume of growth. And if this should slack-bank loans, always higher than en, bankers feel that the spend-the prime rate, will be more'ing for Great Society programs costly, too.	j would be quickly increased.
The Federal Reserve since! They add that any real let-December has allowed banks to|down in the economy’s pace
charge 5V4 per cent on time de-|would Inspire the administration posits, but only 4 per cent on to seek new tax cuts and bigger regular savings accounts. Few;federal deficits to revive the banks will pay that much on boom.
N.Y. Banker Urges U.S. to Give Foreign Aid tq Fewer Nations
DETROIT (AP) - New York
banker David Rockefeller urged today that U.S. foreign aid be channeled to fewer recipients —especially to nations trying cope with the problems of too many people and not enough food.
Rockefeller, president of Chase Manhattan Bank, told the Economic Club of Detroit in prepared remarks;
‘The problems of population and the productiveness of agriculture must be given a new and far greater emphasis in ail thinking and actions relating to die economic advance of the developing world.’'
'Dispersing our investment efforts among dosens of nations usually results in making our contribution to each of them too small ..., at the same time depriving those relatively which could competently utilize more eld,” Rockefeller said. NA'nON’S POTENTIAL
An underdeveloped nation’s advancement potential, he suggested, depends largely on birth control and increased farm output^ If progress Is not made in these areas, he said, spread famine will be a grim condition of life — or rather of death -^In large areas of the world.”
Some poorer nations, he warned, ignored the need for more food and devote too much capital to “the fetish of indua-triailzation.*^ These should receive a smaller shar6 of U.8. foreign aid. Rockefeller said.
2,549 suggestions adopted by the division and 2,521 Fisher Body workers shared $131,806.
Employe inggestioes are aimed at methods of making Jobs safer and easier and improving plant operations. Pontiac Motor made five maximum awards of $6,000 last year and GMC Truck & Coach
He also urged that underdeveloped nations invest in needed building programs — roads and railroads, canals, harbors and dams. And he said such nations should take added stops to encourage private investment in their economies.
Rockefeller asked that Congress pass a measure now be-
Rult Waterford Man Shot Himself to Death
A 23-year-old Waterford Township man was found dead by his wife yesterday morning, the victim of a self-inflicted shotgun wound.
The body of Denis W. Hasted of 4096 Crocus was found in the living room of his home. According to township police, the victim pulled the trigger of the weapon with a toe, the bullet passing through his neck and the lower part of his head.
Treasury Position
WASHINGTON (API-Tlw ci
el Iht Ireaturv i--- ■
SMnsrng ^ >
C44ll P04ltl wTtli cerr#.
P4S. S, ISM
7 5,U*.3«.7S4.M I 3,431,763.733.41 D4e04lf| Flical Y44r July 1-
70,334,SN,4t1.74	44,473,331,317.3*
-----------
*Tu!iim734!47*‘' ~77,66S,S7S,773. X-Totlf Debl-
333.337.SS7.S4S 44 3II,4S4,4U.34S.*6
fore it, providing a 30 per cent
tax credit in the flrst year on private U.S. investments in developing countries.
“It is also my conviction that, by broadening still further the risk guarantees that our government provides for qualified overseas investments, more businesses would avail thenuelves^ of venturesome opportunities,” he said.
GM Worker Ideas Draw Record Funds
Employes at both Pontiac Motor Division and GMC Truck & Coach Division were awarded record amounts last year under the General Motors Suggestion Plan.
A total of $276,737* was award-
ed to Pontiac Motor employes for 2,54r
Fisher Body Division presented $59,000 in suggestion compensation during 1065 on 2,136 suggestions.
There were no maximum award winners.
News in Brief
Robert See, 38, of 575 Tennyson was assessed $125 in a fine and-costs yesterday by Orion Township Justice Helmar Stan-aback after pleading guilty to a charge of driving under the influence of liquor. ^
Waterford Township police are investigating the theft of an I-beam valued at $75 from 6882 Terrell.
Farmington Firm Buys Subsidiary in Ohio
Futurmill, Inc., of Farming-ton, manufacturer of milling cutters and machine tools, disclosed today it has purchased the Cleveland Planner Co.
R. G. Begle, president, said the Ohio facility will become an Integral part of Futurmili’s machine tool division, and will continue to operate atjts present location as a wholly-owned subsidiary.
X-IncludM 1360.335
Lodge Calendar
•ONO AVIKAOIt .
AM^LIS^S^'
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? ASS	73.2	100.3	13.7	33.0
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Annual meeting of the Quadrant Low 12 Club will be held on Wednesday, February 16. at the Pontiac Lodge Temple, 18W E. Lawrence St., at 8 p.m. Election of officers and other important business. Signed—Lloyd W. Burnes, Secy. ■* —Adv.

shades of something hew, in a color so
important 5^011*11 find it every where, every way at HHS
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Our Pontiac Mall Store Is Open tvery Evening to 9 p.m. -- Our Birmingham Store Open Monday to 5:30
■■■:’.: 7. :-V [;
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1966
X)—1
In Waterford-Clarkston Game

Pr^f^f^oring Duel Forecast

I have won
four of their last five games in pushing their record to 7-6, and one of the big reasons for the team’s success has been the play tif forward Rick Ziem, a senior, who’s scoring average stands at U.7. Ziem will be. in the lineup tomorrow when the Skippers take on Clarkston’s Wolves.
A couip of Q|klai)d County’s finest nwksihea wlU br « the court when Waterf^ i^ela to Clarkston to me Wolves tomorrow el|^t«
It’s a iMiKmfe^ Pffair, so there’s nothln/^^litake but prestige for the two quintets.
★ ; *
Another prestige scrap on tomorrow night’s slide finds Kettering entertaining West Bloomfield. ■
’The nets should stay warm at Clarkston with the Wolves’ Dan Fife and Waterfoed’e Rick Ziem in the lineups. '
Heading Int* the contest, Fife is the owner of a scoring average of 3L1'throngh 13 games, while Ziem is sipping along at a 22.7 pace in 13 out-togs.
Both are excellent outside shots, and both established
scoring records at their respective schools this season.
Fife poured in 43 points three games ago against West Bloomfield to establish a new Clarkston record, and Ziem cracked the Waterford mark 'against Walled Lake Friday evening when he connected f(»- 41 points. l-OliR OF F^
Waterford, after a slev^ start, tias come on strong and won Tour of its last five games and Will take a 7-6 record Into the ganae.
The Wolves (8-5) havd woil-idx of their last eight contests, Ju(;^ V, : |he team has trouble Wl^ m ponents clamp down
Againse Northville fHl#' ' in a M-56 loss, Fife collected only 18 points, the only time this season he’s been held to less than 20 markers.
The action will open at Clark-
ston w^' iK Junior varsiW tilt . a*J8:8l!>Jt*5'-
witlf^dhe Tri-Coup ty	crowih tucked awny,
has knt wt once in 13 ontbms and snoukl be nble to hanfie West Bloomfield’s Lakers. •	,
The Captains of KettmUig have thrived qn balance, ahd ip far, there’s always been sonia< one arpand to ball the team put iiTi||(fi leerliig department.' -O>aph:do« Duby and the Cap <v" taidi Native# gaines reaudh-hig, jcoWithig.lh^^^
yi^oriea hrall 'thAdd "
th?m tp mij^ vidarp
And the Lakers have probably one of the most underrated players in the area in Tim Moller, a center-fwward who’s averaging .16.4 points a game.
Montreal Knocks Red Wings From Top Spot
Canadiens Win, 4-3; Hawks Lead League
DETROIT UFI—Three milestontes' a lengthy winless streak ended Sunday but the,Detroit Red Wings would have been happier just to see thb milestones.	;
The winless streak — whicl^ taw Mpn^al d<i no, better than gain, three ties in p^vious appearances on Detroit ice—came to a halt wJhen the Canadiens took a 4-3 decision.	. i
The loss cost the Red Wings; Who gained 8 3-3 tie with Toronto on Paul Henderson’s last-second goal Saturday night, a share of first place in the National Hockey League.
Chicago, which played a ^2 tie with Montreal Saturday, took ovei with Yorl Ni
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Af») V^,•4ack Bowsher, 1965 chain; ||ikW of Automobile Racing America, will ^tait in lflf^t..uf ilw field ill the third .258-fnlle, ARCA cham-plonship. stock car race n e x gtfbdfiy.
Rowsber sped from behind to Wih^the key 25-mila qualifying race Sunday. His 168.164 miles per boW speed was a record, sinoe tim fUatanoe is new in the ARCA GompeUtion here.
It waa'a FloFd-Plymouth-
day*
SHARES SI
Montreal, second place Wings, rushed to A . on Claude ProvosPg before the game waa til utes old. Provost’s first a was the 200th of his NHL daiW and bounced off defeiisdnWn i Bill Gadsby into the DatruH^wit;'
Alex Delvecchio, plagtag Ida 1,000th game-the eighlirW«r
CLARKSTON SPARKPLUG - Clarkston’s all-around basketball ace Dan Fife, a junior, poses a threat for Waterford’s Skippers, who move into Clarkston tomorrow night to take on the Wolves in a nonconference encounter. Fife leads the Oakland County scoring race with a mark of 31.1 a game.

Groves, OL St. Mary
Two of Uie eouhty’s rated basketball teams picked [up key vibtoHeA Saturday while a third one suffered \k defeat Sunday/
Birminghdth iSroves, the Associated Press’ ninth-rated cW$ A	rugged Southfield, 77-73,
aidc^ by sol:§e'imp0nwd foul shooting.
Orchard St:	reached the second division
finals of the Detroit Ca^ic League playoffs by beating' Detroit St. Gre^fo^t "
tied for. np^th, Jii t|vii raigting^.,	' > -Vvyf
for the Red Wings in tM’flikt period.
800th career assist on Delvec-chio’t goal, and Ron Murphy talUed for the Red Wings in the second period.
John Ferguson pushed Mon-^eal in front before Murphy’s goal and GlUes Tremblay’s goal 31 seconds into the third period proved to be the ganje-winner. THEY SCORED "You can’t sco don’t shoot,’’ \
Sid Abel said. "1 treat didn’t do n they scored.’’
The Red Wings sent btlt J6
■1166 Font ptbved fastest.
Oni;- IM short of the finish, Bdpohcr tame off the high east Gordie HOwe, who got lilshatak to scoot ahead of Andy
Hampton of Louisville, Ky., in a 1965 Dodge. TH6n Bowsh^ circled the 2.5-mile trioval .at 171 m.p.h., the last lap and finished two car. lengths in front of Hampton.	. .
Ramo Stott of Kbskakt loba, led the early laps la his ItO Plymouth but had to schle for UiirdflMie. Be wavered hea^
_____________,_________. 154.682 m.pji. in a Uift. Jgercu-i
shots at the Montreal.their |^. |gbad'.Whee|^ ofW6dim|i*' lowest total of the srosoii Mop-lhthn,'Ohid, warsecmkl’iiN Bk: treal had 20 shots, half of th^m In the flrst period.
mar Davis of New Albany, jnd. third, both In 1964 FMs.
WHIGS'■^ih'n’ACK SLOtED-Montreal Canadiens’goalie	^	............
U>rne Wors% (30) and teammates Terry Harper (19) and ,112),. iollITli Cansdiens want 4Mi to	win that
Jaapies Lapforriere ‘(2) broke up this first-period rush by 'imoiiksd Wings put of flrst place In Ihe^lmonal Hockey the Detroit Red Wings’Murray Hall (20) and Ron Murphy Leaguf rai^’
Top Quints
By ’lia' Associated Press A lumber of the nation’s top coljleko basketball teams can
*“slowef Kmfle quaWloS: afjwf: waiting for time to count
it out all together.
j^h standouts as Kentucky, E^ke, CTiicago Loyola, Texas .Western and Providence seek to nail down conference or at large
Retiring Jedrs far Auerbach
South (^lina and figures to improve on its 9-1 league record and 17-2 over-all. The Bit ils, of course, miuti
BOSTON (AP) - Amoldlties’'fHgit office oft, a fuU-time (Red) Auerbach, the most sue- baslh aflnr this s^n. “But
cessful pro basketball coach iii P history, is stepping out as boss of the Boston Celtics with regret and the admission he isn’t quite as tough as he appears.
'The fiery Auerbach, greying and balding at the age of 48, shed a couple of tears Sunday as he was hailed and showered with gifts at halftime of the Critics’ 120-110 National Basketball Association loss to Los Angeles.
A Boston Garden crowd of 10,-679 and a national television audience watched the festivities.
’This is just making it tougher to retire,” said Auerbadh, who plans to move into the Cel-
i’tt ^ing to retire, ^have to.” Auerbacb was rather quiet in t|a im M as the Celtics rallied (o trail only 63-59 at the in-termissloQ. After the emotion-packed salute, though, he became his old self, drawing a technical foul for protesting an official’s can.
OLD 8’TUFF But technicals are old stuff to Auerbach, who already has paid nearly $1,000 in fines this year. His outbursts in support of his playeril have been widely reported in his 20* seasons as NBA coach.
After the game Auerbach managed smiles and talked softly with writers u be puffed on a
cigar in the crowded dressing room. This was a “new” Auerbach. ’The “old” rarely managed a weak grin and a couple of words after a defeat.
“They say that losing comes sier as' you grow older,” Auerbach said. “But losing keqw getting harder for me. I Just can’t take it like I used to. It’s time for me to step out — but I wimt one more championship ■■|ls year.”
Auerbach, hailed greatest coach in b^etball history,” received a silver tray, captain’s chair, 22 plaques featuring highlighU of his 16 years with the Celtics, a lighter for his cigars, a silver dgar bon, and portraha of himself, his wife and two daughters.
spots in the first round tourney Duke, No. 2, is at home to schedules, or at least Improve their alrewly very good chances in games tonight.
’The Important action ’Tuesday is off the court and on the conference table. ’That’s the dead-__________,______________
line for the Ivy League — andl Three	Af 'i
others — to file certification-----------^^^
that they will abide by a controversial NCAA rule establishing a grade minimum for athletes.
’The Ivies have announced they won’t do it. And the NCAA has said that if they don’t, they are ineligible for NCAA championship events — including the basketball tourney.
BIG QUESTION
Just what will happen to tifej Ivy spot in the NCAA tourney k still open to question-^hethlF
berths and all practically d«-
The score was tied at 70 wiUi[^{ two minutes to go, but Angl Fiorini hit five of six chant |tossUs and Mike Rafferty a a field goal to clinch the de^^
Icision. 'Tbe winners missed I free throws during the tilt.
Orchard Lake St. Mary wc its nth straight (18-1) despf 26 turnovers by outrebo St. Gregory, 6(M2. ’The 1 also, made only 21 per c their fleid goal attempts.
OL St. Mary now will i unbeaten and hlgh-scorini troit St. Hedwig 7 p.m. g«tU«[- Special to the Pontiac Press day at the University of Detroit GRAND RAPIDS - Pontiac’s I	Bill HoIUs punched his way to
iRiUtV the 160-pound novice champlon-3 lij"” ship in the state Golden Gloves ^ f I tournament here Saturday night.
Golden Gloves Champion
fontiac Boxer Punches Way ifefo State Title
tt wlU be flUed by an at lai«| defeat, 6441. aided by	nirkkWi >«in
or whether it won’t^lm In the high hurdl^ and^
PJoiwer^
Wrong^Trailj,
in Track Me#l
■ „■'«
Oakland University's |*ione( Saturday blazed a trail tbeg’d rather'^get.	f
Ctofiance of Ohio handed tile Ptoiieers thely flrst Indoor traC^
filled at all.
But while the athletic brass wrestle with that administrative problem, sohitlons of a more basic nature will be forged on a number of courts tonight.
Top-ranked Kentucky, eyeing a flfth national title, takes its 19-0 record to Alabama in quest of its lltb straight SEC victory. A victory, and the Wildcats are favored, would just about put them out of reach of the rest of the league.
Vanderbilt, ranked flfth in the stioD at 17-3, has the ' chance. Hie Cpmmodores are 8-8 in the conference and have a game against Auburn tonight.
tain of making them, are in %. No. 3 Chicago Loyola, 1^[| ■ to Western M’ Western, 111
State, ai_______
'-2, BKS
OL IT. MARY (74) D. It.
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20 points at one ftage and Imd to
OROVRI (77)
The 17 - year - old Hollis, a wrestler on the Pontiac Central High School team, pounded out two unanimous decisions Saturday enroute to the title.
Hollis, managed by Harold Dugan, local GG director, wai the only one of 10 Pontiac entrants In the tournament to collect a title.
In his semifinal Jiout with Jim I Warren of Lansing, Hollis dis-'•Jpiayed a sharp left Jab before ' jjmhe crowd of 5,000 and won the of the Judges, 6056, 59-58 "^nd 60-57.
...'p';	*	*	*
Be had an easier time in the
l%)Ea«X, Ariz. (M - (Slit- fore thd roiWU;’ 6«>iRiid. ,*'.Tho v
dash events. Oakland U 3-1.	/
Former Pontiac Northern runner Uary Cobb wap t h e only dual winner, taking the one^nlle and two-mile runs. Another ex-Hnskle, Ttm KanI, won the 111.
Other ()-U Wbumrs Were George Walkoff (440 doth), Jon
Anderson (long Jumfl^ mid g.	f	< ■*
fiance also won six had more seconds and thirds.
’The Pioneers will visit Kalamazoo CoHege Friday night to run against West Michigan University’s freshman team.
he decked Walter ig of Saginaw with a right
i tihhsid^' w UUB. b<|t theLfQjjj ggeonj round and
pUto.to h^forhisli)ingb|^,pnb	I' W«|,tet on to an easy decision,
set out today in quest o^’a vicRf very satisfied .with’ the »()uo<^a judges scored it 6056 6057 ry in what may be' Widast, gi^ under thp )^lrcttnBl»iices^.i 1-1^2 60-54 toumamnt for some tlRm-the Dickinsob ^veti^«it^^‘
$80,000 rtibelllx Open. ,	• rounds	o/er the 6,^p5NSING WINS
DiAlnaon fought olf the	Pboenfit Cbifntry- Owbl Lansing produced seven cham-
In U. bKk >nd Ih. d»iy. •‘‘Si	-
sevdral contenders Sunday,
his hven par 71 gaid, Urn'! B	S"' -''V'
threwfound total ^ W arid,a
three^iroke l(^ o^.;^t^W	n-ii-ftlSi
borgi'' ’^	v<,
................... “"”!&■
Nth 63 points. Grand Rapids i(46) placed second, Saginaw (30) third and Flint (16) fourth.
The champions in the eight open classes will move on to Kansas (^ty late in March for the national tournament.
the lecond round.” said Dlqkln-son, a 38-year-old, 130-pounder who plays out of Los Tree Vil- zjrny	.
Urge, Fla.	imKirScki : ' ■:: . !!!! 71-73-71-313
T took three pain killers be-y'JS^^y ;	/	^^311
lirpound, Jo* WiiMnolon, Ortnd lUkpound, Robtrt Jtnkln*. Fllnti .34-paund, Botton Robtrtnn. Grand Rk-pldti 133-iwund, Rwi Maik, LwitMai 147-pMnd, Warn* Zaucha. laefetawi M»-peund, OavM Thadt, Laotkigi 17S«ound, Ki^d Lawli, Fimt^ haavywaiRM Kan-
nath Sumt, Grand R
D—2
THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, FEBRUARY U. 1966
Oxford, Milford Gain Basketball Respect
Michigan Five in Big 10 Lead
BIO TEN CONBBRENCE
DOOR BLOCKED — New York Rangers’ Phil Goyette (20) tries to get the puck in the net on this play, but Chicago’s goalie Glenn Hall (right) and Bill Hay (11) close
off the scoring avenue in first period action of their game in Chicago last night. Chicago won, 6-1.
Skipper Skiers Take Two Races at Mount Holly |
Waterford Township skiers beat Bloomfield, Hills boys and girls’ teanis Saturday in the final giant slalom tests on the Mount Holly Prep Ski League runs.
’The Skippers’ boys were four and a half seconds faster than Hills’ cumulative times for four boys making two iruns each. Walled Lake was a distant third and Utica finished Well behind the Vikings.
Individually, Scott Thornley| and Cheryl Smith, both of Bloomfield Hills, led the way with Township skiers close behind.
MOUNT HOLLY SKI LEAGUE Bcyi' Tcim Rtuilli
Wittrlord, 138.4; Bloomfield Him, 14}.l; Willfd Loko, 174.1; Utici, 241.1. litdlvMutl Btyt' OlanI SKIwn 1. Scow Thornloy, BH, 31.7; 2. Tom WebfMr; W, 32.7; 3. Rich Schrtiner, W, 33.4; 4. Wally Stacker, BH, 3S.2; 4. Gary Edwards, W, 35.3.
Atlanta Awaits NFL Player Lists
{press to force Wisconsin 1430 1445'^P®®** “P game, walloped the 1437 1254IB a d g e r s 120-102 Saturday. 53 .425 )i 4.500 1550 iw‘lMeanwhile, Minnesota defeat^i 34 :429 '9 8:524 1282130?! Michigan State, 81-71, to drop 2 5 284 4 11 353 1W5 1408 1*1® SpartaOs one game back of! ^11 tf^jMichigan.
Indiana bumped Illinois 8l-t7, Northwestern dropped Iowa, 81-73, and Ohio State crushed Purdue 68-54.
Michigan’s pressing defense was chiefly responsible for a record breaking performance. The Wolverines broke two team "ds and now share two, including a Big Teh mark.
15 13 5 .722 « 13 5 .723
ANN ARBOR (AP) cision to use the 2one press and an unexpected boost from Minnesota have put Michigan back on top of the Big Ten basketball race.
The Wolverines, using the
(•. 151.5. tirtt' OlBiW > h, BH, 34.1;
PALM BEACH. Fla. (UPI) The^ new Atlanta Falcons were desperately searching for support from other National Football League clubs today as the league opened its winter meet-' ings.
The Falcons, who must pick up the nucleus for the first team which will play in the 1966 season, were finding out that the other 14 teams didn’t plan to be as generoi|s as they' I had earlier anticipated ★ ★ ★
The Falcons are to get three players from each of the other 14 clubs for total of 42 veterans. These, together with the players acquired through th^ college draft and those signed as free agents, are to make up the training rosters for the team which becomes the 15th member of the NFL next fall.
It was first believed that each club would freeze 25 of the 40 players who were on their active roster at the close of the 1965 season and that the
with the Badgers. .
GAME MARK	\
The 120 points scored by the Wolverines broke the game mark of 117, set against the Univer-
Falcons would be able to se- the selection of a 16th team to ^ "he ^onTeJe^e hTgh'ofll’d lect their three from the 15 re- complete the expansion move
started when Atlanta was ad-Voro mitted to the NFL lasj year^®®^-
But it was becoming obvious by late Sunday night that the clubs were more inclined to set the figure no lower than 32 on the freeze list and possibly as high as 34.
This would mean that the 42 veterans which the Falcons would select would be taken
with play to begin in The other team will not actually begin play until 1967 and it was^clearly indicated that although discussions about the expansion will come up at the meeting any final decision won’t be made until later.
Seven cities are seeking thelM'CHioAN itate Minnesota from players who had seen lit-new franchise in the NFL. ’They wasn i - ®	® — T
tie action for their present are Boston, Cincinnati, Hous-Aitch’ teams.	ton. New Orleans, Phoenix,!
ROU’nNE REPORTS	Portland and Seattle.	Bjyk);
The two-team total of ^ points eclipsed the 204 scored in the 117-97 verdict over Detroit and the Big Ten record of 214 set by Indiana (122) and Ohio State (92) in 1959 and tied by Illinois (121) and Purdue (93) year.
Wildcats Beat Orion, 64-58
W. Bloomfield Upset; Romeo Posts Win
A couple of also-rans gained a little cage respect wi^ victories Saturday night.
Oxford won its fifth game of the season, a 64-58 verdict over Lake Orion, while Milford ended a 12-game losing streak with a 59-56 decision over West Bloomfield.
In another Saturday outing. Walled Lake suffered its 13th loss in a row in an 89-70 setback at the hands of Redford Union.
In other games, Romeo downed Txoy, 58-51, and Cran-brook turned back University School, 75-56.
Oxford (5-10) and'tirion (1-13) battled on even terms for three quarters, but the Wildcats came up with a 15-9 point advantage in the final period to wrap up the win. The loss was Orion’s seventh straight.
Roger Miller led the winners with 25 points, and Dennis Brophy picked up 17 for Orion.
The first day’s session was	Cir,nrl!nr,c “ri*;	t.i.i. ,217.22
expected to be devoted almost NriL OTOnOingS iMiei«iB*« hai*	32 24-
enUrely to routine reports by;	Michiati si.t», W4ilo^S;{.
•	-j	national	TotiMouli — MlcftlB»n 51418 20, Mlnnt-
Chicaoo
the pressing question of how many players the Falcons would have a shot at was not expected 0 be decided until ’Tuesday.
The Falcons then will have until probably Thursday to complete their choices.
The only other burnihg issue before this year’s meeting Is
Dttroit	25
Toronto ............ M
Now York	^ 12
Montreil 4*'o#*roif 3
Montrtal 2, Chicago 2, Otlrolt X Toronto 3, tli Ntw York 4, Boston 2 TaBay'i Oai No games schaauled
TuosBay's 0; No games Kheduled.
WItCONSIN	MICHIOA
OFT
Franklin	2	041	4	Darden
on	4	3-3	15	Clarson	_	_ _
s	8	8-8	24	Myars	4	3-2	14
_____ay 7 041 14 Russell 14 8-4 34
Carlin 3 « II Th'mp'n	-	-
Zubor	4	04	I	Dill	.....
Moreni	3	4U	10	Bankey	3	08	8
Roberts	4	4-7	14	Brown	’	“
Gerd'er
Tetals
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CHIVROLIT B PONTIAC • OLDIMOBILK • BUICK • OPEL KADETT a CADILLAC • OMC TRUCK
MM-3ei88 Telale- 44 23
Total foult—Wleconeln 18, Michigan 20.
Fortunes Rise for Ice Squad
POU’TE LOSER — Ron Larrieu (left) of Los Angeles, who was nearly lapped during the two-mile run in Saturday night’s Los Angeles Times Indoor track and field games* shows h^’s a good loser as he ducks under the tape ta enable Bill Baillie of New Zealand to break it as the winner in 8:37-4.
Favored Ron Clarke of Australia finished second and Kenya’s Kipchoge Keino came in fifth.
Mike Yeager and Paul Skinner collected 20 points apiece in bringing Milford’s (2-12) losing string to a halt. Tim Moller tossed in 24 for West Bloomfield (6-7).
Romeo, which made only four of 18 free throws in losing to L’Anse Creuse Friday night, picked up 20 of 35 Saturday, and the shooting from the charity
The Amigo’s Club and Roy Fredman’s Construction and Six,	« w
White’s Unbeatables open theiR’s Construction both trying to|
City Cage Teams Open Tourney Slate Tonight
city Class A men’s basketball phayoffs at 8:30 tonight on the Madison Junior High School court.
The Class B post-season action begins at 7 p.m. on the Madison and Kennedy JHS floors. Both tournaments are double elimination.
The city Class C teams will finish the International League race Wednesday and begin their playoffs next week. ’The top game is tonight’s showdown for second place between Local 653 and the All Stars ^t Lincoln JHS.
Waterford Township’s National League has a triple-header tonight at Crary JHS with
Kennedy JHS -munity College v> Tatty Bakery vt.
Madison JHS - Stantlll's Sinclair ll-Slars, 7 pm.; Auburn-Champs I I. UnbealablaS'Tasty loser, 1:30 p.i Kennedy JHS The Packers vs ' Champs-Auburn Heights CC winner, 7 Tetals
-----UAW 453 vs. Unbaalablai-Tasty
Pin JHS - Eastside vs. All !
The Lakeland Hawks are finding; the second half of the Southeast Michigan Juvenile Hockey Association face more to their liking.
The Hawks under coach Ray Graham won two games over the weekend, boosting their record to 2-1 since the January rcal-lignment that put them in the Midget Division. ’The Hawks are in second place.
★ ★ ★
Friday night, Lakeland drubbed Utica, 10-1, as Bruce Strohm scored three goals and brother Brian two. Former goal-tender Randy Sutt tallied twice while Richie Bell was a strong playmaker. Ron Young and Dick Gorman also scored*.
Yesterday, the Hawks got an-other good performance by goalie Larry Schneider and dumped Warren, 5-1. Robbie Hall scored his second and third goals of the weekend; Sutt, rian Strohm and Chuck Graham added the others.
★ ★ ★
The Waterford Rangers trailed 2-0 until the final two I minutes when Glen Burke and Mike Dunlop scored to give' them a 2-2 tie with Fraser. Waterford is now 1-1 in Juvenile Division.
MSU Shows Class in 43rd Track Relays
EAST LANSING (AP)-Mich-igan State forgot about the rule that the'-polite host doesn’t take the biggest chunk of cake at its 43rd annual relays Saturday night.
No team score is kept at the relays, but MSU clearly dominated the event with five firsts.
Air Force Academy and Southern Illinois won three events each to help spread around some of the honors,
Gene Washington, the pass-snatching end, won both the 70-yard high and low hurdles. His times of :08.5 in the highs and :07.9 In the lows both were only one-tenth of a second off the meet .and Jenison Fieldhouse records.
- ca JHS - Fruihour A SIrubla va. Powall Trucking, 4:55	p.m.; Spanctr
Floor Covarlng vi. LKal 544, i:l4 p.m.; Lakeland Pharmacy vi. Drayton brug,
V JHS - McDonald !
. Coblaeof Inii in, 7%m.i Loc
Joa'i Bar-2, 4:2]
goals apiece.
★ *
Dale Craft paced the winners with 16 points and Bruce Baas tossed in 22 for ’Troy.
John Pavloff tossed in 24 points in sparking Cranbrook (6-8) to its third win in a row.
WALLBD LAKB (78) RBO. UNION (88) PO PT TP	PG PT TP
a 2 J 14	Blarka	I8 4-7	40
4 4-7 13	Ruohoan	2	04)	4
0 2-2 2	Arnold	4	S-8	13
2	2-4 I	Wabb	I	t-l	]
0 S4 5	A4ach	I	2-3	12
4 3-3 21	ShtPpard	8	1-2	I
0 1-3 1 Bauer 3 1-3 7
3	2-3 8	Davit	1	0-0	2
Fbhay	1	80	2
Malthy	1	80	1

POH VI. Local 453, 7 II Stars, I 30 p.m. Sian VI. Eastalda,
Lakaiand Hardwara vi. Wayna'i

Tha PKkart . _ I Abn. Hti. CC 3 I I Tha Champa I 4
WATERPORO TOWNSHIP SCORING Nam8-Taam	o	Aw
Lamaux, Coleman'i ..............5	24.
Lundy, Powall't	3	24.
Oliva, LKal 544	  3	25.
Rtad, Lakaiand Hdwa. .	4	25.
McCIIntock, Six R'i	4	24
Paul, Buckner'!	4	23
Davina, r '
- Mika Milay. Dray-
i*	>4 17-2818
scoRi by OUARTIRS Lake	18 14 14 12-74
Unlan	23 11 18 17-88
BRO (44) LK. ORION (58)
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Junior Vanity: '	'
Lake Orlan 14, Dxtard 11
MILPORD 114) PO PT TP Skinner 8 810 20 SolNilak 2 1-3 S
2 2 4 McParl'd 1 (
Ward 1 82 2 Tafaii 18 181714 Taialt |411-17 la SCORR RY OUARTUS yaat Blaamtiald	18 I118 11-54
MIMtrd	17 1113 14-88
Junior Vinlly:
Allfard sa, Waal Blaamllald 48
5 2-7 12 Beat
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Wolverine Tankers Dunked
156 Points Tallied by Local Hoopsters
Michigan Christian Junior College remained a :9trong contender for the post-seasofl state Christian College AA baskOfiball tournament title with pressive win Saturday.
The Warriora’ fast break riddled hapless Great Lakes Bible College of Lansing, 156-56, for their seventh win In nine league starts. The win kept them in second place behind undefeated Grand Rapids School of Bible and Music.
♦ ★ ★
Seven players were In twin figures for the winners. Jim Martin had 31, Bud Pressley 29, Jini Hudson 24 and Wes Taphin 21 as the main gunners. 'Che Warrioai scored 89 points In the final half.
Michigan, rated the No. 1 swimming team in the country, suffered its first loss of the season Saturday at Bloomington where the Indiana Hoosiers scored a 66-57 triumph.
It avenged the one point loss Indiana suffered at the hands of the Wolverines earlier this season.
In a n 01 h e r Big Ten meet,
I Michigan State defeated Ohio State, 75-48.
Pontiac area swimmers took part in the Michigan State victory and also for Ohio State.
Bob Wolf and Lee Driver, ex-Birmingham swimmers, helped MSU to the 460 medley relay win, while Driver touched first in the 200 breastroke at 2:18.0.
INDIANA 44, MICHIOAN 17
408YARD MEDLEY RELAY-1, _______
gan (Raaa Orland, Paul Schaerer, Carl Robla, SHI Orott)) 1. IrKdana (Pate Hamer, Tom Trathaway, Kevin Barry, ~ob Wllllamt). Tima 3:33.3 (Pool record) ravloui bat) 3:3S.4 by Indiana, 1443). ONE-METER DIVINO-I. Kan Slti-barger (1), 320.10); 7. Bruce Brown (M), 272.10) 3. Prad Brown (M), 217.0S. 108YARD PREBSTYLS-1. Bill Parlay
A), 10:12.4) 2. Bob WIndIa (I), -
. Tony Wllion 0), 10:45.2 (pool pravlout bast 10:20.4 by Bob Indiana, 1444).
208YARD FREESTYLE - ). Bill Utley ). 1:43.0) 2. Bob Hoag (M), 1:44.4; 3. cett CerOin (I), 1:47.1 (Pool rtcordi rtvloui bait 1:44A by Chuck Ogllby, In-lana, 1444, and lU Varalty record of 44.5, Ogllby, 1444).
58YARO freestyle-). EIII Croft (M), :11.4i 1. Kan Wlaback (M), iB.li ' Bob Wllllama (1), :22.S.
,408YARD INDIVIDUAL MEOLEY-Carl Robla ivi, 4:10.3) 1. Kan,Wabb
THREE-METER DIVING-1. Kan •rgar (1), 322.15 ) 2. Rick Early .151 3. Frad brown (M), 245.10.
208YARD BUTTERFLY - 1. Kevin Barry (1), 1:50.1; 2. John Colllna (I), 2:00;3; 1. Tom O'Malley (M), 2:04.4.
108YARD FRERSTYLE-1. EIII Utley (I), :47.42i Bob Hoog (M), :4I.S) 3. EIII Crott (M), :4l.a (Vanity record; pr8 vioua bosf :47.4 bw bob Wllllamaon, 1445).
208YARO BACKSTROKE .. . ... Hammer (I), 1:S4.li 2. Ruie KIngary (M), 2:00.2; 1. Ralph Kendrick (1), 2:02X.
108 YARD FREESTYLE - I. Bob WIndIa (1), 4:S4.4) 2. Car) EeWa (M), 4:S4.4i 3. SMI Parlay (M), 4:17.0 (Pool ----. ------- .. . - - ,
loss).
_______ J _ 1. Art
h (I), 2:13.4; 2. Paul Sdhaarar (M),
408YARD FREESTYLE H_________
llchlgan (Jetm Salaiaa, Kan Wx ..ich Wbila, Sob Hoag) l:)0.tt t. it (bob Wllllama, Kan Wabb, SgS V sir Utley),	(Pool racpfST pr
5 by Indiana, 1445).
Ex-PCH swimmer Ben Donaldson settled for second plact in the 1,(X)0 freestyle and the 500 freestyle for Ohio State.
MfU 71, OHIO STATE 41 400 /MEDLEY RELAY - 1. Michigan lata (Sob Wo(f. Lea Driver, Ed Olick, Im MacMillan) 3:40.4; 2. Ohio State (Mark Malhli, Doug Davlaming, Rob Hopper, Tom Lakin) 3i42.4.
1,000 FREESTYLE - I. Danny. Hill J*?.*'.	> San Donaldion (OS),
10:11.5) 3. Rolf Groaath (MS), 10:44.7. 1-METER DIVINO - 1. Randy Laraon 35L 274.35.	2. Chuck Knoor (OS),
»;*'>• Prwf Whitatard, (MS) 2S0.45. IW-FREESTYLE-). Jim MacMillan Ml), )i40.7) 2. Jack Sotmeid (OS), 44J) 3. Sud Orell (OS), 1:50.4. 5IFFREBSTYLE-1. Otry Dlllay (MS), 12.1; 2. Dtrryle Kitar (Ml) ;12.1; Bill Datihold (Oil :22.4. 208INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY - 1. Bob loppar (OS), 2:01.7; 2. Pate Wllllamt MS), 2:03.1) 3. Kan Walah (MS), 2:07.0 DIVING-1. Randy Uraon (OS), 115.40) 2. Chuck Knaor (OS), ■15.15) 3. Prad Whltatord (Ml). 277.10. 2»BU.TTERFLY-). Ed OlICk (MSI, ot.l) 2. Dick Oabla (OS), 2:02,0) Dan Harbaa (MS), 1:04.4. IW-PREBITYLB - 1. Jim MacMillan (MS), :4l.4i 2. Darryla Klfar (MS), :4I.7) 3. Tom Lakin (OS), :44.0.	^
208BACKITROKE-). Gary Dlllay MS), ):S4,4; 2. Pate WllllMia (Ml), 01 7) 3. Dick Mlchaali (OS), 2:B).S. J»PRBEITYLB-)y-Kan Wplah (MS), :S7.0i 1. Ban Donaldson (M). SiM.4i Denny Hill fMS), S:03.7.	'
108BREASTSTROKE - 1. Loo Orivar MS), 1:11.0) 2. Bob Heppar (0*4, 2:21.7) JKk Marih (MS), 2:22.1. 4S8PRBEITYLE RELAY-). MIChlBan State (Ed Olick, Gary Dlllay, SHI leett, Kan walah), 3:14.2; 2. Ohio State (Tam Call, Jack SatitieW, Sud Orall, Tam Lakin), 3:14.A
THE PONTIAC PUESS, MONDAY, EEBRUARV 14. 1966
Former National League umpire Lee Ballanfant acouts for the Houaton Astros.
ELECTRONICS
DAY A EVENM6 CUSSES NOW FOIMMO AT
E.I.T.
ELECTRONIC
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TECHNOLOGY 2457 WOODWARD AYE. DETROIT I WO 2-5660
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SASKETBAIL
scons
n, St. Bontvtniurt
... ------- N.Y S3,	SI
Celumbit M, H*rv«rd IS Princalon M, Yal* 14
CorntM 103, Dartmouth 13 Boaton Coll. M. Fordham U Ponn Stata M, Novy S3 LaSalla 31, Vlllanova TO Holy Croat 73, Connocticut 7
Virginia SS
«>. iKn II, N. Carolina 71 Vanderbilt 71, Alabama 13 Davidwn 7S, NYU SI Tannoisao M, Tulana 70 N.C. Stota !(», Ga. Tacli It Waka Foraat IS, $. Car. p Gaorgla 13, Min. Stata 71 li Alary 14, VMI 47
LSU I
Tha CItadal Miami 117, .. Grambling III,
Indiana It, lllinolt 77 Cincinnati M, Draka 47 Nabraaka II, Iowa Stata 70 Kanaaa SI, Okla. Stata 31 O Chicago Loyola IM, St. John'a, AMiin. 77 a#, AAamphla St. 77
Dayton ao, Tub 14, Wichita 103
Oklahoma I03, MItiouri W DaPaul 77, Bowling Groan 13 Air Force 13, Marouetta 71,
N. Dak. lOS, S Dak. St. il Evanavllla l«. Ball Stata II Butler 13. Valoaraiao II Waatarn llllnola M, Central Michigan SI Ohio Northarn lOS, Farria State II
\iohn Carroll 14, Wayna Sti Vine Arbor 100, Fort Wa Ngtra Damo 71, Detroit 17 Calvin 13, Albion IS Norwood 130, St. Francla
Kt.) 104 Mlchlg.
(Ohio) 110, AAichlgan Lutt
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Feather Champ Posts KO Win
Mexico's Saldivar Stops Ghana Boxer
MEXICO CITY (UPD-Feath-erweight ch&mpion Vicente Saldivar has finally repaid his Mexican compatriots for their loyalty and the thariks couldn’t have come in a more , formidable manner.
Saldivar, who rates a tossup with sombreros as the most pop-u 1 a r thing in Mexico, retain^ his featherweight title in a most devastating way Saturday night by scoring a s e c o n (J round knockout over Ghana’s Floyd Robertson at the Plaza Mexico, a reconditioned bullring.
Saldivar sprang from h i s corner at the bell, and cooled Robertson at 2:29, as fast as these things can be done without raising screams of outrage.
North Michigan Upset
By The Associatad Press |ond time this season. The WHd- lng Western Michigan in an It was rough sledding this cats had been averaging 109 MAC tilt. Jerry Fisher tapped tor Michigan ba,k«. p^t, a gajfe Tha toss »as|„„	^
ban fans,	Northerns third in 17 games, j Lacefield had 18 for the
a major upset, MinnesoU- The big factor in the game was|l®
Duluth stunned Northern Mich- Duluth’s rebounding edge, 43-28.
igan, No. 4 in the Associated Gene Summers, who fouled out,	^	.
Press small college poll. 104-91. with seven minutes to play, hadi. v/*	all the way
In other games. Miami of 25 points for Northern.	an defeating Detroit. The victory
Ohio defeated Western Michigan;	★	*	★	jwas the secotrf in a row for the
88-68, Notre Dame whipped De-! Miami, the top defensive team iT*, troit 76-67; Youngstown of Ohio, in the Mid-American Confer-i^^°‘‘’
No. 3 in the small college poll, ence, led all the way in dump-
bombed Michigan Lutheran llO-! '	and Dorri^
-----	I	^ Murrey of Detroit each had 18
* » joints.
Trinity Bapfisl'5'
66, John Carroll whipped Wayne State 94-81, and Western IIIinois| bounced Central Michigan 68-59.
Rolls Past Foe
Ohio. Northern defeated^ Ferris State 105-91 , Hillsdale bombed Detroit College 116-77, ^ring Arbor thumped Fort Wayne 100-
“ Northwood pounded St.i Shelton Ardill’s 21 points car-Francis of Indiana 130-104, ried Trinity BapUsfto a 73-31 Moorhead State whipped Michi-'rout of Central Methodist as the gan Tech 83-63 and Dominican YMCA’s only, boys’ church outlasted Aquinas 91-88.	league unbeaten team pushed
In the MIAA, Hope defeatedrecord to 7-0 Friday night. Adrian 82-76, Calvin bombed
Before Robertson could shake	Kal&mazoo Runner-up First Congregation-
downed Olivet 88-78.	gj dumped First Nazarene, 48-
SLATE Pool Tables
Bloomfitid Miracle Mill ARCADE
New Slate 4x8 Reg.
M90
•	FithbrHbwIlbtcSAH
•	Inintwiek Editkrobk tIM
•	AMF CbirtinBMal U1I
•	Pobl Hall TaWa $21f
tIata-AII Iquip.) a Vallay Naw U3t a Bar Styla Siala $1)1

!off the effects of the stinging
\ left jabs, Saldivar stepped in- THIRD LOSS	27. to remain one game behind.
' 4»,’’ThVi;	the African’s longer reach,; Minnesota - Duluth winning ’^® ‘bird game saw Bob Marin. cran 74, ci.v.\ un,v.	abdomen only its fifth game in 18 starts.|‘‘" 25.poin‘s as First Bap-
?i%h°.^sv to drop his guard, and turned held Northern Michigan to less‘‘^t stayed third with a 79^ vic-Mu.k. Mon. Shored, loose that left-handed blow that than 100 points for qnly the sec-|‘°''y ®''®*'	Pa*'*' Metho-
Flat Rock 44, RIvarviaw 4)
Oal. St. Thomas
Daar. Sacredi
,^punch.’
.\ It was the 22nd KO victory of. I'hV career for Saldivar, and the se^nd time Robertson had been .. st.!kn(Aed out in 38 fights.
Sporfs Calendar
TODAY
SkllRf
(Mount Holly Prep Leaguel Berkley, Pontlec Ceritral, Ullce, Bloomlleld Quedrgnguter.
NBA Standings
Bestem Dlvltlen
Doesn't Accept Theory
Trinity Baptist 1st Congregational 1st Baptist Macadonla Bapt. Oakland Park Math. Central Methodist 1st Nazarene
iltlASr#***
Flint C«rt1r«l Flint Soulhwesiern ar Saginaw MacArthur al —ort al Saginas at Lakeville
BALTIMORE (NEA) - When John Kerr, the Baltimore Bullets center, was with the old Syracuse Nationals, his coach Alex Hannum told him to begin isometric exercises.
! “Alex,” Kerr said, ‘’I’ve been!	___________
'pressing against immovable ob-L^*'™" ''*■	charleston,
.jects for the last nine years —1. n«w.X?/'<	Francisco
Capture Skiing Crown
Cincinnati 143, Detroit 114
HOUGHTON (sAP) - Michigan Tech won the Central Intercollegiate Ski Association Alpine championships Saturday on the!
DRIVE-IN NOW!
GET THESE CAR ‘ SERVICES AND SAVE!
Warren Woods a
Fitzgerald at Hazel P Oak Park at Lutheran Eait Wayne John Glenn at Charry i
- berlain and Russell — and, be-| lieve me, it doesn’t work. ” I
cnampionsnips oaiuraay on	IfAIID i
Strength of Ray Kolehmainen’s IfKINIl TUUlf t victory in the slalom and Hrst L place tie in the giant slalom. U Michigan State was second, fol- | lowed by Northern Michigan,! f
Capac at Armada
Drydan al Brown City
Naw Haven at Memphis
East Detroit at 3>orl Huron Northern
Emmanuel Christian at St. Frederic
Cranbrook al South Lyon
Lincoln at East Detroit Jton at Warren FitiBarald Royal Oak Kimball af Highland Park Watarlord at Davison Skiing
to-tord Kattoring, Walled L
Our
'66 Automobiles
come with a spare cor.
OUALFTY GOMES 1§I AT HRESTONE
If you lease a *66‘ from us, we’ll give you a spare: a car use (free) if yours is ever in for major repairs (also free). *
ops, sparkplugs, pointa, replacement tires (including snow tires), all parts and labor, towing and license plates.
Under the Kinney I,easing system (we’re an anthoriaed agency) you’ll get your new car for a monthly fee that inchadet everything you can think of.
The cost of yonr insurance coverage, for instance. Public liability (1500,000 to 11,000,000) property damage ($100,000) deductible collision and fire and theft
The‘fee also covers the cost of wrinteriiing, fummerizing, tune-
Compared to buying a new car every two years, leasing can ’save yon a lot of cash.
There are also potential income-tax savings, and there is no financing charge.
Ask ns for details on leasing any make or model ’66 you’d like. Complete with your choice of accessories. Including a spare car.
SHELTON
PONTIAC
BUICKJne.
855 S. ROCHESTER RD.
SOCHESTER	SSt-SStt
For FREE Information, call 651-9911 ask for Tom Tracy
KINNEY CM LEASING
185 S. RoohtBtar Rd., RoohBBtir, Miohigan
“1
I
Idnney
cirlMtinf
ADDRESS........................................
I CITY.............STATI...........PHONE.........
I I new___I.....own.........Imsb o^.............
1^	(man oimI year car)
Sensational
offer!
De Luxe Champion New Treads
■ RETREADS ON SOUND TIRE BODIES OR ON YOUR OWN TIRES
4 tor
»4Q49
ANY SIZE WHITEWALLS or Blackwalls
NO MONEY DOWN
Pay only *5 per month
NATIONWIDE GUARANTEE
Sm UmU Ml	LImU on MONTHS
Our retreads, Idanllfiad by medallion and ihop mark.
read hazard Injuries aneountarad In avarydsy pi gar ear use for tha Hla of tha tread doslin. Ra
aurrant FIraslana rataS price at time of adjustment.
Same tread QUALITY Same tread DESIGN Same tread DEPTH Same iread WIDTH,
M NEW
Firmtons lOM ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT Tiro*
Ptlttd os etawn at firastsas Itsrsii supsItHysly prtssd at Plrattana Dealers aad at aN ssrvlat
Your safety is our business at Firestone!
FRONT FLOOR MAT
©FREE
10 POINT I
safetycheck'
146 West Hnron
Op#)i Mon. ond Fri. 'til 9 P.M.
FIRESTONE
140 N. Saginaw
OptH M*n. thro Sit. 'til 6 p.m.
SoodAearJ
40 W. PIKE ST.
OPEN DAILY S:3t A.M. to ( P.M.
Fri. Til ):3S - Sat. >til 2:3( FE S-(133

,;■/). I I
D—4
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1966 ■
Suspects Are Captured in Area Break-ins^ Troop Buildupl J^^*'' Notices
V *	-	*	■ I AMII ■■ toCBBIIAAV «• tmA.
Oakland County law officers arrested two suspects Saturday night in two Pontiac area break-ins.
One of the suspects, 25-year-old GIpn D. Tindell of 204 State, was caught inside a jewelry store some 200 feet from the Oakland County Jail.
Tindell was apprehended by three sheriff’s deputies and turned over to Pontiac police, who promptly returned him to the sheriff’s department for retention in the count/jail.
Besides being charged with breaking and entering, police said ‘Tindell suffered a gash on his right leg, apparently when he climbed through a broken window at the front of the store.
j	★	★	★
Officials of the store, Pauli’s Jewelry at 28 W. Huron, said nothing had been taken.
PICKED UP
I Ralph Bush of 300 Plumstead, Waterford Township, was picked Up by sheriff’s deputies Saturday night after officers from
in Cambodia
Commerce Township.
*nre 'tracks from the rear of of breaking and entering.
IREAD and WEEP
or SEE US
The Social Security Board aays that out of 100 persons now age 25 at age 65 the picture will be this:
23 will have died — 16 will be destitute •>
32 will bo poor — 25 will have annual incomes of less than $2500 — 3 will be well-to-do — Iwill be rich.
71 of these folks will be either Dead or Dead-Broke.
... Which will you be?
Did you know that at age 25 you can invest less than $25 per month and have a guaranteed monthly income of $100 beginning at age 65 to last as long as you live.
We have a program for you!
four departments assisted in the store, which had been ford-, tracking Bush’s car from the bly entered, led patrolmen from I scene of a break-in.	Sylvan Lake, Keego Harbor and
D.p.11,, Hr.l .krUd 1?!,”“''*' ’'”''”*'1’	PENH (UPI) - Hk
by a burglar alarm at Gironx’	♦	.Cambodian government an-
Party StoTe, 153S Union Lake, I	_ , . *	was increasing
-	-	He was arrested th^re and its combat forces by 5,500 fnen
fares arraignn^t, on a charge face of almost daily aggressions by our neighbors.
★	★ ^ir
The buildup, effective immediately, came amid increasing border skirmishes with Ibailand. Cgmbodia is also bordered by South Viet Nam and Laos. The increase would bring Cambodia’s total combat forces to 23,500 men.
Cambodia has enough war material on hand — most of it from Communist piina—with which to arm new^troops. Of-
listed Peking-supplied weapons and other items for nearly 75,000 men.
THOMAS e., SM Falrvimi, D«»IM-town, Ohio, taitnniy of Pomioc; •go m oolovod huriMnd of M*r-garot Uwlw; olw uirvivod Oy mo *ttifor>. lUcItotlon of fho Rosary will bt Tuesday, February
More Traffic Studies Due in Commerce Township
Additional traffic studies will be conducted in Commerce Township now that the Carroll Lake-Wise intersection has been improved, an Oakland County Road Commission official said today.
“There are Intersections as id or worse than Carroll Lake,’’ said Highway Engineer Paul Van Roekel. “We’ll take a force traffic laws, good hard look at the	I
number of accidents and use at these corners.’’	- l
“Commerce is one of the few townships that levies millage for roads to pay half the costs of improvements and in the last seven or eight years 15 miles have been paved,” he added.
★ ★ ★
“People may be used to scooting around paved roads, and there isn’t enough police to en-
The following are among the intersections to be studied with-^ in thp next several months.
Carroll Lake and Cooley Lake; Carroll Lake and Commerce; Bogie Lake and Cooley Lake; Benstein and Oakley Park; Benstein and Maple; Benstein and McCoy; and Welch and Oakley Park. All are paved.
Fatally Injured when a car failed to stop at Wise and skidded into them on the roadsidb were Mary A. Wilson, M, and her sister Lynette, 13, of 280 Wise.
■k k k
’The driver of-4he car, Mrs. Kenneth H. Ostin, 24, of 335 Main, Milford has been charged
Avon Motorcyclist Collides With Auto
Large lattice-type warning signs were installed on W 1 s e last week following a study that was prompted by t h e death of two young sisters early in January.
The lO-foot-wide and seven-foot-high signs are installed on both sides of the road about 500 feet from Ihe Intersection to let motorists know that they must stop.
“They should do'•the trick," said Van Roekel. “I can’t imagine that anyone wouldn’t be impressed by the signs."
MAIN REASONS
Van Roekel said excessive speeding and im^ention seem to be responsible for the num- with .manslaughter in connec-ber of accidents in the town- Iron with the Jan. 3 deaths.
ship.	-------------
The quality of the r o a d s | Farm income in Canada was may have something to do $1,500 million net in $964, $180 j with it, according to Van Roe- ' million more than the average I kel,	I for the previous five years.
t A 23-year-old Avon Township man is in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital aft-j er his motorcycle skidded on' loose gravel Saturday night and slid into an automobile.
James L. Gibbs of 3604 Emmons was injured when his cycle, which witnesses told Pontiac police was going about 60 miles an hour, failed to make turn on Pontiac Road near North Perry.
k k k
Driver of the car, which was coming to a halt at the intersection, was John F. Pellerito, 18, of 471 Maplehill, Avon Township.
Pellerito was uninjured.
Some things work so well that nothing can take their place
WEIGHT LIFTER
Believed to have been Invented about 250 B.C. by Archimedes, the comrrion screw works on such a practical, fundame>ital mechanical principle that Its many Tunctional uses have endured the centuries.
The newspaper Want Ad Is another of man's inventions which endures the test of time. Bcy^n as a solutlorji to a low cost means of mass public communication. It has never been excelled for this purpose. As in Colonial times, th6 Want Ad daily serves millions. It is used by m'ore people than any other form of advertising.	'
A PONTUC, PRESS WANT AD WILL WORK FOR YOU
For furlhor information, or atoiifaneo in placing your ad, dial 332-8181
Bo Sure And Order Tho Thrifty Six-Timo Rata
Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads
FOR FAST ACTION
FOLLOWINO DAY.
ir*.
- -jllcai..
n

rtndarad valuatau through Hia
your "KILL tuflmanta w
lining tv
targar t la 12 o'!
vlooi to ________
CASH WANW-AD RATWS
4	2.44	4.4S	a.M
5	3.05	5.40	0.40
5	3.M	<40	10.00
7	A27	7.55	11.74
I	4.00	0.44	13.44
»	5.40	0.72	15.12
0	4.10	10.00	14.40
An additional charga ol 50 anta will bo mada tor «aa at 'ontlac Frau Box numbara.
The Pontioc Press
FROM 0 AM. TO S P.M.
Death Notices
BRAY, FEBRUARY I
I 5»i
wifa of Fred C. Bray; — --------
ar of Mra. Join Ann Goodwin; also survived by tour alitari and two brothera. Funtral aorvici waa hald today at 10 a.m. at St. vin-cant da Paul Church. Intamwnt In Mt. Hopa Camttary. Arranga-tnanhr wara by tha Malvin A.
Schutt Funeral Home.________
BURbER. FEBRUARY 0,	1044,
JAMES, Hollywood, Florlde. formerly of 33 N. Maraholl; ege 44; beloved huaband of Mary Burdar; daar fathar of Mra. H. J. (Ruthi Staphana; daar brothar of Frank and William Burdar, Mra. Rhoda Naab and Mra. Nalllt Humphrlta; alao aurvivad by tiva grandchll-dran. Funaral aarvka will ba haw Tuaaday, Pabruary 15, at 1:30 p.m. at tha Sparka-Griflln
Chaaal Can lla In atat4

0 p'm.)
FIELD, FEBRUARY 13, 1044, RUS-SELL.A., 7175 Comnwrea Road, Union Laka; aga 41; balovad hut-band . of Luclit a: FItW; door brothor of Loator H. and Wllllt L. Flaw and Mra. Namol Kamp-ton. Mamorlal Sarvka will ba Tuaaday, Pabruary 15, at I p.m. undar tha tuapicaa of Commorco Lodgo No. 131 FOAM at tha Dontiton-Johnt Funaral Homa. Funaral aarvlca will ba haW Wadnea-day, Pabruary It, at 1:M am. at tha Oonalaon-Johna Funeral
----- Intormant In „Commarca i'
— Flaw ...................’
-------	JENIS	WaRrENDER,
4004 Crocua, Watortord Townahlp; aga	23.	Privato	funtral	aarvlca
will bt haw Tuaaday, Pabruary IS, at tha Sparka-Grltfln Funaral Homa. Tha family auggaata Memorial (ontrlbutWni may ba mada to Boyttown, U.S.A. Mr. Haatad will	Ilia	In atata	at tha	funaral
^	(Suggaatad	vlalting	houri I
“	- * p.rn.)
tiVALftV,
i; aga 41; daar ti
--- .. AHrod, .
LaVtIlay and --- ---- it.u.; alao aurvivtd
torv5y'*fcifr*'lto*’'h#w’' tCoadoyl Fobruory uL at 11 a.m. at tha Voorhaaa4lplt Funaral Homa wNh Edmond I. Wotfclna oNklatliM. In-tormont In Forry Mt. Fork Camo-tory. Mr. UVallw wlU lla In atata at tha funaral homa. (luggaatad vlaUIng houra 2 to 5 p.m. and
POOLl, FiBRUARY 12. 1044, GEL-STON V., 4304 $. Short Drivt Wat-
■ PooVfctorSSSSndWrIi
Fooit; daar fathar of Fradwlck
brafKir ol'tori? AUan 'iP hlonroo; alao aurvivtd by alx grtndchll-drtn. Funtral aarvko adll bo hotd Thuraday, February 17, at If a.m. at Iba Central Malbodlil Church, intorthant In Faery Ml. Park CamiMary. Mr. Paolo will lla In ttato at IhO Oontlaon-J^a Fi»-
fcSfaTO
SEEGRAVES, FEBRUARY 11 1044. RALPH C„ 40- S. Paddock; ago 40; balovad huaband ol HIWo taa-gravaa; balovad aon of Mr. and M^. Wiley G. Saagravaa; daar fathar of Ralph C., Linda Kay, DarraH Lot, Dale Alan, and Robin . S*''	brothor of
SSri" Soaoravai and Mra. Bill Gotti. Funaral aarvlca will ba haw Wadnaadty, Fobruary u, at 1:30 p.m. at tha Huntoon Funtral Honto with Rev. Theodora Alla-bach offkiating. Intormant In Perry Mt. Peili Cemetery. Mr.
ss;,tLS." "««•»«••
Drive, Fenton, tormarly of Pontiac; age 77; belovod huaband of Laura Vtrpooton; daar father of Htnry, Walter E., and Wilbert yewfan; daar brothar of Mra. Ka^ Paatmora, Mra. Ellzabath Kreti, Mra. Blanche Bankart, Leonard, and Victor Vorpoottn; alao aurvivpd by ftvo grandchlWron
and four grtr*^----
orwl aarvlca «
February 15,
Trinity L"“"
Pastor Edi Interment
tary. Mr. varpooien will lie In •••to at the Voorhaaa-Sipla Funeral Horn a. (Suggested visiting houra 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 0 p.m.)
WALTER, FEBRUARY 13,	1044,
FRED 0., *400 GaiTorth, White .Township; bolovad husband of Halon 0. Walter; dear fr“— Douglas and DonaW Walter; aurvTvad by two grai ' Funeral service will Wednaaday, February p.m. at .the Elton Bla Home, 1233 Union L Union Laka, with Rr«. rrenx
J'.iL'i,ide"”'^'.»ry,'"!;;;^:"*,.,!:
WHIPPLE, FEBRUARY Tm*«4, jasper, nil Pontiac Trail, Walkw Laka; aga 03; dear father ol (Jlenn 0., Reymond F„ Samuel L., Aubrey C., William A. and "•*“ I- Whipple; dear brothar of Lloyd Whl^la, Mra. Frod BaardaWo, Mra. Lynn Thrush, Mra. Btrnice Wada and Mrs. Ban Ball-•!f:..,Alio aurvivad by 11 grand-
F'?n.rr''^rvn"Jiil"£ :y;«“n*%e;;^ra;ihSrS; MnV ^wSmarifa’ISJ:
> Road,
A^nd**someSnw'*"'* *k We will see you once again. Sadly missed by son Ji family.______
AnnoMPaMonts
$50 CASH
^11 332- 053 I - 10 e.m. or 4-5 p.m.
ANNSuNCING ANDTHBR DEBT Aid, Inc office, 711 RIker Building,
garnish/ments, bankruptcy,
REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT AND HARASSMENT.
Granid Opening
BILL AND VERN'S COIN *HOP,
_______^I^N. SAGINAW
hall for rent - WEDDINGS, recepllons, etc. OR 3-5202.
LOSE weight s'a f e l y with Dex-A-OIef^Ubleto Only *| cents
STUDIO GIRL COSMETICS. ALL'
BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there! were repliei at The! Press Office in the fol-| lowing boxes:
IS, 18, 35. 45, 54. 73, ) 80, 82, 84, 117.
^mral Directors __	4
COATS
funeral homi
DRAYTON plains	474<44I
C. J. GOOHARDT FUNERAL HOME Keego Harbor, Ph. 402-0200 DONELSON-JOHNS Funeral Homo
_____"Doaignod tor Funorala"
ELTON BIACK FUNERAiTHOMr
iiuinu .	343.7131
UNION LAKE
SPARKS-6RIFFIN
FUNERAL HOME lul Sorvko" Ft Mm
Huntoon
^ FUNERAL HOME
Voorhees-Siple
4-PIECE R(KK AND ROLL FOR club dafts tnd wadding racoptlona,
partloa. I70-4424 pftor 4 p.m.___
ANYONE WITNESSING ACC16INT Involving 1*55 Codlllac at Tala-graph and Dixie Hwy. at I p.m., Feb. I, plaata contact FE 4-*32I.
Reward._______________________
ANY girl or woman NEhOiNG a trlefMtly adviser, phone Ft 3-5132 betor*' S p.m., or It no an-Twar, call FE 24/34 Coniwienflal. tiOMPLETE ^WIG StRVICE, aalaa, rental, styling and partlaa \n your homa. Houto of Wigs. Evas, or Sat, a Sun, Ft M2I4.
OAlNfV MAiO I'uPPLlfS ■
73* Manomlhre_________ FE 5-7IC5
DAMAGED 1*43 F0R6 MUST BE sold tor local finance company by auction; also l*» Chmry. Wod. , Fob. 14, 1:30 p.m. Auction Land,
plannS_____________
YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO TOUR INCOME
~ SLEIGH RIDE
ilgh	—----------------
___.’Ing    .
spaghetti dinner. Groupa more. Call tor raaarvatlont. UPLAND HILLS FARM	42S-I4I1
LoM M FowmI - S
FOUND SPRINGER SPANIEL GIVE poaltiva IdantIfttatlon. FE 5-*2*0.
FOUNB: weimaraner malT
LOST. I BLACK COCKER SPANIEL puppy. Mala. Vkinity of Elliabath Lake Bstatai. enlist Chrlatmaa
gift. Reward, assign.______________
LOST: BRITTANy SPAhllL, OB-vidnitjf Piifiiwiii

..:OISCIIIMINATION ____
X'’CAUSE OP SWL SINCE
:;: sqMB occupations abb .
coNsioBREo MORE AT-TRACTIVE TO PERSONS I;; OF ONE SEX THAN THE •V OTHER, ADVERTISE-.;; ■;.:MENTt ARB PLACED;:: V UNDER THE MALI OR •> FEMALE COLUMNS FOR :v
convenience OF READ-IRS. such listinbs are
NOT INTENDED TO EX-:;:;CLUDB PERSONS OF
either sex.

Haip WERlEd MeIe
,’nar;.
furnished.
SAURY
Phone S
abto^to ^
$200 PER MONTH Automatic
Screw Machine Operators
Automatic Screw Machine Set-up and Operate
;ntlno. txealh addRIon to a
0ES16NERS-DETAILERS
AMiy at tell Oolf or., Pwitiac. na Orchare lakHind Talagraph.
I Help WEirtetl	^ f
Die Makers Boring Mill
Need 3 die
m?ll®StL^

3 FULL TIME - REAL ESTATE aSleaman, paying 25 par cant Hat Ing commission. Mtmbor of MLS, local bulldar working out of our office. For intarvlaw call Tad Me-Cullough Jr„ 474-223*._________
3
YOUNG MEN
Needed Immediately tor new
10 BOYS'
Wt need 10 boys to work In our mailing room Wednesday, February 16 and Thuraday, Pabruary 17, from 12:15 to 4:15 P.m. Must ba 14 years of age. Apply In person AOonday or Tuaaday to:
BERT FALKNER CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS
ACCOUNTANt FOR L
LIBERTY TOOL & Engineering Corp.
250 W. Mapio Rd, Wallod Uka
Designers-Checkers
aaa your Ideas taka ahapt hi pur modem shop and toolroom*
Don't healtato — discuu your future and a promising cargar with one ol FHnfa latitat growing and prograaalva ahopa.
Dort Design & Build.
G33I3 S. Dort Hwy. FHnt
Miring chango. \utt to txpa-rtonj^ fancy Wtar. RaptW to Pontiac Proaa tox No. S4.
DRY CLEANER SPOTTER AND prtaaar tor aolvont plant, write Pontiac Frew Box *S.____________
at of Atound oW M-J*.
openings. For IntorvleS
2641._________________________
experienced service STATION ATTENDENT-to taka over night shift, from 3:30 to 12 a.m. Mutt
Jordan A4205
Auto Body Bumper
Experienced cepebla man needed by laroe voluma Ford dtolor. Must be eble to metal finish properly, belter than avtrago doalor benefits, oltored with lots of work. See Mr. Sudia, John McAuntto Ford, 630 Oakland Ava.. Pontiac.
AUTO MECHANICS
Want's make soma good money?
AUTO
SERVICE
Our new expanding auto service garage will be opening within a few months. We hove many excellent opportunities now in the following classifications!
Tire
Mounters
Professional Seot Cover Installers
Mechonics
Full time and port time schedules o v a i lo ble. Top woges. Apply per-s 0 n n e I department doily between 9:30 a m. to 9:00 p.m.
Montgomery
Ward
______Pontioc Mall
SARBdR, PULL'~iR 'RART“tImE^, Rikar eullding. FE 3-7116.
BRICK LAYERS WANTED. APPLY Wallace Construction Company. Clarkalon High School. Ctorkston,
Michigan.______^
BORING MILL OPERATOR' -nighli, lournayman pralarrad. Apply Permanent Mold g Ola Co., 3275 .East Nina Mila Rd. Warren, Mich. 534-*g55.	-
BUDGET ASSIStANT
.	_ _ Bachalora' Dagrea
— prelarable In public adminlitra-Hon and axparlanca In municipal
Brea. Raatsurant, Talefiraph and
CAR BUYER
1	used car buyer, axparlancad.
2	ulaaman, will train, opening
mil SPENCE
6673 Dixie Highway
Chryalar-Plymouth-Vallant Rambler-Jaafi
carpentFrs; ^PiintN^ib
. layout mon. Union. Work all win-tar^^Co^lln Conslr. Co. Call aftor
cwiL Engineer
rn*^fiTl“4!?i!:!r"aVT:
2l»-tll.7N, witb many fringe bsna-flta, graduala anglnaars tor planning and auparvlslng construction of water and sanitary sawar ln<-provemants. Sand complete resume to Paraonnal Division - Oakland County Board of Auditors, I3W N. Talagraph, Pontiac, Mklilgan.
COOK
Full or port lima. Apply In paraon 4 to * p.m. Rip's. **l W. Horen.
c60nter aaan for honda fit. F??7liP
CULLIGAN
WATER CONDITION
NEED FULL OR FART TIME MEN DUB TO COMPANY'S GROWTH, GOOD PAY, FRINGE •ENEFITt. LEARN THE WATER CONDITIONING BUSINESS. AP-PLY - *25 ORCHARD LAKE AVE.
CUSTODIAN
Pull lima opening tor axparlancad custodian to laka care of 2 branch
-	1. Blrmhig*— ---
EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE •alaiman, llcanaad tor new and baad honwt, mtmtora MLS. Ca FE 5-*47l tor appblnfmant, Ivan
FIREFIGHTERS
CITY OF PONTIAC SALARY t40t4-t7lk5* PER YEAR Haight: 5'7M", aga 21 to II years, high school graduala or GEO oqulvalont. Roaldant of City of PontiK tor I ytar, ImmMlataly pracodlno application. Apply Par-aonnel. City Hal., 430 Wide Track
Dr. E.	____________________
FOREIGN EMPLOYMENT INFOR-matlon. Construction, other work prolocta. Good Nylny ovoraeos
Vrito only; Fpi aau, DM. 70L Florida. 32510.
Bradenton Beach,
GAS STATION ATTENDANTS
Machankt, wrecker driver* and car washers. Experienced only need
GAS station - EXPERIENCED men tor steady lull lima lob. Renwick Pure Oil Service, toOO

ir Orchard L
d Tala-
CROWING PLASTIC MANUFAC TURBR HAS OPENING FOR PLASTIC FABRICATORS AND AS SEMBLERS. ONLY MEN WITH GENERAL SHOP EXPERIENCE NEED APPLY. EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS. CALL PER-SONNBL OPPICE - Ml 7 1201).
GUARDS '
Pull ond part time. Immadlala city and suburban lob eptnings. Bonded Guard SarviM. 441 E.
Grand tlvd. LO B-41S1 t»4 pjn._
HELP WANTED FOR MAINTAIN-
'pTk‘*a*nxf.
Organ, a at the P(
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS WITH i growing roll ■ —
Young men It
rr trelnhiB pre no oporgtora. at JU H34I.
LAND SURVEYORS ASSISTANT, lltid work, high adibol rtquirad.
OL 4 13ft,_________________
JANTTOR-iL'ue'SkY 6»IVI IND
m *ih4 p!m*’at*lf5K <!pdYko,
JANITORS
Pontiac Gonoral Hospital haa' lm-mediete opanlnga tor lull time lenllora, aoe 30 or over. SI J7 par hour. Apply In parson. Paraonnal _Dapt. Pontioc Ctneral HospItal_
Machine Operators
Severa^penlnga, pernaenenl ^ iwal-
aurtaico or (& grinding oxporlarKo protorrod. Must to rollablo tnd wllllna to loam. Now factory. 2*21 Industrial Row, Troy, batoaan 14 and IS Milo off CaolWgo. Phono
badroom mobile .aland Wandorf
'OR POSITION udio, win train.
MAN WANTED FOT“SALir“AHb aarvlca work. Apply at 23*7 EMi-atolh Lake Road, bet^n 10 and
5._______________________
MAN WitH PICK-UP TO WORR part tlnw, from 12 to 5:30 p.m.
FE 2-2*45.	_______________
MEN FOR SERVICE STATIOli^
Milk Route Salesmon
steady year around work'. No tirlktt or layoftt. Mutt be- neat. W# train you. fartonal Intarvlaw only. Call 474-2233, 4-7 p.m. MONTHV GUARANTBBD SALART
ORDERLIES
For day tnd night ahllta. Alta relief for oftarnoon abltt on wtok-ondi. Trans, nacaatary, axe. working condlllont In mbdorn nursing
IRKING lot WORKING 1...........
Proas ibK 10.________________
PARKlkO LOT ATTENDANT, PART S' lull IWw. apply Northwaat eernar of Huron and Parry. 4^t 14-70. (Equal opportunity amplotor.)
pIrmanent position -
llthad company Intoratltd In young man, 21-32, tor clerical Job with good potantlal. Job wbuM Involve torn# typing, working with figurat and gtneral clartcal dutlai. Pleat# apply In porion to Mitt Reach, MESC, 242 Oakland, Pontiac. PONTIAd’S OLDEST AodPIlfo b Stdlng Co. naadi good mon. Ex-porlonco wanted, but net nocM-tary. Top wagat ottorad. group hoapitaliiation plut ratiromanl plan. Man Batwaon tgot of tl wd 45. inquIrt boiwoan 7:30 and f a.m, |4 S. Cita Lake Rit_____________
PORTER
foto afarttn* aatiry.
THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY U, 1966
D-5
Mtifi Wanted Mala «
Pontiac Area
SALARY $125 WEEK
leAwn the retail pood busi
NESS, CAR AND EXPENSES FURNISHED. REFERENCES NEEDED. APPLY TO MR. WILLIAM at 'savoy motel, ijo so. TELEORAPH, PONTIAC, TUES-DAY, FEB. 15, 10 '	-•
,	TRAINEES
• * Pirionn*! Inttrnltd ... —.
mtchin* oparillofi In cutting tool Industry. Sttsdy smplovtnsnt.
F rings btntflli. Ns txpcrisnct
CP W*7brcJd L\“i R*d. F«,:^|«LL SwNPOWER;^^^
_!5e*?5......________________'ATTENTION RN'S AND LPN'S
.	OPENINGS. CALL 33l-;iS4.
BABY SITTE'rTo live
TURRET'LATHE set up and operator INSPECTORS
PINAL AND LAYOUT INSP.
TOOL LATHE HAND ^
OVERTIME, FRINGES, DAYS
M. C. MFC. CO.
------------... WHILi
____ In hospllll. FE 2-MM.
BABY SITTER, LIGHT HOUSE'-keeping, 5 dsyi, vicinity IS Mlls-Mlddle Bell. Salary open. MA a 5710 attar a p.w. _____________
BAKER'
Paul, 55113, Minn.
Experienced aide, 7-j pm, PM-II PM, Rochatlar area. ( 1-0377 or 647-iaOS.	___________
EXPERIENCED FASHION ILLUSTRATOR
Full tima, psrmanant opening I artist In advertising ottice. Pi dominantly fashion Illustrations, however, ability to draw hard llr--assantlal. Experlenca r a q u I r a Please submit resume with pc tolls ^nd	axpoctad. Portfc
Paul Staketae t Sons Co.
U Monroa Avenua N. W.
Grand Rapids. Michigan atSOI
Attn: Parsonnel Manager
Outstondini
ity for wonfbn with a good accounting background who can supervise others. Mony company benefits, apply in person or send complete resume to Person-el manoger at;
Montgomery
Warci
409 N. TELEGRAPH Pontiac Mall
rapi
. -itabllL __ experlenca
and TeiocateT'Car necessary; sal-—" and expanses. Give- complete uma to Pontiac Press Box 2J.
EXECUTIVE SALES
igible and Intangible sales -ex-. lence. Call on Oakland County businessmen by appointment. High '-imedlata earnings. Call Mr. Lam-irt SSS^TTB S-12 a.m. tor appt.
EXCELLtNT SALARY EXPENSES
COPPER, 35c; BRASS, RADIATORS, *' -nd up- battarias, 11.25. C. Olx-
OR 3-5aaa.__________________
DESKS, FILES. OFFICE FURNI lure, portable and oflira typewrit ars, adding mach'r*
-....-.....—..r tor Detroit and[
Eastern Michigan, to recruit and train District Managers. Must have outstanding record in party plan selling. For , personal Interview, write me with complete background of experience. Mr. Earl T. Doty. 4lh and West Water Streets, Taunton, Massachusetts.
Rooms With Board
COUPLE WITH 2 SMALL CHIL-
'*I«ENTLEMAN. GOOD FOOD. FE
3 Oakland,/ 573-1321.
CLARKSTON AREA Shopping complex, 1-75 area, 5,00. sq. ft., will divide, paved parking, reasonable rental. Michael's Realty, WE 3-4200, 355-2121. Evenings. 054-7731.____________
RENTING
$59 Mo.
Excluding taxas and Insurance
$10 Deocsit
WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME LARGE^DINlftV AREA
WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICA TIONS FROM ANY WORKERS WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES.
MtH I ID Rl H US.
I BMg. Homs
Ctromic Tiling
NEW AND REMODELING WORK, stale, marble, Pontiac Tile t
ArdlHfctural Drawing
ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES. KNIT dresses, leather coats. OR 3-7T23. ALTERATIONS FIRST QUALITY
Batamant Waterprotfing
Plastering tervicB
ARROW PLASTERING CO. REI old and new plaster and dry
FE 5-^. __________
’LASTERING. FREE ESflMA D. Adeyers. 353-2525. 575-2441.
Boildi^
1 STOP BUILDING SERVICE.
R t'm 0 d 6 I i n g, Recreation rooms, roofing, ga-j rages, all storms and' screens, oluminum siding. .
PONTIAC FENCE CO. '
232 Dixie Hwy.__;____OR 3-5525
Floor tiNng
I D. FLOOR COVERING. CE-ramlc and floor tile. Work guar-anlaad. FE 2-3252 or FE 4-0355. _
Floor Sanding
BILLS SR.
RETAIL PLUMBING AND HEATING SUPPLY Repair Parts and Raplacamants
Only Experienced Party Plan Dealers Need answer this ad
TIRED OF THE OLD JOBk TRY TOYS
I The Playhouse Co., Inc.
'	(lllh year in business)
1 hiring SUPERVISORS NOW lor next summer.
■ Free training In June
" .............. — Is the lob
d override ». ^No^c
U». WHO loo gooo to be tr... Check us out with your Batter Business Bureau. Write for free Information to — Louise Erickson, —
St. Paul,
pick up and deliver. t1.25 an hr. Call 5*2-5533.
practical MUASBs To LivI It^.
REAL ESTATE SALESWOMEN wanted. Call Von Really. Mambar oMha MultiDia Listing Service. 5i^ “** * - OR 3-5033.
RECEPTIONIST FOR PHYSICIAN'S
ottica. Permanent pr--
25. 52S-5221 between
BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER e- POWER SAWS •aslyn Oped Sun, FE ........
REGISTERED NURSE ..
Physical therapy 5 day* a week, I approx. 3 hrs. a day, aftameonsi — preferred. 52t-2«2l._ *
years to poy. Vermett &| Leonard's floor service Sons Builders, FE 8-611 5,j25 yrs°axperk^**«7-3l77yCollact. OR 3-9590. 2110 Dixie, f "	‘	'
OIL AND GAS SERVICE. FURNACE REPAIR^ MOREYS—512.|lia.
CRAVES CONTRACTING
All types of remodeling, kitchen cupboards, additions, attic rooms, rtcre-dtion rooms, aluminum siding, roofing. Free estimates. No down poyment. G & M Construction Co., FE 2-1211.86 N. Saginaw.
CARPENTRY AND REPAIR WORK
_________OL 1^*255_____
COMPLETE RE'MODELIN'c SERV-Ica, kitchen cabinets, additions, concrete work, brick and block, hops* raising, foundations, base-rndnls, aluminum siding, roofing, no down payments. Laprall Const. FE 2-2500.
NEW, REROOFS-REPAIRS -
CLARKSTON ROOFING COMPANY, Insurance and own. 573-2227. CUSHING - ROOFING AND RE-paliy. All work guar. FE 5M52I.
ar. Age II to 40 Backer's i
Pontiac Mall, 5*2-0511.________
SECRETARY FOR INSURANCE y at Ihb............... ‘ -------
ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR General Maintenance______5*2-544*
Televisioa Service
Tree TrimniiRg Service
luildlno ind 13 0«kl«nd
Meviog ami Storage
SMITH MOVING CO
_________/I ^
Poiirtiiig aiMl decorating
'lEXPERT TREE SERvTcE, TRIM-
Lakes Tree Co., Trimming
Plantings - Removals Fireplace Wood - *»14I4
Tracidng
Cyi|eiiti7
Tnterlakes painting and dec-
....__I, kitchen
J* ny^sylalty. State
interioiTfinish, kiYchens,
^	akEdtldnca
PAINTING AND DECORATING.
____- • attar 5 p.m., FE H2B4.
PAINTING, PAPERING, CAULKING -alas. Tom 34f-4440 or Roy,
Cement Work
5KM^_FBjyM4.
ORICK, BLOCK, CEMENT ____________FE 3-7521_____________
5em4nt ■■ an6~b lock crew available. FE 5^*45.	»
. klNOi,
Cement and Block Work
;-rnNTERT6R“ANb-BX-TTRlbR;LICH> painting, free astlmafas, werk f»asonabla. FE 4-lMl ^»anra*d. Reasonable rales. 5*2-
NTER lOR AND ^tfeftlOR, Gwrge Houghton, 527-3172.____
LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS, -rages cleaned. 574-1242, FE 5-3*04. IT AND HEAVY TRUCKING,
^Pion^Tai^^
PIANO TUNING AND REPAIRING Oscar Schmidt	FE 2-5217
wieoand piano
30 years In Pontiac, F
Flattering Service
TrackjjeoM
Trucks to Rent
H-Ton pickups	IW-Ton Iti
TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks - Saml-Trallar*
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
*25 S. WOODWARD FE 4 045)	FE 4-1442
---1 Dally Including Su
Wall Ckhnon


2» State St. 33^33*2. ,
Rochester. Hi ; FAMILY OF 4' 3 bedroom ho
I OPEN DAItr AND SAT. AND SUN ,, OR COME TO 220 KENNETT NEAR BAI OWIN L real VAI UE REALTY
SALESMAN: AGE 25 TO 40 FOB Pontiac, Flint, Owosso, Saginaw,
Pigeon, Port Huron, '
Sr^JiliTJlll	3 bedroom home in Watenord'erM, 1200 SQUARE FEET, *33 «.
*lV™l!?e, klkhe^ wlXn^^^	________^___________ Tel-Huron. FE 4-0*03._________________FOT ImmedlOte ActlOn CoH
ulanslls. furniture and furnishings. MOTHER AND 3 NEEDS 2 BED- BARBER SHOP FOR RENT, LEASE paper got^s, linens .chemicals and room home Immediately. OL 1-0312.. or sale. Completely furnished, RIk-l
lanltor supplies to hospitals, nurs- SLEEPING ROOM, YOUNG MAN- er Bulldinq, FE 3-71*5.__________________ '
club* and res- assistant manager S.S, Kresga Co.
basement, carpeting and draperies. 70' lot. Shown by appointment.
Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor
75 West Huron Street FE 5-0T51 (Evenings Ml 7-3272)
SMITH
side, living room with fireplace, full dining room, breakfast room off kitchen. Full basement with recreation room, oil heat and hot wafar, 2-car garage. *10,500, Im-medlete possession.
ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor
244 S. Tdagrarit
i FE 3-7*4*	____ EVES FE 3-7302
FE 5-3676 626-9575
ly Insured required. One treining In Chicago at a of *125 which Includes Ik out-of-pocket expenses. At
1^11^
tus, heelth, c
' Reglonel Sales OIret
I you. Drawing account, r week to start against] rommisslons. Write dell Including ------ ■-
selary
rnonmiy. oeaemeni it pgsa M474. btf. fWWi. ■
young couple with 1
BIRMINGHAM
Privele office
UTICA AREA, 3-BEDROOM RANCH, attached garage, fenced, scaped, nr. schools. Must i appreciate. Owner. 731-0575.
I. occupancy. Reas. 547-
HAROLD R. FRANKS, Reolty I 3 l»dr^°m^Sum^“ld«l home' WALNUT LAKE
A tine 3 bedroom with lull b
................I meni, attached garege, paneled
s shaded lot | i^g room with natural llrepi
Share Living Quarters 33
WORKING GIRL WILL SHARE H apt. with same. 335-2223, befor p.m. Ask^tor Joan.______________
Rent Business Property 47-A
carpeted, peneled,' place family roo
,.,u	garage. On e ----------- .
Birmingham School district, short ■''**'?* ■*"" °V' I walking distance to good beach, m?. ft	^ ^	•**' •ll-qnly SH.T00 on
this one at *15,500.	huRRY, this will go last.
Everett Cummings Realtor I WARttFN RFAITY
25.3.UNION LAKE ROAD.......'3,3, ^	ponllac 333-7157
£!!i7''’e"t^l Wanted Real Estote
— ---------- .. ..... J. Green,'-------
Persannel Director, EDWARD DON B COMPANY, 220) S. La-Salle Street, Chicago, Illinois 50515.
-	-------- UiVENTiON^WANT HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PAR-
JNVtiVTIOiV. WANT	FARMS, BUSINESS PROP-
--- ..._ ----------------
Cycio, 3*15
gatli:
Work Wanted Maie
A5*ll. M
e^^ot OOTval oNIce work 5*2-
secretaryT6~handle INSUR-ance office lor large company. Receptionist, typing, shorthand, prater recent graduate. Nationwide Insurance Co. 332-22*2.
SHOlit ORDER COOK, NO SUN-deys, FE 4-5750.____________
- small lobs. Ffe 0-212*.
CUSTOM CABINET AND CARPEN-
try, I* yaars exp. 33S-0545. __
PAINTING OR WALL WASHING., ___________335-2772.
PAINTING AND bdCORAtl NOI floor and celling tile, F E 4-2504.
SNOW PLOWING AND SIDE WALK
SITUATION FOR CHILDLESS UU-with husband amployad In Twest Delrolt-Pont'" tan to keep house'
own car. Recent ret. Apply Pon-llec press^ox 72.______
SPORTSWEAR SALESLADY
I TO 50
ERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS
s. JOIS Franklin
$100,000 For Land Contracts and Equities Intmedlate action — Call today
A. JOHNSON & SON
REAL ESTATE B INSURNACE 1704 S. Telegraph FE 4-2533
WerkW^^	12
-1 IROttINGS IN MY HOME, 1-
day service. OR 3-347*.___
ALTERATIONS, IRONINGS AND
EXPERIENCED PRACTICAL nurs* available. FE 2-*77*.
rRONiVos:;-' r bAY-smrcf.
e McCowan. FE S-1471.
2 3 BEDROOM, NORTH END, mo down, land contract or as-n* mortgage, FE 5-2223. FE
YORK
EXPANDING COMPANY NEEDS
BOY OUTRIGHT, NO FEES, NO WAITING. FOR FURTHER DE TAILS OF OUR UN QUE GUAR
anteed sales plan call
OR 4-0363
IRONINGS - I DAY SERvYCE.
Donna Holcomb. FE 5-7217.	_
IRONINGS WANTED, EXVeAi-encad, )-day service, FE ^52I5.
LADY WILL take IN IRONING or nurse's aid* |ob nights. 335-5041 *ITCD*Tins.lc	MATURE EXPERIENCED DENTAL
ALTERATIONS ^ Assistant. FE 4-27W._	yy, buy houses.
Part or lull lime. Experienced WOMEN TO ACT AS HOSTESSES IrKli, Waterford
preltrred. Good starting salary: In automatic feeding facilities,-	----
plus liberal employ* benefits. A- -----* —------* —■
ply In person. Ask tor Miss Bea.
AHENTION DOCTORS I
FOR LEASE
AvallabI* now. Approximately-sq. ft. medical sulfa In Village of Clarkston. In con|unctlon with an operating dental suite. Paved parking area. 4 treatment rooms. Private otllca. Business office and ---------------- Reasonable
353-71*1 =
HAYDEN
3-BEDROOM
TRI-LEVEL
II Build on Your I
KEEGO HARBOR	.(
Office space — former cl^ ot-i' —	.—. .jgf beauty shop,
_. ....ie* or other — parking, 5*2-0440 or 5*2-
YOUNG-BILT HOMES
REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUNG, 53VS W. HURON
Attached Garage Family ----------
li at *11,250
WAREHOUSE SPACE
OOO square ft., will remodel. orton. FE 2-«3**._____
NO
Discount
Trade
ment, large lot, excellent neigt borhood, only *300 down. FE : 7051 after 5 call Harold Yokle) FE 3-7435.
SAUNDERS B WYATT REALTY
BEDROOM. FRUIT TREES, 3 lots, garage, basement hr— come, all 3 good locallons. Commercial
3-BEDROOM
ak* front, sandy beach, 50x200' lot, yclone' fence, large mod. kitchen, lone fireplace. *24,200- 25 per cent
CALL B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3722 Elli. Lake Rd, FE 2-0172, ............1-4553. OPEN SUN-
Immediate Occupancy
BY OWNER
Large 2 bedroom. 5 years ( Living room. 74x14. Full bai ment. New IVi car garage. *2! down. 1155 Cloverlawn. FE 4-43
choice. Zuekihe
-------f the finest custom
n Oakland County, pres-
eat and therefore we can offei m home without any discount e also guarantee In writing that lU only "MOVE ONCE" even, II
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Extra sharp 2 bedroom bungalow, only 5 years old. Aluminum siding, ceramic tile bath with formica vanity. Beautiful kitchen with snack bar and loads of cupboards.
master bedroom. Wall-to-wall car-peting Incldded. Also 2 place bath. All this and more only *10,250.
McCullough realty
Ted McCullough, Jr.
574-2232
ALL CASH
ALBERT'S
Pontiac Mall
Telegraph at Elliabeth Lake SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS CLOSED '-Wanresses apply 150 W. M*pla, Ml B10T5.
..- ____4CE BOOKKEEPER,
with experlanc* In payroll, payables, receivables, builng and coat, NCR, bookk^ng mawina, apply Rochester Paper Co., Mill St., Rach-
ELECTRir MOTOR SERVICE RE -----ng^M^^^Indine 21* E. Pike,
Cruiiit Adviton IM
TWO WOMEN
For party plan'operation. ;
*100 or more pw weak. C 3053 * to 10 a.m. only. WAITRESS. EVENING WORK. J
iocooM Tax SarvicE
Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plaint apply :N GIRL.
------------- -------BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS
LASTERING, EXPERT PATCH Walls ahd windows. Reas. Sat I. 20 years exp 332 2554. i faction guaranteed. FE 2-1531.
evenings. Recce's.
WAITRESS AND Kl . .
Superchief, FE 2-5SS1._______
WAITRESS WANTED FOR PU__
■■ .......— Apply In person
lesfaurant. Keego
‘WAITRESSES
Dining Room and Curb
Pull or __________________
Hoapitllliatlon. Lunch hour . , food allowanca. Apply In parson.
BIG BOY RE?TAURANT
» " CASH
3 BEDROOM HOUSE
____________5*2-0455 _
|3 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH NEAR I Keni^y Junior Jtlgh. JE 4-4325.
■ 4-H'REAL ESTATE
WEST SUBURBAN - 3 bedroom, ranch — dining room — base-,
' — 1'/i garage — paved t — excellent ——*■—■'
48 HOURS
LAND CONTRACTS-HOMES
WRIGHT
3*2 Oakland Av*.	FE 2-2141
I. Bodell. FE 4-2C53
19
HOUR OR MORE SPENT ON each tax form to bring you maxlmur^ savings^** pick ui
>5. ]?.%unn!"oR 3<2*7. ***'^*"*
SS LONG FORM PREPARED. Experienced.____________OR 3-3332
Cash Buyers
For Homos and Farms. ELWOOD REALTY
________«^^2410______
*5 LONG FORMS PREPARED AND typed In my office. *5. Your home *5. Nona higher except businesses. George E. Lyle, FE *«52.
ALL BOOKKEEPING AND INCOME Tax Service. Trained	*
revisions. 10 years experience. Reasonable rates. For service In mingham, Ponllac, Waterford ai call 332-11*---------------
QUICK CASH
FOR YOUR'HOME OR EQUITY WE BUY, SELL, TRADE A LIST
____	CLARK REAL ESTATE
latest 3101 W. HURON	FE 3-70M
RES. FE 4-G13 SPOtCASH
FOR YOUR EQUITY, .........
OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION
LONG FORMS PREPARED
ROOM FOR AMBULATORY OR BED
VACANT LOTS AND HOUSES " 'T Pontiac tnd Walerlor 'fsing. REAL VALL 2575, r - •
WANTED 3 OR 4 BEDROOM HOME or Income near St. Fred's. **
locsilon. FE 44204,
AFTER 5\
OR 4 I, FE 4-02-ROOMS AND BATH, 35* I born $1. Good roof, needs i
repairs. *2500 cash. 33*-1*27.______
171 ELNf ST". *2,500 ly, 14 rooms, large 2 cai Needs repairs. FE 5 ------- 574-3325.
rage. Needi after 4:00 oi
Beauty Crest
$15,550
Your Choice
RANCH - CO
TRI-LEVEL -LONIAL - Ye "BEAUTY - C
flUy *r*^h**"H
In '55. Three i choose from at i 500 I plus lot) Y(
_______________ . 'BEAUTV
CRESTS" RANCH, THE STAJE-LY COLONIAL or Ih* appealing SPLIT-LEVEL.
Com* out teday-brlng your checkbook.
(Airport Road between M52 and Williams Lake Rpad).
O'NEIL REALTY CO.
3520 PONTIAC LAKE RD.
OR 4-3222
Buzz Bateman
SAYS
MAY WE HELP YOU?
of living area, beautifully finished family room with fireplace. Brick and aluminum, blacktop drive and nicely landscaped lot. Brand new and yours lor *33,000 with *5,400 down plus costs. CALL TODAY.
#77
BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS
1-	75 EXPRESSWAY close to this 3-bedroom brick rancher with
2-	car garage. Large roomu living room with fireplace, 3 full baths
—. ----------I-,.-,.—.,	pijhwasher, r—	-----
_ .. hx llvli kitchen" Jth b Large well-landscaped lot, an mil* as *2,300 down plus costs.
I at *22,250 with I
arp 1-story, 3-b*dri atlon In denier, of lablV lirlcM at *)(
3-bedroom with aluml-‘ of town with lake SIO.SOO with *2,500
EASY WALKING DISTANCE
TO TEL-HURON, city bos end schools. Excellent railcher, lull basement.
I, oes hei le-florv ,b
-Ins. Real opportunity
CALL TODAY.
NEW MODEL HOMES
Tri-Levals-Coloniols-Ranchers
d aluminum, lots of exira features and n Daily by appointment and Open SAT. he lime to prepare ‘ " '■■■	—
0 build lor Spring.
You can TRADE IN your p
Pontiac	BATEMAN REALTY	Rochester
FE 8-71^1	M.L.S. REALTOR	OL 1-8518
377 S. Telegraph Rd.	730 S. Rochester Rd.
The pqntiAc pkk»s, moXday. February u, loee
INDI*NWOOD SHORES NO. 3.	___ __________ __ ...	_
Ideal spot for your new home, i too'. Possession In 15 days. A large Well restritted home sites.I real bvy, tlS.fOtf.
Call today lor details.
ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker | GILES REALTY CO.
PE 1-3306 350 W. Walton PE 5-67131 PE ^6I7S	331 Baldwin Ave.
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE | MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
Frushour ' MILLER
BEDROOM COLONIAL 3 story ck. New England style. Dining im, provincial kitchen cabinets h bullt-lns and diner bath with 6' doul ' attached garag^
$450 DOWN
■ This 3-bedroom ranch Is located In Close-In sub., with community
Ih’-^l-
TERMS.
■$8950-EASY TERMS
ntr H d I ’irr u-----------1 It’s going (o necessitate an entirely new approach on
Only,112,500, terms. As»?'?oRi the part of iTianageiTient, J. G.? You don*t ORDER a haJe'^cash buyers, waiting lor'	Computer, you ASK!"
3, 3, and 4 bedroom homes In-------------------------------------------------------------
the Oxiord-Orlon area. Free estl----------- ASKFO_RBOGJ_RJ. |$o|, HoUMI
.Strubleir
room, excellent bright kitchen with lots of cupboards, has 1 bedroom down and 3 up, full basement, I 2-car garage. Patio and barbecue'
KINZLERFkJ!^^^
4S Resort Property
able. 636-4064.
J LIKE GOOD FISHING 3^
ith beautiful large lot, has'lf 'Ivllages lust across the niy $7»«0 with 11300 down, S' contract. Belter act fast. ! J?7m,OOC
this before RQY LAZENBY, Reoltor I
4303 Dixie Hwy.	OR 4-0301'
PONTIAt._______Multiple Ctetlng. Service
Clarkston Schools, 3 bedrooms, basement, family room, gas hot water heat, oak Moors, praalarad walls, brick fireplace, carpeting.
Fish K
I kitchen.;

garage. Barg,
r attached i
nn DAprw O	9	Mrmm*. LIKE NEW COndltlOn. Featuril
suKbl. olwsl any*
ol busineu. Brick and, block con-l^;'*/,®?	•>**!
elructlon, corner lot, 3 double If* entrance door at rear. Can bel"'*?“5*. •99 bought with a low down payment and on land contract.	i ®" *•»''
home on Big Lake, a 63' lake frontage, beautllul sandy beach, ditlon an Only to,050. Call right away. i ''•c'-
CLARK
COZY WINTER EVENINGS BY THE] J PIREPLACE-WIII be very en|oy-31 able In this lovely 3 bedroom Alum-', Inum Ranch Home. The living ; room Is a spacious 16x33 It. with » the fireplace as the local point, '■ Large kitchen with a breakfast '	oak Moors, plastered walls,
" ' arage. This home must appreciated. ^
WesT’or ' Ponilac. ' siVsSir'lO *pef
attached g
m plus costs.
S3,000 down will nonaie. DO nrsi — call and. make your appointment now!
DONELSON SCHOOL AREA ;
New while aluminum exterior bungalow, 4 bedrooms, lO-lool living room and family kitchen. High light basement, $14,000, 10 per cent down plus costs to GE veteran.
NEW RANCH HOMES
Nearing completion and still lime to: choose your own colors. Aluminum exterior and 1100 square teel of living area. 3 bedrooms, 1'/j baths and full basement. Gas l“ ‘ and kitchen built-lns. $15,300 eluding lot or will duplicate your lot. Wouldn't you rather h
^OHnTiNZLER, Realtor
Loti—Acreage
1 NICE LOT I
- ALL WITH BLACKTOP In Clarkston School a r small builder. Only
Sole or Exchange $1
Coast-To-Coast
TRADES
“[Tom Bateman
FE 8-7161
r Realtor 54| Exchanger
ducing property.
BATEMAN
XrER * LIVINGSTON! Flhanca Co.
Pontiac Slate Bank Build
•FE 4-1538-9
GE REFRIGERATOR, EXCELLENT condition, $30. 613-1367.	^
GIBSON REFRIGERATORT^W I L-'-"Ison oil furnace. OR 3-0675.
plastered walls, oak Moors, g
BusinBst OpportunitiBi S9
LOANS
S35 TO 11,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO.
30 B. LAWRENCE	FE 1^)431
NEED CASH
FOR BILL CONSOLIDATION?
BORROW UP TO $1,000
36 months to pay
BUCKNER’
FINANCE COMPANY
, t3S. FE 5 3766. home FREEZER Full Family Site
It decor, 3 full hs, a dan that couio poasioiy the 4th bedroom. Oh Yet, It privileges on Loon Lake I meny other tine appoint-
•••; OXFORD - Desira • restricted area, schools. Ideal foi nt, only $3500 wit
JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE
REALTORS	___
fE 1-4035 _____________613-3393
TAYLOR
TRADES
WEST BLOOMFIELD LAKE FRONT !
Yaar-around home with 3 bedrooms - Auto, oil heat. Paneled walls. Located Hin south aide of Middle StraigOifi Lake. Includes t's-car garage. Full price, $I3,500-Termi.
AARON BAUGHEY, Realtor
FE 3-0363
__^670 W. HURON OPEN 9 TO 9_
• IRWIN ^
ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT:
We are pleased to oMer to you an outstanding brick home, lo-
", ■■ ■	---' on 'be APPRECIATE YOURS.
WEST SUBURBAN-Close Ing distance to Grade i High Schools. Paved sire sewer end get. 3 bedroom brick, 9 years old. Ceramic Aalh, full basement with space for large recreation room, nice corner ■— $16,950, terms. F.H.A., G.l.
In Walk “19 Dixit Hwy.	674-3335
-a' iVjf.-i Across from Packers Store !ls. wat«	Listing Service Open_9
WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU
N THE MARCH OF TIMES"
.!?.	*NO WOULD
The tpaciousntst
Comfort and Convenience ^vel not been overlooked. The enclosed entry opens Into a hallway lead-1
CLARK REAL ESTATE 363 W. HURON ST. FE 3-7010 FE S-3691 or FE 5-SI46 Multiple Listing Service
opening off hath
Sil DORRIS
KAMPSENi Times R^lty
Your Neighbor Trai Why Don't You?
Sylvan Lake Front-
This three bedroom bl-l iso'ba
Warran Stout, Realtor
ISO N. Opdyk^Rd. Ph^ FE 5-1165
‘ 10 ACRES
Potential tor small	$15,7
CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR
WALTON
BAY COUNTY, Claii C and S.D.I building In good condition, iir living quarters, good Corner a ample parking. Grotiing appro mataly ‘530,000 and could do much better with active ewnar. $53,150, $15,000 down.
dally MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
^3M-4006 C. PANGUS, Reolty
jLINOLEU.V RUGS. MOST SIZbS.
*' “ p. Paarion'i Furniture, 310 St., FE fjnOt.
“cabinets" large 30"
------------- »3.*S;l.rge
iignis. Sliding doors.' Terrific Michigan Fluorescent, 393 ird Lake^FE^ 4-0463.
LLANEOUS ■ HOUSEHOLD I. 656_Balboa.
NECCHI
Zlg-zagger tor buttonholes, designs, elc. to year guarantee and tree lessons Included. Pay balance ol . $35.35 or $3.35 monthly. Call credit manager at 335-9303 RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER, Author-Izad Need Dealer.
PORCH FURNITURE, CHAIRS, beds and mitc. 613-6315 REBUILT vacuum CLEANERS. $13.11 up. Rafrioarators and ranges - reas. Michigan Appliance Co., 3303 Dixie Hwy. 673-0011. refrigerator, GOOl> CONbl-
conlracls, eoulflasi, acreage. 1 quire 5S0 oAland Ave.
Superior............
Rambler-Jeep	«
...... '	-	! 1-3M5 _
Brown
Rgallori A Builders Since 1939
!. Ally. 673-0701. ____
EQUITY or] Track’, FB’4O 7301 rni on your home. Mo-	^rnc/-iai
10x46 Detroiter. 1 bed-'	SPcCIAL
living
Cats
I Wide
s. or 3-1395.
1 and swim. Bloch
,.J0 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OP on lake front FURNITURE - Conalati afi Pontiac. Call ^placa living room sulta with 3 slap *- " *”'■ ' tablet, 1 cockfall labW and 3 labia
DRAYTON PLAINS
Modern bungalow with ci living room, ‘ " ---
and iencedl school and * 'b 'Ice, $11,950,1 Llvl"
$37,000 Terms.
EAST SIDE:
nIortaW llvli^ quarters.
ACRES WITH'jf RONTAQi ONCall Collect
1 9Mn'’hitweei!'y3 Mr?* nXman^' i °'*T"l“^''’ORSHlP OPEN. 'WHOLE'
salaratall. SIOOO tmilal Invanlory.,	....
1 PONTIAC 35 MINUTES, MILFORD Potential $15,000 first year. Foasl- large porch,
,	.r.*	1»I.	50-xlSO, 5T95.I	ble to start part lima	tor short]	lot	15 min. from
---?d. Send resume lo Pontiac 674-0606 bet 13 noon or FE 1-7161,
Cl„ks,cn Area
|170'X413'	lot ,	53950	AIITO PABT^	!	'----------------- ' aPflno to match with 3 vanity
lOfl'klSC lot, blacktop street 53350	AUlU rAKIi
‘ tarn, 1-30 tt. deep 53900 '	And	> Jglg Clathino	64 5-pleca dlnatfa $el, a ‘
iWblacktop	____ '.7 WOM~E rs^NTE<f COAT5.	^
................... sDkvlS	furLureco.
TAYLOR AGENCY
l'HighieVRoadTM59^ oR^^^^^ JoHn K. Irwln
AND SONS REALTORS
h Mreplace, sej^l for easy Mnancing. '
, cJrpa'tlng'	(,f fngland-
Ponllac Mall. We would be glad
CLARKSTON REAL ESTATE
M56 S. Main___________MA J-MSL
CANAL LOTS
Choice building sites -	60x147.
Connected with Sylvan Lake.
JACK LOVELAND
3110 Cats Lake Rd.	<
613-1355
1 bookcase.
! 5t3.9«
______________________ il7 f. HURON	-------
DO I NO, GOWN, PRINCESS to W. PIKE	_ FE 3-3150
sewVng'machine and vacuum
style, site 10. i
ir3W.
SoIb Houiahold Goods 6$
SCHRAM'
313 W
:e 1935 III FE ^9446
'BUD-'
door wall to patio. iVxIl' kiti an with bullt-lni and dishwai er. ^ 3 car^	'
downtown Pontiac. Only S' downtown Pontiac. Shown by i
Off Perry
X 13' living root
....., .oom, 7'xl3‘ kite
II basement, with gas hai I. Walking distance
Near OU
10'xl3''^*k[lehan, on a lot"^x” o^y^srs^ and 51300 will me
List With Schram ond Coll The Von
nil JOSLYN AVE. FE 5-9471
For The Large Family
: FRONT. A truly
Oakland County and the I 300 leet deep. Well consti summer cottage. 34x30 that easily ^be convartad to a
DOLL HOUSE STARTER HOME i caled In ever popular Elizabeth I Lake Estates. Neal and clean, small 3 bedroom bungalow with a
inis coniemporary rancher kllcn-   —- - _ -
IRWIN ^ CASH
living room. Ilra> Mful Elizabeth Lake.
HI-FI, I'/li ceram-l	’
marble window LAKE ORION RETIREMENT.
s'’‘a‘tta"^ed"Sl.'',WATERFORD HIGH AREA
lenty ol room Lovely 3 bedroom bungalow ^bacau» ^s| alumiqjm	----
.. ____ . or acratge. Call Mc-
Cullough Really, ask Tor Ted McCullough Jr.. 674-3339. 5460 Hlgh-
........ land Rd., Pontiac_________________
Full basement, ELIZABETH LAKE, NICE. WIDE g and draperies lot next to 3954 Creithaven. Lake car garage, all; privileges, must sell. '
plenty of room In the finished borhood, don't miss this one.
I w^iMcIe^m. Sr&uTe CLARKSTON AREA
1 .u-	.... -Ir-condlllonlng Lovely Plalnland subdivision, north-
’"■I COOL, In; ern scenery all about you In Ibis
1 SLJ Its tea It your family]
r;, a'oo.’^i
room, big kitchen, lull basemen! ges hot wa^e^ haat^itorms are
"Bud" Nichdiie, Reoltor
49 Mt. Clamans St.-
FE 5-1201
after 6 p.m. FE 5-0198
country that It
a side 0
I hill I

ANNETT"
1 ceramic bathe and larpt p “h alumlnurh awning, coukl
k Income Property
674-03341
O'NEIL
3-bedroom briok rench i
in trade. Cell Todty.
Lake privileges.
Beaulllully decorated
$25,000
$18,900
Wrsi Side. This one li bum like i Priced like a cattaga-l)lr900 Got It. living roam? 16 x II dining matter bedroom? Thia houte has looking for a grand brick home
got all this and n
$12,500
Good Watt SIda Two-Family. Wall-kept fl bath. Excallant cfaan lanantt, anxious with 53,510 down on a land contract. Wi
$10,700
It tha total Kaap your
prica 0 fishing I tit^ce m

$9600
Clean 3-bedroom Lake Privileges oi
MODELS
Builders Close Out $2000.00 SAVINGS '	Open Doily 2 to 6
Open Sunday 2 to 8
FOUR LUXURIOUS MODEL HOMES IN Beautllul Wettrldge of Walarford, now effarad lo you with Injmtdlala occupancy. Mava -«lBhl In. Models tklH be told furnished or unturnlshecT Bring your lur neighbor. Dixie Hlgh-
Open 9 to 9 01 1-6768
RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 3520 Pontiac Lk. Rd.
OR 4-2222	MLS
GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
Waterford Schools
IQj5l4,95B.	Immaculate 3 b4_ _
/DORRIS E SDN, REALTORS	ranch. Full dividad basemant,
"...	*'*	FA gas heat. ?Sx163 ft. lot'pDiri,
withlencad back yard. Closa
to Pontiac and th. Mall. | Sl{i;ing 7gotre:,. kltchan,’3
^ Brick Tri-Level	.'
n brick with 3 baths, a large family that entarfaln. Close lo "t access to Syl-
iVal-U-Ways'

. Cats and Otter, lakes.
____	. UNIT APARTMENT!
building, each unit hat living room,|
land contract, S4,0CO down.
VON REALTY
GEORGE VONDERHARR, BROKER ...............Eves. OR 3-6033
Rochester Area Lots
Brewetler	Rd...............|3SM
Oklahoma	$3300
Texas	SUM
Rochester	Rd.	53911
Call 651-1511 lor details
50 SHEPARD REAL ESTATE SEE IT YET?
P drive. S12.950 w
I dl»count|
DANDY 2 BEDROOM |
arpelad living^ room and bed!^ oom, alum, storms and t
...	...’ and Is conva
ced under 511.1 n, payments cheeper tt
List With Us-We Sell 0 Home. , Every 24 Hours I
R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR	FE 4-3531
345 Oakland
looking lake. All rooms are exctpllonally large Owners are lost In this big home and willing to sacrifice at a fraction of reproduction cost. 544, HO, terms.
49 Acres-4 Bedrms.
An unusual estate Including a Swimming pool 35x64 with adlacent bath and rac. house, -amt^ltd |Barl^ , gas steam r '
end exe?cUlng ring^
i - btputiful
?ftddoc lergt
CASH
Immediate cash for your fheoma property, large or small. Call McCullough Realty, ask for Tad McCullough Jr., 674-3339, 5460 Hlgh-jand Rd.,_^ljac. _	i
INCOME'
3-slory, presently rented for 5175 per month, large living room, kitchen, 3 badroomi, bath and large enclosed porch down. 3 bad-zooms, living room.'-kllchtn and bath up. Gas heat. West SIda lo-> cation, 5)3,510 with substantial down payment.	*	I
Sislock & Kent, Inc.
_13W Pontiac Slate Bank

wn. Lapeer Road, t miles nor 1-75. Open d*lly noon to 6 p.n er by appointment. Sunday I
13^4536	________
The Peaceful Country
\</i ACRES, surrounded with slata
'* 331-9394
BREWER REAL ESTATE
E. Huron	FE 4-SIII
Or_CaU_Mr Gragory, FE M3I9
' PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE"
SUCESSFUL FUTURE
i*,t:rnr Cdr^rM'^:	"j^E's^RA^ori'^'
c-idTo^'f^sss’^rnih sis:;'	*'i
1 EVERY DAY VALUE
This liquor carry out parly slor.l ^rond NeW Fumiture
»a«S5 M®®nlfr	ri:	Nome Brand Appliances
llghtiul •pic'and tpan living quar Ranges, Ratrlgeralors, washers, TVs
......	----^	' At Truck Lood Prices
Tn‘ r yj
FOR YOU
Thumb
-...... 1965. Da-
iplc and tpan living quar-badrooms) Included. Lo-| a charming and thriving |
lor $7,510 down plus itock. PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 W. Huron, FE 4-3501 SEND FOR FREE CATALOG
PONTIAC BAR
A straight liquor bar (no foo< good gross, low ovarhaad, lar( parking lot. Real astala optkma Bargain prietd at 516,000 down.
WARDEN REALTY
‘ WATERFORD BAR
luslnass with lease or real estate vaUabla. Sharp corner location, as-1 •bllshad 1933. No lood. Takas' s stock to han-
3	room quality outfit Nothing Down $317
$2.75 a Week Beautiful living room 2 ond toblos 1 coffoB toblB 2 booutiful lamps
4	pc. bodroom suits Box spring, mottross
2 boudoir lamps
5	pc. formica dinotto
9' by 12' rug 32 pc. sBt of dishos
MAY PURCHASE SEPARATELY
guaranlta you It pays to I shop balora you buy. Curts Appliance. 6404, Wllllami Lake Rd. ' OR 4-ltOI.
SINGER
I DIAL-A-MATIC
Ztg Z*g Mowing macMn# Embr^l-d#r$, appliques. butlonholPi.
lalt mpdfl. Khool tPidt-in — new
^nachina guarantaa Tarmi of U
UNIVERSAL W.'Te 4-D9D5 SINGER PRE-OWNED
I ele model Must collect balance ol 541.11 cash or 54 11 monthly Excellent condition. Zio zagger lor buttonholes. ham$, designs, elc. Call credit manager at 335-9353. RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CEN-TER. _	_
TA»AN CAS RA'NOE, '41", “ex.
cellanl_condltlon. 671-1119 TV SET, 535, REFRIGERATOR, 535, gai alova, 535. alaciric stove. 515. bunk bads, mltc. FE USED REFRIOERAtbR BOTTOM I freezer	539.50
Used TV's,	19.13 and up
Sweet's Radio B Appllanca, Inc Iw^^Jfuj^on s	_	134J677
’WYMAN'S
USED BARGAIN STORE I At Our 15 W. Pika Store Only Odd llvino room tables From 5 4.95 OccailonaT chairt	From 5 a.95
3-lhalf bookcata	5 9 95
j-pc. living room sulfa	539 95
Ia^. sizt gas stove	514 95
LITTLE JOE'S	®“Your*C*r'edlt*hl'SIiIf“It Wvman's
BARGAIN HOUSE	ea^^^ermV* ^_'l_'^3i
1461 Baldwin at Walton FE 3-6143 WASHER S3S. GAS STOVE, 535. RE-I First Traffic light south of 1-75 i trigarator with top traaiar, 549.
Acres of Free Parking | Dryer, 515. TV. 535. Elaciric afova, Open Eves, 'til 9____*•» J'iL* 535. V, Harris. FE 5-3766.
1 MORE TIME	^
! iRAND NEW FURNITURE j AntiquBS	65-A
3-ROOM OUTFITS	’	---------------
COSMETIC STUDIO
Would you like lo own your own business? Established In Pontiac 35 years. Has steady customers lor natlen-wlda brand. Advarlliad In well known magazines. Franchised
71 1111 tX**# X TV T I E070	'60 c/s lif I I’ 11^1^ DODGE TOURING, RESTORED
COMMCRICAL OCPARTMCNT #^170	/Da.4\ #ji aa ui i i
349 s. T4i4gr«ph I >478 (Best) $4.00 Weekly
""	;i“| NEW LIVING ROOM SAROAINS
FE 3-3759 7 plKe (brand ngw) living -pom:
3-pleca living room suite. Two itap tablet, matching ceffaa labia, two decorator lampiR all for 5119. Only
new*be’dro®m bargains
FE 4-^1
SALESMAlJ
company |
Major ...	___„
Oakland County looking IlganI, young, -------
flowing tiraam, 1 ____ ..
Sroll VndT.'r:,' ’B”ernHo;^."‘“
51 J
WE	WILL	TRADE,
Realtors 28 E. Huron St. ;
n Evenings and Sundays 1-
Vi ACRE LAKE LOTS
ermt alto have W Icra ilth lake privllagaa - easy h -pavmanit M low at |15
benaflft. Our employes
ANTIQUE SHOW
STOUTS
Best Buys Today
Growing Pains?-
Sae this neat 4 bedroom aluminum ranch home wflh laparala dining room, baaamant, oil forced
' C. PANGUS, Reolty
' 631 M-IS	•	OrtonvMla
Call Cellicl NA 7-3111 WALTERS LAK'e PUTviLEGiS. I near Pina Knob akl araa, building IMMEDIATE CASH	' litas starting at 51,310.
HOUSES, FARMS, ACREAGES 613-3301 SYLVAN 635-1IM NOxONTr— ------------- -----------------------
$14,9S0-
Full p
-	. - ... .'hiwIlO
aluminum ranch home lot. Includes ,1'/} bathi, r floors, marble illlt, lar
nil sq. '
ro^Y?
CSSH
FOR EQUITY-LAND CONTRACT WE tUILD-Wl TRADE
HARP 3 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH, wall to will carr "-In living room and badri fireglact in plaaiant living i
14 fool kllchan with tltdrTe___
Ins and dishwaihar, fk balht,' family room, ilr-condlllonar and
Ras ciarlmatar heat, icraa' " -0, barbecue, iprinkling in 300x301 fool yard,
Musi ba saan lo be appreciated. AKE. PRIVILEGES
ITRACTS, EQUITIES
WRIGHT REALTY
351 Oakland Ava.
9141 Evas, after 7:31 FE
HOME, Sites, w x loiy, iunny ' ovirlooklng beautllul WaF Lake prlvDtgat. f ■ t, docking, iTooo, 5 nth. Owner. MY 3-0»„.	„
INCOME PROPERTY ON SA6ALL “pr Lake Orion. 3 yaar-
Sale Farms
li. Shown by ..._
-	....larmi.
C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor
V 5-7»l______________OA 1-3515
, large lachad : ly vm«r laaturi appolntmant.
Small Estate-
Sharp 3 bedroom ranch north ol Fgnflac on beauiiiuii lanced »4 acre parcel faaluratIcLA oak Hoars, plaslarad wallr — letslonally llnlthad batemt room, oil lorced air haal, large 3'/i car garage, p drive. Priced al SII.OM
0 Invnitd. ] ilhi, 3 iTrai
Over ..... ...... ..........
‘ Iraplacat -
Bining moms - pan. GOOd hOUU..
Lew 40's, call CHAMBERLAIN
■Worren Stout, Realtor
50 N. O^yka Rd. Ph. FE 1-1165 Opan Evas. Till I p.m. Multiple Lilting Sarivea
Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor PHONE 682-2211
10 ACRES - r
Underwood Real Estate
635-3615 If no ant. 635-4356 or 635-1451
30 OR IO ACRES, HOUSE, BARN.
5 or 16 A:, houia, garage.
th-wllhoul barn.
_________ Prt. Rep. H. tyilton
Living-Country Style
—' —*ila 5 bedroom home iplact, garaga, IW ... .. Clarkston, (}h Vaa,
------JIngi lel up for profit
makjng chicken buslnass. Ut.oio.
Mrqomt, Mg ell furnadt.
FEB. 1S-18
Roma Hall, E. Dalrell. 3M45 Gra-llol (near 10 Mila Rd) 1-10 pm. Free parking, door prizes. Inlor-malion, 771.3767.
it dtaitr Bpiaca (brand npwl badrooms:'*	DRESSER ' AND
Ing, SaF DouWa drattar, bookcata bad ahdi	Flrjplaca flxturai. 17 clocks,
y fringe chest, box spring and Innarsprlng	I0M5 OakhIM,
w about matirass, two vanily lamps. All	r 5191. Closed Wed.
» Pontlec tw 5139. 11.50 weakly.	-
------- PEARSON'S FURNITURE	^ ^ RodlOS	66
■ t Flka	FE 67111
---------- • ------------- •V USED TVi	534 as
Mtwatn Paddock and City H
TAVERN-S.D.M.
No. 549. A cocktail lounga type 9av-i —y-—■ arn, factory bars, large walk-ln.il UNCLAIMED I no dance, sandwichti only. AAaIn rooms of furnlli highway location In cify of Ifl0.fll0i Martin. a74-33g5.
Ask f
find? Sea u
JOHNSON TV - FE 1-4569
STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE
UI 1 Lanaar Rd. Lake Oric 673-7000
UliO CAlk LOT IM OXFIMD, 110 fat commtrclal cemar oHIct and
SbiIb Ujiid CaWrKte 4D 1 TO SD
1 LAND CONTRACTS
Urganfly wanted. Saa ui bafore you deal.
WARREN STOUT, Realtor
1450 N. Opdykt Rd. FE 54165 Opan Evas 'III I p.m.
9x12 LinolBum Rugs
Calling t“-Vlnyl A-*
3n your I imali, call
AaiON
W alt. 5.
ISO. 30" Frigidal rlla Irgnar, 130.
EM 34101.
4 YARDS AQUA TWIlfCAPRACoN ctrpat, 34x11 living room, 11x11 dining room, tIalri-V....*
AIR CONDITIONER SALE
Drastic reduction on all
For Sale MiscillaiMBtts 67
3 OIL TANKS, OVAL, GOOD CON--'•'■w 3N and 27S .giliSb c^ap, Stanlav, Ind 'heuta ott Mont-
rrjRTl. 7-5BXI4 6Fi^r5N
N^er^Pro^^,___51*A
30 acre farm, barn, lacludtd, 533,300. 55.000 dos
C. PANGUS, Realty
M-IS	Ortenvillo
Call Cellact NA 7-MIS
PrORtr. J/T7 ■ll|•D9Tn LtRI POM. SiiSSTANTIAL BUNGALSw; E“X-CELLENT BUYERS, P,900 -MONTHLY PAYMENT 570. 5700 TO	1650 5 Tatagraph FE 37051 ANTTouE CHERRY DROP LEAF table, large mirror, and old clocks. Large due-lharm haalar, 535. Oil	a.m. or eves. aa2-M23. l3>iec'E PINK ' BATHRDOM SET. 1 Has built-in hand basin, 549.9$ G. A. Thomipon, 7005 M59 Wist.
HANDLE. FRUSHOUR AND STRU-RLE REALTY, IMI HIGHLAND RO. IW. HURON) CALL FE 5-4015 OR FE 3-0473.	tanks, tea cart and mltc. MU Aa-daraonvllla Rd. W a t a r 1 o r d. OR 61710. AlJtOMAtiC ZIG ZAG Sewing machine raifnaeuad — If'aS - "Fashion Dial" modal — In walnut cabinet. Taka ever paymanta at 55.50 par month ter 1 rnentha or 544 cath balance. Itlll under guar-	|9‘xl7' LINOLEUM RUGS 53.05 EACH Plaallc Wall tile )c at. Calling lilt - wall ptnaling, chaaa. BAG Jlla. FE 60957. 1075 W. Huron
W«^EtM^C^Kti4llt|. 60-A CASH		1965 $5ny m A tape rIcorWr Extra tapat. Raala and apaakar cordi. Uiad vary imia. Ml 61014. ALL BRONZE SUMP PUMPS, IOLO ropalrad, oxchtngod, rontod, guar- CONE?■ ” PI Edaa ANCHOR FENCt$
5161 Cttt-BiltaDelh Lake Road
NO MONEY DOWN
THE PONTIAC PRESS. MQXDAX. FEBRUARY 14, 1966
FOR DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS UU LIquk) Floor Hardontr Simpio IncKPonilvo Application ’ Boica Bulklari Supply FE S41I
For tha Finest in Top-Quality Merchandise Shop
MONTGOMERY WARD
PONTIAC MALL
Staal ' ona placa. lablonal. wooi ana (Ibarglaa. Faetory ralKta li uma >l»a. Caraga tront ramoMl Ino. Fraa aitlmataa. Barry Door Salaa Co., 2300 Cola Straat, BIr- -mingham. PE 2-0203 or V ' ■*’*
..M F. SKI-DAODLER. SEC TO kt>-praclata. Skl-Doo't alio. Nor-Wait Sporti. 1«47 S. Talagrapti aflar 5
pm.________________________
GUNS-BUY-SELL-^tRADE BURR-SHELL. 37S S. Talagraph.
Johnson snow a^ile, near-
_ ly n«w, SOSO. 152-3351 all, a p.m.
ShOTSHELL REfOAOINO COM-ponants. Skaat-ttap rangas opan to .11	i,,«	B.. Sun. 10-4
Oakland
GOOD USED VACUUM CLEANER —110 and up, guarantaod. Also rabullt Kirbys with sama gdaran-taas as naw onPs. Kirby Sarvica * Supply Co., 2417 Dlpia r
snowmobiles
Fok • Ski - Doo - Ski • Daddia
CRUISE-OUT, INC-
E. Walton, Opan »-4, FE S4402
APACHE
CAMP TRAILERS
All naw 1944 modals on
USED EQUIPMENT M-F 202 gas With loadar. Savaral Ford traders. 2 Casa Crawlers with loodars. T-D. 9 drott. Damontlrator 203 Massay-Farguson dlasal loadar-Complata urts and sarvicas on all make tractors.
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
123 S. Woodward
FE 4-0441	FE 4-1442
Opan
Travel Trailen	88
943 14' FROLIC STANDARD, Sl,-050. OR 3--
Call 474^34. _
Ft b't P 0 I N T ReFRrdERATdR, larga, S30. Call altar 3 p.m. FE 5-3017.	_______'
HUMIDIttERS
Spaclal sale — regular 117.30 now 19.95. Chandler Haating. QR 3-3432.
JIM'S OUTLET
AND GARDEN CENTER Light tiaturas tor all rooms and dacor, racassad, wall type, chan-dallari, In brass, copper, stained ^l4|S and Imparted crystal.
Sand—Gravel—Dirt
ill llxturas vy oil.
DRIVEWAYS, PARKING LOTS, gravalad, raas. OR 4-1741. _ PONTIAC lake BUILDERS SUP-^Y^Sand. gravel, till dirt. OR
SAN D, ul2AVE LfTfiinDI Rt,“tOP soil, black dirt. BulMotIng, a«ca-
vating. OR yOM._____
WANTED GOOD TOP SOIL AND ------dirt. FE 44SK.
1943 CHEVY PICK-UP AND CUS-tom cab over camper. 423-1290.
AIRSTREAM LlOHTWilGHT' TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed for I Sea them and oat a damonst tion at Warner frallar Salas, 3
a caravans).
Wally Byam's
Vi" CABOVER. SLEEPS 4, COA4-plataly salf<ontalnad with haatar stove. Ice-box and marina toilet 31.393. Also l‘4", 11,093.
TAR CAMPER MFG. CO.
AM-FM Portable Radio with mounting bracket FREE
1 bixia Hwj).
s. Frl. 9
FE 4-0205 Wood-Coal-Coke-Fbe;
—I Raceway „..
chlnejy|_Mm______________
&IL SPACE HEATER. I YOUTH bad and chest. FE 0-2225.
ONE OF THE BEST BASEBOARO deals In town, r ‘ board, haat wItt dampsT,^ ^
FTiTE
tg toilet, 014.93. SBoallon . 047.93) 3-ploca bath sets
2-bowl sink, 02.95) Lavs., 02.93) tubs, 010 and up. Pipe cut and thraodad. SAVE PLUMBING CO« JUIJNKMn. FE 4-13J4.	'
POOL TABLES-BELAIRE LI 4-0900-353-6520
PRINTING
-rOAK-BIRCH. ALSO SLAB. DEL. FE 04753, FE 0-9044._
Pet^Hunting
A, AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPS, STUD sarvica. IMATODDS. 332-7139.
1 YEAR^LD^F^E^LE DOG TO
■ \«EK~OLO“PUREBREO^ BRIT-tany pups, champion stock, no papers. Males 023. Females 320. 334-7554.
PRESS, DAVISON, 2sf
ett-set, prints up to 10 x
- Forbes. OR M747.____________
SPECIALS ON HEATfNO AND aluminum siding. ABH Sales. MA
_5^7 or AAA 5-1301.	_____
IP'RED~-SATIN paints. WARWICK Supply. 2470 Orctiai ■ ■ -	—
i Lake. 402-
. sffbWER faiK^s and i
curtains, 349.50
TOM STACHLER AUTO AND MOBILE SALES
3091 W. Huron St. FE 2-4920
AKC pekingese^gFpiIs, also ...... Mrvica, call tor appointment
_____me. FE 0-9430.____ _
AKC RE'GISTERED TOY POODLE*, male,	"* ““
... POODLES, TOY, MALE AND tamale, 330-S40-373, 4743M.
AKC POODLE PUPPIES, CHAM*-
ARE YOU PLANNING YOUR VACATION NOW?
Than It's time to stop In lake your choice ot a
_____________.
, . DACHSHUND PUPS, 310 DOWN.i AKC-Terms. JAHEIMS, FE 0-2530.|
shots, 4577 Dixie Hwy.
AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES. STuD Michigan Fluorescent, 393	Or-l.-^TEtHE!MS^2^^^^
chard Lake. FE 4-9442.	DOBERMAN, RED AND BUST.
TALBOiriUMBER iljo, em V73S>t?;'
Mahogany paneling, 32.99 to 34.50.iALL PET SHOP, 33 WILLIAMS FEIcamp'ERS Block and Decker tools and Da 4-4433. Selling out ot	-	■
-------CANARIES
n Rollers and Warblers Also u ---- singers and te-i Pickup
AVALIER
ALJO
BARTH
CORSAIR
HOLLY
DETROITER-PONTIAC CHIEF
Top trade., allowance on y( present mobile home.
Yes, all Detroiter products meet exceed tha rigid Blue Book stai ards tor heating, plumbing a electrical systems. You nei gamble. You always en|oy the fimata In safety, comfort and sale value.
AIM a large selection of used 3 a
Boats-
OXFORD TRAILER SALES
13 to 40 tt. See the newest In Ml lattes, Stewarts, and famous Winnebago travel trailers.
Open 9-4, closed Sunday 1 Mila south of Lake Orion on
LIKE NEW 1*2x40 TRAVELO. THE Cadillac of mobile hemes. All sat up on nlu lot In park. 35,995. Attar 5 phona 444-4911._________
Parkhurst Trailer Soles
FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING 13 to 40 ft. Featuring Naw Moon -Buddy and Nomads.
Located half way between Orion and Oxford on M24, next to Alban Country Cousin. MY ^441l.	_
Waterford Mobile H^mes~
ovas you Immediate-mobile b>
.. Inest park., park anything
Mollixyclet
1943 HONDA M
B.S.A. - HONDA TRIUMPH - NORTON 5-SPEED DUCATI
Special winter prices, ect now: and save.
ANDERSON SALES A SERVICE 1443 S. Telegraph	FE 3-7102
!HAROLD TURNER
“Barry is the thoughtful type. He thought about sending Linda a Valentine gift, but he decided on a card instead!”
3 Exprei
', hard-
NEW 1944 MODELS ON DISPLAY
LAKE & SEA MARINA
OWENS DEALER
Woodward at S. Blvd. FE 4-9307
save-savE-save
"PINTERS SPECIALS'
Now you can buy new S
tiberglas boat with Johnson -
Yours tor 31043. Only 333.47 par
12' alurn. fishing boat with 3 h Johnson motor. Yours tor | 3299.50. Only 311.94 per month.
PINTER'S MARINE
1370 opdyka 9-4	FE 4-0924
" -• - Oakland University Exit)
1964 EL CAMINO
pickup. This little fella has a zippy I cylinders with 3 on tha tree. Hardly used. Old car down.
$1495
LLOYD MOTORS
250 Oakland	333-7343
Lincoln, Mercury. Cohnat
Waotod Can-Tracks lOT
ADKINS AUTO SALES
Ve neOd cars nowl At presant ire buying mostly '40 and ' )rlva In at 733 Oakland for a ci
Ellsworth Trailer Sales
1025 Oakland	_ ^E
fHi*“SALVinbN ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 113 W. LAWRENCE ST. Evarythliw to maet your nei Clothing, Furniture, Appllanc TWO LAMP, 4 FOOT FLUORES-cant lights. Ideal lor work banchas, shops, 319.95 value, 310.90 nnarred. Call at factory showroom. Michigan Fluorascant, 393 Orchard Lake.
FE 44442.	______ _
WALKIE'-'fALKlE. 1 MONTH OLD.
TRAILERS
Winnebago
Phoonhi
■s FE 2
HOWLAND SALES ai
K & W CYCLE
YAMAHA
California Buyers
I and 7415 Highland
CANINE
COUNTRY CLUB	.
Introducing Canine photography by!.__ open 9 a.m. HI 9 p.m.
appointment. Clean. conVortabla.'BRADLEY CAmRer ALU/WINUM, convanlant, bathing, groomlno, covers lor any pick up, 47345231 boarding, heated..aclfftles..525 .1. ----,
mlnum covers and campers tor pickup. 4247 LaForast, Water.
_____
CAMPER AND TRUCK. 3' CHAM-1 pion camper. Never been used. ' Sleeps 4. Mounted on 1944 GMC'
oardlng, h I. Blvd.. R
CAPUCHIN MONKEY WITH LARGE jnoderr^cage^ 47A2043 alter 4:30.
WANTEO-A St^LL 20 OR 30 G^ DOBERMAN MINIATURE " c'Tm.J:?. V®	...-
WEDDING ANNOUNCiMFNtS AT FEMALES SIAtVIESE CAT.
diKount prices. Forbes Printing, _	_________
and Office Supplies, 4500 Dixie GERMAN SHEPHERD AND COLLIE’
_HWY. OR^747.	________i pup. Loves chlldrM. FE 3-4340.
YOUR	; HALF MOON'pXRROT AND CAGE.
WELDWOOD	___________«_»■'»'__________I
HEADQUARTERS «?ir^ebr«,'h.u? ^iS^rDlo^^X CTf^WiriSA
A 7.3457	I wm h«v» a large selection of -
DHAYTON PLYWOOD ,	trailers ar^ campers. Thank
4112 W Walton	OR 74*12,
3 7334
Hand ToalB-aHachiiitry 68
AIR COMPRESSOR, t
beams-angleVpipes-plate
I h.p. elec, motor—140 3 h.p.-043l 7VS h.p.-«99 hT-Lo 7.000 lb.-3300 4,00t lb., A-1-41300 BOULEVARD SUPPLY
300 S. BlVd. E._________FEJ-70A1
SAWMILL, COMPLETE LESS NtO-tor. Going out ot business. /" LandteapIng. FE 44833.________
WINTER SPECIAL
P. A H. model 433 A dragline. I condition. Cat. 0-3,000 angina, trade price, 37930.
body-harrison equip. CO.
151 S Cass Lake Rd. 333-4
Muikal Goods	71
BALDWIN 71 MAHOGANY ORASON-Ic. Perfect condition. Consider raa-sonable offer. 474^. Evenings.
EXPERT~PnANQ*l^VINb
EXCITING NEW THOMAS OAGAN-prlces start at 3329.30. Sea th. exciting new Total Tone Wurlltzer Total Tana organs. Afso Wurlltzar Plano and several used trade-in
JACK HAGAN MUSIC CENTER..
449 Elizabeth Lake Rd.
FE 2 3900	3324500
Conn Theatre Organ
V Conn loll, save 3
personalized grooming poodle supplies
HOUSE OF POODLES
OR 3-3920
POODLE BEAUTY SALON-ALSO poodle puppies lor sala-Call 432-
4401 or 3434323.	_
REGISTBREb fOY FOX TER-«2V77.*“ “	“
REGISTERED CHIHUAHUA PUP-
rsm^Fis^’L!"-
AFTER
CLOSE-OUT SALE 1965 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC.
1, dally 9-4. FE M403 .
( you.
____ ______ „.3 WII-
_	J0-_9R_y!*’:________
COM*E 6h out and $ E ■ THE
............... ■■
----- -i you a
March ut. wa all
SUZUKI
I-year - 13,000-mlla warranty 230CC s eoeed ALL MODELS IN STOCK
TUKO SALES, INC.
327 E. AUBURN. ROCHESTER UL 2-33M
SUZUKI'
KAWASAKI WHITE BULTACO VAN TECH
PARTS AND SERVICE DEPT.
Custom Color
___234 W. MONTCALM _
SUZUKI CVCLES. 50C*C-250CC RUPP Mlnibikas as low as 3129.95. Taka M59 Ig w. Highland. Right on Hickory Rldga Rd. to Demode Rd.
e 1945 m
s High-
SIAMESk KITTENS.
3:30 p.m. 334-0093._ _
springer spaniel pups, AKC. Ml 4 2093._________.
toy silver or black poodle
stud service. 333-4792.	_	__
TOY TERRIER. 4 MONtHS OLD. ___________
Pet Sappliei-Service 79-A
/FREE
Phone M
T TIPSICO L
I DAW-
Booin--Accwsorlee 97
13' FIBERGLASS WITH 30 HORSE Mercury motor, tllt-bed trailer. 333-
2372 bet. 10-3 p.m. ______
23' cAris craft cabin, fully
______FE 2-4447.	____________
23 FOOT TROJAN CRUISER, LOAO-*' .PE 34344.
AUTO SALES
1104 Baldwin Ave FE 3-3900	✓__M 3-3923
“TOP DOLLAR PAID"
FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS
GLENN'S
ANTIQUE AUCTION
COLLECTORS, RARE,
hard to get, MISC.
interns; brass; anvil; organ )Ol) forge; barrels; commode; Iding bed: folding rockers; old :tures and frames; china pieces; esl: silver; collection of Ivory;
iri this
M0RRI$ MUSIC
cross from Tel-Huron __ FE_2^
COME VISIT US At Our New Locotion FOR SPLENDED BUYS
Several used pianos . Spinet piano - raturnai rental, eava
Other plenos — Kralchi large dlsceunt.
. GALLAGHER'S MUSIC
1710 So. Telegraph - W mile So.
Of Orcharb Lake Ave.
The phones the same - PE 44544 OPEN EVENINGS 9-9 PM
GIVE*’ US A CALL. '
fiUlTAR IKAY). JUST LIKE NtW; also case, picks and Instruction books. 330. 9471 Bonnia Briar, Poo-
ls Is our monthly 3>iS hour auction 0 be held Wed., Feb. 13th.
Doors open 4:30 P.m.
Auction starts at 7 p.m. sharpi Don't miss this one. ,
>>	1300 Crescent Lake Rd
... rAuctioneers - Mike Spak and Gary Berry, "The Singing Auctioneer."
P.S.-
1943 Ford, slightly damaged and y*!9 Chevy must be auctioned lor ^1 finance company tonight at
AUCTION LAND
i^CTION _________*yCTION
•VERY FRIDAY T '7:36 P.M,
IX§5X	c
Ellsworth Troiler Sales
4377 Dixie Hwy._______MA 5-1
HOBO PICK-UP CAMPERS
THEY ARE QUALITY BUILT HOBO MFG. SALES Rear 3343 Auburn Rd.
Sal. and Sun. noon till 5 p.m.
_______J31-3357 anytime^ __
/WAKE YOUR CHOICE OF:
Streomlines-Kenskills Franklins-Fans-Crees and Monitors
-Look US Over-
Holly Travel Coach, Inc.
into Holly Rd., Holly ME 44771
PIONEER'CAMPER'sales'
MERIT FIBERGLASS TRUCK COVERS 4 W^ HURON	FE 2-3939
....SALESMAN'S DEMO
ROME FOR dealer, OLT-
TRAILtR.'lfW 3334932
WOLVERINE fRUCK_ CAMT^S
Jank Cart-Tracks 101-A
?!"14 Foot Larson
3x14 Sylvan	Was 3 773
Pontoon Boat	Now 3454
HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS
"Your Evinrude Dealer"
1399 S. Telegraph_______3324033
19U JOHNSON MOTORS AND
discount on 1943 boats, motor
""““tONY's' MARINE
2495 Orchard Lake Rd. 4t AVOID THE RUSH
Sporty OoMs-AII Typ« Door Prizas Evary Audloil le Buy-Sall-Trode, Retail 7 dai ConHjmnemj W-‘----------
9 Dixie Hwy.
OR 3-2717

electrics and amps. Drum
‘mo'r'ris music
34 t. Telegraph Rd.
' Pontiac Tal- Hurog_______F E^2-43«
NO SALE THIS WEEK AT 6xFOR6 COMMUNITY auction. We buy estates, large or small. 437-2523. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14 - 10 am. Bowden Farm near Lennon on M-21 West ot Flint 4 tracio Holstelns. Bulk lank STAN PERKINS AUCTIONEER h 313435 9400	Swarji Jre
GUITARSiHabbiet & Sappliei 82
—	■ II '	-
l- SLOT RACE SET. 3 LANES. EACH ~	33 ft. Cars, controls, battery. 330.
474-0113.________________
WE ARE BUYING OLD COINS.
inllln, silver
E 3-7433.
"BOAT SALE
low Going On In Oi
Hospltsi I M 3-3411.
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Cliff Dreyer's Gun ond Sports Center
15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 44771
1 MONTH OLD. 12 BY 30 RICH-ardson trailer. Comp'-* '- ■ -nished. 3900 down. Take
. ...... _ _J, very nice,
JJW BETTERLY, Ml 44002. loWreF**ITARLET OROA keyboard, 2 yrs. oM, exc.
lion 3473, FE t-IIOI._
tlCvERtONf CONSOLk CH*b R*6 argon In axe. condition. 473-1042.
10 MONTH OLD 10 X 30 QLEN-haven 2 bedroom mobile >ome, Exc^ condition., OR 4-1237 after
fi'xM' NEW MOON, LIKE NEW, I bedroom, living room, kitchen, din-call alt*T'p m*OAVVAi 23x3 ZEPHYR, EXCELrENf**CbN-dlllon, 3295 down, taka over payments. Ask lor (Moral Young. See at 2427^j4/llllams Dr. 4:30 to 3
AT COLONIAL^
Every Prk Winter D
CLEARANCE I 1965 Models
Now On Display Pontiac Only
MERCURY-MERCRUItkR DEALER
. CRUISE-OUT,- INC.
43 e. Walton Opan 94 FE 1-4401
Zloopout
CORRECT CRAFT ^PEED BOATS;
PART QUARTER HORSE -
Vary 'ganf 3-2H7 after 3 p.m.
(Corner ol 5430 DIs
(W Mile
drives; Vat.:i| oat hauling, bools and
EXTRA
EXTRA Dollars Paid
FOR THAT
EXTRA Sharp Car
"Chock tha rost, than got the best" et
Averill
AUTO SALES
» Dixie FE 4.409a
M & M MOTOR SALES
1150 Oaklxand Avenue _________330-9361_______
MONEY
GALE MCANNALLY'S
NATIONWIDE
•HELP!
slate market. T(
luicks fi irket. Top dohar p
MANSFIELD
and arrange >.■11 Mr. Dan at:
FE 84071
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
_____Just east of Oakland
NEED A CAR?
fa finance our own cars. Credit or credit problems accepted, r application refused. Call Mr. Ds at: FE 3-4071 for Immediate a; proveI.
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
FE 4-IOoi Z	FE 3-7354	N-
1941 CHEVY, GOOD CONDITION.'__________________ROCHESTER
I CHEVROLET I
IS BUICK 4
Autobahn
Motors, Inc.
authorized vw dealer
mile north of Miracle Mile 1743 S. Telegraph_FE 3-4331
GMC
1966 FORD
$1795
939 BUICK LeSABRE. VERY NICE.
333-7342._____ _________
REPOSSESSION 1961 BUICK ELECTRA CONVERTIBLE WITH FULL POWER, LUSTROUS BLUE FINISH AND MATCHING ALL LEATHER INTERIOR. MUST SELL TODAY. NO MONEY DOWN AND JUST 37.97 WEEKLY. CALL MR. CASH AT 333-4523. SPAR-
1961 BUICK CUTLASS STATION WAGON with automatic transmission, RA-
DIO AND HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly paymenta of 37.44. CALL CREDIT MGR. ^r. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500.
Estate Storage
109 S. EAST BLVD.
FE 3-7161-
McComb
1941 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR SEDAN WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL -TIRES, ABSOLUTELY^ NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of 34.33. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7300.
REPOSSESSION -
payments of 13.37
1941 CHEVRO-* money -—
335-4101,
WHY NOT OWN AN "OK",USED CAR? Shop the big lot at MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 44547
and arrange all financing, ca AAr. Dan at:
FE 84071
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
_____Just east of Oakland_
BUICK SKYLARK CONVERTIBLE, 1942, power steering, power brakes, whitewalls, buckets, tow ml., 3973.
Pontiac's New Jeep Dealer Wants Your Business
hand. Special discount on pickups 3 to choose from. Complete parts, equipment and service available. LIBERAL TRADE-INS, BANK RATES, FINANCING
Superior
Rambler-Jeep
330 Oakland Ave.
1943 RIVIERA, 2
SPARTAN ONLY SPECIAL 1941 FORD, TON PICKUP TRUCK WITH ALL THE MOST WANTED EXTRAS, INCLUDING 3 FOOT BOX
»iuw, Ruai r-nee tiie BLUE FINISH AND READY TO GO TO WORK FOR YOU. FULL PRICE 3947. 333 OAKLAND (IV4 MILE N. OF CASS AVE.) FE
top. 3793.
STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET
3400 Elizabeth Lake Rd
FE 8-9239
rI
1963 BUICK SPECIAL i.
L 3_^cylln-| Ski
iTwsTull'prTce'.’' '
Villoge Rambler '
664 S. Wo "— * BIRMINGHAM
BUICK WILDCAT 4~bOOR irdtoo, power steering and '
REPOSSESSION 1942 CHEVY II, SEDAN, WITH LUSTUROUS TURQUOISE FINISH AND FULL FACTORY EQUIPMENT, PRICED TO SELL TODAY FOR JUST 3497 WITH NO 3 DOWN AND JUST 34,21 WEEKLY. CALL MR. BURKE
__ 333-4323. SPARTAN. _____
mrCHlvYT*DOORTSTTCIT—3499.i
■ »r^int‘raS%r2} gg;!
FE 5-4390. ____________________
1943 CHEVY PICK-UP, 0*3*6 d' condition, call 40^2733.	I
WILSON
OFFERS
MORE
CADILLAC
1965
Coupe
sierra Gold finish with matching Interior. Enloy the pride of Cadillac ownership
""wiso
CADILLAC
1964
Sedan
Aspen white finish with black and white Interior, Go Cadil-.lac for—
$3195
CADILLAC
1963
Coupe
Beautiful Sandalwood finish with matching Interior. Full
radio and whitewalls, 31793. PAT-TERSON CHEVROLET —	—•
S. Woodward Ave. *'
Ml 4-2735._________ _______________
BUICK 1945 DELUXE STATION wagon 6 passenger VO,
equipped, Ir" —■ --------—
ranty. Muil best ol
1943 IMPALA SPORTS SEDAN, EX cetlent condition, dark green, v-l. Powergllde, power steering, healer, whitewalls, a good L 31393, PATTERSON CHEVRC
roIkt
II finance. Phil O'DaM
_______
1965 BUICK
Cutlass convertible with a
Fortigi^^ri	105
1959 SIMCA. NEEDS CLUTCH. 330.
545 Granada.	________
1M1 VW SEDAN. LIGHT BLUE. Oocumantad sarvica history. Better condition than many later modgls. Carrier, extra lender
> 10 JUNk dW. OR 3-
ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS and scrap, we tow, FE 39943. COMPLETE JUNK CARS; PICKED
SUPER REVERSE four 333 by 14 tires Trade for two 325 I and cash. OR 3-3543.
- *^1LLAC, ALL OR PART. EM 3-7003.
157 CHEVROLErybOOR HARD-top for parts. FE 4-9173 after
3:30 PM.__________________
1939 THUNDERBIRD, SELL FOR
parts. OR 4-0434.__________
CHEVY FORD COMET-FALCON
4-cyl., lactory rebi‘“ -- "*
c.n Install. Terms low prked. 337 1117.
P'ARTS for 1*945 GTO.
FE 2-9077.
New and Ustd Trucks 103
. Other makes
OAKLAND
HAROLD
TURNER
r FORD, INC.
444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_Ml 4-7300
Sedan DeVille
lazzllng blue finish With hatching Interior. Enloy tha tandsrd of the world lor
$2695
CADILLAC 1963
Coupe DeVille.
1943 CHEVY SUPER SPORT. AUTO.l on floor. 203 VI. Powor brekes, steering. Elec, windows. Perfect. 424-4331.	I
i43 CORVAIR, 3 SPEED, 4 DOOR*,! radio and heater, exc. condition,! take over peymenls. 473-3970.
BUY HERE-PAY HERE*
1>33 CADILLAC, SEE TO APPRE-
elate, S373. FE 39393.________
repossession' - 1959 CADILLAC r Coupt OpVllle, no monoy ' Peymonts of 17.07 weekly Mr. Mason et 335-4101.
1943 VW SEDAN. SEA BLUE FIN-'ow mileage, radio, whitewolls!
SI393
Autobahn
Motors, Inc.
AUTHORIZED VW DEALER W mllo north of MIrocle Mile
1743 S. Telegraph_FE 19531
944 VW, VE'RY good CONOftiON, 11200. 334 0320.
f44 OPEL WAGON, >W. TAKi over peymenls. 134.31 me., Del ence $147. FE 1-3244.
'VOLKSWAGEN '
Convertible, black, while lop, 1395
IMF
John McAullffo Ford
1959 jSadillac
Coupe DeVille
This on# has full powtr, nico me talllc silver mink finish. In gerto kept condition, no nnonev dowi spot dtllvery, lull prict only:
$997
SEE CHARLES HAMILTON
10 Oekisnd Ave.	FE 3-4U
John McAulllto Ford
IMF
$2695
CADILLAC
1963
NEW FACILITIES
IN THE NEAR FUTURE to better serve our cuslomori -BUT STILL IN BUSINESS AT 334 MAIN ST., MILFORD
VAIt CAMPJHEVY
U 4-1023
$2695
NEW CAR TRADES
1944 Ford Goloxlo "300" 4-door tomallc, powtr slooring ' ' ' VI, 4,000 octuol miles
1943 Rambler Classic, ri<
31,493 d heater,^
fRiCKER,
, Si W,. Y
Village Rambler
M S. Woodward Ave.
BIRMINGHAM ___________Ml 4-3W
* VWX 11393 -CALL*
4739II0I.________
N, LIKE NEW, RADIO.
----.Iwr good buys, t19 up.
Economy Used Cars 2333 DIxto Hw
ffsTVOLKSWAOEN YRUCK. RUNS good, 1273. 474-1411.
1940 ^HBVY ’
,	1960 CADILLAC |
I 4 door hardtop. This car wllll I thrill the heart of a luxury cor I buyer. SI49 down.	I
1	$1195
,	. LLOYD MOTORS
23ff~ Oakland	_	333-7143
1943	Ramblers (4), 2-door, wagons
Vis and 4s, from	| 79
1944	Rambler Classics (2), hardlops
2-door and 4 door	11,19
1944 Chavrolel VI, lutemotlc, nav car warranty	|i,S9;
1942 Cadillac 2door, hardtop, lul power, bast otter >	tav(
1942 Rambler station wagon,
1942 Chevy II station wagon I 791 Easy Financing and Bank Rales
I Superior
I Rambler-Jeep
'Isso Oakland Ava.	FE
CADILLAC 1962
“"Sedan DeVille
Xn outstanding aulomoblla with a whita finish and black
“■""$1895
WILSON ■ Cadillac
Aske. For Lloyd Wallace
(Usad Car Spaclallsll
1350 N. WOODWARD
MI 4-1930
MICHIGAN TURBO CRAFT
OAKLAND MARINE SALES 2327 Dixia HIghway-Ponllac — 1 _Pt»na: 47>2fl^ _ DAWSON'S S*p"E*ci A L S -J'ti Glasspar boats, Slaury-MIrro Cri boats, Evinruda beata and motei Pamco Iralltrs. See the AMF S Deddler power tied. Bta sevlngs now and iprlng loweway. Toko MM to W. HIghItnd. Right on Hickory RMgo Rd. to Domedo Rd. toft and
F/tllr M 8 ft c*u k Y oWboards*. Kbr't Boat's B Mlelers, Lake Orton.
conditton. 420-1342.	_
1943 CHEVY PICKUP, VI, POW-irglldo. custom cob. FE 2-1403.
TON PTCKIJ^, *
— CHEVY ..	.........
dip, hoitor, giwd cdhdltlen. 425-9011. M4 F^^'F-100 f^TCKUP, W TON, 4-cyl. standard custom throughout. Ssvt. JEROME FORD, Rochositr FORD Pooler. OL 1.-9711.	_
I^M Ford Va'n ■
Econollne, radio and heater, truck never been worked, lull price tl193.
OAKLAND
IMF
John McAullllt Ford
1962 Renault
Dauphine
In , real good condition. It I: roll lint transportation, no monoi down and bargain priced at only
$387
SEE DICK COON
ind Ave.	F
lohn McAullfIt Fore
IMF
r. 423-WOO.
JEROME
SPaATAN only SPliCIALS 1943 VW. A SPARKLING RED SUNROOF THAT WILL CERTAINLY GIVE YOU THE "BUG." NO t DOWN AND JUST M.971 WEEKLY. CALL MR. CASH MS OAKLAND nw MILE N. OP CASS AVE.) FE 1-4321.
SPARTAN ONLY SPECIAI 1944 CADILLAC. ENJOY DRIVING TBfE "CAR OF CARS" WITH ALL THE EQUIPMENT. PRESTIGE AND LUXURY FOR THE PRICE OF A MUCH LESSER NEW C>R. CHOOSE THIS ELEGANT TUXEDO BLACK OeVILLE HARDTOP WITH FULL POWER AND GM COMFORT CONTROL A IR CONDITIONING FOR JUST 1197 DOWN AND S2997 FULL finance BALANCE. CALL MR. BURKE. M3 OAKLAND ll'v MILE N. OF CASS)
±£ 0-4521	_
. FORD, YOUR
K s-om._____
1934 CHEVY. M7, 434 POSITRAC-tlOT. 4-tpttd. Bucket tools. "*
1957 *CHEVY*y~6bbir HAfbfb#.
3431 Lexington. OR 3-7394 1937 CHEVROLET 2 d60R SEDAN. VI. Auto. S400 FE 44175 tfltr 3“ ' BUY HEAeUpaY HERE 1930 Chtvrotol impala convirtibto, lull prict 1397.	'
f^RVIL _____ Ml Ooklond A
)9M CHtVY, onSboCTEDAN, V-l, rfu. S3I Bilboa.
SWING FEVER SPECIAL
BRAND NEW
'66 OLDS F-85
.$1995
Houghten & Son
YOUR AUTHORIZED OLDS DEALER
528 N. MAIN OL' 1-9761
ROCHESTER
Olds-Ramblir-GMC
■I --fi’
D—8
TllK PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY U, 1966
Naw Md Ut«d Car* IM Nva and UsmI Cart
IMS CHEW iMPALA 4-SPEEO, JM, liMfp, SJM ACtMl •niles. FE 1-tlSS or FE S-M1S atk for Kirby. IMS CORVAIR SM. MUST SELL. ____________FE i-roos__________
M GOOD CLEAN TRANS-portatlon coii^ ctwoM from.
106 New and Uitd Cart 106{N*w and Uttd Cart
MONEY DOWN—WE FINANCE j
106iMARMADUKE
OAKLAND CHRYSLER'S IMPERIAL HEADQUARTERS
l*U LtBiren *
Just
tl OokUnd.
CREDIT
AUTO SALES IIS Ooklond at WIdo Track FE I-WU
REPOSSESSION l»S3 CHRYSLER NEWPORT HARDTOP WITH? VS ENGINE, AUTOASATIC TRANSMISSION, POWER AND GLOWING ERMINE WHITE FINISH. BANK RATES ON BALANCE, PAYMENTS OF JUST S10.S7 WEEKLY. CALL MR. BURKE AT }3S-4SM. SPARTAN.
DOD^^^^DOOR, S7S.
Hardware - FE t-MM.
OPDYKE FE S45W.
SPARTAN ONLY SPECIAL IM3 dodge dart, that WOULD BE THE PERFECT 1st OR 2nd CAR FOR YOU. LOVELY BRONZE FINISH, SLANT SIX WITH TOROUE-FLITE AND FACTORY WARRANTY FOR YOUR PROTECTION. FULL PRICE S»I7. MS OAKLAND AVE. (I'<
....	_	..	Qp	,
f.Sl?n"bi:?'i:!
OAKLAND
chrYsler-plymouth
724 Oakland Avc.	132
I 1964 CHRYSLER "300" K
,	2 door hardtop, power steering and
black! brakes, bucket seats and console, ----1 tuiuiifui blue with metchlng Interior, a one owner Birmingham trade, our weekly speclel—
$1995
$995
BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 4 S. Woodward_Ml 7-32
KESSLER'S
DODGE
SAVINGS!
(TODAY'S	CHRYSLER 2-Ooor Hardtop. Power steering
CDC^MAi^ and brakes, auloma,tlc, radio, heater, whitewalls. SPECIAL Beautiful white finish with red trim
$1495
IM3 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-Ooor Hardtop. Power steering, automatic, radio, heater, white-walls. 27,0M guaranteed actual mllas ........... IIWS
IH2 BUICK LeSABRE 4-Dooo Sedan. Power stearlng and brakes, Dynaflow, radio, heater, white-

1962 F-83 JETFIRE 2-Ooor Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, console, bucket seats. Red finish with white cordovan top S1295
1942 F-35 CUTLASS. Automatic, V-l, radio, healer, whitewalls. Beautllul aqua finish with white top and silver leather bucket seats .	,	31195
1944 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, HydramatIc, radio, heat-
0	CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-or Hardtop. Power steering
1	brakes, automatic, V-l, ra-
1945 PONTIAC CATALINA 9-Passenger Wagon. Power steering, brakes and tall gate. Hydramolic, radio, heater, whitewalls. New car factory warranty ' 12195
1945 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2-Door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, HydramatIc, radio, heater, whitewalls, rear defogger and other accessories 32795
1945 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE BROUGHAM. Factory air conditioning, full power, with Brougham
1942 SKYLARK CONVERTIBLE. Power steering and brakes, Dyna-llow, radio, heater, whltejyalls. Black finish with while leather
1945 COMET CYCLONE 2-Door Hardtop. 219 angina, automatic, whita	—
car factory warranty .. 32195
19tt PONTIAC 4-Door Sadan. Power staarlng tnd brakes, HydramatIc, radio, haatar and whitewalls. Light blue and locsily owned	31195
1944 FALCON 2-Door. Beautllul red finish with 17,0W guaranteed actual mllas. Most economical. .................... ... 31095
1944 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop. Power staarlng and brakes. HydramatIc, radio, haatar. whitewalls. Only 2,000 actual mllas	32095
1941 PONTIAC CATALINA Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, HydramatIc, radio, heater, white-
1942 FORD GALAXIE "500" Sadan. Powar staarlng, V-0, automatic, radio, haatar, whitewalls. Almost Ilka new, sea It today I
1944 BUICK LeSABRE Convertible. Powar steering and brakes, Dynaflow, radio, heater, white-walls, and other accessories 33195
....	- - brakes. HydramatIc,
radio, healer, whitewalls. 24,000 guaranteed actual miles 31295
»tfle^
1945 MUSTANG h
r that Is most Konom-
brakes, HydramatIc, radio, heater, whitewalls. 10,400 guaranteed
Just Ask For: John Donley—Bob Hill-Win Hopp-Ed Broodwoy-Tom Trocy Clarence Burmeister-Lou Jonko-Joe Golardi-Tommy Thompson
PONTIAC-BUICK -651-9911
855 ROCHESTER ROAD
106 [Ntw and Uttd Cart
1963 Dodge "880"
Radio and heater, power stei and brakes, sharp one o« bronie finish, full price 31095.
OAKLAND
chrysler-plImouth
ver/good condition. 424-1334. SPARTAN ONLY SPECIAL 1943 DODGE. A NINF PASSENGER STATION WAGON
. „CTORY WARRANTY FOR YOUR COMPLETE .PROTECTION. FULL PRICE 31497. 005 OAKLAND (l'/4 mile N. of CASS A,VE.) FE 3-4520.	_
t44 DODGE 4 DOOR 440. POWER steering. Bowet brakes. Radio.	,i.-	■ ' ,n j » r. i	, i
Heater. Exc. 31250 Ml 4-3273. i “I gucss this IS Be-Kind-to-Salesmcn week!
ATTENTION HOT ROD ENTHUS----------	-	-	---««--------------- ------
A Ford Coupe.
...........iM#w and Used Cart 106 h
1943 COMET MOOR SEDAN WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES. -ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payment of 37.M. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURHER FORD,
Ml -4-7500.
SdiDsTlRt" “
BOB BORST
lincoln-mercury .
I S. Woodward	tlrmln^s
MI 6-4538
lifts COMET CALIENTE 2 DOOR
,	j	....	....
white vinyl
106|N#^aad Uttd Cor*_ J06
1945 MERCURY PARKLANE
door hardtop. Vt, auf- ‘
steering, brakas. III
SPARTAN ONLY SPECIALS 1945 COMET CALIENTE HARDTOP, FROST WHITE FINISH, SNAPPY "219" V-3 ENGINE AND FACTORY WARRANTY BOOK FOR YOUR COMPLETE PROTECTION. FULL PRICE 51397. 335 OAKLAND (1>4 MILE N. OF CASS AVE.) FE 3,4523
HAROLD ■ Pretty Ponies
TURNER
1923 Model
Channel 4 In. 411 . _ _ .........
Ford front. New tires. 44 complete.
I FORD, RUNS GOOD, GOOD
1955 FORD, GOOD TRANSPORTA-tion. Straight tranmission. Engine In excellent shape. OR 3-1253. Call between 3 and ' —
Ntw and Used Cars 1963 FUTURA
1941 FALCON 2 DOOR SEDAN WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES, absolutely NO , MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments ot 35.38. CALL CRe6iT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4 7500.
FORD, INC.
444 S. WOODWARD AVE.
. BIRMINGHAM________Ml 4-7500
JEROME FORD, Rochaslar FORD
SPARTAN9DNLY SPECIALS 1942 OLOSMOBILE "33" 2
DOOR hardtop in dazzling RED AND WHITE WITH MATCHING INTERIOR. POWER OF COURSE, AUTOMATIC AND ALT THAT BUILT IN FINE CAR LUXURY. FULL PRICE 31297. 335 OAKLAND (l<4 MILE N. OF CASS AVE.) FE F4523. ,
$1095
LLOYD MOTORS	i
0 Oakland	333-7343
Lincoln, Mercury, Comet	I
I .-- FORD LTD^^OOFWPtH VI, heafty 3 with 3 automatic, radio, healer, power .... — steering, brakes, many extrA (as low as 32,595). JEROME FORD
Rochester FORD Q
1965 FORD
m wagon atic Trar
GOOD TRANSPORTATION
1959 Ford 'i-ton stake 1959 Rambler Classic wagon 1940 Rambler wagons (2)
ILUCKY AUTO.
7MF
1964 Ford
Superior
Rambler-Jeep
, 500. EXCELLENT
^	I llnish, '
. .....— —.. .prlca 3295.
Cash or will finance. KING AUro SALES, 4495 Dixie (US 10) Clarks-ton. MA 5-2471 (Cell collect.)_|
THEY MUST GO!
1940 Ford 2-door 4 1957 Pontiac, all power 1954 Pickup, Ford, Ti-ton
Rochester FORD D
I! 3595. JEROME FORD.
Cheap.
SCON(5mY
CARS 2335 DIXIE HWY.
REPOSSESSION 1941 FORD CONVERTIBLE WITH V-3 ENGINE, AUTOMAT I C TRANSMISSION, POWER, GLOWING RED FINISH, NEW WHITE TOP, AND MINT CONDITION, ALL THE WAY. MUST	,
SELL TODAY, CALL MR. BURKE AT 333-4523. SPAR-
___TAN. _	_____ _«	_
REPOSSESSION - 1941 t-BIRD SE-dan, no money down, payments
of «.37 weekly. Call Mr. t----
at 335-4101, McAulltle.
MATIC TRANSMISSION, I DIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Assume weekly payments ot $7.14. CALL CREDIT NCR. Mr. Park at HAROLD-TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500.
TAKE OVER PAYMENTS - 1944
----xle XL 390 lour speed, beau-
shape, going In sarvice. Call
T-BIRoj
MUST DISPOSE OF -
1943 FORD 2 DOOR SEDAN WITH AUTOMATIC •-•■■SMISSlOK -
L TIRL-. _____
0 m6ney down
— weekly pay-CALL CRED-
. Only 345 down, finance t
”'$1397
SEE DAVE DAWSON
JMF
i HAROLD TURNER
FORD, INC.
' 444 S. WOODWARD AVE.
BIRMI N^H AM____M^_47500
1945 FALCON with AUTOMATIC : transnillision, radio, big 4-c' Under ^ engine, priced at 31495. JLROME * FORD, Rochester FORD Dealer.
•| OL 1-9711^ _	_	_____
■ 1945'gALAXIE, red’ WITH BLA(!K
1965 mustangs
7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM
CONVERTIBLES* HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $79 Down
HAROLD
TURNER.
FORD, INC.
444 5. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM	Ml 4 7500
Transportatidn
Specials
;	FULL WKLY.
car	' PRICE PVMT.
1957 CHEVY, 4 cylinder
1953 FORT ---
CHE\
otos
1959 CHEVY, impale .3197 32.25 1957 PONTIAC, Slick 5197 $2.25 1957 PLYMOUTH, SHkrp $197 «.« 1959 DODGE 2:*>or	3197	M 25
1940 PONTIC, V-l	3»7	$2.75
1959 CHtVY, Slick	3297	$2 75
1940	DODGE, 3 cylinder 3297 32.75
1941	CORVAIR, euto, 3297 32.75
1959 FORD, Sedan	3397	34.10
1910 CHEVY, 2-door	3397	34.10
1942	REHAULT Deuphine 3397 34, 0
1959 BUlCK, Hardtop 3397 34.10 1942 RAMBLER. Wagon, 3497 35.15 194) COMET, Stick	3597	34.35
1940 BUICK, Hardtop 3597 34.35
1940	CHEVY, impale 3597 34,35
1941-.FORD. Hardtop	3497 $7 10
1941 CHEVY, 2-door	3497 $7.10
1942	TEMPEST, Wagon 3797 31.15 1941 Ponllic, Slerchlel 3797 M.15
NO MONEY DOWN SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL THE FINANCING CALL MR. DAN AT;
FE 8-4071
Capitol Auto
944 FORD GALAXIE, STICK I, . 31299. No cash needed, bank rel Opdyke Motors. Ponllec Rd.
Opdyke. FE 19237._____
9M FORD GALAXIE ’’ $li Opdyke Hardware — F E_F
1961 FORD
convertible. 3. Red and i Power steering and brakes, radio, heater. iV down.
$490
LLOYD MOTORS
250 Oakland	333-7343
___LIncoJn, Mercury, Cornet^
Ifl’l FORD convertible’ FULL price 3595. Cash or will finance. KING AUTO SALES, 3375 W. Huron (at Elizabeth Lk.) FE 1-4033 REPOSSESSION
1941 FORD GALAXIE	,
HARDTOP WITH "325"	I
ENGINE, CRUISrO-MATIC, POWER AND JUST THE NICEST ONE WE'VE SEEN LATELY. ERMINE WHITE	I
FINISH WITH GOLD ROOF	i
AND MATCHING VINYL AND NYLON TRIM. NO 3 DOWN and JUST $3.33	:
WEEKLY, CALL MR.	,
BURKE AT 331-4524 SPARTAN.
TRADE UP!
NOW IS THE TIME , TO SELECT QUALITY...
THESE CARS ARE ALL ONE OWNER NEW CAR TRADE-INS
1963 Olds Convertible Radio, heeler, aulomelic, power $1495	1962 Buick, Electro 4'Door, radio and healer, automatic, power steering and brakes. $1295	1964 Chevy Biscoyne 3-Door with radio end heeler. $1395	1965 Pontiac • Bonneville 4-Door Hbrdlop with radio, healer. automatic, power steering and brakes. ^ $2695
1964 Pontiac	1963 Pontiac	1962 Pontiac	1965 Chevy
Bonneville Convertible, radio end heeler, eutometic, power steering end	Cotolino Radio end healer.' 4-door, power	Cotolino 2-Door .with radio, heeler and	impolo Convertible, radio iM heeler.
brakes. $2095	steering end brakes. $1195	eutometic. $1095 —	 0		automatic. '.$2095
1964 Chevy
Impolo
1964 Pontiac
PONTIAC-BUICK-CHEVROLET
OXFORD, MICHIGAN on M24
OA 8-2528
1943 FORD CUSTOM 300 3-DOOR with VI engine, stick shilt, rham-paigne In color, priced to sell el 3350. JEROME FORD, Rochester _ FORD Dealer, qLJ-971).	.
Economy
PLUS
1965
Volkswagen
3	door, green llnish, radio end
... $1595
1964
Volkswagen j $1395
1963	Falcon |
*$895'	" I
1964	Rambler'
Classic 440, 2 door, radio and
“ $1195 1963 Renault i
4	door, (needs sortie body worklj
$295
1960 Rambler i
station wagon. 4 passenger, 4 cylinder, radio end heelerf eulometic.l
$295
BEATTIE;
FORD ‘
549 down end weekly payments'
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM	Ml 4-7M
....REPOSSESSION
1964 PORO SEDAN, MUST
“IMF ^ mustang
1966
NEW
$2139.27
CORRAL YOURS TODAY
Set Lester McDonnell John McApliffe Ford
430 OaKlend Ave.
_______ FE 5-4101 _
740 LINCOLN HARDTOP. FULL power. Full price 3415. Cash or will llnance. KING AUTO SALES, .4495 Dixie (USIOl Clerkslon. MA 5-7471
IfSi'MERCURY'2 DOOR HARDTOP mechanIceljY sound, 3125. 333-7442. 1940 mercury 2 door'HRAOTOP I Power steering end brtkei. Full
NORTHWOOD Auto Sales YOUR"
CONVERTIBLE - HARDTOP AND COMPACT DEALER
^0 CARS MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEK
1961 PONTIAC .	. $797	1962 FALCON .	$597
196D MERCURY	. $497	1956 OLDS .	$ 37
196D OLDS 		$597	1961 PONTIAC	. $997
1960 FORD	$397	1959 FORD	$ 77
1962 CORVAIR	$697	1960 PONTIAC .	$597
WE FINANCE-NO CREDIT PROBLEMS We Accept All Credit Applications CALL CREDIT MGR.
Nprthwood Auto ■
2023 Ooklond Ave., Cor. Telegraph Rd.
FE 8-9239	FE -8-9239
Murphy at 335-4101. McAollff^.
'Birdland"
At 0 Dodge dealership yes, these charger trades ore really rolling in.
1965
T-BIRD
DIXIE HWAY.
LANDAU In lovely burgcndy
while padded lop. Full power end factory elr conditioning.
1964
T-BIRD
Landau In TOxedo black with ganulna black laathar Inta-
alr conditioning.
PRKES START FROM
. $2397
SPARTAN
DODGE
355 Oakland Ave.
(1'/, Mile N. ot Cess Ave.)
FE 8-4528
BIRMINGHAM TRADES
GET THE SWIN6 FEVER WIN A NEW TORONADOl
1963	OLDS "88", 2-door hardtop, power steering .
ond brakes, a boy ot .......................$1495
1964	OLDS F-85, 4-Door, V-8, automatic radio
and heater, whitewalls, only................$1495
1965	OLDS "88" 4-door hordtop, power steering,
brakes, electric windows, factory oir, transferable new car warronty	$2695
1963, PONTIAC Bonneville coupe, automatic: power steering and brakes, tinted gloss, silver finish, black vlhyll top	$1595
1962 PONTIAC Storchief, 4-door hardtop, power steering and brakes	$1195
J965 OLDS "442" hordtop, sharp Birminghom trade only 10,000 miles, transferable new cor worronty ,	$2395
2 YEAR WARRANTY
635 S. Woociward Ave. Birmingham	647-5111
STEAK DEALS
(AT HAMBURGER PRICES)
$2595
1965 Bonneville
Convertible. Gleaming red llnish, white top, matching trim, 13,000 miles, radio, heeler, power steering end brakes, autamallc. Many
$2895
1964 Catalina 2-Door.
Hardtop, Vantura trim, gleaming red with black cordove top, power steering end brakes, aulomellcr
$1895
1963 Bonneville Hardtop
2'Door with HydramatIc, power steering and brakes, radio, white-
1964 Catalina 4-Door
Hardtop wilt, e sparkling ai finish, matching trim, low rr
1964 Olds F-85'’
3-Ooor with euti heater, whltewalli.
$1595
$1495
1964 Pontioc CotolintP^
4-Door Sedan. Beautllul dark eque finish, radio, heater, automellc transmission, power steer Ing.
$1745
1963	PONTIAC
CATALINA HARDTOP I-Door With venture trim, power ilatrlng and brakas, automatic, whltewalli, glaamlng midnight blua finlih and matching trim. Only—
, .	$1645
1964	VOLKSWAGEN
Daluxt Station wogon. Low mile-apt, 1-owngr, ready te gol
$1495
1963 Cotolino
3'door hardtop. Automatic Ira mission, Bowtr slatring i brakes, radio, heater, whilawe
hro^u^L
1963 Ford Goloxie
1963 Ford Goloxie
"500" 2-Door Hardtop gleaming black trim, radio, hea
car throughout. Only—
$1095
1963 Catalina 2-Door
jjadan with an aqua tlnlsh, white cip. automatic, powar titering and whittwalli.
$1445
1963 Pontiac 4-Door
Hardtop with radio, haotor, automatic, powar steering and brakes, whltewells, dark turquoise with metchlng trim.
$1645
New
Car
Borgoin Hunter Specials (3)
1965-
Pontiac
Demos
Save Up To
$1500
O)
1965
Rambler
Demos
Save Sove Sove
1963 Cotalina 4-Door
Sedan with eutometic, V-l, power
$1595
1963 Cotplino Hardtop
*^ind**'brekVff’ redlof heeler, wells. Bronie.
$1645
1961 Ford Wogcin
Country Sedan with red er llnish, metZhlng trim. V-metlc end factory air ci
lul let bhek llnish.
1^63 Pontioc Cotolino

$1695
r mileage. Priced
$1595
1 mllet. Cameo ivory trim, radio, heater, ering end brakes end
$1495
1962 Pontioc Cotolino
:, power ili rhifewellt.
$1295
1961 Tempest Wogori
$595
A Good Deal for You
Means a Great Deal to Us
RUSS JOHNSON
Ask For Pot Jorvis-Jim Barnowsky-Bob Clemens
Pontiac - Rambler
on M-24 in Lokt Oriot^
MY 3-6266
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY,.FEBRUARY U, 1966
I C«t- 1M
OLOSAWWILC #-«S, i DOOR.
S. Woodwart Avf.< ■!
Kgpossessiow - iHi

1967 OLDS
Villogt
«M s
BIWMINOHAM
1964 OLDS “88"
fi?^claan'a’*?*pKi tSIj!
$1595
BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLIR-PLYMOUTH .	^	Ml T MU
IMF
John McAulllft Ford
1964 Olds
$1597
QNTIACRAMBLERBUICK CRE&
II linonco. TIC
r. Snow, Ml t-5M0
Htw l|M< Ow W
Its* PQ(<TIAC 4-OOOR STARCHIBF. Clean In and out, no rust. Now tlroi, brakai, (hocki and boarinaa. No naad to ipand any monoy wr ----- ----- Atklng only
lt» PONTIAC CATALINA
10 PUTMOUTH StATION WAGON.
1963 PLYMOUTH
. p..jton .aloarli^
factory Inatallod
ItSO PONTIAC STATION dWAOON.
$1395 ^ BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYASOUTH -	^	■	Ml 7-W
tactory warranty, drlva i
........ly paynnant.
$1395
BIRMINGHAM.
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
WILL
ACCEPT
GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS
Echo from a itaambMt whlitla
Nmt tmi On 1M
<450. FE 4-I5SS. SI W. f
Iftl PONTIAC WAGON. SALE OR trada tor VW - <74-1051.
MUST'dispose op - mi n
‘'«''w'j;'X!5;yrsrn^
urphy at 335^101, AAcAullffa, PONTIAC,	ACTUAL
Q 4ALES, 3V5 W. Huran (
SEE US LAST Far A Oraal DmI
Sr’al^'flna^ "****
KEEGO PONTIAC
SALES A SERVICE
682-3400
torna rust, good condition S375^e'
l»0O PONTIAC ]4>00R HARDTOP.
prico S4M. Cash or will ____________
KING AUTO SALES. MSS Dixie (U$^ Clarkston, MA S-M71 (Call
MUST giSPOSE OF - isM PON-
:* hardtop, i wants ot fc _
Murphy at 335.4101,
1S41 TEMPEST 4 DOOR, AUTO-
ISOS PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-i4rllbla, full prioo S7S7. Low down payment. E2 financa ‘
Estate Storage
109 S. EAST BLVD.
FE 3-7161
IMF
or, almost anything itxrvablo
AS PART DOWN PAYMENT ON ANY NEW OR USED\CARI
ISOI PONTIAC TEMPEST . . No cash needed, bank rate dyke Motors, Pontiac Rd. .
1004 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, 4 spoad, powar brakas, warranty. FE S-SSOO. FE MTa.
ISS4 TEMPEST STATION WAGON
accessories, taka i
-■J8T—•
LUCKY AUTO
IS43 PONTIAC. SHA4P 1S4I CHEVY Vt TON ’
1S4S W. lyida Track FE 4-IOIIt ’ or	FE 3-7S54
1S44 PONTIAC'S DOOR.
TEMPEST
—t blue,	______
1. EM 3-4430 after 5:30 p.n
SPARTAN only SPECIAL
I ALL
ER
POWER
BRAKES, AND WINDOWS, AND MAG. WHEELS. BLEMISH FREE MARLIN AQUA FINISH AND MOR-ROKIDE BUCKET SEAT INTERIOR. .PULL PRICE SI4S7. SSS OAKLAND. (I'A AMLE N. OP CAM AVE.)
FE S-453S._____ ■■	.______
IS65 TEMPEST. V-S. WIFE'S CAR
LUCKY AUTO
ih 10,500. <1S50. OA S-104S.
IMF
John McAulIHe Ford
1964 Pontiac
LeMans Sport Coupe
Inyl Inte
$1587
COME
TO
THE
PONTIAC
RETAIL
STORE
6673 Dixie Highway .
Chrysler-Plymouth-lSallant
RamUar-Jaop
CLARKSTON______________MA S-MU
PONTIAC WITH VS MOTOR, iw tires 470«15. FE 5-4340.	.
l»54 PONTIAC, 4 DOOR STARCHipF
WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE ... AND GET ITI
100
Top Quolity, one-owner new cor trades to choose from
65 Mt. Clemens
at wide Track
FE 3-7954
Yes-We Do-
IMF
BILL SPENCE
DON'S
USED CARS
SMALL AD-BIG LOT
50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 10U CORVETTE Interior.' Sharp
1M5 T-BIRD .ule., double power, rai r. whilewells, beautllul si
1145 FORD, r. hardtop, oulo, po. Canary yellow, v
lOM BUICK
677 S. LAPEER RD.
Lake Orion
MY 2-2041
NO MONEY DOWN Buy Here - Pay Her§
CAR	PRICE
1962 FALCON ........... .........$595
EXTRA CLEAN
I^EEK
$6.06
$5.05 $3.03 . . . $595 $6.06
$2-02
$ 97 $1.81
TEL-A-HURON
AUTO SALES
60 S. Telegraph	FE 8-9661
Across From Tel-Hilron Shopping Center
1M
mm md\M Cm T06
teas GTO PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, perfect cond., 4-speokar, 4roid and rear vlbTasonlc radio, posltractlon
poeltraction, tfnfod wlndohMd, II l5w, S1ISS. FE 441417._______________
BANKRUPT? SHORT EMPLOYMENT?

I LEFT. IMS PONTIAC
to go. SIIH full prica, SI d Wo finaneo of bank rotoa.
, I»40 W. wide Track
IfSS PONTIAC CONVERTIELE Cotolkw, iuiomallc. power stoor-Ing ond brakot, maroon with o
5 BONNEVILLE 4 DOOR HARD-
powor, Bool-troctlon, reverb « or, Jhorp. S24f0. FE 3 eves. FE I-StSf.
SALES, 337S W. .1
IMF
in McAullflo Ford
1962 Rambler
106^^ Mri IM Cm 104
inIi
nd| ________ - ............
Corp. Mr. Snow, Ml 4^5110.
NMfMidlMCm 100
1962 RAMBLER
1940 RAMBLER tStf. OPOVIUI
Herdworo - FE S44S4.______
141 RAMBLER CLASSIC
------- Iju HoMort RMbo
mia._____ . • i
SI45 full prIco.
Village Rombler
644 S. Woodward AVo. BIRMINGHAM__________ Ml 4-3fOO
$470
tr ovoryeno Is laok-
*Ti&'*^’mbler-jeep
EM 3-4155
r at BIO 1 at Rooa R
—________I only ooloct uaad c
or ropeof buslnooi.
R^E RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155
Bloomfield HUia.
Eight Nei|y '65 RomblEa
Another special factory aHosoBnco allows Us to soli cars seay Bolaw
lo Fair Trade. Oaol, Offfr Ri
Superior
Rambler-4eep
55^ Oakland Ava.
$697
SEE BOB RUPB
IMF
THOUSANDS -OF UNUSED MILES
Still available on every one of these Birmingham Trades.
1964 WILDCAT .............................. $1888
4-Ooor Hardtop
1966 ELECTRA .............‘	$3888
"335" Convertible - Full Power, 3,000 Miles
1964	BUICK...................................$2688
Riviera with Ftfll Power, Deluxe Trim
1965	RIVIERA ............................... $3188
Full Po<wor. 14,000 Miles, Turquoise Finish
1963	ELECTRA .....................k .......$1888
4<door. Real sharp.
1962	SPECIAL ................................$788
4-Door Sedan — Automatic Transmission
1965 OPEL ...........................:......$1388
Slolkm Wagon — Chroma Rock, Radio, Heater
1961 BUICK............,!.................. . $ 988
LeSabre Coupe — Ooublo Power, Bucket Seats
1964	BUICK ...............................  $1888
Skylark Coupe — Real Sharp
1964 OLDS................... $148 Down
3-Ooor Hordtop — Burgundy Finish
- DOUBLE-CHECK -- USED CARS -
554 S. Woodword
NEED A CHEVY? OLIVER BUICK HAS LATE MODEL TRADE-INS!
1964
CHEVY
BISCAYNE 2-DOOR
$1495
1964
CHEVY
Bel-Air 4-Door ^
sutomatic transmission, radio, htiN I whitewall tires. The finish 1
$1595
1964 CHEVY
Biscoyne 2-Door
$1395
1963 Corvair
SEDAN _____ _________ ..
Sion, radio, heofor and wmto-wall tires. Has a nice white
$795
1963 Corvair
Monza Sport Coupe
radio, heolor and whitawall . The finish It o booutlful I with matching trim.
$895
1962 Corvair,
Monzo Sport Coupe
nice 4-speed transmission, y wall tiros ond o nice blue I with matching trim.
$745
1962 CHEVY
Bel-Air Wagon
4-PASSENGER MODEL With V4 e^lne, automatic transmission.
', whitewall tires a
$1195 L
1963 Corvair
Monza Convertible
$995

196-210 ORCHARD LAKE FE 2-9165

FREE
ENTER OUR WIN-A-CAR CONTEST
FREE
100 GALLONS
‘ OF GASOLINE
FREE
FROM YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD SHELL, STANDARD, CITCO, GULF, ETC. STATIONS WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY VEHICLE DURING THE BALANCE OF THIS MONTH WITH OUR COMPUMENTS
FREE
COFFEE AND ,
DOUGHNUTS
Follow the Crowd to Bill Spence's "RAMBLER-LAND"
The world's most (quality built-in) automobile, built by American Motors, are on display-We want to sell even more autos this week, which means (volume), and that always means lower prices. So hurry, save many dollars. We'll twist any deal to fit your pocketbook,'no reasonable offer refused. Don't forget, our Ramblers also carry the 50,000 mile warranty. There is a Rambler built to suit anyone's personal desire such as the Luxurious Ambassador, Sporty Marlin, Economical Compact American, amazing, dazzling DPL, sleek, startling Rogue, Classy, Classic outstanding Ret?el.
BILL SPENCE
Chrysler - Plymouth - Valiant - Rambler - Jeep
6673 DIXIE HIGHWAY, -CLARKSTON MA 5-2635


:/
.-f:

THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY U, 1966
OHECOUIR
/
for^ used car. So read our
IPs not every day that you buy a used car. So when you do,' be sure to get a car with our Chevy dealers’ OK-a 25-month written warranty. IPs not Just any warranty mind you, but a warranty from a Chevy
dealer. A dealer pledged to selling carefully selected, honestly represented cars. And who’d like to sell you CA*^ * Chevy someday, too. So look over our OK cars now—and other good used car buys, too.
Quality Warranty
1964 Buick
Spwial 2-door, V-6 onginet iranmisrion, radio, haotor, whitewall bronn-mut finiih.
»1427
1964 Chevrolet
♦1582
1964 Buick
LtSobra 2-door hardtop^ ontom modal, automatic traniiniuion, powar brokaa and ataaring, radio and kaotar, aosy eyo glosi^ vinyl interior, dork blua.
♦1952,
1964 Buick
LaSobra-tedoor tadon, hot doubla power, radio and haolar, bMutiful Marlin blue finish and whitewaJI tirai.
♦1804
1964 Chevrolet
impala 4-door hardtop^ V-8 angina^ Power-glide, radio, haater, whitewalls, powar steering and brakes, A^ra Aqua finish.
♦1843
1964 Buick
RMSra Sport Coupa. Hilt dream car Is solid whits ond n hat sporty black leather bucket seats. It's really class.
*2496
1964 Buick
Electro 225 convartibla with bbckel seats, Moutiful silver mist finish, black ibp. This * beauty is loaded with'oil power and only
*2595
1964	Chevrolet
BIteayna 2-door with 6 eyflndar angina, Powargllda, power steering, radio, hadar, whitewall tires, nloa magic mirror finish of Azura Aqua, It's beoutilul.
*1252
1965	Buick
Elactra 2-door hardtop with lots of estros both inside and put. It has a beautiful finish thofs turquoise and has a whits top.
*2978
1965 Buick
LeSobre 4-door hardtop with many extras,
H Is really loaded. The finish Is o beautiful Champagne mist and It really sparklet.
^2595
1964	Chevrolet
Bal Air 4door- tedon with V-8 engine, Powergllda, rodio ond haater, whitawoll tires and o truly beautiful light blue finish.
*1361
1965	Ford
ton custom pickup truck with V-8 engine, Ebrdomotic transmission, radio, heoter, whitewalls, many other custom features, only
*1714
1965 Chevrolet
Vt ton Fleetslde pickup truck. Hot 6 cylinder engine, standard shift Iransmistibn, ond It has vary low miles, a real good worker here
*1598
Al Hanoute, Inc. CHEVROLET
209 N. Paik Blvd. 692-2411
LAKE ORION
Quality^ Warranty
4-door. Rodio, heotei^ automatic power-steering' and brakes. Beige finish.
^2795
^845
1965 Pontiac
4-door. Rodio, h steering' and broki
1961	Buick
Electra 4-door. E Wonderful saconc
1963	Pontiac
Cotollna 4-door. II Ing and brakos, si
1963	Olds
Convertible. Pow radio, healer, ou
1964	Pontiac
♦1195
Convertible, Powar steering and brakes, radio, healer, automatic Iransmiulon.
*1395
Bonneville convertible. Radio, heater, oulo-matic transmission, powar steering and
*2095
1963	Chevrolet
*1495
Cotalina 4-door hardtop. Power steering and brakes, radio, heoter, automotic.
*2595
1965 Pontiac
Cotalina 4-door hord and brakes, radio, heol
1962	Pontiac
1964	Chevrolet
♦1095
♦1295
1964	Tempest
2-door Custom. 8-cylindar angina, radio, heoter: Test drive this onatodayl
*1495
1965	Chevrolet ,
Convertible. Radio, heater, automatic Irans- , miMion. Just right for Spring,
*2195
1962	Buick
Elactra 4-door. Power steering and brakeiv automatic transmission.
*1195
1962	Chevrolet
1963 Pontiac
*695
slpering
*1495
1964 Chevelle
■. 6^lndar angina, radio, heater, gtle transmissloa.
'	•	*1395
Hdmer Might CHEVROLET
160S. Washington 628-2528
OXFORD
Quality 0 Warranty
1965 Chevrolet
Blscoyna 2-door sedan, d-cylindar, outb-matic, radio, heater, turquoise finish.
*1895
1964 Chevrolet
Impala sport coupe. V-8 engine, outomoKc tronsmission, white finish,
*1595
1964 Corvette
Stingray, dnpaad tronsmissloiv 365 H.P. angina, radio, dork blue finish.
*2895
1963	Chevrolet
*1195
1963	Buick
Special convertible. V-6, automatic, power steering and brakes, white, block top.
*1350
1965 Corvoir
Cored coupe. 140 radio. Red finish, ii
1963	Olds
"88" 2-door hord steering and broket
1961	Chevrolet
Impala 4-door he malic, power staei
1961	Ford
Va-lon truck. (pick-o| box. A real work
1965	Pontiac
CotoIinOfcCOnvertlble. V--. ... powar steering and brakes.
1962	GIds
MS 2door. V-8 ai eaots, radio. Royal I
1965	Chevrolet
Slittlon wagon. V-8, automatic,
Ingwind bnikee. Whiter kil
1963	Buick
Special. 2-door aedem. V-6, stick, bucket eaots! Radio. A real sharp carl
*1095
*1964 Chevy il
Nova 2-door hardtop. 6<yllndsr anginay Mick, radio, blue finish.
*1395
1965	Chevrolet
Bet Air. 4-door eadan.V-B,automallc, powar steering and brokaa. Radio, dork blue.
*1950
w
Haskins
CHEVROLET
6751 Dixi* Hwy. 625-5071
CLARKSTON
*1895
*1595
*850
ne, long
*795
rd shift,
♦2395
, bucket
*950
*2195
Quality 0 Warranty
1965 Malibu
Super Sport Two door hordtop, V-8 outomotic.
*2395
1965 Chevrolet '	.
Impola. Two-door hordtop, V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes.
*2495
1965 Chevrolet
Impala 2-door hardtop. V-8, automatic, power steering ond brakes.
^	*2495
1964	Chevrolet
Impala two.door hardtop. V-8, full power, automatic.
.	*1995
1964	Ford
Two-door. V-8, oulomotit
*1395
1964	Chevrolet
Feuivdoor elation wagon. V8, outomallc, powar rioaring.
♦1895
1964	Chevrolet
'A-ton pickup. Flealside, Six, standard trons- -
*1495
1964 Chevrolet
Th-ton pickup. Stapilde, sik, standard trans-miuion.
*1495
1963 Chevrolet
Impala two-door hardtop. V8, automatic.
*1495
1963 T-Bird
Two-door hardtop, V8, automolte.
*1995
1963 GMC Carryall
9 possangar, 6, standard transmission.
*1395
1961 Ford
. 9 possangar, tlig ilendai|^ -
1961 Rompside
Rlckup, six, standard transmission.
1960 Chevrolet
Station vragon, 9 passenger, six, si
*650
*595
londord
*495
*375'
Crissman
CHEVROLET
755 S. Roch*st«r 652-9721
ROCHESTER
1959 Chevrolet
Fourdeor, V8, automatic
m
Quality 0 Warranty
1965	Chevrolet
Bel Air 2-door sedan with radio, haater, outometic transmission, iactory warranty, nice Tropical Turquolsa finish, whitewall
*1695
1965	Corvoir
Corsa Coupe with radio end healer, nice sporty bucket seats, sparkling block finish and has ipotlea whitewoll tirec
*1895
1965	Chevrolet
Bel-Air station wagon with V8 angina, Powargllda, radio and haolar, nica malodor rad finish with sporkling whitewall tires.
*2195
1964 Chrysler
Newport sport coup# with radio ond heoter, power steering, outomotic tronsmission, beoutilul Silvermlit Blue finish ond while-wall tires.
*1795
1964	Chevrolet
Impala <l»n coupa with V8 angina. Bower-glide tronsmission, radio and h^ar ond a nice Sierra Cold finish, whitewall Hrat.
*1895
1965	Chevrolet
Impolo sport sedan wM tronsmission, radio and broket and power steering, and a beautiful beige finish, whitewall lirev
*2295
1964 Pontiac
Calolino 4-door sedan with Hydromolic Iransmiuion, power broket and power steering, radio ond healer, beautiful mW blue finish and whhetwall tires.''
*1795
1964 Corvoir
Spydar with sporty bucket aaals, all lha moiiy extras that go Into moklno o Irua sports car. The finish Is a beautiful block ond hot whHswall Hres,
1965 Chevrolet
Blscoyna 4-door sedan with radio, heater, Powergllde transmission, a finish of Tahl-tion Turquoise tfit sparklae and whitewall
1963 Chevy I
*1395
*1695
. *1195
• 1965 Chevrolet
Impala sport coupe with V8 engine. Power-glide Ironimiulon, rodio ond heoter, power steering, nice beige finish ond sporkling whitewall tires.
*2195
1964 Chevelle
2-deor tadon with V8 anginay slfck shift
*1395
Matthews-Hargreaves
CHEVROLET
631 Oakland 335-4161
PONTIAC


—Television Programs—
Proflrami furnished by itatlens listed in this eelumh ore subject le change without notice M 2-WJiK.TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-^KlW-TV, sb-WKiP-TV,
EVENING
l;N (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports	%
(7) Movie: “Abbott end Costello Meet Dr. Jdgil and Mr. Hyde”
(In Progress)
(9) Dennis the Menace •:2S (7) News, Weather, Sports 1:30 (2) (4) (Coior) Network News
(9) Marshal Dillon (50) Little Rascals (56) (Special) America’s Crises
6:4S (7) Network News 7:00 (2) Dobie Glllis
(4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) (Color) Stories From Beyond ^
(9) M 0 V i e : “Man on a Tightrope” (1953) Fredric March, Gloria Grahame (5Q) Soupy Sales 7:30 (2) To TeU the Truth (4) (Color) Hullabaloo (7) 12 O’clock High (50) l^ells Fargo (56) U. S.A.
7:45 (56) To Be Announced 8:00 (2) I’ve Got a Secret (4) (Color) John Forsythe (50) Speedway Inter-
(56) Great Books 8:30 (2) (Color) Lucille BaU (4) (Color) Dr. Kildare (7) Legend of Jesse James (50) Auto Classics (56) Math for Parents 8:55 (9) News
9:00 (2) (Color) Andy Griffith (4) (Color) Andy WilUams (7) Shenandoah (9) Mystery Theater (50) Open End 9:30 (2) (Color) Hazel (7) Peyton Place 10:00 (2) (Color special) Gene Kelly
(4) (Color) Run for Your Life
(7) Ben Casey (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee (50) Merv Griffin 10:30 (9) ’The Sixties 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather. Sports 11:25 (7) Movie: “Once Upon a Horse” (1958) D^n Rowan, Dick Martin
11:10 (2) (Color) Movie: "The Mouse ’That Roared” (’59) Peter Sellers, Joan Seberg
THfc PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY U, 1966
Cable tAay Link Earth and Satellite
D—ll
TV Features
Gene Kelly Tours NY
By United Press International
12 O’CLOCK HIGH, 7:30 p.m. (7) Only pilot qualified for special mission reuses to go because he has com* | pleted his 25-mlssion quota. Bradford Dillman stars. I
U.S.A., 7:30 p.m. (56) “EJehoes of Jazz” is first of * three shows on 20th century dance forms.
LUCII^E BALL, 8:30 p.m. (2) Dean Martin plays i| dual role in this episode.	p
ANDY'WILLIAMS, 9:00 p.m. (4) Andy welcomes folk singers Peter, Paul and Mary, comedian Bob Newhart and songstress Nancy Wilson.	|
GENE KELLY, 10:90 p.m. (2) Gene KeUy is host | for this song-and-dance tour of New York City-
I
(7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: "Raiders of the Seven Seas” (1953) John Payne, Donna Reed. (50) Motor City Movie 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (2) (4) News
(56) Young Artists at Work
1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Dea)
1:50 (56) Safety 1:» (4) News
(50) American History 2:00 (2) Password
(4) Days of Our Livei (7) Nurses t:N (56) Safety 2:21 (56) Book Parade 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us 2:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:15 (7) News 3:H (2) To Tell the Truth
(4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Captain Detroit 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marries (9) Swingin’ Time 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Never Too Young (50) Topper 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House (50) Love That Bob 4:55 U) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) George Pierrot
(7) Movie: “Ape Man of the Jungle.”
(50) Lloyd Thaxton (56) Music From Cass Tech
5:10 (56) What’s New 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall
By Science Service WASHINGTON - An earth-circling satellite could be a true ’skylKM*,” or ladder to the sky, if a proposal made here proves poesible in the future.
The skyhook would start with a thin cable linking a satellite in an orbit keeping it over the same position on the earth’s surface to the earth itself.
The details concerning Project Skyhook are now available publicly for the first time la the Journal Science here.
The existence of studies concerning the feasibility of Project Skyhook were revealed last July in an exclusive Science Savice story.
★ ★ ★
A sky-piercing cable with the necessary properties requires strengths about jOO times greater than those now attainable. EARTH ROTA’nON Drs. John D. Isaacs, Hugh Bradner and George E. Bachus of Scripps Institute of Oceanography, University of California, La Jolla, and Dr. Allyn C. Vine of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, Woods Hole, Mass, reported here that mwt of the energy for such cables would come directly from the rotation of the earth. Mars or i rapidly turning asteroid.
la an nansnal note prefacing the scientists* report, the
Bachelor's Marital Views Recipe hr Nuptial Stews
By EARL WmON
NEW YORK-Comedian Jackie Mason, a bachelor, doubts If women are here to stey. (His opinions are strictly his own aod
n	he says, making a gesture with-
(4).(Color) Johnny Carson hj, |,gn<j jy SulUvan could describe better, 1
(9) The Saint 12:45 (9) International Deteclive
1:00 (4) Beat the Champ 1:15 (7) News
1:30 (2) (4) News, Weather (7) After Hours
’TUESDAY MORNING
6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News 6:25 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews
6:55 (2) Editorial, News 7:00 (4) Today
(7) Johnny Ginger 7:05 (2) News 7:30 (2) Happyland 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:30 (7) Movie; "Adam Had Four Sons” (1941) Ingrid Bergman, Warner Baxter. 8:45 ( 56) English VI 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round
9:N (2) Andy Griffith t (4) Living (9) Romper Room 0:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read 9:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (56) American History 9:55 (4) News
(U) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Eye Guess (9) Canadian Schools 10:10 (56) Our Scientific World 10:25 (4) News /
10:30 (2) McCoys
(4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Friendly Giant 10:35 (56) French Lesson 10:45 (9) Chez Helene 10:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (2) Divorce Court (4) Morning Star (7) Supermarket Sweepstakes (9) Butternut Square 11:20 (9) Across Canada (56) What’s New 11:30 (4) Paradise Bay (7) Dating Game (50) Dickory Doc 11:50 (9) News
AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News, Weather,
Sports
(4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Razzle Dazzle 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Post Office (7) Father Knows Best (9) Take 30
12:35 ( 56) Spanish Lesson , 12:45 (2) Guiding Light ' 12:50 (56) Come, Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game
, Ugh! Today when a woman says T do,’ that’s v the last thing she does. She gets nurried, not' to start housekeeping and cooking, but to start, % eating out. If you say ‘Let’s eat at home,’ she k hires a cook. If I want to marry a person who f can cook, I have to go to the Waldorf and marry » the chef.
"The only thing a housewife does by herself today without hired help is go on a vacation.
WILSON
“Why should I get married? First thing I’d do would be to get her appendix out, cap her teeth, shorten her Boee, send her to a reducing spa, and buy her a wig. Now the short fat littie brunette is a tall thin blonde. She looks at bm and says, ‘The way I look now, why do I need this guy?’ ”
I mentioned this opinion of Jackie’s to several girls around the Booze Beat, and they said; “I hate to say this—but you know, he’s right—not about us . . but about some girls we know.”
★	★ w
Fearless Forecast; NYC cops, though pledged not to strike, may ask a bigger pay raise Uian the TWU got . . . Nal Bonet, the belly artiste, stopped the opera VAida” in Philly, getting more applause than the opera singers. The audience’s Bravos began when four slaves carried her onstage, even before she began her spectacular ballet.
Orson Bean excitedly told friends, “We just found out we’re pregnant!” This includes his wife, the former CarolyB MaxweU, of coune.
THE MIDNIGHT' E^RL . . .
Edmund Purdom may be Barbra Streisand’s leading man in the London company of "Funny Girl.” (Kay Medford and Lee Allen of the original N. Y. cast will join Barbra) . . . Is the famed Cafe Chambord reopening, in the Hotel Manhattan? ... One of the "inmates” in “Marat/Sade” has been adlibblng lines that are too wild even for this wild show, and mdy be sent back to England.
The "Peyton Place” producers reportedly are meeting secretly to decide which “residents” can be written out of the show . . . Rita Tushingham told an interviewer; "I have a kind of ugliness, aiKL^hat is a joy forever” . . . Frank Sinatra’s dtr. Tina, one of tht few Sinatras not yet in the business, may have a role in an American - International musical epic.
REMEMBERED QUOTE: ‘"niere are times when silence n the best way to yell at the top of your voice,” —0. A. Battista . EA^’S PEARLS: "Of course I’m against sin. I’m against everting I’m too old to enjoy.”—Bill Strickler, Daytown, Texas.
Dinah Shore, ending a successful Persian Rm. stay, kidded her love clothes: “Some people said that during my TV wows I didn’t sing much, but 1 changed dresses well."
That’s earl, brother.
_______________ (TSe Man itaMkait, me)
lema If Stability hi eouiectloa with Project Skyhook that might make it “impiractie-able.”
Nevertheless, the idea was considered such a “ddigbtful and grandiose” scheme that it should have wide attention.
* ★ *
The theory behind putting Skyhook.into operation can be considered in the following way: Imagine slinging a piece of rope around your head, then letting a ring loose at the end of the rope.
The ring would fly off into the atmosphere due to the ac-celeratioB given it by the rope. However, because of earth’i gravity, the ring has to be hurled Into an orUt 22,300 miles above earth’s surface before it will go into an orbit that will keep it always over the same point, the soK;alled synchronous orbit such as the Syncom satellites maintain.
* ★ ★
The real problem Is to establish the first link between the earth and a satellite. Dr. Isaacs told Science Service. .Once even a thin cablp was established, he said, it could be used to build upon itself to make an elevaUM’tothe sky.
Son of Bing Crosby
Is Wed in Los Vegas
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -Crooner Bing Crosby’s son, Lindsay, 28, was married Saturday night to Janet Sue Schwartze, 23, Los Angeles, at the little chapel of the “Strip,” * * *
Crosby previously wu nuu’-ed to former Las Vegas show girl Barbara Frederickson. The pair was divorced April 2, 1963. They have a son, David, 4.
'Batman' Wins Again, This Time Over Grippe
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Adam West, star of the 20th Century Fox television production “Batman” has just won another triumph — this time over the grippe.
★	* A
West, who was taken ill flve days ago, was released from Bel-Alr Memorial Hospital Sunday in Los Angeles. He reports for work in Hollywood today as the caped and hooded hero of the twice-weekly show.
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HITS IT BIG - Special Forces Staff Sgt Barry Sadler, a veteran of the Viet Nam war, b shown at Ft. Bragg, N. C., strumming hb guitar. Hb hit record "The Balbd of the Green Bereb’’ has sold more than 700,OM copies and he expeeb sales to top the 1 million mark.
Gleason Plans New TV Format
NEW YORK (AP) - Jackie Gleason will return to television | next season and has nailed down hb ideas about a "new concept” for the future series, the Columbia Broadcasting System says.
Three weeks ago the rotund comedian announced hb determination to take next year off.
# ★ ♦
But Michael Dann, CBS vice president in charge of programs, said. Sunday Gleason had made a new agreement with the network to return to hb Saturday night spot next Sep-tembec. Dann said the new format will have a musical comedy slant to it, and Gleason b with it.
Dann said Gleason had signed Art Carney as a regubr performer for next season. It was reported that many of the current show regulars would be dropped. s Gleason’s! Miami-based production company, will receive about $200,000 a week to turn out the variety shows.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY U, 1966
ONE COLOR
LANSING (AP) - Committee -isn’t expected
work, including a start on Gov.
George Romney’s 1966-67 state!
budget, is the legislative menu'
I senators who don’t like the way
Both House and Senate plan Wayne ^ate Bdich^^ daily meeUngs which will han-i ignored a Senate resolutioh Ffi-dle only housekeeping chores as day urging them not to permit leaders strive to avbid an end- Communist speakers on cam-of-sesSion logjam of bills. jpus.
Af PIwMm
ALL TUCKERED OUT — Craig Kennedy Tomaino, 2, fell asleep at the Menswear Retailers of America Convention in Dallas yesterday as Norman Brook (left) of Raleigh Manufacturing Co. of Baltimore and New York City and Nat Roth, Southwestern representative of Raleigh and Wall Street Clothes, talk shop. Craig’s father, from Dallas, is also in the clothing business.
Legislature to Start on Budget
Hard questioning at those
hearings may come from some
Romney lihveiled his record' When Wayne President Wil-$944.9 million budget more than liam Keast telegraphed Senate two weeks ago but spending Majority Leader Raymond committees in each house havejDzendzel, D-Detroit, Friday that been forced fo delay hearings jhe would ignore the resolution, until they receive the inch-thick I Dzendzel declared that Keast
volume of budget detail.
Testimony from the state’s colleges and universities — traditionally among the most determined seekers of more money
I There was a chance the matter might even cotne up in the Senate again tonight. The resolution passed 16-15 Friday after two days of debate.
A ‘NO’ VOTE
Shortly after passage. Sen. Gilbert Bursley, R-Ann Atbor, returned to the chamber from a meeting and said he would have voted no—killing the resd-lution.
might have to “face the conse-j quences.
He said la$er he might offer new resolution in effect aimed at canceling the no-Commu-nists measure.
Self - styled Marxist Herbert! Aptheker then spoke on bothj campuses.
TTie House, as it did last week, planned to begin work today at 12 p.m. instead of its customary |6 p.m.
TARNISHED HERO-North Salinas, Calif.High School senior Paul Murray, 18, was a hero when he rescued a dro^yning. clam digger from the Pacific Ocean Feb. 3. However, after the story ,l|jt the local paper, Murray was given an automatic Ifrday suspension for playing hookey to go surfing.
A Family Wedding for Luci
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President and Mrs. Johnson bid the Nugent family farewell today with all in agr^ment that Luci’s marriage to young Pat Nugent will be a family affair.
The Nugents, Gerard and Tillie, planned to drive the 900 miles to their home in Waukegan, 111., after a White House weekend that was the first meeting for the families and the Nugents’ first trip to Washington.
Luci and Patrick are to be married in late summer. Pat is on active duty gt an airman and is stationed at nearby Andrews Air Force Base.
Yesterday was a blustery, rainy day which the two families spent in a leisurely fashion, chatting and recapping the Saturday njght party for Luci and Pat.
White House sources said yesterday that it was agreed the wedding would be a family affair, not a state function: a “sentimentai” occasion instead of a pubiic spectacle with a good deal of fanfare.
The plans for a family affair gives no indication of the size of the wedding, however, although the accent will be on gathering old friends and loved ones from Luci’s baby* hood on.
That Jingling of Money
By JOSEPH R. COYNE
WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans have more cold cash jihgling in their pockets and stuffed In their billfolds than they did five years ago.
The business boom is only part of the answer for the proportionate ind-ease.
The Federal Reserve Bank at Richmond, Vii., part of the agency which distrihutes coins and paper imoney, has come up with some explanations.
More teen-age spending, to name one, tat most factors lack accurate measurement.	/
John K. Carlock, fiscal assistant secretary of the Treasury, said only theories can be advanced to explain the phenomenon and one theory is probably as good as another.
MONEY SUPPLY
Hard cash makes up only about 20 per cent of the total money supply. The rest consists of time deposits, mainly checking accounts.
Here are some of the cold facts:
On June 30, WOO, the total currency in circulation was valued at $32.06 billion compared with $41.82 billion last Nov. 30, the most recent date for which Treasury figures are available.
This represented a per capita jump from $177.47 to $213.79. BY ITSELF
Treasury officials said the increase has nothing to do with
any trend toward inflation, which is a. much broader problem of production, supply and demand, over-all fiscal policy and a variety of other factors.
Two definite developments in the new pattern, the bank reported; are the increased demand for coins and an upturn in the business cycle.
* The remaining possible causes, the bank added, are less measurable. It listed them as:
1. The demand for pocket money by the increasing number of teen-agers who hold jobs or receive allowances.
26 PER CENT
The number of teen-agers between 15 and 19 increased by 3.5 million between 1960 and 1965 — some 26 per cent above the increase for the previous five years.
2. Increased travel, both domestic and foreign, which prompts Americans to carry more ready cash than normal.
The Chicago Federal Reserve Bank reported that although travelers checks are widely used by travelers, most still find it convenient to carry more currency than they normally would at home.
3.	Possible hoarding of American currency abroad to offset sometimes shaky currencies in emerging countries.
IRS POUaES
4.	Internal Revenue Service policies, including a crackdown on federal gambling tax collections and use of computers to check income tax returns.
“Persons who were evading the gambling and income taxes may have bedn sufficiently impressed by these two policies to switch to a currency basis for conducting their business rather than depositing their hinds in banks,’’ the bank said:
5. Strong and steady increases, especially since 1961, in personal income, savings and public holdings of liquid assets.
The rising use of credit cards and higher interest rates are factors in the opposite direction, the bank said, but pressures toward bigger holdings of hard gash were much stronger.
One Treasury spokesman summed up the whole situation in one word—affluence.
1*U, tt 10 o'clock a.m. it XU Stritl, Rochottar, Oakland County, i -1, public tala of a 1*04 Dodpa Polara
Datad: Pabruary I, I1
I
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I and IM LaBaron Farmi

The Weafhet
THE PONTIAC
A’OL. 124. — \(). (>
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
rONTIAC;, MICHIGAN. MONDAY. FERRCARV U, llMiO —40 PAGES
Bus Blasts Kill 54 Viets
Rabbi Is Near Death; Faiths Join in Prayers
Accused Assailant in Southfield Shooting Also on Critical List
MISS OU — Kathleen Longeway, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. R. l-ongeway of 20706 Kennoway, Birmingham, wears the new Miss Oakland University crown. She was crowned Saturday at midnight. Kathleen will represent OU in the Miss Michigan Contest to be held in June at Muskegon. (See additional photo, page 2.)
Area Beauty New Miss OU
Crowned Miss Oakland University during Saturday's Snow Ball festivities was Kathleen Longeway, a sophomore commuter student.
Sponsored in the contest by the Newman Club, Kathleen dazzled judges with her dramatic presentation of Joan of Arc’s solilo-j— quy from George Bernard!
Shaw’s, "St, Joan." j ■‘¥•0 laiow.” confided the year-old beauty, “1 never saw myaelf as Miss OU.	|
“I was so pleased and ex-ritdd to be a finalist, 1 Just never even thought I'd be | i-hMea,	I
“Wheh my name was called i out as the winner, I coaldn’t' think, I ddn't have time."
Dramatics have always been a favorite hobby of KaUilcon’s. A 1964 graduate of Wylie (lroves| High ,S(;h«)l, Birmingham, she| was active.in "Dramatics, schpol's draipa club, serving one year ak its president.
INITIAL INTKRK.ST
"Groves’ teachers Katy Bigge and Geprgeann Jordan were responsible for developing my ini-, tial,interest in drama," said Kathleen.	^
"And Tom Aston, OU'g ’ drama director, helped me a gnrat deal in polishing St. Joan’s speech," she added.
KafKiMn was awarded an Olivet College dramatic wholar-ship the summer she graduated from high .school,
★ * ★
Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Longeway of 20706 Kennoway, Birmingham, were on hand to- see their daughter crowned by the university’s first Mi«s OU, Sharon Snyder of 6765 Woodbank, Bloomfield Township.
DETROIT (AP) — In churches and synagogues throughout Detroit, Jews and Christians alike joined yesterday in prayers for Rabbi Morris Adler who lay near death after being I shot by a younger member I of his congregation.
I The 59-year-old spiritual leader of 6,000 Detroit-area Jews was reported in criUcal condition at Sinai Hospital where he was admitted Saturday for emergency brain surgery.
His accused assailant, Richard Wishnetsky, 23, remained on the critical list at nearby Providence Hospital where he was taken with a self-inflicted
Snow Flurries, Colder Trend Forecast for Area
Partial clearing and colder tonight with possible snow flur-. Ties is the weather forecast for Pontiac and vicinity.
The low this evening will be from 12 to 20 degrees, while tomorrow’s high will range from 25 to 30 with partly sunny skies.
Winds porth to northwest at five to IS miles will become variable tonight and shift south to southwest Tuesday.
Mostly cloudy, windy and colder with snow flurries is the outlook for Wednesday.
Downtown Pontiac’s lowest temperature reading preceding 8 a m. was 23. The mercury was pushing 31 degrees at 1 p.m.
GKI-STON V. POOLE
Death Claims Firm Chairman
Directed Company Over Lengthy Period
In Today's Press
Goldwafer Vhges determination, not ‘groveling’ peace bid, in Viet - PAGE C-3.
Space Program U. S. project to soft-land spacecraft on moon ntarldd J'AGE A-3.
Cash on Hand Americans holding more ready currency - PAGE D-12.
Area News ..........A-4
Astrology ..........C-6
Bridge ............ C-6
Crossword Pbztie I>-I1
Comics ..............C4
Editorials	A-6
Markote ............C-7
Obituaries .........C-2
SporU	D-I-D-3
Theaters............C-4
TV-RnUo Pregrams D-ll WQsea, Earl D-ll Womens’ Pages B-1—B>3
Gelston V. Poole, chairman^ of Ihc board of the F. J. Poole Co,, died yesterday, lie was 69.
Poole of 4,'106 .South Shore, Waterford Township, was born in Pontiac and, for many years, headed the 1 u m b c r and hard-jware firm founded in 1895 by his father, Fred J. Poole,
I	A graduate of Pontiac High ; School and Ferris Institute,
> Poole also attended Michigan
Agricultural College, now Michigan State University.
He was a member of the Pontiac Exchange Club, past president of the YMCA board of directors and a member of Masonic l.odge No. 21, F&AM.
Poole also served as a member of the Clinton Valley Council, Boy Scouta of America. SERVICE SET Service will be Thursday at
II	a m. at Central Methodist Church with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery by Don-clson-Johns Funeral Home,
Surviving are his wife, Marie: vo sons, Frederick J. and Richard C„ both of Pontiac; a sister, Mrs. Allan H. Monroe of Pontiac; and six grandchildren.
Friends may make a contribution to the Central Methodist Church Building Fund.
At Shaarey Zedek synagogue in suburban Southfield, scene of the tragedy Saturday, the 1, children of the congregation prayed for the recovery of Rabbi Adler.
* ★ ♦
And, said Leonard Antel, the school administrator at the synagogue, many words of sympathy were said for Wishnetsky, brilliant honors student and recent psychiatric patient, who shot the rabbi, then himself, during a Sabbath service.
IN MOST CHURCHES A spokesman for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit said there were prayers in most Catholic churches yesterday for the recovery of Rabbi Adler and his assailant.
Some 125 persons of the Catholic, Congregationalist and Methodist faiths were among the approximately 600 who watched helplessly Saturday as Wishnetsky shot down the rabbi, then turned the 32-caliber pistol on himself.
The Christians had been Invited to Saturday’s ecumenical service at the synagogue.
One bullet smashed into the left side of the rabbi’s head, shattering part of the skull and sending splinters tearing into the brain.
2-HOUR OPERATION The bone fragments and blood were removed from the rabbi’s i brain during a two-hour opera-|tion Saturday by Dr. Harry Gass, chief neurosurgeon Sinai.
A Pontiac man was killed and two other area n\en_ critically injured in separate traffic accidents in the Pontiac area over the weekend.
Roger A. Madou, 28. of 900 S. East Blvd. was dead on arrival at William Beaumont Hospital last night after the car he was driving struck a tree in Bloomfield Township.
The accident
1 Killed, 2 Hurt in Area Wrecks
Pontiac Driver Dies After Car Rams Tree
VIEW SITE PLAN - Dr. Alan M. Potts (left) and Dr. Stuart F. Harkness view the site plan for the projected Michigan College of Osteopathic M^icine (MCOM). Dr. Potts is president of the MCOM Board of Trustees,
PMitiK Prtu Phot*
while Dr, Harkness is assistant dean of clinical sciences. An estimated 300 attended an open house Saturday at the College Development Center on the 164-acre site at Auburn and Opdyke.
Oakland Highway Toll in ’66
16
General Motors Corp. announced plans today to build additional car-testing facilities at its Milford Proving Ground in Milford Township.
The new facilities will be added in the center of the existtog complex of buildings on 4,011-acre test area.
Tokyo Is Crackling Dry
TOKYO (AP) - Tokyo Is crackling dry after 41 days with neither rain nor snow. It is the Japanese capital’s longest dry J spell in 85 years.
occurred at 14 Mile Road and B e a consfield, opposite the entrance to «t h e B i r mingham Country Club. Madou and his passenger. John T. Neylou, 24. of 1813 Beech, Troy, were traveling west on 14 Mile Road at a high rate of speed when the car left the road, according to Bloomfield Township police. Neylou was listed in critical condition at the hospital today.
In critical condition at Pontiac General Hospital Is Richard A. Gracey, 26, of 2461 Georgeland, Waterford Township.
.Gracey received multiple internal injuries when his motorcycle rammed into a bridge on Hatchery Road near Georgeland in the township Saturday- night. * ★ *
According to State Police, Gracey lost control of his motorcycle on a curve after passing a car.
GM to Expand Facilities at Milford Proving Grounds
AF Moves Trainees to Curb Meningit'is
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) —The Air'Force moved ahead today w Tt h preparations to transfer thousands of basic trainees from Lackland Air Force Base in an effort to prevent a major outbreak of spinal meningitis.
One serviceman has died of meningitis at Lackland and six other trainees are hospitalized with the disease. Three are listed in serious condition three in fair condition.
Meningitis has claimed three other servicemen’s lives in military basis throughout the nation recently.
To limit the spread of the disease, the Air Force training command plans to move sever4 thousand Lackland trainees 500 miles northwest to Amarillo Air Force Base in the Texas Panhandle.
Plans for the testing facilities were announced in the midst of a controversy over how safe U.S^buUt autos real-ly are.
Cost of the- building program, describW as a two-year effort designed to expand GM’s safety efforts, was not disclosed.
★ ★ ★
Planned facilities included a safely test engiheering building, a tire - testing labwatory and an added, paved test area on which maneuvering, handling and emergency situation tests can be performed, the company said.
SAFETY CENTER
James M. Roche, president of the auto industry giant, said the 88,000 - square - foot building would become the coordinating center-for all GM vehicle, driver and highway safety efforts.
Pressure has mounted on the auto industry this year from critics, including some in Congress and the federal executive branch, who contend American-fliade autos should feature added safety equipment.
GM last week announced plans to make collapsible steering coluihns and dual braking systems standard equipment on 1967 models.
★
The company said its planned testing area Would be unique in
the industry, permitting testing of autos at ail speeds and making possible better evaluation of controllability of vehicles, especially in critical situations unfavorable weather.
The new program, Roche said, "will maintain GM vehicle safety testing facilities as second to none in the automotive industry."
Ask (10 Million for Auto Safety
Bill May Be LBJ Drive on Highway Dangers
A Post article today by Morton Mintz reported that the blU also authorizes ^ million for the year ending in June 1968 to help States establish highway safety programs.
Patrols found new Viet Cong hideouts today, including abandoned tunnels and fortifications. A battalion-sized camp was discovered near where the farmers were blasted. A spokesman said it contained about 40,000 rounds of small arms ammunitions and been deserted for about a week when the paratroopers The |10 million would expand	district,
federal "highway safety
to include all asp^ts of search and development activl-highway safety systems re-.search and development relating to vehicle, highway and driver characteristics, accident investigations, communications, emergency medical care, transportation of the injured, and any other elements of the highway safety problem." •
OOEY—GOOEY—A slippin’ and a slidin’ good time was had by all in Oakland University's tug-of-mud bowl Saturday afternoon. Warm weather forced officials of the three-day
Winter Carnival to replace the skiing events with the tug-of-mud rally.
WASHINGTON (AP)-Author-ization for $10 million which would be spent to study auto add highway safety is Included in a draft of a bill the Washington Post says may become the President’s attack on the automobile safety problem.
Mines Sef Off Near Guarded Harvesf Area
18 in Vehicles Injured; 150 Cong Said Killed in Scattered Clashes
SAIGON, South Viet Nam (JP —The Viet Cong mined three buses today, killing 54 Vietnamese civilians and wounding 18 in retaliation for an allied operation that is guarding a huge rice harvest.
Allied ground forces reported killing 150 Viet Cong in scattered clashes elsewhere in South Viet Nam in the past 24 hours, while U.S. planes hammered Communist targets in North and South Viet Nam.
Guerrillas attacked a nv-emment outpost in the Mekong River delta, at Dinh Mon, and killed or captured all 11 defenders.
The death-dealing Viet Cong mines were set off on a road 10 miles southwest of Tuy Hoa, on the central coast where the U.S. 101st Airborne, South KOfean marines and South Vietnamese troops have been roaming the countryside for several weeks while the rice was being harvested.
★ ★ ★
An American spokesman said the first blast was touched off about 7:30 a.m., catching a busload of farmers and killing 27 and wounding 11.
DEEP CRATER The explosion left a crater nine feet deep in the road, hurled the bus into a canal and scattered bodies along the roadside.
About an hour and a half later, the spokesman said, a three-wheel vehicle used as a bus and Jammed with passengers drove along the same stretch of road aad tonched off a second mine. Another 20 Vietnamese were killed and seven wounded.
An hour and a half later a second three-wheel bus drove onto the scene and set off a third mine. This time seven persons were reported killed.
The Poet said the 20-pagc draft, stamped "for official use only," does not request authority for mandatory automobile safety standards or specifically for the construction of prototype safely cars. But both could be accomplished under the proposed legislation.
Waterford Wife Evens Things Up
Laotians Get Reassurance by Humphrey
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -U.S. Vice President Hubert H, Humphrey flew from Bangkok to Laos for a brief visit today and told the Laotians he had come to reassure them of his government’s pledge "to work with you in developing your resources”
Humphrey flew across the Mekong River from Thailand after making an aerial inspection tour of eight projects including sites for a huge power dam to serve both Laos and Thailand and a dam that will create a giant lake for irrigation.
A little over 20 months ago. April 29. 1964, the wife of Richard L. France Jr. gave him an original birthday present: Richard L. France II.
Saturday, Feb. 12, Patrieja France. 20. celebrated her own birthday with the birth of the couple’s second son, Douglas.
* « *
France. 19, and his wife live at 1229 Muskingum, Waterford Township.
Flash
MOSCOW (UPI) -Two Russian writers were convicted today of undermining Soviet communism with clandestine works, that they smuggled to the West and were sentenced to prison. Literary critic Andrei D. Sinyavtky received the maximnm sentence of seven years. Newsman-translator Yuli M. Daniel was sentenced to livn yenrs.
' i/'
TilE IHOTJAC 1*UESS. .MQXDAV, EEimUARV 1-t. 1966
aos^%)^veloping in Santo Domingo
2nd Trial to Open in '59 Miami Killing
MIAMI. Fla. (AP) — After'Force logbook figure as proba-serving six years of a life termible key exhibits in Shea’s new for a murder he coijfessed "be-[trial starting today.
cause I wanted to die, ” Joseph Shea, 26. now says he is innocent.
A bloody shirt and an Air
HEARTFELT VALENTINE-Lotus Lake school pupils Wanda Norton (center i, 10, of 6526 Cloverton and Donna Wherritt, 10, of 6544 Cloverton. both of Waterford Township, present local Marine recruiter M/Sgt. Kirk Wolford of 48611 DeQuindre, Avon Township, with $70 for CARE at a special ceremony at
The former airman's admission that he shot Mary Meslen-er. 23. Feb. 23, 1959, was uncorroborated at the first trial except for a psychiatrist’s port, and testimony that there was a spot of the victim’s type of blood on a shn-t belonging to Shea.
Dade County laboratory technician. Edward Whittaker, who said a trace of Mrs. Meslen-er’s kind of blood was found on the shirt along with much of Shea’s type, was on the state’s list of about 25 witnesses.
Among some 35 the defense planned to call were two experts expected to testify that none of the blood was the victim’s.
REUGIOUS BACKGROUND Shea, a handsome youth with religious background but a record of some mental distress, was expected to tell the jury he had been “mixed up’’ stained his shirt with blood drawn from his arms with an Air Force snakebite suction cup.
Lt. Col. Arthur W. Brown, formerly a psychiatrist at the West Palm Beach, Fla., Air Force Base where Shea was stationed, testified the shirt was in I IlCtnrt I	article of morbid fascination
ill l/ljlllU I	to Shea, "a symbol of his act.’
I Dr. Brown was expected to be a A 40-year-old'real estate salesj"^'*”^^® again. ^ manager filed petitions today|
ft M h 7 r T‘"® '°"‘" Miller, whose six months’ re-^ ^ Commission !	^	3
p mary. ^	^	^	trial, wrote that the Air Force
n 1	»	showed Shea could not
V w	''i	have been in Miami at the time
Bloomfield is sales manager for ^f ^^^der. The defense will the Marshall Realty Co, of Pon- pg,, g	^eep-
‘>ac.	5j,g3.g 33jj j3 widow, was said by the state to
Garling is making his second 11959, to testify about this. have engaged in an illicit lovei bid for public office. In 1958, |	*	*	*	affair with Powers,
he was an unsuccessful can- [ Miller wrote that the logbook, Mrs. Mossier returned to didatc for the City Commission. |Shows Shea was at the base, 65;court today after illness had
WILUAM A. GARLING
Enters Race
PontiK Prtii Ptwto
the school this morning. Pupils in the upper three grades at the Waterford Township elementary school collected funds to aid South Vietnamese refugees, using money they normally would have used to buy valentines for classmates.
'Powers Asked Me to Kidnap Mossier
Area Quieter, People Angrier
Old Rebel Enclave Is Restored in Spirit
By ROBERT BERRELLEZ SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) — disquiet and smell of disaster, so familiar at the height of last April’s Dominican revolution, pervades the heart of Santo Domingo,
Streets get dirtier and emptier, people seem angrier, shuttered homes even more hostile and quivers of apprehension increase as one drives from the western part of the city toward the downtown sector.
Plumes of dirty gray smoke give oft an acrid smell as they rise from burning mounds of garbage uncollected for weeks. Many people are in black — some mourning lost ones, others the occupation of the city by foreign troops.
Gunfire crackles sporadically here and there in the old part of town laid out 470 years ago. Amid the carnival of disorder f and hate, authority seems an ianachronisrh.
Birmingham Area News
Commission to Discuss Request for Village Fair
BIRMINGHAM — Among the items to be discussed at the City Commission meeting tonight will be the Birmingham-Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce request to hold a 1966 Village Fair in May.
★ ★ ★
Knowles B. Smith, executive director of the Chamber of Commerce, has requested that the fair be held May 19-22 during the city’s observance of Michigan Week.
The fair was held last year during the same period.
Smith believes that several improvements can be made this year which would be mutually advantageous to the public, the participating community organizations, concessionaires, and the city administration.
The chamber proposes to submit a point-by-point communication to the City Commission! covering the specifics of the fair] as soon as possible.
graduation from the lUniversity of Michigan. He has been president since 1955.
COL. RUDOLPH ABEL
Spy Claims He Outwitted FBI
The Women’s Council of Holy Name Church has announced plans for the annual fashion show to be held Thursday and Friday.	i
The show will consist of two parties, the first to include a! luncheon and fashion show'
Thursday and the second, a din-i I.	"“=‘|ner dance and fashion show on
MIAMI, Fla. (AP)—An Ar-brought to court earlier in the payment in 1962 to kill her	L	~~
kansas penitentiary convict tes-case. He testified that Mrs.'band, but that he spent the mon- ,	' „ , , ^ ...f‘ "|	w *	♦	jdolph Abel, .the former Soviet
tified today that Melvin Lane!Mossier gave him a $7,000 down ey and never went through with	Both parties will be held at	‘‘PyJ" Ui®'.Inited Jjtates,
RESTORED IN SPIRIT The old rebel enclave has Ip
Destroyed Evidence, Ex-Soviet Agent Says
Powers asked him to kidnap Jacques Mossier in 1962.
"We don’t want him back, we want him killed,’’ Powers was quoted by the witness, Arthur! Grimsley.
Powers is on trial with aunt, Candace Mossier, accused of slaying the 69-year-old Mossier in 1964. Mrs. Mossier, the
Twisters Rake Parts of Dixie
“constitutionalists" fought for d survival of their ideals.
Although the old military s checkpoints have disappeared, n it is difficult and probably more [1 dangerous to get into the central g sector these days. Roving bands ’ death.	I of teen-agers throw rocks at
Widespread- 1 Death'	"as bludgeoned and almost every passing vehicle.
“	'	stabbed with a knife 39 times in!	*	★	★
his Key Biscayne apartment' Snipers fire with apparently June 30, 1964. Unable to obtain a!less concentration on specific
I, and her 6-I foot-3 nephew, 29, are accused I of premeditated design to kill rher husband, to achieve access ' to his money, and to further an I illicit love affair. The maximum Rain, Flash Floods	“P""
.	.	f ..	^ I Duiii	will Lw nt’Ki HI	'•t'j •••	.....
leaders is finding its most el^jthe Oakland Hills Country Club'sa'd yesterday he was able to quent expression in the 20-a„d will feature Eddie Shick and	•’’BI agents and destroy
his five-piece orchestra.	|an important decoding device
The event is held yearly to and other evidence during his
the deal.
PAIR ACCUSED	square block area-where for
The chic Mrs. Mossier, who! four months last year rebel gives her age as ............'	.....................
By the Associated Press
raise funds for the projects of the Women’s Council and this year will display spring clothes, furs and children’s clothing.
A tornado-spawning wind and kiHep, the state sa.vs Pow-targets and stray bullets are the^®”^^^'
1957 arrest in New York.
Abel, who was convicted in Brooklyn Federal Court on Oct. 25, 1957. of spying for the Soviet Union and sentenced to 30 years BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Er-'".P"**""’ exchanged for U2 nest A. Jones, president of Mac-'g'®‘	®"
Manus, John and Adams, Inc.,| ® P’ will be guest of honor and fea-l Writing in a Soviet newspa-tured speaker at the Economici per about his arrest and inter-Club of Detroit luncheon next' rogation, Abel said he had hern in communication with Moscow the night before his
A	milcs fcom Miami, until 6:30:forced her to miss last Friday’sTainstorm that raked portions performed the slaying him-norm, not the exception	j
. . .	_ ..	. p.m. Mrs. Meslencr punched a session. She told newsmen she ofc, the South for hours moved ^.if during his aunt’s planned f’ or this reason, traffic intol Jones, 41, has been affiliated arrest and that his code and
time card at 7:36 p.m. at a Mi- had received a number of valen- «ot to si-a today II c	ami airline officc whcrc shc was tincs, although none from Pow- Tornadoes in North Carolina,
months with the U/- Army Air^3,	Virginia and Georgia yesterday
Corps during World War II.	^^3^	International mossi FR III
*	*	*	lAirport. Her blood-stained car, e tr r "	"	property. At least one death was
Garling is a charter member,which had been, parked at the Suffering from nerves tension reported, of the Neapolitan Club and its|airport, was found abandoned in “ migraine headache, Mrs.,	Hooding were
immediate past president. He Tampa, Fla	unable to make it, ^ead. Heaw rain fell
was one of the organizers of the if shea didn't commit the	^ *^**^^a th	spetions of Tennessee,
group now known as the Pro-'erime. why did he confess’.’ '®®''f	recessed the tria ,.p„„svlvania, Missi s s i p p i.
gressive Action Committee for	sERUM	weekend, with medical ^ Virginia. Alabama
Equality.	. assurance that she would be 3^^	^
During a truth serum test in back today.	^
the center of (own is at a mini-lwith MacManus, John and' a copy of a message from mum Foreigners, particularly | Adams since 1939 following his Moscow were i
p, , I	Americans and especially n
OiOf© JCiyCGGS	are not welcome. How-
'	ever, the Americans are repre-
sented right in the middle of it all by a company of 82nd Airborne paratroopers.	.
"It gets pretty lonely in here,! even at noon,” said Lt. John Counts, 24, of Denver, Colo.
The Americans are under
PJck LGvin in 5 Top Men
SERVED 3 TERMS
State Sen, Sander M. Levin of
Pontiac Man Asks Exam on Assault Charge
room when FBI agents arrived.
Under the careless watch of [an FBI agent, Abel said, he Hushed the decoder down a toilet.
★ A *
The message was under a pile of papers on my desk, ” he said. "While packing art ma-
Garling served three terms, tion: 1952-55, as a member of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors. He served on the juvenile committee which established Camp Oakland.
prison. Shea gave this cxplana- One of the first .scheduled wit-
An 11-ycar-old hoy died at Berkley, Democrat, was among ”®f f® without specificj A 23-year-old Pontiac m a n ferial I had used for painting.
I small	outstanding young men
"1 wanted to die. 1 was all nesses in the fifth week of the Troutman, N.C
mixed up.”	[sensational trial is Arthur building collapsed on him dur- the year named by the Mich- ,p.	^	downtown is
Defense attorneys said they'Grimsley, a convict from the in a storm yesterday.	(Sun Junior Chamber of f-uni-
also will seek to prove coercion Arkansas State Penitentiary —	*	a *	merce at its convention in	Sag- ..	. u , .	.
was used in obtaining the;,^he second prison inmate on “	Four to five	inches of	rain fell inaw during the weekend. ^
confession.
The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly cloudy and colder today with a chance of snow flurries mainly near Lake Michigan. High 28 to 34. Partial clearing and colder tonight with snow flurries near the Great Lakes. Low 12 In 20, slightly colder northern interior. Partly sunny with little temperature'change Tuesday. High 25 to 30. North to northwest winds 5 to 15 miles becoming variable tonight and south to southwest Tuesday. Wednesday outlook; mostly cloudy, windy and colder with snow flurries.
Tod«y In Ponlinc
Lowtit lcmp«rnturc prKnllng i ».
At I •.tn.: Wind Velocity tOlO n Direction: North-Northwest.
Sun leti Monday at 0:04 p.m. Sun ritei Tueaday at 7:30 a m Moon lati Monday al 13:41 p.m Moon rliai Tueiday at 4.43 a m
Weather: Partly <
Lowest temperaluri Mean temperature Weather: Fair.
Uoughton 33 10 I
Waather: Cloudy.
Downtown Tatnparalura*
nccuiiu friiMiii iiiiiimt.- uii <i Eour to five inchcs of rain fell inaw during the weekend. l)izarre slate of state wilnes.ses. ever norlhwe.stcrn North Caro- the others]
AAA	lina, flooding many low-lying are Robert J.
Grimsley is expected to sup- areas.	Bradshaw,
port a prosecution claim that 4 COUNTIES	credit manager]
Powers and his aunt shopped ____________.	■	...	^ . ol the Flint
around for a hired killer to do	Journal a n d
away with her husband.	”1-slate chairman
Jacques Mossier, 69, head of a ‘ "	iof the Jaycees;
$33 million banking and loan I" Virginia, rain, hail and j Don a Id E.i empire.	several small twisters marked Dodge, a cleri-
Billy Frank Mulvcy, 35, .scrv- a variety of weather yesler- |ral administra-ing a thievery .sentence in the '''■"J K“*»ts reached 70 i tor and linotype LEVIN Texas State Penitentiary, wasl m.p.h. and caused some dam- operator in Algonac; Loren E,
Gray, a Mount Pleasant attor-
Houses and house trailers Tuesday Final Day were damaged when tornadoes hit Griffin and Wintersville, Gi for Filing Petitions At Nicholson, Brazelton and Winder. Ga., tornadoes toppled 10 chicken houses. One farmer estimated he lost 75,000 chickens in the storm.
New York received nearly I'k inches of rain yesterday — the heaviest fall fur the date since and added nearly a billion gallons to the city’s upstate watershed.
Tomorrow is the iast day for candidates in the March 7 city primary to file petitions for their district nomination.
Nominating petitions must be filed with the city clerk. The clerk’s office will b<; open until 5 p.m. tomorrow.
ney; and Wendell E. Smith, an industrial engineer from Plymouth.
Levin, an attorney, represents the 15th Senatorial District in Oakland County.
Named by Capitol newsmen “the outstanding freshman ator,” Levin is chairman of the Senate Labor Committee, vice chairman of the education committee and member of the judiciary and election committees.
held for investigation of kidnap-1 simply cleaned my brushes on ing was arraigned Saturday on the paper, then crumpled it up a reduced charge of felonious and flushed that loo.” assault.	"The FBI .saw me do all of
*	*	*	this,” he added
Gary J. Rappuhn of 3(12 Hif-ford demand^ examination atj ER IIE( E his arraignment before Water-1 Abel al.so said he disposed of ford Township Justice Patrick another piece of incriminating K. Daly. -	evidence during the ride with
Daly set examination for Feb.!the agents to FBI headquarters 23 and ordered Rappuhn held [after the arrest, on $10,000 bond	a a a
AAA	; Abel said he adjusted his tie
Pontiac post State Police said [clip which contained a thin film Rappuhn forced a 48-year-o 1 d and, as he had hoped, an agent woman off the road early Sat-|grabbed it. "But instead of l(x>k-
„	....... urday, hit her on the head andJng at it, he started immediately
Provisional President Hector drove around with her some 30|to dismantle it,” Abel .said, and Garcia-Godoy rescinded his or-[minutes before being appre-l’ tlie film slipped out of the clip der transferring two of the threel bended.	unnoticed.”
chiefs of staff.	^
Former President Juan Bosch, the leader of the consti-] tutionalists, said the strikers] don’t want to destroy the mili-l tary because “without armed!, forces there can be no country.”!
But he added that most Domin-I leans “also know that there can| be no country if the military] does not respect civil authority.”	!
has taken 17 lives so far. The violence set off a strike, mostly in government offices and the sugar industry. Its chief purpose is to force two more military leaders to obey a presidential order transferring • them abroad.
The chief target of the constitutionalists, Armed Forces Minister Francisco J. Rivera Cam-inero, finally left the country last week. To get him to go.
Customer Right? Machines Say No
33 13 Ml*ml Bt 43 33 MllwaukK 31 13 Nrw Orl3
PllUburgh 43 31
3 37 W«3hlnglon 33
NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow will Cover much of the country from the Rockies across the northern plains and over the Great Lakes tonight. It will change to rain south of the lakes to the eastern Giilf Coast. Colder temperatures are predicted over the eastern third of the nation and the southern

.C'
OU BEAUTIES — Finalists In Oakland* University’s Miss OU contest in the order of their selection are (from left) Kathleen Longeway of 20706 Kennoway, Birmingham, Miss OU; Junq^ Lorimer of Northville, first fgnner-up; Kathleen Sullivan’of Oak	Park, second	runner-up; Carol	Hofler	of
.	. I ■	-	.
Alexandria, Va., third runner-up; and Suzanne Wibby of Berkley and Janis McLeod of St. Clair Shores, tied for fourth runner-up. Th^ finalists were revealed at Saturday night’s Snow Ball.
Some inhabitants of Pontiac’s hilltop City Hall arc grumbling, but not because of complaints from taxpayers.
The automatic vending machine has’ taken over the favorite and only spot for a coffee break on the hill.
Nine vending machines and a can opener have replaced two waitresses who formerly ran the small
employe cafeteria.
The results:
•	One day, coffee drinkers received hot water without coffee.
•	Then the dollar changer returned only 95 cents.
•	A 65-cent chicken sandwich was sold by a machine for 50 cents.
No complaints, however, have been noted against the cigarette machine.
A SPECTATOR
This device, which coexisfed with the former human help, has been a spectator to the switch from girl-type service to machine-type self-service.
He’s a mechanical veteran of the preautomation era.
He hears the employes whispering behind the backs of
bis mecbanical friends.
A sample of the comments?	;
•	“They (the machines) don’t lend money." .
•	“They don’t agree with you that you’re overworked.” ,
•	“They don’t hand out aspirins."
•	‘“rhey don’t smile.”
But, secretly, the wise old cigarette machine smiles. He knows. It will take time. Acceptance comes hard in this ! business. Waitresses are softer.
THE POX'iTAC rilESS. MONDAY, FEItUrAKV Ik IKtiC
Surveyor Program Is Skeleton in NASA Closet
By HOWARD BENEDICT AP Aerospace Writer CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. -The National Aeronautics and Space Administration generally has an excellent record launching spacecraft and making them work. But there’s a skeleton in the closet: the hapless Surveyor program whose goal is to soft-land an unmanned vAicle on the moon.
The recent gentle landing of the Soviet Union’s Luna 9 on the lunar surface focused attention on Surveyor — a program which a congressional subcommittee recently termed “one of the least orderly and most poorly I hangar, executed of NASA’s projects.”
General Accounting Office charged NASA and the rocket’s builder, General Dynamics-Astronautics, with bungling which delayed the program two years and cost the taxpayers an unnecessary $100 million.
feJ?*!"***"* ‘he spacecraft. |dig up and analyze samples of] The space agency said itl The officials said the. missiJ fioiunT	'".°^*'|the terrain.	. , would not be possible to develop is extremely difficult and seven!
tationTth?ouirK?hr	In December it was decided to seven of the spacecraft for,identical shots with the simplen
ISTear	^^Imake the first seven craft enei-	un-|vehicle would enhance chancesi
4'^ year history of the pro-|'"aKe the hrs^ seven cratt engi ,^3^ 3,,	! that at least one will succeed.
Additional problems cropped up, but a fully successful test flight last summer indicated the rocket was ready to boost a Surveyor. Another Atlas-Centaur was erected on a Cape Kennedy launch pad, slated to attempt the feat last October. But Surveyor wasn’t ready, and the booster was carted back to a
Tonite ’til wi
TUES. and WEDS. HOURS 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
gram as technical difficulties were encountered.
—Major spacecraft problems involved heat protection, vibrations, the retro-rocket system, a radar device to sense altitude above the moon and small vernier engines designed to guide the craft to a touchdown on the moon.
—The test program was “too austere.” This has been corrected and recent drop tests of the vehicle from an airplane were successful.
neering models.
Officials said this was done in j order to concentrate the effort! in developing a vehicle thatj could be soft-landed on the moon, because lunar bearing j surface information must be obtained by the end of 1967 to support the Apollo manned lunar landing program. The data is essential for building suitable Apollo landing gear and to help select a touchdown spot.
the lunar surface. The last six to be more sophisticated and would pack equipment to

That’s when the Karth* sub-ORIGINAL PLANS
wauld ha,. L„ ™ th.MANAGEMENT	iveyors «... 1. b. .ngteering
1963 and the Soviet Union would' report blamed the troublescarding only television not have reaped the propaganda >ax management by	^ instrurnents
value of achieving this historic headquarters. neglect by	bearingjtrength of
feat first while a similar Ameri-INASA’s Jet Propulsion Labora-can attempt foundered.	‘“''y which directs the program.
The first Surveyor now is evidence of disappointing scheduled to rocket toward the iPerformance by Hughes Air-moon in May, but chances of a eraft Co., which makes the successful soft landing on the^Poeecraft. initial attempt -are not great, ^he subcommittee said the Project officials noted the com- Program as originally conceived plexity of the mission and the "'as overambitious considering fact the Russians failed at least!‘he limited knowledge of space four times before recording a “'ght in 1960, success.	*	*	. *
$ YEARS BEHIND	conclusions of the re-|
Not only is the program three! -Perhaps direction of the I years behind schedule, its cost i program should have been shift-has spiraled out of this world, led from JPL to another NASA I Originally conceived in 1960 as a,center. During the first three*
$!i0-million program for scvenjyears of the program JPL con-! launchings, the price tag al-jcenlrated key manpower on the! ready has reached $350 million j Ranger moon probes and Mari-i and is expected to surpass $725 ner shots to Venus and Mars' million by the time the present- and virtually turned .Surveyar' ly planned 10 launchings are over to Hughes. The number of| completed.	jpl^ personnel on the program!
To find out what went wrong,,during this period ranged from the NASA oversight subcommit- 20 to 100. After an extensive re-1 lee of the House Space Commit- view in 1964, JPL assigned 500 tec recently conducted a probe.*io the project.
The group was headed by Rep.
Joseph Karth, D-Minn.	a. .u -
1, i, i,	: —At the beginning there was.
The result was a blistering 35-	between!
page attack on both government	^"**1
and industry management Hughes. NASA later was dis-
In a nutshell it .said: “A
project as troublesome as Sur-,.T‘'"'	a reorganiza-,
veyor demands vigorous cen-u®”.	the 1964 review.!
iralized management and effee-1	""‘y
live control from the top. From|'^ ^ recommendation. ,
SIMMS
Discount Annex
144 N. Saginaw St.
Downtown Pontiac-Next to Sears
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WITH BLADDER IRRITATION
Alter 31, common Kidney i
Hetdnchci, Bnckichei and le
All This Week at Simms
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all appearances, these impor- , lant elements have been largely	preliminary
...	”	SI lid V	litxna hitf/srA Ui inline.
missing right from the start. APPEAR.S READY H'he report said program management has been strengthened in recent months, most technical problems seem to be .solved and the first Surveyor now appears ready for flight in
study was done before Hughes
POWIIFUl PLUNGER ttEARS
OOCCEDTOILETS
in ajiffyl
May
The Karth subcommittee dealt mainly with the spacecraft. But the program’s difficulties also involved the launch vehicle, the Atla.s-(’cntaur rcK-k-
In 1960 no U.S. rocket was powerful enough to send the 2,-160-pound Surveyor to the moon. So a new stage, the hydrogen-powered Centaur, was developed for use with the Atlas.
High-energy liquid hydrogen was an untried rockcLfuel and engineers had trouble taming! this frigid fluid which must be kept at 423 degrees below zero,' even in flight.	j
A YEAR LATE The first test launching was more than a year late. Then the rocket exploded high above Cape Kennt>dy and 18 months were required to redesign the' vehicle.	|
During this ptTiud, congres-' dional and government agency investigations resulted in transfer of Atlas-Centaur management from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center to the l^ew-is Research Center. In 1963, the
wk*n yovr loil«l ovarilow*
TOILAFLIX-
Toilet	Plongor
Unlike ordinary
meuy water to tpitih back or aKipa. With IbiltfleE the full pretaure plow through the clogging man ant twiihet it down. Can’t miaal bCtlONtO TO rtex AT ANT ANOlt aucTioN-aiM tropt SPtAaH.aACK CCNTtat ITtfir, CAN'T AMID AAOUNO TAKMo TAii aivit Am TiOHr riT
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/
THE PONTIAC PRESS. MPypAV. FEBRUARY U, 1966
Hand of Mate Sent to Wife
Estror^d Husband Is Found Near Death
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) - The package was soaked with blood. Inside was a human hand and a note that read: “This is the hand that caused the trouble.”
Dr. Margaret Ansari stared at the package’s grisly contents yesterday and called police who found her estranged husband, an Indian neurosurgeon at Barnes Hospital, near death on the bathroom floor of his home.
The couple had been married for five years but for the past two months had been separated.
Police Said Dr. Kjurshed Ansari, 30, apparently had used i hacksaw to cut off his right hand and had then sent his hand to his estranged wife, an Amdh-ican.
Hospital authorities said today Ansari remained in critical condition but was improving. WITH FRIEND
Mrs. Ansari was staying with a friend.
Yesterday, a cabdriver knocked on the door and left a package, from which blood was trickling, with the friend, whoj opened the parcel and gave it i to Mrs. Ansari.
Police said they found four: notes in Dr. Ansari’s home. They were addressed to the city coroner; to whom it may concern: Nazir Ansari, the doctor's brother; and William Cox, an associate of Ansari at Barnes Hospital.
Police did not reveal the contents of the notes.
Scout Will Get Eagle Award
Sevehteen-year-old David L. Bone, son of Mr. and Mrs Howard Bone, 1634 Inverness, Sylvan Lake is to formally receive tonight his Eagle Scout award.
The youth, also a winner 0 f scouting's God and Country Award, is presently assistant scoutmaster
of Troop 9, First Methodist] Church, Pontiac, where ceremony will take place.
He is the first Scout from the troop to attain Eagle ranking since 1942.
Ai/r
iirMA
BONE
SPACE PROBLEM—Accommodating ever-longer runways isn’t the only space problem faced by modern air terminals. There’s also the matter of adequate parking areas for ground transportation. This view of San Francisco’s interna-
tional airport shows outdoor areas which now handle 1,400 vehicles. A giant new multilevel garage next to the terminal is adding another 2,700 parking places.
Student Trainees at Area Restaurant
Ex-Ambassador Dies WASHINGTON (AF) - Or me Wilson, 81, a former ambassador and a member of thevState Department from 1920 until “ 1946, died Sunday. Wilson was I appointed ambassador to Haiti! I by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1944. \	I
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APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Too Many Cooks Don't Spoil the Broth
Extra help, although inexperi-i year program “arc in high . The students work in twol Soon cards will be placed on enced, has fortified operations! demand,” noted Thorn.	‘ ““	"•■■rtrv.wr.re
at the Skyroom Restaurant at| They go directly into hotels Pontiac Municipal Airport.-	better restaurants as chefs.
*	*	*	assistant managers and dining
The newcomers — 15 students room supervisors, starting off '■'from Waterford Township and'at salaries ranging from $100 to Waterford Kettering i g h ®	^	^
|schools - began training last] charlotte Korte. a one-week with the start of second jg^^^er at Chadsey. is semester classes. .	manager of the Skyroom and
Mostly juniors, they have {also instructs students.
their hearts set on culinary '	----------
careers.
three-hour shifts at the restau- tables so that customers can rant, 8 a m. to 11 a m. and 11	operation,
a m. to 2 p.m.	LEASED FROM AIRPORT
Besides learning
lAdvorttMinont)
If You Are Under 80
... you can still apply for the same kind of life insurance policy available when you were] younger. Once your applicationj Upon completion of the two-is approved, the policy can be year program, most can be ex-| carri^ the rest of your life. jpected to seek employment in| No one will call on ydu. You, local restaurants, according toi handle the entire transaction! Dr. Burton K. Thorn, direction! direct by mail with the com- of vocational education of Wa-
Leased by Waterford Township Schools from the city-owned airport, the restaurant is signed to Waterford - Kettering
fundamentals of cooking, they receive dining room training.
In fact, much emphasis is High School, placed on the customer. Thei	*	*	*
restaurant is planning a work- Restaurant hours are 7:30 shop on “How to Put the Cus-a m- to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday tomer First.”	Ithrough Friday, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
—-------------------------— Saturdays and 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Sundays. The restaurant is , closed Mondays.
pany which helped pioneer insurance for senior Americans.
Tear out this ad and mail it today with your name, address and year of birth to Old American Ins. Co., 4900 Oak, Dept. LB221A, Kansas City, Mo. 64141.
VOLKSWAGEN
SALES—SERVICE Autobahn Notois. Inc.
1765 S. Ttitgriph Rd.
338.4593
terford Township Schools.
* ★ *
But some, he predicted, will further their education, enrolling in outstanding courses as offered by Oakland Community College and Michigan State University.
MORE PROMISING Employment in the restaurant field is more promising than many believe.
Products of Detroit Chadsey High School’s model three-
Should Draft'Minor Criminals,' cnff/n opens Says Selective Service Director Bid hr senate
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, ‘ Nom/nOf/On director of the Selective Service System, says “minor crimi- i
nals” should be drafted as part of the push to satisfy Viet Nam |	„
manpower needs.	(AP)—Rep.
Hershey said yesterday local draft boards have been ] Robert P. Griffin, claiming| ordered to reexamine men rejected on a moral basis in con- support of at least half the junction with the over-all lowering of mental and physical state Republican leadership, has! standards for military service.	opened his bid for the GOP Sen-
According to Hershey, there have been incidents of nomination.^ ^
“young men committing crimes to escape the draft. I feel :	j I
the armed forces should take some of these minor Congress, said he was confident!
he would get the GOP nomina-|
The downward revision of draft standards was made to tion for the seat now held by! facilitate induction of 360,000 men in the current fiscal year. Democrat Patrick V. McNama-j and another 160,000 in fiscal 1986-67 which opens July 1, 1966. ra.	j
Defense Department figures show that more than 200,000 ! The 42-year-old Traverse Cityj men have already been added to the service in the buildup, attorney said he did not expect.
AUTHORIZED STRENGTH
With the additional 150,000 or more to be called before July 1, authorized troops strength in the fall would be 3,093,000, 453,000 more than planned a year ago.
In a related develapment, a House Education subcommittee scheduled Wednesday hearings on the impact of drafting college students on the reservoir of trained professional manpower for civilian programs,
Hershey has said that college students in the lower ranks of their class would lose their deferments and be subject to the draft. This prompted the committee hearings.
ride on the governor’s coattails” if nominated. However,] he admitted it would be an advantage to be on the same tick, et with Gov. George Romney! and Lt. Gov. William Milliken. i Griffin spoke at a Lincoln Day dinner in Ionia Saturday night. |
Griffin said he decided to run! for the Senate, giving up a safe^ I congressional seat, because of |"a growing concern among the: Hershey also said yesterday he has had “several phone I American people that the two-j calls” on the subject of deferments or rejection of those who party system is too weak for have been involved In minor crimes.	I the good of the country.”
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
48 West Huron Street
Howa«» H. Hiicmali
Pontiac, Michigan
c vice President *
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14. 1966
HAROLD A. PITZOERALU
Vice President a Astd McCuiiv
It Seems to Me___
Legalized Lotteries Gaining Throughout United States
Las Vegas lives off gambling.
New Hampshire legalized lotteries. Many states approve horse racing and the easy taxes therefrom. Now New York State will probably make lotteries official and provide $400 million a year for education. In Maryland, this will be a major issue in the gubernatorial race.
★ ★ ★
Objections to gambling are well-known. In a legalized lottery, those who don’t believe don’t have to pay a cent. The whole co.st rests on the partici-
pants and yet everyone shares in the money that accrues.
★ ★ ★
Some gambling attracts undesirable elements, but the lottery is largely bookkeeping. A New York legislator has had a national lottery bill ready, but it remains bottled up for fear of violent opposition. If the proceeds of a national lottery reduced the national debt the move might claim a wide circle of adherents.
It may become a red-hot issue. What do YOU think?
Reaching a New Low..
One of the most despicable occupations in this hysterical era is the theft of children’s pets for quick sale to laboratories for scientific research.
It isn’t new or tiny.
It’s a big time deal.
★ ★ ★
There are gangs that definitely earn a living through the theft of puppies and other dogs. The labs used 2,250,000 dogs and cats last year. “At least half are
family pets," says Pageant Magazine, “and docifmented cruelty precedes .sale to the yawning maws that await them.’’ A half-ton pickup truck in Mi.ssouri was jammed with 00 dogs. 10 of which were injured to the point they were de.stroyed right there by Humane Society-agents.
★ ★ ★
Some are sold as pets.
But labs get the bulk.
And they’re stolen from children.
Cost of Public Interest?.
Professional athletics may have reached the zenith of financial largesse.
★	★	★	.
NHC is through paying ex-horbitant fees for TV rights. Carl Lindermann, VP in charge of sports, declares they’re hooked with .specific commitments but they’re hsiking elsewhere for the future. The stupendous charges far outweigh public interest.
★	★	★
Some of the money paid untried college football players bordered on the realms of mild insanity. fO. K. I take out the “mild.") The current
Lions flareup, stems back to the idiocy of a few pro moguls. Huarte, Notre Dame, was one of the boys in the astronomical bonus division and he couldn’t even make the team.
★ ★ ★
If the National Football League ever gets bright enough to wave an olive branch in the direction of the American League and works out a mutual draft, the situation will return to normalcy. Otherwise, it will bankrupt some of the clubs or place them in the doldrum.s, saddled permanently ^ with the weakest .s(|uads in the two leagues and a futur^of dismal financial failure.
Speeding Talk____
Speed-talk is the latest.
★ ★ ★
Any verbal announcement is fed into a machine that com-pre.sses each word into half the time and an electric device removes distortions. Then the listener will sit with jaws ajar as the same remarks are deliv-
ered twice a.s rapidly. This compres.sed voice is very commanding and demands attention.
★ ★ ★
Most of the people that tell me off, talk too rapidly and with too’great assurance as it is.
Can this process be reversed?
And in Conclusion..
Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter;
Watch for this: LBJ wants the post offices open a trifle longer in
the evening............. . There’s a
chestnut street vendor in New York thdt hai^ this waggish sign on his little wagon: “Eat now. Pay Now."
............ Overheard: "A recent
wedding in Rochester lasted three days. That’s longer than .some of Tommy Manville’s marriages." . . .
..........Chicago schools want a
$75 million bond issue, just for buildings.
★ ★ ★
T r u N 1 e d aS c 0 u I M advise me Linda Morse deserves mention as one of our attractive young ladies...........
....... If the
room temperature sinks to	_
an, why is it	LINDA
the little woman thinks it will
warm up faster If she pushes
the thermostat to K8?..........
. . . The other day we ran a list of TV programs that had been frowned upon ^or children. Several protests were phoned in but they rarely agreed on the shows
that were “right.”.............
Overheard (in Cuba): “There’s nothing like a fine cigar after no dinner.”
★ ★ ★
The A. ‘C. Nielsen TV standing.s only phone 1.100 homes for
their official ratings.............
Sporty looking automobiles are receiving Increasing customer acceptance from the public. The “teenage" demand is reaching into the older brackets.................Over-
heard : “Substandard homes are
those without color TV."...........
Dept, of Cheers and Jeers; the C’s—our own Bruno Kearn’s sports arena; the J’s—the junk mall from the Harvard University Press w.hlch sent us sixteen (16) (XVI) duplicate pleas to buy a certain some-thlng-or-other.
—Harold A. Fitzgerald
Voice of the People:
'Coll The U.N.!'
David Lawrence Says:
Viet War Could End Suddenly
WASHINGTON - Nobody can predict just when the Viet Nam war will end, but it could hap-den suddenly.
An unexpected * break has often . come in the ^ past.
Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, one of the advisers, on Viet Nam] who accompanied President Johnson to Hon- LAWRENCE olulu. makes this very point in a copyrighted interview published this week by '-U, S. News & World Report." -He said:
"I can remember how quickly situations have changed in the past. Take the Berlin airlift — how quickly it stopped oner the other side made its decision. And we had no intimation that it was going to end, or very little.
"The opening of negotiations in Korea came very quickly, although the negotiations thereafter dragged interminably.
".So we’re never quite sure. When you’re in action against an enemy and you’re hitting each other day by day, the only thing you know is that, if you keep hitting him long enough, .some day he’ll give way. And I hope we’re approaching that day "
IN COMMAND
Gen. Taylor was commander of our forces in Berlin during the latter part of the blockade crisis there. He later was U. N. commander in Korea and then became chairman of the U. S. Joint Chiefs of Staff in 1962. He served last year as American ambassador to Viet Nam.
He is very knowledgeable on the whole Viet Nam problem, and believes that steady, unrelenting pressure is more significant in its efferl than some single action or dramatic maneuver.
But even a policy intended to be resolute can fail to convince the enemy that it's time to quit.
If, for in.slance, the highbrow d e b a I c s by professorial witnesses before tbc Senate Foreign Relations Committee continue to belittle our strategy and to give at) impression of irreso-liileness or wcaknc.ss, the enemy will be encouraged to stick it our.
HIGHER PRICE Only when the North Viet Nam government makes up Its mind that the punishment being inflicted on it daily is not to be relaxed - and, instead, that the price is going to be higher in lives and damage to property-will there come a sudden decision to be realistic and arrange a cc)isc-fire.
Gen. Taylor explained America's military position as (ol-lows:
be the silver bridge,' which is always open to them, to withdraw from fheir situation." 4-POINT STRATEGY Gen. Taylor, in his interview, outlined the four-point strategy which the United States is pursuing in Viet Nam—the use of ground warfare, the effective employment of air power, the advancement of nonmilitary activities and the continuance of the effort through diplomacy to .find "an honorable, peacefdl solution at the negotiation table ”
lie said the four components together make up what he calls “the American strategy in South Viet Nam.”
He called it a "package" and remarked that one component can’t be separated from the other.
Bob Considine Says:
The general stressed also one of the significant steps that has been taken by the United States in sending 1,200 American civilians to Viet Nam to help in the development of a program in agriculture, health, education and economic expansion.
WILL CONTINUE This form of help will continue even after the war ends. The objective is to hold free eleci lions, unite the North and South' Vietnamese and bring a better life to all the people in this hitherto underdeveloped area.
The policy of the United Stales indeed envisions Viet Nam as an example of how substantial progress can be made by a small country when given guidance and direct aid by the nations of the free world
(Copyright im. Now Yorh Htrild Tribuno Syndlcott. Inc.)
‘Recent Cooking School Was Beneficial to Many’
Being the lucky winner of a clothes dryer, I wish to express my gratitude to everyone concerned and to The Pontiac Press for its sponsorship of the cooking school. Not only does it help the brides and inexperienced, it also gives modern and new ideas to the tired chef of the household.
MRS. D. G. RACOSKY WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
‘’Wlial Happened to Aiiieriea's Mothers?'
Motherhood is the most renowned state of life a human can possibly attain. What material frill can a working mother provide that can possibly replace her love and ready open arms? What has happened to our mothers who want to hold and nourish their children both physically and spiritually? Where are the mothers who are satisfied with a used refrigerator, or can save half a week’s pay by darning a sock, altering growing children’s clothing, cutting a head of hair or fussing over a special pot of stew? Where are the mothers who really stretch dad’s inadequate paycheck and make him feel proud and needed?
A MOTHER
SliidtMit	h'i^htiiig; in Viet Nam
I am a fifteen-year-old girl, attend Isaac C. Crary Jr. High, and have a brother in the Navy fighting in Viet Nam. What are we fighting for and what is the purpose? Why do they have to ask United Nations’ permission for other countries to assist? There was no United Nations in World War I and II to decide whether we should help in those wars. Why are they spending taxpayers’ money and time when they could be assisting the war?
ALTHEA CRAMER	Union Lake
Sugifjesls 'riirii SifiM at (lily liilrr»<*«iioii
We need a "left turn only" sign at Baldwin and Walton for the center lane. Drivers use this as a through lane and a sign might help^avoid an accident.
It would be a good idcR to have cars safety checked before new license plates are issued, considering the number with only one headlight and even more with no taillights.
• CLARIS M. SHEPHERD	213 W. Sheffield
Says l*art‘iils (ioiihl Help Keiiiirc Vaii<lulism
The new bond issue is upon us again in Waterford Township. Why don’t we protect what we already have in our community before we put out more money for .something cLse for children to destroy? The money that has bt'cn paid for repair of destruction by children would pay next year’s taxes for a lot of people.
* *
Why don't taxpayers pilch in and see what kind of policing is necessary to stop this vandalism? If more parents knew where their children were at night and cared about what they were doing, this would be a beginning to at least cutting down the destruction,
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP TAXPAYER
‘Friendless’ Billy Rose Had One Key Contact
NEW YORK - Tools Shor, who is es.sentially a kind man. .said the onkindest thing about Billy Rose. But he said it without malice about the i n-rredible little showman who died the other day.
I once told T(K)ts that I had heard a report that a mob was CONSIDINE going to kidnap Billy.
Toots made gruff noises that indieuted he didn't believe the report.
I a.ssured h i m that it had come from a highly respectable hoodlum.
★ * *
But still he wouldn't believe it. even though Billy was the perfect kidnap case: very rich, and easy to pick up and run with in case the bulks swooped down on the scene at the time of the snatch.
SH(K)K HIS HEAD Toots ,sh(K)k his head and all of his jowls.
I asked him what was wrong with the report that Billy would be kidnapped.
“Who would they contact?" Toots asked, spreading hfs hands.
and adviser, a giant in his lime. Hut now they arc dead, Bernie and Billy, his protege.
And as one who knew both of them, and wrote a lot about them, my grazing ground is diminished.
And I am poorer, though you’d hardly know it with the brave front I’m putting up.
Wrilf (ioiio;rt‘hHiii(‘n /Ahoiit Animal (iriirlly'
How many readers'^sajK-^e pictures in a weekly pictorial magazine of starving and frozen animals held by unscrupulous pet dealers, were shocked and sickened that conditions like these could exist in our country, but did nothing about it?
Eight bills are pending before Congress to prohibit this sort of thing, but the only way your congressman knows how you feel is by your letters, calls or telegrams.
CiEKALDINE PFITERSON	Waterford Township
‘KMrrIv NrnI Information on Mrdiran IMan'
In regard to Medicare, section 2, why doesn’t the government tell the older people what this program will cost them before they get any returns? How are they going to get doctors to make house calls?
A married couple will pay $72 a year dues. They will pay the first $50 expenses and $10 of the next $50 of expense. That is, each year, with no carry-over, each couple will pay $132 before they get any return. 1 can’t see where the government Is putting out very much.
ONE OF THE OLDER PEOPLE
Reviewing Other Editorial Pages
Great
Expectations!
The Arnold Glasgow
Many a gal who says “no" expects to be held for further questioning.
“We're trying to create a sit-uation whiqh. In the eyes of the leaders in Hanoi, will be more disadvantageous than what would arise If they give up their aggression. So we have Indicated there can be compensations, in terms of economic aid, par* . ticipation in the development of Southeast Asia, and other advantages.
"One would hope that this will
Billy heard the story in time, was at first angry at the suggestion that he had no friends, but finally pt around to laughing about It — with the same laugh he used during tirades directed against hhn as he wended his way to his broker’s place to buy another ton of AT4T stock.
WITH SOME HEAT
'i'll tell you who they could contact,” Billy said to me with some heat, the last time I talked to him and heard him relate Toots’ story to my surprise. “They could contact Bernard Baruch,”
He spoke of his close friend
Government
Controlled
The Harlington (Tex.) Star
In view t)f the way the federal government is taking over control of the federally subsidized public school system, any indication that the government is moving into the newspaper field via the subsidy route is disquieting. That which the government subsidizes, the government will control. The Supreme Court has laid down that ultimatum.
According to the Chronicle-Herald of Hoopeston, Illinois, the federal government has used $188,000 of the taxpayers' money to set up a subsidized newspaper in Willow Run, Michigan, which, in the subsidized newspapers’ own words, was to provide “honest and true reporting the government feels of interest.” That was bad enough. But now, the federal government is considering another $150,000 in tax funds to launch a newspaper which will be owned and
operated by a quasi governmental agency ... a community action group. We quote:
"The press is threatened by a request for a $150,000 federal grant to launch a weekly newspaper here. Rep. Donald Runs-feld, (R-III.) says.
“He denounced a proposal now under consideration by the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEOi for the demonstration grant to a Washington community action group to start the paper. The eight-page, 5-cent tabloid would serve residents of a poverty area.
“Approval of the request would put the government directly into the business of propagandizing, in competition with privately owned newspapers.
“This would amount to a violation of the constitutional guarantee of a free press. The next step could be for the government to tell the newspaper what it cais-and cannot say In print. Just how far has the Meral government gone in ■ process which could ultimately Result In official Pravdas and Izvestias in the United States.”
All Ways Help
The Baltimore Sun
Negro athletes have contributed a lot to improving the situation of all Negroes. This has been particularly true in prize fighting, from Joe Louis to Floyd Patterson. But lately, what a change!
Sonny Liston, despite some really decent impulses — his association with groups working with Negro orphanages, for instance — was a sorry champion. Cassius Clay has outraged and embarrassed Negroes and whites alike.
It’s good to read, therefore, that Clay has hired Louis to advise him. We ,hope I.«uls won’t limit hit advice to ring conduct.
He's quite wise in o t h q r ways. Once he was asked abwt his contribution to the civil rights movement. He said, “Some people do It by shouting, some march, some talk, some give lots of money, I do it my way, behaving. All ways help.”

Eventually...
The Richfield (Minn.) flews
Some lime you have to gq out on a limb. That's where the fruit
•" OsSUnd.	LIv
MacomOi LaoMT and WaiManaw Caunttai H ItnLM a V*vi alMwlwra m MIcMgan and
KiipMana payabtt In advanoa, eytiaga hat baan oaW at ma M «J«a rala at OanHab Mlchldan. *»«"*ar at Anc.
THE PONTIAC PRESS MAKE ElVLil
l»ONTIA<|, MICHIGAN. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14,
B-1
Valentines Are for Real and Cupid Scores a Hit
MRS. KENNETH B. VALENTINE
KATHLEEN VALENTINE
By MADELEINE DOEREN
Today has a special significance for some 20 families in the Pontiac area with the name of Valentine!
Historians are somewhat vague about the early observance of Valentine’s Day except ' for the fact that it falls on the feast of two different Chriatian martyrs named Valentine;
Three hundred years ago on St. Valentine’s Day in England, . young ladies behaved in a most peculiar manner. And with good reason.
★ ★ ★
Their strange conduct was based on an old superstition: that the first man seen by an unmarried girl on the holiday was destined to be her spouse.
Some girls took odd precautions to ensure their seeing the ‘right’ man first. Some stayed home all day to await his arrival. Others were said to have kept their eyes closed for interminable lengths of time.
* * ★
When the gentleman did appear, he usually brought a gift, perhaps a heart-shaped box of porcelain, enamel or gold, perhaps with a message inside.
It is from these tokens and missives that our present-day valentines and the custom of gift-giving on February 14 are derived.
★ ★ ★
Mrs. Kenneth B. Valentine of Phelan Street, in Deer Lake Estates will undoubtedly pursue Valentine genealogy further, for she is the subject of one of our thumbnail sketches today.
She is an alunuia of Butler University, Indianapolis, and earned her master’s degree at Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania.
★ ★
Her affiliations include Clark-ston Women’s Club, Clarkston Village Players, Waterford Book Review Group and IS years with the Waterford Great Books Groupi
(Continued on Page B-2)
'' C : % ‘ibsEANif A^!isi:K:ArHBR^
^ Calendar
TODAY
Soroptimist Club of Pontiac, 6:30 p.m.. Elks Temple. Dinner meeting.
TUESDAY
Oakland County Chap- , ter. National Association of Social Workers (NASW) 6:30 p.m., Devon Gables. Vital issues of social work ] f field to be discussed at ;;; dinner meeting.	*
Fashionette Club, 7 p.pi., Adah Shelly Li- , : brary. A nutritionist from | : Pontiac Osteopathic Hos-'I pital will speak.
WEDNESDAY Women’s World Series,
10 am., Pontiac Mall. "Exciting Lenten Meals’’
• by Mrs. Clarence W. , Kremer, home economist. ;
Veterans of Foreign Wars No. lOW, AuxUiary, < 1 p.m., VFW hall on Au-' burn Road.
Waterford Fashion Your Figure Club, 7 p.m., Schoolcraft School. "Importance of Wills.’’
North Oakland Association for Retarded Chil- ‘ dren, 8 p.m.. Community ‘ - Services Building. Silent ' auction.
Kingswood Has Traveling Art Coming Soon
kingswood School Cranbrook will host its first traveling art exhibition "Nine Utah Painters" from Feb. 21 through March 18.
Sponsored by the Phillips Gallery of Salt Lake City, the show represents the contemporary school of painting.
★	*	*
Stephen Beck of the school’s art department who arranged for the exhibition was a c|ass-mate at the University of Utah of the exhibitors; Darryl Barton, Don Olson, Lee Deffebach, Bonnie Gile, Dennis Phillips, Don Athey, Don Shepherd, Earl Jones and F. Anthony Smith.
★	*	*
V. Douglas Snow, a graduate of Cranbrook Academy of Art and current faculty member at the University of Utah, was also , A infloeptial In sending thlf ex-tvAj»hibitt»KingMood.
w.
‘ I’.;
MRS. ROBERT EDWARD VINCE
Acapulco Honeymoon for Robert Vinces
Flying to Acapulco, Mexico for a week’s honeymoon after Saturday vows in Christ Church Cranbrook were Robert Edward Vince of Detroit and his bride, the former Gail Lynne Glover.
★ ★ ★
They will return by way of Fort Lauderdale where her parents, the George H. Glovers of Bloomfield Village, have . a winter residence.
★	* a
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. God-lewski of New Kensington, Pa. are parents of the Jt>ridegroom. MAI^-ILLA . .
A hand-embroidered mantilla of Alencon lace complemented the bride’s gown and chapel train of ivory peau de sole. She carried white roses.
*	a *
Attending their former classmate at Kingswood School Cranbrook, were maid of honor, Barbara Barker with bridesmaids Dorothy GodlewskI, Washington, D.C.; Anne Coulter, Oxford; Mrs. Lawrence Heitsch and Mrs. James Fox, Birmingham.
Bonnie and Cindy Heitsch were flower girls at the afternoon ceremony, followed by a reception in the Village Woman’s Club.
George H. Glover Jr. was best man. Daniel A. Glover ushered along with Adolf Grjijeiif, Melvin Bannasch and WilliiAg Lookey Jr.	!	. ic
* ★
The couple has taken an apartment in Detroit. She la an alumna of the University of Michigan and earned a master’s degree from the University of California.
Bride-Elects' ‘
Is Honored
Carolyn Julia Kraus of Sylvan Lake was honored at a recent bridal shower and luncheon in ' the home of Mrs. Dale Menear on Brunswick Drive.
She will exchange vows with Arthur Lyle Robinet of Barnes Lpke, this «rening, in Sk Mne-dict’s Catholie Church. 4 I
Mrs. Charles C«rpe^ « Jos-lyn Road gavp «)| MM|rt .jjjve-nipg shower and Mis.'' Dahiel Dunaj of East Pike Street also was shower hostess with Mn. James Coulson assisting.
Parents of the couple are the late Mr. and Mrs. John A. Kraus and the late John Robinets.
Plans Summer Vows
ANN MARIE‘ ' y
GEHEI^AVK I
•’■"f
Mr. and Mrs. Ray- { mond H. Genereaux ) of Lake Orion an- I* nounce the engage-ment of their daugh- ; ter Ann Marie to J* John Joseph Driscoll, « v son of the John J, \ Driscolls of Jamaica, • Long Island, N.Y. A f-July 16 wedding-date " has been set.
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Our Pontiac Mall Store, Open Every Evening to 9 p.m. Our Birmingham Store, Open Thurs., PrL to 9; Sat. to 5:30
W MAP Mill
THE PONTIAC PRES?, .AlOXDAV. FEBRl^ARV U. 1966
s
eaths in Ponfiac and Neighboring Communities

Surviving are a son, John of , Dryden; two daughters, Florence of Detroit and Mr^ Lidia Andea of Dryden; and three I grandchildren.
Church, with burial in Mount:|yjj^	' Surviving are his wife, Ellen;
Hope Cemetery by Melvin A. pnrHFSTFR _ Sprvirp	daughters, Mrs. Ravmond!
Schutt Funeral Home.	i awrpnrp	and Mrs. Leonard Zieg-‘wo brothers, George and Rus-; employe
■ son, 71, of 308 W. Third will^bej*®’’-	-	Ken-isell, both of Oxford; and 10 Aviation
MRS. FRED C,. BRAY Requiem Mass for Mrs. Fred C. (Kathryn) Bray, 59, of 155 S. T'rancis was to be at 10 a.m. today at St. Vincent de Paul
Mr. Harris died yesterday after a long illness. A lathe operator at Acme Manufacturing Co., Ferndale. he was a member of the First Baptist Church.
Surviving are his w i f e, Gladys; two sons, Donald of Pryden and Arthur Spies of Im-lay City; two daughters, Mrs. Leota Weingartz of Imlay City and Marilyn Spies of Almont
Mrs. Bray died Friday after a long illness. She was a housewife and a member of the Rosary Altar Society of the League of Catholic Women.
Surviving are a d a u g h t e r, Mrs. Joan Ann Goodwin of Cim-momanson, N.J.. four sisters: and two brothers.
JAMES BURDER Service for former Pontiac resident James Border, 64, of Hollywood, Fla., will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy.
Mr. Border died Wednesday after a short illness. A former superintendent at Timken-De-troit Axle Division, he was a member of Pontiac Lodge No. 810, BPOE.
Surviving are his wife. Mary; a daughter, Mrs. H. J. Stephens of Pontiac; two brothers, William of Pontiac and Frank of Florida; two sisters; and five grandchildren.
DENIS W. HASTED Private service foi> Denis W. Hasted. 23, of 4096 Crocus, Waterford Township, will be tomorrow at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home.
Mr. Hasted’s body was discovered at his home yesterday.
He was a meat cutter for Stanley Morris Livingston Co. of Detroit.
Contributions can be made to Boys Town, Neb.
MAX L. LaVALLEY Service for Max L. LaValley, 68. of 1474 Orchid, Waterford Township, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery.
A retired carpenter. Mr. LaValley died Saturday after a long illness.
Wednesday at Pixley Memorial Chapel. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery.
Mrs. Ferguson died Saturday after a long illness.
Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Curtis Weiser of Detroit and Mrs. Frank Trificano of Hollywood, Fla.; five grandchildren; four great-grandchilditn; and one sister.
RUSSELL A. FIELD WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Service for Russell A. Field, 61. of 7876 Commerce will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Commerce Cemetery. Commerce Lodge No. 121, F&AM, will conduct a memorial service at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home.
Mr. Field died yesterday after a short illness.
A retired employe of Consumers Power Co., he was a member of Commerce Lodge No. 301, OES, and a life mem- ( ber of the Oakland County Sportsman’s Club.
Surviving are his wife, Lu-le; two brothers, Lester of Orchard Lake and Willis of Commerce; and a sister, Mrs. Naomi Kempton of Waterford Township.
FELIX H. GALUSZKA GROVELAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Felix H. Galuszka, 49, of 15178 Dixie will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Rita’s Catholic Church, Holly. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery by the Dryer Funeral Home. Rosary will be 7 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home.
Mr. Galuszka died yesterday after a long illness. An employe of the Ternstedt plant in Flint, he was a member of St. Rita’s
neth Kuritch of Shelby Town- grandchildren, ship; and three sons, William F. at home, John E. Jr of Grandj I RED O. WALTER Rapids and Thomas L of Madi-| WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP son Heights.
Also surviving are one sister and 19 grandchildren.
HILON G. MUZZY HOLLY — Service for Hilon G. Muzzy, 71, of 104 Cogshall will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the First Baptist Church. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery by the Dryer Funeral Home.
Masonic Memorial service will be 8 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home.
Muzzy died yesterday after a short illness. He was a member of Holly Lodge No. 134,
F&AM, and past master of Aus-| tin Lodge No, 48, F&AM, Davis- j burg, and a member of the First Baptist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Thcl-' la; one son, Landis Granger of Holly; one daughter, Mrs.
William Wood of Essexville;! seven grandchildren; one broth-1 er, Carl of Holly; and one sister,'
Mrs. Aden Highfield of Holly.
of 9600 Garforth will be 1 p.m, Wednesday at the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Burial will be in Lakeside Cemetery.
Walter died yesterday after a long illness. He was an the Commander 10 Aviation Co., Waterford Township.
Surviving are his wife, Helen; two sons, Douglas at home and Donald of Detroit; and two
Four Are Caught in School Break-In
Pontiac police and a school principal collaborated Saturday night to apprehend four juveniles who used a stolen set of keys to get into Eastern Junior Hi^ School, 25 S. Sanford.
The four were caught by Theodore E. Wiersema, 62, principal at Eastern, who held them until police arrived.
Police said the four had entered the school with a set of keys taken in a previous break-
Woman Is Held in Shooting
A 24-year-oM Pontiac woman faces arraignment on a charge of assault with intent to murder after allegedly shooting her husband last night.
★ * *
Pontiac police said Mrs. James Mathis of 438 Howard McNeill shot her husband, James, 28, in the arm with a 22-caliber revolver.
Mathis was treated for the wound at Pontiac Hospital and was listed in satisfactory condition.
Another man, John Gosby, 41, of Detroit, also suffered a gunshot wound, according to police.
when he attempted to Intercede in an argument which preceded the shooting.
★ * ★
Gosby was not hospitalized.
To Seek Griffin Seat MUSKEGON (AP) - Wesley Tebeau of Muskegon has announced his candidacy for the congressional seat held by U.S. Rep. Robert Griffin, R-lhich. Griffin said he plans to run for the U.S. Senate. Tebeau is chairman of the Michigan Tourist Council.
Surviving are three sons. Maxi Church.
•• Surviving are his wife, Irene;
L. of Pontiac, Paul J. of Hadley and Thomas G. of Highland Park; a daughter, Mrs. Joseph Strzelecki of Lake Orion; three brothers; a sister; and eight grandchildren.
THOMAS E. LAWLER Requiem Mass for Thomas E. Lawler, 52, formerly of Pontiac, will be 10:30 a m. Wednesday at St. Michael’s Church, with burial in White Chapel Cemetery. Rosary will be said at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Don-elson-Johns Funeral Home.
Mr. Lawler died Saturday. He was an employe of B. F. Goodrich Co.	4
Surviving are his wife, Margaret, and two sisters.
MRS. LEONARD D. PRIOR Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Leonard p. Prior, 86, of Bay City will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Penzien and Vallender Funeral Home, Bay City. Graveside service will be 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery.
Mrs. Prior died Saturday after a long Illness.
Surviving besides her husband are a son, Glenn R. Rivard of Pontiac; 12 grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren.
RALPH C. SEEGRAVES Service for Ralph C. See-graves, 40, of 40 S. Paddock will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery.	i
A baker at Tasty Bakery, Mr.| Seegraves died Saturday after a short illness.	j
Surviving are his wife, Hilda; i his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wiley j G. Seegraves of C r o s s v i I le, Tenn.; five children, Ralph C.,1 Linda Kay, Darrell Lee, Dale|| Alan and Robin Ray, all at | home; a brother, Darrell D. of!i Pontiac; and a sister.	p
CASPER C. VERPOOTEN I Service for former Pontiac resident Casper C. Verpooten, 77. of Fenton, will be 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at St. Trinity Lutheran Church, with burial at White Chapel Cemetery by Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home.
Mr. Verpooten died Saturday after a long illness.
JOHN BACIS
DRYDEN - Service for John Bacla, 75, of 4365 Hollow Corners will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the . Dryden Methodist Church. Burial will be in Mount s Pleasant Cemetery by Muir | Brothers Funeral Home, Al- !lj iDont.	a
Mr. Bacis died yesterday after a long illness. A retired farmer, he was a member of the First Rumanian Baptist Church of Detroit.
two sons, Paul of Grand Blanc and Felix Jr. at home; two daughters, Diane and Barbara, both at home; and two brothers.
JOHN EDWARD HARRIS SR. TROY - Service for John Ed-ard Harris Sr., 58, of 2310
FRANK RUSSELL
LAPEER TOWNSHIP - Serv-; ice for Prank Russell, 87, of 2451 Greenwood will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at Trinity Methodist Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery.
Mr. Russell, a former township supervisor, died Saturday after a short illness.
Surviving are two sons. Earl! Russell and Norley Russell, both' of Lapeer; one daughter, Mrs. Violet Brinker of Lapeer; one brother, Bert Russell of Davison; 12 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.
EDWARD D. VANDAWAKER
ALMONT TOWNSHIP - Service for Edward D. Vandawaker, 67. of 6345 General Squiers will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, A1-, mont. Burial will be in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Dryden.
Mr. Vandawaker died Friday. A Dryden High School bus driver, he was a retired farmer and l former employe of Champion
Tucker will be 1 p.m.’ Wednes- Home Builders Co. of Dryden. day at the First Baptist Church. I He was a member of Dryden Burial will be in Christian Me-|Lodge No. 150, F&AM; Dryden morial Estates Cemetery, Avon Chapter No. 338, Order of thel Township, by the Price Funeral Eastern Star; and the Michigan Home.	'Fox Hunters Association.
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FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL STAMPS
THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14. 1966
The following are top prices coming Saks of locally grown proddce by growers and sold by them in wboksak package lots. Quotations are furnisbed by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday.
Produce
Rails Strong in Mart Action
Applj*, Norttiwn Spy, bu. ..
vaesTASLat
Betli, topnd. bu..............
CiibbpptTTurty, bu............
"S'	............
cirrX'loppiiil. “bu. . . .....
Cel«ry, Root, dz...........
Horooradlih, pk. bikt.........
Le»k«, di. bchj...............
Onioni, dry, 50-lb. bog ......
Poronlpt Cello' Pek, dz.......
Pototots, 50 lbs...........
Potoloos, 25 Ibi........
Radlilws, block, W bu. Radishes, hothouse, dz. bchs. Rhuborb, hothouse, 5-lb. box .. Rhuborb, hothouse, dz. bchs.
Squosh, Acorn, '/y bu.........
Squosh, Buttercup, bu.........
Squooh, Butternut, bu..........
Squosh, Delicious, bu.........
Squosh, Hubbord, "

NEW YORK (AP) -Rails showed continued strai^ and steels advanced in an iiregiilar-ly higher slock market early today. Trading was active.
Gains of fractions to a point or mwe were scattered throughout the list along with a wide variety of losses, mostly fractional.
★ *
Santa Fe rose 1 to 4m on an opening block of 18,000 shares 1 Chicago Si North Western rose Vh to 12914 on an opener of 2,600 shares.
Illinois Central rose more than a point.
U.S. Steel gained 1 whik Beth-kbem and Rqwblic added frac-
Douglas Aircraft early 2. Fractional losses were taken by other aeroqrace stocks, such as United Aircraft, Boeing and General Dynamics. SHOWS GAIN
Eastman Kodak gained 1. Du Pont dipped a fraction.
IBM lost 2. Pokroid rose more than 2. U.S. Smelting gained 1. Other nonforous metals were narrowly mixed,
Ford gained a fraction. General Motors (ex dividend), Chrys-
ler and Studebaker edged lower.
Airlines were scrambled. Pan American gained a fraction. Eastern lost nearly a point.
Jersey Standard and Standard of Indiana were fractional losers.
Control Data was delayed in opening and rose IV4 to 30 on 25,000 shares.
★	★ A
Prices were generally higher on the American Stock Exchange. Edo Corp. “A” rose more than a point.
On Friday The Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose .8 to 367.9.
Posts Filled at Consumers
Jackson Man Named Pontiac Supervisor
Edward A. Weliver of Jack-son has been named personnel and safety supervisor for Consumers Power Co,s. Pontiac division, Charles F. Brown, division manager, has announcedi
Ihe New York Stock Exchange
WEUVER HARTRICK
Weliver succeeds Phillip A. Hartrick, who has been named to a similar position with the company’s Battk Creek division.
A MkUgaa State University gradnate, WeUver Joined Coo-tnmers Power In 1981. Before that, he was a management employe wUh Kelvinator Division of American Motors Corp.
Hartrick, also a Michigan State University graduate, has been with the Pontiac division since joining Consumers Power in 1952.
Both men wilj begin their iw assignments Monday, Brown said.
■MAKE mm pAm,-,
Loan Demand Ups Pressure on Rates
)ut its fifth year, ir loans is rising
M
'^1
By SAM DAWSON AP Bnsineu News Analyst NEW YORK-As the business boom rounds out its fifth year, the demand for loans is rising and with it the pressure for still higher interest rates.
Many in the banking field feel that another hike in the cost of borrowing is not too far off.
Involved would be consumers, DAWSON business firms, buyers of new homes.
Put the other way around, rewards for savers and returns to lenders would be rising further. This runs all the way from the interest payments on U. S. savings bonds and bank savings accounts to the yield enjoyed by sui^liers of funds for mortgages or for business expansion.
# ★ *
The administration is expected to oppose this, or to delay it as long as possible. It prefers money to be plentiful and fairly cheap to keep the economy expanding through a sixth straight year.
Some banks already are raising again the interest they will pay on large deposits tied up for six months or more.
OTHER SIDE bn the other side of the coin, the Federal Housing Administration has just raised the interest charged on mortgages it insures. Formerly this cost 5V4 per cent. Now it costs 514 per cent. Lenders of conventional mortgages unbacked by the FHA get an average of 6 per ‘ The building industry is
By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) ”I am a wUow of 53, living comfortably on interest from money in savtags banks. I own lit shares Times Inc., which is new worth $15,888. Sboold I hold or seU half and put the proceeds Intp *the bank? What do ymi think of New England Telephone? It doesn’t seem to do very mnch. My mother bought it five years ago at IU4 and it shows a loss.”	^.c.
A) New England Telephone is hn excellent income i^ucer, ■ ■ its growth—except for the past two years—has been only moderate. I advise your mother to keep the stock. The current yield is 4.5 per cent and since New England — particularly Boston — is undergoing somewhat of a renaissance, I believe the stock will show further appreciation.
You have an excellent growth holding In Time Inc. I believe you should switch half to Eastman Kodak for diversification purposes only. I advise you to add no more to savings, since these — unlike the two stocks mentioned — can offer you no inflation protection whatsoever, n ★ w
Q) ”I own $N,888 Series H bonds, maturing March 1188.
arvuMem, ausMUtag IflWVB IPW. .IJ w u/ll—
Can you teU me the advent-
ages hi savtags bonds or good municipal bonds. I am in my 78s and Interested only in •afety."	—C.F.
A) Your Series H bonds maturing next month have been extension. Ihe President has announced that the interest rate will be raised on all bonds now outstanding, u well as on those to be extended. For a person in yoiff there are great vantages in holding uv bonds. You get absolute safety combined with complete stability, which is unobtaiiiable in any other bond whatsoever.
Municipals offer a higher taxable equivalent yield if your in-some is in the upper brackets. They do fluctuate on money conditions, which might disturb you. I advise yog to extend your Series H bonds.
Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Snecesefui bvestlng Is available Is aU readers el this cofamm. For your copy, clip this uettee atal send |1JI with address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1818, Gram! Ceatral Station, New York, N.Y. 18817.
(Copyright, 1888)
MICHAEL R. BECKER
GM Credit Union Picks Officers at Annual Meeting
Michael R. Becker, 1844 Lakeland, Sylvan Lake, recently wu reelect^ president of the GMTC Emplo^ Federa' Oedlt Union.
Other officers elected at the group’s 3(Mh anniversary were Hi Hudak, vice president; H. W. Reeve, secretary; and Harry J. Woodman, treasurer.
♦	★ A
Named to the board of directors were Rudolph Hartman, Nick B. Skosich, Charles Talbot, WilUam J. Tobin and Doo-
debating whether interest increases all along the line are in prospect.
Banks borrowing from the Fedval Reserve have been paying 4\4 per cent since early December, when the cost went up by H per cent. Dr. Roy L. Reierson, senior vice president. Bankers Trust Cktmpany, New York, predicts this soon will be raised still higher. Other bankers express the same belief privately.
The increase in the discount rate in December brought a rebuke from Washington but was quickly followed by an idmtical H per cent rise in the prime rate charged by the banks to their largest customers with the best credit rating. It is now 5 per cent. Dr. Reierson thinks it will go up again. That would mean that the great volume of bank loans, always higher than the prime rate, will be more costly,' too.
The Federal Reserve since December has allowed banks to charge 5V4 per cent on time deposits, but only 4 per cent on
time deposits yet, but several have raised their interest rates close to it.
DEMAND HIGH
The reason banks and other lendo-s are willing to pay savers more these (toys is that the demand for loans has risen so high — and the interest that can be earned on bank loans has gone up so much, too — that lenders are competing for funds. To do that they lure savers with higher rewards.
Predictions that the demand f<» funds will goon growing — and that interest rates will keep in step — are based on the majority view in financial circles that the economic upswing is sure to continue through 1966.
* * *
Spending for the Viet Nam war will stimulate the economic growth. And i( this should slacken, bankers feel that the spending for Great Society programs would be quickly increased.
They add that any real letdown in the economy’s pace would inspire the administration to seek new tax cuts and bigger
regular savings accounts. Few federal deficits to revive the banks will pay that much (wi boom.
N.Y. Banker Urges U.S. to Give Foreign Aid to Fewer Nations
DETROIT (AP) - New York banker David Rockefeller urged today that U.S. foreign aid be channeled to fewer recipients -«8pecially to nations trying cope with die problems of too many people and not enough food.
★ A ★
Rocdcefeller, president Chase Manhattan Bank, told the Economic Club of Detroit prepared remarks;
“The problems of population and the productiveness of agriculture must be given a new and far greater emphasis in all thinking and actions relating die economic advance of the de-
Directors of the credit union declared a 4K> per cent dividend on shares and a 15 per cent interest refund, making a total of $680,000 returned to the members for 1885. Assets at the end of the year were listed as $12, 712,482.
“Discing our investment efforts among dotens of nations usually results in making our contribution to each of them too small..., at the same time depriving those relatively few which could competendy utilize more aid,” Rockefeller said. NA’nON’S POTENTIAL
An underdeveloped nation’s advancement potential, he suggested, depends largely on birth control and increased farm output. If progress is not made in he said, “widespread famine will be a grim condition of life — or rather of death — in large areas of the world.”
Some poorer nations, be warned. Ignored the need for more f<)od and devote too much capital to “the fetish of trialiiation." These should receive a smaller share of U.S. foreign aid. Rockefeller said.
*	* w
He also urged that underdeveloped nations invest in needed building programs — roads and railroads, canals, harbors and dams. And he said such nations should take added steps to encourage private investment in their economies.
Rockefeller asked that Ckxi-gress pass a measure now before it, providing a 30 per cent
Business Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Jack-son of Jackson Equipment Rental Sales and Service, 82 W. Montcalm, will attend the American Rental Association convention Monday through Thursday in Washington, D.C.
Appointment of George L La-hodny, of 31771 Verona, Bloomfield H i 11 s, uf to
chairman of thel board of Detroit Edison Co. has
by Board
Walker L|
CIsler.
Lahodny will' will continue as LAHODNY manager of sales for the company. He was named to this position last April.
Record High in Wholesale Price Level
WASHINGTON (UPD-Whole-sale prices - a major indicator of inflationary trends — rose 0.5 per cent in January to another record high.
The labor department reported yesterday that prices in primary markets went up to 104.8 per cent of their average level in their 1867-80 base period.
They were 18 per cent higher than a year ago.
Farm products and processed oods showed the largest increases and prices for Industrial comnwdlties also advanced as the nation’s economy neared the five-year mark of continued
Wholesale prices, along with the consumer price index, are
tax credit in the first year on private U.S. investments in developing countries.
★	* A
“It is alw my conviction that, by broadening still further the risk guarantees that our government provides for qualified overseas investments, more businesses would avail themselves of venturesome opportunities," he said.
GM Worker Ideas Draw Record Funds
Employes at both Pontiac Motor Division and GMC "rruck & Coach Division were awarded record amounts last year under the General Motors Suggestion Plan.
A total of $276,737 was awarded to Pontiac Motor employes for 2,548 suggestions adopted by the division and 2,521 Fisher B<Rly workers shared $131,806. Employe suggestioas are imed at methods of making
Pontiac Motor made five maximum awards of $8,000 last year and GMC Truck & Coach made three.
* ★ ★
Fisher Body Division, presented $50,000 in suggestion compensation during 1965 on ",136 suggestions.
There were no maximum award winners.
News in Brief
Robert Soe, 38, of 575 Tennyson was assessed $125 in a fine and costs yesterday by Orion Township Justice Helmar Stan-aback after pleading guilty to a charge of driving under the influence of liquor.
Waterford Township police are investigating the theft of an I-beam valued at $75 from 6882 Terrell.
Farmington Firm Boys Subsidiary in Ohio
Futurmill, Inc., of Farming-ton, manufacturer of milling cutters and machine tools, d i s-closed today it has purchased the Cleveland Planner Co.
R. G. Begle, president, said the Ohio facility will become an Integral part of Futurmlll’s machine tool division, and will continue to operate at its present location as a wholly-owned subsidiary.
Lodge Calendar
Annual meeting of the Quadrant Low 12 Club will be held on Wednesday, February 16, at
two of the major barometers the Pontiac Lodge Temple, 18*4 used by governmental experts E. Lawrence St., at 8 p.m. Elec-to measure economic activity Uon of officers and other im-and the need for brakes of itim- portant business. Signed-Lloyd ulants for the economy.	| W. Bumes, Secy.	—Adv.
THREE COLORS
‘ shades of something nefw. In a color so
every way at HHS
Our Pontiac MafI Store Is Open fvery Evening to 9 p.m. — Our Birmingham Store Open Monday to 5:30
THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY li, 1966
DOOR BLOCKED - New York Rangers’ Phil Goyette (20) tries to get the puck in the net on this play, but Chicago’s goalie Glenn Hall (right) and Bill Hay (11) close.
off the scoring avenue in first period action of their game in Chicago last night. Chicago won, 6-1.
Oxford, Milford Gain Basketball Respect
Michigan Five in Big 10 Lead
Michigan Mkh. Stata Minn, illlnois
Ohio Stata Nj^tern
N CONFERENCE —AM Oar^ J. W L PCI. .815 13 5 .732 \	.750	13	$	.722
!	.714	12	5	.706
I	.625	9	9	.500
1	.429	12	5	.706
d..
Skipper Skiers Take Two Races at A^ounf Holly
Waterford Township skiers beat Bloomfield Hills boys and girls' teams Saturday in the final giant slalom tests on the Mount Holly Prep Ski League runs.
The Skippers’ boys were four and a half seconds faster than HiHs’ cumulative times for four boys making two runs each. Walled Lake was a distant third and Utica finished well behind the Vikings.
Individually, Scott Thomley and Cheryl Smith, both of Bloomfield Hills, led the way with Townstiip skiers close b^ hind.
MOUNT NOLLY SKI LtAOUI
PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPl) -The new Atlanta Falcons were desperately searching for support from other National Football League clubs today as the league opened its winter meetings.
The Falcons, who must pick up the nucleus for the first team which will play In the!
press to force Wisconsin speed up its game, walloped the d g e r s 120-102 Saturday. Meanwhile, Minnesota defeated Michigan State, 81-71, to drop the Spartans one game back of Michigan.
Indiana bumped Illinois 81-77, Northwestern dropped Iowa, 81-73, and Ohio State crushed Purdue 68-54.
Michigan’s pressing defense was chiefly responsible for a record breaking performance. The Wolverines broke two team scoring records and now share two, including a Big Ten mark, with the Badgers.
GAME MARK
The 120 points scored by the Wolverines broke the game mark of 117, set against the Univer-Falcons would be able to se- the selection of a 16th team toi^S	hi!f®
Purdi
ANN ARBOR (AP) - A decision to use the zone press and an unexpected boost from Minnesota have put Michigan back on top of the Big Ten basketball race.
The Wolverines, using the
Atlanta Awaits NFL Player Lists
lect their three from the 15 remaining.
But it was becoming obvious by late Sunday night that the clubs were more inclined to set the figure no lower than 32 on the freeze list and possibly as high as 34.
1966 season, were finding out' would mean that the that the other 14 teams didn’t
plan to be as generous as theyir^^'**	^e taken
had earlier anticipated..	®een lit-
. .u	the conference high of 110
rS h	”'°!,®lpoints set against Indiana
started when Atlanta was ad-|jgg2
The two-team total of 222
Wiltrtord, I 141.1; Wdllfd Lake, 17a.1; Ulica, 141.1. l*«vMial ■eyi' Olaal Slalam I Scott Thornlay. BH. 317; 1. Tom Webltcr; W. 31.7; 3 Rich Schreiner, W, 331,	4. Wally Sleeker, BH, 3S.1; i.
OIrli' Team Ratwili
Waterford, 131.0; Bloomfield Hint. 1413; Walled Lake. ISI S.
The Falcons are to get three players from each of the other 14 clubs for total of 42 veterans. These, together with the players acquired through the college draft and those signed as free agents, «re to make up the training rosters for the team which becomes the 15th mem-‘ ber of the NFL next fall.
It was first believed that each club would freeze 25 of the 40 players who were on their active roster at the close of the 1965 season and that the
tie action for 'teams.
ROUTINE REPORTS The first day’s session was expected to be devoted almost entirely to routine reports ty various league committees and the pressing question of how many players the Falcons would have a shot at was not expected to be decided until Tuesday.
The Falcons then will have until probably Thursday to complete their choices.
The only other burning issue before this year’s meeting
mitted to the NFL last year with play to beginln 1966.
The other team will not actually begin play until 1967 and it was clearly indicated that although discussions about the expansion will come up at the meeting any final decision >yon’t be made until later.
Seven cities are seeking the'wicMioAN itatb Minnesota new franchise in the NFL. They wasn ion ® 3^ n ovor k ® oo
their present are Boston, Cincinnati, Hous-.........	•...................
ton. New Orleans, Phoenix,
Portland and Seattie.
points eclipsed the 204 scored in the 117-97 verdict over Detroit and the Big Ten record of 214 set by Indiana (122) and Ohio State (92) in 1959 and tied by Illinois (121) and Purdue (93) year.
NHL Standings
Chicago
Montrool
13 30 I 32 14]
MontrttI 4, Detroit 3
irk «. Botton 3 ToBoy'i OaiiMi wi schoduled TutMBy't aaniM
MIcMRaa Foolad _________
Total foult-^^ii^dn II, Michigan 20.
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General Motors car or truck. It lists the step-by* step service recommendations of factory engineers. Everything you need to know about protecting your investment is spelled out for service satisfaction I And one additional tip from your GM dealer: for protection against theft... jOck your car.
ai SURE ... BE SAM ... SB SATISI>IBD WITH Sg DEALER QUALITY SERVICE

CHEVROLIT • PONTIAC # OLD8MOBILE • BUICK • OPEL KADETT • CADILLAC • OMC TBUCE
TMalt 17 17-U 71 TaUli
_______ ....Jitaan SI
Total touli - Mlchlg4 Ota II.
Attamlaiica; 17A3I.
i^kMton. la 20. Minna-
Taiait MM-jaiax Tatah 4I11-I7IM
Fortunes Rise for Ice Squad
Road Officials Show They Give a 'Hoot'
The Lakeland Hawks are finding the second half of the Southeast Michigan Juvenile Hockey Association race more to their liking.
The Hawks under coach Ray Graham won two games over the weekend, boosting their record tx> 2-1 since the January real-lignment that put them in the Midget Division. The Hawks are in second place.
Friday night. Lakeland drubbed Utica, 10-1, as Bruce Strohm scored three goals and brother -Brian two. Former goal-tender Randy Sutt tallied twice while Richie Bell was a strong playmaker. Ron Young and Dick Gorman also scored.
Yesterday, the Hawks got an-other good performance by goalie Larry Schneider and dumped Warren, 5-1. Robbie Hall scored his second and third goals of the weekend; Sutt, r 1 a n S t r o h m. and Chuck Graham added the others.
The Waterford Ranger trailed 2-0 until the final two minutes when Glen Burke and Mike Dunlop scored to give them a 2-2 tie with Fraser. Waterford is now 1-1 in Juvenile Division.
156 Points Tallied by Local Hoopsters
Michigan Christian J u n 1 o i College remained a strong contender for the post-season state Christian (Allege AA basketball tournament title with an Impressive win Saturday.
The Warriors’ fast break riddled hapless Great' Lakes Bible College of Lansing, 156-56, (or their seventh win In nine league starts The win kept them In second place behind undefeated Grand Rapids School Bible and Music.
Seven players were In twin figures for the winners. J i m Martin had 31, Bud Pressiqy 39, Jim Hudson 24 and Wes Taphln 21 as the main gunners. The Warriors scored 89 points In the final half.
POLITE LOSER — Ron Larrieu (left) of Los Angeles, who was nearly lapped during the two-mile run in Saturday night’s Los Angeles Times Indoor track and field games, shows he’s a good loser as he ducks under the tape to enable Bill Balllie of New Zealand to break it as the winner in 8:37.4. Favored Ron Clarke of Australia finished second and Kenya’s Kipchoge Keino came in fifth.
Cily Cage Teams Open Tourney Slate Tonight
The Amigo’s Club and Roy White’s Upbeatables open the city Class A men’s basketball playoffs at 8:30 tonight on the Madison Junior High School court.
The Class B post-season action begins at 7 p.m. on the Madison and Kennedy JHS floors. Both tournaments are double elimination.
The city Class C teams will finish the International League race Wednesday and begin their playoffs next week. The top game is tonight’s showdown for second place between Local 653 and the All Stars’ at Lincoln JHS.
Waterford Township’s National League has a triple-header tonight at Crary JHS with
Tatty Bakery vt. The Unbeatablat, 1:30
Lincoln JHS — Coulacot Inturanca I. Autobahn Molort, 7 p.m.; Local A53 I. All Start, 1:20 p.m.
Crary JHS - Joe't Bar-3 ; Conitructlon, t:55 p.m.; Hot
Fradman Conttructlon, L... ^..........
man't Craw vi. Joa't Bar-2, 0:2]
Maditon JHS — Stanflll'i Sinclair All-Start, 7 p.m.; Auburn-Champt k "nbeatablet-Tatty loter, 1:30 p.r .. Jiady JHS - Tha Packart Champa-Auburn Helghtt CC winner ----UAW tS3 vt. Unbeatablet-Tatty
MSU Shows Class in 43rd Track Relays
EAST LANSING (AP)-Mich-igan State forgot about the rule that the polite host doesn’t take the biggest chunk of cake at its 43rd annual relays Saturday night.
No team score is kept at the relays, but MSU clearly dominated the event with five firsts.
Air Force Academy and Southern Illinois won three events each to help 8( around some of the honors.
Gene Washington, the snatching end, won both the 70-yard high and low hurdles. His times of :06.5 in the highs and :07.9 in the lows both were only one-tenth of a second off the meet and Jenison Fieldhouse records.
Fredman’s Ck)nstruction and Six R’s Construction both trying to retain a grip on first place.
RECREATION BASKETBALL SLATS
Madison JHS - McOonald'i Driva-ln vs. Highland Lakts. 7 p.m.,- Amigo's Club vs. Roy Whitt's Unbaatabits. 1:30
Wildcats Beat Orion, 64-58
W. Bloomfield Upset; Romeo Posts Win
couple of also-rans gained a little cage respect wiA victories Saturday night.
Oxford won its fifth game of the season, a 64-58 verdict over Laktf Orion, while Milford ended a 12-game losing streak with a 59-56 decision over West Bloomfield.
*	-k *
In another Saturday outing. Walled Lake suffered its 13th loss in a row in an 89-70 setback at the hands of Bedford Union.
In other games, Romeo downed Troy, 58-51, and Cran-brook turned back University School, 75-56.
Oxford (5-10) and Ofion (1-13) battled on even terms for three quarters, but the Wildcats came up with a 15-9 point advantage in the final period to wrap up the win. The loss was Orion’s seventh straight.
Roger Miller led the winners with 25 points, and Dennis Brophy picked up 17 for Orion.
Mike Yeager and Paul Skinner collected 20 points apiece in bringing Milford’s (2-12) losing string to a halt, "nm Moller ossed in 24 for West Bloomfield 6-7).
Romeo, which made only four of 18 free throws in losing to L’Anse Creuse Friday night, picked up 20 of 35 Saturday, and the shooting from the charity line proved the difference as both teams recorded 19 field goals apiece.
★	* ★
Dale Craft paced the winners with 16 points and Bruce Baas tossed In 22 for Troy.
John Pavloff tossed in 24 points in sparking Cranbrook (6-8) to its third win in a row. walled lake (7B) red. union (W) ^	RO FT TP
BItrkt II 4-7 4B RuolKwn 2 0-14 Arnold 4 M 13
Lincoln JHS -

Lincoln JHS - POH V
I Stiri, 1:30
fs«Ti,rawr vna — nil Sltri VI. EmI___
p.m.; Ptrry Pork vi. All Saints, 1:30
Plorco JHS*- Fruthour t Strubto v 'owoll Trucking, t-.U p.m.; Sponc loor Covoring vi. Local WJ, 1:10 p.m akaland Pharmacy vs. Drayton bru
C«ntr*J^HS^^CIaM*B city playotfi,
Madliwi JHS - Class B city playoff, p.m.; Booth Homas vs. Amljpt^ |:]0
Crary JHS - Ryason'i Markat vs. Bundy Blit Homas, *:$] p.m.; Bucknar FInanca vs. Zllka Haatlng, i:lo p.m.; Lakeland Hardware vs. Wayne's Sarvica,
CITY LEAGUE STANDtNOS American Laagtw Final
Doom Homes II 1 Tha Packers *5 S
MlJlJn^d'T* D* '* '	? -
Tha All-Stars 4 S
non. HIS. CC 3 Tha Champs I
Natlanal League Final
W L	w L
wiacoi ini. a 0 Autobhn Mtri. 3 S III Stars	s 4 POH	'	0 f
ocal 4S3 s 4 WATERFORD TOWNSHIP SCORING o Ay
tmtux, Coltman'

ll 594
3	75.)
Amvricwi UMOM - M1K9	Dr«y.
ton Drug, U5; >iatlenal LMgut - Jim
Dawinn. Hamm** I	1,w. V.—
FOFTTF
irland	2	2-4	0	L.—	.	,
Innall	0	54	S	Mach	J	3J	ij
•War	a	3-3	21	Shappard	0	1-2	I
hmann 0 1-2 I Bauer 313 7 iragoi	3	^3	I	Davis	1	04	3
Fahey	I	04	2
Mallhy	I	0-0	2
LIndman 0 4-4 4 alals ]4]]-3a7t Totals 34l7-2Sia SCORE BY QUARTERS allad Lake	11 14 M n—m
Mtord Unlaa ............it 21 || vZga
OXFORD^ (tar LK. ORION (SSI
Valentina	4	2-4	10	I
Ganstoy	1	3-4	S	I
Shambiln	1	04	2
m	0	3-4	3
14 17 14 lt-44 13 If 17 f-tt
'JSifrip
W. BLOOMFD (14)	MILFORD
FO FTTP	r*
lurl	3	5-7	11	Skinnar	.	_____
Aollar • 0-1S34 Soltyslak 3 1-3 i -Klnday	3	0-0	4	Ormln	2	1-2	5
HaWnslall	1	3-3	4	McFarl'd	I	0-1	]
Holllslar	I	0-1	2	Yaagar	0	4-7	31
Tatala 30 14-27 14 Talah 1411-3712
.. kore by quarters
« Blearntletd	U IS 10 is-u
“j'Tr varsity:
Mllfard sa, Waal BtoamllaM 40
ROMEO (M)	TR(
FO FT TP
rail 7 34 14 HaNy
FO FT Tl 0 1-2 0 M :

Schapm'n 0 4-4
-7	12	Baas	a	4-2 It
-I	3	Popovich	5	2-2 13
4	7	Mndrl'M	0	M I
Darrlgan	2	1-2	5
-------- I	g.)	1
3	24	4
TSiaiS	12 13-21 SI
SCORE BY QUARTERS
14 IS	0	lO-M
II tl	II	I4-It
IS SI Evans
Wolverine Tankers Dunked
Michigan, rated the No. 11Michigan State defeated Oh io
swimming team in the country, suffered its first loss of the season Saturday at Bloomington where the Indiana Hoosiers scored a 66-57 triumph.
It avenged the one point loss Indiana suffered at the hands of the Wolverines earlier this season.
In another Big Ten meet.
tobla. Bill Groftli .	_____ .
Hamar, Tom Tralhaway, Kivin Barry, ‘Ob Wllllamsl. Tima 3:33 2 (Pool rKOrd; ravlous bnl 3:35.4 by Indiana, 12431. ONE-METER DWINC-I. Kan Sltl-bargar (I), 320.MI; Y Bruca Brown (M). ‘72.10; 3. Frad Brown (M), 3S7.0S. lOB-YARD FREESTYLE-I. Bill Farlay M). 10:12.2; 3. Bob WIndIa (I). 10:" ‘ .. Tony Wilson II), 10:45.2 (pool r$t pravlous bast 10:30.2 by Bob Wl ■----n, 1244)
diana, 1244, and lU Varsity ricord of
400-YARD INDIVIDUAL MEOLEY-I.
State, 75^8.
Pontiac area swimmers took part in the Michigan State vie* tory and also for Ohio State.
Bob Wolf and Lee Driver, ex-Birmingham swimmers, helped MSU to the 400 medley relay win, while Driver touched first in the 200 breastroke at 2:18.0.
THREE-METER DIVINO-I. Kan Sltl-irgar (I). 323.35; 3. Rick Early II), M )]; 3. Frad Brown (M), 325.I0.
300-YARD BUTTERFLY - I. Kavin Barry (I), ):]0.l; 3. John Collins (I), * 00.3; 3. Tom O'Mallay (M), 3:02.4.
lOO-YARD FREESTYLE-I. Bill Ullay
), :47.43; Bob Hoag (M), :«.]; 3. ~ " Croft (Ml, :40.2 (Varsity rKord;
vious bast :47.4 by Bob ...
12451.
200-YARD BACKSTROKE - I. Fata Hammar (I), 1:32.1; 3. Russ Klngary (M), 2:00.2; 3. Ralph Kandrkk (I), 3:03.3.
500-YARD FREESTYLE - I. Bob WlhfSa (II, 4:544; 2. Carl Robla (M), 4:544; 3. Bill Fartay (M), 4:57.0 (Pool
Ex-PCH swimmer Ben Donaldson settled for second place in the 1,000 freestyle and the 500 freestyle for Ohio State.
MSU 75, OHIO STATE 40 MEDLEY RELAY - I. Michigan (Bob Wolf, Lot Drivar, Ed Olfck, MacMillan) 3:40.4; 3. Ohio Stata (Mark Mathis, Doug “
Hoppar, Tom Lakin) 3.,..,
1,000 freestyle - 1
.............. 2. Paul 5
:14.3; 3, Tom Tralhaway ( .. _
400-YARD FREESTYLE RELAY -Akhlgan (John Salassa. Kan Wlab.. . Ikh walls. Bob Hoag) 3:10.2; 2. Indiana Bob Williams, Kan Wabb, Bob WIndIa, III! Utlayl, 3:11.3 (Pool racordi pravlous
0:31.5; 3. Roll Grosath (MS), 10:44.7. 1-METER DIVING - I. Randy Larson OS). 274.35.	2. Chuck Knoor (OS).
00.40; 3 Frad Whilaford, IMS) 350.25. 200.FREESTYLB-I. Jim MacMillan MS), 1:40.7; 3. JKk Batlhold (OS). 42.3; 3. Bud Grail (OS), 1:50.2. 50-FRBESTYLE-l. Gary Dlllay (MS).
o„,. n n.-------
3. 0 . ...... ......
300-INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY - I. . Hoppar (OS), 2:01.7; 3. Pala Wllllami (MS). 3.02.3. 3 Kan Walah (MS), 3:070 3^METER DIVING-1. Randy Larson (OS), 3)5.40;	3. Chuck Knoor (OS).
305.15; 3. Frad Whitofofd (MS). 277.10.
200-BUTTERFLY-l. Ed Olkk (MS), 2:011; ' --------------------
It (OS) :
5»FREESTYLB-1. Kan Walah (IMS). .:57,0; 3. Ban Donaldson (OS), ftOS.Si 3. Danny Hill (MS). 5:05.7.
30(7BREASTSTROKE - I. Laa Drivar (MS), 3:10 0; 2. Bob Hoppar (OS), 2:2V.7; 3. JKk Marsh (MS), 3:22.0.
RBLAY-I. MkMgan