“Under the present system,” Milllken said, “some districts are limited to less than $500 a year on the education of each child, while in other districts, the figure is more than $1,1Q0. “We want to even 'things out, The Related Story, Pago A-3 Text, Picture, Story, Pago F-6 7 Michigan’s school district system is at the mercy many .times of the district voters, who must approve minimum millage for them to qualify for state aid. 1 As an example, the North firanch school system In northern Lower Michigan did not know whether It would open this fall until mid-September When voters approved millage. - He.recommended a constitutional amendment that would lower the callings on local property taxes as a balance to the proposed state property tax. * . Regarding aid to private and parochial schools, Milllken said “We believe very strongly that the existence and strength of nonpublic schools caii contribute to education choice in Michigan and that education choices Is'In the public interest. . \' .... . ..■• ■ - - •;.« o- ■' .: ;' . : . , - V- .. • ■ ... i s : • r; Milliken Unveils School Reform Plan LANSING (API - Michigan Gov. •William 0. Milliken . has unveiled a sweeping plan to revatgp Michigan’s school systems,'including a proposal for a statewide property tax to eliminate the traditional distrlct-by-dlstrict taxation dystem. ’ < Milllken also proposed state aid to nonpublic schools yesterday in announcing results of a five-month study by his commission on educational reform. -. Jerald Miller,' tax expert for < the . governor, said he knows of no state that has a state property tax'for its school systems. The State Legislature begins a .special session next- Monday to consider Miiliken’s proposals. commission does not think a child In one school district is worth only half as much as a child in another,” said Milliken, who succeeded George Romney as .governor in January when Romney-became U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. Milliken said “Some districts have a tax rich base — expensive homes or substantial industry. Others have a very poor base. “This base, the so-called state equalized valuation, ranges from $3,000 per child in some districts to $60,000 per child in others," he said. SCHOOLS IN TROUBLE “Many nonpublic schools are in deep financial trouble. Many of them have closed and many more are destined to close unless they are helped,” he said. 1 (Continued on Page A-2, Col 3) Tho Weather Chance of Showers THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER h 1969 Gov. William G: Milliken VOL. 127 — NO. 203 ->^r%AGES ADC-Supported Children In for a Long, Winter? U. S. Rail Shutdown Eyed By JEAN SAILE . It could be a long; cold whiter for many schoolchildren in families supported by Aid to Dependent Children (ADC): Funds appropriated by the county Sept. M'4 for emergency clothing needs are bet-p! ter than SO per cent usedt and there has been no provision for further funds this year or any for next year, records show. The Oakland County Board o f Supervisors had voted extra cash for emergency clothing purchases following yearlong protests by ADC mothers about the county clothing store. A study undertaken by- local merchants supported the ADO mothers’ claims that the store services were inadequate. The board set $90,000 aside to be spent at the average rate of $30 per child for $,000 children in- the county. , There are about 5,8)0 school-age children on ADC rolls, according to Ora Hinckley, county social services director. By last night, Miss Hinckley reported $76,871 had been spent at the average rate of $29.68 per child for 2,580 children. Before the cadi was voted, another 1,000 children had been outfitted qt thmcounfy clothing store. Mias Hinckley said the cost ofjthat service is not yet available. She sald tho ADC mothers are returning receipts for the purchases they made at private retail stores. A total of 859 families were benefitted. WASHINGTON (AP) - The railroad iddustry, threatened with selective strikes by shoperaft unions, has countered with a threat of its own—a nationwide shutdown of rail service. A spokesman for the four Involved unions immediately protested that the industry’s announcement was aimed at forcing government intervention in the wage and work rules dispute. But Chairman John P. Hiltz Jr. of the National Railway Labor Con- ference—which represents management of the nation’s 76 major railroads—said the move would be taken “both in the long-range public Interest and as a matter of self-survival.” He said the shutdown would be called off if unions did- not strike* the seven railroads they have designated as the first to feel what the industry refers to as “whipsaw” work stoppages. The shrike deadline is 11:01 p.m. (Pontiac time) Friday. ’ - The unions’ chief negotiator, William W. Winpisinger, said the strikes would go as scheduled unless the industry’s announcement triggers President Nixon to invoke the Railway Labor Act and postpones the work stoppages for up jo 60 days. A* dispute between signalmen and the railroads last April was the most recent threat of a nationwide rail shutdown, and this week’s is the third in a little over two years. During the April dispute— which was solved without; government intervention—Secretary of Labor George Shultz forecast grim consequences to the economy. He estimated a weeklong Strike would put a million persons out of work in addition to the 137,000 railroad employes. A two-week work stoppage would raise it to 3 million. TO HURT AUTO INDUSTRY The county’s 1970 budget, In final form for presentation to the board of supervisors later this month, carries no 1 provision for ADC clothing supplements. The supervisors’ finance committee has cut a Social Services clothing request of $350,975 and an auditors recommendation of $141,918 to $48,918. NO FURTHER PROVISION Committee Member Delos Hamlin, R- Judge Orders Arrest of Groppi Farmington Township, told The Pontiac, Press, “The stun represents that amount (Continued on Page A-2, .Col. 1) ' Rain Chance Seen T onight, Tomorrow MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A judge ordered the arrest today of the Rev. James E. Groppi who had invited students and welfare recipients to defy a restraining order and march into the Wisconsin Capitol. His arrest order came from Milwaukee County Judge F. Ryan Duffy Jr., who directed that the Roman Catholic .priest be picked up and brought before him for- a hearing on possible probation violation. There’s a chance of showers, or thundershowers in the Pontiac area late today -or tonight add again tomorrow, according to the weatherman. Partly cloudy and mild is the outlook for Friday. . J/ftt , "v mi ■HHI ■ %t!x .,. 1 ’em ’j'&'-wSt.* Wm ■ W? ' : 1 r .v tqLjflK' Vi m i * Among industries hardest hit by a strike would be automobile manufacturers, which depend on rail shipments of raw materials and distribution of their products, Schultz said. If any section of the country would bo deprived of adequate transportation by a rail strike, the Railway act provides tho President can create an emergency board to arbitrate the union-management differences. The boasd could spend up to 99 days Investigating both sides of the dispute and another 30 days attempting to faring about an agreement. Meanwhile, union members would be required by law to continue' Hiltz said “the unprecedented divide-and-conquer tactics of the four shoperaft ' unions leave the railroads no alternative but to take unprecedented action themselves.” The unions have designated for strikes the Sante Fe, the Great Northern, the C&O, the B&O, Southern, Illinois Central and Erie-Lackawana. . ' Duffy had placed Groppi on two year’s probation Feb. 12, 1968 after the civil rights acjlvist was convicted of resisting arrest during an open-housing •‘demonstration, If the probation is, revoked .Groppi Would be required to serve a six months • term in the House of Correction which was stayed by file court at the time of sentencing. Temperatures will continue —balmy-through the period, with the high near 70. The low Is expected to be in the 90s tonight. .-jj Winds east to southeast at 10 to 15 miles per hour were to become south to southwest at 10 to 20 miles tonight. •' GO HOME — Pontiac Schools Director of Physical Edu-cation, Athletics and Recreation Lee Haslinger (right of school this morning. Haslinger and other school officials center) talks to Pontiac Northern High School student Rod urged black and white students to disperse when the two Mcllroy (left of center) and other white students outside the groups angrily confronted each other. Hanoi Changing POW Policies? Probabilities of precipitation are 40 per cent today' and 30 per cent tonight And tomorrow. The low before 8 am. in downtown Ponfiic was 52. The mercury had jumped to 77 by.2 p.m. Whites Trigger PNH Ruckus In Today's Press Angry white students touched off a disturbance at Pontiac Northern High School- fills morning when they confronted a group of black students who were waiting outside for classes-to begin. Most of the students had dispersed by 11 a.m., although some students lingered among uniformed police officers surrounding the building. The blame for the-outbreqk was placed on the whites by Assistant School Supt. Richard Fell. He said the’ students milled around outside the school before the opening of school at 8:30 a.pi. when several white students approached some black stur dents from behind. Students said a police patrol car driving by at the time stopped, and the four officers in the Car reportedly held off the youths before any fighting could begin. \ More black and. white students took sides after tills, incident and gathered .on opposite sides of Arlene Street. ^ About 150 white students..were barricaded for about a half-hour on East day as a result of racial outbreaks there Thursday in which several students were injured. Parents, teachers and plain-clothes policemen ' have patrolled ' the halls this week, and school officials reported that tension seemed to have eased. WASHINGTON (AP) - North Vietnam’s willingness to see wives of imprisoned U.S. serviedmen is being viewed here as a hopeful sign Hanoi may be , reevaluating its prisoner of war policies. Pentagon officials also indicate belief the North Vietnamese move is aTeaction *to a Nixon administration campaign to focus International attention on the handling of American POWs. Photo, Pago F-5 Beverly Street by double rows of police officers while an estimated/ 75 to 100 black students milled in the school parking lot. / ‘MANY NOT FROM PNH’ According to school officials, many of the students at the school today were not from Northern, which has an enrollment of 2,100 .There-were reports that some of the blacks arriving* later were frojn Pontiac Central and Detroit. The white students were asked to disperse; but they circled the icnooi, seem- Gl Club Probe Brought Threats ingly to approach foe black Students, again from the rear. Minor fist-fighting broke out when the two student .groups met, but they were quickly separated by police. One white student reportedly received a minor knife wound in the scuffle. Some of the whites were identified as -students from Waterford Township. Lake Orton and Oxford schools, according to school authorities. . This assessment came after North Vietnamese diplomats in P^Hs said yesterday they would receiver a new group of American women sewing information about husbands mlssimitojhe^ war. \ , Only a few days' Vietnamese delegation time met with four wives from Dallas, out whether their husbands are dead or . alive. Softool Strike Clarkston audience mostly backs teachers’ cause - PAGE A-4. White for black D-8, D-t . ... F-5 A„l Grafts of Caucasian skin save burned Negro woman—PAGE A-B! Military Spending Soviet superbomher report heats debate lit Congress — PAGE C-l, WASHINGTON (AP) - Bribe offers and threats of death were received by Army personnel probing charges of rake-offs and kickbacks in operation of servicemen’s ' recreation clubs, an officer testified today. , Lt. Col. William L. George.said he, received many anonymous threatening phone calls during the three months between the arrest of one sergeant and his conviction for stealing "slot machine proceeds. .Some black and white, students involved in the disruption today‘Were bused to their own neighborhoods. Northern High School closed last Fri- Doors at the school wdre locked io keep out file outside agitators. Classes were continuing, though some parents,, arrived at the • school to take their children home. Madison Junior High,-which is ad-i jaccnt to Northern, was locked fromv the outside and reported to be running smoothly, as were other city schools. ENCOURAGING While North Vietnam’s attitude i such private meetings may prove to be ot no signifies [hificance, any sign of movement on the POW problem is encouraging, Pentagon officials say. City Charter Vote Set for Dec. 18 “One in particular which I remember most vividly happened about 2:30 in the morning and foe caller sat'd: ‘You’re dead, you bastard you,’ and hung up,” George told foe Senate’s permanent investigations subcommittee. . Pontiac will hold a special election on Dec; 18, the City Cbmmlsrion decided last night.. , ” 1 The election will determihe if voters wantjhfa*'changes In foe City Charter — election of city, commissioners on the basis'of district only’and reduction'of age and! residency requirement fo 25 years and one year, respectively (presently 80 and five). The issue on districts is whether foe city should return to a system used prior to foe 1984 election. Since that time the city has used a • modified at-large system whereby the top two vote-getters in each district face. a cltywjde vote. a a * a Petitions to bring about the election with over 6,200 sigpatures were gathered hy the Pontiac Concerned Citizens Council (PCCC). Some - of foe present districts have twice., foe population of others, end redistricting is expected after foe 1978 census. “They have had an indefensible' world position,” commented one official involved in day-today dealings with POW matters. “It hasbeen hot only wrong bid also not smart. Now they may be looking for a way to eaae themselves out of foe fire,”....... •i lib '"'*L ' • North Vietnam; may be -holding as many as 900 Americans, most of them fliers shot down during the air war. The certain, number Is uncertain because Hanoi steadfastly has refused to provide a name list—an act which violates international agraements. The Pentagon's official list of captured men totals 413 but there are 919 names on the , missing Ust and many of those are beltoved Imprisoned. m A—2 ilK in>i\ VlAl‘ 1‘HKSS WEDNESDAY,.OCTOBER 1, 1960 Rogers,Gromyko OK Further Talks UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) Secretary of State William P. Rogers should know within about a month launch Big Four-U.S., Soviet, British ricn- _____r' his “era of negotiations’’ debut with, Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko Is producing results. . Rogers and Gromyko wound up their sessions here last night,, agreeing to continue U.S.-Soviet discussions on a Middle East settlement. Assistant Secretary of State Joseph Sisco will carry these forward with Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin in Washington. and French—undertakings for a , Middle East solution. . Another item discussed was President Nixon’s still-unanswered bid to. begirt missile curb talks. Gromyko told Rogers Sept. 23 that Moscow would reply with a time and place “soon,’’ but didn’t say when. Apollo 12 Crewmen Set Long Moon Trek GAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)— Hie Apollo 12 astronauts may stroll more than half a mile from their mopn-lahdtng. craft next month. - Also, they plan to-collect rocks with far greater scientific finesse than Neil A. Armstrong and Edwin E. Aldrin Jr>, were able to eniploy oo mankind’s first lunar, scavenger hunt. DISPLEASURE TO GREET DELAY If. the Kremlin doesn’t respond by the ROBERT C. IRWIN Rogers hopes that by late October, the United States and the Soviet Union will have agreed on enough groundwork to ADC Clothing Funds Run Low (Continued From Page One) needed to carry on the clothing store for the use of our Juvenile Department' and our foster care program. There is no provision for further cash supplements for ADC children after the first of the end of October, its delay will produce puzzlement and displeasure in Washington rivaling that prompted by" the Soviets’ silence last summer on the presidential plea. Nixon, upon taking office* vowed to seek an “era of negotiation,’’ rather than ’^confrontation,” with the Cofnmunist world. Rogers’ meetings with Gromyko .provided the firrtt high-level test. Gromyko heads today for Ottawa, then Moscow. Roger? returns to Washington tomorrow. a a ★ In private sessions totaling about 8 hours, including IV» hours at Rogers’ apartment last night. Rogers feels he has established good first-name relations with his Soviet counterpart. ' But Rogers won’t predict that personal friendship between diplomats will result in successful negotiations! ’ Schools,Parents Urged to Take Tough Stance Apollo 12 Commander Charles Conrad rates chances as “50-50” that he will be abie to land elope enough to an unmanned Surveyor spacecraft on- the moon’s Ocean of Storms so he and astronaut Alan L. Bean can bring pieces of-it back to earth. All this was revealed in an impromptu press briefipg by Navy Cmdr. Conrad and Lt. Cmdr. Bean Tuesday following a dress rehearsal of their moon walk. astronaut—Navy Cmdr. Richard F. •Gordon Jr.—helped crews at the launch pad with a countdown rehearsal test for the scheduled. Nov. 14 liftoff. Gordon will remain in moon orbit in the Apollo 12 /command ship while Conrad and Bean spend some 31, hours on . the surface; Including seven hours outside the lunar landing craft. . Mission rules will let the two crewmen wander 3,000 feet, or about two-thirds of a mile, to visit, the Surveyor. Their emergency oxygen supply, needed if their main backpacks fail, holds enough oxygen to keep them alive 15 to 20 minutes. Birmingham Area Church Has Hew Organist, Choirmaster COUNTDOWN TEST Meanwhile, the third. Apollo 12 Hamlin did note, however, that an extra-large contingency fund of nearly $700,000 could be used to meet clothing needs next year if necessary. A majority vote of the board would be necessary to carry .out the fond switch, he said. . Without county clothing supplements, an ADC mother is expected to dress her child from a $12 per month personal allowance. That fund was recently boosted $3 by the state, moving it up from the $8 level set in 1961 by the federal government. DOESN’T PRESS GROMYKO Under the administration’s nonconfrontation policy of not pushing issues If considers irreconcilable at this time, Rogers did not press Gromyko on Vietnam or Soviet pressure on 'Czechoslovakia. On the Middle East situation, Rogers has come to the conclusion lhat whatever agreement is possible with the Russians now will mark only one step In . a long and difficult process. An appeal to parents to assert their authority and a demand for punishment of those responsible for recent fighting in Pontiac schools was issued by District 2 City Commissioner Robert Q. Irwin last night. - . Speaking at -the city commission meeting, Irwin said “This community can’t stand this . . . all thinking parents are going, to have to stand up and reject lt totally," Cleveland Mayor WinsDem Primary This year the state added another $22 to the allotment, but Miss Hinckley noted, “That was this year’s legislative appropriation. We don’t know , what will happen next year.” Neither do a lot of ADC parents. His rtext planned step is to lay before the Big Four a U.S.-Soviet outline of how the major powers could work toward a permanent settlement. After that he hopes for a start on the key ingredient—to bring the Arabs and Israelis to the negotiating table. His behind-the-scenes talks with .the Middle. East rivals found them far apiart. Irwin referred to violence which closed some Pontiac schools last Thursday, Friday and Monday. Centered at the two high schools, the racial fighting resulted in several minor injuries and three arrests. The commissioner said he was at Central last Friday and observed the Violence. Irwin said he had talked with both white and black parents and all agreed that those responsible should be punished. CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) - Negro incumbent Carl B. Stokes defeated a self-styled law-and-order candidate by more than 31,000 votes yesterday in Cleveland’s Democratic mayoral primary, election. But Stokes won his bid for nomination to a second two-year term only after overcoming a lead of more than 20,000 votes Which Robert J, Kelly, an electoral newcomer* built up . in white sections crucial to the mayor’s Nov. 4 general election prospects! A color television camera that can beam live coverage of their lunar activities to earth has been built and “if it can be flight qualified in time, will be aboard,” Conrad said. The moon men plan to make two excursions outside the landing craft, .each lasting about 3tt hours and separated by an eight-hour rest period. ’ First priority has been given to setting up an elaborate set of. experiments, Conrad said. Included is an advanced seismic device to record moonquakes, a sheet of aluminum foil to collect radiation partiles streaming from the sun, an experiment to measure the density and velocity of radiation near the lunar surface and a device to study the moon's magnetic fields. BIRMINGHAM - Dr. Reynold pvln.> will be officially recognized as organist-choirmaster of the Embury United Methodist Church on Oct. 12. A formal reception will follow the,M:30 a.m. worship service. Prior to arriving af Embury Church, Dr. Attain served churches in Santa Cruz and San Jose in California. Dr. AUvin is an associate professor of music at Oakland Uniyerslty. He received a B.A. degree from San Jose State College, attended the University of Heidelberg in Germany and received his doctorate from Stanford University. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - The Cran-brook Academy of Art galleries are preparing three new exhibitions opening Nov. 8 and continuing through Dec. 7. Richard E. DeVore, head of the academy’s ceramics department, wUl •ylic collages U.S.-Romania N-Pact present his latest acrylic collages and ceramics. Also exhibited will be “ToWers,” a survey of over 350 towers by architects, engineers, artists and fantasists, U-lustrated by architectural photographs, drawings, films and slides. Another exhibition is. “Lasers and Holograms,” an experimental' exhibition illustrating the significant changes technology is piyducingin today's art. BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) - The chairman of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, < CHILDREN ’BEING USED’ September Song for This Year Could Well Be a Drought Dirge C, .“How Dry We Are” might well have- been the September song this year. A1 warMus drought plagued Oakland County farmers and gardeners. Last September &05 inches of rate dampened the fields and flower beds as compared to last month’s fplneh.' . •' ** ?! Sunshine, though welcomed by housewives doing their autumn cleaning and outdoor-happy youngsters, toasted lawns an even deeper brown on 26 days during the month. % Rain clouds darkened the skies only two days with the remainder only partly cloudy, in September 1968, there also were 26 days of sunshine. The high temperature reading last month fell on the eighth, a sizzling 90 degrees! The low, 42 degrees, wasrecorded Sept. 29. No threat of frost hindered lata harvests. Mean temperature for the past month was 64.9 degrees. September 1968 had a high of 86 degrees, a low of 45 degrees and a mean of 65.83. - He said the children were being used by persons deliberately inciting violence and usurping parental authority. “I saw parents trying to speak' to their youngster and being ridiculed by others (students),” he said. i Irwin said a conspiracy to disrupt the schools may have existed. ML' fr; * , * - The Rumor Control Center of the Human Relations Commission reported 538 calls.were handled in the four-day period. ’ The rumor center was - organized almost two years ago to act in cases of civil disturbances.' It Operates continually, but in emergencies human relations commission members man up to 10 exira phones. The final unofficial count gave Stokes 92,219 votes to 60,899 for Kelly, a 48-year-old former city service director. “We’re going to really have to work against! Ralph J. Perk,” Stokes said of the Republican county auditor he will face in the general election. Glenn T, Seaborg, signed a contract today under which the commission will hire out'to the Romanian Nuclear Energy Committee a cobalt-60 bomb as radiation source for research purposes. Before talks with Romanian experts, Seaborg was received by Romania’s president and Communist party leader, Nicolae Ceausescu, the news agency Agerpres reported. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Registrations are being taken at the recreation office in Andover High School for the Bloomfield Hills School District fall 1969 adult eVening program beginning this week. Applicants may register dally from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday-Saturday and 7-9 p.m. evenings during the next two weeks. The adult evening program course offerings range from swimming and bridge to upholstering and water colors. Ap-proximStely 40 courses and activities are available. The recreation office can supply additional Course information. By Pollution Unit Head Pontiac Div. Statement Hit The Weather UP-TO-DATE DATA # Callers are given up-to-date information and any rumors are checked'. ttyoUgh appropriate agencies. . • ’This was the first time the operation was put into foil use., • +' * * Samuel A. . Baker, human relations commission chairman, said in his report, “We would-like to believe our center has ’ •made h significant contribution to our community in replacing rumors with truth. Foil U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy today and tonight with little change in temperature and a chance of showers or thundershowers. High today, 66 to 72. Low tonight in the 50s. Mostly cloudy Thursday with a chance of showers but not change In temperature. High near 70. Friday's outlook: Partly cloudy and mild. Winds east to southeast 10 to IS miles per hour, becoming south to southwest at 10 to 20 miles tonight. Precipitation probabilities: 40 per cent today, 30 per cent tonight and Thursday. “We trust the citizens Will continue to utilize the facilities to eliminate rumors which, by our experience the .last few days, can lead to widespread fear and 'unreasoned actions.''' Pontiac Motor Division was accused last night of promising a “pie in the sky” in its statements regarding air pollutants emanating fromtite coke fires of its foundry. 1 The accusation fas made by Robert Parker of 791. First, chairman of the city’s Air Pollution Committee. A report he had submitted to the City Commission was discussed last week, but Parker was out of town at the time. p * t * , At last night’s meeting ha continued his allegations and demanded a city ordinance be drama up and prosecution begun against Pontiac Motor Division and others accused of air pollution in the city. He Cited an ordinance used in Trenton and submitted copies of it to the commission. A statement fibm the plant last week Indicated work, was proceeding on schedule in replacing the six coke ovens with electric, nonpolluting units. One was built and another started, it was reported. Sometime next year the second one would be completed, thus allowing the phasing , out of onefold unit. Since five operate at one tim$, this would mean a 20 per cent reduction In smoke, from the plant sometime next . year. GM spokesmen did not give deadlines on total completion, but denied the target date was 1979 as Parker claimed. At last week’s meeting it was pointed' out the State Legislature had created an Air Pollution Commission with, power to enforce standards statewide. Fighting air pollution also needs expert handling, officials pointed out. Sherwin Blmkrant, city attorney, observed “We could enact a thousand ordinances and it wouldn’t bring any immediate relief without the staff jfo carry out enforcement.” Parker said Trenton had done it “and we can do it, but we have been passing , the buck.” A meetingbetween the .committee, city and Pontiac Motor officials on the subject is to be arranged, it was Indicated. Press Given Two Awards The Pontiac Press has delved two major awards from the International Newspaper Promotion Anociation. * In the classification of newspapers under 100,000 circulation, The F^ess won a first-place pjaque and a second-place award. The first-place award, chosen from 213 entries, was for in-paper! promotional ads on the theme “people who read The Pontiac Press every evening have more to talk about the next day.” The second-place award was. for ads honoring all-A Students in local schools, and ads about a preelection page of candidate background information. The awards were accepted by Bernard M. Salvatore, assistant, advertising director in charge of promotion. Also winning awards were jhe Birmingham Eccentric and the'Detroit News. Miliiken Unveils Broad School Reform TsSty Ir Lowmt temperature At l s.m.: Wind Vs______ I...... Direction; Saif Sun Mtt Wednatday at 4:15 p.m Sun rl«*» Thursday at 4:11 a.m. Moon sals Wodnotday at 1:00 p.n Moon rises Wednesday at 9:23 p. ruasday In I racordad i Highest temperature weather: Sunny (Continued From Page One) His commission recommended that the State Legislature pay half of the salaries of lay teachers of secular subjects in the next two years Ih private and parochial schools. 1 ’. Another proposed c o n s 11 u 11 o n’a 1 amendment also, would abolish the eight-member state board of education, now elected by partisan ballot. In its place, MilllKen’s commission has proposed a state director of education, appointed by the governor and confirmed by the senate. Miliiken proposed a three-year ^timetable to reform the school systems. He called for votes on the constitutional amendments, next August. Legislature sometime after lt returns Monday from a two-month absence. Miliiken is recommending thaV two per cent of the total public schools budget be earmarked -for parodhial and private schools. This year’s budget is $848.6 million, but would soar to $1.04 billion next year under Mllliken’s plan. ‘DRASTIC ACTION’ Miliiken. recommended that the present system of intermediate.sch&bfMatrlcts be abolished and replaced by 10 to 15 education regions, whose boundaries would be set by a special commission and subject to ' approval of the Legislature. Among other things, the districts would be responsible for special education,-technical education, transportation, data processing, central business, services, curriculum consulting and budget review of focal districts. directors, and sizes of regions would be set by a special apportionment commission subject to legislative review. No legislative change in the district boundaries would be permitted under pro-posed bills. * P' ★ a While the statewide property tax could mean higher property taxes in some areas, executive^ department experts say more than 75 per cent of the state’s students go to schools in areas where taxes are expected to be less. As the plan now is envisioned, it would offer a total property tax saving of $320" million based onMBn estimated 1971 total valuation of $40 billion. Peter v0ppewall. Democratic president of .the board which Michigan proposes to abolish, termed the action “drastic and -radical surgery, without .precedent in the United States.” The superintendent of thCi i suite’s public schools, appointed by the present eight-member State Board of Education, would be thrown out umjer the proposals." SAME LOCAL DISTRICTS gl . Miliiken said local districts would remain, basically the same, and the “control of the schools should remain as dole to 1 1 people as possible.” / < / liken is expected to seek Miliiken ‘ is expected increase in the state’s present 2.6 per cent state personal income tax. Increases in the 5.6 per cent state cor- MHliken’s action, Oppewall said, would mean “he’s reaching for authority to coordinate higher education as well.” The Michigan state board has little control over boards of the state’s three principal universities. Oppewall said, - poration tax and the 4 per cent state fibut, NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain is predicted for tonight in the Southeast, rifle Northwest, the northern Rocky Mountain region and the Great Lakes vii tty. It will be warmer, in the Midwest' and cpoler in the central Rockies. * DETAILS LATER \ Detalls.of MUUken’s reforms are to be spelled out iQ an address to ftp sales tax also have been considered apparently rejected. Mllliken’s proposal to eliminate the State. Hoard of Education, it was uth derstood, would require revising constitutional authority over the boards of the University Of Michigan, Michigan State and Wayne State in Detroit. .The State Education Department director also would appoint regional 60horsepower, MPH 500 ec’s 3 cylinders! This Is the fastest moving, fastest accelerating tWO- torcyde. Big three cylinder design with 500 cc‘s that outperforms the 750V A full *0 Horses with a toe speed ef 124 MI»H. Blasts through' the % mile 12.4 seconds, end all this Is stock* GOT IT? GIT IT at ROB0IMS SPORT CYCLE 2267 Auburn ItoiS Near Qrooka Road -< ; \ QUICK SERVICE ■. on7 MOST MODELS W TO THE POtfTlAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1989 m . AhS School-Reform Plan Termed 'Very:. Radical' LANSING OR - Sweeping change* proposed by Gov. William MUUken’s Commission on Education Reform have been called ‘‘drastic surgery, without precedent anywhere In die' United States.’* 1 State Board of Education President Pete? 0 p p e w a 11, whose position would be eliminated by the reforms, has called the proposals “ radical," '■ "We are not descending from die mountaintop with a tablet of commandments," Gov. William G. Milllken said recently of the proposals being developed by his Commission on Education Reform. Legislators a n~d Educators Tuesday appeared to adopt that view as their first Judgement of the commission’s final report PAROCHIAID PROPOSAL The commvsslon proposed a token, $25-million parochiald allocation, eventual state supervision of private and parochial schools, substitution of a statewide property tin fop most local property,, mlllages and two constitutional amendments. • /" • One would eliminate the State Board of Education and superintendence of public instruction, redwing them with a department, director serylng at the pleasure of the governor. The other amendment would lower constitutional ceilings on local mlllageo as a balance for the proposed new state property tax. 4 ” Both proposals would be submitted to voter approval at next August’s primary election if approved by the Legislature. NO INCOME TAX HIKE? The commission- report M illion’s own public television addnas left unclear whether his legislative proposals would call for an increase In the state’s Id per cent income tax. Executive office staff members denied it would be recommended. Disclosure of report, apparently ' Aga1net Millikan's wishes, left some legislators and officials ' unprepared and uninformed. MiUiken’s proposal could legally fy elective positions of board members, .some of whose terms run through 1977. Rep. Robert Waldron, GOP minority leader in the House, said he’d planned to hold -a Thursday news conference, following general broadcast tonight; of MUIiken’s address. Some television stations aired the speech Tuesday night. Dr. Ira Polley, state superintendent of public struction, whose job would be scrapppd under Millikeh’s proposals, also declined to c ment. CONCENTRATION OF POWER? Abolition of.the state board, also proposed as part of~a constitutional change, “seems to concentrate way. to much power In one” individual,” Oppewall said, and “would remove that last link with the people." Oppewall questioned whether *Sen. - Anthony Stamm, R-Kalamazoo, also could not be reached. Stamm earlier said the property tax, a key feature of Mllliken’i plan, must b e eliminated. “True reform must eliminate the property tax as the basis of local contribution to education,’ Stamm said, adding he believed “Michigan’s entire educational system could be financed e* clusiyely through the collections from income taxes." NUMEROUS SHORTCOMINGS Democrats, meanwhile, found numerous shortcomings in the proposals. Sen. Sander Levin, D-Berkley, termed the report’s financed recommendations “cloudy." “It takes more guts to add a tax than it does to take it off;” the Senate minority leader said This report is not very gutsy In the area of taxes. n ; . - * ‘What would be the precise type of property tax relief? What would be the other kind of tax system combined with it? I was hoping the commis' would come up with some answers," Levin said, “But I don’t see many." House Speaker William Ryan precicted the State Legislature this year will. appprove some form of aid to parochial and private schools, but vowed to try to change the parochiad formula recommended by the commission. Advance Public Education, said districts in debt. Detroit bas a t’We Just can’t' accept what we call Illegal- diversion of public monies.":' Norman Drach.ler, superintendent of Detroit public schools, said Milllken did not say how much the statewide property tax should be. His said it would have to go down considerably to help Detroit. COMPLETELY UNACCEPTABLE Drachler also said no mention was made for„ capital penditures for new buildings. The Detroit superintendent also said Milllken did not men tion what would happen to carry-over deficit of more than |20 million. / , * i GAMA MLIS Since 1941 / J . Ill N. Saginaw ll, CIMINT WORK • PATIOS CARAOB • ADDITIONS TICKETS NOW ON SALE Cobo Arena: Hudson & Gr BDWonlCE Directed by Domi Arden WORLD FAMOUS ICE SPECTACULAR The executive secretary of the Michigan Education Associa- tion, Terry Herndon, and MEA President Douglas Ward said In a ‘ Joint statement, ‘ ’ T h e diversion of public funds tfr private purposes is completely unacceptable.’’ Mrs. Harriett Phillips, chairman of "the Citizen’s to Now Many Woor. § FALSETEETH With Moro Comfort To b«ip NUm dlaoomfort wta.n dontum «Ud down ml com. Ioom. Juit oprlnMo FABTMrrtt as your Egigas return mot ns or* MBS, a— >our dents Oot FAJ5TMBTH ot oil dru* ooun tor*. 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White, fruit-wood, oak and birch finishes. —2nd Floor WITH 2-IN. MATTRESS FOLDING BED-COT DOLLAR -DAY DISCOUNT m F01; home, cottage, cabin or tent—extra sleeping space- Rugged construction.' Polyfoam mattress with pillow fupport. 2nd Floor . V Teachers' Demands Backed at Rally Clarkston Parents Want Ry NED ADAMSON . CLARKSTON—The board of education In this,strikebound school district found itself in a somewhat unpopular position last night, following a confrontation before parents. Nearly 1,000 persons attended a rally in the high school gymnasium last night to hear the school board's position regarding the stalemated teacher contract negotiations. The general opinion reflected indicated that parents want their children back in school, regardless of the cost of tiie teachers' demands. Most parents also appeared to be more in support of the Clarkston Education Association (CEA) the teachers' bargaining agent, than foe board. SALARY PACKAGE ' The board maintains the salary package requested by CEA, based on a fact-tinder’s recommendation, would represent expenditures of $300,000 oyer its Income, or a school operation tax increase of 25 per cent. Acceptance of foe fact-finder’s recommendation would necessitate a millage increase of 3.84 mills for taxpayers or $117 annually based on a $20,000 house, qne audience spokesman noted. > Several residents accused the board of manipulating figures “in order to make their case look good.” Charles Barrie, assistant superintendent and one of the board’s negotiators, answered a questioner’s remark: “Are you implying that the fact-finder is a liar,” by replying, “Yes, I would say so.” ■ ; i.... Dr. L. F. Greene, superintendent of schools, whose $32,030 annual salary was A sore point to many audience members, later retracted Barrie’s statement. CONTRADICTION' The CEA believes foe difference between the school ’ board’s, offer and the fact-finder’s salary recommendations approximates $37,000 which would not create deficit financing as foe board contends. - In a prepared statement following last night’s meeting, CEA President Thomas Brown, said his organisation is proposing an immediate resumption of contract talks without conditions to reach agreement and reopen fob schools. “We have done, everything possible to meet foe board 6f education halfway Including reluctantly compromising on the fact-finder’s recommendations in order to reach a settlement and avoid a strike,” Brown sqid. 'Floyd Vincent, assistant superintendent of schools, said THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1969 A—4 In Farmington Region Meetings Slated on Consolidation Plan FARMINGTON - Meetings to' debate the proposed consolidation of the Farmington area begin this week in the four municipalities affected. Voters go to foe polls Nov, 4. The schedule is tomorrow in Sarah Fisher Home for Wood Creek Farms Village residents; Oct. 8 in East Junior High tar Farmington Township Friends of Troy Library Plan Used-Book Sale TROY — The Friends of the Troy Public Library have selected NoV. -13-14 As foe annual used book sale dates. Many bocks are needed to stage this. Annual project: hardbacks, paperbacks, textbooks, children's books and funny-books. Records and National Geographic magazines are also welcomed by foe mends. ■'■I.'1 1 A A *1 Mrs. Walter Sobeck, 3448 Newgate, is chairman of the sale. residents; Oct, 13 in First Presbyterian Church for Quakertown Village residents; Oct. IS ,in Farmington Junior High for city residents; and Oct.- 22 in Dunckel Junior High again for township residents. * A A Speakers for and against consolidation will be solicited from the municipality, where the meeting is being held. Each ride will be given 10 minutes to speak, followed by a five minute rebuttal by each in reverse order. A question-1 discussion period will follow. MODERATORS The meetings will be moderated by members of foe Joint Study Committee which has been meeting to discuss the question of consolidation. According to state law, each of the four municipalities must pass the consolidation request fay a majority vote in order for fob motion to pass. ★ A A. Approval in November merely would mean that charter commissioners, also foe board and administration representatives will sit down and discuss foe CEA proposal today. , NO ANSWER “The board made it clear last night that it Is willing to resume negotiations. Right now I cannot give you an answer to when and how we Will react to the CEA's statement,” Vincent declared.. “ A CEA spokesman said his .group was compromised i against by the fact-finder on 70 per cent of foe issues. “As a matter of professional'dignity we cannot concede everything,” he arid. 7- Some of .the CEA’s concessions included relief time duty in elementary ^schools, Class size limitations, relief of nonprofessional duties such as collecting lunch money and severance pay. The current obstacles to settlement include CEA demands for personal business leave days and board acceptance of foe fact-finder salary recommendations which lists, a range of $7,375 for a BA minimum to a master’s maximum of $12,625. INCREMENT , .. .. L The fact-finder’s salary recommendation also includes Parent: 'Are You Implying That The Fact-Finder Is A LiarT Assistant Supt. Charles Barrie: 'Yes, I Would Say So/ a longevity clause calling lor a three per cent Increment for each five years beyond foe top step. School board negotiators contend foe economic impact of foe personal days request would approach $13,000 in payment to substitutes if ail teachers in the system took foe full leave time. - A A * The board also maintains that its current policy regarding leave time , that Includes provisions for personal illness, funerals, jury duty, hospital visitations, court appearances, legal and moral obligations, adequately covers any situation that might necessitate-leave time during the yea#. ____________ elected on that ballot, may prepare a charter which must then be approved by the votrs before foe actual consolidation takes place. The nine'commissioners, to be elected from a field, of 28 on foe ballot, will be divided among foe municipalities according to the equal.proportlons formula; Farmington Township will elect five; Farmington City will elect two, and each village Will elect one. Troy Story Hour Starts Today for Preschoolers TROY — The Troy Public Library is to begin its Wednesday story-hour program hour today- Preschoolers 3-5 years old are invited to hear stories read by volunteer readers. Two sessions will enable more children to participate in foe program. The first session* will last from 10:15-10:40 a.m. and'foe second session will \ follow from 10:45-11:10 a.m. ' Disciplining Set in Birmingham School Walkout BIRMINGHAM *- A joint committee of school officials, administrators and board of, education members moved yesterday to discipline students at Groves and Seahoim high schools, who Walked out of classes here last week. The estimated 350 students, • most of whom were from Groves, left classes to march two miles to the school district’s downtown administration building. They will be suspended from-classes for. one day. A * * The decision-to punish foe students who demonstrated ostensibly in support of teachers who are working without a contract, but primarily to open communication channels to air student grievances, came as a surprise to many observers. School officials had earlier termed me student example of self-direction and independence a healthy situation. There was also little indication that disciplinary action would be forthcoming at that time. ‘COMPLIES WITH POLICY’ 4 A school board spokesman said the action compiled With a standard school district , policy regarding class “skips.” “The students’ action constituted a skip and standard school procedure concerning such situations will be taken,” the spokesman said. Walled Lake Eyed tor HUD Program LANSING UR — Walled Lake is one of, 20 Michigan rites being recommended for U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) assistance for low-cost, mass-produced housing. .WWW' The aid is being sought under HUD’s Township Truck Driver Gets Honor OAKLAND TOWNSHIP-The National Automobile Transporters Association has given B. T. (Bud) Tompkins of 5040 Orion, Oakland Township, its distin-, guished driver of foe year award. Tompkins received foe highway safety' award at a -recent special luncheon of foe association. - A- A A He began driving trucks in. 1937 and since has driven mdre than 1.75 million miles — foe equivalent of 70 times around foe earth,— without having a preventable accident. Tbmpkins has never received a traffic violation ticket in Michigan; „A A A A former resident of Pontiac, Tompkins Works for foe Pontiac office of foe F. J. Boutell Drtveaway Co. “Operation Breakthrough” program. HUD is budgeting $20 million for construction in Michigan. It would lease the units, selling them later at their assessed valuation. Gov. William Milliken said other sites are ih Alma, Alpena, Battle Creek, Detroit, Flint, Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, Monroe, Muskegon Heights, Port Huron, Saginaw and Sterling Heights. , He reported HUD officials estimated the contract awards will be made by late November. 160 NATIONWIDE The Michigan site applications’’"*!* among 160 nationwide. “Michigan faces a serious housing shortage,7 Milliken said. “At foe present rate, we are building nearly 40,000 fewer living units per yeqr than are necessary to keep pace with foe growing population. - A A A “The active concern of our mayors and city managers abdfit this crucial need'has helped create our statewide breakthrough program," the governor said. Milliken said Michigan organizations submitted more proposals than any other state in the eight-state north central region/These covered a wide selection of inner-city, rural and suburban types of building, he said. Given Training at Workshop ■BPfflgfr 7 v ’ , ■ - ^ NMttt VrMi PM* Horizon Worker , Packages Electronic Farts By LOIS FRIEDLAND FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP - White Wood walls of an old converted barn deaden foe noise of active hammers and clinking metal. These are the sounds of New Horizons workers packaging products, building crates and bending wires — their dally Jobs, ‘ A normal small-factory atmosphere? Wflk through foe open bard doofs and people stare with wide-eyed gazes. Slurred* voices record your presence — if noted- at all — as you walk to the director’s office located in. foe eld tack room. James Nothbff, director of the Farmington Township branch of N e w Horizons, explains that here moderately mentally or physically handicapped Individuals are taught to handle certain routine jobs contracted from businesses. Once trained, the handicapped workers are placed in jobs as janitors, rides add filing clerks, to free more trained personnel for other jobs. SLIGHTLY MODISH The mustachioed Nothbff, who dresses with a slightly modish air, explains that New Horizons emphasizes foe “behavior approach.” - , He calis his- workers- “clients” and considers their training therapeutic and educational but never as straight schooling.^ ; • * * A • “Our ultimate goal is to make them (foe7 handicapped) self-supporting. We try to get them taking home a paycheck and earning their own kbep. Sometimes this is their first success,” he commented. Arriving at a self-supporting job begins with much evaluation of ability. All workers hirtd\tt New Horizons are first tested and examined. Those found to have capabilities above — or below — foe scope of foe program are plaCedvln more-Appropriate agencies. ON-THE-JOB TRAftilNG * Once accepted, foe client has bn-the-job training at forEarmlngton Township , bullring or foe Wain center In Madison Heights. Their work, which has been lot to New Horizons on a bid basis Includes timpler jobs such as mriliagr collating, counting and boxing parts. Most of the equipment used in such operations has been donated by area “What may - be obsolete to a businessman could still be used by New Horizons," said Northoff. Walking through, foe .workroom, Nothoff stops to give directions to a pretty girl, both physically and mentally handicapped, attempting to retype a simple fist. A A' ' A In a soft-spoken tone, he repeats- his,, directions for foe third time when she finally smiles happily and says that she will tty. “I find it difficult to do- the training rather than sitting down , and dring it myself. It’s like thinking of 47 different ways of saying It until you hit on foe right combination of words to make foe worker understand,” he said. ‘COMMON SENSE’ “It’s a common sense approach. You also try to make each failure a learning experience,” Nothoff foeororized. Nothoff transmits his belief that each worker is important to himself and his society. Passing through foe workroom, he’ll ask questions, .to' draw out the workers' personalities. He treats his , .“clients” as friends in order to'Encourage them to think, make decisions and find their own level of creativity. The employes have a 30 hour workweek. At the end of each day, they Old Books Sought in W. Bloomfield WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Books are needed for foe West Blooni-fieid Township Library annual used book sale, Nov. *8-10. Used books 'may be dropped off at either the, library, 5030 Orchard Lake Road, or the Westacres branch at Commerce and Cedarbahk. Mrs. Robert Forrest of 8701 Aides or Mrs. L. W. Cutler ofNMl Northcote Lane, will' pick up books for anyone unable / to /leave them at foe library. Sale profits will supplement library - * fl ... James Nothoff Stops To Give Directions To A Pretty Girt. Both Physically And Mentally Handicapped, Attempting To Retype A Simple Ust. In A Soft-Spoken Tone, He Repeats His Directions For The Third Time When She Finally Smiles Happily And Says That She Will Try , .. line up carrying their iunch boxes and punch out on the time clock. .Once m client has been sufficiently* trained to handle a job out side of New Horizons’ sheltered atmosphere, they are placed in regular businesses. HANDLE JOBS BETTER Many businesses are now discovering that well-trained, moderately retarded or handicapped persons can handle certain jobs bettor than normal adults. The retarded or handicapped person’s approach to life in general and to their jobs In particular Is “uncomplicated.” This attitude makes them happy doing simple repetitive work that many adults would soon try to avoid or “staff off.” - One manufacturer of electronics parts found that hiring mentally retarded assemblers actually reduced- job turnover. He explained, “In my place, I’ve got a lot of work that’s repetitive.” A A ■ A Reassigning these jobs to Now Horizons trained workers could leave more trained men open for more productive or more demanding work, Nothoff contends. Thinking of a hearing aid ? ZmMi has 10 yeen of ikM axporionco In caso you haven’t hoard You oonrt buy a finer Instrument than eo tiny it fits in your ear...toona tor the severely deaf.- Mall Optioal ft Haarlaf AM Oaatar <82-1113 Michigan Bell Z®\ Part of thi Netionwiite Boll System yjy "Sunday Viewpoint: JUot recommended foe people who get headaches when they think. "Sunday Viewpoint" Is one of the ingredients of The Detroit News' 90 Turned On Days. It was designed to give smugness a hard time. Dn its pdges every week, lei, analysts,, philosophers, intists and ‘reviewers ex-ire the whole panorama of nan adventure. And if, in the process, one of them should kick your neighbor’s favorite sacred cow, don’t laugh. The next one may prick the balloon of your own pet dogma. "Sunday Viewpoint”, is not for mental ostriches. Nor is it for those who grow nervous and suspicious at the sight of Jhree-syliable words. diSmit news But, if fresh Inslghts-even when they threaten your-most cherished Ideas-challenge you to growth. If wit, logic and literacy delight you. Then, welcomed the pages of "Sunday Viewpoint’'. They’ll turn you on. Please enter my subscription ta The Detroit News quick, and .NAME. ADDRESS. CITY____ — -PHONE. (Mall terlvtecrfptfee Department, The Detroit Nowo, 413 Lafayette BM., Oetrelt, Michigan41221. Or phono 122-2400.) ga \ « Chock on* O Daily enly-60< per week □ Doily and Sundoy-90* per wook □ fundey only-304 per week ‘ ----------------------------- ■ FIFTEEN CHILDREN HURT - A truck loaded Vdth apples sideswiped a stopped Montague school bus yesterday afternoon on U.S. 31 at the MuskegomOceana County line near Rothbury, injuring 15 children on the bus. Hiree of the pupils, aged 10 Ip 16, were hospitalized, one with a skull fracture, one with a broken hip end one with cut*. A brake lining on the truck apparently tailed. 7 Freed Green Berets Heading for Homes TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. TAP) — Seven Green Berets, against whom charges of murdering an alleged Vietnamese double agent have been dropped, returned to the United States today and headed for their homes. CpI. Robert B. Rheault, 43, former commander of the Green Berets in Vietnam and the top-ranking among the men, said he hoped the incident “would be forgotten ... “so long as people remember that we were exonerated." ~..t * * An Army spokesman said they were released upon arrival for 30 days’ leave.- Rheault said he, the five other officers and two enlisted men did not know Thai Khac Chuyen, their alleged victim. He insisted there Was no .evidence that the man had been killed. ‘SECURITY REASONS' Army Secretary Stanley R. Resor announced Monday the BUYI SELLI TRADE) . . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSI at Nlsws Conference - coi. Robert B. Rheault acts as spokesman for a group Of Green Berets against whom charges of murdering an alleged Vietnamese double agent were dropped Monday. Rheault told newsmen yesterday he hoped the public would “remember that wa were exonerated.” charges against all eight had been .dropped after the Central Intelligence Agency, for security reasons, declined to let Us agents testify. He said the CIA action precluded e fair trial. With Rheault of Vineyard Ha-ven, Mass., were Capt. Robert F. Marasco, 27, Bloomfield, N.J.; Maj. Thomas C. Middleton Jr., 29, Jefferson, 8.C.; Maj. Dsvid Crew, 33, Cedar Rapids, Iowa; CapLLeland J. Brumley, 27, Duncan, Okie.; Cept. Budge E. Williams,. 27, Athens, Ga.; and CW02 Edward M. Boyle, 26, of New York. * e w , All had been charged with murder and contplirley, Chargee wore held to abeyance for Boyle and Sgt. l.C. Aim L. Smith Jr., 41, of Naples, FUu " i■■ c?/wrr*ftv \ Smith was aboard a separate flight to the United States, after his departure from Vietnam was delayed in processing. VoIpe Visits Rome MADRID (AP) - UA TtoBS* portaticn Sscrstory John Volpe flew today to Rome after • 24-hour visit hare. ■ ■ V msmmsesf THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1MD % \ * A—A • v • , —j. ii - i u/w-J Pontiac and Clarkston, Meet Ortonville Long distance won't come between you after October 2 That’s right. At 12:01 a.m., ThursdayyLong Distance charges will be eliminated on Ortonville calls from Pontiao and Clerkston. You won’t even have to dial “1” when making such calls. Listings for Ortonville customers will be included as a separate section, in the April 1970, issue of the Pontiac Area directory. Before then; you may obtain a special directory supplement containing Ortonville numbers by calling your telephone business office, 332-99J1. ' -v This expanded service is pprt of our continuing effort to make telephone service g greater value. We hope you willfyp pleased with the «xtra convenience and sayings. -If Tells It Like Ills I By ED BLUNDEN Beware, another piece of contagious slang Is on the way. We've ail heard “sock It to ’em," "do ,your thing,” “finalize," “bag,” "gap,”' etc. until we're right up Creeping Into the Jargon Is “input.” Hill I first heard It used about a-month‘ago at a City Commission meeting. It was a stormy aession with a lot of citizen participation (griping). Near the conclusion, a speaker said “These people have "all given you their inputs'/’. It was a swell word. It covered the feeling, opinions'and suggestions put forth, but added dimension. ' LAYING ON THE LINE - BLUNDEN Of Course, I had been impressed the first time I heard someone say “tell it like it is/’ This told me the speaker was about to be utterly sincere and reveal heretofore undisclosed material. But, use of the term soon became distorted. The usage bed the most extravagant variation when one speaker said, “I’m not toiling It like it is, I’m telling it like it’s going to be, because it sure isn't that way now.” Catchy words and phrases in our media-oriented society quickly auffer overuse and exploitation. Thus we hear, “This is really good beer... and I’m tolling it like it is.” The USe of the word “input” at present centers around office forces. Thus after any type of briefing, hearing or staff meeting, members emerge with “valuable inputs:” GIVE ED A CHANCE It’s an absolute must that you work “inputs" Into your conversation. It can be substituted for any exchange of information or opinion whatsoever * . . “Thanks for* those inputs, boss, I won’t do it again . i, we Value your inputs, Ralph, but let somebody else talk i,.■ -s ■ In fact, if you’ve-read this far, you’ve gotten “valuable inputs” from this article. This useful -word will no douht degenerate in usage, too. Soon we’ll hear, "This is great beer because it has valuable inputs." - Sorry about that, but you better believe it. DAUGHTER IS MISSING — Gene Tunney, former world heavyweight boxing champion, goes to a Boston press conference in a wheelchair yesterday to discuss disappearance of his daughter, Joan Tunney Wilkinson, 30, white site was on a European vacation..Tunney is recuperating from surgery at New England Baptist Hospital in Boston. He has offered a reward of (1,290 for information about his daughter. 'Voice of the People: THE PONTIAC PRESS II Wat Huron 8treet Pontiac, Michigan MOM WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER .1, 19*9 HOWARD H. FITZGERALD II RICHARD M. FITZGERALD JOHN A. RILEY AUvartlilng Director G. MARSHALL JORDAN , Local AdvertUIng Manager HAROID A. IITZGIRAID . yuktiihw mt-itt* Harry j. rii d i Editor J&d RICHARD M. SAUNDERS Managing Editor W *lt* Teacher Talks Bluntly Man bit dog the other day. 6r more accurately, a teacher lectured students on how they should conduct themselves academically—which is something of a switch; "The task of students is to learn and to be instructed, not to decide what courses will be taught and who will teach them, and not to invest the university’s money,” says philosopher Ernest van den Haag of Mew York University, addressing a freshman convocation at DePauw University in Indiana. ★ * ★ X' Other blunt advice offered by van den Haag: “ e “Students are not in a position to know what they should be taught; if they do know what > they should be taught, then they have what they came for and they should leave the university.” e “The proper task of a university is teaching you to reflect, to analyse and see what actions and alternatives are available and should be taken. The place is not committed to action, but to prepare you to make future commitments.” e “The way to learn about poverty is not to be indignant-but to study economics. If you i are interested in preventing war, it doesn’t mean a thing to ‘make love, not war,’but it does mean something to learn, how to prevent war by studying political science and history.” ★ ★ ★ Perhaps the bluntest statement - of all is van,den Haag’s contention that the reason higher education is irrelevant to so many college students today is because “so many students themselves are irrelevant tocollege.” * ★ ★ ★ Americans are in the midst of an “educational escalation,” . he says. They erroneously believe that you can do anything better if. you have more and more academic preparation. Hence the new wave of college students, half of whom Shouldn’t be In college. - • . *• Van den” Haag says he favors a law that not only outlaws discrimina-tion on the basis of sex, race and religion, but also on the amount of one’s education. "Discrimination on the basis of educational degree should be prohibited unless it. can be shown it is relevant to the wprk to be .done.” “ * ★ Interestingly enough, the professor was not jeered but was, in fact, enthusiastically applaud-'£?f ed .by his student listeners. 'It's Just A Figment Of Some Cartoonist's Imagination!' David Lawrence Says: Apathy to Strife in U.S. Puzzling Self-Protection Laws Fought like most states, Illinois has witnessed a. motorcycle population explosion, the number of registra-tions having doubled in Illinois Atom 50,000 to 100,000 since 1905. And like most states, Illinois-had a law requiring motorcyclists to wear crash helmets. ★ ★ ★ It had a law until motorcyclists successfully challenged jit. The law has now been declared unconstitutional on the grounds that an individual cannot be forced -to protect himself. (Michigan has enacted a new motorcycle-helmet law after a‘previous one was held unconstitutional.) * £3 , The ruling could open up ghrgthgr interesting legal Pandora’s box, especially if it is repealed in other states or is as well. For instance, it could call into question the practice, of some judges of suspending portions of fines or sentences of traffic violator# who were wearing seat belts or, conversely, being a little harder on those who were not wearing their belts. ★ ★ ★ What about cases where contributory negligence has been alleged against persons who were injured in accidents because they did hot: have their seat or shoulder belts fastened? ★ ' ★ ★ The whole issue revolves around the question of whore one’s safety ends and the rights of others begin. It mgy not be constitutional to force a motorcyclist to protect himself. But it would seem that a second party who may be in an accident involving one so heedless deserves mse- quences regardless of who caused it-. WASHINGTON -Many writers are trying to describe the mood of America today, but it la difficult to put in words the people’s state of mind growing out of a-variety qf; problems. ® Thu.s/tbe protests against the violations o f , iflbronr law and order TAWRENCE ■ are not always related to“ demonstrations against the Yietnam war or to racial troubles. Racial friction, to be sure, is incrasing .rather than diminishing. , What is puzzling at the moment perhaps is the alleged apathy or indifference of many people to what is occurring. The truth is there Is no dear understanding of where responsibility for .maintenance of law and order begins or ends. IN LAST FEW DAYS Within the last ,few days police and National Guardsmen were required to prevent further trouble when the W i s c o n s i n legislature convened in special session. Earlier in the week- a Roman Catholic priest who is a civil rights activist had led 1,000 demonstrators w h o broke down the doors of the assembly chamber and * occupied the room for 10 hours. .But the significant words in the news dispatch were: "No arrests were made.” There are pleqty of grievances on the part, of the electorate in eve r'y administration. Today the high cost of living, as inflaUon continues, is affecting households everywhere. All these subjects may ac- count for the different protest movements and worries as government — federal, state and local — is confronted with cumulative responsibilities to maintain order at home. (CoyyilfM, 1*4*. Vubll Hill IvMiciti) Bob Considine Says: Nixon-Press Harmony Appears to Be Ending NEW YORK-Last Friday's White House news conference, the first in three months, gave hints of Nixon Draft Plan Is of Loopholes CRCMLEY By RAY CROMLEY NEA Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON — If Congress falls' to amend the Selective Service law this aession and President JMxon gocfc • head with the new way id drafting young men he now proposes, be will be Jumping from the frying pan into the fire-,., A college freshman with a sturjfnt deferment will still have four to five years of uncertainty ahead of him. He won’t know whether or-not he Is going to be selected foil service until he graduates from college and spends his 'inquired year in the prime draft-age group. ’★*, L| ■ - A low draft call, dr ho draft cOll at all in a month in which the son of some high, administration- official has* a high priority for call would Risks the whole draft system suspect, even though n o wrongdoing was intended. Critics would be certain the call was cut that particular month so that ihls particular youiig man wotdd "escape.” CONFUSING SYSTEM Tha “moving age., group system” which Secretary of Defense Laird favors would have Selective* Service local boards - in such confusion that there would be myriad mistakes. . Each month the priorities would change. Through- the Selective Service System this would require a hilge quantity oft extra paper work which would of necessity have to be done at high speed. * ★ * If a board acted slowly in reclassifying a young man wfihee deferment had just ended, for example, hip drafting might be delayed), for a year, a year, .later than - a young man in another area whose ,board acted more quickly in his reclassification. • The date on which a board met, for example, could heavily Influence when a young man would be drafted or conceivably, through a change ★ „ it it It’woufd seem from analysis that the moving age group plan would provide so many loopholes for evasion, however much these1 loopholes were restricted by careful legal, language, that f there would be constant recrimination. Clever lawyers^ would be busy advising their clients on evasioh. For example: A man, finding that he would be finishing school at a time, when because of his-birthday -and month, he would be near the top of the first priority induction group dr near the top, could find ways to delay graduating for a month or two, in order to get classified as eligible at a time when his! name would lie af or near the" bottom of the induction list, thus lowering' his chances -of being Inducted. JOB SHIFT MANEUVER Or a man, deferred, as a key worker but due to be shifted to a job in which he was not eligible for deferment; .might get his company to hurry or delay the change to lessen his chances of being, inducted. ' , The- "rtioving age group system1*1 further is technically so complicated to explain, that neither young people nor their parents will be able to understand what i s ~ happening. Lack of understanding Inevitably leads to suspicion. In such a climate rumors and accusations Will flourish even when no unfairness ex- ! IS Y The public wonders whether state and dty authorltiesare afraid of the demonstrators. Certainly any such invasion of a state capital constitutes an. -offense which is punishable. - WRATH AROUSED The wrath of the members of the Wisconsin Legislature was aroused, and there were .demands for the punishment of the participants. The feeling throughout the coup try is that, unless severe measures are taken to deal . with demonstrators wHo pro-duce d i s o r d e r, the disturbances will rise in nurriber and intensity. One of the most flagrant examples of Indifference to law is the recent episode in which civil rights leaders, mostly Negroes, have demanded -large sums of money in “reparations” from churches. There is, to be ' s u r e, discontent about the war in Vietnam. i ' "NATURAL DESIRE , . , While there 'is a natural desire for the war to be ended gs early as possible, the risks in such a course are not. , named mood much more barbed. The President, like most of his predecessors, didn’t have a very good time. It isn’t easy to give positive, sure-shot answers in front of the cold red eye of the TV cameras, when a slip of the tongue or an error of judgment might produce extraordinary reactions ' — ranging all the way from a dip in the stock markjet to a rush on the. banks to a thermonuclear war. One might pine for aJesa. volatile, way of having a President report to the nation. ensued, arid; of course, the question never got answered., Harry Truman battled the press when he thought it needed it. Ike Eisenhower, who was at first astounded that any reporter should ask him a pointed question, did much to establish the White House news conference as it now Is recognized.' Jack Kennedy got a great kiek out of the give and take, and was the most articulate of them all. LBJ could charm or overwhelm i n d i v i d u a 1 members of the news media, in his office, but stiffened up when confronted by reporters in. numbers. President Nixon was remarkably self-assured and open-handed in his f l r s t brushes with the press tional TV. But something’s now happening. Relent School Incidents Discussed by Readers | Our son is in good health and although he.auf-, fared a bad cut, X rays showed no permanent damage. We thank God for that. Contrary to the article .in The Press, he was not involved in a fight but was attacked without warning or provocation. He did not recognize his gttackers and we do not believe they knew him. He just happened to be the one in their path of destruction. __. * it_* |[ . We do not harbhr resentment against black students at Northern High'School and plead with other students and parents at both Northern and Central to go back to school without fear and distrust, but with the determination that no few people shall cause your place of learning to become a place of turmoil. God expects us tojielp ourselves by refusing to carry rumors or listen to gossip; by obeying school rules, our teachers and adminis-. trators. , "*■ r“ it ★ ★ It Is true our . young people are growing up in a world df unrest, but it is also true that there has riever been a generation of students with^more-opportunity for. an education. There is no reason why all black and white students cannot be friends' 'if each will do his best to treat the other with the same kindness and courtesy with which he would . like to be treated. • MRS. HOWARD R. DOW 644 BROOKS In regards to the happening at Pontiac Northern on September 25, I would like to know when the white people in Pontiac are going to stand up for their rights. I feel are discriminated against every day. Why' didn’t teachers contact the parents, .because some of the teachers knew about this before it took place? Why are outsiders allowed to enter school with hammers and such in their possession? Why aren’t these people hauled off Tor loitering? The public should be told what is going to happen to those who injured the white students. How can the schools allow our flag to be discriminated against at their assemblies while* our boys are dying for that same flag? W, TURNER ‘Commend Support Given Social Security’ I recently wrote to Congressman Jack McDonald regard-, ihg Social Security benefits. These payments are different, from ADC, welfare and other programs we hear so much about. Many retirees have paid into this fund, along with employer contributions, since its inception in 1937. Those dollars paid in were mostly hard-earned ones, not the inflationary dollars of today. I received a reply from Congressman McDonald which stated we could expect some favorable action in the near future in this matter. We need more like McDonald in Washington. * v , . R. H. GRIFFITH 79 CANDLELIGHT LANE ‘Shoppers With Children Need to Use Carts’ When shopping at The Pontiac Mall I saw a sign stating no carts were allowed in The Mall. I have a very-active two-year-old and am not about to chase her and shop'too. Why doesn’t a place that has so- much business from mothers with small children provide something to keep children In? UNHAPPY MOM Question and Answer , I’m a newcomer and am interested in finding a group of. Senior Citizens. Can you give me any information? MRS. E. S. - REPLY Both Pontiac Parks and Recreation (333-7171) and YWCA (334-0973) have active groups of senior citizens. They can give you their times and places for meetings. 'v. ■ . But if a President was allowed the luxury of saying only what he wished to impart to the constituency, with no chance, of pertinent Inquiry and what amounts to cross-examination, we’d wind up In a heluva fix. A mighty majority of our bygone chief executives would have nothing whatever to do Smiles There are few things more permanent than a temporary iax;_r!_________... * ★ '* One thing harder to keep than money is quiet. . Question and Answer Who gets more in dollars per student from the State— Pontiac or Waterford? INTERESTED PARENT REPLY Waterford. Last year Pontiac spent0/total 6f $790^93 per student, $238.28 of it coming frorp the State. Waterford spent $637 per student, $341.39 of it from the State. ■ - • Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Alan's Nest New York Newt We don't Often see eye to eye with United Notions-with the press. When Presi-* Secretary General U Thant, dent Theodore Roosevelt in- - j$u^ we are gome gg per cent vlted, a small group o f Washington reporters to come into the White Mtouse and get out of the rain It was considered almost as audacious as his dinner invitation to George Washington Carver. ALOOF OF REPORTERS Woodrow Wilson was loftily aloof of reporters.. Warren Harding knew only a handful of them, chief among thorn George Rothwell Brown, Stefa Early and George ■ 11 till | p didn’t know anybody readily understood. Verbal Orchids Mr*. George M-Sjott Sr. of 132 HeraheyMHln birthday. Mr*. Julia Carbonncau of Romeo; 90th birthday. sympathetic toward a report he released recently. It concerns this little earthl y ball that mankind Inhabits; man’s nest, you might say, which he is fouling at ever-increasing speed. ★' w * ★ a Outstanding' among United States, Articles used and then junked per year, according to the- U Thant report are 7 million automobiles, 20 . million tons of paper, 48 Holmes. Calvin Coqllitge billion cans^28 billion-bottles and Jars, 3 billion tons of waste rock and mill tailings ... We, pollute our. air with’ some 142 million tons a year1 of smoke and unhealthy fumes, and our industrial plants dump about 50 trillion gallons of hot water into ponds, lakes, streams and fivers-and thereby kill or ini jure numerous fish. It la estimated that about 1,2 billion acres of once cultivable land have been Herbert Hoover released Ms messages through a ^spook ‘the White Rouse spokesman.” FDR enjoyed his jousts with 'an- Increasing band of White Houae correspondents he used, to Invite into fils office. If one asked a question, he considered too tough, FDR would tell him to go to a corner, (in the oval office) and stand In it f for punishment. Much laughter. made barren by erosion or salt water inroads which could have been prevented, * * . ★ Humans down the ages hafa managed to rub out entirely 150 tyjtos of birds and animals. About 1,000 types of wild animals are regarded as being In danger of becoming extinct because people either hunt-them-downunn)ercifully_ or neglect to protect them with sensible legislation and set aside adequate wildlife reservations. Another statistic: By the year 2,000 the earth’s population is expected to number 7 billion;-qr twice what It is now: The. ^gkmeyBdtoever, is expected to remain the same •toe. , ] i,i' \ " - i r The food; shelter, fuel, and energy problems which this anticipated development will bring are easy to imagine, but will scarcely be easy to solve. *' * * * Here is where the United Nations comes. In, with a plan which obviously. is a U. N. natural. The general assembly has called for a gathering of experts from all pountrloa, In what is to be known as the United Nations Conference on the Human Effvironmerii, to convene in S t o ek h o 1 m, Sweden, sometime in 1972. This conference wllTtake up all the problems and -dangers spotlighted above, and many more, discuss them at length, and make recommendations as to how man can reverse the age-old practice of fouling his own earthly nest. Cost of the conference Is estimated at about 1.9 million dollars. lt Is hard to Imagine a better why to apend that amount* of money; and we hope the United States government and its citizens will give the, S t o c k b o 1 m meeting every ponible encouragement and cooperation. * k mHHMI •nclo.lval/ •• th* hr rapuMi-teiltn/V all kul A*w> gdoM# l« (hi, MWiaamr- at «*ll m all A* now* HImoMM*.' Th. SoaHa. Nu l> HaNvomH ky ■arrl.r l«H) • woakwfcofa malM Count!., h li IMM • yaan aka* wh.ta In M,Mgm> aoH a* oHm, glam In tha UnHW katM SUM • yaa*. All mall MMMMfM geyeWe h * «.nc. nttaga ha. Loan paW a* th. Ini tint ml. at Ponttao. MkMgan. / ^ : m THE PONTIAC- PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBElt 1, 1909 T™ J' A—7 Revised Drain Prpposa! Is Approved A revised proposal for the 22.2-niilllon Levinson Drain to • serve Pontiac’s southeast area plus two neighboring townships was approved by , the ’ City i Commission last night. The drain .would, serve the South Boulevard-Opdyke area in the city and portions of Pqptiac Township to the east, and Bloomfield Township to the south. Joseph E. Neipllng, director of public works, reported reapplication for the -project was necessary because officials of Pontiac Township have never signed the 'original petition. If two communities* approve s drain project, the third community Involved is obliged to go along, according to , state law, Nelpllng said.. , The reason Pontiac Township j/officials have not signed the .petition was unknown to Neip-ling, he said.! However, none of therh ‘had voiced open op-position to the project.. COSTTO BE SPREAD . t According to state law, the County Drain Commissioner will spread the cost according to the benefit to each community even If one government has not signed the petition request, he said. The state attorney general’s office had requested a reap-proval of the project after noting the'lack.'Of signatures. Engineering work-is completed and (he project near construction, Nelpling reported. In-other business, the commission sent a -resolution to the State Public Service Commission objecting to the* closing of a street for the Grand Trunk Railroad. The West Boulevard crossing was closed last summer after , a fatal traffic accident. * Hie railroad is seeking permanent dosing of the streetjthe commission, railroad and plana to Install a humping (train assembly) operation at that point which will mean almost continual use of the tracks. * FIGHTING MOVE The city has beep fighting the proposed move , for months seeking cooperation from the state and railroad in providing the city with a crossing of the railroad somewhere Ip the vicinity to help with the east-west traffic flow. A^meetlng of state officials has been asked, but thus.far never arranged. * In other business the Torn-mission: ’ ',”v J Again delayed approval of a beer and Wine takeout license for Perry Drugs at Baldwin and Ypsllanfi. The approval was delayed one week to allow nearby residents to again speak to the commission. The license wjs delayed for 90 days after protests by a neighborhood committee and District 4 Commissioner F. Jack Douglas op- Douglas reiterated h i s position last night. • Heard proposals for two municipal, parking lots on West Huron. Public hearings were set for 8 p.m. Oct. 21 for proposed lots on the north, side 6t Hui between Mark and Dwight and on both blocks bordering Dakota. Cost of the first was placed at 874,000 and «t $129,000 at the second with the city to pay about 28 per cent of the total • Authorized bids for pedestrian overpass on Baldwin at New York for schoolchildren. Cost estimate is $40,000. Engineering reports for crossings at Montcalm at Burt and Perry across from Jefferson Junior High School also ordered. Set a public hearing, for curb and paving in the alley west of Woodward between Nebraska and Earlmoor for Oct. 14. Projected cpst is 221,000 with' 114,300 to be benefiting property owners • Received the assessment roll for a sanitary sewer on the north side of Walton'from Stirling to . 250 feet west of Arlene and set a hearing for Oct. 14. • Rezoned the north side ol Perry, adjacent to Perry Plaza from light to heavy commercla to allow a specialty drive-in grocery store. - • Called for bids on a new ladder truck for the fire dept The cost is estimated at'857,000] and delivery is not expected for] two years. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ■ : Offer* * ( / FREE PARKING OUTRE PONTIAC MUNICIPAL LOT (CORNER SAGINAW and HURON) Furntfhed by tlun Following Merchantit OSMUN’S MEN’S WEAR 91 N. Saginaw St. BOBETTE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. CONN’S CLOTHES 73 N. Saginaw . THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. Commission T ax Free Bo The Pontiac City Commission | millionaires who do not pay a offered it collective opinion on dime in tax," Douglas said. He state and national legislation also objected to raising the 6 last night in a resolution con- per cent state limit on bond coming the tax-free, municipal issues saying' it just brings bond controversy. more profit to people with The commission urged the money-to invest. U.S. Congress „ to drop its con- District J Commissioner T. sideratlon of a bill to remove Warren Fowier defended the the tax-free status of the bonds method of f i n a n c t n g. im and the State Legislature to re- Iprovements. “If there’s no prof move 4he 6 per cent returh ceil-ft, there’s no investment aric lng on them. you would have no industries * ’ * * and no labor.’’ The resolution said the issue! District 2 Commissioner threatens con s,t r u c t i o n of, Robert C. Irwin said allowing essential facilities such as]an Increase in the interest rate sewers, hospitals, schools and would encourage investors to water supplies and would place [leave the corporate investments a greater burden on thp tax-]and go into the bond market, payers. [ District 5 Commissioner District 4 Commissioner F. Jack Douglas voted against ine resolution. He said the removal of tax-free status was designed to cut loopholes in the income taxlaws;—i—r-—.....'.;—- “Do you realize there are Robert F. Jackson warned of the “backlog danger.” ” H e pointed out since f e d e r a 1 legislation was proposed (It passed the House and is in committee in the Senate), bond buyers have held back. ’ * 48” woven acetate/rayoiy suit- « qq -Inge In •tripes, plaids and ehecki. I • 7 7 H .36" print cotton flqnnelettels \ jj* mochihe washable and1 doable. W • 7j" nylon not is so versatile. am Pestols ond deeptone colors. m Id A.M. »o I P.M., (Mon,-Fri) 9i00 A.M.-9P.M.) fee. 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(Set. tilO-V •Mil Sunday Noon t* f p.m. clout Tint, Wti. al t p.jgJ FEDERAL DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS TH White Skin for Black LOS ANGELES (AP) - PtU-film prtc* awoke screaming, her nightgown tblm. She ran into .the yard mantorch, Nelghbora atlfled the flames with a blanket, but half her skin was burned away that night of April U. 1964. A graft offered her only hope for life. Mrs. Price Is a Negro. When she came out of surgery, almost' halt her skin was white. Doctors had covered 40 per cent of her body with the only skin available at the time, from g white male corpse. FIRST RNA CASE Mrs. Price wall the first human to receive grafts of skin treated with ribonucleic add (RNA) as a way of combatting the process that makes the body reject foreign tissue. Dr. Weldon Jolley, Lome Linda University microbiologist who orginated the technique, \ says he since has used it in seven bum cases and it prolonged life In all but two. Surgeons under the direction of Dr. Louis L. Smith of Loma i.inda used as much as possible of what remained of Mrs. Price’s skin to repair burns that showed, on her neck and arms and legs. But there wasn't enough for the rest of her body. So 40 per cent of the grafted skin came from a white man who died shortly alter she on- _ _ _ University of Southern Price feels Is “I Just can't stand Califomia-County Medical Cen- heat. I used to work in a laun-| ter, four of them under sedation toward off pain, "When the bandages finally tered the hospital She now has came off and I found that about half of me was white, 111 admit I was worried some,” she, recalled. "But after they told me I had been dying and that the white skin was all that was available, I learned to live with dry but I had to give that up be-; cause anything over 80 degrees makes me feel like I want to ' jump out of my akin.- Now I do baby sitting, or take care of| elderly folks, whatever I can! WV’ , Mrs. Priqejays the Are started after she went to sleep smoking a cigarette. “I still smoke," large patches of white skin On her torso, front and back. Mrs. Price, 40, a tall, slender domestic worker, says she has lived happily, grateful to be alive. She saya she has over- come resentment she felt upon it. 1 usually wear long-sleeved she «but you Cap bet I learning white akin had re- turtleneck blouses and wee^rs s^oke ^ placed black. and it’s hardly noticeable at * * * NO ATTENTION PAID------------- + * ' * I Atter fiv® years- Pf- JoMey "I was self-conscious about It, Mrg gaid raclal Dre|u. “y» he sUn cannot •f0011"1 H for a long time,” she said IupURJES the c.ut oT her «*«*"• of treating bu-* Interview. “I was afraid of what L, „It m the dlscolora- my friends would think, But «tion," she said, “nobody wants turned out they didn t ^ tw0 coiors.’’ attention at ill. LnOwMi they're Just happy I'ln^Hm*’ Aytinul Multi-Vitamins tlO69 ________ $5.49 Ska -100's Soper Geriatric Tablets Mrs. Price apod fiv I BEAT UNBEARABLE Hie . only aftereffect Mrs. ____skin soaked in a solution When rolling dried bread, graham cracker* or loda cracker* for crumbs, keep them from scattering by placing in a plastic bag. Fasten tightly with rubber band. IToli bag with rolling pin and crumbs will stay in the bag instead Of alt over the roiling surface and kitchen. COMPARATIVE GENERAL FUND SALANCE SHEET - ■atanMShael Balanca'sliMt Audi: July 1. INI Junt 10, 1949 (tatty .cee* fundi.......... , ,Ml „ ' invtntorMt Prepaid Ixi Efficiency Report Setl A management consultant firm will be invited to appear before the County Board of Supervisors Finance Committee to teH What the firm can do for I 275.194 9M9? Total H 551.524 ilia •2,591.157 9 440.097 174,707 14,245 47,001 9 494,Wo 9 240.112 9 44,539 7411 547,749 43,997 . 41,502 ■fetal iblllltai Account! Payable ........ , lolarloi -PoyObM ... .. Salary Wlthholdlnga Payabl Deferred Revenue .. a, Raiarvo for ObllOtllona-Fo Gonoral Fund l Fund 101,1 JtfflffL JtML WlMUiLfJiL Fund COM hi Hanoi .............. Invoatment Oocurltlu .... Taxta Receivable ., -Accrued Intareat Receivable iiablfimaP*** Wttlr*rw*nf S*id Aeeete a 521,442 Accrued'Expenata DM RetirementFund loultv .........: It ...... ,»U42 T€»l OoW Ratlramanl Fund Liabilities Plus Fund TZTZ Aaaalai SUitOINO AMD BITS Ftiliio' bIlSncS 9 —s a— ........I*:::::::::;:::::::: . 93,459,704 I 4,915 Total Building and Slta Fund Liabilities ding 1 I Sflo fund Him and I (gully r Local OOurcaif LlabilltlM Plug GENERAL PUNb REVENUES * , Total Qanorol Fund Properly 1 .Tonga other than Proparly Tax .Tuition—Oummar School ......... .Tuition—Adult Education . ..... .Ravanuo from Currant Dopoalta .Revolving Fund. Ravadbea ...... Mlacallanooua Rovanuoa .1..... , Total Ravanuo from Local Souri . Ravanuo from State Sourcea: , Direct AairoMlatlona from tho . , State SMooi Aid tar 194949 .. ot toola and dial ....................... ..... .................... 44,990 lOCr l — lttta~Ald .. ....... ................ ...................... 100.249 Total. Dlract Appropriations from tho Itato proprlotions from tho state Raproaonllng jjjj of Federal fundi: vocational Education .. PL 4910 Title I ESEA PL 9910 Tjtlo.il ESEA PL 0910 Title III iflA " Basic Education increased efficiency of county government and what the cost will be. , ‘ Finance Committee Chairman {George Grba, D-Pontiac, who earlier this year told the committee he’d been promised free service by two consulting firms,, reported yesterday that both were now unable.to comply. ★ , e ■, * * . "Jt’s amazing a county of this size can't afford 140,000 to |50,000 which I’m told it (the study) will cost,” Grba said. He noted that estimates by County Auditor. Chairman Daniel T. Murphy put the figure nearer $120,000. ‘‘Let's put it out fpr bids and. then we can decide,” Grba said. His committee agreed. F^?mV^Vw»™.lngt0niWmmltted for near,y hB,f “ Deioe^ Han^ln, ILFarmlngtcm dollars in preliminary Township, reported that the last time' the county had such a study made was about 25 years ago. A Chicago, firm was employed for 110,000, he said. “The firm made such a lot of recommendations' that the board (the then board of supervisors) was sure it was a Communist plot and turned them aU down,” the former board chairman recalled. h it- ----- “Since then,” he said, “every recommendation made has been carried out,” - Murphy, whp is' county administrator, said he’d be in favor tf such a study, “if only to learn whether we’re overstaffed in the Health Department.” CONSOLIDATION Hamlin pointed out that a reasonable conclusion of such a study might be the lumping of the drain commission, public |work8 and road commission duties in one office. He noted state legislation would be required for such ae-tlon. ' • In other' business the committee accepted the bid of Steve Kruchko Co. Inc. of Waterford | Township in the amount of $101,700 for mechanical alterations at the old Board of Education building on the| Service Penter. ; Carl O’Brien, D-Pontiac, who earlier had refused to vote for the bid, reconsidered when county administrators informed him a 150-day llifllt had been placed on the Job. Kruchko hgd failed to include that information in his bid. The committee also recommended-the infusion of $176,000 into the drain board fund — a fund running low at $20,000 and drain construction costs. School Board Cites O M. Osmun, who resigned as a member of the Pontiac Board of Education in June, was honored during an executive dinner meeting of the board last night for his contributions |o the school district. Osmun served for 23 years as a member of the board, seven years of which he was the board’s chairman. ★ it h Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer presented him with two plaques, each expressing appreciation for “giving his time and energy, above and beyond the call of duty, to the maintenance and improvement of education for the young people of Pontiac.” wmmmmmmmtmmm EXCLUDING TRANSFERS utsolng Transtar Accounts to Oil* Total Outgoing Transfer Expenditures to OtIM TOTAL “GENERAL FUND EXPENDITURES FLU) OUTOOjNG TRANSFERS Mrs. Donald Mitchell Service for Mrs. Donald (Leona B.) Mitchell, 67, of 102 Seward will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees Siple Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. , Mrs. Mitchell.died Monday. Surviving are one sister and two, brothers, including Raymond Maxwell of Pontiac. Mrs. T. K, Sales Service for- Mrs. T. K. (Mary Ann) Sales, 89, of 4734 Kempt, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. Friday at Donelson-Johns Funeral. Home, with buriail in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. i Mrs. Sales died yesterday.]with burial in Oak wood She was a member of Forest Cemetery, Lowell. Grove General Baptist Church! Mrs. Roth died jesterday. She of Cardwell, M°- ,lwas a member *of the First Surviving are four sons, Willis United Methodist Church Burges* and Henry Burgess,!Society ot Engineers’ Wives, DaW go ? of School Buildings ir of Classrooms ..... H of Touchers ...... * 1.29L094 13,347 4 1,959,999 Amount of Levy ...el of Law Total of Lo0* Uncollecllblo one MB# ■SK'Tr “ji S ® . I:™ 199447 194749 . 2,591400 3,404,000 off. .423 1,013 ;lJB cryapr* 2* \ 5,800 9,194 7 07# ■ * 25# . , 10,121 ^ v 7,113 ja TKOffr. ^ v -Mtfnbwtahlp (as of’ ilh Friday In kegtamber) 4,729 ' 1 v 11,190 1- , 4.421 ^iaTf i' rw"’ i ,ducT 14,244 14,4U Deaths in JPon Area George A. Kahle COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for George A. Kahle, 80, of 3596 Moberly will be 1 p.m Friday at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake, with bi In Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. ■> Mr. Kahle died yesterday. He was owner and operator of Kahle Lawn Movrer Service. Surviving are his wife, Anna; one daughter, Mrs. Dale Fife of Commerce ' Township; two sisters; and five grandchildrn. Mrs. Albert Roth BIRMINGHAM - Service for Mrs. Albert (Ethel M.) Roth, 77, of 1245 Suffield will be 10 a.m. Friday at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., both of Arbyrd, Mo., Floyd Burgess of Pontiac and Permer Sales of Otlsville; two daughters, Mrs. Genie Shrum of Caruth, Mo., and Mrs. Hazel Clark of Waterford Township; 36 grandchildren; • and four great-grandchildren. - Gregory L. Smith - Service for Gregory L. Smith, the 7-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Smith of 5155 Farm, will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at Nordman Funeral Home, Cheboygan, with burial in Carp Lake Cemetery, Cheboygan. Local arrangements were by Huntoon Funeral Home. The child died yesterday. Surviving are two brothers, Robert B George A., both ai home; two sisters, Wendy S. and Patricia A,, both at home; and grandparents Thomas Webber of Pontiac and Mrs. Joseph Harrington of Levering. Mrs. Belle Williams .Service for Mrs. - Belle Williams, 92, of 129 Coleman will be later this week at Gregg Funeral Home, Jonesboro, Ark., with burial in Walnut Ridge Cemetery, Jonesboro. Local arrangements were by PUraley-Gilbert Funeral Home. , Mrs; Williams died yesterday, (lurvivlng are one daughter* Mrs. GSrlrude Estes of Fyntlac, and one sister. | if'.1'.' Charles Brittain LAKE ORION - Service for Charles Brittain, 18; of 304 will be 1:30 pan. at Altai’s Funeral Home, with burial in East Lawn Cemetery. v. Mr. Brittain died yesterday. He was a retired shipping clerk of Ford Motor Co. Oakland Hills Country Club T.P.E.O. Sisterhood, Detroit New Century Club, Michigan League for Crippled Children and Bloomfield Art Association. Surviving are oqe son', George of Livonia; one daughter, Mrs. Robert E. Riordan of St. Louis, Mo..; and five grandchildren. Mrs. Aaron Smith ORTONVILLE - Service for Mm Aaron (Mabel) Smith, 85, of 330 Sherman Court Will be 11 a.m. Friday at C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, with burial in Brookside Cemetery, West Branch! Mrs. Smith died yesterday., Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Gusta Moss and Mrs. Vera Klech, both of Atlanta, Mich.; one son, .Gabriel of Atlanta, Mich.,; and one brother, William VanWormer of Orton- Mri. William Woodruff COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for former resident Mrs. William (Jean R.) Woodruff, 59, of Royal Oak will be 2. p.m] Friday at the Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home, Royal Qak. with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery,: Berkley. Mrs. Woodruff died yesterday. She was the executive secretary and member of the board of directors of Hoiefca & Associates Inc., Ja Rochester insurance firm. ' ■ 7/7 ■ surviving are her mother, Mrs. Mary L.( Chamberlain of Ferndale; two brothers; and one sister, Mrs, Kenneth Look of Walled Like. CONSflPATEDO PUR TO LACK dp FOOD ■ BULK IN YOUR OUT ■ iW $$$• ! . , v 9 THE NEW. NEW A M iBl'. / • ape Exciting selection of men’s regular $6 wool/nyIon sport shirts and assorted knit shirts I each Sport shirt* are Impeccably made and come In a variety of bold, masculine plaids. All have twin pockets, some with flaps; long sleeved. Buy now fpr cool days of sport, leisure. S-M-L-XL. Knit shirts in fufl fashioned Orion® acrylics have short sleeves, In solids, stripes. Long sleeve Ban-Ion® Text-ralized® nylon shirts with hi mock, crew neck or placquet collar. S-M-L-XL Mens sweater set|> and assorted fall sweaters, val. to $17 Includes reg. 15.99 sweater sets by Waldorf; Orion®acrylic cardigan with pullover. Also . ass t, fall sweater*. S-M-L-XL. Raguldr 13.99 warm outerwear for boys 10.88 a. 100% nylon ski parka Is re-vorslble for double the wear. In a variety of colors. S-M-L-XL, b. Cotton corduroy parka has acrylic pile lining. Warm hood. In olive,| bronze, blue. 6 to !4i c. 100% nylon oxford parka; acrylic pile lining, snap frfent. In nqvy, green or gdld.f8 to 18. 10 A.M. TO t R.M. (Set. 399 eesn Sunday Noon te 4 p.m. own cmm Tuv, Wti, W 6 P m-J 4 FEDERAL'S DOWNtoWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1900 Black>andl«W]iite Portable Ty Stereo FM/AM Radio-Phonograph ,53, W9* Sears 10-Chord, 37-Key Organ •ah j tQQ Prioad OO r»* Urn play-fcjMmmber aye pans, Tape Recorder^, Phonos . . . Floor Samples, * One-Of-A-Kind lWncb at mm* tar*,... Ms mm vkwhi. BmOUm Cambodia Gives Afegf a PHNOM PENH, Cambodia 1 — Two hundred young knot girls' In red silken sarongs and strew rose petals at the feet of Britain’s Princess Margaret yesterday as Mm walked a red . carpet Into Cambodia. Hie princess came to-Cambodia with her husbapd, the Earl of Snowdon,.on a private visit but the head of atate; Prince No- rodom Sihanouk, > provided dazzling welcome 'of' Oriental pageantry at Phnom Penh kin port. ________ Thousands of schoolchildren waved Union Jacks and the ele- phant flag of Cambodia as the princess drove Into the1 Cambodian capital to begin her five-day stay. ■ The high point of th* visit will be a Journey to Angkor, wt massive 11th and 12th cen stone temples were lost for cen-tuies in the green jungles. Margaret’s visit is similar to the pUgrlmage'to Ahgkor made by Jacqueline Onassls, widow of Resident John F. Kennedy, nearly two years agq. ■. / For the British princess’ an rival, Sihanouk assembled his Cabinet and the entire dipiomat-ic .corps with the exception of the Viet Cong ambassador, who for unexplained reasons did attend. Both the North Vietnamese and Communist Chlnese ambas-sadores were introduced to the visiting royal couple. South Vietnam, 60 miles to the east of to the wars. As the rose petals Ipllled at her feet, Margaret wes told by Prince Sihanouk that the coming giris were part of Cambodia’s Bfiddhist tradition. Sears Home Appliances 20% to 50% OFF WASHERS and DRYERS REFRIGERATORS and FREEZERS STOVES and AIR CONDITIONERS We Have Moved Hundreds of Appliances From Our Warehouse Into the Store for This Special Sale. Choose Brand New, As-ls, Some Ope-of-A-Kind Models. Hurry In! . Other Kenmore and Coldspot Values Kenmore 1-Dial Washer Kenmore $0’* Elec. Stove With porcelain-enameled . . _ , 7 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator *118 *128 Rafrigaratnr with 23.4 lb. . capacity frnair compart-front. 4 fall-width ahdvea, •128 Kenmore Electric Dryer 30” Double-oven Gas Stove 2 .ettlnfs: Heat and Air Only, with built-in lint ■croon and Load-A-Door for foldinz and torting. Upper oven with aeo-thrn 14 Cn. Ft. Refrigerator Sals Priced •08 •198 Refrigerator .ection do-froit* automatically. 3.08 cn. ft, manual defroat freezer hold* 108 lb*. •178 20% <* 40% OFF As-Is Radios, Televisions, Stereos, Or- Ask About Sears February Deferred Payment Plan on Appliances REMODELING? Call lit for a ■MOVEMENT 333-7071 OAKLAND FiratVederul Msjvlnga of Oakland ' 761 W, Huron Street 16 E. LawreneeSl,, Pontiac , 1 FK 2-914? 407 Main Street, Roeheater 651-5460 4416 Dixie Highway, Drayton OR, 4-0327 >1102 W. Maple Rd., Walled Uke MA 4-4534 351 N. Mala Street, Milford Ml1 5-1555 6799 Ortonville Rd., Clurkrtott 625*2651 471 S. Broadway, Luke Orion 693*6220 504(k Highland Rd*, Waterford 673*1278 7110 Cooley bk. ltd., Union Luke 363*7163 636 East Blvdi INorlh, Pontlae 336*6486 s ■, I « f-vh\ \ ' 'rj \ , , 1 N * !j C \ ‘ 1 . r 1 Til K P<>NT1 AC PRESS,, WEDNESDAY, OCTOB^lF l, 1969 'fell* New Service May Solve Problem of Moving Family Autos BALTIMORE, Md, fop) - • How does a businessman, who perhaps has two or three cars/ In the family garage, cope with a coast-to-coast move? Large corporations often are faced with mis dilemma when personnel are transferred long distances. The Chesapeake and Ohio • Baltimore and Ohlo Railroads think they have the answer with a new service called auto-trans. ••' / W. ‘Sr •■*. ★ It is a plan for transporting the family car — or cars — by rail and is based on the premise that most people would prefer to, fly when making long* distance moves. sJ'Auto - trans is an expert* mental venture,‘but we know ■the need for the service is here, in today’y highly mobile socle-ty,4’ said John Moag, marketing executive in charge of the new program. IMW ANNUALLY ° “Census bureau figures show that an average of 85,000 people move '{annually between the East and West Coast cities which auto-trans covers." Moag predicted a wide appeal7 to Targe businesses with cross: courftry chains of plants and offices, whose costs for moving personnel are skyrocketing. He satd the service is being offered on a subcontract basis to private moving firms and to individuals as well. »)df ★ dr* "OOr new service #111 substantially reduce these costB for1 moving employes’ r automobiles,’’ Moag saw. He added that it also would save time for the persons being moved and eliminate the fatigue of drivingiong distances. Service -will be provided Initially by the R&O-C&O on a coast-to-coast basis via1 St. Louis in cooperation with the Southern Pacific R a i 1 r o a d -Eastern stations will be New York, Philadelphia,.^Baltimore and Washington. Los Angeles and San Francisco will be . the West Coast terminals. t h ★ t , i Moag said service would be extended ta other cities “as demand warrants.” Japan exported a record total of 2.1 mifiltfh tons of mandarin oranges in 1968. BONUS SPECIALS SAVE 15% to 40%! Maker'* rloNoafl Fine quality tlmaa boa* in 4 g-a •Ism 10MlS.Unit 12pr. ft |>r. *1 Men's Knit Gloves Stretch knit Craalah* Wara 2.21 acrylic* nylon* Solid col* -Tine ors. One .lie file ell. VV Wall Mount Dimmer Switch On-off •witch. 0-100‘Tf II- '* . ai. . Choose front Many Outstanding Values Aluminum Stahv Nosing 3Axl-%-in. poliihed alum* Wa* 1.09 inum. Reni.U aerate It**. tQc 1-Qt. Varnish, Reg. 2.99...1.44 l*Qt. Tripolene, Reg. 69c ..... 33c Floor tempi**, miaanafniiad, (lightly SEWING MACHINES 14% to 36% SEWING CABINETS 10% to 37%% . MANUFACTURER'S CLOSEOUT Save50% to 60% 20% to 40% Off On Remnants and Roll Ends of Cdrpeting • r. Carpet a Living Rooni and Dining Room... Hurry in for Best Selection! VACUUM CLEANERS 10% to 33 1/3% Off “Surrey” 10x14-foot Oval Rug Was 93.99 44“ With woven-in fringe. .97% wool, 3% unknown fibers ..", aoft and durable. Reversible for longer wear. : 9%xl3%’ Williamsburg Rug Wst 99.99 44“ Beauty and praetioality are combined ... long-wear, ing nylon yarn, are eeay-care ... most spills wipe right up, “PREMIERE” CARPETING 106# nylon plla In a beautiful sculptured pattern. Wll Treatad to retlM mil and reduee italic elaelrieily. |,|| Choice of cdon.»' A H'widlh*. __________■ finishing and decorating values Modernization Values Many Floor Models, Samples, Demonstrators, Some Brand New Discontinued Models to choose from .. .'Some Slight-, ly Scratched or Marred, But the Savings Are Great. Many One-and-Two-of-a-Kind in Group. Sewing Chairs and Floor Polishers Also Included InThltSale. • | | I „ $ | \ Ask About Sears v Convenient Credit Terms 20-In. Vanity With Lavatory Top 40-Gallon Gas Water Heater Independence Brick® Wall eoverlnV with Its owik Wa» mortar-Ilke edge painted , . right on ih Terra Cotta, v /!./ | ^ Ml,* eM inlet / 1-elage . . . provide* up to 70.2 CPH the first hour at 100% temperature rlae. IJIam-llned, in-tulaled tank. JP Open- Monday* Thut*nday, Friday* Hatar^i'y 9. to 9,. Tucudav, Wednesday 9 to 5i30 Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 Furniture Carpeting A-^aa THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1960 The slacks finds of the season are ready to wear in Hudsonf$ Pontiac Darwood Shop Great buy: young man s slacks by WRIGHT A ’classic young* look plus fit and? comfort? You'll always look neat with this wrinkle-resistant, EVer-pressed® fabrifc that's machine-washable, tumble-dry*; Styled with side pockets^ belt loops, pre-finished hems. Ready to wear, in chocolate brown,-black" blue, or olive -Dacron® polyester/rayon oxford weave. Great buy; dress slacks by GLEN OAKS A new collection that's sure to be the mainstay of your fall wardrobe.'finery pair has pre-finished^bot-toms, ready to wear; and each is permanently-creased, wrinkle-resistant, ahd has that new, stay-neat feature, the Ban-Rol® waistband. Wear them .with sportswear, too. From "Hudson's and'Glen Oaks. IT'S EASY TO ORDER YOUR SIZE BY PfJONE. 6hE'CK THESE CHARTS. . WRIGHT'S YOUNG MEN'S SLACKS . GLEN OAKS' DRESS SLACKS Waist Intaain . , ■ 29 30 31. 32 33 l 34 36 Waltt L Insoam I 32 1 I 33. 34 36 38 40 } 28' : i nv ■X / j Xr i X hX m / x ■ $ ' 28 art X .X ’ X X X 29 X X . X X -X/, X -29 -X ) X 1 X X? X j x - 30 X X X X X X X 30 X .X . X X X ■ X 31 .. X X X X X X ',3.1,.' ^ X X X X x. X 32 ■.. X X X X X «. ■ ■ ' i2 a X X X X l X 1. , .33 H X X * ** , X " V ■ 34 , •• X X , X Lefts Dress sleeks In glen plaids. All-contemporary styling, bottom-hemmed, ready to go. The self-belted top has inside adjustment for smooth fit. Dacron® potyester/wool In soft colors—blue heather, gold heather, or brown heather. CenterrCdntemporary dress slacks—Good looks top to bottom from the self-belted waist, western top pockets, and color-coordinated linings to plain hems. Ready to put on. In a fine wool worsted, hotkey,- light grey, olive endblack. Rights Traditional dress slacks, ready to go for good looks anywhere; pre-cuffed Ivy style, with belt loops. Smooth wool worsted in shades of black, grey, brown, or blue. All ere pre-flnifhed fdr you, complete with color-coordinated linings. Chooieyour foil slacks'In Hudson's Darwood Shop, 1 Pontiac, 1 and bronchos. Or shop by phono. v • .11 11 •V n? - lii THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, H *=± 300 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS shoppers home happy flLJ discount prices plus HI Too Value Stamps. _ WITH COUPONS BELOW “Top Value Stamps has a sift for making people happy1 Bring home the bargains and a big Top Value bonus. 'You have a happy homecoming after a shopping spree at Kroger. You’ve made your choice of excellent meat, prirtie-quality produce, and a vast variety of other tempting merchandise... all at low discount prices. And you have your extra bonus of Top Value Stamps to tupk away for something special. That’s why Kroger .stores are so nice to come home from. 50 EXTRA Top Value Stamps 100 EXTRA Top'Value Stamps This coupon may b* exchanged for 100 extra Top Ygltie Stamp* with th. purchase Of $10.00 through $14.99 oA combined with othor Triple HMdor coupon* for a* many a* 300 bonu* Top Voluo Stomp*. (Excluding Beer, Win. or Cigorett**.) Valid thru Sun., Oet. 5,1969, pt Kroger Dot. & Eatt. Mknlgon. 150 EXTRA Top Value Stamps Only Kroger offersboth DISCOUNT PRICES and TOP VALUE STAMPS! Why settle for less? JiC 't With Discount Prices Plus WHOLE ! Fresh Fryers U.s. CHOICE TENDqjAY 1USDA1 Round Steak FAMILY SIZE MICHIGAN SNO-WHlTE Caullfowur.. Fresh Walnut Meats Golden Ripe Bananas B*-a THF pb^TIAC'PRESS. WEDNESDAY, ■ OCTOBER l, n&» — HYGRADE'S 1 fcg* KAHN’S I COUNTRY CLUB I i * III. SHwd Canned vs Bologna | _Ham»_ | **67 FBI U.S. CHOICE BONELESS LB $113 Rump; Boast •• ••••••* ■ ^ UJ. CHOICE TENDERAY 4TH 1STHRISS Boot Bib Boast...............V™ FRESH PICNIC “MQ* Pork Boast norbest grade •a* Beltsville SERVE H’SAVE Sliced Bacon 2 "T? Turkeys - AO w wti FRESH LEAN lg ^ Pork Steaks HYGRADE’S WHOLE ‘ LB an| Wost Virginia Homs Sr d«* A Vctinq 0?i4Uvu&! KROGER BAKED, . 9 VARIETIES Raisin Bread ©*. Yogc u.|flf •-« tOf ^ -U^r wrcm iy . amHBRHP**1™ ■ • DECORATED JUMBO VIvaTpwels ••••••MOLL 29* ASSORTED FRUIT DRINKS Captain Kidd’s mJ5«aW19* SPECIAL LABEL Splc * Span....<^<,75* SUNSMEET DELICIOUS 6K-OZ WTTUBB IHDEPENDENT CO. ANN DALE COOKIES Boyal ASSORTMENT.. u-ozpkg 69* CONTADINA 4 VARIETIES Cookbook Saucos*7 can25* SPECIAL LABEL-WHITE OR ASST. BATHROOM TISSUE Whito Cloud..., ..2”°ck25* RICH TOMATO FLAVOR Holnx Ketchup 4-OZBTL 33* D/X/C BRAND —~—r—— KROGER SLICED Giant White Bread ^23' Pruno luico..... b-ozItl 49* KROGER THICK Tomato Sauco • • • • • wtxah 8* READY-Td-USE BABY FORMULA ; ~ Infamll.............. c% 49* KROGER REFRESHING 1 Tomato luico uloZCAH 22* SPCC/AL LABEL MARGARINE Sood Luck...........pxc8 26* PILLSBURY COCOANUT ALMOND * Frostlnp Mix........w8tpkg 43* NON-DAIRY CREAMER ft* Cofffoo-Mato...wt~j°ap 59* aiwvvwv-scsaiV« •••fWTJAR mw GREEN GQDDESS OR CAESAR 7 Sous Drosslng 0z & 33* SPRAY FOR CLOTH St MOPS Indust............74* FRENCH ONION ^ lOYO Dip............. 49* SHEDD’S DANDRUFF SHAMPOO Hoad I Shoulders ^SII9 Poanut Buttor... %«* 65* tn-PL OZ BTL REG. DRIP OR ELECTRA-PBRK COFFEE - Maxw.ll How.* 3 AS,*!7* HUNGRY JACK BUTTER TASTIN' 39 Mllibwry BISCUITS WTTuU 19* Soft Margarine39* CHEF BOY-AR-DEE ■oof Roviolf »/c«32* 10< Off VARIETIES ROYAL VIKING JT || Pnnish Pnstry iy/y O ©*. STAMPS ITbP VALUE 1 STAMPS! Tomatoes 71 -»r »-0S— • 0 | SHALL ALASKA Kroger Peat..........5 AVONDALE BRAND Tomatoes.............6 STRAWBERRY PLUS 8 OTHER VARIETIES Kroger Preserves ..3* KROGER TASTY Appl* Save*..........6 IN HEAVY SYRUP-CLQVER VALLEY Fraction* Peach**..4 Kmcoumn Wh*U Pot«t«*t........10 S VARIETIES INCLUDING ALACK RASPBERRY OR CHENRY Kroger Jellies 4T 10-OZ ■ iIT JARS ■ AVONDALE BRAND •I Fork A Scant............3 &jf •** ■ KROGER BRAND 7 Fvcpcratcd Mlllc....7o^I*l . ITVARIETIES-GREAT AMERICAN ■ Hein* Soup*.............*A£yg GOLD PINE CRUSHED, CHUNKS OR AVONDALE CUT & SHELLED >REEN BEANS, CUT GREEN Sliced 7 Beans or ^ Grapefruit Pineapple ( Sweet Peas 1 Sections 5 m 1 8^ 8 a? 1 8 -$1 SPECIAL LABEL R Giant Sine Rinse 3-LB 3-OZ PKG 73 LAUNDRY BLEACH Gallon Clorox 49 APPLE OR CHERRY Wilderness Pie Filling tyvi *Dc4cou*tte crfl & ‘Scauty /ticUt 29 Jewel Shortening 3*49 REGULAR OR SUPER Medess Sanitary Napkins Ufa, SUPER, TEENS 'fe?39* SPECIAL LABEL-NEWS Deodorant - Vf&RBI*1— VESPRE FEMININE HYGIENE ' Deodorant spray Ucan MODESS VEE-FORM ^Sanitary Napkins? o$r994 10 FREE-REGULAR OR SUPER Moils Tampons •ib? $1” . mmtsmr---------— Gillette Poamy •have Cream n-QZ GDI iii) iUii NEWI HEADACHE TABLETS ANTISEPTIC MOUTHWASH i GARGLE listerlne #*•**•*•**•••BTL m UGLY DUCKLINGS PANTY HOSE ■ya-kya lo|(v Knnl S* Lang Stagy laalal Hal la Parlacl Pill Lika Th. 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' Hl-C Drinks.... u-ozcan 29* CHECKS PERSPIRATION Dial Deodorant ozcan98* a ALL METHOD GRIND Chock Full P! Nuts Coffee WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY KROGER WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY 2-PKGS FROZEN WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY fZ COUNTRY CLU9 . LAYER CAKE * SEAFOOD I CORNED BEEF BRISKET ■ 2-FRESH ROASTERS . ■ L: WITH THIS COUPON ON „ j 2-PKGS CUT-UP FRYERS ■ 2-PKGS FRYER PARTS OR I 2-FRESH ROASTERS Vjlld Thru $un„_ COMB, OAKLAND, WASHTENAW, SI. CLAIR AND LIVINGSTON COUNTIES THRU SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5. 1969. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. COPYRIGHT 1969. THE KROGER CO. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 1. I960 Agnew to Protesters; Give Peace a GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -Vice President Spiro T; Agnew told young antiwar protesters Tuesday to “Give -peace a chance” and that “You do not give peace a chance by running from a responsibility ofj -mankind.” ——------------- In Grand Rapids to dedicate a new city-county office complex, Agnew was met during his speech by more than 30 youths, who identified themselves, as members of the Students for a Democratic Society. . — * * * ’ Agnew insisted that if this counti^ is to get out of the Vietnam war, It must do so without the type of “simple solution that will bring us to; catastrophe In a few years.” ‘ He insisted that peace “is What we wantrBut we cannot; have peace until all men are free.", . •, I ARRESTED Before his arrival, police said they arrested five persons, In-j eluding a young woman, after a dash between protesters and law officers. The protesters indulged In sporadic chanting during] Angew’s brief remarks. ] His remarks about the wan caim at the conclusion of an| eight-minute prepared address j which he devotjed mostly to a discussion of President Nixon’s “new federalism.” He said the President’s pro* posal is a “return of resources and responsibility to the states and cities. It is a pledge of| federal cooperation and a call for state and local creativity.” MARCHED TO SITE Hie band of p:ro testers gathered in a nearby park and marched to the dedication site. Several other sign-carrying pickets were already among the crowd. Four cottnterpickets appeared later, bearing signs praising the vice president as “one of the good guys.” ★ a a Officials'said one of those arrested was a young woman who scuffled with several police. Agnew described the new office complex as one which will “permit “the people of Grand Rapids to propose and package their destiny ... on their terms ... for their children.” MILLIKEN’S WELCOME Gov. William Millikan welcomed Agnew to Michigan and insisted that local government “must be kept strong if we are to solve the problems which confront us.” . a ' a * House .Minority Leader, Gerald Ford of Grand Rapids introduced the vice president as representing “the finest in public Ufa” as the vice, president appeared flanked by'seven Secret Service men. we reserve the right TO LIMIT- QUANTITIES. PRICES AND ITEMS EFFECTIVE AT KROGER IN WAYNE, -MACOMB. OAKLAND. WASHTENAW, ST; CLAIR AND LIVINGSTON COUNTIES THRU SUNDAY; RIGHT 1969, THE KROGER CO, si Frozen Food Ideas From Kroger! DOUBLE-RING CEREMONY - Vice president Spiro T. Agnew came to Grand Rapids yesterday, ringed by Secret Service men, to dedicate the new city-county building. Agnew’s party was, in turn, ringed by antiwar pickets. TMr activities prompted him to depart from his prepared speach and air his war views. China Celebrates; Thousands Hail Mao TOKYO fAP) — Communist! China will support the "people’? China’s top five leaders stood on struggle throughout the the red walls of Peking’s For- including the Arab “struggle bidden City today above a half] against imperiaUsm andneoco-million Chinese shouting: "Longilonialism.” The crowd inter live Chairman Mao!” |rupted his address with frequent towering over the 20th anni- applause and cries of “Long live] versary celebration of the na- Chairman Mao!” Peking Radio tion he founded was Communist said-party Chairman Mao Tse-tung, j The broadcast said Mao was 75, whose appearance again be- “in very good health” and lied widespread rumors that hej moved about during the 2V4-was either dying or dead. jhour cererflbffy, chatting with a A * the leaders standing with him Mao smiled, waved and shook I atop the Gate of Heavenly the hands of dignitaries as thou- Peace, sands of marchers turned the a a a vast square below him into “a in a preanniversary speech, sea of red flags,” Peking Rafflo chou gaid china j, making nu-said. Mao did not address the ciear weapons for defense only crowd. and “would never commit The square is part of the aggression against others.’^ walled Forbidden City, once the] speaking before 5,000 persons site of the Imperial Palace and.at a reception Tuesday, he said now the nation’s seat of govern ] chine’s goal Is a ban on all nu-j ment. c dear weapons, but China must. AIDES AT SIDE ’. be prepared for any nuclear Standing at Mao’s side was war or "blackmail” waged by! his officially designated succes-!the United States or the Soviet -sor. Defense Minister Lin Piao, ] Union, who also has been reported critically ill, Premier Chou En-lal - and Politburo members Chen Po-ta and Kang Sheng, Peking Radio said. Chou, Chen and Kang rank just below Mao and Lin in Communist China’s hierarchy. RUSSO-U. S. FRENZY He also said the Soviets and ! the Americans are "engaged in! frenzied arms expansion end war preparations.” , The oviet Union sent China a message of congratulations, but addressed it to “the chairman of the People’s Republic,” a post Vacant since Liu Shao-chl was dismissed in disgrace in April. < Lin, 62, delivered the keynote address, a nine-minute appeal for unity, loyalty to Mao, and continuing struggle, against “American ^mperlallwn and The Soviet news agency Tass (the Soviet Union’s) soclai gajd message urged nonrial- MORTON FROZEN Cherry, Peach or Apple Plea 29 "Pumpkin NORTON 9 INCH Pie Shells............. "t.35* NORTON FROZEN 2-LOAF PAK Bread Dough2 39* Pot Pies it pie STOUFFER’S CLUB STYLE OR £ Scallop Petatoos STOUFFER’S Spinach Souffle CAULIFLOWER OR BROCCQLI Sara Leo Jl-OZ CARANEL PECAN ROLL, APPLE DANISH-ORANGE OR 13-OZ PECAN COFFEE CAKE h< BEEF. B CHICKEN OR ■’ TURKEY wt'pko ^gf 12-OZ M WT PKG - io-oi WT PKG 419*! TORNSQUARE Strawberry Shert Cake 39 Jena’s Frozen ■nnv. • • pS^vlMK. Pizza Ralls E| CHILI BURGEIY, SLOPPY wt pkg obs^biiw vi Rflj^R JOE, SAUSAGE, SHRIMP ORPEPPERONI LARRY’S FROZEN* Pearboy Sandwiches.. . ^ wtpkg HOLLOWAY HOUSE STUFFED Baked Potatoes 12-0 jf .au WTPKG — NARSHBURN FROZEN Crinkle Cut Carrots ... meP t-ozho TASTE O'SEA Shrimp Dinner ... EQ FROZEN CHEESE OR CHEESE A SAUSAGE John’s Pizza PLUS ww Fish t Chips s-PK- 78-0Z T T.V. PKG SlHSV STAMPS WITH ZBDp- coupon . VAHLSING FROZEN . ' Crinkle Cut E[ t. "fW Potatoes......... ...“* # # 3 ,-’i ; WTFK9S M imperialism.” Quoting from Mao’s works, Lin said: "If others don’t attack us, we will not attack others. If others attack, we shall counterattack,;,V He made no mentloft of the two nuclear tests the Atomic Energy Commission says China detonated In the past week. AID FOR ARABS Lin pledged that Communist ization of Chinese-Soviet relations and urged “the solution of disputed (border) questions by peaceful means, through talks and consultations.’ Earlier 1n the day, an editorial in Peking's People’s . Daily and Red Flag said, “We stand for the settlement of border conflicts between countries by negotiations.” JUNE’S PURE Pork Link Sousag# SHURTENDA Boot Prlttarf-....... PRE-COOKED CRISPY STICKS. Cod or Porch' Fillots. CA TOP VALUE 9 V STAMPS JIFFY OR FREEZER ■ QUEEN FROZEN MEATS* ■ V«/«y Thru Sun., O I At fcitfir Oil. i ■■§■■■■■■■ CA TOP VALUE 3U STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY.2-PKGS KROGER FROZEN BA(| VEGETABLES WITH THIS COUPQM ON ANY PKG JOHN’S 3-PACK FROZEN PIZZA ■ ■ ■ ■ e eHua ■■saaaaaai a ■■■Ohm p a a ■■■■pa eaaalD WEDNESDAY, bCTOBER l. 1969 C—1 Mrs. Knauer Disappoints » New executive difiecipr of Pontiac General Hospital, Dr. Roger B. Nelson greets ttro of the Hospital volunteers honored at a Iwiiheofi Tuesday in the PMllK Prill Photo by Mil Untornohror Hospital auditorium. From left are Mrs. Aim Denham of Oriole Road and Mrs. Mayme Neubaueir of South Johnson Street. . Wife," Doorm at f o r Yea rs; Now Wants to Change By JANET ODELL Pontiac PreasPood Editor CHICAGO - With Virginia H. Knauer, special. assistant to the President for consumer affairs, billed' as one of bur principal speakers on Tuesday, we food editors thought we would have the latest authoritative word from Washington. What a letdown. Mrs. Knauer not only failed to spell out her program or give decisive answers to questions, but her attitude was patronizing, Actually, the only bits of information we gleaned from her' talk were that cereal producers are using up their old stocks qt paper before converting to the new limited range of . package sizes, and she likes Ralph Nader. Oh, yes, a third item: she believes that the public should have access to the test results on products given to the Army and Navg, but even she can’t get a copy of the report......... .. >___ going into the restauran Neither is corporation, going into General Mills is already in toys, games, Jewelry, .clothing and home decorating kits. By ABIGAIL VAN RUBEN DEAR ABBY: Your answers to other people’s problems are so wise, maybe you can help me with mine, though I believe it’s hopeless.* My husband and I have been married (or,27 years, raised three children, and now we have grandchildren. He traveled lor a living and made little effort to hide his cheating. He calmly told me (when I caught hint) that it meant “nothing.” ___I have nffered Mm his freedom a dozen times, but he always refused it, saying he loved only .pte. after having taken pain pills and a sedative. Her.boyfriend of long standing, was Just about to leave when I'got the shock of my life! He tried to get involved with me in a very private way. Need I say anything more? , ■ should I worry about the way the next fellow weafs his hair? MARTIN IN NEW ORLEANS DEAR ABBY: Thanks for the letter from “BITTER,” who asked ij,she could He has never wanted friends. Never knew a neighbor. I have raised the Children alone, covering up for him, helping him in his office. We are financially well off, but what good is the money? I am 9 feet tall and weigh 105 pounds and am told repeatedly that 1 look like a sister to my" daughters. My husband has .4 gained 50 pounds since our wedding and ' doesn’t even think of dieting. He keeps talking about how crazy, he is about blonde hair. (My hair is as dark-as yours, Abby. In fact people say we look alike.) Please don’t tell me I’ve been a doormat. I know that. What else have I been doing wrong? HAVE BEEN MISERABLE DEAR MISERABLE: You may not have fried hard enough to Improve your miserable lot. No man will give up his cake If he can have it, too. And for 27 years yours has been having a ball in a bakery.v- - Should 1 tell my sick, but recovering friend? It would hurt her beyond words, .yet I think she ought to know what kind of'‘man” he is. ’ ’’’ $ Maybe ignorance is bliss, but for me to have such knowledge is a very painful burden. Help! CONTUSED DEAR CONFUj8EP:> The win'd from here is “Mum.” The heel Will probably confess it to his girl friend fearing that you might tell on him. But even if he doesn’t, this is not the kind of information one passes on to a friend. take legal action against the dirty rat who told his wife EVERYTHING in order to relieve her of all the anguish he had caused her. It’l the bast laugh I’ve had since ruiy husband deckled to relieve ME of all the anguish he’d, caused me for the same reason. . DEAR ABBY: I recently learned that my husband’s grandmother was very much offended by the letter I wrote thanking her for our wedding gift. It seems that everyone in the family calls her “Nanna” but not being aware of this, I addressed her as “Mrs. Smith” in the salutation, and twice again in the body of the letter! DEAR ABBY: Never in my whole llfe have I been so confused about a problem is I am now. ' A few weeks ago, my roommate’came home from the hospital after .minor sprgery, and was sleeping peacefully. Abby, she never asked me to* call her “Nanna.” In fact, I don’t recall that she ever asked me to call her anything. Quite frankly, since Ijiave seen her only a few times I thought the formal “Mrs. Smith” would be more appropriate — and anything more familiar would be a bit presumptuous. Why can’t people read a “thank you” letter and appreciate its sincerity and promptness without trying to find something wrong with it? CAN’T WIN DEAR CAN’T: Some can. But not Nanna. , She sounds like the same ding-a-ling my husband had his romp with, except SHE threatened to sue ME for calling her "a lady of ill repute” —only I didn’t use such refined language. What do these gals expect from their back alley intimacies with married men who use them with no intention of leaving their wives? It would be interesting to hear from some of these ladies. All of u8c"reUeved-of-anguish” wives could use a good laugh. WE’VE CRIED ENOUGH * „ ★C W CONFIDENTIAL TO MOTHER OF FOUR DAUGHTERS: Yes, I tell mothers to teach their daughters how to cook, iron, and keep a neat house. But 1 tell them also that there is something even . more important in marriage. Girls should know how to cuddle a man, entertain him, listen to him, laugh with him, forgive him, and make his ■home a “happy” place to come home to. I have heard from hundreds of divorced women who whine, “—-But I always kept a spotless home, and I was ah excellent cook, and the dirty rat left me.” Season's Last Recital Features Fred Fahrner The final carillon recital of the season at Christ Church Cranbrook will be given by Fred Fahrner at 4 p.m. Sunday. Fahrner of Detroit, is a member of the Guild of Organists and, the Guild of Church Organists. He studied music at Wayne State University and music and carillon at the University of Michigan. ThS public is invited to attend the recital, and may sit in their cars or on the church lawn. Recital programs are available in the narthex of the church. , : : V DEAR ABBY: The man who keeps worrying about his son's long hair should be more concerned about what’s inside the boy’s head — not outl The modern generation wants to be “modern.” So what do they do? They start wearing their hair the way men wore it 200 year? ago! , The Spanish have an old saying, “The cloth does not make the monk.” So why fioo/c Club Schedules Spanish Work Talks Selections from “The Guide for the.. Perplexed" by Maimonides, Spanish philosopher of the 12th century, will be dlseussed at Friday’s 8 p.m. meeting of the Waterford Great Books Gub. Mrs. Karl Kuts Will be author's advocate and Wilbur Ott, leader at, the talks, when the group gathers in theC-AI building. Symphdfty Women Plan Teas to Boost Interest, Membership Calendar p.m., YWCA. Regular meeting FRIDAY University of M inaSIota I Women’s Club, 12:15 p.m, Bloom* field Hills home of Mrs. HirolrT Melln. Mrs. Clifford Baugh will present a program of organ fniislc. SATURDAY I Springfield TowMhlp lentor Cffhpu Joggers, noon, Township Hall, Cooperative dinner and meeting. By SHIRLEY GRAY __________ Women’s Association work is never done.* They raise money for the Detroit Symphony by various imd sundry stratagems, they sponsor music ap-‘ predation lectures «o (hat even the gal who starts out unable to tell a harp from a harpsichord will know the score by the end of tiie season, and, during the month of October, they woo new members. I' The first of six “Bring • A - Friend” new memtar teas is set for Tuesday. Mrs. Leonard T. Lewis of Bloomfield Hills Is hostess lot the 2 p.m. gathering. Mrs. Vernon L. Venman of Birmingham, is general chairman ot the area membership teas, which will also be held in Detroit, Groase Points, Grosse Be and Dearborn. HOLIDAY IN MEXICO The Dale F. Carneys of Bloomfield Hills are back in town, cooling off, after a week of blistering 110-degree temperatures ip Acapulco. Other than the weather, the trip was great, reports Mm.v Carney. Chairman for the day Is Mrs, Robert Fife of Bloomfield Hills, whose crew of willing and able helpers.lncludes Mend Ames: Bernard Craig, John F.-Noonan, John L, Denman, Irwin R. Rector and Richard,A. Fisher-Others are Mrs. Robert Goodyear, Mrs. Chet Wisniewski, Mrs. George E. Miller and Mrs. Byron Garaon. Mrs, Albert S. Crawford, the former With the Carneys was. their teen-aged daughter, Michelle, and their yon David, of Ann Arbor, with his wife, Marge. Also' along were the Jack Fosters of Bloomfield Hills and their daughter, Mary Jo. Maurice and Marianne, Barnett are finally settled in Scottsdale, Aria., the packing, moving, and living out of auty-caies behind them. t ^ ' ' Mrs. Knauer was brought to Chicago by the North American Blueberry Council. At .' their meeting they served blueberry champagne, developed* by a winery- in New Jersey from a concentrate originated by Paw.Paw blueberry'growers. It tastes a bit like cold duck. Other new blueberry products are in the testing stage. New packages were the subject of several meetings. In the near future, you may be able to put a plastic container of fish, in the oven. A new plastic container for Armour’s hams has been seven years in the making. At bredkfast with the United Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Association we saw a delightful way of using fresh produce, and flowers for a centerpiece. The flowers were chrysanthemums. Grouped in pyramid form around the base of the flower container were eggplant, string . beans, squash, citrus fruit, radishes, onions, apple! and green peppers. Baby’s breath and parsley were tucked into the arrangement. ' General Mills introduced the fourth revised Betty Crocker cookbook, after dinner. Tuesday. Their meal was a delight to the eye as well as the palate. It was served in the Arts Club of Chicago which would be sort of comparable to eating in the Pontiac Creative Arts .Center. Varying sized, brightly colored plastic boxes made up the cent terpieces. Also announced was a new cookbook for homemakers with limited eyesight, “Cooking with Crocker Mixes.” Set in large type, it is available without cost by writing to Betty Crooker, General Mills, Minneapolis, Minn. Even the food companies have suc-. cumbed to the craze for collectibles. The R. T. French Company had a display of containers and packages from way back. They also had reproductions of food and women’s pages of newspapers of 50 years ago. Their new products Include colorful salad oniony imitation bacon, cheese seasonings, mustard with onion bits and hickory smoke-flavored Worcestershire sauce. .» . , My taste buds don't know which flavor -to expect next. * MRS. KNAUER Request Answer From Relative to Invitation Analysis of News Is Series Format NEW PRODUCTS Some of the new food products I tasted Tuesday were a smoky Hawaiian barbecue sauce and. frozen meatballs from Chun King; maple walnut pancake syrup; Irish tea from a new collection of Beiglow; a variety of highly seasoned corn chips; French fried Brussels sprouts and a hot dog Reuben sandwich. All the major food companies seem to be expanding into lines other than food. Both Green Giant and General Mills are News analyst Russell Barnes is scheduled to appear in a special lecture series-entitled “Great Decisions,” from 1-3 ' p.m. Mondays for the next ten weeks at the BaldwinJUbrary,. Birmingham. Barnes ww interpret the news as it happens, explore the making of foreign policy and view relationships of politics and militarism. A question and answer period is included. Oakland Community College is sponsoring the appearances. Final day for enrollment tor the series is Monday* at the Library, from 12:30 to l.p.m. Further information may be obtained from Mikkl Goetzmann of the College’s Community '-Services office. By ELIZABETH L. POST Of the Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs. Post: My widowed mother-in-law and unmarried sister-in-law live together. Whenever holidays come around I have always, tried to include them in our parties, since I feel sorry for them being aloqe. Well, the last several holidays when I invited them, this is the response I got, "We can’t tell you now because if the weather is nice we want to go to" Michigan (they have other relatives thereh so you will just have-to ’wilt.” I tried explaining to them once that I would like to know before the last minute, because there are others I would , like to ask if they couldn’t come. I am hurt and feel they are using me as second choice. I think they should either accept that invitation, or refuse, saying they have planned something else. Aim I justified? - Mrs. T.S. Dear Mrs. S.: Your mother-in-law and her daughter show little appreciation for your hospitality. The next holiday % season, invite them once more (for your husband’s sake, and because of your children) hut make the situation quite dear. Simply say, “I must'have an answer by the 15th or I will assume you are going to Michigan. At that time I would like to ask Dot and Bill to take your place. New Fall Fashions Due at Luncheon New fall fashions will be featured at a show to be given in conjunction with a ladies luncheon at Spring Lake Golf and Country Gub Thursday. Bridge players and fashion buffs interested in attending may call the club for reservations.'. Luncheon will- start promptly at noon.' Table prizes are from the International Bazaar at Seattle, which was built dur-■ ing the World’s Fair there and is still operating. Penthouse Fashions, Independence Commons Is supplying fall-winter styles. C/eoQ Air Is Topic for Conference Clean air Is the stogie topic of a conference of the National Federation of Business aqd Professional Women’s ' ' Clubs, slated"Friday through Sunday at ■ Detroit's Metro Inn. . Dr. Roger Olaf Egeberg, assistant secretary for health and scientific affairs of the U.S, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, will .deliver the keynote address at 9:30 a.m. Friday. This is the first time the Federation has devoted a national conference, to s single subject. Other' speakers' include; '• Dr. Rosa 'L. Nenriir, director of the ( Children’s Chest Glnlc at Bellevue Hospital Center, New York; Arizona j State Senator Isabel Burgess and attorney Ruth Church Gupta, a member of the National Aif Conservation Com* mittee. One of the most fascinating, yet simple, looks of the new fur ■ season is this fredrica natural jaguar trenchcoat. The beauty ii in the shaping. Big collared. Skinny. Short. Reined in at the waist with a figure-eight belt of jaguar and leather.- The Safari hat is also jaguar. f j Detroit attorney Zaio Wjj o d for d Schroeder will conduct a unique critique ■ of the entire conference. •* • - J ' Also attending wilt be Untto Hinton, Michigan’s Young Career Woman of the •Year. C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1900 They Schedule January Nuptials Mr. and Mrs: Martin M.jthe engagement of their Lamb of North Westview. Court, daughter, Lt. Mary Rose Lamb, Bloomfield Township announce! USAF to Lt. William David •*“'—7*—^"~Hr-----J~1 Hart, U$AFY Jan. S' wedding ‘ -Jr:t .^Ivhwsare being planned by the 'All Washed Up His parents are Col. William! - - r Hart, M. EKj USAP and Mrs. LOUGHBOROUGH, England Hart. of Randolph AFB, Tex. (AP) — “They’re my wages," Their son is stationed at Cam truck driver Derek Loads Ranh Bay, Vietnam. - : shouted when he saw the scraps Lt. Lamb is presently at! of paper scattered among the Langley AFB, Va. . „ clothes his wife was pullingJbutL—.. ihe WasHh^machine. Bank Salt sprinkled on woolen employes pieced together thejcarpets or rugs before contents of the pay envelope^ vacuuming helps destroy moths Loade had left in a pair of1 It will also brighten the carpet overalls and gave him new land remove collected or lm-Mils. ■ bedded soil. Their First Day Traumatic for By BETTY CANARY ...NEA Writer behave at school meetingi. In theory, parents" and teachers come together to discuss wgys of Improving sbgcel In reality. 1 meetings are usually long 1 discussions • Casual campus wear begins with Perma-'TreatyBy-style sUBlfc'Tattersatt pattern, teftf fa teamed with a virginwool, V-neck pullover featuring saddle shoulders and rib knit finishing, and a tapered shirt with chambray button-down, long-pointed collar in a polyester-cotton blend. Glen plaid slacks, right, pair with a brush mohair blend, cardigan and a mock turtle orlon acrylic knit shirt with contrasting ribbing. All available in country shades of green, blue, gold and brown from Sears. Polly's Pointers Bag Prevents Tarnish DEAR FOLLY - My husband, a Jeweler, says the only way Mrs. E. S. can keep her sterling-silver wedding c a k knife from tarnishing is to buy a, tarnish-proof bag to store It in They cost Very little. — ANN POLLY’S PROBLEM DEAR POLLY, and other readers — Please help me: My husband left a shovel on the cement patio and now we have Jr t: > ■ wQ/k an unsightly rust spot which I cannot remove. Suggestions anyone? — MRS. F.VD. ' * * * "• DEAR POLLY - I have an easy way to do small painting or varnishing jobs. I needed to varnish a five-foot piece of molding and used a discarded toothbrush and then threw it away after the little job was finished. It did an excellent job and there was no brush to clean when 1 finished: - MRS. M.Y. . . ' ' * * '* ... j ‘ You wijl receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite! homemaking idea, P o* 11 y * s Problem or solution to a pro-| blem. Write Polly in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich.1 4805b. Contemporary styling, from Sears..in a fully Hnedr designer suit of 100 per cent wool features a deep center vent and slanted flap pockets. The four-button model combines wide lapels, canted sleeves and shaped waist. The four-inch silk tie is in a new. basketweave pattern complementing the wide spread collar, Perma-Prest shirt in autumn colors. Deborah Wisby Exchanges Vows Deborah J. Mercay Wisby became the bride of John Morgan LaVire Saturday St a candlelight ceremony in Dunstan’s Chapel at Christ Church Cranbrook? The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wisby of Birmingham chose a street length dress and carried a bouquet of roses and chrysanthemums. * ■■ * * Honor attendants for the couple were Julie Sundnuht and Leslie LaVire, the b' - /room's brother. They are tl- . .ons of Mrs. Aaron Hays of Cruse Drive and the late Edmund LaVire. The newlyweds were honored at a reception in the bride' parents’ home following the rites. ir hominy grits with a knife and the goof on chapters covering wedding in- on whether or not vltatlans and how much , to tip the fall festival money should the butler after a weSkend at buy new ndl-away bleachers for Mrs. Rich’s estate,‘But hare we the gym or new saw horses to are in the first semester of the school year and what, I ask, have the noble, knowledgeable rule-givers done about that? Thousands of mothers afe facing up to it for the very ftrht time and not knowing how to' behave. i 1 observed some on the first day of school. Three 'were crying; four lurked on the lawn until recess; one brought the teacher a list entitled Things to Remember about Paul. Why didn’t someone tell them the1 way to leave a child? (Shake, hands with teacher with one’s right hand and, at the same time, with the left hand, give child a deft thrust into room.) FINE POINTS———j-’ It’s nice to know the fine, points on accepting gracefully a child’s first drawing. (Holding paper carefully, turn it around and around and say, “It’s so colorful! Wasn’t this fun?" Do not EVER say, “What a pretty j kitty!" or “Such a NICE tree,”| because things are never what they sepm to be.) jk it ★ Then there’s the first time the child announces he is never going to school again, although, [ heaven knows, nobody can really give us a rule on how to act here. (Just remember how wonderful life can be without his throwing a ball against the house and singing, “Oh! You! Pretty Chitty Bang Bang!" the livelong day.; You.’ll think of something.) We need pointers as how to Mock off the playground darfeg the fall festival. ^ A parent roust go t»:$N meetings so', his child's dp can win the attendance award* During the meeting*, do not ask about reading programs or the quality of school lunches. This marks one as inexpertmeed or, at tfre lodat, stupid. ir JmUmM e Curly 299 Rea- $349 CONTEMPORARY 96" SOFA Select your fabric from crushed velvets, sturdy , tweeds, beautiful quilted deslqas or sleekly styled contemporary fabrics. Modern 4-cushion sofa with self-dec^. SALE >299 Reg. $349 Fabulous epacial tolling of l-o-n-g 96-inch |ofas in Traditional' Contemporary and Colonial designs by on* of tho country's loading manufacturers. Thorn's a W-l-d-o selection of decorator fabrics in newest fashion colors. Select from Velvets,, Quilted fabrics, Mateldsses, Brocatelles. Arm caps are included with each order. We suggest early selection now? at this very special low price — to assure delivery for Christmas. TRADITIONAL 96" SOFA Blscult-tufted bock, three cushion style with skirt and welt seam detailing In an elegant style for more formal rooms. COLONIAL 96" SOFA Wing-back, three-cushion sofa .whl^box-pleated skid, self-deck for colonTal decor. Choose In quilted fabrics, colonial prints, tweeds lo suit your need. > OTHER SOFA SIZES AVAILABLE IN THIS SPECIAL EVENT; 3-Cushlon 84” Sofa Order Now For Christmas Delivery Imaginative Interior Decorating Counseling • Call FE 2-1252 for .an Appointment Free Parking Front of Storo - FE 2-8348 M80 8. Telegraph South of Orchard Lake Rd. Open Thurs., Fri., Mon. Evenings 'til 9 n .C—4 THE 'PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1969 Figure Out, Keep Track of Personal Assets , MR. AND MRS. MELVIN C. HEFFELBOWER Couple /Wirks 50 Years A surprise reception Sunday marked the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin. C. Heffelbower of Highland. The affair was hosted by their children and spouses, Mr., and Mrs. Arthur Toop of Livonia, the William and Henry ' Heffelbowers, both of Highland, the Don Heffelbowers of Bay City, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Heffelbower of Ypsilanti and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Parks, whose Milford home was the scene of the festivities. The couple was married in Flint on Nov. 12, 1919. Mr. Heffelbower was employed by the Huron Valley School District for . Future Farmers Retain Ban bn Female Members LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — One male stronghold girls still haven’t penetrated is the Kentucky Association of Future Farmers of America. At the organization’s 40th convention, some members proposed that the all-male group admit girls. But despite strong support, the measure was defeated 144-131. Association President .Lanny Harlow felt that discussion of a subject like geneticfc in a vocational agricultural class might prove embarrassing to members of a mixed class. And “Row can girls do the heavy, Amanda plays third base, has!dirty work involved with farm a batting average-of .607 and) machinery?” he asked.. has hit twovhome runs. “Most .. WWW girls don’t think they can make For girls there is the Ken-the team,” she says, “and the tucky Association of Future ones that do have to try. a little Homemakers of America, a harder.'*' strictly female organization, She Tries Harder Ala. (AP) -Uniform No. 14 of the Leeds Little League team belongs to a 10-year-old 4 foot 2 slugger — Amanda Courson, better known as “Tiger” to her teammates. over 20 years. Since his retirement, they have spent their winters in Lakeland, Fla. They have 17 grandchildren and one great-grandson. Small rubber-headed tacks placed on the underside of a drop leaf table where the leaves touch the table legs will protect the legs from sciratches> and mars. Harlow commented. Each group should keep its sex exclusiveness, he added, as mixing the sexes in either organization is bound,to prove distracting and therefore weaken both. By ANNE TAYLOR AP News Feature There are few financial exercises more revealing than to fit down and figure out your net assets. Honestly done, it puts you face to face with realities. It focuses fuzzy thinking. If helps you to plan. Despite this, very few people take the time and effort to do the job. In fact, very few people really can say they handle their personal bookkeeping in orderly, efficient manner, w w "w There is' one group of people to whom this Indictment does not apply, and I refer to farm families. I think that if urban dwellers took a tip from rural families there would be a lot less bill juggling *- and fewer arguments as well. In the city — and don’t forget that the vast majority of Americans live in or near cities — there is more of a tendency; to play it by ear. And when the ear hears a sour note, there is a tendency also to simply take out a loan. This can be trouble, especially in these days of easy credit. If you keep poor records, it is entirely possible to awake one day to the awful realization that you .are broke and will have to lower your standard of living. BIG ITEMS I Your home is very likely your jbiggest asset, financially and; otherwise. Be realistic in your appraisal, nobody is going to pay you for your emotional ties to the house. What are sihiilar houses* selling for in th< neighborhood?, - Make a separate list of tarnishing*. If you were to sell them today, how much could you ask and receive for them? i Don’t attach the eurrent list price to your year-old washer even if it is good as new. To a buyer, it’s a used machine. How much can you get for y6ur automobile? Rather than guess, take the car to a dealer and ask him. And keep .in* formed on prices by checking the classified ads in newspaper. Now make another list for your clothing, and while you’re at It, decide on what you can give away. It would be nice if you could eally sell used but serviceable doming. The fact is policy and which lists the -dollar and cent* value of each $1,000 of insurance for specific age or time periods. charity. Just as there generally is miscellaneous equipment How much money do you have in the bank? In your choking account? How many r * * *SSST $7 i. k<«k«U». current v«lu« ... and ■ t that of your stocks, mutual gdf dubs . • funds and other bonds? SECURITIES, CASH INSURANCE Now list the values of the various pieces of paper that you hdd in your strongbox or safe deposit vault. What is the cash value of your life .Insurance policy ? This is determined easily from a chart that accompanies The pleasant part of tbg> job is now over. Next your liabilities.-★ l i h Hie biggest item, once again, is likely to concern your home mortgage; the second may be the- loan on your automobile. List only. the outstanding „bal- You may, also have other long-term leans. Passbook loans, .or loans on oyur savings account, , pure common. Also common are loans on fourance policies. WWW Your short-term borrowings undoubtedly will be more numerous although not as large as your long-term debt, especially since credit has become' a way of life. List them all: department store credit, credit cards, credit union loans. * 1 f The final piece of arithmetic is to subtract your liabilities from your assets — and hopefully not the other way round. Date your inventory and file it, and at the same time next year go through the sanie process. sale custom tailored DRAPERIES -CARPET save FABRICS save Use Your .'.ilMliii.W.1' Double Knit Wool Dresses SALE 14*97 Juniorsl Misses! Here's your chance to save on the up-and-coming, new styles and colors of fall. Wonderful, wearable .wool knit dresses (many with stitched details) on sale now. New Sportswear Looks SALE 3.97*6.97 Surefire styles at savings! Permanent press safari shirts, 3.97. Pgntskirts: plaid or solid wools, 6-16, 5.97. Acrylic crocheted vests in popular colors for SML sizes, 6.97. Lined! Wool Costumes SALE 59.90 v Beautiful styling you'll seldom see at a price'this low. Coat and dress costumes: fully-lined, double knit in fine wool. Choose \jn gray, wine, brown or green fc>r sizes 8 to 18. v • .9 r Pile Suburban Coats SALE 27.90 Everything you want! The furry softness and warmth of Orion, acrylic pile. A whole collection of great-looking-styles. Brown, white, navy, ash. Sizes 6-18. q Leather Gloves SALE 6.97-8.97 Magnificent importsl Butter-soft, genuine kids In gloves at anniversary savings. Shorties, 4-button lengths In \ brown, black ok, white. Sizes 6 to 8. IF YOU HAVENT OPENED YOUR MAO^Y'S MULTI-CHARGE i; ' IrU Vv W ; YET, DO IT NOW DURING OUR BIO ANNIVIRSARY SALE bm Pontiac Mall (We're No. 1 Stare Inside Elisabeth Lake Ent.) . . Shop Mon., Thun., Frl., Sat. till 9 P.M. e Ann Arbor e Ypsilanti e Monroe e Jackson • Toledo V \ A mM •A ,WV \ -i V \ \ \N \ " \ ,\ \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER T, 1900 :;0-«' When brass has become MA It koK tarnished, dean It with « solu- '-c*9e tion ot salt and -vi h a g a r. Bl,ssolve the salt In, the vinegar until the liquid does not absorb any: more, and let the salt ; crystljs as a result, settle to the After cleaning* the brass, rinse it thoroughly, in clear water and dry with a soft doth. , „ jealousy Is at the Root >m,4 TROPICAL FISH ' BIRDS Hamsters REPTILES GERBILS Open Sun. If • 4 661-2894 222 N. MAIN. ROCHESTER how to satisfy a wife, so they I him, lest he enter into often leave her frustrated, tense I clandestine affair.” * and jittery. ! This is t h e subconscious Then she begins to think: reasoning that often leads to , “Perhaps something is wrong abnormal jealousy. ■ * f I with, me, because I don’t enjoy. And it shows how the wife’s marital relations ot become major attention is on herself satisfied therein. instead of being unselfishly *'*-* devoted to her mate’s best, By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE K-595: Teresa G., aged 23, is jealous of her mottier-in-i law. . . ■ ; “Dr. Crane,” she began, “Tom’s mother keeps interfering in our marriage. “She tries to show me how to cook the foods .!? vSu fiif "So maybe I am organically .interests And she tele- inferior -(infantile uterus; sterility, etc.) ‘For if I arm inferior, then maybe my husband wjll feel far moreV attracted to some Other .whp is entirely nbrnialr Wore, I better watch NEW . ... WIGS and WIGI^frs PERMANENT and HAIR STYLE IMPERIALS? 158 Auburn Ave. Park Free FE 12878 Edyth Stenion, owner phones us every day,- for she lives in the same tpwn. ’Why'doesn’t she leave us alone? _____! “Dr. .Crane, Dr. crane 8h* ™ake® .m* so furious I just wonder if our marriage will I last^---- TRIANGLE FEUDS The triangle is the most dangerous geometrical figure for marriage. The tircle (ring) usually culminates the courtship and marks the wedding ceremony. But it -is the triangle that Often causes the divorce. And marriage triangles are of several types, such as the feuding, between wife and mother-in-law. But another triangle may involve the wife and an outside paramour too, a daughter may subtly compete with her mother, for the attention of the man in the house. When wives grow unduly jealous of their mother-in-law, that very fact often indicates their original attraction to their mate wps based largely on sexual infatuation rather than on true love For in true love, you are most concerned with the best interests of vour sweetheart. And if his mother can help You can remove that ugly; discoloration from the teapot by filling the pot with strong trailing bluing water and let it stand a few hours. Wash in the usual way. * i Opep House for Today marks, the gold'en wedding anniversry of Mr. and Mrs., George Penoyer of West Longfellow Street. The occasion was observed Sunday with an open house at this Seventh-day Adventist Church. The couple married in Battle Creek, Oct. 1919. ft' t f Their children are: George of-Marks Street; William, in service in--El Paso, Texas James of Cupertino, Calif. Mrs. HJ S. (Revs) Briggs of University Drive; Mrs. Edward (Marylin) Keith and Mrs. Jack (Joyce) Yates, both of Union Lake. There are 24 grandchildren and 10 greatgrandchildren. ? Inspect Laundry Before Washing Do laundry inspection before the clothes go into the washer. Remove from pockets sand, grass, loose dirt and lirit. Also remove pins, o r n a me n t s, removable shoulder pads, and unwashable trimmings. Zipprs, hook fasteners and buckles should be closed and loose strings tied. Do any repairs of rips or holes before washing. - The 1IM of artificial flowera i« i not • new thins. The Egyptian* formed their famou* floral wreathtjrom thin plate* of horn, •tained in different color* with •liver or copper coaled leave*. The Romun* made their artificial flower* from wax, and many of the crown, of victory awarded j "‘prepar’rmore ravoury food at ancient Olympic game, in f him why be jealous? Rome,were made of ulver and ~ ■■-■•---* gold leave*. ", ‘Later in the State*, flower* were 1 made from many different type* of feather*. Today, however, > with the new plaitic* and way* of arranging1 flower*, it I* hard . to determine -which flower* are - real and-Which one* are' arti-; ficial, ; Alwayt buy the- bed product* when purchasing artificial flower*, because the cheap one* are not good. PEARCE FLORAL CO. 559 Orchard Lake Ave. Unless you are thinking of yourself! Your vanity is hurt because -you Imagine you don’t rate top billing. So* you are selfishly worried about yourjown status in the eyes of your mate, and not properly concerned with his own best interests! Jealousy also is a basic sign of a sexual inferiority complex. For a jealous woman fears she cannot- hold her man against outride competition! And this often goes back to jthe boudoir, where she fails- to obtain the erotic satisfaction which she craves. Med unwittingly abet form of jealousy for they often are not medially instructed In If you have kids for boots... , Rugged but light... Just right for any child who likes the real grown-up Western look. Parents,should insist on boots Which give proper support and fit fof growlngyoung feet. INFANTS (black only) 6 -8, D widths only $8.50; 816 to 3, 316 to 6, B't — D's, E'» from $9.50, according to itzo and style., Black, Breton and Rough out fin- Stapp s where theexperts work 981 Wi Huron St. for evening hours Phone 681-8121 WfifitfM fi. M. M riinmniHi - , , .ilUlU C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 190 Soviet Bomber Report Heats Spending Talk WASHINGTON (AP) — At* port the Soviets ere developing • brand new bomber drew angry counterfire as the House headed into debate over a 121.35-billion military spending bill. Rep. L. Mendel Riven, D-S'.C., made the statement of a new Soviet bomber Tuesday in defending the bill’s, provision for development of an Advanced Gobbies’ pretty ond oh-jo-com-fortable “Sunrise" dashes from meetings to shopping to gardening. It’s a congenial companion for any occasion and the little heel will add support to every step.' PAULI’S SHOES Downtown Pontiac 35 N. Saginaw Manned Strategic Aircraft as the U.S. bomber of the 1970s. F w "" ;— The chairman of the powerful House Armed Services Committee said a report by other members that there is no- evidence the Soviets are interested in such a bomber is inaccurate, Saying be has access to classified information the other members don’t, Rivers stated “We have every reason to believe Russia Is well on the way toward developing a brand new bomber—I’m telling you this on nty own responsibility.’’ j NO EVIDENCE The spending critics said Pentagon witnesses told the com- mittee fat closed fesslon there was no such evidence. , 1 - - ——.- * * * /t; - - “If he has beep cleared for that kind of hibernation/he has a duty to review it with the committee before he reviews it with the press,” said Rep. Robert L. Leggett, D-Calif. “For that reason I tend to discredit what he said.” * * * Rivers made the bomber comment at a hearing at which the House Rules Committee cleared the military spending bill; for four hours debate—over objections it should get at least 10. “We’re arming ourselves to the teeth and the gills, and one day we're going to choke on It," said Rep. Thomas P. O’Neill Jr ~ D-Mass., in contending spending critics should get five hours speaking time of their own. “I don’t know how we can expect to get peace in the world." . * * * -, ; But Rivers, the bill’s floor manager, said critics will be given every opportunity to try to cut $2.2 billion from the measure and promised debate will be extended into Friday if It can’t be finished Thursday, The bill, which the Senate debated most of the summer, is the spending authorization for the Safeguard antimissile sys- other military hardware. Replace Lost Oil Skin that becomes dry and seems to have lost its elasticity is often file result of dieting. Even a few Weeks on a diet devoid of fats land oils can cause a deficiency that may cause your skin to become extremely dry. The solution is twofold — add some olive oil to your diet and some pure baby oil to the surface of your akin to aleviate the dryness and help restore the natural elasticity that makes your skin smooth and young looking. 170 Viet Civilians Escape Reds SAIGON (AP) - Seventy-nine Vietnamese civilians escaped from a Vietcong village to an American patrol base north of Saigon and South Vietnamese Infantrymen rescued another 91, the UR. Army announced today, The Army said the villagers had been forced to, produce food for enemy troops while the villagers went hungry. Some of the refugees attended a Roman Catholic Mass at the American base and received communion for the first time in five years. ★ w ★ ■ i The Army said they had been held captive in the village of Due Bon, 70 miles northeast of Saigon. It had a population of 400 before the exodus of the 170 civilians. V “Last nigffi,” an Army spokesman said, “Enemy soldiers, in a concerted effort to Cut off the increasing flight of Due Bon’s population, rounded up and tried to move One quarter of the- villagers to p new location."' SQUAD INTERCEPTED He said South Vietnamese in-fantrymen intercepted a Vietcong squad herdlqg'91 civilians through the countryside, scared the enemy troops off with a volley of gunfire and rescued the civilians. _ •* * ' ★ * Spokesmen said the 79 other civilians had fled during the past 10 days to. Landing Zone Mary, a patrol base of the US. 1st Air Cavalry Division three At Last! Great News for Overweight People Reduce- Nobody pays cash-in-advance anymore for anything, not even a gorgeous now figure. So now you eon join the Holiday Health Spa in your area and actually pay for it as you reduce. Sound Fantastic? It — ——-----------is — It^S revolutionary. * Everyone knows that diets along simply can’t got the job done. - It takes exercise. And the nationally famous Spa System* is a pleasant, comfortable way to exercise. "Pueh-button" machines focus on problem areas and eliminate them ... effortlessly. Does the Spa System work fast? Read on! • Facilities for Men and Women^ WOMEN! • Lift, firm, d.v.lop bu.llln* • Tuck 2 to • Flatten tummy • iraw 3 to 4 Inch.. aW • Hav.gr • Smooth IS*. ACT NOW 682-5040 today for a Free Tout 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. miles south of the village of Due Bon. The civilians have been turned over to South Vietnamese authorities in the provincial capital of Song Be, 80 miles northeast of Saigon. Jr * * The Army said one group of 27 villagers who turned up at Landing Zone Mary Tuesday included. 17 children. ‘WENT HUNGRY’ “The spokesman for the group told the American Infantrymen that they had for a long time been forced to produce food for local Vietcong and North Viet- namese army regular forces, while they themselyes went hungry," an Army communique said. Capt. Herbert E. Barnes of Orlando; Fla., an Intelligence of-fleer, said: “When our interpreter told them/1 You are safe now,’ their faces turned to smiles."— *'* * jr Elsewhere, three enemy arms, caches were found by South Vietnamese troops 11 miles west of Saigon. The finds strengthened speculation that the Communist command is stepping up Infiltration efforts in the capital. ELECIMC HEATING ...Am YOU SAVE MOOT ON AIR CONDITIONING From lamwxeome* afmih; now kind of electric heating: Now with[accurate tamper* humidity, No atalaneiA or lingering odor*. 0WJL|ip nox forced Sir clrculatljw makes this special whoi* house comfort possible. And, you can add central alrcon* Don't It satisfies with loot tlun LCNHOX FOR A LIMITED * TIME ONLY, 1 $100 TRADE-IN. ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR OLD SYSTEM 33842SS KAST HEATMG & COOUNG 880 TELEGRAPH RD. (at Orchard Lk. Ave.) CnnmhijiTaffi's Our 80th Year TERRIFIC BARGAINS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT SAVE 22‘ TONI HOME PERMANENT .JIEGUIAR-SUPER-GENTIE Tha quick and aoiy way to Roma hair car*. Just right for any hair toxtuia, any ‘ hair style. TIP TOP BRUSH ROLLERS reg.** -SAVE 42e ^ADORhL HAIR SPRAY BY TONI ___SAVE 20*_‘ l WHITE RAIN SHAMPOO 69' SAVE 30* WHITE RAIN HAIR SPRAY i»oz. 99' NESTLE STREAKS 'N' SP TIPS HAIR COLOR Alluring octant itraahc or •hinnarlng tip. to bring wit tha am Intar.itlng you. GOLD - BLOND - SILVER THE PONTIAC PRESS, ^ 1 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1 ■*—M j Pacific Ocean 'Bra for New Map of Its Floor. By N.Bmi! Oop'.p.lr S*d^y Unlverdly'i Li mont - Doherty WASHINGTON— The world'i!Geological Observatory and largest ocean lies restlessly on Marie Tharp, now of the Ngval a bed of dragon teeth, slashing Oceanography Office, ridges and Jagged cracks. 1 I / * 0, * ' new/map of the Pacific The Pacific rhap shows the Ocean floor, reveals the great1 Mm# MTl . of gatelUte-view basin as though drained of pinorama of „ waterless ocean seawater the dramatic vlewjthat was g0 spectacular In the accompanies the October lssue|map| the gamg team produced of National Geographies^ jndjan and Atlantic ocean fioors. The vast empty seas of the Pacific are swept away, ex-I m .... . posing a third of the Earth’s ritor es, and other polltlcri gurface „ever eeen bj^ man, divisions of tM islands and where on, lnfrequfent Elands surrounding continents Both' lerce the surf, a wild and rug-, maps - 25-by-l9 inches and ^ terrain gtfetcheI over M (Identical In scale - represent mlleg of thg 60 per cent of the Earth’s i0ca#n a<£ circumference. ■ , 1/ ^ ,.........\ ... - The magazine commissioned Austrian artist Heinrich 0. Berann to Paiftt the unusual, almost three-dimensional map. It was based on research' by Dr. Bruce C. Heezen of Columbia magazine. Printed In tall-color on the reverse side is the Pacific of people: the countries, trust ter- Get the exterior of you house snug and set for winter now in Hudson’s Home -Improvement Center MERCY MISSION—3 Navy Qmdr. Christopher Withers flies at 8,000 feet as he starts his landing approach to the flight deck Of the attack aircraft carrier Franklin D.. Roosevelt, steaming in the Atlantic. After landing, Cmdr. Withers flew an injured sailor to the Norfolk, Va., Naval Air Station, the Navy said. Date of the photograph and the pilot’s hometown were not given by the Department of Defense, which released the picture yesterday in Washington. .. •„— ACCUTRON (By Balova) 3tme#lj0p 151 S. Bales, Birmingham A FAMILY AFFAIR Fidgeting, nom-picldng. a tormenting rectal itch are often telltale signs ef I’in-Worms. ..ugly parasite* that med-leal experts say Infest 1 out of every - .A V-.1_ ,_III_ I may be victims and not know it. | To got rid of Pin-Worms, they must be killed in the large intestine where they li ve and multiply. That's exactly what Jayne's P-W tablets do. <, and here’s how they do it: First—a scientlAe coating carries [ the tablets into the bowels before they dissolve. Then — Jayne’s mod-ern, medically-approved Ingredient goes light to work—Idils Pin-Worms quickly and easily. Don’t taka chances with danger- dren and adults. easy-to-change inserts that eliminate attain, increase your property value. Also three track, $19* Storm mill-finis)) key lodt and heavy duty air 5j closer/Has an easy-to-change insert/ is very attractively styled., Sealdon asphalt roofing assures weather protection and affords a beautiful new look. Shingles are designed for re-roofing, and ate wind-resiypuit. Call us for an estimate on your roofing needs— there’s no charge and no obligation. *PrictJ plus instulUtion Aluminum aiding and trim Offers a new look with a minimum amount of maintenance. It can cover Overhangs and hard-to-paint facia boards. We have a wide selection of colors to choose from. Sevas' painting your home every few years. Hudson’s Home Improvement Center, Pontiac, 2nd or caU 682-3232, extension 342. All Items also at all Hudson's branches. Come in and register for a free storm ndoor to be given away this Saturday, October 4th. Include* free installation. HUDSON S PONTIAC, PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1969 Wed. Thors Fri.-Sdt. BATHROOM fffi fissw BASKETBALL .VINYL LACE TABLE SCARFS PHOTO ALBUMS Tt Reg. 88c * CLEAR PLASTIC SWEATER BOXES SHOES Men’s, youth’s, boys’ low-cut canvas shoes with rnoldpd rubber outsoles. Sizes 11V2,10-2,21/2-6. Sb . Our Reg. 4.94 CANNON® WARM PLAID BLANKET ■A wonderfully soft blend of 55% rayon with 45% nylon. Raspberry, empite bronze, bamboo, fern, green, aquatint, spring violet 72x90”. 36” and 42” wipe-clean vinyl scarfs with lace effect. White, pastels. BUY NOW AND SAVE! PLAIN AND FLORALPRINT Ten H”xlO” just slip pictures under transparent, acetate pages. No glue or mess. BIG FOAM FILLED LOUNGE PILLOWS Decorative — comfort-ablet Ideal for the family room. Plumped with shredded poly fo'am^ Cotton, covered in Early American designs or floral prints. EVERYDAY BOXED CARDS Assortment features birthday, get iwell, sympathy, juvenile and aJJ-oc. Tweed effect yiscose rayon cut pile with non-skid back-ing. Gold multi-color, blue/ green, black/red, or black/ grden. Charge it and save. UNNERS ]44 An amazingly low price for your faVo- rite play shoes. White, H|! H black or failed blue 1 u p p er with FVC* soles. Size 5-10. m H mm I -Polyvinyl Chlorld, ^R^H ^R^H SALEM MAPLE Many practical uses. Footstool, Ty stool, handy plant stool, or in child’s playroom. Choice of Many Regular 58c HANDY TOOLS for ALL JOBS YOUR 0HQI0E including 6-pc. screw* driver s’et, interchangeable taw set, slip joint pliers, hammer, power auger bit set. Teens', Women's Canvas Sneakers *!:•,'. ‘I* 'Wil S$y»2i Our Reg. 5.97 4-TIER SHELVING UNIT All-purpose metal shelves, walnut or avocido finish. Ideal as a room divider, book shelves, to display a treasured collection. 914x30x36.,” Save howl PONTIAC MALL i Non., mt. iiie to itoo •UN. 12 Ip 5 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC onNMON..nii.ai9ltei TUBS., WED., THUS!., 1ST. . »lliis»lH-»UN.It.» TEL-HURON CENTER OPEN MON-UT. lit! to I SUN. 12-B DRAYTON PLAINS OPEN MON.-IAT. lilO to I SUN. 11-1 ROCHESTER PLAZA OPEN M0N.-SAT. Bill-B SUN. 12-B BLOOMPIILO MIRACLE MILE , OMN M0N.-SAT. SjIS to S SUN. 11-1 4 Days—Reg. 68$ Pkg. Jumbo Size 6-Ct. Plastic leaf Bags The safe, easy way to dispose of leaves. 20x 14x56". Special! This sale only! 2 pkgs. $1 4 Days Only—Our Reg. 58$ Eachl Elegant China Bowls lb set a pretty table... handy for serving so ' You’ll love the mouth-watering taste of nut many things! Save now! 57$ ea., or 2 for $1 clusters. Save now! This salt only! 2 Lbs. $1 4 Days—Our Reg. 69$ Lb. Net Wt. 4 Days—Reg. 88$ Eachl Your Choice uays-y^ur nvy. oty lu. 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Save now! $ Yds. $1 C-10 THE yONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1l '-V- v M School Unit to Meet at City Hall Tho Pontiac City Commission chambers will be the scene of tomorrow night’s regular Pontiac Board of Education meet* log, at 7:30 p.m. < ir* * the board voted, 4-3, at "a special meeting yesterday to move the location ot board meetings because ot crowded conditions at board offices in recent weeks. * w • ★ Board President Russell Brown told the audience of about 40 persons that the city fire marshal had established a 100-person capacity for the board meeting room. 'LARGER CAPACITY’ As many as 400 persons have attended recent meetings of the board there. S i S’ Brown claimed the city chambers has larger capacity and also a piddle address qratem which would allow everyone In the room to hear the discussion. However, city officials today pointed out that the chlmber has 100 seats — about the same capacity as the ichool board room. ■ . ★ ★ Board member Dr. Robert Turpin took exception to moving. He said that the physical location of board meetings was not the problem causing disruption at recent sessions. "I fed wo should make do with what we have here and con* centrate on trying to repair the board’s relations with the community,” he said. -MEETING SUGGESTION Christopher Brown and William Anderson agreed with Dr. Turpin by voting “no” with him against the proposal. if ' It ' „ Turpin also suggested that If meetings must be moved, they could be hdd in different junior high schools in the city, in an attempt to bring the board to the people. 4——4——7 .■ His suggestion was not discussed. - " Tomorrow night’s agenda includes discussion of school district desegregation; discussion of Equality of Educational Opportunity report recommendations; and a proposed contract with the Urban League in connection with Project 100 for 1809-70. Pollution Plan Delay Won by Power Firm LABSING (AP) - The State 1 Air Pollution Control Commission has given Consumers Power Co. another year’s exten-i Sion to complete plans to eliminate air contamination tram its plants throughout the state. Urn commission authorised: the extension Tuesday after the : utility gave a progress report saying it was on or ahead of •LOOK, MOM, NO CAVITIES’ - That’s whst 7-year-old Sara Lowry of Columbus, Ohio, seems to be saying from inside an outsized tooth display at the Center of Sci- ence and Industry in the Ohio capital. Some of the teeth light up to show the things that can happen to teeth_______ For School Administrators Bargaining Unit ;OK'd The Pontiac Administrators and Supervisors Association was recognized unanimously by tiis Pontiac School Board at a special meeting yesterday as exclusive bargaining unit of all administrators below assistant supervisor. All principals, assistant principals, community school directors, directors, assistant directors, supervisors, assistant aupervisors and coordinators are included in the newly recognised group. ★ * * The board had unofficially recognized the group for annual negotiations in previous years. Smith Carson Jr., assistant prlclpa! of Central High School and president of the new group, said the association wanted to be recognized permanently. Ha said he felt it would help to pull administrator! and supervisor* closer together. ' W ' ■ if* - * The recognition means that the association will be able to use the services of the State Labor Mediation Board as doei the teachers’, group, Pontiac Education Association. POOL USE OK’D •In other action last night, the Pontiac Swim Club request to use the Northern High School swimming pool without rental charge was approved by a 5-2 vote. ■ ■■ * ' * * The board’s two black members, Dr. Robert Turpin and Christopher Brown, voted against Jthe proposal because of the . audience raised questions about tlie club’* acceptance of black members. / fiWV * •* - ; Board member John Irwin, who said he was president last year said the dub presently is all white. He added, however, Uiat any members of the com* munity with qWldren who swim well are welcome to join. Dr. Turpjn and Brown earlier had voted to table the item until the discrimination charge against the Swim Club is investigated. . .'ft * ' * The dub encourages competitive swimming and sponsors an 'amateur aquatics swim meet. The first American president to marry during his term of ot fire John Tyler in 1844. i THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURSAY WHILE OMMTITIES LAST j DOWNTOWN KRESGES WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. Table-Portable color Television Complete with Kmart Discount priced Beautifully styled. Hand- Deluxe feature* throughout. Glare free .tinted safety shield. Front mounted speaker. Roll-aboutCart ~~ Included --- - mEPONTik WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 19|69 0—11 Photos by Apollo Crew Reveal Clues Moon Bears Hint of Sun Scorching rrtlACA, N.Y. (AP) - A wee researcher who ha* stud-d close-up color photographs iket) of A minuscule segment of is moon’s surface says the pic-res Indicate a huge explosion rthe sun scorched the moon id could have affected the tarth. Prof. Thomas Gold, director Cornell University’s Center r Eadlophyslcs and Space Re-learch, believes there was a gi intic explosion on the sun that ised Its heat intensity to as nuch as 100 times the present vd, Gold believes '‘the explosion aused elements on the moon’s lurface to -melt, combine and then cool. Into a glass-like glaze. He made his comments In a scientific article after looking at 17 color "stereo" photographs taken by thei Apollo 11 astronauts. Tbs pictures show glassy patches, ranging in size from half- a millimeter to one centi- IN SCIENCE WEEKLY The article is in the Slept. 26 Issue of Science, weekly phbli-cation of the American Association for the Advancement of Set GSBd said the explosion mult hfflfi occurred in recent geolo» gir*tlmes—probably not more than 80,000 years ago and certainly not more than 100,000 resultant glazed glassy particles had to bo fairly recent, in scientific terms, Gold said. If the explosion happened more than 100,000 years ago, he contends, the micrometeorites that bombard the lunar surface would have destroyed the glaze. Gold said further proof of the relative recentness of the solar explosion lies in the fact that the glaze parades have not been covered by the lunar soil, which is redistributed by meteorite pounding. ATMOSPHERE SHIELD Gold theorizes that the solar explosion would have notably affected the upper atmosphere oh earth, Venus and Mars, hut that the earth’s atmosphere would have protected the sur [face. “The heat delivered to the ground (of earth),” Gold said IV not likely to have been Sto cause any permanent .The temperature rise of Kind due to such a flash Would be about a thousand times less on the earth than on tile moon." He said scientists could possibly explain some geological changes on earth, keeping in mind the probable solar explosion. Solar flares on the sun’s surface are fairly compion—but not in the intensity referred to by Gold, v The photographs revealing the surfaces were taken, the astronauts reported, In small craters measuring about S to 4 "The glazed areas ari clearly concentrated towards the top surfaces of protuberances," he thf lunar surface In better do-lthe tall than Aldrln and Armstrong [taken could have been able to S«e with Points and edges appear to be strongly favored Mr the glazing process. In some cases, droplets appear to have run down an inclined surface for a few nliUlmeters and congealed there.” * * ♦ Gold discounted the Idea that the glassy patches could have been formed by the rocket of the descent stage of the Apollo 11 spacecraft. He also expressed disbelief in theories that the patches Were created by the impact of meteors that caused the cratera in which the sparkling patches were found. CLOSE-UP CAMERA Astronauts Nell A. Armstrong and Edwin A. Aldrin took the color photographs with a camera designed to give a clOse-up color picture of tine detail. Gold said the pictures show CONSTIPATED? DUE TO UICK Of POOD Z naked eye since they only a few h MAAAAAAAAil 4 DAYS ONLY THURS., FRI.. SAT.. SUN. OUR REGULAR 200 HAMBURGERS ? FOR H*o With This Coupon* Fast Self-Service! GLENWOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY ST. AT QLENWOOD 8#, WITH THIS COUPON Sale Ends Saturday, October 4 .M0FF i2nd Tire When You ar Low Price Sears Snow and Wide Belied Tires Guaranteed for 40 Months Better Traction With SEARS Snow Guard Tires Durable Wide Guard Belted Tires 2 fiber glass belts directly, beneath the tread keep the tire surface flat against the road for better traction... virtually eliminates squirming and wiggling. Means greater strength and longer mileage, too. These rayon cord tiros give qn extra quiet ride... even at high speeds. Buy now and save! 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Boll bottoms and stove pipe look In bonded acrylic plaids or bonded Shetland wool sol* ids; Fly front or side zip dot* ing. Danes & pastels. Sizes 8*18. OUR RIC. 16.97 IUN FfeOSTIIS.;.double breasted in double dimension white acrylio/polyaster pile. Just hot enough to keep you warm all winter. Misses' sizes 8-16. OUR RIC. ' 14.97 WIDI WALI CORDUROY COATS interpreted in safari, captain end toggle atylea. , V /f Lined in plush acrylic idle for super warmth. Browns, groans and golds in mines' sizes 8 to 18. YANKEE SELLS FIRST QUALITY ONLY NO SECONDS NO IRREGULARS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1069 ; '?» .___________1 ■ - ' ..■ c-»l§ We reserve the right t&limit quantities LEATHER-LOOK GO-GO GLOVES YOUR CHOICE ii lllllllll GIRLS’ FLARE SLACKS YOUR CHOICE KNIT SCARVES GIRLS’NYLON SUCK SET What i handsome savings! Attractively knit Banlon ® textralfzad nylon phlrt*. Crew neck andooller model styles; short sleeves. Choose from’solkl colors, stripes and Jaoquard link types. In olive, black, royal, gold 1 1 or brown. In sizes S-M:L-XL. \ UUMt DISCOUNT SHOPPING AND SAVt DETROIT STERLING HEIGHTS DOWNRIVER I . | 3Ei i Give the pan in which you are going to melt chocolate a light coat of fat. Then all 6f the chocolate will pour out of the pan, making it much easier to wash, and you do not waste one speck of chocolate., -SO ROUGH AND VIVID IT'S ALMOST UNBEARABLE" —JVaw York Timet |f) PERSONS UNDER 18 NOT ADMITTED iCenturyFoxpresents rjjv HARRISON Miwasn BURTON • lllM QgNEVIEVE WAITE FIRST RUM Pontiac drive IN THEATER ft 5 4500 2935 DIXIE HIGHWAY III $ 10) I BLOCK N TELEGRAPH 80 ST A l RO n ftatealmd Jgaj [IRIVt iN THEATER SJ 674 1800 JHCDH ! TSfuc C-M THE PONTIAC PHEgS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1. rtM TWO FACES OF GOLDIE Hawn, the smart blonde who only acts dumb ilon’s^Laugh-In,” television’^ u Laugh-In," is embarking on a career in the movies after this season. She made one film this summer and is set for two more. Some observers in Hollywood predict die’ll become as big a star as Marilyn Monroe. Last Season on 'LaVgh-tn' Film Career Ahead for Goldie jimmy One/ Bobb ‘ -ter a 'Speed'/. Courtship IftL WILSON Jimmy Van Heusen could' write a to a very slow tempo, ts a song plugged and piano ptoyer lovely young singer, chick,” he told him And then with the crazy abandon of song^^ Iters, those “very fast workers,” he hastened SH marry her 34 years later-just the other week.jp^ His five Oscars.tor melodies are second now! Ms bride who freed him from bachelorhood! the age of 56, bouncy blonde Bobbe Brock WS8 rlberg Van Heusen, of Hollywood and Palms| ■' • ■ lit...... jealous of,me," says Jimmy, WILSON any of Bing’s songs and is Ms dear friend. 'they used to be sweethearts. I think he’s still in love with "Of course not!” scoffs Bobbe, former wife of the late pro-w William Perlberg, and once part of the Brox Sisters, a top singing act. 'Look at this letter Bing wrote her in 1927!” Jimmy produces a copy laughingly.. ''It's a love letter and it’s,cute as hell, ‘On Paul Whiteman’s stationery. Phone number—CHICKER-ING 3110! He sent her a picture of himself and cut out the other two guys in the act. And he’s got on bell bottoms." 'Read it,” Bobbe smiles, tolerant of her husband’s romantl ‘It’s not a love letter But It is charming. Bing was with the Rhythm Boys bored a little . . . “sick of the town and appurtenances thereto By GENE HANDSAKER HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Rub bery-faced, giggly Goldie Hawn, the smart blonde who only aots dumb on television’s In,” leaves the show after this season for a career in movies. This summer die did one film, “Cactus Flower,” with Ingrid Bergman and Waiter Matthau, and found it “a very exciting experience.” ' She’s set for a second for producer Mike Frankovlch “There’s a Girl in My Soup,’1 and producer Billy Wilder is scheduled to write another for her, as, he did for Marilyn Monroe with “Some Like It Hot.” . Some observers predict, indeed, that Goldie will become as big a star as the late Marilyn. DANCED IN CHORUS One is Goldie’s agent-partner, Art Simon, who discovered her dancing in the' chorus on Andy Griffith television special three years ago. He and Miss Hawn have formed » company that will produce two Goldie specials for NBC and eventually, they hope, movies-Simon says Goldie is leaving “Laugh-In” because “in the framework of the show, I dog’l think she has had the opportunl ty to present the talent she* really has.” * R - ★ . But Goldie Is grateful for her three seasons on' “Laugh-In,” an “enormous thing that really shot off my career.” Around the show’s stage she’s known as cooperative and unaffected. Producer Paul W. Keyes says her leaving is “like losing your right arm. S going to be a big star.” SHAPELY The shapely Goldie, 5 feet 6 and 114 pounds, is 23. She was born inWasbington, D.C., where her father, Rutledge Hawn, is a musician in society orchestras. He is also a descendant of Edward Rutledge of South Carolina, youngest signer of the Declaration of Independence . At 3, Goldie started ballet and at 10 performed with the Ballet Russe. Later she ran a dancing school for 150 youngsters WasMngton and still later was a go-go dancer—clothed—at “fine wMle living with four other girls in a tiny Manhattan apartment. |. . . only able to find solace in rum”'. . . about to go into the In Paramount Theater . . . “Odzooks! It’s most disconcerting.” Forty-two years ago . . . when Bing was 23. THE MIDNIGHT EARL Go-go is the same kind of wild gyration performed by . “Laugh-In’s” kookie comediennes. Goldie asked the producers to excuse her from that this year—“I didn’t like to see myself up there dancing; I thought it tasteless”—and they complied Miss Hawn launches her moy? le* career married—this —to a film director, is, 30, who soon starts Germany. Goldie describes him as not as outgoings* herself but full of fun. At thelr/nice little house in Studio GMy,” she takes care of the roses, cooks and cleans on and rests up for the week's shooting. She and have no immediate plans for a movie together. Jill Haworth’s reported marryingTSenny Febre . . , David Merrick’s pal Alan Grant says yep, it’s true DM married Eton Aronson . . . Barbra Streisand likes long nails and refuses to pare ’em for “The Owl and the Pussycat” . . . Jaye P. Morgan and Michael Zannella, head talent Coordinator of Tonight, are definitely fond of each other. Tin Ppn Alley’s full of stories abbut Janet Joplin's Mt song 'MaybeJ'on a Columbia album. Author Richard Barrett blames Fanet/for not allowing it to become a single. Columbia upholds T : . , •„ WISH I’D SAID THAT: The Delegate’s Tom Manessls described an actor: “His personality’s split so many ways, he goes alone for group therapy.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: It is easier to stay out than get out—Mark Twain. EARL’S PEARLS: Ground Floor’s Manny Zwaff figures a retraction is usually the revision of an insult to give It circulation. , An actress at^Jffitnik’s explained her bit part in an off Broadway play have epren left to say than I have to wear.’ . . . That's Dr. Sabin Seeks. Cancer tiriki WASHINGTON (UP!) Albert B. Sabin, who developed oral poliO yacdne, has begun a government-financed attempt |o determine whether viruses cause cancer in humans The famed Cincinnati, Ohio, virologist will use skin samples taken fopm long-isolated, Inbred communities of peoples* in the United States and abroad, Including descendants of the Good Samaritan who, in Biblical times, showed compassion for a fallen stranger. “No one has yet demonstrated that human cahcer can be caused by viruses,” Sabin said In an interview. “But naturally occurring cancers and leukemia in lower animals have been found to be caused by viruses.” Sabin plans to collect TOO skin cultures as well as 85 extracts of malignant tumors from the bones and soft tissues of hospital patients. UNDER WAY We shall put each sarcoma (tumor) extract on each of the 100, skin cultures and watch tor the appearance of little •a ” CoKIn do tuinors,’,1 Sabin said. After a year of planning, the study Is begging under way a yc with about $125,000 a year in funds from the National Cancer Institute. The program could last three or four years, depend lng on respite. The 'akin volunteers i carefully selected. “It is important to obtain the skin from isolated people who hopefully may not have been exposed to the special viruses that are the target of the studies,’’ an Institute spokesman said. Grease Pan First Sabin paid that ’jthUftfd lit other types of studies are if we are to gain tha Er“t,r understanding of human cancer that is required for its ultimate control.” • S 31 URSULA ANDRESS ORSON WELLES -IAN HENDRY. Watchers Mourn Echo II Where would she like to be IQ yean from now? "Alive, happy, and no place special.” WASHINGTON - Backyard astronomers sometimes find t h em selves absentmind looking for Echo II, altM the famous satellite has been “dead” since June 7. Nothing has replaced the 135-foot plastic space balloon. There are no plans for orbiting similar vehicle. Launched in January 1964, the communications satellite spun around the Earth more than 28,000 times before succumbing to the solar radiation pressure and atmospheric drag that pushed, it toward the Earth ip ah inevitable death spiral. who had lived among African Bushmen reported that even these simple people saw Echo II A Rosy Outlook and Included it in their roster of real estate can Gus 12 NORTH SAGINAW Open HiM mr. WML ISM I ■nS SlSt p.M. Sun., Mm* T« Continuous AN Day SM-441S You Must Is 18 - Proof Is ItoquiroN M’ruao- . The long-range market hardly anything but rosy, in view of the expectation that the world population will double by the year 2000. Durable homes, incorporating such quality material as real ceramic tile, dhdoubtedly will appreciate in value as the population increases and the demand for housing zooms. gods MUSHROOM |M HU “EVERYTHINQ FOR EVERYBODY” tence Klopman’s Silken-Touch Permanent Pres#' Prostone Chdmbray NOW! THRU TUES NEW silken-touch fabric NEW trostone colors NEW longer-polm collar 1:06 - 9:46 WED., - SAT,, - SUN, 1:69 - 3:40 - 6:20 • 6:01 NEW double-button cuffs f NEW trim-taper waist NEW freedom from care: machine waeh/dry /no-lron 595 80% Dacron* pcHyaatar 20% cotton ( \ : Frosty tan, MOO, llnan gresn, gray. 14M-16U, 32-38. 682-101v The Pontiac Mall mail and Many amateur trackers regarded die big space balloon as a personal friend. When the Smithsonian Aatrophysicai Observatory broke the news of the satellite’s impending death, it was swamped with letters of regret and sorrow. While traveling millions of miles, Echo II delighted many watchers and awed others. A Smithsonian Institution scientist I limited! ENGAGEMENT Anthony Quinn Oskar Werner David Janssen Vittorio De Sica Leo McKern JohnGielgud Barbamdefford Rosemarie Dexter % M Vv m. A V < THE FQNTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 1, 1969 C—10 ~rar--- By Lurry Lewis Aflfc ♦ Q10S m AQM88 aajss * BAM All VAQS 4JM8TI ♦ AKJ74 ♦esa «I4 AITI . SOUTH (D) 4AXJS4 VK64 - ♦KQ10S W"t «♦ 14 Pms 44 Pm* By OSWALD AND IT JAMES JACOBY THere Is another example of lOser-on-loser technique from the new Solomon-Wilson book. North has a multiple choice at his first turn to bid. Some people would double two diamonds, There-are others who would try twono4rump. * ■ w a ★ North’s choice of a raise to twq_ spades meets with our approval. South’s Jump to four spdBes is a slight overbid but a thrQe-spade Call wduld undoubtedly lead to a further, bid by -North. Anyway, we find West opens the king of diamonds and shifts to a trump. South Is unhappy about this. He is sure that West is sitting with the ace of hearts In back of dummy’s king and sees that repeated trump leads by the defense will make It impossible for him to ruff his third heart in dummy; * There is more than one way to skin, a cat and South found another way to make tract* He started by playing three rounds of trumps and the king-queen and 10 of clubs. He overtook the 10 with dummy’s jack and left the ace Then South led dummy’s 10 of diamonds pnd discarded the four of hearts on it. W , :A'\ .'i West was In with the Jack and A diamond lead would allow declarer to make a trick with the queen. South showed-West his haitd and West conceded the contract to South. An enzyme called urokinase has produced good results in dissolving blood clots that lodge in the lungs. THE BETTER HALF ' , ' : V*rCflRDJWtfIV*' K"0W ' Si SrfPK Jon accordingly. Pino doy for • vlalt. IpEMlNl .(Moy 21-Junc »».. Belter |I publls EHmff vcnli irr^f i dhand intprrnttloni ..— NCER (Juno 21-July »)i Cycle I w. ... {\v(. strau orlglnollty, You can win paopla to * wllllngneaa to m sum*us SB ^anr^ae! lowara ot MMacapllon. LIBRA (fort M-Oet, nil Strau on yMfamblilX Youere not likely to b. •atmlad with atatua quo. Accept chattonga, rawWulblTlty In partonal •» waif at protaukmal araaa. Oddi art In yoUP favor, Daily Almanac United Press International tday is Wednesday, Oct. 1, 274th day of 1969 with 91 glow. te moon is last quarter. ie morning stars are cury, Venus and Saturn, ie qyenlng stars are Mars Jupiter. ★ ★. * a this day in history: 1885 the first medal rery mail service began towns of at least 4,000 IwM the first world series tod in Boston. The Boston sricans of the American gue beat Pittsburgh In a es that went eight games. * * * i 1908 Henry Fbrd to-uced the m o d 61 - T •mobile. „ *... i 1869 James Meredith ime the first Negro to •ter at the University pf Suit Over Refund (AP) — Seeking to of ' $iSt368 refund from a health in-■urgnee company covering policemen, three Detroit officers haW sued thi dty and % DetColt Employees Benefit Board. The suit said the refund was made because of toe high standard of health maintained! bv the police officers, and asked that toa court order the .city to spend toe touts only for pollce-- men.-'/ It to believed that extensive » crops, that obtain their nitrogen M ato ntoar toan from Ive fertilizers. i ■\TV v C—16 X&j kY* ■ N; a ** ^ y' v' ‘ ' ’’ 'ty Nip^j THE PONTIAC PRESS* WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1069 * M ..f 1 Keeping Track of Luggage May Be Hardest CLOUDCROFT, N.M. (AP) n right, it's going to Involve tlx Plennlng a trip to the moon? spaco ships and something like If Dr. Krafft A. Ehricko lalaovon days ot your ttmo. And don’t forgot to keep an aye on your baggage during those transfers. , Red China Is Failing at the 20-Year Dr. Ehricke, chief seleiftlfic advise/ for advanced programs at North American Rockwell, outlined his moon-travel plan this week to the International Academy of Astronautics, which Is ho!ding.an international orbiting laboratory and space confer- A typical flight to the moop as Ehricke envisions It wotlld begin at an earth spaceport such as Cape Kennedy. There, a craft would rocket travelers tiTo rendezvous with an orbiting space station, * The station would be a giant craft boosted Into apace by a nuclear rocket engine and cruising endlessly on a 13-day, egg-shaped orbit, passing behind the moon and then, returning to sweep around the earth and back to the moon again. moon.' There, another tiny tail would leave a spacecraft orbiting the moon and rendezvous with the main station. The travelers, and- hopefully their luggage, would take a short ride by space taxi to the station. The lunar travelers would relax in, large, comfortable quarters aboard the station for the| flight to the vicinity of Passengers would transfer to the taxi for'a short trip to the moon orbiting craft. From there they would catch a flight on a lunar lander. The entire trip would tgke at i least a week. i Ehricke said his plan would reduce the cost pt space travel, becatiae the vehicles could be ttsfed again and again. The space shuttle station would be more than a luxury liner. It would Include laboratories and be used to ferry, supplies to other shuttles and moon stations. Most of its occupants probahly-would be Scientists. The shuttle would look like a 400-foot pencil with an oversized and would contain living quarters) laboratories and control moms. Along the body of the pencil would be a nuclear power plant, maneuvering rockets, and dock kH ing 'terminals for the space taxis. The "eraser” might rotate slightly to create an artificial gravity. The physicians of London Incorporated in 1518. . By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent Twenty years old today, the Chinese People’s Republic is like a young rebel, resentful of the whole world, full of defiance, down at the heels and unhappily insecure. Measuring achievements against the lack of them, historians are likely to judge the Communist regime "in Its first badly deput'd Mao’s prestige. At Lushan in 1959, stubborn party opposition resulted in his furrendering his post aa chairman of the government, retaining only his party chairmanship. Mao was successful, however, in' having Marshal Peng Teh-hual fired as defense minister and. replaced by the iaturnine Marshal Lin Piao. It was then that the cracks in two decades as a monumental the alliance with the Soviet Uniion began to be ohvious. [If HARD YEARS China underwent three ex-[Itremely hard years from 1959 to 1962. There were food shortages, -failure of modern times, evei» famines tn some areas, severe though it has brought the shortages of consumer goods. The second Fiv^Year Plan was a failure. Political tension mous, overpeopled land to the point where its growing nuclear "arsenal makes it a contender for major power status. National Day celebrations opened to an ominous overture: what was probably China’s 10th nuclear weapons test in five years. This is an achievement in terms of world power politics, was high, and Mao himself was in danger. President Liu Shao-chl appeared to have the backing of Influential generals, among them enemies of Pjaon for efforts to create more rational system. Recovery was slow and but it is of doubtful value to a|fui but there had been some by nation of 750 million or morel1965i wj,en Mao and his allies that is dreadfully poor, began planning for a new up- There have been other heaval that would get rid of the achievements—in oil, for exam-Ubrea^s 0j bis pre-eminence, pie. China was an importer be- Like a sudden hurricane, fore the revolution. Now her|Mao’s “great proletarian cultur-Taching oil fields supply morelal rev#jution- hlt china in 1966. than Waif her needs. She has He enlisted the country’s indoo- made some progress in industrialization, but so swollen to her population that most of it musk be engaged in raising food, and still the population growth outruns production. The regime can claim’ to have kept the nation together as it never had been held together in the past, but at a high.cost. trinated youth for a campaign of reckless violence against the institutions of the party, the government, education, science and particularly culture, the fountainhead of ideology. ENEMIES DISGRACED What It left, after three ye&rs of violence, was a prospect of MPRE PRONOUNCED The failures are more pro-. nounced. From a promising start In the first five years of "people’s republic,” china retrogressed to a state of internal political and economic chaos. Ob Oct. 1, 1949, the victorious Mao Tse-tung, having swept Chiang Kai-shek’s forces from the mdtolapd gazed with moonfaced. solemnity from the Gate of Heavenly1 Peace in Peking and promised a bright future for his people. Mto’s “new democracy" would guarantee freedom of thought, speech, press, db-■embly and all basic rights to all "the people.” wreckage of the party and government machinery as it had1 existed before. Rule now was not so much by the party as by Mao’s “revolutionary committees.” His enemies had been disgraced. Many of them were dead. Liu Shao-chi was stripped of all his offices and denounced as “traitor, renegade, scrab and China’s Khrushchev.” . It left, also, a wider gap than ever between China and its onetime closest ally, the Soviet Union, The split radiated outward causing division around the world in the Communist movement. What is In prospect? Mao is 77, probably ailing. His anointed heir, Lin Piao, is also ailing There appears to be deep division between the Maoists, who are the theoreticians of revolu tion, and (he more practical ones of whom Chou En-lai, Communist China’s first and only premier, may be a leader. Thera Is' a kicker in Communist promises. “The people” in Communist language means those who conform to party dictates. All the rest are potential "enemies of the people.” China did ipake some prog-r e s s attacking mountainous problems, mobilizing all the people to a desperate effort to make production keep pace with population. The first Five-Year Plan, instituted in 1950, seemed a success. But Mad was impatient; and he proceeded to breakf DETROIT (UPl) — The more promises; i froversial “Philadelphia Plan,” COLLECTIVIZATION bitterly opposed by building He announced collectivization! trades unions, may-be put into of all the land, depriving Chi-!effect in Detroit to force na’s 500 million peasants of .minority group representation property and flying into the 00 federally assisted con- Detroit Eyed for Hiring Plan face of traditiort. Heavy pressure enforced the collectivization despite widespread resistance, and by 1957 it was almost complete. Then Mao acted again. His "Great Leap Forward,” an attempt to push socialization ahead of schedule, proved a major disaster. Coupled with natural calamities such as floods and structlon projects. * Detroit Is one of nine cities to which the plan may be extended, the U.S. Department 4f Labor has announced. A hearing will be scheduled In Detroit in the near future so all concerned parties may testify. Under the plan, builders are required to submit “affirmative action”. plans tor hiring plagues of locusts, it would re- blacks and other minority suit in bringing China to her! Americans when they enter bids lowest point under communism on federal projects costing more by 1961. than $500,000. If the bid fails to The "leap” had heavy politi-jmeet minority hiring standards politl- meet minority mrii which! for the area, it will he rejected. SAVE! 14” BIA. COLOR TV 18” III PORTABLE COLOR TV h,» at ihk law Highland arieal Nationally known brand. Smartly atvladtahli Can't martian nanta ban at our law pika, bat It', a tap American brandl Walflh, |vat Nationally raid brand at Highland aala priaal full I *“ dla. icraan m vat (antral, and "tZmtl- JTrat *„n“a SSraktaloTirtn. 17 lb,.... yat ahawa 101 an. In. plclyra - laap. anau.h hr full family anjaymant. ..and am art frartl built • In aSpah artanna hr .harp ptct.ra. an all UHF/VHf «h.n- ^ IMF/VHF. WMay flan aarylca. Thauaanda aald alaawhara hr $27V.9S. aala. Lu,,ag. typ. handla. Inlay Calar TV In any r«,m. F,a. 90-do, ..mica. *149 *199 *249 Free 19-diy heme trial. SHARP 18” COLOR PORTABLE ln|iy family ills viwwingin any room with this giant 110 «q. lit. ecvwwti Calar TV. RCA 23” COLOR 00MMATH PANASONIC COLOR PORTABLE *299 ss grtgggggsssiss *647 *249 \ / S V RCA COLOR TV LOWBOY Ihtt I99W 1970 model big-ecroon 20" «fl«. tdof TV In quality, RNfflrmmui and rwllabilHyl ••autlful llvm _ ____ Inotry. New tllt-ov* control gonel. lugor-brlght color tub*. 23,000 volt Now Vletachoo- yater warroMyon tuba, K •Hi. Iraa 90*efoy oorvica. Modal 0M-S21. ThmiMRM8<>>iMf*llN^bi><9r * MOTOROLA 23” DjA. COLOR Whaf a bvyl Matarala aa laaat Wart 295 aap la. Mb. Walnut waad aanaah bt ah- »7aa. bfc| «aartafa^ wf*.Sabd(tata aamgrtarthtlpMad WF/VHr3»matii. S- bay atylad i yaar wanartyan pfiiaratvba, Madul COSTS-1 ftaa dalbmay, SO ■ day aarrlua. bahr clarttk i,- ; ■ " • - ' New Kraft Mexican-style Macaroni Dinner—with a wicked little touch of cJiHi. Macaroni, spicy mixings. Just add tomato paste. Ole! New Kraft Italian-otyle Macaroni Dinner—with a nice-a little Italian accent. Plenty macaroni, spices, too. Tomato paste i» all you add. Nutty Addition Prepare a package of frozen small onions with cream sauce according. to label directions. Stir in two tablespoons sherry and y« cup chopped, toasted Iasokfor tM« special Buy a Kraft Macaroni: and Cheese Dinner at regular price. On the back you'll find i . a coupon worth 101$ towards l purchase of either new 1 Kraft Mexican or Italian* i 1 style Macaroni Dinner, j Add Berries to Colonial Bread BLUEBERRY AN ADAM A ' BREAD • V* cup yellow cornmeal *• 1 cup boiling water 1 tablespoon putter or margarine' % cup molasses 1 egg, well beaten 1 package active dry yeast Mi cup lukewarm water 3 .cups all-purpose—Hour (about) 2 cups freshor frozen dry-pack blueberries, rinsed and drained Stir cornmeal into boiling water, Stir in butter, molasses and egg. Dissolve yeast in lukewarm water. When cornmeal mixture is , lukewarm, stir in dissolved yeast. • Beat In flour until a stiff dough Is'•formed. Knead dough on a heavily floured board until smooth and elastic. Let rise in A warm place until double in bulk. Punch down and roil dough to a 10-inch square. Sprinkle blueberries over dough pressing them into dough. Roll up like a jelly roll. Tuck ends of roil under to seal ends and put seam side down into a well greased loaf pan 9x5x3/ Let rise until double In bulk in a warm place. Bake in a preheated moderate oven (375 degrees) for 45 to 50 minutes. Turn out and cool on a rack. “ Cool thoroughly before cutting. Serve spread with butter. Yield: 1-9x5x3" loaf. Blueberry Anadama. The colorful language that christened this bread was male and, hearty. 'The bread Is that, n 1 ¥• ■ •’ v -^V"¥ ^ ‘ > •. iv1 u THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, I960 MARKET BASKET In a Spread Lobster Is Elegant One of the easiest trays top present a canape or hors d’oeuvre. to guests Is to give them a mound of something to spread on a bowlful or platter of something else. IWs is easy on the hostess. Hie people who were invited Uke It, too. It's casual and informal and makes everybody feel a part of the party. Sor for goodness sakes, give fhe guests something worthwhile to spread. Something, for instance, like this delicate and flavorful mix ture of, South African rock lobster meat combini butter and cream cheese and egg and pleasant seasonings. ROCK LOBSTER SPREAD 3 pkgs. (8 oz. ea.) frozen South ■ African rock lobster tails 1 cup soft sweet butter 1 pkg. (3-oz.) cream cheese 2 tablespoons drained capers % cup minced celery, v 1 dill pickle, minced • derside membrane. Remove meat and chop finely. Mix rock lobster meat with remaining ingredients' and ipash until well blended. Shape mixture Into a ill. , , Serve with a spreader, Spread on celery, carrots, radishes, saltines or pumpernickel. ..-a . ir ' Can be prepared ahead off ....... time and chlUed. Remove from refrigerator % hour before ROCK LOBSTER SPREAD - A good way to spread the serving time to allow ball to pleasure is to offer guests a spread made with the meat of to fr»r»«»og consistency, the South African rock lobster. This is no ordinary way to Yield: about 3 cups. * make people feel wanted! Hot Drink Has Zesty Flavor This savory hot drink was served at the Food Editors Conference. It combines canned chicken broth with tomdtojuiCe cocktail, onions and spices, and is a zesty, warming beverage perfect tor a chilly day. For an unusual treat, serve the bracing drink in demltasse cups as dinner guests come in from the cold. Or, have big mugs of the nutritious steaming hot drink on hand for the children after play on a frosty COLD WEATHER BRACER DRINK 2 cans (18% fl. oz. each) V chicken broth % cup chopped onions 3 cups tomato cocktail tomato juice - l teaspoon lemon juice 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce ' 1 clove garlic, crushed Mi teaspoon celery sfel Mi teaspoon salt, M« teaspoon pepper, optional Bring chicken broth jo a boll add chopped onions and simmer 3 to 4 minutes, AddT remaining ingredients and return to a boil. Serve hot. Makes about 12 4-oz. servings/ Type of Liquid Tells. Method The secret of making Smooth gravy is to blend flou thoroughly with fat or with cold liquid before combining it with hot liquid. To make a gravy from drippings containing only fat and browned crusty bits, stir flour directly into drippings and add liquid later. When drippings contain considerable amount of meat juices, make gravy blending flour with water, then add to drippings. BLUEBERRY ANADAMA BREAD - A bread for the man in your life: Blueberry Anadama. Guaranteed to make him proud he chose you to bake fdr him. Slippery/Spoon Before attempting to measure luch liquids as syrup ‘ o r nolasses, always coat ihe measuring utensil with cooking oil. Syrups and molasses then slide out easily. „ Spoon that meringue on a lemon pie around the edge of the filling, then spread over the center so the entire filling, is covered. Addition of Beer Enhances Many Foods There are many ways in which beer can be used in the preparation of ypur favorite foods. Simply substitute the new low calorie beer for other liquids in your special recipes. If your family is bored with ordinary meat loaf, here is a delectable way to add zing to quick and easy dish. Lite Meat Loaf 112 oz. bottle or can beer 1 pkg. dry onion soup mix 4-6 slices bread crumbs 2 eggs Mi cup catsup 2 tablespoons prepared mustard Mi teaspoon pepper 2 lbs. ground beef Combine all Ingredients except beef in large mixing bowl. Mix by hand or with an electric mixer until smooth. Add beef and stir with spoon until all Ingredients are completely mixed together. Place in toll-lined loaf pan (9x5x3) and bake 1 hour at 350 degrees. Serves M. What should you coat a souffle dish with to discourage the contents from sticking and to allow the souffle to rise to its greatest, height? You were right ifyour to all three questions sugar. pjf* HP* * ■ ★ Bid did you also know that the sugar industry In America started 175 years ago Louisiana became the first state to-grow sugar cane profitably? Or that sugar beets weren’t grown successfully until 1891 — in Utah, and then in California and Nebraska? Or that today, our average sugar consumption per person is 99 pounds a year? But fewer than 33 pounds are actually purchased for use in cooking or as most of the sugar we consume comes In commercially prepared foods — s o up s, Dreads, cakes, salad dressings, ice cream, soft drinks, candy id many other convenience ods. . v\' ? -I These and other interesting offbeat, facts about sugar Come to light in a new booklet, “Why Sugar." The booklet' contains 80 itoms about,sugar, from Its uses in cooking to the part it plays in Industry, agriculture and even In the development of the United States as a nation. ■ W a a • For tree copies of “Why Sugar,” write to "Why Sugar," Sugar frifarmation, P.O. Box 2884, Grand Central Station, New York City, 10017. n«ir iwist THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1009 University : A ^ Since then the student body has grown tenfold. And the campus has 19 buildings valued at nearly $30 million. ★ ★ There’s nothing to Indicate the boom will stop in the near future. Projected glgurea the student body Is expected to Increase by another 0,000. Then too, $40 million more In buildings is planned for the next five years to keep up with the ever-increasing enrollment and learning programs. . Even then, the Michigan State 'University affiliate wlU have jonly scratched the surface. ★ * * Located on a 1,400-acre complex presently, and even for the near future, utilises only about 100 acres. Any expansion to another part of the remaining 1,900 acres would come alter 1078. | . The property originally was the estate of Mi*.' and Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson. GIFTS TO MSU million. The property then was valued at about $8 million, W " it ■ Sr . Only a few months before they announced the $10 million gift, the Wilsons had been approached by the Oakland County Planning Commission with the idea of using the property^ for an institution of higher learning. Ns ' at. * ★ • Oakland University's Inception, I ‘ * major U the school's development. , - 1 He Is highly respected for bis leadership. The students recently staged a peaceful demonstration asking Varner to stay at OU after they beard reports he was being considered for the presidency of Michigan State Vhlverdty. DEGREES FOR >417 During his tenure, Varner has seen 2,110 students recslve bachelors’ degrees and another 77 fulfill requirements for their master's dsgrlfep 1 Despite Its nicciM.voakland University has made it cieair that it will not dwell on thd past. ♦ W ★ Varner has noted that the anniversary year will be devoted to a study of the "University in Crisis,” to examine current problems in higher educatloa As has been the case with Varner, he wants, to make a good thing better. Picturesque Oakland University: Vandenberg Dorms Overlook Beer Cake Graham Health Center 0/ Pleasant Architecture Of John Hahhah Classroom And Office Building Beautifully Landscaped Grounds Surround Kresge Library Balconies Lend Apartment Look To Dormitories" D— B\ THE PONTIAC PRESSl WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1969_ 1-LB. 8-OZ. SIZE LIMON Oft OftANOI m mr plain - cinnamon or a h. Chiffon Cakes..«£• 55 Sugared Donuts ««• 27 ? 49‘ DATS FILLED Coffee Cake . . . *» THIN SLICED niwi CMMI I ,Mt 39' Donuts NIWI CREME FILLED CHOCOLATE THIN SLICED JM Sandwich Bread 4^99* SMUCKER'S—CImc., ftigKiiHii •» fmmmh. —gfc Jk|- at OFF LABEL—2-PLY WHITE CLOUD '4km • Ice Cream Toppings "« 29 Toilet Tissuo .irss. « 25 All TUNA MM,-. Ap. PURE VEGETAILE —— Purr Cat Food.. 2 can* 25 Crisco Shortening SS 77 lima Beans... «2 ^*> 33 Instant Dry Milk • • 1 AIMROUN A A. JO. OFF LABEL MJ. Hash Brawn Potatoes ■« 39 Electrasal....... t® 77 MINUTE MAID—FROZEN . m P* DRAIN OfINIR |fp> Orange Juice. ...v ™ 55 liquid Plumr.... K u9 VIVA Jumbo Towels.. ASP BRAND Soft Margarine. THB PONTIAC PKESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1969 Save on Mature Com-fed Beef During AfcP's "Super-Right fUlOlM Boiling Beef . . . • , WILSON VACUUM PACK . Sliced Bacon • • • • SMOKID—FULLY COOKID Maple Creet Sous age Spare Ribs Chun King Egg Rolls CHUN KINO—PROKlN Beef Chop Suey • • CHUN KINO—FROZIN Chicken Chow Mein 1-LB. 13-OZ. CANS Chicken Ravioli «« INSTANT Maypo Cereal • • iggo Waffles • CHIF-tOY-AK-DII MIX Cheeseburger Pina 0* M> fUtCHAII light »ATT«k ANDIS.00 jane par*** Bartlett Pears 3 s»1°° PROVINCIAL Joy Liquid Detergent s 77 Why Pay More? THIS WEEK’S FEATURE Asparagus bllKi HAMBURGER 0 L 5-LBS. OR MORE Ik 59‘ | loo | jp.,j I* Fruit Cocktail M OFF LAOBL-PARKAY »OPT V «A( DUl Margarine ..... »* 39‘ Buttermilk Biscuits • . • *9 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEpW^SDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1980 FOOD TOWN confided With Coupon Bolow Melocrust White gB&pw*- PHfttBMEAT Whole BREASTS assorted flavors itSstf BUTTER WWHK SB?;. BMBVS. CHOCOLATE COVERED CHERMES FOOD TOWN ★ PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN * PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN * PEOPLES * FOOD TOWN * PEOPLES * FOOD TOWN * PEOPLES ★ FOOD TOWN ★ PEOPLES * FOOD TOWN * PEOPLES * FOOD TOWN ★ PEOPLES * FOOD TOWN II CARNATION 5 INSTANT || BREAKFAST 1*59* VAN GAMPS PORK A BEANS “13* I KELLOGGS CO COUNT 1 VARIETY PERT 1 PACK NAPKINS f-450 10* THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBEjnU[M! in Merihgye SykJs, Fin* food I* th* keynote of bospiUillty ... and nothing you’re having pnm for a dilut casual evening visit or an 1H te elaborate dinner party, Florida rind Orange Swirls rate a blue rib* , -, Jft*~»wlrla, turned up on thg-menu at the Age of Aquarius Brunch hosted by the Florida Citrus Commission for the Newspaper Food Editors Conference this year at the Drake Hotel in Chicago. And when you are entertaining the country’s top-notch food editors, you just know that the food has to be wonderful. Ill* swirls are crisp merg-Ingues, just the same fancy kind you are served in a fine restaurant. They’re filled with a velvety orange cream made with whipped cream. FLORD1A ORANGE SWIRLS S egg whites teaspoon cream of tartar lb teaspoon salt Rtcupsugar Beat egg whites until foamy; add cream .of tartar and salt; beat until stiff, but not dry. Gradually add sugar, beating until very stiff. Cover baking sheet w.i t h heavy brown p a per dr aluminum foil. With spoon or pastry bag, pile meringue into 6 rounds about 3-inches in diameter on covered baking sheet. Make a 1-inch depression In. center of each. Rake in 175-degree oven, 1 hour. Cool; I egg yolks 1 tablespoons sugar FLORIDA ORANGE SWIRLS - Crisp baked meringues are filled with velvety orange cream, garnished with orange sec- tions. They’re blue-ribbon pastries feet for impressing guests! Wheat Germ Adds Delightful Taste Recipe Wheat germ, now available nationally in the cereal section of food stores, is the germinating part of the wheat seed. It is one of the most nutritious of foods. It is a rich source of good quality protein; vitamins of the B-complex, such as thiamine, niacin and riboflavin; iron, phQsophorus, potassium, and is the rich natural source of vitamin E. In addition, it contains other Important nutrients in token and trace amounts. Wheat germ- is eaten as a cereal, per se, with milk or cream and sugar, or it can be mixed into other cereals, hot or cold. For example, many homemakers stir a tablespoon of wheat germ per serving into oatmeal, after the latter cereal has been cooked. GOOD ADDITION The homemaker can also the high nutrition nut-Uk* flavor of the wheat” to many dishes Meanwhile; there are recipes for wheat germ cookies, yeast or or quick breads, ice cream pies, casseroles, ham loaves, crepes Suxette, apple pandowdy and cheese cakes, among other occasional fare. (Wheat germ cookbooks are available). Wheat’germ, vacuum-packed in jars to preserve its freshness For dinner courses, it can added as an extender to meat and seafood loaves; used a* a breading for chicken, chops, cutlets and fish fillets, or contribute its nutrition and texture to cakes, crumb pie shells, (“the better the food the quicker It Ipolls”), can be purchased in two forms —’the regular, toasted flaky cereal, and a sugared honey product, which has a nugget-llk* texture. are interchangeable in recipes, even- in hamburgers and meat loaves. Wheat-germ should be kept In the refrigerator after the vacuum Is broken and until th* jar is used up. Has Start in Austria Thrifty housewives can find dozens of ways to cut kitchen costs. Here’s one recipe that wins raves, even from con- flrmedyineaiand potatoes enthusiasts. The trick is to substitute crispy, protein-rich fish steak for more costly veal when making a national favorite, Schnifoel. • The approximate cdst of this entree per serving is 24c — certainly a delicious way to economize. FISH SCHNITZEL HOLSTEIN (Fish Cntlest with fried eggs) 4 frozen, breaded fish steaks -2 tablespoons chopped green pepper 2 tablespoons chopped otfion 1 tablespoon margarine 1 can (8-ounce) tomato V* teaspoon Tabasco 4 slices Swiss cheese fish - steaks on package. Saute pper and onion in margarine. Add tomato sauce and Tabasco. Arrange Swiss 1sh steaks and heat until cheese melts. Spoon tomato sauce onto heated serving dishes, cover with fish steaks and top each with a fried egg.' FISCH SCHNITZEL HOLSTEIN - Substitute crispy, protein rich fish steaks for more costly veal when making Schnitzel. Add pickled beets and home fried potatoes and a dessert of stewed fruits for a delicious meal at only 50 cents per serving. Serve with red cabbage or pickled beets and home fried potatoes, with a compote of stewed fruits for dessert. Makes 4 servings. Pine Nuts Give Unusual Touch Only Six Types Although there are about 2Q0j An interesting addition gives! kinds of sausage and ready-fo-l fine flavor to broccoli. lawnre meatw, all of them can be classified into six types ~~ 'DiScetyeRV/ package (10 ounces) chopped cor<**n® t0 Processing method: - - fresh; uncooked but smoked; broccoli 2 tablespoons butter It cup pine nuts cooked and smoked; just cooked; cooked meat special-Cook the broccoli according to t,es* and dry *ausa8es-package directions; drain. Add. „ ... . , .■»„ ' butter^ and pine nuts; stir over| lf *"*“• Coff“/ low heat until butter melts and U8e a fine Krind and a cof-pine nuts are hot. Makes 3 feemaker that does well by this servings. • 'grind. \ . \ (^n foods EUROPISCHE DELEKATESSEM Wlr fuhrenalle Sortien twiner deutscher Wurstwaren. Deutsches Brot und Backwaren. Imp. Kasw und Konfokturen in grosswr auswahl. V FINER FOODS Ur/ 9 Oloswd Inn* and Men. B4$5bntii«rd Lake M, lk**«o Herboi*682-2640 BfervKiy RjcceiasiB ToildRi-eaeieitwHen you m WKKSHWN ecyffitpeev&ynay/ STEAKS GUIS or GIBS . per PORK STEAK oottage style Whole ttaiaalfegL TOW' V" - r% ' Till PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER j, mno m i gis ) ""A 11 LEAH MM" . MOTHER GOOSE APPLE PIE - Simple crusts. Illustration from “The Volland Edi-: apple pie ... is a time honored first cook- lion of Mother Goose,” published by M. A. ing lesson. Tills version is a crisp with no Donohue & Co. Crustless Apple Pi$ Lesson in Simplicity Sandwiches Are Way to Use Leftovers COUKTftY STYLE If your children are Mother Goose fanciers, they are doubtless familiar with Tommy. He would ride a cock horse to Banbury Cross to see what he could buy ... and included among his purchases was a two-penny apple pie. Well, apple pies cost more now. And here's a really simple version | your youngstersmay enjoy making themselves. Mother Goose Apple Pie is lUOSt delicioOi and a snap to rl. It requires no crust and pie has crisp crumbs of sugar, nutmeg, and cinnamon ifiixed throughout with the apple pieces. The pie comes to the table warm with w h ipp e d cream or ice cream. • I ★ ik it 'The pie mixture is combined vrith West Indies molasses, and the mellow molasses taste is FRESH LEAN Looking for. a way to stretch leftovers into a meal that the family will Injoy? Try these hot sandwiches, completed with sesty American blue cheese. They’re easy to fix and most of the ingredients are pantry shelf staples. You can use- slices of roast beef, lum or lamb. The salt-and-pepper of blue cheese broiled on top the meat filling gives these sandwiches that epicurean flavor needed for a good change-of-pace in menu planning. large apples') VI cup sugar, divided V* teaspoon nutmeg VI teaspoon salt VI teaspoon cinnamon, divided 5 tablespoons West Indies molasses, divided 3 tablespoons butter or margarine. JANITORTN THE DRUM - Va-QAL, Frozen Foods MEAT SANDWICHES 1 cup coarsely cut cooked beef (ham or lamb) 3 tablespoons mayonnaise VI teaspoon soy sauce 6 slices toasted white bread Icup medium white sauce 1 hard cooked egg, chopped— 1 tablespoon minced onion ' VI teaspoon salt Vi cup American blue cheese (about 3 ounces crumbled) Blend meat with mayonnaise and soy sauce. Spread mixture on toast slices. Arrange, toast in bottom of 13Vi by 8V4 by 2V4 inch baking dish. f ‘ it i Heat white sauce until hot; stir in egg, onion and*salt. Pour sauce over toast slices. Sprinkle blue cheeM on top. Bake at 350 degrees la to 20 minutes or until cheese melts. Serve at once. Makes 0 servings. Wise Cook Uses Olives to Enhance Many Dishes Olives are a relish, riglrt?,But it seems almost a shame to squander them on relish trays once you've discovered their versatility. RIGHEUEU Sliced Halvas, I lb., 13-ox. Can Cling PEACHES 25* 1-Qt. Jar £ a MIRACLE 4 He JL muffins are a great companion to salads. • Curried ripe olives are a breeze to fix. To your favorite Italian dressing add curry, powder to taste. Pour mixture over drained ripe olives. Refrigerate for several hours, then drain and serve the olives fstaacks. , These Prices Effective Thru Tuet., Oct, 7 m THE PON1. IT AG PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1969 -Junior Editors Quit on Smoking Cant Be Treated as Simple Addiction (EDITOR'S NOTE - Here is tin third in a 14-part series on how to stop molting and not pain weight. The Newspaper Enterprise Association series loffers a double-pronged solution to tho p diction, though addiction plays a part in hooking the smoker. Once hooked,^however, other (actors come into pi ay, particularly psychological factors. and these bind the ad- problem. It is written by Julius Fast, novelist, medicali that, even though editor and mystery writer,! diction tightly to the victim so ' addiction itself is comparatively habit, curiously much stronger, too strong,, in many cases to break. , TWO categories listed by Dr. HoTn follow: the there and then By JULIUS FAST Dr. Daniel Horn, director of U.S. Public Health Service Clearing House for Smoking and Health, worked with CBS to produce a National Smoking Quiz in 1968 and from his efforts * six different kinds of smokers were discovered. Sr n W ' ■" The tremendous importance of this work is that it shows that smoking is not a simple ad- his , Stop 1 Smoking Lose v Weight , The Craving Smoker He doesn't come alive morning •.until he ha. cigarette for a pick-me-up. You’ve seen him in the movies if you aren’t married to him. Bogart played him in the old Sam Spade-type pictures. He sits on the edge of his bed when he wakes up, fog-eyed and half-dead as he fumbles for the bedside pack after a night of withdrawal, and he draws in his first 'lungful of smoke gratefully, lets the smoke linger through his nose as he returns to consciousness. ' He can, as all these types cap, be a she as well as a he. CHAIN SMOKER this smoker lights one cigarette from the stub of the the|last, --------- In Dr. Born’s words, "a craving for the next cigarette begins to build up the moment he puts out the last one.” * * This type of smoker Is not only physiologically addicted to cigarettes, he is also psychologically addicted. He buys his cigarettes In cartons and checks each night to make sure a cigarette is available for the morning. Th. 'Stimulated Smoker'I^Vp'r''^1’ "* .This one smokes for the lift,! (NEXT: Other Smoking the kick he gets from {the Types.) / cigarette, and he Is not truly awake till he’s had h i at breakfast cigarette. {>**.. ** talpM Characteristically, he can _<«• ■» «■». become the chronic drinker or | Istop-Smoking Bask I eater when cigarettes are given ,/a The Penliso rrsis r up, getting hfe "charge’’ from I oleat. W. CHUTE ,t ___■—____eventually in the form of higher DETOOIT (UW) , * ! prices or taxes. Hainan figures tag the public about $2 billion a year, but the battle against air!u costs about f50 P* car‘ pollution is slowly being won, 7 PCT. REDUCTION’ says Charles F. Heinan, chief! Already, he says, a 7 per engineer orr pollution controls reduction since 1957 has been for Chrysler Corp. However, he ^recorded in the fallout of warns the battle is not over yet. [particulates from- factory www smokestacks in 58 urban centers He estimates the $2 billion a year cost will continue for at feast the in y*arsi PprhaP<1 aval longer. Hetaan sets the cost figure for cleaning up the air at $1.5 billion a year by nonautomotive sources, including government, and another $500 million by the auto industry to p u t antipollution controls on cars. But 8 Servicemen Killed in Viet of the country. During that same time, ironically, Heinan says a alight increase in particulate fallout was noted in rural areas. •• w w w V As for automobiles, he says the chief problem now is to getting some of the older cars off the road. These cars were not equipped with exhaust emission controls but they still represent the largest car population on the nation’ highways. H As the older cars'begin to fill the junkyards, , Heinan says the newer cars with lower pollutant emissions will become the majority until, eventually, virtually all cars on the road will have low emission levels. WASHINGTON (AP) - Eight servicemen killed in action in the Vietnam war have been By named by the Defense Depart- fl few yeflrg certainly by The list includes five men W ™ will have reached the from the Midwest. clean-air level that existed to w w w the 1940s, despite the enormous Killed in action: increase to car population since army that time,” he said. ILLINOIS — Pic. Thomas ROCK Island. MISSOURI — Pic. Larry STEADY LEVEL “This level will be essentially Kansas ^hl^os[”*ixaCorp,m*n 3 C steady for a considerable length KANSAS ^*i.!NLI C at lea8t 1990> * ninpion* Mission. . counting on a still further great Ammoh,usain7 JosSS. C0‘ *r" ’! increase in the number of cars Missing not as a result of hos- ^ the road.” tile action: ^ w w ARMY * cunis r. cunt, ■ This, Heinan says, would be true even without any stifferj UD Per anna Malrl emls8lon standards' than ■ I ■ LjLCJptJv/ ntJIU, now contemplated, for the auto.-I industry. half 7nH Ic fit I amp' An<* lndlcates that by that DUl ZIIU l> dl Larye tlme furtherMevelopmenta in emission control technology will be able to maintain or reduce pollution levels further. w ★ ,w But how about the possibility that new cars with ^pollution controls will, with .wear, begin losing their antipollution ef-, MANISTIQUE (AP) - One of two prisoners who escaped from jail at Manlstique Monday night has been recaptured, - but the second remains at large. State Police said 25-year-old Thomas Coleman of Orwln, Pa.. waS arrested Tuesday on U. 8. * lb Delta County. The second; fc, and starf ,pawing out' la-yeaf-dd Aaron Zeig- m0re pollution than standards! tofvW Manlstique, remained at w * * Heinan says data from the ; Ziegler was In custody for vi- *tate of California onl969 cars i olatlon of parole on a charge of shewed that with onto nonnal - maintenance, cars, on the average, still mot the hydrocarbon omission standards after 50,000 miles of use. breaking and altering an Slit. Coleman fas held as a parole violator on a gross inde-osney charge. CIUlirMLOICUW u. aAi SLICED PEACHES.. ;..322* SUTTON SAYOARK PITTED CHERRIES t»42* DELICIOUS im a MANDARIN ORANGES......*&19* MW JAAAX BARTLETT PEARS ....... SAVE UP TO nniiB ajj WITH ' | PKG- | COUPON BELOW JL JL CARS Mil IM WB-. Ducss jlisn 4 PCS ‘r wm WHIGLBY FINK POODS tFitjiliri Littici SSwS- rr wNfc loans I0W«I, kill Of Biffsris LAIIBLU I RILH IfWAt WliWW M A . MSSSSSS* TOMATO SOUP 10* GAL. BLEACH-39* sMvWSSMW FA^TCSUE wl9< t autumn save tot mmi JOY LIQUID m tmmntumm ' ananx' arrsv ten. GALLON MHK.m99* SUGAR COOKIES 59^ BISCUITS....TEA «HG...........;.79< sxtra sharp cnssii teas. pse. , umsuA *coar a in a pks. CRACKER BARREL 79( RAISED DONUTS 49* CANSLOT NATURALSLKIO . ' A AWRRT PRRSH BOL _ * SWISS CHBSE.m:99* BLUEBERRY PIE 69* mm the PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY? OCTOBER I. 1969 Gold Mines Reopened, Ghost Town Gets Mew Life VANDERBILT, Calif. (AP) -In the 1890s, when this desert town was home to 2,000 lusty minors and Wyatt Earp’i brother VIrgU ran the Gold Bar Saloon, they scooped more than gl million in gold from the barren hHle. - It was easy pickings getting gold near the surface In the days when Las Vegas, 60 miles north, was just a water hole. „ But, when miners reached the underground water level, the jigging got tough for crude equipment of the times. With the depression of 1806, Vanderbilt shut down. Since then, except for p futile try In the 1930s, the jagged 4,000-foot hills have hot known the chatter of mining tools. But now, with modem equipment and new processes for extracting gold from chemical compounds, Vanderbilt is alive1 ; Where old-timers crushed the ore and recovered pure gold, the new mlnerg use a chemical brine to process sulfides of gold. Of course, it's not quite the same. Jack Jordan, 38, boss of the operation, travels by auto rather than horse, carries a briefcase and Is responsible to a board of directors. ★ w He's backed by 40 California Investors, many in the computer and electronic fields, who set up a 82.3-million operation. "The old-timers • we dumb," Jordan said. "They knew the gold was thfcre. They just couldn’t get it." MAP WAS RIGHT Jordan's firm, Heavy Metals Carp., has drilled a ty-feofrdi-ameter shaft to a vein Just where old maps said it would be. The vein, Jordan said is 7 to |KCT'. PpM SHARES DAD’S DRAWING POWER - Gary Barton of Cleveland, Ohio, son qf the long-popidar bandleader Blue Barron, gets an enthusiastic welcome on -the campus of Vernon Court Junior College in Newport, R.I., where he is one of the first male students to be admitted. Surrounding him are (from left) Marilyn Muraloof Scandals, NX; Linda Thome of Ugit House (Ration, N.Y.; Aida Jean D’Amapo of Atlantic City, NJ.i Debra Maloomlan of West-wood, Mass.; and Beth Boyd or Houston, Tex. Government Unorganize Kids By JEAN SABLE Few kids are nonjoiners. Nonjoiners are watched with a worried eye, because they are unusual. w—★ ★ But the kids who do join activities, as any mother knows, pick them because the meeting spot is beyond walking distance from home. Mothers — and sometimes, fathers — thrive them. PROGRAM CONSIDERED Presumably because of an increasing number of atrophied leg muscles, countv government is considering a program to improve Junior's physical fitness. , Supervisors are discussing a $125,000 recreation program, the emphasis to be put on phyai- mm gATTB! cal activity. is going my I I know government, this physical to be so organized that it's going to wind up with me kM some place to exercise. • Personally, I have trouble getting him out qf a chair in front of the television set and-out to the .kitchen to eat. ALL CHOKED UP - I get all choked up to think that government, tod, is worried about my problem. The average kid —- that’s who they’re going to help -- and no kids are any more average than mine, (or heaven’s sake. What government- fails to realize is that the average kid is already so organized HeTBarely has time to eat. Sports, teen dubs, youth clubs, various lessons, you name it. Today’s adage is "An organized kid requires less parental watching.” FREE TIME What government could provide is a. little free time, and a place, other than the street or my living room, to' get out from under. And the place should come equipped with a listener. * I’m too busy being a chauffeur to listen for very long at affy one time. — £ ★ ★ ★ < I . ' Somebody young — old enough to know when to keep his mouth shut — young enough to sympathize, and Incapable of pushing even one single activity. . '£ You might describe him as "a Mind" IN WALKING DISTANCE And this listener should be stationed within walking distance of home. : A-T" And his office — or his vacant 1st or his empty stare — should not be called "a drop-in center for kids.” It should just be. dr < ★ Sr Who knows? This nonorganization might be so successful that the rffxt thing the government will undertake will be the nonorganization of adults. And if WE all started taking each other on individual merit, rather than by category, it could affect otir thinking muscles. And that, you must admit, has possibilities — for physical fitness, that is. ’ It feet in diameter, 600, feet operation also will yield copper long, and since it was tapped in early September has been yielding ore assaying $50 a ton. * * W That is enough to make a profit even though the U.S. price celling of 835 an ounce his virtually killed gold mining in the once booming West. In many of California's gold mine areas, there's still plenty of gold but you can’t get it out and make a profit at~g&5 an ounce. Several old mines have become tourist attractions. COPPER, SILVER Jordan says his firm hopes to extract 850 million to 8100 million worth of gold. The mining and silver. « 7 The 12 miners at the digs are, unlike the old-timers, family men. They live in house trailers, set amid weird-looking Joshui trees overlooking a barren valley. Nearby are the collapsing remains pf the old ghost town. Wien the processing mill opens this winter, the crew will increase to 30. . * * * About the name, Vanderbilt, Jordan, said, “The town was named after Cornelius Vanderbilt, the railroad magnate^ He never was here. The people just I to be rich said they were going 1 like Vanderbilt.’7 GOLD DIGS - Modem gold miner Jack Jordan examines old ore that has been extract-' from abandoned mines in the ghost town of Vanderbilt, Calif. At right a modem earth-mover is used to haul m out of the shafr Jordan and his firm, Heavy Metals Corp., use maps of old-time miners to guide them to the ore. U.S. .CHOICE CLIIML FRISK STANDARO SKI #aiA CAMBIOT PRELRD 4 PIVEIMED TV shrimp...........mT GORTON'S QUICK FROZEN MAX HYORADIRALL FARK1-LR. FKO. COD FIUETS ^59c SLICED BOLOGNA 89* Oscar mavir-or gall fark skinless — . oscar RATER ALL PEAT sliced m/'nA FRANKS - »79* B0L0GNA.,..;...%s-79* OSCAR MAYRR UMCH HEAT M-m. PKO. ^ . ECKRICH HICKORY SMOKED . ag VARIETY PACK 89* SAUSAGE.......................99* HMMH IsSSi) HEAD i'LS* ■Mm-! mmmm FROZEN PEAS CUT CORN COT GREEN BEANS MIX VEGETABLES... I mozm | I FROZEN Imch’i puaotx _ ^ MlfSB-J FROZEN | MEAPOWDALE STRAWBEHB1ES -25‘ FROZEN ORANGE JUKE..»%,17* FROZEN FRENCH FWES 5^ 79* FROZEN PIZZA ROUS .^»69* CREAMETTB FROZEN m ,BnA MACARONI ’N CHEESE 5&T cons RICH.............®25* CREAM CHEESE CAKE s79* TOASTER WAFFLES **.21* --HP U.S. NO. 1-FANCY . , MICHjSVUT : . __ 4. 4. 1 RUTABAGAS JO* APPLE CIDER ^99* frssh crisp endive oi AA|Ki affy-taRfu ESCAROLE........ .29* CARMEL APPLES .121 5 Convenient Locations! PONTIA^r—46 E. Telegraph at Huron PONTIAC—5046 Highland Road SYLVAN LAKE—2375 Orchard Lake Rd. UNION LAKE—8040 Cooley Lake Rd. ROCHESTER—1495 North Main 19* POTAtOES...20*89* 1 J)....' JE i aiL....■ ■..; ment coffers. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1. 1»«» County Board t6 Get Budget Later in Month By JEAN SAILE - inquires 5.16 mills of -A: controversial 1970 county ^ t#x to fin#nc®. it P*“s government budget - pared to »nother »■**{«» *■ just under (30 million — will j revenue front anticipated state probably go to the board of!income tax returns and other supervisors later this month. . .. . , The budget will face a public Pe ,fact there ** °J^ hearing at the Oct. 9 session of 516 th® property tax .ST2A adding to theH^ryj'trffi As prepared by the County j^ance committee resolution. faction°withUtherSb(/ar d*a For the second year in a row personnel practices and finance *h« Tax A!‘ 0 1-3 0 12 Orangar 12-3 1 1 1 P.Niekro ’ (W,23-13) 7 7 2 2 Wllhtlm 2 0 4 0 1 Save—Wilhelm. T—2:14. A—03,074. Cincinnati o, Atlanti L.May. S -Carty. GR SB ! . LEW SLOWED - Milwaukee Bucks’ towering rookie Lew Alcindor sits in a -wheelchair after arriving in Milwaukee from Wichita, Kan., Monday. Alcindor, 7-feet-lVt-lnches, suffered a sprained ankle in an exhibition game Sunday night. He rode the wheelchair from the plane to a car. Helps Tigers Nail-Down No. 2 Spot TOM TIMMERMAN May Lose Bing Mickey Lolich After 20th Win in 1969 Finale BALTIMORE (API - What, do Mike Kekich, Fritz Peterson, Mel Stottlemyre, Mike Kilkenny and Tom Timmerman have in common? They all have complete-game victories over the Baltimore Orioles in running up a five-game losing streak for the American League's Eastern Division champions, their longest of the season. A A A Timmerman, 4-3, a 10 -year minor leaguer making his first major league start, held the Orioles to seven hits. Tuesday night as the Detroit Tigers won 4 -3 and ’ clinched second place in the Eastern Division. Mickey Lolich, seeking an elusive 20th victory, gets his last chance tonight when the Tigers dose (he season against Baltimore. He has lost 10. ~ Jfm Palmer, 15-4, is scheduled to-start-for the Orioles. Loser Dave McNally, 20-7, was routed during a three-run, seventh-inning rally which featured Don Wert's two-run single. DOUBLE PLAY Decals Becoming Difficult to Obtain —ANN ARBOR (AP) - Gold football decals that appear on some Michigan football players’ helmets are symbols of excellence in past games. And the way U-M rolled to victories in its first two games„8ome players were awarded as many as six at one time. ... A -*~«A But coach Bo Schembechler says “those things are going to be a little tougher to get now.*' The Wolverines had little trouble crushing Vanderbilt 42-14 and last week thrashing Washington 45-7, * but this Saturday they take on* Missouri, rated ninth to the cotintry. “The1 Missouri defense is one of the best in the country,” Schembechler said this week at 4 news luncheon! "They^iaytheir secondary sotight they’re line linebackers," he said. " . . . Their defense hasn't been scored on by rushing Vat.” sf f t That might prove a problem to U-M, which has ground out 729 yards rushing In two games. Junior quarterback Don Moorhead and sophomore t a i I b a c k sensation Glenn Doughty have accounted for 560 of that. * SLOW STARTER “Missouri has always been a slow starting team," Schembechler said. "And they may be again. They’re starting to get better already.” He said the Tigers have good field goal kicking and punting return games'. “We’ll have to defense their punt returns. It’s aa real fine weapon for them,” he said. ) The former Miami of Ohio coach said . there is not much that can be done agaiftst their field goal attempts, which may come from anywhere inside the 50- yard.line., _______ The Tigers, who beat the Air Force Academy in their first garth and downed Illinois last week, were 7-3 last season and went on -to upset Alabama 35-10 in the Gator Bowl. No Lead Big though Says OSU's CHICAGO (AP) — The days of sitting on a. two or three touchdown lead are gone in college football; take it from no less anauthorlty than Woody Hayes of Ohio State who commands the notion’s No. 1 team. Hayes, whose Buckeyes rolled over Texas Christian 82-0* in their opener last "Saturday, told Chicago Football Writers Tuesday that "During a game you don’t know how big is big enough.” Hayes referred to Purdue’s opener against the same TCU team a week before when.the Boilermakers ramhled to a big lead and had to hold off TCU for a 42-35 victory. High geared offenses in the colfege game have developed from the beginning of platoon football to extension of the games by stopping the clock jfter every first down.. OPENS DOOR It all makes for more excitement, bigger crowds but also opens the door for lopsided victories by^toams loaded with talent, , “Platoon football offenses are reaching their maximum potential,” said Hayes. “The quarterback is to the game, totally and not just a drop back passer. “College coaches experimented and were not afraid to run the quarterback as you can see in the tripto*o£tian offense. More and more,, quarterbacks aoy the run-pass option. There are fications to the new offenses and the big scoring is not necessarily a drop in defensive football," added Hayes. John Coatta, whose winless Wisconsin Badgers .appear on the verge of a breakthrough because of their potent offense, attributes the big scoring to the greater skills of the players. “The kids today all- run, catch and throw the ball so well that it is difficult for the defense to keep up,” said Coatta. "If you have a wealth of material, you c.an put good players on defense. But if you're short of manpower., the bettor players go on offense Because you must score to win.”- ' (Continued On Page F-2, Col. 2) Ex-Kettering Player Cut for Three Weeks • Former Kettering gridder Jim Haviland, who started at the cornerback spot for the Miami Hurricanes in their .I6-I4 loss toFlorldaState, wilt be lostto the team for at least three weeks. Haviland suffered a shoulder injury late in the game. He is expected to return for the Houston game Nov. 1. DETROIT (UPI) - A year ago, Van Breda Kolff was wondering how he'd survive a season of squabbles with Wilt Champerlain. Ahh, sweet memories. j£ Now Van Breda Kolff mqst be just wondering how he can survive the season as coach of the Detroit Pistons. A ’A - - A Van Breda Kolff left the Los Angeles Lakers after the Boston Celtics had beaten them to the seventh game of the National BaskebalL Association playoffs. He now begins .the first of two years as coach of a team which finished sixth In the se ven-team NBA East /tost sea Yt corral e end the Pistons ditto' draft choice of note— again. As If that wasn't enough of a problem, he faces the prospect of losing His best player soon to the rival' American Basketball Association. . < Dave Bing, who led thd NBA to scoring two years ego, has algned an esUnwted half-mlllion-doilar contract; wTthf the Washington Caps, starting to -ttf 1-73, after his contract with the Pistons runs him play since high school and he only knows one way to play1 — all out. ” Center Walt Bellamy, acquired in the trade which sent Dave DeBusschere to New York and almost gave the Knicks the key to the playoffs, is as good as there Is. Critics tack a “when he wants to be” onto that sentence. . Happy Hairston will get Van Breda \Xaiff sortie points and pull down a few rebound (Midpoint average and nearly' 1,000 rebounds last season) while Terry Dischinger and McCoy McLemmOre do a 1 capable job on the other side., Eddie Miles ranks among the best guards, aqd Jimmy Walker,, the former flash who has disappointed in "new attitude” agalpi Howard Komlves, obtained in the DeBusschere deal, can also, come off the bench and swish a few. •> Providench I the past, has a Nets Drop 2 Cagers "I don’t think that will affect his play here,” Van Breda Kolff said. “I’ve sasn BROOKVILLE, N.Y. (UPI) - Wilbur Frazier, a 8-0 center, and Etoin Ivoity, *-8, were cut Tuesday from, the New York Neto squad as the club prepared for Its Oct. 17 American Basketball Association opener. After Mickey Stanley had been doubled off second on Cesar Gutierrez’ liner to Dave Johnson, the Tigers came roaring back. McNally walked Jim Northrup and Willie Horton, then was kayoed by Bill Freehan’s double, which scored Northup. Wert greeted reliever Dick Hall with his two-run single. Stanley and Wert had two safeties to pace the Tigers’ nine-hit attack. f Club Sags on Field, at Gate Long Road Ahead for Young Padres The Orioles almost came back in the ninth aa Don Buford singled in Mark , Belanger, but Timmerman got Paul Blair on a popup to Freehan. , Manager Earl Weaver played \hll Oriole regulars for only the fifth time in 16 gamed since they clinched‘the division, title SeRt. 16. ■ v L1 SAN DIEGO (AP)-Baseball fans In San Diego apparently won’t come out to watch a loser, but E. J. "Buzzie" Bavasi can’t blame them. He wouldn't either. “These people ip San Diego\ want imething to root for,” I of , the San Diego Padre something to root for,” Bavasi, president res said. “I as a fan, han’t see people rooting fpr a club BALTIMORE' r.usMr mi 3 01 d DJohnton 2b 4 0 0 0 ‘‘ ‘ 3 5 1! 4 12 1 2 C 00 0 0 0 0 i iii that' wins one out Of every four daysA A A A ’But if we can win as often as we lose, you’| see an | appreciable difference In majaorlty owner of the team, would not look to another city If attendance doesn’t increase in 1970. “We would have to take a dim view of the future |f we didn’t pick up next year,".Bavasi said. “If we don’t do a lot better at the gate we’ll have to think which direction to go. By that I don’t mean >Ft. Worth, Buffalo os New Orleans. "What I mean la right now our direc- btinhotr u McNally p DMiyf pH iBonhard p TO . *...I.Brown, Northrui 1. . LOB Detroit 7, I fir i.fi ••• >•« is?; ____ oil. t. lammora i. fft PowtM, ttanlay, PraaHan. IB ,1s. ButorV A, nr am mi I (it* (I.Brawn).'T—fits. the audience.’ The Padres, last to the National League’s West Division, have completed *their home schedule, a) 50,000-seat San Diego Stadium, playing befdrfe 613,302, an average, of 8,177 a game, Bavasi said it was too early to determine the club’s financial deficit, but he laid a season attondance of 600,000 was required to break even. San Diego County has about 1.4 mlljlon people, Bavaal said he and C. Ariiholt Smith, |lon Is headed toward the minor leagues our 1 to develop otlr players. Now, if toe don’t come up with the resources to do this, we’ll have to take what good players we > have and sell them to get enough cash to sign young players or free agents. ; "Right now we think we can do it through bur own minor league system.” Rut without good attendance revenue the Padres wHI be in a bind. DRAFT FIRST “If we don’t draw well there’s no way we’re going to algn ballplayers, m particularly now when we're finishing last and we draft first. We don't have the money now and we’re in trouble. “We'll do something about it," Bavasi said. "We've got to go. out and borrow and beg money to sign these ballplayers because now is the time to dtf l£ Four years from now, when we’re fourth or fifth, we won’t be first in the draft. - “We need the money now but we don't haVe if heeayse wq haven't drawn well enough. ' ' , “We’ve had a frugal operation. We’ve had to cut down here and there. But if it hadn't been for the'qxcesslve charge (110 million) fnr the franchise, we'd-hatto been .all right. We'd have made a few dollars. • - "I thonght it was an excessive charge and wanted no part of It. But Mr. Smight said he had promised the c|ly major league baseball and the price wasn’t going tp interfere — and it didn’t.” m uh, mm JF—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 12C2 Gants Mbs Fifth Straight Bouquet San Francisco finishes^econd Break With Tradition Two Backs Share Grid Laurel By the Associated Press itro of Rutgers, a 29-0 victor over led 12 of 20 passes for 213 yards j ! College foothell tradition, it's!... Princeton. [and one touchdown and sewed' wonderful. Rutgers and Prince- j * * * once himself. ' ton, 1809; Notre Dame almost I Phipps became' the first quar-Perry Stops Redlegs!every year since. ’terback in history—at ...., _ • „•* . | But this week The Associated With 14 Str IK80Uts^press decided to break with tra-, . - Idition and name two players as tor O-V Win J College Backs of the Week- i quarterbacks Mike Phipps of But this week The Associated since the forward pass and accurate record-keeping became a part of the tradition—to lead his team to three tlve victories over Notre Dame. . can wnAisirrcrn fAPW-“TtolPurdue, a 28-14 winner over ... .-I The 6-foot-3, 208-pound senior tuning pointof the season was'Notre Dame, and Rich Policaa* from Columbus, Ohio, compiet- Vheri Atlanta failed to lose,”!........, - —II...-,,,;. sighed San Francisco Giants’ Manager Clyde King at the conclusion of the Great Race Tuesday (right. ;The second-place Giants failed to grasp the bouquet for a fifth straight season when the1 Graves clinched the National | League West Division title with • 8-2 triumph over Cincinnati Tuesday night. k * * -A few minutes later, the Slants took the field and runnerup honors as Gaylord Perry struck out 14 San Diego Padres in a 8-1 victory, his 19th of file season. “Naturally, I’m disappointed we didn’t win It." said .King, “but it isn’t because we didn’t try. We’ve won 11,of 18 games, but file Braves have been un-believable with 10 straight IT of 20. Played well *“If we were someth (111 down the stretch be different, but we pli toll,” the can’t con grateful we 41 our tor “The trig difference was Phipps,” Said Ara Parseghian of Nitre Dame, who has lost only eight of SI games at the helm of the Irish, three of them to Phipps and Co. “He made the big play on every one of their touchdown drives. He has great poise, great touch and great leadership. He has to rank | among the best quarterbacks in ithe country." * | ANKLE INJURY ' In his first two seasons, despite an ankle injury as a junior, Phipps completed 206 of 412, -passes,- 1A of them for touch-, downs. Against Notre Dame a year ago, Phipps was 16 of 24 for 194 yards and a TD. In 196?, it was 14 of 34 for 238 yards and two scores. ' Coach John Bateman of Rutgers goes overboard on Policas-! tro, a *5-10, 178-pound senior from Highland Park, N.^.‘—a-|about lti miles from Rutgers Stadium. “There’s no better quarter back in the U.S.,” Bateman told the New York Football Writers Tuesday. “He sets up real fast. ROK Flanker* Leads Scoring — . XP Wlnphslo UPSETTING — Minnesota Twins’ second baseman Frank Quilici does a balancing act on one leg after tagging the bag to force Chicago’s Walt Williams at second in the fourth to ning of their game in Minnesota last night. Quilici tried for a double play but Chisox’ Lou Aparicio beat the throw to first base. Twins won, 4-3. Royal Oak Kimball, which was moved up to the number five ranking in the Associated Press state class A grid polls this week, also has/the distinction Of having Oakland County’s leading scorer. Tom 'Brown, a senior end, , currently leads the county with-a total of 4 points. With just three games played, Brown’s point average figures out hr 15 and one-third per contest, moire points than dome schools have managed to score finis far. ?■ dr * A Brother Rice, another 341 area school, has senior halfback Stove Jones following close behind with 42 points, while fullback Bob Reid of Bloomfield Hills Andover holds down third with *36 point total. Mike Webster, a senior back from Waterford Our Lady of Lakes, is onty**four places removed from file lead with 34 points. * Rochester High' School, which has only won one of three Twins Nip Chisox Senators Dump WASHINGTON (AP) - Mike MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL for the upcoming playoffs with has very fine release, doesn’t Epstein’s three-run homer Iri (AT — Ted Uhlaender’s run-get jittery with people coming the seVenth inning and Del Un- producing single with two out In in on his permiter and uses his g^g bases-loaded triple in the the ninth inning gave the Minne-pocket very well. . sixth Tuesday night gave the sota Twins a 4-3 victory over the Washington Senators a 7-2 victo-1 Chicago White Sox Tuesday, ry over tile Boston Red Sox asj With one out in the riintir, Dick Bosnian won his eighth rookie Rick Dempsey singled, consecutive game. After Tony Oliva filed out, Har- blm.” .'it -k * |mon Killebrew walked and Uh- Against Princeton, amidst the j The Red Sox loss clinched sec- laender won the game , with a pressure of college football’s ond place for th^ Detroit Tigers [single over second base, centennial game and with Rut-lin the American League’s East1 * * * gers on NCAA television for the Division. Jim Holt hit his firm major first time—Policastr* hit on 24 ______.... .......—league homer in the eighth, I ,0,T0" Ah r h bi WMMIM0Ib?hW; tying the score for Minnesota. 0 EBrkman st SOI ] j “He’s a thinking man’s quarterback. He does everything that goes into being a quarterback, and the team respects of 35 passes for 260 yards and a AP Wlrtplwto GRIDDER HONORED - Ohio University split end Todd Snyder, going through the cafeteria line at the Athens, O'., campus, was named college Lineman of the Week by the Associated Press for his efforts as OU battled Minnesota to a 35-35 standoff last Saturday. The 6-2, 185-pound senior hauled in a one-game school record of 12 passes, good for 122 yards and three touchdowns. touchdown. He also scored one. | Andrew? iS J o 11 cuif«n"jb ’’ 2 o I o George Mitterwald homered fqr In two games this season, Pol-taf " SSoo K!5f 1l1 ? o the Twins in the sixth. Baltimore . starting Saturday. Reliever Jim Kaat was the winner. CHICAOO MINNESOTA ab r h M abr WWIIama rf 4 0 3 2 Tovar cf 4 ® Apariclo at 4 1 0 0 Dempsey McCraw lb 4 o 0 0 Oliva rf Melton |b S4 0 I 0 Allium If Sill 3 00 0 uhlaandr cf 2 0 1' Knoop 3b Ortta or Murphy p Total Two out , »d‘ 4 1 fe Nettle. H 2 0 00 Naih lb 10 10 Holt 1b •••If Cirdonsi f a a o a quilici » JPerry p Renlck ph * Kaat p Berry cf b—l. ... - - i o a a 1 11 11 4 00 0 2 00 0 t 06$ 100 0 3 03 Total 30414 CTWTiraW ___ _ ___.000 1 01 011 — DP—Chicago 1, Mlnnr ‘ fi i tea^ 5, Minnesota 10. fcOB- icastro has completed 37 of 52 “ 0 , for a brilliant 71.2 per cent.|i”jyw n Since he became a starter mid- aconWro a way through 1968, he has thrown | buTr, * 2000 SSSm "p 17 Scoring passes in seven games. 'Though the Giants learned the lad news prior to the game bey jumped on loser AI Sant-Rkri, 8-14, for three runs in the bat Inning. Bobby Bonds belted a two-run single and scored on tbe same play when two Padres ^ **Bonids scored again In the Caught 12 Aerials fourth after walking and steal- w teg second and third. Hie two| runs pulled him ahead of Petoj Rose for the league lead, 119 til 118. Hie steals were Bonds’ 44th in 47 attempts. * , * * ★ I .Willie McCovey went hitlern,' lot boosted his RBI lead to! ATHENS, Ohio (AP) — lfnrith a run-scoring grotmdqrjsurprised, .really,” said OhiolIncluding the game-tying 14-lagaihst a Minnesota zone de-(ing said i University’s ace receiver Todd [yard touchdown, strike in. the'fense but he caught nine passes “Jo Jim Perry, hhS5£ - ove^tor ***** iio Cimwyp e ill o pmch hitter in seeking I removed his 21st. ip (M-l): 2 J-S 1 R ER BB SO * 2 2 0 4 games so far, has nonetheless rolled up enough points to placa a man in fifth place on the ■coringlist, . v ,'i: ' j...^ FIVE TIMES Steve Blair, a junior halfback, has crossed the .goal-line five times and nln one conversion for a total of 82 points.' Further on down the lift we find Tim Teasley of RoOper, Anthony Thomas of Cranbrook and John Wallace of Cranbrook who have made the Oakland County top scoring list despite having played .only two gameg this season. * a * In the Saginaw V a II e jl Conference scoring race, onljf one local area boy has manage^ to tally enough points to make the league standings. Peh-y Humphrey, a senior quarterback from Pontiac Central has hit paydirt three tlmM for 18 points, just half the amount of points the Saginaw Valley , scoring leader Del Williams of Flint Northwestern, has at 36. (A«INAW VALLBV CONPSMJKS Del wllllem*. FlInt NorlhwTj 111* Robin Early. JFlInt L, * j ? 3 Tom Morrv. Sm. Arftur Hill 3 4 1 21 Brut Remlnglon. B»y City C. I 3 0 II OAKLAND COUNTY SCO«INO_ > Tow Brown. R. 0. Klmboll ] M 4 Stovo Jonoo, Broth.r Rico JIM lob Rold. bloom. Andovor 3 13 Mike Wobstor, Wotorfi Stovo Blolr. Rochwtoi Dove Kootollc, Oxford 3 I f 3 5 1 3 10 Corl Soldi, Forn. Sf. Jomo* 3 « l 21 Mlko Atkins. Bloom. Lohsor I I S Kevin Kootlng. Broltwr Rico J 4 0 24 Frank Wlgmen. F. St. Jomos 3 4 0 ■ |0b tMbol, W. L. Woitoro 3 3 3 24 Root Potion, Fermlnaton OLS 3 3 2 22 2 3* Devs Calms. Waterford OLL. 3 3 1. Rldl Campbell, R.O. Klmboll 3 3 1, Westeri •onllsc l 3 3 1 ,20 1.3 3 1 To 3 3 1 J# 3 3 0 'S i 113: 3 3 0 1 Dan McGraths POLE _ . - . Mika Pallarlto* Roch. Adams 3 2 2 Data Roman* OLSM 3 3 0 Bruca Ruhlr S'fld. Lathrup 3 3 0 1 oo ( 0 0 0 0 Hlofl^r p 0000 0 0 0 0 1000 36 2 0 2 Total 22 7 T7 ..... 000 1 00 1 0 0—2 000 oil 1.0 a ER BB SO . 4 4 6 3 o o.; o the sixth to rest.^jy^s id the seventh. King _______________ 1C would be up. to McCovey | Snyder «' Taking two of the fop 10 with a time «f «:».8, hut tbe 2 places, Harper Woodl PIotrelNotre Dame crew displayed the Dame streaked to a slim vto best balance in tha victory, tory yesterday fo the fifth an-1 VICTORY nual Oakland University Class A Invitational cross-country meet. §f If Finley Reports Club Prof its'’ : Show Decline OAKLAND (AP) Charles 0. 'Finley, owner of tha Oa|-land Athletics, said the club wffl show “a substantial profit” this year, the Oakland Tribune reported Tuesday. , ‘ i Finley reports he made more 3 before Whether he played in the second honor like this before.” by three defenders tome of the series today. The 6-foot-2, 185-pound split "'We’re going to take a look end learned Tuesday he had been named College Lineman of the Week by The Associated Press for his stellar performance against Minnesota. I’ve never had an final period while surrounded in the second half while double- His receptions, a school record, added up to 122 yards and he gathered in pitches of seven and five yards for two more touchdowns. at Some of the young players^' explained the manager, “but I’d rate to see Willie win the home nir and RBI titles. It’ll be up 14 him.” ’King also disclosed that Juan “j thjnk cieve deserves mu^h Marlchal, 21-11, would not pitch 0f the credit,” Snyder said. “He the season finale Thursday, was on target almost all day.” with the thrpe touchdowns be-v)rtuafiy sewing up the league! cieve is Cieve Bryant, Ohio cause it matched Karentire pro-earned run average title for the u.’s star quarterback, who duction last year," the 20-year-great right-hander at 2.10. completed 18 of 27 passes for aid senior said,”" •an DIROO IAN franciico 194 yards against file Gopher*— * J m Fwuioi lbthe two clubs battled to a Minnesota Coach Murray pro ball—it’e J 1*8 35-36" standoff. ;Warmath called the Bryant- i:o jo SSlr » J5T? -——.................. —’— .Snyder duo “the best combina- Murroll cf 4 0 It Mc?ovey 1b 10 8 V ! tlon I ever S8W, ----- 10 0 0 Bondi rf 2 2 12 ^ If n . igioM.r.H.na^M Col leges Put Wm* " interim p phi ph THREE IDs “I’m particularly Describing [Snyder, he said “his hands re-Imind me of a vacuum cleaner teamed most of the time. “It’s a great thrill but it would have been so much better if we could have won the game." Snyder, whose father Jim coaches the basketball team at Ohio U., .holds nine records at the school with 79 pass receptions for 1,407 yards in his first two seasons. A sports administration major, Snyder has pro football aspirations and most coaches feel Rick Schott of Grosse Pointe North claimed individual honors he can’t miss. “I’d like a shot at mydream." I 0 0 0 Ptrry p 1000 IA.01 %' j “Total 35 1 2 1 Total “-33 6 0 S tan Ditto .........ooo oio ooo-i tin Pronclioo 3 00 1 00 tlx- 4 E—Santorini, J.WIIIIamt, Slocum. DP— Prandtco 1. LOB—San. Diego ID, Prtnclaco 6. 2B—Murrell, Hunt, cum. SB—Bond* 2, Marshall. IP M R ER BB SO ntormi (L*l-14) 5 3 4 3 2 4 berger 3 5 2 2 1 4 rry (W*12-14) 9 2 1 1. 3 14 Greater PunchCup8 ’’ or an octopus with suction E -2:45. A- 3,525. _ j ( . - j And Paul Giel, a former Min- in CZrirl A jj-nr- Is' nesota grid star, said “three of III V7IIU nil VJV.lV Snyder’s catthes were the great-esl I have ever seen.” (Continued from Page F-l) Namath Talks of Retiring Might Mot Be Back After This Season IngemarCuts Weight, Eyes Ring Return STOCKHOLM (AP) - Inge-mar Johansson, of Sweden, former world'heavyweight boxing champion, has gone into training “to knock off 50 pounds overweight and perhaps .talk about a comeback.” The 35-year-old Johansson, who won the crown frogLEloyd Patterson and then lost it again to him, weighs 285 pounds. . A total of 11 teams will pete for file first place trophy B-OD Teams Compete Today 2nd Stage of Crosi-Country Meet Set than 8690,000 hi profits Doug Brown placed second1*®**8 last y*®r and said to for Notre Dame, followed by made “not quite as much to teammates Ron Champing (6),|1«8*ye®r. but » substantial prd-George Coppens (14), Greg fi*-” i ,, • j Geek (15) and Don Jurivich (51). ' “It is not exactly an ideal fighting weight,” Ingo admitted. He added, “It’s all because I lived a happy playboy life too long. Drinks and dinners, but that’s all over now. In three weeks I’ll be in good shape again.” Coach Alex Agase, whose, Northwestern Wildcats also are seeking their first victory of the season, agreed with Hayes and Coatta and added that the games are 30 per cent longer than they used to be. i , GREATER SKILLS . ’COLDWATER, MU. (AP) J, <4 Ken YORK, Pa. (AP) — Roy Jack- Hodge of the Bdston Bruins Will •BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) ■Bie Minnesota North Stars won jockey In seven their water-team 4*2 Wn\ to run. He blocks and that’s only taking a few steps. “It all boils down to speed and you use it where you need It." said Agase. “You can teach them to block, tackle and learn to think. But you cannot teach speed.” \ ■ season, and that he probably will be finished with foot-t ball after that. ‘son, owner of the York Pirates have to be content to sit out at “Does that mean you’re all In the Class AA Eastern League, least one more week before tak-through at the end of fills sea- announced /Tuesday he would lag part In scrimmage sessions, son9” Miss Collins asked. , not operate next year in York, general manager Mitt Schmidt SHREVEPORT, La.,(AP) ♦/, * * * * of the National Hockto League The Atlanta Hawks defeated the, "T can pilftically guarantee Phoenix - Suns 124-109 Tuesday that/’ Namath night as the two National Basketball Association squads closed out a preseason exhibition road trip, WBZ-TV said the Interview was taped earlier in the evening at Namath’s Bachelors IH Club in Parit 8quaro. • In a statement, Jackson said club said Tuesday, insufficient interest was shown during the pflst season in tha dub, which won the league championship. Ha said the dub draw about 52,000. Hodge underwent an appendix operation two weeks ago but returned to training camp to begin light ikat%thli week. Unlvonlty I.........._ lame 32:list 2. Royal Oak 4*>er Rice 53:003: „ _______ _____j 53:34: I. Pontiac Kimball 54:39.9; f. .Redterd Haml Perk 54:43J( no (Ponilec Northern) Chempkn. (Notre Dame) Even, (bonderol 10:11: ■■m (Heiel Perk) 10-13:1: v, uu.uvu Styltr (Clarktton) 10:14; f, Phil eeeleyp, (ROYOl Ook Kimball) Ml 111 10. Chuck Hoteling (Brother Rice) 10:13. The Athletics’ attendance toas down nearly 50,000 this year from the 837,466 in 1968 to 7jH£ 332 this season. “I’ve never complained atttdt our attendance,” Finley sdK “I’ve been somewhat dijratp pointed, but I still appreqfow the fact it would be necessity to establish and prove ourselves. I feel we’ve done both this year.” •••—» *»—;, Finley, said the two years of profit lii Oakland come after eight losing years when the team was in Kansas City. "Next year we shouldn’t hav| any difficulty hitting one million in attendance.”' ; *. Hawks vs. flint j FLINT (AP) - An exhibition hockey game has beak scheduled Odt. 8 between thp Chicago Black Hawkt of tha National Hockey League toft Flint' Generals of tifo International Hockey League. Tha game will be played at Flint’s new 85.3 million IMA Sports Arena. For F»Bird Game Route fo Lansing Field -i.-, For Pontiac Firebirds’ fans driving to Lansing for the ng All-Stars Central Division game with the Lansing All-Stars at Lansing Sexton High School hare Is tto suggested route: Take MOO to 1-96 toward Lansing ; take Kalamazoo-Street exit to Michigan Ave., turn left and drive toward tha Capitol Building. A left turn 'Is a must at the papttol, and then take two* rights to gat hack On Michigan Ave., to the renr of the! 1 Capitol. Stay ion Michigan Ave., until It runs into the school. The field la behind the school. Tickets can be purchased locally it VFW Poet 1870. They are 82 for adults and 81 for students. Kickoff is 7:80 p.m. Yankees Whip T; Bondo Sparh Oakland^$L THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER I, a NEW YORK (AP) ir, ML gffp., Downing fired a six-hitter and If ? YORK iooo Clark* lb *40 Tjierman Munson cracked threelKSrV" H i u 40 hits, leading the New York can-far, br' I i I f'KSBA' ] ? kees to an 8-2 victory over the 58%', jjtlHHra' Cleveland Indians tuesday'fJjX26 J' j j cn*i£\c night. bfflLfii. f S 8 S Oownini p Munson smacked two singles and a triple, netting up one rtin, •coring one and driving in another. Downing contributed a two-run single and a double to the 14-hit New York attack. MOONLIGHT BOWLING Sat. Night 12:15 ,, $400 JACK POT NO TAP BOWLING Friday Nights 9:15 CMh PrliM Nightly WESTSIDE LANES 0000 1 0 I Total7 ’ MOtlf . too too yot-t Hi KANSAS CITY (II - Ed Kirk-j| Patrick, slammed two home 0 ruhi, a single and triple to drive 1 in six runs and lead the Kansas oo o f City Royals to an 8-5 victory | j|| oyer California Tuesday night. CAUROftNlA • KANSAS CITY H i i || A 350 hitter wt«, dubs the long WL California Angels, Good trade posnibili- RENT A CAR $89 - 1970 Chevy Nova I Oats Phone FE 5-4161 SEATTLE (AP) -Sal Bando punched out five singles and right-hander Chuck 1 Dobson posted his 15th victory as the Oakland Athletics whipped Seattle 8-4 Tuesday night. fartibon If 4 2 2 1 Dona Id jn 2b 4 II 0 RJackson rf J f 1 1 Hovlay ef 4 1 1I TRtynldi rf -£ - 111 10 2 1 Comar“rf " 10 00 4 0 0 0 Paolronl c 3 0 4,10 Partin pr 00 0 0 Lockwood p o o 1 i o ] o .b 1 011 0 0 0 0 Otanlay ,1 4 0 Brabondr p 00 Ranaw ph , o wom«ck p 0 0 C.|*rV Kubl»k2b CDobion p Lindblad p Krauii* p 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 0 Oalnar » Mlnchtr p axvpr. 01 4 001 1 01 — S §0*100020-4 DR—Oakland 2, Saattla LOB—Oakland 4, C.Dobion (W.,5-,3) 7,-3 9 4 Lindblad............... 1-3.0 0 Krauts. _ ..,1-300 Brabandr (L.,3-14) 3 0 5 MSF—by Oalnar (R.Jackaon). T-2:< ■■■■"■ Sport* Specialist* Since 191 $P8MHm BOWLING BALL We Drill More Bowlii - Why Don't Downna Balls In Thi* Area Than Any YOU Try US Hall BRUNSWICK BUCK BEAUTY OR AMF BALL SHOES AND BAG Mon'a, Woman** Rleht or Lofl Hong . \Shoa Bog • Name Engravad Free *swi • Belt Cu.tom titled And Drilled by Foctorv Trained Expert^ BALL ONLY All 3 for $24.84 ' We earty * oemplete eelection ef Ininowiok, AMF -Bowlins Ball*, Bags, Shoo* and l rfcme Sfront S&ofr 2924 N. WOODWARD AVENUE CORNER BAMIET AVE BETWEEN 137 AND 13 MILE WHO’S GOT EVERYTHING? LUMBI kCOMPANY HOME BUILDERS DISCOUNT DEPT. STORE 9 7940 COOLEY LAKE RD., UNION LAKf -rSSXSSSBSL. Phillies' Richie Allen Would Fill Hitting Bill Says California 'Pilot ANAHEIM (AP) - Wanted: ball. Cowboys7 Hill Romps ' Kapp Leading Posset's Tuesday aa the u... |Angels’ manager for 1970, Lefty If I tfj^I Phillips made clear what he ■ needal tor next MprthiS? Alceriz. 'lB-K*lrkpsTr/ck. HR— “We must COme tip with & iSST* J r,4»' I good hitter,” PhUllps told a Murray IL,10-14) ♦ i conference, specifically PEcvm,.», l IJ I I naming only the Philadelphia * 1 ! * Phillies’ Richie Allen as a can- didate for a halo. NEW YORK (XP) — Joe Kapp and Gene Washington of Minnesota and Calvin Hill, Dallas rookie, took over the mdst important statistical 8. 2.44, McLaiii,, D»t., \727, 277, B«sman,' Ragan,^ chic., 12-4, A47, -1.44, Carroll, HOMI ^ RUNS-McCov^jn STOLEN BASES^Harrar, Saa., wnil."!’.A.VToT Tofan, cin pacltlcntl-Palmar.l PlTCHINQ^llS Decijlon^-Mooia, pm St.L.. , S.P., 44, ' 'STRIKEOUTS—McDowall, Cleva., 274,1 STRIKEOUTS—Jank Lollch, Dat„ 244, Mattaramllh, Calif., 311,; Glbton, St.L., 2H, Boswall, Minn.. 118, Cuellar, Bair, 112, D.Wilson, Houtl., Oil Tie in Hockey 722 2,k' , i CISTR,| otjTI *3? AN / t*gm (AC FROM yf RENT AN ICOND RATES OF PONTIAC SC99 Fir Pay ® plus So per mil* WE FEATURE OM BARI call 332-0102 SPECIAL WEEKEND RATH • I BET ' j YOU n*frMDT: LBADING PASS RECEI) Racd. Yda, Parr, BH. Wathlnglon, ap Livingston. NO 'lilBiifnFo Handarson, Min LBAPING PASSERS ,C4m..Ydt. “ 1 10.44 a KNOW OOHI j 4B|« By John Carter ' ||l Hera’* a football fact that'8 | may surprise you ... The I ich who had the matt a lafaatad - untiad taam* S pro or malar collaao * Ji s I " Football In tha last 80 1 ill 1 II years was not any of tha 1 | coachat you might think | tt 120 2 ll °i tirot — out it wa* Bamla ■ 47 iij T L Biarman who had a total Z M iM 1 ! °f six unbaatan • untiad J ■ togular - ooaoon toamo — f. ^cotd?1o rat rr I two at Tulana (1929 and t :::::::: 4 I till iff j ----- seta (1934, 1935, 1940, I 1941). I ★ ★ ' ★ * Vary faw fans — avan tha t raal good ana*—can coma I up with tha antwar to I thioqua*tIon...Saalfyou a 4 2IMIngo, 5 Big 4 Helps ! ®f ewch of tha*# playan S w » ' ■ who wara votadaspetan 1 f •:,t!t___ 1Lmll * * Tim*. baoabaU I Houston naif I hi tha ncant baf- | ■ rating — Pla Tray nor, ■ p a • | )■ Honut Wagnar, AAlchay f Enemy Aerials1] * I thair raal first nomas? It NEW YORK (AP) Hous-l ton’s use of four defensive tackr g ler has paid off with the best a VVaooar, pass rush in A*--ra||r-G ball League After the first three gsmes, the Oilers have dumped the quarterback .11 times for 103 yards while showing the way in both total defense and pass defense, according to league statistics released today. The Oilers have allowed only 211 yard* per game , and have restricted the opposition to 114 yards per game in the air. Kansas City is best against the rush with a 60-yard average. ... Haro’s tha antwarf It's Harold Ttaynor, John ■ Coctv- J pass rush in the American Foot-j Ru,h,and | StotB University got mote Ntw York San Olreo Oakland . Cincinnati Kama* city Oanvar Miami , .. I .. ★ | rfere's quit# i i i | only 3 of 10 gamesl| a Washington State, to? i* a talad 189 points during } ! tha year whlla thair op> f ■ ponants totaled only IBB ■ I against them, but Wash* f | ington State's racotd was 9 ■ 3 win*, 6 lossas and aria f I tial fwm ■ -jf .-jf . W ■ , I I bat yah didn't know.. . |. .,**/• II that a* "palyglao" baltad ,1; jg gi | tirao prolifaratay tha tiro | % a buying public Is faced I Tor. I again with a vast differ- ■ .......», ... it* ! once in parformanca and J' ....... 273 ,{j J quality. It's tha tamo old ?« ’« lit1 *,ory* y«» rw*d p«*»••* ■ tsam osfcnss * ’ll tional advice. Saa ana | Y«^fc.raiAn^-p.AJ^i(I or our Prat. ......., - ,4 TRAM OPFBNSB Av. .* Yards R Tuesday's Fights B Tha Associated FflM AMI BBACHy Fla.—Dario Hidalgo* ; 150/- Bogota/ Colombia, outpolntad Larr > ! Adkins, 151, Cincinnati, 10. ST. LOUIS (AP) = Yvani Philadelphia—sannia Brucoa# 155* Coumoyer scored 10 seconds | ou' T"° M*r,h*"' into the third period Tuesday! Mexico cnv-Efr«i "Ai*cr*sM night to give the Montreal Cana- J0,rrrryV.“sre"i, ^'Fi^Sig!!!!? n5Sm.° diens a 3-3 tie with the St. Louis buffalo, N.Y.-yinc. c.i., j4o, bu,-Blues in a National Hockey] League exhibition. Oakland . Buffalo . Now York Miami Cincinnati San Dl«M CARTER TIRE CO. iiano, 9i vie grown, i™» DUTiaio..-KnocKOfl out Martfiall Warran, 174, Worcaitar, Get with the Bourbon that scores high. Ten High Come over to the taste of T«\High, a true Bourbon of Hiram Walker character and quality. Sip it slow and easyr u Yoli’ll be doubly glad you v joined vis—when you remember Ten High's welcome price! Your best bourbon bay $|09 $G56 Ten high Sr*AIGHT BOUR30H WHISKEY. 135 Branok 4/3 fej.. Pint i i proof * Hiram Walker & Sons lno„ Psorls, III. what a tire, what a prtcer from Armstrong! 4 PLY NYLON CORD BUY FOR ONLY... O Patented contour shouldors givo added Stability, safoty, corner control. O Patented tiloncor button* for better traction and help to reduce squeal, o Lifetime tread guarantee, plus 30-month woarout guarantee TdS*i*(* MaskwaN •uardaawa Tiraa Tire Frlaa with Old Tir. Fist fadaral ■talas Taz 7.35x14 16.95 Ml ' 1.18x14 19.95 2.20 8.28x14 18.98 2.36 1.78x18 16.95 2.21 FREE MOUNTING - EA8Y CREDIT l=i- Til K I’ONTIAl 1'HK.ss. WKDNKSDAV, OCTOBER 1, 1069 ~ flUng the Outjm Twfl with DON VOGEL Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Prtss rcjKw& Great Lakes: New Fish Management Plan A tentative new sone remnant populations of perch, and add to the program toi zones, large-mesh commercial Michigan and Huron. For Lake restore self-supporting popula- gill nets -would be banned tlons of these fish in lakes generally, and small-mesh gill Superior and Michigan. nets would be limited to waters As proposed for rehabilitation 140 fathoms or deeper In lakes management plan programmed to cover sport and commercial fishing in the state’s Great Lakes waters In 1970 has been ttivetled by the Department of Natural, Resources The object of the plan Is to (most the recovery of fi§h stocks In the big lakes. walleyes, and herring a chance i to rebuild. Controls In these waters1 would also protect lake trout The plan, subject to change, maps out areas to expand the potential of sport fishing along tiie Great Lakes, and calls for 'close controls ever the stated 'Commercial f 1 s hi n g industry 'Consistent with the reduced pressure which depressed fish populations can stand for netting operations. »,* As such, it divides Michigan’s Great Lakes waters into three distinct areas — sport fishing development zones, rehabilitation zones, and commercial OFF LIMITS , The first of these would be lirgely off limits to commercial ’fishing — completely so in lakes ^Michigan and Huron — in an effort to promote sport fishing is the greatest potential for it. Selection of these zones, covering such waters a s Keweenaw Bay and those stretching from Grand Traverse fey to Little Traverse Bay, also Wflects efforts by local communities to expand sport-fishing Services and facilities along ‘their shores. ’Under its plan, which comes up for final Commission action In rawing Oct. 9-10, the DNR would intensify plantings of trout and salmon to increase tingling opportunities in the ■port fishing development Superior, the dividing line for small-mesh gill nets would be waters SO fathoms or more. PERCH PROTECTED Besides the protective gill netting' restrictions already outlined, the DNR’s plan calls for taking perch and walleyes off the commercial fishing list in the three upper Great Lakes, except for a portion of Saginaw Bay in Lake Huron where perch! Sturgeon, classified nationally would remain open to com-1 as an endangered s p e c i e s, mercial netting. would be off limits to all com- Herring, another specl.es virtually' In total collapse in Michigan’s Great .Lakes waters, would be completely protected in lakes Michigan and Huron. In Lake Superior where herring populations are more abundant, these fish will remain open to commercial fishing except during their spawning mercial fishing t hr ou g ho ut Michigan’s Great Lakes waters. DNR Fish Chief Wayne Tody itch reported the commercial cal of perch in Lake Michigan has plunged from about 2.5 millions pounds only four or five years ago to 80,000 pounds this year. He pointed to charts which showed that Lake Michigan’s |production of herring and I walleyes has suffered a'similar drastic decline. The three species — perch, Only One in Nation Ski Flying Slide Takes Shape walleyes, and herring -» have declined to a point In lakes Michigan mid Huron where they are providing “no one”' ti valuable fishery, emphasised Tody. The third and final areal designated under „the DNR’s new plan are commercial fishing zones where netting operations can be continued without jeopardizing the lakf trout restoration program, or remnant populations -bl walleyes, perch, and herring. IRONWOOD (AP) flying slide, the only kind in the western hemisphere, is rapidly taking shape atop Copper Peak, in the vast Ottawa National Forest, 12 miles north of Iron wood. When completed early this winter, the 120-meter slide is expected to permit leaps of direr 500 feet — more than 160 feet greater than the present North American ski jumping distance mark. A ski j sightseers from the base of the of its hUl to the top. The elevator will complete the trip observation deck. An estimated 200 tons of steel will be used ip constructing the slide. The support legs for the tower alone will weigh 20 tons each. Copper Peak is being financed through local fund drives and substantial grants and loans from various governmental and development agencies intersted in seeing this prea more fully develop its tourism potential. the rehabilitation GENTLE REMOVAL - Dr. Ralph Farnsworth, veterinarian at the St. Paul (Minn.) Como Park Zoo, uses a string-like saw to cut off the antlen of the zoo’s bull elk. It was a painless operation for the huge Within jones, whlch largely cover offshore waters of the Great Lakes, commercial fishing Itinild be regulated , to give > AP WlrapMM animal. Elk normally shed their antlers in late fall and grow a new set in the spring, but for protection of other animals in the same pen, the massive rack was removed early. * * Horse Race Results DRC Results Grand William a-fauch A Go Go Adaptlva tubsday‘1 silvers a as «n Eve v $4* 1 "ssr&tii,* Arrow - 7 m Subic paid 1177A# 13.40 4.80 4.00 3.00 2.60 4J0 "SSTejl 4.80 TUBIOAY'I SBIULTI J J0 j£l !*M>110# Claiming Paea; 1 Mila 70 Yardti PIcom a-Touel Harr Fancy m£%MO CMnSatf ‘"V/M Milan Mohan Hindu Widow Pliat Daal Tap Display MM Mlcha Kura Count Royal Qufito Fearthagrlmma Qulllomallc Devious Mil Hazel Park Results Ittto Deems t Perfect*t (3-1) Paid 914S.I0 Attendance MNf total handle $41l« Hazel Park Entries Seven Million Trees Available C5fckl flying is distinguished from the more familiar ski jumping by the tremendous distances involved./___ The largest American ski jump is 99-meters, such as the Pine Mountain jump at. Iron Mountain. The present distance jumping record of 338 feet was set on such a jump In 1967. EUROPEAN SPORT While ski flying is little known in the United States, it is well established in Europe and d ana via where international meets draw up to 50,060 spectators. fling facilities now exist in Planica, Yugoslavia] Kulmi Austria, Vlckersund, Norway, Biologist Tells Anglers They Shouldn't Worry Tiger Averages “13,4 Broncos Drop Burnett GRAND RAPIDS UR Muskegon River anglers needn’t be panicked by the report that “great numbers” of Chinook salmon died in Muskegon Lake of “thermal shock.” John Trimberger, district fish biologist for the Department of Natural Resources, says the number actually was “insignificant” in terms of the total fall run of Chinooks in the Muskegon, which hasn’t- really started yet. and Obertsdorf, Germany butj.,ab0(lt He was able to check flat isn’t apt to happen until the water cools off both in the Lake Michigan shallows and Muskegon Lake. Chinook are already jumping in the upper waters of the Muskegon River although they don’t seem to be biting too well. Two 20-pound Chinook were caught Saturday at Od Croton Dam, 30 miles upstream, which is as far as the fish can go. It does not appear that the main run has arrived, although it is expected any day. Even if things are not right My Adlos 3.80 2.80 O.K.'t Chief Nlkl N. dh-Pastlmo Bomb dh-Mr. Lucky Buck ead heat for thin 1180 Cond. Pica; _____(wood Bill Carnival Girl Walla Knox Dally Daubtoi (44) Paid $119.80 lrd-41180 Cand. Trot/ 1 Mllai . Jab Spanjla 14.30 4.80 4.20 Josadale Treasure . 3.40 2.80 eAiMOM. Tr.1i 1 Mil.* Sup*r Malic 6.60 Good Pal* (cot 5.40 3.40 Aicom M. High Abbey Camden Jeclyn 2nd—(1700 Cond. Trail I Milo: Cady Edgewood Tropical Queen Klleg Fancy UIIM (on Pat Phantom Colby Berber Child. Meadow Hempt J. S. Bod Eiglo 35.00 12.60 7.00 Ird—(1100 Cond. Pacoi ,1 Mitoi 4.00 J.rvl. Hall ' Mitt Borlha Cr* 3.40 Rtoco o Jan 3.40 Countou Brio Broadway Ann HoBo'f Jeolo Frlthy Future Nearly seven million young pine trees are being offered at approximate production costa by the Department of Natural Resources for* reforestation plantings this-fail or next spring on- idle private lands in Michigan. vEfiEJ Jhy . njSjSgj* b 6dl «l hour If they of the ^Federation of Internationa ^ to«nxious fish could not find tolerable temperatures and sufficient oxygen at the same depth, mostly because they arrived too early. The main run, which is controlled largely by temperatures, al Skiing, governing body for international ski competition, will remain so. The first international meet at Copper Peak has been set for Feb. 27-March 1, 1970. A large field of international jumpers is expected 11.2# 5.60 3.60 Attendance 7.M* DRC Entries THURSDAY'S INTRIBS oo Claiming* 4 Furlong*: t Put Bolton Yonkoo . I'o With Child's Prlnci Prairie Adair Tulllan Cinnamon Roll Kee^Marchl|nji . Robt. Sorkin Bully Vlow D. D. D. 4th—$1 “ Bright CoHonmjDd Cindy^w ,JW 7th—47000 Mich. Colt Trot/ Victor R. V HOBO'S Butch Thundorbolt YllCr . 6th—4310# Claiming faca/ 1 Mlyhty. McKlyo Con Man 9th—42300 claiming Trat; Pick's ColltMo Dovoda's Boy Paarl'f Chip 16to-$148$ Claiming Paco Marlin Sola Float Jolly 7.40 4.20 4.20 3.20 2.20 Kay i Anna Ensign Roslyn's Protty Adonis Drtam Weomoo Clovor Yaf Gusty Gallon SthrS1400 Claiming Trat/ l Mila: JBtfhtr't Mink Smokay M« (j John Exprass Ensign Adli Concord Baron Cal Kit Cab Carl Gallon 4th—S170S Cond. Pacoi 1 Mile: Action Boy Swinging Slsto Nibble Storm Song of vonlo Chunky Grattan Harold Adlo Lucky Greontreo Sound Track Frosty Freight 7th—$1400 Cond. 9 Speedway Cutlo . The Bedford Kid Cottonwood Clovor 8.20 2.80 Luclne Scott Porter Tone 3.00 Robin's Kit Upland Hal Mil—$2300 Cond. Pact/ 1 Milt: Ilia: Widow's Adlos Sassafras Power' s ___ 5.40 4.40 Loyal Pick Lutla's Tima • 24.00 11.20 Gentry Yates Black Malattic 10.00 Sparx Dutchess Express 1 Mile: 9th—42300 Claiming Pact/ 1 Mila: 8.80 3.20 out Herb Rolling Eric • 3.20 out Iowa General Hot Cargo * out)Diamond Dot Daring Dan 1 Mil#: Dlrectnlk Mike Astra 14.00 8.40 340 1Mb—81400 Claiming Pact/ i Adlos 1400 Cond. Paco/ 1 Mila: Listed for sale are white pine, jack pine, red pine, and white spruce trees priced between $12 and $25 per thousand. | Construction of the slide Itself j Jbeuan Sept. 3, after a two-month small delay in the delivery of the: corten steel used for the supports and scaffolding. The slide will tower 241 feet above the top of the 350-foot Copper Peak, at its highest point. From the observation deck, which will be open year around, a veiw of the Ottawa National Forest, Lake Superior and the Porcupine Mountains, far to the northeast, will be opened up, CHAIRLIFT Saturday An 800-foot chair lift will car- S.yv Order blanks "and price lists'* offlcia,s J covering the DNR’s planting Solunar Tables Shipments of young conifers already ordered for this fall will get under way as soon as the first bud frosts hit to make the stock safe for lifting from nursery beds. This fairs deliveries will then Continue through the end of October, according to present DNR plans. The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s SOLUNAR TABLES. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times, if you wish to find the best sport that each day has to offer. ■MtMTI Standard Tim. T#3»y Thursday Friday ““lY .......I IB 12:38 8:4| 12:! 1:29 7:30 1:ap 2:05 8:10 2:20 2:45 8:45 2:55 Mill. Mil. Mill. Ml . 9:38 3:25 10:01 . 10:30 4:20 11:00 11:28 5:20 want to — and they’ll want to. Steel Head trout, Which usually run a little later, have a ny Trouble in Muskegon Lake and the main swarms of salmon aren’t apt to, either. DENVER (AP) ~ The Denver Broncos of the‘ American Football League 'cut Bobby Burnett, the 1966 AFL rookie of the year, and Brendan McCarthy, both running backs, Tueaday. ; UNITED TIRE, INC. 4.30 3.HI 3.30 Wfntfl. Milt I 1 Mil.* Society Min 11.30 6.30 5J0 Splndloton Jo* 17JO (JO'Mallr. D. Hickory Encoro H.l'« Gift McH.rzoy Joyful I mo stock are available free from Its Forestry Division' in 'Lansing. They also may be obtained from offices of DNR field foresters and county extension agents. Ihocky Chi Mr. Particular a-llrtfjling Roman B8w, ' YOU UMD nor mar amertgo SLEEP 6 WITH OPTIONAL FOLD-OUT BED style leader in truck campers molded fiberglass top, front plexiglaie picture window, styrofo insulation, beautiful interiors. Camper Closeout ’•9 Nimrod Camping trailers RiVERI A, wes $999— CAMELOT, was $1269-now $118 MODEL XI, was $1435 -now $IM C. DELUXE, was $1599--now $1098 TREMOR’S TRAILERS 2012 PONTIAC DR., PONTIAC - DAILY 8-7, SUN. 12-6 - 682-8946 WANTED NON-FERROUS METALS No. 1 COPPER » SO* No. 2 COPPER > 45* BRASS . . . 25* RADIATORS -25 ALUMINUM tokos Sub|Ml to Cheng# Pontiac Scrap Co. THE THE "Edwardian Look" in many variations, custom tailored to fit YOU I Hundreds of fabrics, sharp, beautiful linings, at a price no more than any other good suit) \ 7 < \ v ' HarwnaH 908 W. Huron tit Teltigreph 4814800 ^ ... THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1,1089 Ft-ar Tlie following nre top prices covering sales of ncally grown produce by groweru and sold uy them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as ol Monday. Product Market Continues Decline j 4 Rezonings for Harambee Sales Test Is Ahead for U.S. Car Makers NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market-—continued its steady decline in slow 'trading this afternoon, as. brokers said many investors were waiting to see where the bottom lies. Die Dow Jones industrial averageat noon slumped 3.89 to 809.20. * ‘ Losses led gains by better than 200 issues. “Everybody is watching this 800 DJI level to see if the market will hold there again," commented one analyst. “If it does hold, we can expect a new wave of buying, especially by bargain hunters, since there is an enormous amount Of cash around." In the past week, funds have been dressing up their portfolios tort the third quarter by e changing large blocks. But even block trading appeared down today, observed another analyst Some profit taking existed in the issues that have been flying high in the past two weeks. . rig ' 4 ' : *,... These include: Xerox at 99, off 9k; Control Data 140% off 1%; IBM 343% off 1%; and Polaroid 129%, off %. The Associated Press 60-stock Three large developments planned hy Harambee Inc. will come before the Pontiac planning commission at 7:30 tonight at City Hall, East Wide Track and Pike. * _ Icome a Mt sus- Harambee is seeking reran-. picious and fi ings to allow three separate ntstuyf ally housing projects and a com- tightfisted mercial area in the southwest- For SO years part of tl?e clity. or so the re- arkable By JOHN CUNNIFF / - ‘than in September 1968—doubts! At U cents a mile—the gov-AP Business Analyst [are growing that the pace can emment estimate—you could NEW YORK OB — A test Is be maintained. {cross the continent by air for lesa than it could cost by automobile, a shocking realization eoming later this year between the never-to-be-underestimated sales, skills .of the automotive manufacturers and a public that has be* CUNNIFF average at noon wass off .7 at a black development firm, efforts of the car makers - The third quarter ended Tues-!284.4, with Industrials off 1.0, day. i i rails off .S, and utilities off .1 using- its funds along with loans from area agencies and h u s i n e s s e s (including $1.1 million from General Motors) to. provide extensive new housing in the city. Public hearings will be hejd on three projects: Shopping complex and two six-story housing towers in an area bounded by Branch, Warner, the Clinton River and Gillespie. involving high pressure, low sluggish, also. >, psychology, sex and, it has been claimed, outright deceit — generated a mania for wheels among Americans. Just as important as the financial and economic considerations, almost any auto man will concede, is the increasingly critical view that Americans A car became not gnlya tran-jtake of their new cars, no mat-sport vehicle that opened up I ter how throaty the engine or brand-new pastimes and creat-regonant the door. Once they ed new needs, but it became a]ran' their Hand over the paint; symbol of success even when | now they lift the hood. WILL BE THERE 't simply an inert pile of metal Moreover, despite their afflu- j Based solely on population = parked outside a house. ence, many Americans are real-{and financial prospects, the Sixty units of low-risei Each year the new models ev- izin« that cars can be expensive market certainly will be there. m'1 mS i li ... oaatoro-end -as-regularly as the saa-,^ operate" Garage charges con-j But iris unlikely that ever again sons, and as far into the future tinue to rise. So do insurance will it be the docile, receptive, of Diston, east of Bagley. Low - rise, multiple - bed- Ls any auto man could peer, all | rates, taxes, parking tickets, complex of 38 units on theUj,at j,e geen Was a succes- -—^-rr-----------------r».— southwest corner of Bagley Wessen. ston of more “seasons.” j SALES INCREASE Almost every year the sales figures increased, and now the big three auto makers are sprawling enterprises , employing hundreds of thousands of workers. Financially they are more powerful than some indus- A Waterford Township mani^1 natlon8- „ndpp nhnrnrattnn and! Each year, this year included,, to stuSorJ “n- the Industry’s leaders projected boc_commlttee? Divers Rescue Area Canoeist According to Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies, Sam u e 1 Gottschalk, 54, of 5959 Cooley Lake was rescued by divers from the county’s water safety division at 7:45 p.m. after his canoe overturned. ;• Jr,, ★ , ★ A friend, who was fishing with Gottschalk, Herbert Grover, 55, of 6910 Williams Lake, Waterford Township, was able to swim to the southwest of the lake and call for help. for 9.5 million car sales test. The obstacles cento from different points in time. Of immediate danger to forecasts is that prices have' been increased at the very time that consumer resistance may be stiffening. Every Important measure oL; consumer confidence is falling now. People are watching their money. Even though sajgs of the 1970 Mutual Stock Quotations Nat Ind lt.14U.lt mOTPTDOUBT^-Already some authorities on ie industry are forecasting a decline in sales right through the end of 1969. And 1970 remains in doubt, an economic riddle.... Some forecasters foresee the economic boom continuing in 1970, and that carries with it the suggestion that car sales could boom, too. But the official government view is different. It calls for a slowdown, and if that happens car sales will for those who continue to regard their vehicles as metal slaves that work for nothing. Will ail these factors—deterioration of consumer confidence, a probable downturn in the economy, the increasingly critical attitude of buyers—hinder the auto makers significantly? You couldn’t tell.it from their own forecasts, which call for sales of 13.5 million cars and trucks in the year 1975. Nor do the independent surveys and forecasts call for any great lessening of demand. The National Industrial Conference Board, for example, foresees a continued bullish market in the 1970s, basing .its conclusions on the prospect of increasingly younger and richer families. .. Resolution Hit as Destroying Unit's Function What are the duties of an ad uncritical market of years gone by. The sales ingeulty of the oar people is going to be tested. Just because,- statistically, the market is there doesn’t mean they’ll get .it. But neither can anyone ever underestimate the marketing skills of Detroit. News in Brief reported in satisfactory con-tn® mauswys:nmmn Supervisor Harry According to city police, rob- dition this morning at Pontiac what appeared to be astronomi- C^ty Supe v^or Har r y a ey * General Hospital following a calsales figures, but tomoreln- Kffi off with moro I was the Progressive Oil Co., 477 [Saginaw, while the gas station «*»••*** zjstosssr Horton charges that a.resolu ;attendant was servicing an auto tion to come before the board of supervisors tomorrow destroys the function of the ad hoc committee oh roads. The resolution formed in the ad hoc committee, would authorize the committee to concern, itself with improvements to Telegraph Road as well as to M275 and M150 — problems which have already models shoTVflhe' mark-in been tacked on to the original September alone sales totaled [resolution of last February! 645 --------------------------M Mom’s Rummage, Thurs., 9-12, Indianwood and Baldwin Rds. -Adv. Carpeting, datlon sale. Bring your i urements. Open 9 to 9. Dixie Hwy. - Stocks of Local Interest Flturn tfl«r d«clm«l point* ar* •Ighth* Der aiouc boics kubito —------------ — - - - units, or 80,000 more which called solely for M59 widening west of town and work towards a better disbursement of gas-weight tax. “They’re going to get too many things going . and ac complish nothing," Horton said. Wyandotte Chemical 10,64 10.64 12.91 14.11 ■I ■ 11.1412,94 Price Funds: mm 24.96 24.96 9.99 9.79 .. .... 27.20 27.21 Pro Fund 10.7910.79 mm‘■ 6.65 5-08 9.83 1v.74 Funds; Equit 10.6011.50 Georg— 14,20 15.52 11.4312,49 1.01 0.75 Pontiac Press Photo SPECTATORS ONLY - Pontiac Northern High School students Eric Penigar (leflTand Gary Manns (right) take time out frdm classes to watch a confrontation of white and black students at the school-this morning. The student in the background is not identifiedHRolice were called to the; school after several, minor skirmishes broke out. The school had been dosed last Friday after a racial clash Thursday. It was* reopened Monday. i. STOCK AVeaAQES Compiled by the Associated PrUtf Ind. iU Util Stock Net change , -1.0 -.5 —.1 Noon Wed..... 423.1 150.9 132.3 204, PtlV* .Day Month ifiio mW H 506.9 ,211.4 140.3 352,0 513.3. 217.7 159.1 3609 422.3 140 0 132.4 204.0 531.1 217.4 160.4 360 01 435,6 165.6 131.1 DOW JONES AVERAGES STOCKS 30 iRdUSltlalS 20 Rails » : . IS Utilities ...... 4$ stocks iONOft 40 Bonds i 10 Higher/grade rails ..... 10 Second grad# reds......... I 45 W> » Zoning Appeals Post Is Filled Booker Woods of 300 Rapid was appointed to the! zoning board of appeals by the City Commission at last night's meeting. jj * * * 1 Woods is a foreman at GMC Truck and Coach Division and his name was proposed by District 1 Commissioner V, Warren, Fowler. ills term will be until Jin i 1071, and he replaces Oscar Bolin, who resigneC PI F—6 Til K l*ON t 1 A(/ 1’ltKSS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 1, 1068 1Greatest Challenge to Our Future Is 3.. LANSING (M — Follow* is the text of the televised speech by Gov. William Milliken explaining the proposals advanced by his Special Commission on Educational Reform: I am here to talk about our schools, our children, and our state’s future. The greatest current challenge to our future is the challenge of education. 1 am convinced — as I have never been convinced at any other time on any other issue— that what we do in regard to education and its fundamental reform will have more to do with the quality of life now and in the years to come than any other thing We can do. Plan Drafted Five months ago, I named a governor's commission on educational-reform and asked it to draft a plan for rapid and responsible reform in elementary and secondary education. The commission, of which * I served as chairman, has developed a plan which will be the basis for. my recommendations to the Legislature shortly after it convenes early this, month for its fall session on In presenting these proposals, I am absolutely determined not to pull any punches, nor in any way evade my responsibility as governor of this state in fighting for necessary reforms — no matter how controversial they may be. * * * I am ready to fight for reform and for the children of this state. I Invite you to Join me in this battle. C Our children are the ones who pay the price when we shortchange education. F o r their sSke and for those who wiO pick up the torch for future generations, I believe we must have reform from the highest level of state authority 'to the individual classroom. fcneil steps will not solve giant problems. REVAMP OP SYSTEM I intend to submit to the Legislature a far-reaching set of recommendations which will completely revamp this state’s educational system. I believe it will be the boldest, most imaginative, and most Innovative educational plan ever placed before the legislature. It can-, not be otherwise. We can’t have total reform with timid proposals. We can no longer continue the waste of’ human and financial resources now occurring In our outmoded educational system . . . nor can we any longer tolerate the reckless course that is the alternative /to reform — a course that already has us frustrated by an inequitable tax system, thwarted by an inadequate system of distributing funds and burdened by an antiquated educational system that needs to be overhauled from top to bottom/ These recommendations stem from the best thinking of the distinguished citizens who served on the commission, augmented by a comprehensive review of a vast amount of research material. . , by testimony from group representatives and concerned citizens at a series of .public hearings and by important contributions from members of the commission’s advisory council. The commission’s report is not a study to be put on the shelves; it IS a blueprint for action to be put^n the legislative agenda. Objectives With shortcomings «f the present educational system in mind, we set out to design a new structure. Our objectives were these: • To assure to each child, no matter where he may live or what his circumstances may be, an lequal educational opportunity- , 1 ' '■ v i ? j - • To assign appropriate ad/ minlstratlve and educational responsibilities to state, regional, and local levpls. • TO provide, a rational budget process, • To devise-means of testing . the system and the students. • To distribute equitably the tax burden. 0 To help preserve id an appropriate and constitutional manner the educational diversity, choice, and public value offered jgf nonpublic schools. Our recommendations clearly show that problems which have evolved over- the past- tOO-years cannot be corrected in a single year. These reforms just wifi be phased into pulr education system, following a closely - prescribed timetable, over a three-year period. They, call for basic changes. They deal with causes rather than symptoms. They are Intended to rebuild the foundation rather than repaint thewafis. 11 Administration First and highly Important, We, need reform of state administration. The organization of public .education at foe state level is a classic case'oif arrested development. No single person or institution can be blamed for this. Control and authority on the state level are divided among the governor, the State Board of Education, the superintendent of public in-struction, and the Legislature. 'It’s hard to think of a less-workable structure — a huge institution powered by several engines, not all of them pulling the same direction. Take for example, the State Board of Education. Its members are nominated almost as an afterthought by both political parties, brought into (Mice on the tide of presidential gubernatorial elections, forced to function in a political unit which may be partisan, and given only baited powers to fulfill the requirements of their office. With such handicaps, the board Is bound to fail. And fail it has as an effective governing body. * , w" ' /, The commission has no quarrel with these office — bidders, who are trying to do the best they can under the circumstances. But such a board, however, gifted its members, just eannot meet the crisis hi educational leadership existing in Michigan. To clearly fix responsibility for operation of the department of education, the commission recommends that the existing hoard structure and the position of state superintendent be abolished by constitutional amendment and replaced by a state director of education appointed by the governor, subject to Senate confirmation. DISTRICT REVISIONS The commission also proposes basic reform in the organization of school districts. Under the present system, the state has a network of intermediate school districts. At one time in the state’s history, these districts Served a useful purpose. But over the years, most have become almost useless, in terms of power and functions. Therefore, I am recommending that these Intermediate districts be abolished and replaced by ten to fifteen education regions. Their boundaries wou]d be set by a special commission and subject to approval of the Legislature. ★ , * ★ Among other things, these districts Should be responsible for special education, technical education, transportation, data processing, central business services, curriculum consulting, and budget review of local districts. These revisions would play a vital role in equalizing educational opportunity in assuring problems and in providing adequately trained personnel for highly technical functions. They would assume burdens which most focal-districts are 111 — equipped to carry. By using modern business massage —• ment techniques, we can save tax dollars and Improve the education of children. NEIGHBORHOOD ROLE Underneath existing intermediate districts are local school districts. These local districts operate the schools in your neighborhood. They art run by local boards elected by the voters. For the most part, these boards are composed of conscientious, hard - working citizens responding to needs of the community. This system is basically sound. Control of the schools should remain as close to the people as possible. But improvements must be made. Right now, there are school districts in this state not operating any schools. There are over one hundred districts offering only an elementary program, and there are between 100 and 200 districts which, because of their size and other factors, eannot operate their schools effectively. " ''•■■**.. »V * * * In order to increase the effectiveness of the local district. REFORM COMMISSION — Members of Gov. William Milliken’s Commission on Educational Reform are (from left) Ofis M. Smith, Dr. James W. Miller, Daniel B. Burke, William M. Day, Wilbur C. Mutmecke, Milliken and Mrs. Robert FoeTdi. t ..^Education—Mil likens Text er consolidation of districts. financing What about the financing of our schools? The answer is that school financing has been drafting from bad to worse, and the time for basic reform is long overdue. Your state constitution places the primary responsibility for education in the hands of state We now have a very wide range in the quality of education among the various districts. The lives of Michigan citizens have grown too intertwined; .we have become too dependent on , each other to Impose second or third-class education on any of ’ our children. We Want to bring the quality of education up-far up — in those districts where children are not now receiving an even break. Some districts haven. rich tax base-expensive hornet or substantial industry; others have a very poor base—perhaps a rur-, al district or a • community ‘ where incomes are low and the homes are modest. This base, the so - called state equalized ^ valuation, ranges from $3,000 per child in some .districts to $60,000 par child lit others: DISTRICT DISPARITY You can see what happens. In districts where the tax base is high—where property is expansive or where valuable factories are located—school authorities can keep the actual rate of taxes low while raising substantial funds for schools. But in districts where the tax base is low, tax rates are high in order to run the schools. Under the present—system, some districts are limited to less than $500 a year on the education of each child, while * in other districts, foe figure is more than $1,100. ' ★ «-* ★ We want to even things out. The commission does not think ,a child in one school district is worth only ’half as much as „ a child in another: Furthermore, the commission believes that property tax relief is essential. For " that reason, we 'are recommending a constitutional amendment that will, in effect, reduce the current heavy reliance on the property tax to raise money for schools. The state would collect that part of the property tax used for operating the schools. The state would levy a uniform property r^tax in all districts which would be below the existing statewide average operating millage. LESS PROPERTY TAX I’m sure you wonder whether this change would result in an over-all increase in property taxes. The answer is no; in fact, over-all, it would mean property tax relief. In most instances, it would lower property taxes. In a few qases, where districts are neglecting their educational responsibilities, the property tax would go up. Tlie net result of this would Tie a giant leap toward equality in school financing. That astonishing range of payments which I referred to earlier would be drastically narrowed. We would eliminate the feast - and - famine quality marking so much of our educational system. * (f * .There is another element of school financing which must be used just as effectively in one district as it is in another. Obviously, this can never be. fully assured. But we can move in that direction by adopting a school budget system based on the classroom-unit approach. This approach takes into account the ratio of students to teachers, teacher salaries, overhead costs, and other factors that have an important effect on the 'quality of education. Some of these things relate, for example, to the growing problem of classroom discipline. LOCAL CONTROL Let me emphasize at this point that none of the proposed changes will destroy local control of the schools. Local authorities are the ones who should hire teachers, negotiate with employees, detanntoe what Is to be taught and how it is to be taught. But at foe same time, local authorities can and Should be relieved of some of the housekeeping and administrative jobs that can be handled more efficiently on The only things that focal districts will lose if these proposals are adopted are frustration and waste. • Evaluation One .of the critical failures in our present system is foat we don’t know how effectively our tax money for school is being spent. We simply do not have any way today of telling how one school is performing in comparison with others. We spend a lot of time mid energy testing children within the same classroom, but not classrooms within the same school or schools within the same districts or districts within the entire system. * ★ * To correct this situation — fo Inject method and order Into a system that is now based largely on hunch — the commission recommends that the Legislature allocate funds immediately to develop and administer a statewide educational evaluation program. Such a program would establish tests for vall children in Ahe state—at several grade levels, but "especially in the early grades where it Is so important to find out how well a child is learning. The advantages are obvious. If a child is tested and found to be falling, corrective steps are taken. In the same way, with a statewide system of testing, we can find out if whole schools are failing, determine why they are failing, and take the necessary steps. Parochial iaid Whether I raise it or not, the controversial issue of aid to nonpublic schools inevitably will be raised in foe Legislature this fall. Hie commission believes, therefore, that it would be remiss if it failed to help position this issue for reasoned consideration in the contest of total education reform. The commission’s abiding concern has been for children, where-ever situated. Our recommendations can be no less comprehensive. And we are, therefore, advancing proposals for discussion and decision by; the Legis-lature — which is foe body that will determine whether aid to nonpublic schools would be sound public policy. We believe very Strongly that the existence and strength of nonpublic schools Can contribute to educational choice in Michigan and that educational choice Is in the public interest. WWW Many nonpubUc schools are in deep financial trouble. Many of them have closed, and many more are destined to close' unless they are helped. The primary consideration in the debate over public aid to nonpublic schools must be the children. The commission believes that sound public policy requires the people of Michigan to recognize a measure of responsibility for providing all children with an education to nonreligious subjects. SALARY SUPPORT For that reason, the commie-■ sion recommends that the Legislature approve salary support for certified lay teachers of secular subjects to nonpublic schools. This support would be granted according to the following plan: 50 per cent of such teachers’ salaries during the next two years, and 75 per cent during the following school year. But we are recommending that to no event would this aid to nonpublic schools be allowed to exceed 2 per cent of the total school budget in Michigan. Under this plan, mmpdblic schools would be subject to the same evaluation and quality controls as public schools. We also recommend that the Legislature appoint a committee to determine and reduce the effects of this aid on racial, ethnic, or other segregation to „thete schools. tent possible to Improve the educational process so that no time will be unnecessarily lost. We recommend that the Legislature, during its fall Session; • Pass a state-aid act for the next school year providing substantially greater educational opportunity and more equitable property tax rates. • Pass needed revenue measures, based on ability to pay. I will have some specific recommendations to the Legislature early this month on this point On the basis of surveys and on foe basis of. personal contacts, I believe foe. people of Michigan are willing" to pay more if they are convinced they will get more. Meanwhile, it is important to come to an early determination On the lamount of property tax relief that will be enacted and on the cost of the package so foat we wifi know how much new revenue wifi be needed. • Pass resolutions enabling the people to vote to August of 1670 on the necessary constitu- ucation and who now need a way to better hold the state accountable. There are those who may say this plan wifi take too much out jaf_handa-_otJocal districts. It Furthermore, I will have a number of specific proposals on: • Teacher certification, evaluation, training, and incentives; 5s An extensive pupil testing plan;... • Neighborhood education centers, street academies, and other means of meeting educational problems to inner cities,, with particular reference- to will not. It will strengthen their hands by freeing them to concentrate on educational essentials. REACTION SOUGHT This week, I will mtef again with foe commission’s advisory council to get its reaction and to 'get any suggestions refinement of the proposals Jbefore they are submitted to the legislature. I also toVite your reaction, as I have been seeking the reaction in recent days from legislators from both parties. Neither Republicans nor Democrats can claim to pol-sess solely the formula for educational reform. That formula will be so complex that it will take all of the intelligence and -resources we have — working together — to devise it. * —....... + *........ * . This is a collective struggle-one to which foe factors uniting us are far greater than Time does not permit me to outline additional details of these proposals tonight, but you will be reading and hearing more about them in the weeks ahead. Under our system of government, they can be adopted only after the widest public debate and legislative consideration. The Interim The interim period, from now until educational reform can become fully operational in 1972, must be used to the fullest ex- Fuller use of existing school facilities; •New approaches to technical training, including possibilities for contracting with business and industry for job training; • Specialized bilingual programs for Spanish: - speaking students, who are port of the second largest minority In Michigan. T Unity Plea Educational reform will, require time, which makes it imperative that we begin Immediately: The Legislature, acting for the people, will make those decisions which determine the future course of education in Michigan and will make quality education not only our highest goal but also our best investment. We know foat each lawmaker wifi follow the dictates of -his conscience and reason. We ask only that each reflect, as we have, on how his decision wifi influence foe future lives of all our children. * * * * There' are those who say I am risking my own political future on thin package. I say that this is not a partisan issue and that failure to enact educational reform would jeopardize our children’s future. There are those who foay say foe plan represents a power -grab by tho state. It is not! The power is with the people who have given the state constitutional responsibility for ed- Thig times demand unity of action. Not all of you wilt agree with every aspect of this program, but this Is one time when foe must put individual differences behind in order to accomplish a major objective designed for the benefit of all our citizens. BACKING NEEDED The governor of Michigan needs your support. The Legislature of Michigan needs yhur support. The schools of Michigan need your support. And, most of all, the children of Michigan need your support. Nothing is more vital to foe future welfare of this state. We must now appeal to legislators and to you. For It is in their' hands — mofa than the governor’s — and yotor hands — more than mine — foat the success of education reform now rests. * ★ If ever you wpnt to do something for your state; if ever you want to do something for your schools; if ever you want to do something for your children, — you will support educational reform. Dem Ryan Questions Parochiaid Plan LANSING (/U PI) -v Democratic House Speaker William A. Ryan said yesterday Gov. William Q, Milliken’s proposal to supplement salaries, of only lay teachers In parochial schools could be un-constltiutional. /★: , '♦ ■ (-st\ 'This could be in violation of the 14th amendment. It could deny certain teachers equal protection of the law,’’ said Ryan', who is/ pushing a parodied plan of his own. Ryan said a teacher teaching math or science was still a teacher regardless of religious connections with any church. « ★ ★ -Under Milliken’s blueprint as outlined in his educational reform plan# lay parochial school teachers would receive • salaries supplemented 50 per cent by the stats during foe 1970-72 school years and 75 per cent to the 1972-72 school year. Total money paid out to the teachers could not exceed 2 per cent of foe Michigan education $25 MILLION Milliken' recommended $25 million be paid to teachers to the 1970-71 school year. Ryan said the plan penalized parochial schools which economized by hiring members of religious orders as teachers, who are traditionally paid much less than others. 1 * a ♦ ^ "It only discourages eL ft ' \ ' flclency in the system,’’ he said. Ryan labeled the 2 per cent plan an “ill-conceived.” “You can’t have a school community educating 14 per cent of foe students and paying 14 per cent of the taxes but only receiving 2 per cent back,” he said. “That’s a sure sign they’ll be out of business In Just a few years,” /' >'/ / MAY STILL LEAVE Hie i money than $25 mfilfon, the scheduling state's 900,000- parochlal students will continue to leave foelr own schools for foe public system. He said he thought MUUken did not intend to phase out the parochial schools: by 1972, “but foat will be the effect of ft." -The speaker said he would Support Milliken’s plan if foe governor broadened it to cover personnel a n d expenses L such as t "E | certain operational (such as utilities. ( SchoofAppetil Decision Near The Waterford Township Board of Education is expected to decide tomorrow about appealing an Oakland. County Circuit Court ruling foat foe board restore foil-day classes by Nov. 3. Only two courses of action appear to be open by the School board — either conform to foe Circuit Court order or appeal the ruling to a higher court. * * X it is likely ■> foe board will choose to appeal since jnchool officials have said H is impossible to return some 18,600 students of full-day classes in ttortime given. Time-consuming activities Include hiring some 125 teachers, redistribution of supplies, rescheduling of classes and rearranging of bus transportation for about 8,500 students, according to school officials. . - ' i, EXPLANATION LIKELY In a related item, school officials are expected to publicly explain why elementary pupils were put on half-day sessions and why gym and music are still Included In the curriculum. The board meeting 11 ' for 8p.m. at foe tiaoLake at AlrpofoRoadL X TJHB PONTIAC -f’RKSS, WEDNESDAY, QCTOflKIl t, 1909 Ap PHOTOGRAPHEITBOB SCOTT wrote from Denver that ** he enjoyed every minute which he spent putting together this photo essay. “This is my bag, shapes and shadows and bits of beauty that abound all around us if one wants to spend a few minutes fn search of it. The pictures are the result of an hour spent in a Denver junk yard... I saw these situations and they appealed to me for what they offered. Nothing was staged or moved in any way to offer better composition... just the movement of the camera to make the sun work in highlighting the wanted areas.” T-4 THE PONTiAC PRESS, WRDNESt)AY, OCTOTO lor Wont Ads Dial 3344981 I .Dearth Notices CUFTON, JAMBS T.; Sep- 36. 1969 ; 235 N, Saginaw Street; ago 41; beloved son of Mr, and Mrs, Joseph Clifton; dear father of Terry, tommy, Timothy, Sean anti Kevin5*Clifton; dtear brother of Mrs/? Edna Hall and Roy Clifton, Funeral service will be'held Thursday October jaJIt 1 p.m. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mount will He in stale at the funeral home. (Suggested v i s 111 n hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to-9.) City of Pontiac dev o'---------- (Seal) JutfO* of Probott KAHLB, GEORGE A.; September 30, 1969 ; 3596 Moberly, f Commerce Township, age SO; • beloved husband of . Anna Kahle; dear father of Mrs. Dale (Delores) Fife and the late Ilene Schmidt; dear brother of Mrs. William Ben-newies and Mrs. Daniel Eickmeyer; also survived by f five grandchildren. Funeral I service will be held Friday, October 3, at 1 p m. at the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake with Rev. Lawrence Kinnie officiating. Interment in Oakland Hills 1 Memorial Gardens. Mr. Kahle will lie in state at the funeral home. I fstir' ot' Do«ls. Court Home Town MITCHELL, LONA B. ; Septem-o.ted:’W»r i, »» ■ ber 29, 1969; 10901 Doster Rd.,| < Oakland County Ctork-Roytster STATE MICHIGAN m thb Peob. FOR THE COUNTV IVUT having Man fllad in this Court at said child coma* within thi of Cheater H1A-M toe Com _ j ot 19S — “icnioan. Pbntlac. Mich 1070 Budget It office of 1969; 10901 DoSter Rd., Plalnwell and 192 Seward St., Pontiac; age 67; dear sister of Mrs. Flora Woodward. Raymond and Walter Maxwell; also survived by several nieces and nephews. Funeral service will be held Thursday. October 2, at 3 p.m. at the] Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Rev. Ronald E. Heisler officiating, interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Mitchell will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5, and 7 to »■) .V ;..:r SMITH, MABEL L.; September ! 30, 1969; 330 Sherman Court,! , Ortonville; age 85; dea/| j mother of Mrs.- Gusta Moss.j u Mrs. Vera Kiech and Gabriel! ' Smith ; dear sister of William VanWormer. Funeral service will be held Friday, October 7~g, it ll a.m. at 'the C. F.| Sherman Funeral Home, 135! i South Street, Ortonville with I Rev. Horace Murray pf-i ficiating. Inter men tv in Broekside Cemetery, West Branch. Mrs. Smith will lie In state at the funeral home. ' SALHfey MARY ANN; Sep-L tember 30, I960;'4734 Kampf, Drayton Plains; age 80; deari mother of Mrs. Genic Shrum, Mrs. Hazel Clark, Permer . Sales, Willis, Henry and Floyd! ; Burgess; also survived by 36j ; grandchildren End A great-i grandchildren. Funeral' service will be held Friday,! )' October 3. at 1 p.m. at the _ Donelson-Johns Funeral "Home. Interment in Oakland. Hills Memorial Gar Ohs,1 flovi. Mrs. Sales will lie in' , state at the funeral home j- after 7 o'clock tonight. (Sug-! gested visiting hours 3 to 5 Corj of and 7 to 9.) Dial 334-4981 (Men. thro 9ri.l-S) (Sat. • to 2 301 or 332-8181 From I A M. TO SF.M. (Sot. |t* 9) Pontiac Press Want Adt FOR FAST ACTION N0TICITO ADVERTISERS FOLLOWING DAY. t following publication. If n fieotlen weh wrtvrt 1 -Day 3-Dayt 6-Days |26G$^t97 9 5.96 3.00 3 76 9.01 2.51 4.90 7.S2 2 02 9.70 9.12 3.76 6.94 10.94 4 39 798 12.77 JL02 9, T9 44:99 An additional chorgo of 60 car bo mada far u»a af Pontiac Pre The Pontiac Press Clastifiad Oapartmont » FROM 8 A.M. to 5>30 P.M. Funtrol Directors .^godhardt fun < Huntoon FUNERAL HOMS Serving Ponllxc tpr N »»« ■ 99 Oiktonu Avq. 1 FB7-0199 '1”SPARKS-GRtFFIN FUNERAL HOMS Thoughtful S»rvle|"HW Voor-heesS i &\e- FUNERAL HOME. UMVI Bttebllthod Qvtr UVun CEMETERY LOTS, BEAUTIFUL spot. kE_ 4b>t<. e jivons.__ OAKL AND HILLS. 4~tim»t«ry‘ toll In Lot Supper, by ewntr. Write Box C M. Pqnttoc Prow. Porlltee. ' 4-1 "BUTCH MOBEY." ............___............ tglllna complete ling of 1970- Dodge Cer» end Truck* Motor City < gt Dick CineeiYi Dodge. 85S Oakland. BILL FBOBIEMSI-118 to start# 6494092-_ ~25~MEN WANTED EVERY DAY 6 A.M. DAILY PAY General Labor-Groundskeeplng Warehouse * Factory - Janitorial Plus many mort OPEN 4 A.M. DAILY REPORT READY FOR WORK An E^ual Opportunity Employer^ 85.50 PER HOUR# axparlancad duct installar and fabricator. Tima and a half for ovar time. Steady work. Must hava own tools. O'Brian Haaflng# 371 Voorhtlg Rd, :. . A TRUCK MECHANIC, gimt wagat, own topll, call Horvpy 334-3536. Aviation Electronic TECHNICIANS ' needed with 2 ytart exp. Top waoei, excellent Irlng# benefits. Apply pi ADI, Pontiac Airport, Pontiac Michigan, or contact Mr. White 074-044). ---- Hlmolhoch, l#| -THE FAMILY OF MR. JOB CtAV rwiomban iwHh thinki i predltude lha many frlondi tl woo with uo In nur hour boraavomont. ‘ donations, and tltelr willingness to stand by and with uo, was hurt warming. A ipaclal thanks to tha nalghbors and frlanda that worked so hard and diligently In my homo to propart ouch a plentiful, beautiful and taotv toast tor oil. Our hearts was warmsd duply. Our thanks to all .of you. Mrs. SAVILLE. NORA DELL A ; September 29, 1969 ; 258 Osmun Street; age 84; dear mother of Mrs. ,„A n g e 1 o Gallardo, Ernest H. and Donald K.. SaviUe; dear sister of Mrs. May Linemeyer ; also survived by one grandson and two great-grandchildren. | In Mamoriom . Funeral service will be held - Thursday, October 2 at 11 a.m, at the VoorhMS-Siple Funeral Home witif Rev. Mary G. Crouch officiating. Interment in Perry Mount —Park-Gemetery, Mrs, Saville will lie In state at the funerali home. (Suggested v 1 s i t i n g| In "memoryt'op our father. hours are 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) SMITH. BABY GREGORY LEE; September 30, 1969; 5155 Farm Road; beloved infant son of Robert L, and Iris Smith; beloved infant grandson of Mr. Thomas Webber and Mrs. Joseph Harrington; dear brother of Robert Brian, N MEMORY OP MY belovtd hui-band, Emil J. Flury Jr., who |M»s*d away 1 yaar ago today# r miss you so my iov«Iy sweat, *uf time 'hen I stay; Mf In Pataca# Darling# saaiy mtiiio w ywr wif» Danny Plwy,------ IN memorTXmT” Sadly missad by vayr cl WllHam, Jack# and Rtck Plury, iN LO^ING I. hearts to lose you. The day God called you hprga; l will ever know; When evening shadows are falling# And we slf hare all alone; po our hearts fhera comes a longln f vou could lust cpm# home. Sadly missed by wlfa Junlfa 9 children, Chris, Dick# Wans Sharon, and Karen. COIN SHOW# Sun. f a.nvf p.m. CAI Building. GEORGE CROCKETT NOW working fi ‘ Shop# 4632 Ells- -George Allen, Wendy Sue and ?h. ?‘uraai lotek1. iilo bTowi"’ Pamela Ann Smith, Baby Sut wh’' « m“n-' to ,#M you' Smith has been taken to the Nordman Funeral Home, Cheboygan, Michigan for services Thursday, October 2, at 10 a.m. Interment in Carp Lake Cemetery. Arrangements by the Huntoon Funeral Home. ---- ----- -—- .--rj— I xbolh Lok# Rd." STRONG, HARRY M.; Sep-1 Lose" weight teieiy with o#x-m tember 29. 196&; 1045 Durant;!' ^,mt,,TB?,B.,'5r^V0n'v age 56; beloved husband of ^ Funer-al Dlrsctors 4 Evelyn J. Strong; dear fatheri of Mrs. Jognn E. Cadd, Judy C0AT5 ,Mae, Carl E. and Harry M.' rR0YTON UpNLAiNs H0ME (74.04.1 Strong Jr.; dear brother of/ Harold. Howard and Clarence Strong. Funeral service will be held Thursday, October 2, at 3 p.m at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral H 0 m e , ( Keego Harbor. Interment in Parry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr, SttWi will Ue in state at tha ftuteral home. (Suggested visiting hours are 3 to 6 and 7 ■ to •.) ■; I Fully W, Mopte. Blrmlnghom. Ml 4.3000, APPRENTICE maintenance man. fi learn largo apartment servlet. Mechanically Inclined. Excellent opportunity for right men. Woodward 3-Wlo. , ASSEMBLERS ELECTRONIC-MECHANICAL Our rapid expansion and promotion - program has croolod soma very daod assembly positions. Full Full ffinite benefits, BENTON DIVISION M70 Industrial Row____Troy Accountant CWIRlV (dunllni with graduation from an --------Jd college preferred. Af least throe years supervisory ot odmlnlotrollvo experience. Open ■alary. Excellent fringe benefits. AUTOMATIC SET-OP OPERATOR TOP WAGES, ALL FRINGES. 333-7083 .Oakland Pontiac Press. Want Ads . For Action TUSjT CALL 334-4981 . ACCOUNTING* Cost accountant; supervisor cost sectidn# must be familiar with |ob order costing# overhead analysis, profit margin analysis. Wt want a man who will handla tha complete cost related function for the controller. Degree not necossary. Apply or send resume to Bonton —DIvIsleni AMBAC Industries, 2870 Industrial Row# Troy# Mich, batween 14 and 15 Mila Rd.# off CoolldoeNwy, __________ Auto Mtchanics Guorentoid steady work and wages, Blue Cross,,Ilia Insurance, uniforms, must hove tools, ex- ■ perlonco and willing to ..■ Apply In person at 100 .Oi __Avenue, Pontiac. BURNER SERVICEMAN; TO P WAGES, Tima and o holt and double time. Blue Cross plans, WILL TRAIN FOR AIR CON-D I TIONINO REFRIGERATION. Guaranteed year round work, es»*bll»h»d firm. For Interview cell 3*3-4154 between I e.m. and 4:30 BOYS-MEN" 1| OR OVER INTERVIEW WORK Richard's Co. Inc. For app't Call Mr. Ballay, 9 AM. ■ 1 P.M,, r ITS Tri VEl-mafntenanca) ax- BUS BOYS Full linrte, part tlltte, All com* pany banaflte, paid vacations. ELlAE BROlo BIG BOY RESTAURANT ' __20 S. jslegraph BARBENT PJJLL or"part timt, Front of Huron Bowl# 674-0688. GUS BOY WANTED. Cafeteria styt# restaurant. Bottle j S Basket of mediately. Guorontaod exp. needed, 1-713-5514 r worn Michlgoh. ’ .iW"___________ -CARPENfEW 391-3341 or 39l-337l or 391-0411 Hllp Wiiifgd Mih 6 CARPENTERS. gINl$H ONLY, position with miMgamoht poten. Mat; Previous sales expertence not necessary. Prater, marrtad man. high school or hotter, willing to work tor hotter, than avortgo In-coma. ‘ Salary end- commission, training guarantee, transportation •urnlshod, rdtlromont, lamfly medical plan ami Lonoevlly benefits. If you onloy matting the Co.. Pontiac Mall Shopping Canter, Him COLLEGE STUbENT. 2 or more days par wk„ os Surveyors Helper. Ht-ItSs gftor■ Sim" . _______ WOlt N'tolWI, AtOlV In jtftict,............m COOK. 5 i w. Huron. collont on broiler, Oultyi, union LiKoT jjNhOMO. _____ CAN OFFER A PERMANENTTOb to shift, must bo reliable, able to supply reloreneei Ppyloss Oil. 5594 Dixie Clarkston. . . CLEANER AND SPOTTER for ffife^'Nlw^erdW IhBhem. • _ ■ - ■ 1 CHAiNED-TO A DESK? it you Lika to w5rk wllh peoole, have a good oopeorence end a pleasant personality, we will talk with you about making a future in lha tfnanea buslnast~lt solocled. you will receive good •alary, outstanding employe# banaflte, and tha bast possible opportunity to advance to on executive position quickly. Must bo a high school graduate apd hove a car. Contact Mr. stanvansgn. Liberty Loan Corg.,»l2l9 W. 14 Milo Rd. Clawson Shopping Cantor. JU s-4000. COOk-GRlOr MA«7~MooIs, uni. forms, benefits. 5 day weak. Top pay lor good men. Biff a Telegraph at MaplatlS Mila) Ml 5-1712. S CHECKERS . DETAILERS ” Special Machines Automation Opportunity f c idvencement# DRIVERS. WIPERS, pert time, full time. 148 W. Huson. __ DETAIL DRAFTSMEN, soma ax-perlence desired, would consider o night school student, aducotonol benefits, Vtga Servo Control 3511 EIHoU InJroV; 5*5-3500. DISHWASHER'~f6R NIGHT shift.. Bottte A Bosket of Birmingham. 131 N.‘ Huhior7t55-5553. DISH MACHINE oparator S3 par hr. devs or nights. Biff's Coffee Shop. Tongraph at Maple (15 Milo) Ml ._ 4 I7I3. - ~ --------------------- DRAFTSMAN, experienced or frolnad In mechanical and-or engineering drawing, , knowledge ot mopping, blue printing, loitering with Laroy use of Ink and poncll techniques necessary. Apply personnel board, City of Madison Heights. 300 w. 13 Milo Rd., . DESIGNERS Aulomatlon-toolt-Dlot Maximum rates ... ..-333.7MC-----_ DELIVERY HELP NEEDED, Chicken Delight, 1303 W. Huron or 500 N, Parry. Draftees-Students SERVICE MEN ON LEAVE , LABORERS eno part time work. Temporary i > Track Dr. An equal opportunity employer DESIQNER....... •Special Machines Automation Ogportunlty to bacomo protect loodtr. Frlngp benefits, overtime, steady year around work. An EqU,CrL°Y«liVP0WRr-koo W, Maple Rd., Troy EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR: If you hay# tin ebllltv and desire to work With people end have nad sates or public contact experience, wo will train you. Exceptionally ■ hloh earnings first _vear. Snelllnp end Snelling. Cell Dove Lee. 334- •1RIENCIO SERVICE MEN tor rlngt boneflls. Apply In HOPtlng A Cooling Co. Rd.,-Pontiac. / person Kast Stealing A Coollr _ 510 J. Telegraph Rd EXPERIENCED MAN to work part time avalngs In service elation. Must hove chauffeur's license and bo able to drive tow truck. 551-, loot. , Experienced" miscellaneous mocKlno operator, Croseont Machine Co., Inc. 2501 Wllllamt Or., Pontiac, Michi,. ______ EXPERIENCED SERVICE -man for' alr-condltlonlmb year round employment, hospital Insuronco, paid vacation and othar fringe bondttn. Heating Telegraph Rd., Pontiac. EXPERIENCED WORK RIDERS, thoroughbred race, horses, permanent employment. ISO per week- plus 'quarters. Maximum weight 125 pounds. Transportation advanced to bo refunded. No ‘ union. Contact Mr. Jamas Llllty, NBSC ottlce. Pontiac,' Michigan, EXPERIENCED Maintenance men — some knowledge of Hydraulic presses for modern plastic plant. Day shift# overtime. Apply in perton. Mon.* Frl. 8 a.m.*4 p.m. to: American Plastic Product Co. 2701 w. Mapla________Walled taka EXP ERIENCBD BOOKKEEPER# part time college students tor ear is rooms and inventory control, wlso general help. Avon Sail Boats# 1669 E. Hamlin Rd.# Rochaster# Michigan. • EXPERIENCED TANDUM dump truck driver# must have references. 897-9500. EXPERIENCED TREE TRIMMER only# excellent pay. 333-6372. ¥ XPj|RTiM C ID FURNACE Installers# year round employment# hospital insurance# paid vacations end other frlnoe benefits. Apply In person Kast Heating B Cooling Co. 580 8. Telegraph Rd.. Ponflac. FLOOR CLEANERS AND~*u“*h*Jal axparlancad only. 181) Auburn# Auburn 1 m_____1 of Bitflfi i_ based on qualifications. Complete fringe benefits. Apply In parson or call 619-3147. Instaset Corporation 1330 Piedmojnt St. Troy, Michigan FULL TIME tURVICB ItellOh, «■ perlencod, 1150 to itort, 543-1.'" iir—tm FOREMAN v Shipping and rtclavlng. Modern plastic plant. 2701 W. Maple Rd.# Walled Laka, Michigan, » FACTORY HELP Over 21 years# steady work# all bonafits. Apply 660 B. 10 Mila Rd.# . per lanced. 373-4336 ¥Acf6*V~WG¥fTfor men oyer W. simple orlthm.llc r a q y I r a d . Mtchonlctl oxportenco doslrphlo, Apply 217 Central. Vi aleck off Saginaw St., Ponlloc. POIf&ai IMlYIffl'BH and s.rvlco morv—oxporrtnc.d only-top pay, 403-4113..______________r porioneod wity.’ 15.00 par hr, plui commission, truck furnlihod. Apply Mr. Weaver, 520-4243, or 693-174/. . GRINDING. . Manufacturer located’'in Waited Lotte .hM immijiltete ogoiiingi ter i^ywoflTyEexcijlenf wogol 33ft HAGGERTY RD. .. WALLED LAKE Equal OaSorTunlfy omploygr “^" OAS STATION HELP ■ ’ Largo IndMOnitent ' corp. has lovorol oodnlnos tor ollinilanH. Minimum 5,315 • Highland, Ponlloc.______ GENERAL LABORERS! P.M.O. InC., aSTt. Tatearaeh'and Mapta! _ io p.m. and waakends. Maple and Cranl»r^t#“~»TrmtnBham.CaHMI 7*0700. ■' ___- General Foundry Laborers— Wanted ^Oldy omploymont No oxportenco nNHiory. Will train. Age no barrier. SystemCition 25464 Novi Rd.# NOV). An Equal Opportunity Employer GENERAL LABORER Instasat Corporation 1330 Piedmont St. TraVr' Michigan GLASSMAN, AUTO will train, mm in comWan Glass CO. ■RMPWL.. .. roildontioL train. Application! will bo. hold “ ice. Apply only ot Avon i„ 1553 E. Auburn,, Rochester. 6-5 p.m. , .V- GAS STATION ATTENDANT, Ex- perienced. Full or part-time, walled Laka araa. 534-3)54. 424- GOOO PAYING POSITIONS, growing printing company, dayf or •v.nlngs, lull or port time.— Start at (3.75, top rate .IS plus fringe boneflls. INTER-CITY PRESS NOVI 3495990 I.AS STATION attendant wanted, tul) or oert time, light mochonlcol, oxparlencod. Bill. £(-7913. HARDlNGB CHUCKER, wmo ox-perionco or trainee, plenty ot ovortlmo, good wages -and Irlnga benefits Including fully paid Blut Cross, afternoon shill. Apply ot Bonton Division. 3170 Industrial Raw. Troy. tonance, full time. Coll 547-3100, Ext. 309, 9-10 t.m. only. HYDRAULIC ' COMMt R ClAL ASSEMBLER. Experienced or trainee. Plenty of overtime, good waqes and fringe bonafits. Including fully paid Mut cross. Day shift. Apply at Benton Division AMBAC Industries. 3170 Industrial . Troy. Bn HELB- -...WANTED a day at a time . Factory hande; warehouseman. Common laborers, etc. Age to to fetlrod - Work a day or a Week at a time- FREE JOBS REPORT READY FOR,WORK 4 e.m. to 4 p.m. EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc, FERNOALE 2330 Hilton Rd. REDPORD 25417 Grand River CLAWSON " TER LIN Agency HYDRAULIC LAB "ASSEMBLER; Experienced or. trainee, overtime, good wages, benefits, Including fully cross. Dav shift. Apply Division AMBAC Industrial Row, Troy. Equal Op-oorlunlty Employer. INSTALLMENT LOAN trainee. Apply, at*"*"’-"- .Irlnga Department. - 1'nsp£€Yor. ExpIriINCE prater, rod, or will train. Must be able to use stand Inspection equipment end ■ road blue prints. Afternoon shift. Good wages and fringe benefit*. Including fully paid Blue Cross.. INSTALLMENT L O A N (WllMtor. Apply ot Pontiac State Branch, main ottlce. Personnel Ddpormtnot, . JANITSR, MACHINE ASSEMBLERS ' MACHINE AND BENCH HANDS WE OFFER: Excellent working conditions — Suburban location, day shills, excellent wages plus fringe bonafits. Diamond Automa- ~^&rh»o«,MM M- AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER JANITOR PULL TIME ampToymont, 5S5-1454, ___ LICENSED BOILER OPERATOR Permanent full time positions available. Liberal salary plus aft-ernbon differential, excellent fringe benefits. Apply Personnel Office. CRITTENTON HOSPITAL 1101 W. University Dr. , Rochester ‘_____ 451-4000 LATHrOPERATOR Some experience necoesary, ox-.client wogoe and fringe benefits, plenty ot overtime, days and afternoons. Apply et Benton Division, AMBAC indu.tr LAY OUT MlN,'-structural stool and misc iro plant. Equal Opportunity porlonced In rtunlty ‘ Em-Iron Work*. 1270 Ponlloc Troll, W.Med Lake. 624- Wlggs behind mi Conlor, go ■liable ildo lob for the •y Williams ot 555 Friendly Rd. Milo Shopping warehouse work for rolloblo men# no drunks. LAY OUT MEN# experienced In structural steel and misc. Iron# new plant. Equal Opportunity Employer. Davis Iron Works. 1270 Pontiac Trail# Wallad Laka. 424-9840# V * LABdRSBl ^ Nd WfWJlirCl necessary. Education no oerriar. Requirements Include; SOM work performanca and reliability, Exc. totrieflf* provided! Steady ampfoyment l Good starting salary with opportunity Fair managamani I______ Paid vacation# holidays B Insui manaqtmant policies I ion# holidays B Insu pply at GltW. Engineer# Inc. 2501 Williams Dr,, Pontiac An Equal Opportunity, Employkr repair man# must ba able to perform misc. malntohifftlO. end m*emnt repoir functions In small manufacturing plant. Must ba able to set up and run lathe and milling raff fit M; only. Fl.x-Cohlj Carp, )|7I 3i.von.on Hwy„ Troy. ________ AdABaoIA Wjl aOt(T WWhT#x-helpful, but not nocoMtry. vlng »nd. custodial Mtvgay-pftdw.. MAN WANTED PART time or toll time prttorrod, steady Million. (hipping, receiving aha . custodial —dun»i, Tnu»v™:l ——' manIni'th iSl-. ^ MAINTlk^kCI MAW 1 Power House Operators OMnlngs it Ookterx Coltefl. MUIt hsvo h«f %.a 00 high prossurt, hlgh temporltur. hoofing systems, .i.clrlc.l control and ilr conditioning oqulpmonl. Excollint honotlfs. Apply Poroonnol Debt., Oakland Commonlty Collage. 547-43M. ■ ___ MEN TO 66 JATTlTBpr^I*' oflicts and scho •tSlVtn - to 83.J p.m, can Man fp HELP WITR Shipping. Retirees considered. MusU know aNihmeljtr Wrlti Poet Office Box 8M# Pontiac. _______;___ MILLING Tool manufacturer located In Walled Lake has immediate ^openings for experienced mill handt. Wa art offering steady work with excellent rates and company paid benefits. VALENITE METALS 229( HAGGERTY RD. ■ ■ i WAOTDprxir. MOLD SET-UP------------- motder requires two ox-d set-up m«n. Ex- INSTASET CORP. 1330 Piedmont St. Troy, Mich. MATERIAL HANDLER Material handier and praform men for two shift*‘In plastic molding plant. Good hours# pay and fringes.' Instaset Corporation 1330 Piedmont St. Troy, Michigon MEN WANTED to do veer round ground maintenance. 525-6140. MODERNISATION Qualifications: m SALESMAN artenca. Daw Construction Co. MILL OPEBATOR ■ LATHE OPERATOR Needed foe fast growing ml dieslied company# top ratal# i lteady no nSymsni Pyles Industrie*, 89« Wixom, Mich. An portonlty Employer. MECHANICS. MECHANIC Helpers. Keego Saits and Servlet# Orchard Lake Rd.# Keago in parson. Wixom Rd. oqual Op- Apply MAN TO WORK and lawalry business'. No Soma rttall expartonco but not osiontla! and rotlramont | Connolly's Jaw Saginaw, Ponlloc, and noon. No phoho cant ptoaso, MACHINE OPERATORS and trainees for .LATHES .MILLS .GRINDERS Lynd Geafinc.” Phonr'651-4377 361 South Strnt Rochester, Michigan An oqual opportunity employer MANAGEMENT TRAINEE Z In retail lawalry Industry. Excellent starting salary with full madlcal and raliremant benefits. Spaclallsed schooling at our ox- ptrsonabla vouno man who wonts a solid future. Wa are the largest tewelry chain In tho Midwest. Phone or sea Mr. Conrad Slkora, —Rosa Wwolry Co,r Ponlloc Moll. <13-3220. — “ mK 18 Y6ARS OR OLDER, lor ----- ---- -I ,urn||urt ,|erg, 744 general 1 Oakland PLASTIC LAMINATORS PLASTIC FIXTURE BUILDERS Day and night shut, hast ratas, f r I n ga banaflte, ovartlma, naw plant, FORMATIVE PRODUCTS -CO, 1401 Ptodmont Rd„ Troy, Mich. 1-1542 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY 10 SHARP MEN 18 TO 25 Conltct: , Mr. Roymer ot 332-3639 Needed at Once A utility men for various |obt which require ibllHy to reed# write end to do soma simpla arithmetic. This Is e permanent steady position. Minimum 40 hours weekly. Must be sober end reliable. Excellent working condition!. Good •alary# paid vacation end other fringe benefit!. Please send a short outline of your previous experience* age end phone number for appointment for .interview to Press Box No. C-24, Pontiac Press. ^ ^ElMOfONCff Ynunq men to do c l e a n up# parti chesar end station work for new car dealarshlp. Sea In person - Mr. Ken . Johnson# Russ Johnson Pon-flee# 19 A484 In Leke Orion. OPPORTUNITY With a future In ptottlcs, soma p«r.on with ' mochonlcol ability, chance to loom maintenance of Intectlon molding presses and mold sottlngr. Day ihllt.’ovarlfma d Laka oil flan', PART-YlMiFfEMPeRAEY^, _ . preparing income tax raturha. Fr«. , , framing , provided, location In ' Kasgo Jterbor, Phoho 1-SS3-3335. ►art Tiia#~dinfuii time mah to i manage tool and ports crib. Koop , Inventory choex, schedule vehicle service etc. Will consider retiree, call 353-4154 from 9 a.m. til 4:30 ' " PLANT ATTENDANT ,To operate and maintain high presturo bolters and work In general maintattanca, must hav* 'and axaoftenct, Excellant trlngo . bonallls, Contact Parwnal papt., Pontiac Gentril Hospital, Simlnelt at W, Huron, Pontiac, Mich. Phono 331-471) Ext. 211, Fa!NtEKiB, XuT(T coTOIon’ worlf. Professional Administrator copablB of monoglno small Oakland County Vil-lagt. Would ba responsible directly to Prasldtnt. Mature man familiar with municipal govtrnrnbnt pro-, cedures. Send complete resume of background add salary rtguiremints to Pontiac Press Box, Nb. ..C4; ...: '■ FaINTIRS WANTBpi ixporiwcifl only, noot end left. 547-5355, or 543-35S5. _____ ' - - FHA"RMXcIsY. lull time, motjorn islory ond working condittons, 133- - PHONE MR. MARSHALL 433-1333. , representatives, prelerably licensed now In real eitala but not nocoiaary. Wo have our own' training program. Ovar Two Hun- throughout the state. The only : residential mulHpIg lilting «9T ot It* kind In the U.S. Publtet •trlctly confidential. Aik tor Oerv apply 154 N. Perry, tltn. • ' *' ■ ■ RETIREE FOR PORTER WORK Evening Shift Apply at BIG BOV DRIVE IN Sato PIxle Hwy. ' trucks. Writ train tha right ntrion. prater _ soma iota* background, DEMO, good pay plan, fringe benefits, apply In person at 900 Oakland Ava., Pen. fRlPFlklP Aftb RECilVip'HaTpar, Town and Country furniture, 4107 Tolinraph Rd., Bloomllsld Hills. — UMUt, --------'— SERVICE STATION Go* Pumper*, lull time day*, Sunday* oft. Call STATION siiisyx.ii — parlancad, 529 E. Walton Blvd. ilRVICB STATION ha* opening for , toll time day mechanic, mutt hav* tool*, (iso par weak for right man. C0II Ml 7-0700. . SERVICE STATION attsndonti toll time, aftornoona A midnight*. Apply In person Kan'* Clark station, 757 S. dlKlyko. _ ' SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, no oxportenco necessary. BIOS par wook. 442-2124. ___ Salesmen Appointments . I'M REALLY EXC.ITED-BECAUSE I - HAVE ENOUGH LEADS POR 3 MORE—GOOD, EXPERIENCED SALESMAN WHO WISH TO WORK IN THE PONTIAC AEEA ANO EARN OVER 519,000 PER YEAR. PLUS LIFE INSURANCE, HOSPiTALUATlON; attendant. A. E. Van Bibber 342-3425 Sporting • Goods Salesman- background and t 10 *.m. Id 4 p.m. Employment Ottlce Hudson's Pontiac Mall Turrit Lath* Operator g,W,lMr-Ri.T'>'lKSIId.,i fgfClTY op wixom, I* aecapftrio eppllcetlon* tor tha , pop lion tl patrolmen Oh W* Polle* Oapl. Minimum rjqwTromanf* ■ Include: 1 — U.S. citftdnahlp, r*»ld#nl of Oakland County upon appointment, Minimum age 3) year*, high tchoni oducetlon or It* equivalent, valid Mtehloan driver* tkonii, no .criminal rodorg, MvoraMd , credit record, good phyilcol and #mo. tlonil condition, it WWMIM by mtdjcal (xam nimn, paraonoi in. Mrv|ow*. and unqufitlfinod In- !n?eres'led par Hot may obtain *n application or lurthar Inlormatlon ’ tL Chief ot Polteo . 4,043 ^.h,,.0^eSwteom. 45094 -P* "“TOOL AND Dll Troy firm noad* man oxpofldi In tooling lor tuba fabrication, 1137. * TRUCK DRIVER 30 voar* or email truck, ate,, tteady, S BMtA 12.50 par hour to. • nutn DEPUTY DOG WARDEN $7,300 TO $8,200 Plu> Excellent fringe banatlt* U.S. CINMn Reildent l Oakland County Prom 21 to High school License. Michigan and 11 to 50 yaar a, ag* :heol gradual* valid Michigan Driver** violations For lurthor Information and applications contact: THE PERSONNEL 0IV„ Oakland County Court Hou*p 1200 NrTatMmh • Ponlloc, MlUllgan Or coll lA*>3V, *xt. 01 fvlERVIce mon oxportencqd only. Exeol. 3201. Mich. USED CAR PORTER Mual hove drivers license and ox-porlenco prolerred. _ OAKLAND CHRYtLBR-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Av*. 71 5-9435 UNIFORMED GUARD 4 e m. to 4 a.m, Pull or port tlmo. American Ptajtla Producte. mi W, Maple Rd_. waited Lake, Michigan, 424-1507 lor ogpl, Vending machinI mb^HAHIE, experienced In toll lino vendlno tor ln-p(int vtndlng operation. Good 1 pay. Blua Croat and Blua Shield, ejilj I a.m.-4:30 p.m. 8354111# txt. WELDERS & HELPERS Flat wektort (3.5S par hour, __holpers-33.36 per hour: 9 poliL holidays, paid Elu* Cress, Blue Shield, paid sickness and -accident Insurance. We will teach you welding alter 30 daya employment. • Apply Protee Inc., Paragon Division, 44000 Grand Elver, tlovl, WBMWt man lor werahoute work and customer loading. Exctllgnl wages. Box C-3ft giving rat, and oxp„ ole. Wt HAVE AN IMMEDIATE oponfng for an ombillouo young mon In our counter tote doportmonl. Thl* position otforo opportunity tor Store, 145 W. Huron, Pontiac. " W. T. GRANT CO. time, txporlancod i WANTED Indopandont Oil Cd. dotjro* a itatlon manager for tha PenMae araa. Starting aaiary I1». wkly. plus ovartlma. Guaranteed liberal rail* In 50 daya. Paid and paid uniform*. Nr ' necessary. 5(9-9205. Working fOMAAmI por •mall tool -ihop on loml-productfon tool work. Familiar with milflng a. WANTED, MAN WITH tmechanic* jte---- burner*. All a year. around -------- -gate in. ‘ ability, to torvlct ' 'ngo bonolltt, a __________ I irk tor auallflod parion. Apply I irion only 251 S. Paddock, Wobb Hrtt V’ontpd Malt 6 Help Wanted Mai* ENGINEERS Engine & Foundry Division of Ford Motor Compdny has excellent opportunties immediately available in turbine and industrial area fart • Material handling Engineers —. BSIE degree with automotive experience. • Plant fngineering Designers — BSME degree witji experience in design loyout and construction. Excellent storting salary plus liberal trlngo benefit*. Sand corn-plot* return* to: Engine & Foundry Division 3001 Miller Road Room 3030 Dearborn, -Michigan #48121 An Equal Opportunity Employer FSWffB: SMALL rsitxuront work only, no Sunday Bpmlngham, 4444333. ant, day holidays, Whip Wanted Mate 6 Help Wanted Male DO YOU WANT . TO BE YOUR ~ - OWN BOSS? SHELL OIL COMPANY II, ' ' t \ ' 1) '4 PONTIAC AREA, FRANCHISE AVAILABLE • PAID TRAINING. • FINANCING AVAILABLE CALL MR. ZOLMAN DAYS: 535-8500 - NIGHTS AND WEEKENDS 837-7206 m For Want Adi Dial 93fJ981 THE PONTIAtf PRESS. WEDKESDAV, OCTOBER 1, ififtD WANT ID. ■HH TRUCK WARlHOU' MtpWN l iSS 3*71 DRIVERS GREY MBN,__y NLQN I. IOHTS 4;Hlt| WentidMple j 1 WANTED: MAN CARARLE al turning Marine mechanics trad*, pvorlt yttri auction weldors. mj* .urranvite Rd, scroll from clorkatan equip mint. WANTED: PART TIME bartenders, W4. Orchard Lake avi., bonama, Interested? Call YOUNG VETERANS, HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES COLLEGE MEN DIAL FINANCE CO. ttlATTfWi MEN 44 to ss Mara old 0n, ,hf |4r8„t I inane (qr porjir work. Day and waning organization* In tha com WANTED TRUCK/ MECHANICS ' Qai or dletel. Liberal -pay, Insurant* furnished, retirement and full'benefits. See Mr, Coe, 8 a.m. to 4i30 p.m. Monday thru Friday. GMC - Truck Center Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 xporloncod In i and - ra-bullt parti for Apply Hollarback Auto Parti, in 1 Av*.Ph.33A4054.________ WINDOW CLEANERS experienced. 3*15 Auburn, Auburn Hoighta. managlns program ill miry, laaki lo proper* lor branch position, Our Iramlng we ______ aiiTitancai, avollabla lor Ihoio who qualify, glut a good storting inlary and complain lino —y and omployao banaflli. ayo axocullva potential, Idly outgoing porionallly aggraulyo to maka oi yourioif. Cali Mr. Kuzzopt,1473-1221. Dial Plnanca Co. Drayton Plains. ir Help Wanted Female : ATTENTION HOUSEWIVES Sail toys, nlfto, now tor "SANDfeA PARTIES" zh.. cant Commltilon plui nocouary Unliad Parcgl. gi mciuoad with orders., •Iom, up lo IS par cant pi IP AND COMPAREI CALL BETH WEBER CAKE DECORATOR, 0000 I goad pay, Call FE 29M0. eftbees ItUDIWT, "for "nrSthor'a halpor. altar 4:30, in oxchoni . room and burd. Call altar 7 Help Wanted Female AUTO dealer In wotortord hai opening- for c ashlar. Must ba BMP la typo and havt iptlHld* .for: pricing Invoices. Phona Mr. Hotmei 423-0*00 lor appointment. A TELEPHONE CANVASSER" SUPERVISOR*. Top lalory lor right porMn, Call 074-3331, Mr. Brooke. __ 1575 MONTH fLuS,' OfTti SECRETARY OR REAL ESTATE EXPERIENCE. MUST ACCEPT RESPONSIBILITY. PHONE MRS. Schultz, aawses. . ARMATURE LADY P6ft ganeral of'- I NEED EXPERIENCED! Sdcrolarloi Stonao and Dlclaphnno Opri. typioii - Jr., SrT, Slot.- Talttypa Opr*. Clorki (10 koy Adding Mach.) Comptometer Opri, Rookkooport Jjlowonco, *42 7*00. _... CHRIStMaI TOYS ' Ymiri without Chora. Hava o toy chatl party. Call 4134114 or 41). 0454. Norma Shirley. CASHIER TO WORK full lima. Ap Ky Kuhn's Aulo Wash. 14* W. uron. fOUNTER HELP -' WANTED lor 1 Mi nr blunorV. Highland Rd. or coll 473-31*2. quality dry ^cfsanln flour**, typ OffleoBox comploto Info Help Wanted Male pine roqulrtd ii m Pont Information. 6 Help Wantill Molt Post Assemblers and Production Machine Operators — . —No Experience Necessary Pontiac Motor Division General Motors Corporation Pontiac, Michigan Employment Office Open 8-11 A.M. 1-4 P.M. ---.----- Monday thru Friday An aqual opportunity omployof _________ Fatal. ___ AAA WAITRESS Off Sundays. S days a wook, cloud hollriaya, liberal bqnoflti, , Plod Pjpor Rsrtiursnf, 4370 Highland ATjkNTidN“DpTAL'jH^S|mSf, Aro there any married hyglanlili In tha Milford, Highland or Whllo Lako area* who would wont to go bock to work 1 or 3 doya a wook, If to wrlfo box 43. Milford. Michigan. A Young Lady Over 40 TO 37,200 10 train for personnel Interviewer position. Mrs. Hardy iii-iioo. y ASSEMBLY- COUNTER and mark-ln girl, no oxporlonco necessary. Apply In parson, MAM Cloontrs, 3*44 COUNTER AhlD LAUNDRY help wanted, full or part tlma, for qualify dry cleaning plant. Apply at 1-Hour Martini!mg oi - Miracle Mila Shopping Cantor or coll Mr. Maori of 333-032, euRepiNif t WAlfftSsi Nights, ejuo Star Drlve ln, | Opdyko Rd, Pontiac. Apply In piriMt only. ■ _______ CIGAR CLERK* WANTED, motor*, Cunningham Drug* TeI Huron. ertlTfrianT vytoow op ir yV*. naadi tidy to stay nights, J3M011 or attar 5, 887*4553^ CLEANING & KITCHEN Excellent Working conditions, 5 or 4 doyi wook, attractive salary. EM CASHIER-TYPIST Permanent, challenging position for high school graduolowllh good grades, ago IS or abovo. Oonarol office dulloi including typing, somt llguros, and meeting the public, Good storting salary. S dov week Liberal employe benefits. sop Mr LOhMoVOf, Dior Flnoneo CO., TO w Huron St, An aquol opportunity employer. ~ I._________1 DISHWASHER ON Sundays, 5 day wssk, II 7 p.m., Ilbaral benefits, Plod Help Wanted Female _______7Help Wanted Female HOME workers NEEDED Im-'WOMEN for eloonln* madlalaly. 333-937* altar 5 p.m. y . buildings. 332-*f»l after 7 . HOUSEKEEPER, I IVC IN, own WOOL PRRfOER FOR f roam, bath and Tv, ratarancas, top! poitldn - with dry clti wag** 426-73B0. ! Birmingham. MA G-7207. 2 school aga, and I proscSSol child, tocatad on Can taka. Call iiWKur HOUSEWIVES, EARN 12.50 AN hour up, naar'hom#; pick up and,.dallvitr Fgllar Brush ordars, days, 333-2156, •v«ja., 398 51/2. , INTERVIEWERS TRAINEES lb TO 25 SI1S PER WEEK Must bo high school grad, naal iT.sr.pit............... •TANT ^ Contact: Mill NEWELL AT 9^*3639 I IMMEDIATE OPBNINO) "a rp^hy Imparial Moldad Products, 3331 Oaklay Park Rd., wait of Haggarty Rd. batwean • a.m. and 4 p m. _ • -IMMEOIATE OPENING tor offlco gin, apply In parson ' 2-4 p.mr Blua 8 Thaatro, 2150 Opdyka, and ar4n't afraid should road fha rail tha salts fitld,'hOU, *OU, * IUU giotiworo: anything old. 473-04U. ihlnklng oMalllng, coll STENO-TYPIST I WANTED UkeD ’MOBILE" ham*, Tyu 41 to 10 wordi per minuti l 4500-4750 coin lo Shorthand or tpood wrlflrtf hoipful.T 43*0. .. S N T E PN AT ION AL PERlONNEL 401 1100 Hip W. Huron WANTED; Coilumo Idwolry. $466-5600 TfE PAID ftp.................... MANAGEMENT TRAINEE «^-*g**{ bnd ofljcg. Au 21 eotlumlng, MlZidtS. fill be olad to . Ifwiu or* JOHNSON 11704 »• Telegraph FE 4-33M . b'rffttm I *P«niHEiit». Furnlshid 37 6f®l > Wonted t« Rent CO-EDS NEED PLACE togolhor from C 133-1000 Ext. I* Mon.-Frl. 075! ACCOUNTANT: Take chore* c I- book! and run your own , spot It proof. WOW! I Jim Lana, 334-3471, Stwillng from O.C.C. Call Mltchfl! Smwi Bx*. TV DESPERATE Pontiac Proao roportor marrladl Nuda flat In •tori- married 111 modorol* cott Need rofrloorolor and , ( furnlihod. Coll Tim McNulty1 4a, . opofu I ly Pontiac Chrlitmai tblllnq atari* early with AVON-osrn OH for your Chrlalmoi In opor* lima mar your homo.’Coll FE 4-041* or writ* Drayton Plaint. PO Box *1._ DOMESTIC HE,l> _ HAMBLOOMEIELD day* par waak, mu* raniportollon, currant rol child, Drayton birmingham bloomeII ironipsrloflon. 473-0717. _______, BABY SITTiR MORE FOR homo *»-0l3S. DRAFTSMAN, oxperlencod BA*Y SITTiR In my homo, m'u*f I AREA1 034-4730 only,__________< - '■ BAbYSITTERTMV HOME, vSfnlly Of Cresc.nl Like Rd. and Tubb* Rd. 4:30 O-m. • 3- 473-0030._____ BABY SITYbI, O'lrl for, Friday *nd Saturday nlghli after ichool. 335-1*54. ollor Si30. BAlYSiTTBR LIVE IN room and board tit wook, own room and TV, mutt Ilk* onlmoli, iflor 4, 114- 1303, __________ ... BABY SITTER, older women, 4 night*, 015. 135-9300, no call* iflor 5 p.m. .. BABY SITTER WANTED ,VICINITY of Pontiac Northorn, 5 doyt waok, 0:30-1:30, no Weekend*. 331912* oflor 4, In my homo or your*. BABYlfffER WANTED, my homo. 4 day* per weak. Poqfloe Moll or**. Own trantporlatlon. 441-3440, BABY 3ITTBR, lun-ogor, ollor ichool, vicinity of Mott School, Own Irantporlallon. 402-50W. ____ BABYSITTER FOR SMALL child, traniportatlon furnlihod, S •. Benedict'* arm. 025 week. 103-17*7, Help Wanted Mala 6 Help Wanted Malt Pontiac Pro**, C-3*. Production Workers ------Ng EXPERIENCE NECESSARY , ' All Sf the GM Benefit Programs will accrue as you enjoy Top Earnings with a winning team Make Application at . .Ghf...Employment....Office.. 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY FISHER BODY' DIVISION •00 BALDWIN AVE, PONTIAC Phon* 1313) 333-1341 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 2:30-12. Rffersnces* own cill jS2*6716 bsfort 2 P.m. BOOKKEEPER, ' - ' __ ’ '334-3535 BEAUTY OPERATOR Pull llmo and pdkl time. Top pay Apply ol Andre'* Beauty Solon, ll N. Saginaw. In p*r»on only. bETUYy Of»ERAtOR». oxporTonce Wllma'i Boouty Sanon, 441 3 •Soolnaw SI. 334-4254. BEAUTICIAN WITH guarantee 1 field aro*. wollroiM* full ohm, 13 or 1 / In ponon ■ P.M., AlrwaV Lou Hlahlond Rdl. (M-W). BAGGER for Dry Clunlno I •xnorlonco noconary. Bln mechanical and-or onplneor- 13,7)3. Dental Receptionist E xporloncod proforrod, but m qulrod. 4M4500. » DAY WORK - PART fim* - mu»t have own trdniportollwf, 3*15 Auburn, Auburn Htlghtt, Michigan. DRUG AND COSMETIC*clerk. Over Pull or port t.lm*. Ru*»'» airy ’ Drug*. 4500 Elizabeth ___> Rd.____ EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR: If ydu have the ability and the desire to work with paopl* and have had public contact oxporlonco—w* will train you. Exceptionally high earning* flrtt V*»r. Spoiling and Smiling. COU DiVg EiO, M4-3471 lor oppolntmont __________ EXPERllNCED GIRL FOR ganeral laundry work. Spoony laundry. 232 E. Plk* St. 334-1450. EXPERIENCED MEDICAL TYPIST. for doctor* offlco, ton roiumo of c.flOHPMpM Pontiac Pro**, Box C-3 Ponfloc. UbpaiirRd.^L«b»OrlbnL__ PULL TIME NIOHT-bar meld waitress. Apply In .person, Nlle-Owl Lounge, 470* Dlxlo Hwy., Drayton Plolnt.___ ; •_______ FACTORY WORKERS punchpapc"kea,gs4rY,,be¥?LEM! .. , APPLY 4 oTmTfc* P.m. EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. PERNPALB 3330 HIHon Rd. REDFORD 34417 Grand Rlvof CLAWSON' 45 S. Main CENTER LINE MSI E, 10 Mila An Equal I __________HP AMERICAN GIRL pinQ,V,Wu* prlnlVng, 'r*l’*rrno wiTh1_ 1*374 Woodward al 7 Mil*____ Loroy, UIO of Ink and pencil live IN BABY SITTER, prlvot* technique* necessary. Apply, room, vary nice, room end board, portonml-bderd Cllv ■*> Modltoni—piua. . reunnahle......wage*. ...lor Haights, W0 W. 13 Mil* Rd., dlvorco* molhtr with 3 children. Madison Haights. Michigan. Rang* 387-4*43 lo discus* lyrlhor.______ oxporlonco. *7MS;|laDY WANTED TO toil pot*. Muit . .—— I Ilk* animals. Excellent wag**. Mud live In Waited Lake or**, or Rochester, Troy aria. Coll *51-0073 altar 5 P.m.___ MAID TO ASSIST porter, InTonor*! cleaning, of ....... •tore. Chudi 7-1300 Mft. ZotvQ. MAID WORK, good hourV, Motol. 334-35*3. MATURE GIRL FOR holt doyo, of typing and general offlco wort our office. Mall Information Pod Olflc* Box 05.-Pontiac. MORNING PULL TIME CASHHERS needed by Pronk'a Nuriory Solo* Inc. 0575 Telegraph at Mopl* Rd., Birmingham. Call Mr. Kulat, 447. I 3343 0-5. -NURSES AIDES, oxporloncod proforrod, coll FE Stott, 0 *.m,-4 NEEDED DRY CLEANING proiior, lor plant In Pontloc, Waterford are*. Experienced prelerrad but will cantlder training, top — steady work. Call 473-23*3 or and up. |om* collage helpful. Ci INTERNATIONAL PERSONNE 411-1100 _____IO|O W. Hyi $7200 UP I* FEE"PAID COLLEGE GRADUATES For management poaltlon In *11 sirepn-e* mep'e field*, COM I 444-1711._______! INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL WjklfftESi ANO’ORILL COOK. Ap- 401-1100 _____100® W-_Huron ply In porion Gave* Grill, 075 , Baldwin. — H WOMEN" lo doc (toning' work In* offica* and schools. In Jho City Of Roenottor and Birmingham. 01.75 . ________________ to 51.00 por hr. 5 days * wk. 4-10! billing CLERK: Mature gal. Flair p,m. 011 547 1437._______ with ftauru. 0330. CoTl M*ry| WAITRESS, pi flmo, nlghtol Harbor Brldooi. *34-2471, Snolllng and . . Ear, 431-0330. ____ tnellTng- ; ‘ .___: . - _■ Be A^trllhSiSrin1 EXECUTIVE SECRETARY 4'.™^ | m jilii ^ 2 YOUNG WOMEN ?ytnTd*Km.’h tSS 18-25 . , art gr««t, PM paid. YkYJvIl Local national firm now hiring I Accuracy Partonnal _642-3M0 , Wr^*“lXnvl*,wrwfrk* W.Vtlni ’ fX-SERVICt MAN !3 WORK^G GIRUI tjoklna ter 1 of *1 our oxpomt. Mud hav* pl*o»lno' Wondering whir* I* 007 WO hoy* ,*ViiV* e ! m n ^*1 ?l^r personality ondL fa# qblo fo dorll coroor qpporlunllte* In ill Itelds.J »k* Irani homo, compioioiy immediate employment FicaTOnr 'Sill: .. MS earning.ter (host who quality. No INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL | *M;7*II. typing roqulrod. For Interview coll OH-IIOO 1000 WL Huron cbuPLB A, MWBUattJftgLl GENERAL OFFICE GAL I .__________ Help Waatad M. or f. 8 plijj WiriV ...T-T' "** d"1' X 5fiMF**iY.....LN| w ,an5| CENTRAL OFFICf \iikm N.libi A'.H’AT'Wrn yiars. Itocco't* ! Dtp ia h tgnway. KEYPUNCH OPERATORS Tamp, Aislgnmanti* all iblftt Call Jean Johnston 442-3065 j Shor* Living Quarters 33 eonHomin, ilf roqulrod.^ if RoownRvi qulel? rot*. PB 4-4340. 2 ROOMS AND aATH. PdlVATd, 403 N. Saginaw 11. *25 a wuk, deposit. 3339403. J^ANo.l 'K'0toirfi~Nfwiy~tecofafed, now furnlturo, private ontronco, and bath, wainlng teclllllos, sound proofed, carpeted hallway, Mud ooi to appreciate, cblldron welcome all utilities lurnishod. 032.50 ond up. Dop. required. FE 2 and I ROOMS. oxcello'nl condition', good furnlturo, ** ontranco, bath, wologmo, 334-300 1 ROOM An6 BATH, no omoklng or drinking, wui for 1 perwn^ living alone, coll after 5, 2 AND 1 ROOM furnlshod, all utillttei paid, coll after l o. m. Shown by appointment -only, no 'I dtiidron. 335-0W4. ___________ '|TT«SoM iipitlENCY. prlVff* OIL ebuPLB TO SHARE homo rent fra*I I^'S.w'Turnlhir* 1.. .r <1 erhnr.1 M4RM rhllrfrMn . n*W WmilHli bath* of 2 tchool Al t I TSIDE WORK, f X P B N 8 E oil t- GGOGFUT4ARE. i»H BLOCH* 623-1333. Are Your Afternoons . Free?__________ Motor Route opening in Southeastern part of county- Apply, lb Porion- R. T. PECK CIRCULATION DEPT. THE PONTIAC PRESS Sfiiby' Brent Gleaners, Waterford I Plow Ihooplng Conlor. _______... _______■____________■ _ . . NEEDED AT QNCE UVl In APPLICATIONS NOW BEING I babysitter. FE *9324 ittorl. 1 for Cashteri and concession NURSES AIDES, experienced or wlll 6E5lXri%ieri pm DrV' tra)n. nfiernoon n, midniohf ahlfti.l Theatre. A'lerjJTn;--- must ba ovtr i traniportatlon* Union Laka area. —430O4g-$A25- Numerous positions. Typo . BW> ,Bd W ’after'«■' •-jays 3 ROOM AND BATH. NorihwaH araa, carpated. vary nlca. uljlliiaa. 1140 por mo. dap. .roqulrod. No children or Ooto. ieMlW. g 4 LARGE ROOMS ANO bORl, TIB children, no drinker*. 3J2-474T . nice location, good Pm paid. Accuracy “ SALES TRAINEE $500-5650 PLUS CAR Ail fields. Ago 21 colleoe helpful: Cali: INTlRNATIONAL PERSONNEL 411-1100 . SALES: Topnotch co lopnolch mini This *pol go** *» Ih* Mgor-boovor.l Full M,500. Call Dov* Loo, 334-2471, Snolllng ond Snolllng. ___:_ SECRETARIES $450 TO $550 Typing So wpmi, shorthand 30 wprns it you have thois qualifications, WO ho* Ih* positions available. North Suburban ’nter”ationalpbrsonnel 1330 S. Waadword, E'hom. 441-334* -INQ1 -oughl laved. Con work out needed. Agent, 401-0374.___ ’ Divorce—Foreclosure? Don't Iom your homo —call ui for fra approMel. 474011* Laulnger 473-114* SECRETARY i, dlvortlflod portion 4*3-4714. WOMAN OVER H I V oonarol oflics, bookkooplng, u;~momy dolly. Hour* from 10-3, 5 days par wuk. At our rostouronh depart mint. Apply In porion. So* Mr. Borgor, Nolsnor Bros., 42 N. Saginaw, Pontiac. ________ RBuilRilFSK. AWTUrE woman to cor* ter 2 vr, old child ond tin* home. Llv* In or own transportation. Hlghof I wages. 434-4015, liter Homemakers Your skills *i a homemaker could be added lngom# tor you. are presently aMaplInq aoPlltalloks lor our pan tlma aolilng achodutes. II you or* avallsbl* ddvl or eom* In and diocuss i a Apply in person 10 P.m. to A P-m. ■mplovmsnl Olflc* Hudsons Pontiac Mall ON YOUR NIGHT OFF, apply parson only, balwoon 1 ond 4 P.m. ——.-v i op? ko'y Drkv* ln Ih“'r'' ”50 Work Wanted Female 14jH^casiT* por"c as*j ;i iMpreVMiTi-i' AvAiLAiLl - lb', | aoies want Day baby aittmq- ?n9,tJTl IN, 4130 p.m._ _______ply »t iamlnola Hills .Nursing 1 nr |,nltor work at nlphl. FB 4 7I73| xij'ijii ir M|teS*3 WAiTlTessrANY SHIFT, Call after1 Home, 532 Orchard L^k# kmr M g-3o*l. ..............._ fl3Dfg _ oUcsfien"phono1 M4^f'i° * Sales Help Male-Female 8-ASalei Halp Male-Femole 8-A Building Services-Sapplies 131 ------------- PRE-TAB GARAGE d acted, *4*5. Dow Construdlon Ce. 333 21*5 or 334M3*i_ . __ Business Service IS iloff, Llconsod loiospoopte but Will train. Classes IV *1 t a.m. . Schrem tor starling ovary Saturday al t Coll Mr. Bogr - *—- adpolnlmadl. IVAN W.JEHRAM, Realtor Ff 19471 AVON.TROY CARPET WAREHOUSB C erpellng Inslelled cleaned. WAREHOUSB Inti s<^ yds. carpal Painting and Decmatlnj M . lOID DECORATORS ' Interior 4, Extenlor , . Well wnsnlng, rug Shampooing, palnllg, wall papoHng, minor rapairs. — ** 332-4816 For Proa Ritlmafa ^ EJIikt iWFTan d PTPTin ; residential and e 0 m rn o r cl* I spray teg. Orvel Oldcumb A Ions. LADIES VlklTSE INTlRldR Iooln-•ling noor Wolorlord *r*4», JRrs* aslTmaias. OR 34304 or OR S-W34. Wonted Heuiehold Goods 29 HIGHEST PRICEI PAID POE |Md lurnllur* ond ORplloncoi, Or who' hovo you? . B & B AUCTION 503* Olalt Hwy. OR 1-1717 WE HAVE OPENINGS FOR TWO QUALIFIED SALES PEOPLE. WE /OFFER PROFIT SHARING PAID VACATIONS' AND MANY OTHER FRINGE BENEFITS. CALL TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT WITH OUR SALES MANGER. KAMPSEN REALTY, INC; 1071 W. Huron St. 681*1000 — F4-10 Apnrtnwntl, UntaraMlo4 II Apnrtm#nts, Untarnisliad 31 , Canterbury Apartments mwe1 l- end -todroem. eats., hr balcony, 0* hoot. fmt Air colonialViLUoi o« iHrawissr < mu* on Pixie Highway . . ■ *73-7457 biLiotitPUL iMd"*"*JgnflfiA On the water. Lute *« couplet. “^"^'■ttlAsiV wi*T Spacious 1- end J-btdrooml. SIM •wl <175. n# mi* or cMUnn. Call) Mr*. Schultz. 474-034*. I to I p.m.i KINGTOWNE MANOR 3 Townehous© Apts.- AVAILABLE EOR RENT I blDROOM. BATH AND HALF FULLY CARPETED AIR CONDITIONED FULLY I n cot GAS HIAT ■, lillFRlffill^ ■ DISHWASHER. DISPOSAL BRAND FJEW —nuin-------, Itol PONTIAC TRAIL ' . WALLED LAKE Apartments, Unfurnished 31 Apartments, Unfurnished 31 RIDGEMONT TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS "• One, Two. and Three Bedrooms • Roper GoT Ranges • Hotpoint Refrigerators • Carpet and Drapes • Swiming Pool and Pool House • All Utilities Except Electric .• Air-Conditioning by Hotpoint Between East Boulevard and Madison-2 blocks from main gate of Pontiac Motors. 957 N. Perry St. Phone 332-3322 OMR Dally W AJOL. MW WsEMMty Apartments, Unfurnishsd SB WALTON SQUARE 1675 Perry Rd. North HOURS 12-7 FE 8-1606 ' 373-1400 P-R-l-V-l-E-W It you den'* mind » little dull. ii.nc., com* in n. Sins bull* in iy tasMJt *p'-completed. P*y id to* quality w chon,., location. THE POyTI^ PR^S, wjjpyRSDAY, 1, mi for Wont Ads Dial 3344911- Rent tKsaeeE. Untarnished ddflent Ri children, pntid SPrtty'™nd V?ull particular Mtantl design *nd You n o» your' tptrtn _ . .. moving In, Thick, ci through out, plyi iltctrlc nil* and hoi witar «r# Inciudtd In your ront. OCCUPANCY FROM LATE SEPT. I EEDROOM. Torrcc*. carpeting, no chin d-BEDROOM, t BATHS* tkucutlvu 1 hbmt, tor runt or Imm, Wulurford irn, $300 j»r month. m-4300, OfiDROOM#''illl' FlJtmonttv' I diBPOEilta Pi 4-4406. ’ wfuK\ 33M9H, a___ ROOMS WITH hOARD 43 GOOD ROOD, QUIET, ludy < 42 Sale Hewee SLEEPING ROOM. «lrl . lady. to^Mell. Frivol* entrance. t SLEEPING ROOMER LADY. S iWCLi~l®SlLrr»lr' eoiilllonbdj curputud, TV, tot«PNMh!^ mild —ilCtiagJiO Ptr wook. Woodward tnyWit. I I n%WnAu4 43 it, in huut. Juit jtl, *HA, CALL (HI-0370. ■TO Sole Heme* 49 Sale Houses 491 Sale Houses ■AST TENNYSON TEL P*MlM,» block! North ol Monlcilm, I block* t«l ot Jo.ivn, Choice arc* hoar Slice Meters, *—roam*. ' l ‘oomi, gat htif — ilda arlvo. M'xll3\ Comalaloly famodoltd In and out. Immsdlsl# poaoulon. iia.MIL loro down. FHA S74. KE 7-4**0. “ 1 ELIZABETH LAKE OT RANCH WirffPUU Mumsnt on vour tot, 111,003*. MoM$«0i ^EtaHrWSa? room, SS,r«on«: extraW tot. call altar I, <11- m iM-tiia'ir'jjf-i - FIRST IN VALURS m mil. . ... ..small dHttlKPI~ and tlmu of HAS. 1 OR > GENTLEMEN, lovuly i fWt rental $brvic¥ ' tor I _________ landlords. good .tKtonti waiting.1 BOARDER, MEALS, Ilaundry Art Dan tola Valty. 685-1567 | all. On Ihu stand nlco. Duel Newly 117-4743 to nof t hsTde“dupl8VL-i 1 WITH APPLIANCES BY FRIGIDAIRE iroltd. 141 weekly. 4S1-M55. MEN. VALLEY PLACE APTS. In tha Cantor ot Rochoilor 1 bodroom. a balhi IIM — OPEN EVERY DAY CALL* 6514200 Rent Houses, tarnished______39 BEDROOM. HOME AT Walter's Lako. MM Lakavlow. 2-BEDRODM HOME ON laka. ssc 4| washing I Duck Lake. Highland arta. " ..... 'urthiir. HOME PRIVILEGES, tm $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR UNPRICED PORTUNITY - STOP RENTING um down- gaymanl on FHA will movo you Into this 3-bMroom bunga PW, I In Pontiac. Low prlco Ot 'tOTRitMTUNBil un your loo. OFF SEASON, HAVE 5 ROOM modem houto to ronl, will accommodate 1-15 coo. plo, will ront hy the weekend or the week, bring Hooping tm, located north ot Cadillac, call itj. 7*54. , »■, ' Rent Rooms 42 a SINGLE BEDROOMS tor rant.’ 1C75 Scoff ^L«k« Rd.. dtauaif.__ aoMMi fflCE CLEAN ROOM, homo cooked TOWN HOUSES ADJACENT TO .. maoii. ns-isat. : as, only u Iain, 1* #ni ofreio- KBWiv-wsnrwiHf, SJuv11iBBBrii tob* roimtrv hnme iSLIlU DAILY AND SUNDAY ^11 TO I 41.A country nomi. aaiono.-----p.m.. EXCEPT THURS. FOR Ront Starts 46 more information call us- .1 (H7I, ■ ~ FOR LIAS! - STORE proKlmatoly >,000 in. It. ct Cantor, W. Huron St. <51-071 LAKE FRONT, Wllllpmi Lako bedroom, large living room, dli area, ’and kitchen, get It Available Oct. llt.Ouno lih. ! plui utllltlct. Mr. Parmcntor, LADY, NO SMOKING. rant 3 Like | jiOLU37, NICE ROOiyi near KSiirt lor girforl modern “KITlady, prMlogti. 3335377. . uragi. 3 to I mot. ban. IIM447 ROOM .FOJiJmAN, 111 weekly. Sit Stores a. Service iiuWt. NOW LEASING .PRIME ttora loco-tlani In now OpdykP Square Shop-' ping Cantor, any alia up to 10JI00 •quart toot. Excplhnf parking. Opdyko Road north ot South Blvd.. AtS-StM. Ront Office Synct ~ 47 8 OFFICES High truffle volumo, Wuturford Twp. Carputlng. Drapus. Somu turn Hurt. 1000! Tor Insuraneu pfficu or root ostito, ate. 1300 par month glut utllitlot. Writ# Pontiac Ion C-13. ■ ‘ APPEdXiMATiLY fti i irn offlco spaea f BtVd. 674-2222. Rent Henses, UBtamlshed 40 3 BBROOM. SIM • mo. with MC. dOP. 3SKSS7P. i eepRodM house in tR» Wotorford oroo. nice and dean, IMS a mo. Flrit and tail mo. glut •oc. Phono 734-1373. FB3-73M.________________ ROOM, PRIVATE BNTBANCB. TV, cooking arlvltogoi. FB MS4S. ROOMS, Working man. near Truck, FB 3-1 Id7. • ___________ Buyers - Sellers Meet thru Press Want Ads. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 11*1 IQ. FT. OFFICE -s-rrx Second floor with elevator. CMC and water furnlihed. I1S0 m $1,200 DOWN Brand now — s bodroom, crawl ■pace rancho*. Fully Imulatod. Family ilze kllchan, large utility rm, furnace rm.- Com plat a Including lot. *15,400. $1600 DOWN Off Jptlyn on LMhx-lrind new 3 bodroom home, full basement. Northern High district. FHA Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Rutioll Young. Bldg. 334-3030 - 53Vt W. Huron St. 5469 HEATH OFF MAVBBB ROAD ^ Now 3 bedroom, aalh and a half, full baiement, laraa tot. DON E. MCDONALD LICENSED BUILDER OR 3-2837 AVON TWP. 4 bedrooms, large living room, 3Vk-car garage, paved drive, auto, hoi water heat. IOOkMS ft. lot. Many extras. 10.400 SO. FT. OFFICE itcond ipaco with level i boat and water. Attar 4 F.M. Call 4M-M71 ■ ■ Annett Inc. RBOitors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 RENTING WE ARE NOWJCROSS - Really and Invaitnjant CjhiiB§L. 3417 Saihabaw Rd.. Drayton Flilnl 674-3105 _ iAiriY'OWNRR, trOMO^ay *0 a car^ garage, St B, Itraihmora, 334- ^SMALL DOWNPAYMENT S Bodroom home an Bait oMa.Wjjh Gai haat and Gai hat wator with good credit you are in. Call YORK i OB 4-0243 FB 1-7171! TUCKER REAltY REALTOR tos Pontiac Stale Bank Eidg. __ 334-1541 r The stop RENTING $140~MO. HOMES WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS. WIDOWS OR DIVORCERS. • ______ iJLCFLl WIT H. CREDIT PROBLEMS AND R E T I R B 11 ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action . Call FE 5-3676 - 6424220 DIRECTIONS! HlBhlBBd to CrBSCfh* Lake Rc ai»o ranchai thd eolenlil* •• 'tow •» 414,990 plu» lot. GIROUX REAL ESTATE ■ bbaltyTT m Auburn _____^**£581$ bny 5 u«ur let and MVf V0U GET 2 FOR Colonial, dlninj mant, gat heat houie In raar < price H»00. Cl M70. full basa-1 bad room out. Totol AT ROCHESTER LOCATED..IN TH* VILLAGE ~ On I a paved itraat. This bungalow; having dlntna room, ttrimtec»;r i ----*»tlng, filll basement, l’s-car ia. Quick posteiilon. $21,000. Offlco In Rochostor GMC ' . IVAN W. SCHRAM LAND CONTRACT TERMS INL WATERFORD vbedroom bungalow en nice, w« landtcaped Ml, full beitmtn modern kitchen, new wall to wall carpeting In living room and din-: lug all. include, all "fumlturt end appliances end tome dlihti. All 'thli Is In a nice neighborhood end g"gfr ^JWS&'rz: WATERFORD - Ajum. ^lldeg captain* wat. GMC_ OPEN Two Models. COLO NY Come Ing loti, central walyri ilorm^lower. :h, ceraeli and big kltcnc MAINTENANCE FREE MOVE IN FAST HEIGHTS, ' DIB, tointfil *H homo* priced from UitOog tvs MILTON WEAVER, INC., Realleri : many olhari. Pontiac Area Offices Available imw^univ,r,iy_, mi-h«i A 24* x 4(r HOUSE. $i,$9S service, parklno A heat. Ill: ?ou0.h. ,400 td. feet & up. Free lanltorlal parking & haat, inly 12.00 tq. ft . Conatructlon Co. 301-2190 or 330* ALUM. VINYL AND AS||STOt ” AWNING-PATIOS SCRBBNED-IN OR <1 'SS INCLOSED EAVES TR0UGHING Continued laamtoM teveHrouahln*. DEALER-ASK Sand—Grovel—pirt t-A SAND, GRAVEL, roaionabia, 131*1201 CHOICE SHREDDED black dirt, top Miller Bros, ftoalty 333-7156 kint 6n LEASE. S etttcei and ttoraga room, ample parking, 2500 Dixie Hwy. utiiitiaa Included. Call A SALE IS ONLY AS GOOD AS YOUR FINANCING. ~ ' or telling your home. Let Ul CEMRNT f excelled HAVE BUFFER, Will travel. Tired of hall-done lanltor work? Try DWARDS JANITORIAL In downtown Pontiac. Up to 3400 tq. ft. of air conditioned ipac* avallaMa. Attar , p.m. 451-*777._ fan* Rncimss Proonrtv 47-A ASSUME the mortgage tor 12300 on thli 3 bedroom, aibettot ranch, In Clark,ten. New carpeting, parage. S1S.M0, P-5. 'CALL RAY TODAY I 474-4101 RAY IVAN W. SCHRAM LIST WITH SCHRAM AND CALL THI VAN Hit Joilyn REALTOR HARRINGTON HILLS All brick ranch with many .extras like bulIMm In the kitchen, formal dining room, huge clout*. Horace ihcd and mom, 3 bedrooms, only 117,500. FHA, H41. CALL RAY TOOAYI 474-4101 l3t*-7Ma _ 145-0470 VACANT CAPt COO Newly decorated, full batemenl, get I,heel', formal dining room, FHA approved. Agent lor owner, 474-144t. _ WATERFORD — Charming elder celenlal. 3 bedrooms, dining room, basement, 2-car garage, acre of land. Only *17,500 land contract S5000 down. CALL 4*1- RAY GMC axcallad by Bart Cqmmlns, 391- 334-3334 2100.______________ I----------------- CEMENT AND BLOCM WORK, fraa Londscaf 1-A MERION BLUE FOR »OR or REP dOAAMihdiAL, iNDuItRiAl raoldamtol brlek awgjafwawt GUINN'S CONST. CO. . BLACK DIRT & Oalivarad. 152-5462._________ Soptic Tank SBrvicB I COMPLETE SEFTIC WORK.,Si and watar Unas, 432-3042, FE 2- 991-2671 nan* Neon, patloa, plain and col-ir. General Camanf Contractort, IAFRATR Specializing In and iliMwalk,. I A-l MERION BLUE J" ' Complat ~ 107 Fret act, 402-71* andteap LANDSCAPING, rotblnlng walla. J. H. Wellman nos, LABS, , . DIXIE AND HOLLY NEW COMMERCIAL BUILDING 2S x 40 or SO x OIL air condition plenty ol parKIng, located el 3 TOWNSSNO SEPTIC REPAIRS and nZ.’SlSSif, __ _ -......... Cleon, carpeted, 3 ring room and dining wiw , room, 2 car gange. 010,000, OOtOOO *™70'1 down, tali on land contract; FE > BY OWNER. MILFORD, tri-level, lj image Is Important IN TODAY'S LIVING, why net llvq like the final! do? Thle fabulous 3-bedroom custom built brick ranch, hes carpeted living WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE ^■.nr;iiiftn,j(a,fflsioyour l,t> ■— BACKUS- BLOOMFIELD HILLS Custom built 3 bedroom trl-lovel an large lot. Hug#,Hvl«« room, leyaly kitchen with nullMns and braakfait area, ipaclous - paneled tomlto room with tlreplece and deer-wOfl leading to sunken patio, 2W batht, 2 car attached garage. CW wa,,|[ and tawar. Can assume 4 par cam monSS#- cm tmvt: Try. AUBURN HEIGHTS 4-B«lroom ranch, large living room, senarete dining room, toll baiement wTlh recreation room. room with end lit baiement, MERION GLUE BASEMENT end i brill give I m m a d I . 331-4971 or 1-434*044. V BL U E sod,« yd. delivered, i MAI NT WAN! DOMINO CONST. W 674-3955 RELIABLE Ak^H/SH Centrecten.i er~new. Pree oil; S24-434l743S.lS0r Free aettmatoe. Specialized In ~f (•ramie Tilt DAN'S CERAMIC TILE, alato floori, » marble dm, Inf — ai's lawn ..jmmmmmmmm and fall clean up*. Cutting, MnlllzInB aniFipraylng. 473-3993.1 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING Sodding, seeding, ibrubi. llcinsed Nunery Men. 4Q3-70S0. DON PORTER LANDSCAPING, fertilizing, lawn maintenance, Sed-dlng, delivered and layad. 473-0777. unique. LANDSCAPE doilgm; or Spraying SarvicB DALBY & SONS TREE SERVICE NOW ELM SFRAY. S7S-6670, ____SuspendBil C«llingf A - OWENS CORNING Suspended calling William Lannon - 6&2195. SUSPENOED CE.ILINGS Trimmilig Service STORAGE SPACE FOR RENT. 40x90 baiamant. Dry. Saparatt ailay^antranca. Birmingham---------- BY OWNER, badroom tri-laval, extras, $1000 dow $12,000 mortgage, trading our aqulty home. 335-2441. NORTH lido, 3- , tachad 2-car garage, In prastlgo neighborhood near Watkins Laka. 141,500. HAGSTR0M, REALTOR 4900 W. Huron OR 4-0351 MLS_________After 4 p.m. FE 4-7005 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY, 4 model Sale Mourn 0 DOWN All thot It needed to e and zpan 2 bedroom I Northern High araa coin. Large bedroom. 49 the tr... Free eetlmoto, ttosto’* *no,h*r *x,r*‘ FuM prlc* ' MURPHY PARK IY OWNER, 00' Lake Orion frontage, s bedroom, 1VS bath., 07,000 down to existing 4 per cent contract with 190 • month no ogenti.- 403-3*50. BRIAN zoic' REALTY the W* sold your neighbor's home sing Multiple Llaflng Service «m,iWukdeys 'til * Sunday 10-4 ond 15200 Dixie Hwy. 433-0702 SiMINOLE JOSlPHSINGLETON ^REALTOR 1427 ORCHARD LK. RD. 335-011( 1 KEEGO HARBOR, 2 bedrooms, 0*1, city water end .ewer, fenced, lm- baument, brick gbraoe, possession, terms. Calf t Ion—it a Gorof* , Q»anln|____ Meomml A Garage Clunlnt Light Hauling FE MW ________ F» WH1 DOZER*. EACKHOR, LOADER Salts & Rentals U$fd Bobcat Loaders Burton Equipment Co. ’ 7* E.’ Auburn Rd.____.05*353 TALBOTT I . service, wo i ond Hordwsro •UP|Mi COOPER OUTER* DANCE. dulfod. 451AM7. Auburn. *5*5010. Coll I-A ALTERATIONS, .SUITE, COATI, i A-A MOVING ■I ond Letio dnti Mbdern Storage .tflmatw. Insured. MY 1-1*15. GARDNER'S TREE SERVICE. Fru *»Hm«toi. Very r*ai., 335^744, OAKLAND TRIMMING SERVICE Tree Trlmlna end Removal Fully Iniui payment, at 5(1 plui tax-: BY OWNER, 1 BEDROOM ranch the vicinity ot Lockhavon Elizabeth Lake LAUINGER 574G517______ 2 BEDROOMS ttyit hemp, lb car gai living room, fenced In. Land Art ADDITIONS AND giregei cement work. Call tor our fru estimates. Springfield |jjjmg | xff7 r_"A6DITIONS. Atftjr. porch enclosure, electrical and K I H. HOME IMPROVEMENT, aluminum elding, rooting, and carpantor work, additions, (tola or smell |eb«), 4*2-7tW. MODERNIZATION Addition, el alTtyaaa, Camant werk.topHHli. remodeling, boiimgntz. amu. family rooms, dormers. Complete specUlUto. Ft i ALL TYPES ALTERATIONS — pick, A-l LIGHT MOVING. TR ! reasonable. FB 4-12% i Al LIGHT HAUTlNG am I,___________FE 541tt . A-l LIGHT TRUCKlffo ot any kind Drywqll , CHUCK'S DRYWALL AND toping •orvlco. New and ramodaling# alto palntlM. 399-3416 before 1:30 and Eavsstroqdiing M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED emaleto ..vesirouflhlng barvlet -Fru uf. ^473-4044, 473-5442 A-l INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Family room., rough er flniih, derm, re, porch.t, roe root Ian .roemt, kitchens, balhrooms.. It.t. Ilcemed. Raat. Call alter 5 B.mJ 402-045. __ _____ Carpentry and cement work I fru tstlmttol. *52-5252. I - “ca'RBIHYrVwOTk'A'fftyp..: BtGcirrem simczs FB 03110 FBS3520I............. t 6 M F L4 f I MODiRNIZATION. ADRIAN'* FROM7>T ELECTRICAL addition, or rapalrt, 20 yaon ax- utvlca, reaienobl* riloi. 473-2712. perltnet, llctnud and Insured, MCCORMICK ELECTRIC •1*1, tor a Ruldantlal wlrlng-Servic# i prr-* ----------- Cor IxcavntlRg 'BULLDOZING, Finish Grading, ickhee, Bauraenti. *74-3429. FB 1201. , A-FslRvTdi. SasemENTO, ooaiic Fru dozlna wl at fill. 4253710. Iackhoe cuitcnn |sb you i Plisct's. Medornli Carpentry -INTERIOR ill • ing, 40 year exp* irtwpwtwr utlmatu, 334-2179. FE 4-9191 tost BULLDOZIfiOo baiamant, grading, 632-3042a Fa S Ponds, Lakes and Canals Carpeting Dug er cletntd, 425-4530, 079-0513, Fencing PIANO TUNI' ►-REPAIRING OSCAR SCHMID* ------FB 1-51 Painting and Decorating l-A CUSTOM FAINTING Pro* ooMmato* EMI! REASONABLE RATES. 330-1344 AFTER 4 P.M. IIght hiulIng ......... 574%3) Centric* Term*. 3 BEDROOMS 2 itory, full btumont, tori* .... petto, excellent cendlitan. Slt.tfK) on land contract torma. FLATTLEY REALTY '420 COMMERCE RB._______3434911 2 STORY ___i home large living room i gueit clout, full dining r I kitchen ‘ kitchen. I car garage with ptvtd drlvi barbecue, toned In let I Prlc* 117,000. Cell OB-IMO, BUD' MAND0N LAKE FRIVILIGIS - 2 bedrooms, 013,400. ‘FHA tormi. WE HAVE OTHER-LAKE PROPERTIES COSWAY REALTORS —* 6B1-0760 ' Cake Oakland - FRONTAGE Bl-L*v*l. Aluminum sided finished w.ik-oul baument. S car garage on 50‘x340' tot. Tormi. Call YORK find this 2 bedroom ranch with will-to-wall carpeting, remodeled ceramic tiled beth, and 2"* cer gernge, share house tor lust 117,000. P-7. CALL RAS TODAY I 474-4101 RAY- WATRRFORD AREA, I bedrooms, toll batemenl, 2-car flange fuel painted en .the outside. City water, new uptle field. FHA approved. 014.500, Ztro down. CALL 001-0370. GMC ■ wist 6lo6MFiSl6 j ASSOC., 31*5 Union ■ I 34*5325, *V( ELIZABETH Like privileges go aluminum and ifone, hem* (could ba 3) strut. Excellent MAR.OT.TA A With t h condltl throughout. Hal finlehad rac. ro 2-car garage, paved drive, beagl landscaping. SM It todty. J S23.t00.wltn tormi. ' ARDEN REALTY uron, Pontiac 502-1 answer Cali 343-0540 3434 W. Huron, BACKUS REALTY 332-1323 ___l. MFl*!* GOODRICH AREA SOUTH OF DAVISON — charming 2 bedroom, dining room, large living room, lull baumant, poisibieJ bedrooms up. Urge lot, with 431 frontage, epjirox. 2 ecrtl. Wall landscaped. Priced to ull. *21,00*. SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT IN ROCHESTER , 134 w. Unlvonlty (2nd llojr) . 4514100 Of ■ J34-31J* HITTER NORTHSIDE — Llk* now • room* , with 2 baths, could be 2 family flat, alum, and brick. Ownar saya "sail". Call today. NORTHERN HIGH ARIA Jf rooms and bath, nice lot. 014,05*, land contract tormi. TOR, 3792 Ell*. Laka. R*. with option to buy to qualified NICHOLIE-HUO HAULING AND RUBBISH L_________ __llrucflon clean up. 4*24043. LIGHT HAULING and odd lobt. 32*- A RELIABLE PAINTIK exterior. Fraa eit. 3344 ,-l Intorler and axtorii excellent work at prices, cal) anytime. 33 met kitchon, corner lot, 110,300. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE _; 301-1000 __________ 243-3413 j 1141 W.. Huron it. MTORY BUNGALOW, tookirlna 1 bedrooms, ctrpollng, dining room end living rqom redecorated, welkin storog* attic, full baument, enclosed porch, garage an* prlc* .... quick aale. P43. ODAY 4744101 '__• FE 1-7174 associates, NEW 3 BEDkOOM Aluminum ranchi ir hut, toil occupancy, vu you lm Frank Marotli , 3175 Union Lk. Rd. 14* CALL RAY TODAY A-l FAINTING AND PAPER HANGING rsm LIGHT HAULING. BASEMENTS P R K gereau cleattod. 574-1242, m LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING rubMoh, All dirt, Eroding end grentil^nd front-end toedlng. FE 3- fRAoil,' MOVINOTCLiANUF. Call -----*120 p.m. FB 4-9224. RAY f fcBDFOOM EUNOALOW In Pon-flac, only $12,000 FHA. Living room. mlsT thl. r your doners. WEEN 14 P. 243-0476 tor i Don't the molt for your CALL BBTWBBt BROKER - ' ""to® 5a™ HRWT: - in 30 oayt. uuniuu* FHA mortgag* Nothing Down raaionabla. Fraa guaranttod. V yr$. axp. can anytlma, 6I2-S763. ___________ FA IN TIN Q. DECOR AT ING. com-j merciai and ratldantlai. Call 682-$974. QUALITV WORK AisudEO,' Faint-ing< Paparlng; Wall WathlnQ; 673 TRASH HAULING. IS2-2940 spray fainting Trucks to Rent ^^y***^^M ^-l 1 ?.i.k.r ilh with vanity, Kon Plastering Service 1-A PLASTERING, NEW WORK er poicWno, troo utlmatu, 34*5f~ PATCH PLASTER ING', 4*11 kind MOVirl, OR WIm._________ Plumbing t Hooting CONDRA FLUMRING A HEATINO AND f QUlFMI Semi Traitors Pontiac Farm and Upholstering cerimlc r. Old, plui * Ront imoll h makt paym —tdowni 4th badroom. Florid* rum, IVa bathi, beautiful decor, Im-meculeto heuukupino, oversized -~w MtltoO. Bv l-IMO. FHA All you need Is * good credit retlng. a steady lob, and you can own this modern 2-tomlly dwelling located on East eld* of Pontiac. Rent from upelairi apartment will ilmost make mortgage gay- Kii L appointment mini. Includes 2 and bath—onaaen tloor, separate entrances, full basement, corner lei. For Information cell—JAMES A. TAYLOR, Rllltor, OR 4-0104 Now I bedroom ranch, aluminum tiding, ivy eoromle baths, wolk out baumant, 2 car garago, on torn Pino weeded tot, 1 block off OH______ CARPETED, ROOM, FULL_ BASE, PINING HINT ALUMINU CARPET CLINIC WAREHOUSE. El living! eh carpet. 413-1094. tARPSTI, TILES AND Carpst C|*EElHg A-l CHAIN LINK Fru u! Ft repairedront mffM r-ru **'• ra I nt> or 474-3*41. -j- Chain link FfffcTri? ter Fen. _FE t-0442. ______________________ PLUMBING A If* ATI NO. Lai raupholslerad. 225-1700, tru utl-rge Do It. mom. ' main. Eves, and Sat, 53*4545. • I 0FM6tiYbEffifd dY VldRXVB' - Restaurants tSSSSS^BSSlff^ Wall ClEaners BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS Wells cleaned. Rns, Satisfaction guaranteed. Insured. FI 2»i43l,_ WeeNt-$#9tiiiiiwrHBiipmlr WATER SOFTENER prebtomt Far ____ JAR-A-GB* SIDING ON LARGE SHADED LOT. CLOtf TO COL- Cash For Your equity HACKETF 363-6703 • Clarkston to writ. Your OXFORD OFFICE PERRY LAKE STARTER HOME Field Hon* bungalow with 4 lot*, nice large. shidi trill, ipactau* llvlna room with fireplace, enly 1)2,500. Smell down payment, lead contract tormi. Aik fqr M7-R. Quick ootuttlon. CLEAR LAKE—BRAND NEW Only 4is,**0 full prle*. 1* ptr C*n» down will hindle, FHA. Cih V piled living room, large kitchen and dlnlno L. Mgka appointment, today to ue 35P-R. ; 10 ACRE PARK 1,34* sa. ft. ranch. 1 bedroomi, many bvlll-ln futures, finished, baiement. toneed-ln backyard with patio, I* sere subdivision, park, „BrXvHeau,. Bl*P».*fli .ngighb call for appointment. Pn H-163-V. Tor quick mir~mz CUSTOM QUAD-LEVEL ON LAGOON Located In en* of the nicest art as In Oxford, owner Ming trani-, at Is your geln, 4 large ipieloui bedroomi, panoramic , room, split-rock llreploee, plaiteqgd thrauoheut, only ’, many txtrii, makt appointment to IU 330-B today. *44,7*0, 823 S. LAPEER ROAD 628-2548 2 BEDROOM, torn 49 Sal* Houibi LEGES AND KXFRESWAYt. IN ranch wit AUBURN HEIGHTS^ *22,90* CASH, drapes, cerpellng, Iraet I* balhi, 21* car e*ra*a, ---------MEBPEEMMan _.„u, -carpeting, loti at- extra* TERMS AVAILABLE. BY OWNER Only 537,*0* On FHA or land con- * tract li posiibie. p-i. ■____ CALL RAY TODAYI 474-4101 453.(371 UL 2 «M.____ 3-BEDROOM RANCH, lorgs kitchen and dlnetto, carpefad living room and hell, MILL'S REALTY For ALL Your F60I Batata Ntftdtl Off lets in L«kf Orion and LapAtr HHI 464x4309 streft. Only $16.5 Ctmtnt Work „.... Hoor Sa^lw^^^^ ISoipOSiEO5^^ FLOOR 8ANPING AND LAYING Old floors rtflnlihfd, 627477* col WSBSBm TZ-J, I Fleer Tiling 1 cemeny-—-^™-----.J.)CUSTOM PLOOR CDVI Prop atMmit MACK ROOFING CO. Wetagg ATCHISON'S WILDING Howard_________Flj 3" WELL PRILLINO, wall plus1 closing colts, CALL GMC RAY OPEN '3 BEDROOM ("baumant. l' ltraplacas.^i rogo. Lorgo lot. Mutt 00 WATERFORD HILL Sacluwen glut convanlanca, 4 bedroom, and huo* family room en big lindicaaM let at andet qulit itrodt. GBrogp end patio, 534,900. Extra let available. 3 bedroom ranch Sick Mil, Nlea lot. Nur school, n^ be bought To axlitlnq. 514 ROYER REALTY, Inc. ar,ch . w tm MiDROOM HOMlr Garage and imenl. 1S5 Jackson In Pontiac la areaartv. Minimum 17,500. tforkston School Area WALTER'S LAKE FRIVILEOES, loeftfd W0$t .of Clarkston Golf Court#. Enttr from N, Isfon and AJ&At^UFANCY *0 { badroom IrILavai .......m>?5t 4 bedroom ranch ....MUM 473-140* SYLVAN 4EMB0S DRaYY6(4 AREA—4 bedroom col-onlal, 11b baths, (pM prlvllagas. immedlata occupancy. Sunken formal *r*MH. 024,000, occupancy, m, flreplai Carpetyig i rvu,f i tract torffll, FARRELt • Northern High ‘Area ' lull baiamant. M garaga on cornor $19.900. Lon# 00ft* I mY^elSYtcroll lnF!nlffe ship, Kitchen racanlly iremodeled. FARRELL REALTY > 1405 N. Oadyka^d, Fontlac 9 A.M. TO 8 P.M 1204 WILLIAM! LAKE RD. . Dir,; Drlv* wait en M-St, turn north on Wllllami Lk. Rd, 1 badroom ranch, laraa family roam, full MUmonl, 515,770. On your lyt. BEAUTY CRAFT WOMB* 474-422) "0 DOWN" - fait Now York Sl.,J bedroom ranffi; j car garaoe, with attached screened gatle, corner' lot, NEED ROOM7 — Close to 170* iq< ft. eatonral en Mlhlbaw, 4 bedroom, 21b MIDI, tut? basement, ^ chV..*r$ n ti'A ' | r uo.ooo. 1 BEAUTIFUL TREES end friendly nelghMra mako for a happy ................... aft n kitchen with built-in* J0SLYN FAMILY HOME the t ik tloi TOS *■ Teiagraab .. 231-0124 gbcHkiTM ah'Ia HSMij IIXRMItoF 7 _ ill-53711 Rochester - By Owner Sur,r,4«.ur.Tr.&i . oak fiobri, plaitarad w*i|», ioporota dining i with got hoof ond o 2 oar garago# FHA (on TAILORED FOR YOUR POCKETBOOK North side fha, luxurleui cerpellng and drape* In living i rooms, modernized kitchen with eating jpeca. lovely panal bedroom, Mument, gas M*l, and garage. COUNTRY LIVING CITY STYLE An axcelltnl aluminum ranch hem* .an an fail subyrMn -14*', o*k fleers, plsstorsd Willi, Hb MthS, 10 x22' kilt combination With bulli-ln dish washer, lllb'xl*' .family f full Mumantr amt 2 ear attoehad garag*. DORRIS & SON REALTOR 2536 Dlxli Hwy. MLS ) OR for Wont Adi 0iol 334>49M 49 Sol* LOVELAND , 5 BEDROOM ,: Lira* living room, pining room, kitchen. porch, *lum|nunn etormi and screens. Oil privilege. W. dlitrlcf. Pull | Ltona Loveland, Realtor 1100 Con Llkt Rd. Hl-llli _________ IRWIN “YES, Wi TRADE" EAST SIDE I* where till* largo family homo I* located, 1 badroomt, formal dining room, full baoamont, gee hoot, linear garage, all Mle for Ill.tfO and an a-z farm*. OSMUN ST. Nice 1 bedroom homo with larga living room, dining room, kitchen and full baiamant. Hot go* heat and ’ hot Water, only 111,000 on PHA term*. JESSIE ST. )• . where thl* J-bodroom older ham* I* located. foyklOO' lot. Mae •It tM city convenience*. Can be bought on land. contract. Priced at only 010,100 with 12.000 down or trig* In your praeent houta. ’ MODEL HOME 1 bedroom, larga kitchen, ceramic file bath with vanity, full. basement, alum, elding, eatled Blast window*, marble sills, oak foora and priced at under 010,000. Left Easy FHA HOME WITH ACREAGE This 2 year old alum, rancher, located on TO acre* In Independence—Twp.,—features » bedrooms with large cl oeate. spacious Hying room, country style kitchen, TO baths and full basement. Priced to .sell at only 001,400. R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor opin Dally M A&G BIG 1 ^flvlng room. , 1. 27' kitchen and dim 4. 22 X 22' garaga 1. Full basement ANDERSON & GILFORD Building & Realty II Highland Rd, (M-W) HH ANNETT STRUBLE AUBURN HEIGHTS AREA FOR THE SMALL FAMILY on a nice corner lot location. Call for price i OFF PERRY 1-year-old fat al sharp OhW Hvlth Ing room and "‘Wt wupie of nice will assume' tms tow moni Priced at 110,700. REALTOR 1020 Highland Rd. (M-lt) Next to Prank's Nursery 674-3175 OFFERS AUBURN AVENUE 0 room home In go LR, DR, J first fmsi —up. Full b DRAYTON PLAINS 0 room alum, ski upstairs. S S3 5 BEDROOMS Mill K^pWajS iSM: Available on FHA terms. lltlMT INDEPENDENCE TWP. 2 BEDROOM 1 lake prlvIMMs < This homa le in ^/^ms iSST THE PONTIAC^RESS, WEUNKSDAy, OcVeBKli Sal* Houits 491 Sal* Hamas 49 OMf^Mw'^Wn & 674-3105 A&G FE 5-8183 EAST SIDE , Thrb* bedroom, two story older home. Living * dining rooms. Kitchen, Basement. Oat HA heat. Vacant, closing costs move YOU In. NORTH SIDE ThrM bedroom ranch, Carpeted living room. Kitchen with built In renge * oven. Utility. Ose HA , .heat. Oarage. Vacant. PHA terms available. PONTIAC KNOLLS I Vacant. Clotlng coiti mova you ■va. call M*. ALTON PB 4-5301 Nicholi* & Harger Co. me W. Huron it. PR MI02 TIMES ARRO jtoiijjh. bedrooms, pMelbte Heat, Full llniihed •rag* and diMVee Ottered af only 122,700 on contract terms. Ohown by Val-U-Way SOUTHWEST SIDE front rancher with , Oas fleet. TIM us Beeutl priced 3'/2 ACRES - Located near Davleburp with a larga brick ranch. This custom built home features: three twln-tlsed bedrooms, 2 flreolaeti, dining room, family room, TuFf boso-r ment with finished recrsetlon room. Oak floora. Plastered walls.: Attached 2 car garage and paved —drive end etreatT Offered at only: *42.100. Call right away for your pareanal appointment. NEW HOMES Built an your lot for ai lltl *14,500. Peatures Include bedroome, ceramic bath, l •lied kitchen wIM Parmlca boards, oik floors, alun elding, storms and eeraane. Insulated walls and calling and full basement. Wa have a modal wa can show — so can ut for more particulars. ........— -I WHEN' YOU IREK OUR SERVICE [fhim-, you forft , LAKE FRONT COiTAGE I story 2 bedroom.; With gee beet screened porch, MMs same repair lot Ok on the wtterhes nice frees. Center dejallt. 1 /„ ~r': 3 BEDROOM 1 Brick end frame ranch In excellent condition. Brick fireplace In living room, large rear porch, Wear ah' tachad garage. Underground soo gallon fuel tank, fruit fraae, specious lot,- pertly fenced.:- Excellent neighborhood wth v lehe privileges. Cell tor deting. "T- 682-2211 MARGARET MCCULLOUGH lopi...:. -mm 3 New Custom Ranch Hom*s Lots—Acreage l‘ci*ft£8m.>M»y temiTfffi?. —2H Acres of Privacy tM,WMr'*n"ri $7500 TERMS Mrlab Within one block of elementary, piece undevej school.. 3 Mdrooms.ful beta- Ray today, « an O'NEIL YOU With "J01N THB MARCH TO TIMES" lav* you i urpl# tun •ndy boa jr foM? •vaiiaDia mar is conventional in JifiBn Vit Inspirational In Concapt. walled terrace to the elevated $59,900 ANDERSON & GILFORD Building & Realty It Highland Rd. (M-W) MM m landtc ,_ PHAtehms. NORTHEAST SIDE ■aautlful 4-bedroom home with full basement and a TO car garage. Larga carpeted formal dln-|H mem. Roomy kitchen Wltn Large earjMted 117,MO, farms. OTTAWA DRIV* BRICK £ Bedrt “ kltchalh bedroom ceMlel. LR with SYLVAN LAKE FRONT i baths. Owner S ear an. gar transferred, (PM ........ . WE WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. MLS! Office Open Evenings * Sunday 1-4 in Evenings 1, 338-0466 Priced at 118,710. ■HA terms or tradi ■ hams. YOU CAN TRADE FOR ANY HOME WE HAVE FOR SALE Vol-U-Way Realty and Burning Co. FE 4-3531 141 Oakland Ava. Open 7-1 MILLER Times Realty Wideman $500 DOWN fHA TERMS NORTH SIDE RANCHER, 1 WHY NOT TRADE? GOOD LOCATION Prtttv home, beautiful lot located In desire bit ’Like Anpelus Oolfvlew Estates. You'll find this brick arid Cape Cod hams a real comfort mlly living, l large ' wnn room for 2 mors, charming larga living i fireplace, WMjllM LEACH WILL BUILD UNDER CONSTRUCTION White Laka Townahlp, ready for your Mlectten Is tolt lards 3-bedroom brick ranch with family mem with flraplaca, lots of extras, 2714200 liooo e Ion, call 2 i-i ACM parcVLi, ronad cc horses are allowed. White Lake area. Price IM00. AL PAULY >R UCCO Evas, OR 27272 2 LOTS, 71’xlMV Star trado program. FINANCING li AVAILABLE 5925 HIGHLAND RD. (M59) 33MHI 1742142 97»ffof STOUT'S BEST BUYS it. Jo—phe Sylvan Manor. 99 acres. An «XCfll«n1 isfmant, Ground contain Klroom Dutch colonial r 19,700. 7 ACRES. 9 bedroom ronch, am. Stalla for naraaa. Tack i pring fad pond. IMAOO. 4 ACRES. Could uaka Front. ! homo. Barn Dark Laka [ with tall lor only tt$!ISo.0&lya ua a can on thla on# and lata talk trada, ? No. 1-37 FOUR BtOROOMS Brick and alum. Cipt Cod In fha Sylvan area. Separata dining roam, TO bath—ceramic flit, plush carpeting. TODAY tall yfataly SPARE-TIME mechanict featuring large M x 102 lot, basement with pat heat, oversized garage with oil furnace. Many extree t^.r»rMftg/,r^ WHILE THE OL' MAN WORKS . Lein for only U4,7Sd, Bo §3* IB IK *2 EXCEPTIONALLY NICE .AS •amWtt. Rf»Jy*other axtraTau'for lust ffwtA HERRINOTON MILLS, wsoraom *400 moves you Inll Immedletl HERRINOTON HILLS, bhedreom -----1th many r— '=^-— Mb on you inll ERICK WEST SIDE 1 jH 11 bedroom home, Feature* large living 'throughout. jrti 49 Sale Heuiet SJK.0 block ‘IT'S TRADING TIME" r ga ktop drive, situated in e fine reeldential area with an ranlanca* In and paid fori Has beautiful vlaw of Sylvan LAKE FRONT ON SYLVAN LAKE This three bedroom ranch has everything for the dlecrlmlnatjnp buyer. 20 ft" living room with beautiful draperies end carpeting and brick fireplace. Family tiled kitchen with left of cabinet - epace. Has finished lower level with walkout) completely carpeted with fireplace andfwet bar. Two car garage and nicely land scaped yard, inclules extra* too numerous to mention. A real buy af 111,000 with Substantial down payment on Land Contract. CALL POE A^gAPPOINTMENT. OTTER HILLS » landscaped i two raised bar. Two to pallo, hearth fireplaces, large finished recreation room with bathe with ceramic and vanities. 2Vh car attached garaga . pavad drive. For the children, there It a Community pool with I 1 ----------------------------1 Lake*. Close to school! and shopping. YES, W^/WILL TRADE I LIKE NEW area. Larga Contract.—121,1 private entrancse, 2 < WM .ye ___________________ VTtgFNflc buy it 920,000. «niii ttoriipr ipkil Inlthtd bascmtnL ._ Vary . nlct landicapad Thl* well keel little 2-bedroom home priced Jo jell fert. Lend Cam I* iyet Mot. Entrance closet, ceramic! 7«rma pr FMA t«rm* evelleble. bath, pat heat, baiamant, TO car i immediate poesasslon. Call pn .IflV oarage, and cuia as a button. Priced |0«* me*1 right too. cell today. ! 2-BEDROOM EAST eld. home, all Claude McGruder | Realtor I jHWWm vou Fu" prl£# dSffli ™ 2-0262 agL ■ Mi W. HURON OPEN * TO 7 .^jr* bet Cell 474-2222 .for irvlM“'room, lirgt let'. school AR^A. HOLY AREA L*.mm ..mp 3 bedroom rambling' brick rai EAST SIDE approx, ona acra of land. Full b< OR FHA TERMS W* ■*.l?*> bull* '".'"ti.SSIa 22J! 1 vuir ea • fMKrn’pLar7iSifie^?iaid1 ■*r« *ttm^ oir?B. Lrte trade. IK *r«ch« THERE'S NOTHING LIKE A _ . HOME OF YOUR OWN TtKmTw And the time to buy If I* NOW. reef and rank ere g< LITTLE FARM — Newly.. elded will 4-room and beffi •Ituated on farm ill* parcel In Jot ment wIM First d be subdivided, 1 bedroom, TO irn and chicken coop, ser.wxi. BROOCK ‘"Srtxuvjr1 MA 6-4000 4444890 l-to ACRE RIVIW AND stream fenced d^taICs l*nd,cap*a' call fo I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 412 W. Huron If. 734-45! EVE. CALL- ________________132-44! Multiple Lleflna : HARRISON - furnfshed cabin, paneled glessee beautiful secluded setting. Ideal for deer hunting and on’canSTl ediolnlno'lalte. Very nxrzJte-*4* LAPEER SfMO, 4* secluded acre* In one'of 1 ~ flsteet' growing acre* of HiuttMl 1 lake elf*, Weal, location for hors* farm. Yours -for only 1470 per acra. Very liberal term*. 4444540 EVES. 771- lapeer 4714a her* It Me bargain you have been looking tor. BEAUTIFUL HORSE SETUP, box etalls, white board fenced, yearround live stream runs through property, 101 acres end modern home can be yours tor only *54,450. Lend eontrecT available. CALL <14-11 lb EVES. 7244270. IMLAY CITY 49220, 40 WE HAVE MORTGAGE MONEY AVAILABLE TO HELP OUR BUYERS FINANCE... IF ,Y0UR HOME <11 NOT BECOMINO TO YOU—IT SHOULD BE COMING TO Oil A listing with KAMPSEN bring* you a targe, reedy list of welting HOME BUYERSI Results of pest sales prove cur ‘1071 W. Huron St. MLS, 681-1000 Sab Hamas 49Sab Housas 49 WILL GUARANTEE THE SALE OF YOUR HOME ling*, l acra lake site, exc. bunding elf*. Only RUN. Very liberal tonne. CALL 4444M0 EVES. ISM17B. PONTIAC mttt lovely 1 bedroom rench typ* heme, pet heet, carpeting. Plastered, storms and screens, paved drive, choice of schools, storage building, owner must mm PHA. or mortgage can be assumed. Prtof 117,100. CALL 4444540 EVES. 7734744. IMLAY CITY 17414, Mis large country estate it in very feet growing ere*, 130 wooded acres, pond and river on property, large barn and several other out mIMIim, Ideal retreat tor the herd working business men. PM* OR 4444140. GOODRICH AREA 17111, her* bra lm secluded acre* doe* to 1-71. This wooded parcel Is Just one mne off Nils. Lovely ifl». to bund, a country hem*. If you enley Me pOacb end auto* of Me country, you won't went to miss this buy. 1710 per acre. i/BTiiZr* LAPEER AREA wooded parcel li rolling scenic ac l,V *UZr PRIZE PACKAGE ALL BRICK bungalow In Plo- CALL NOWI LAKE FR0NT-$18,900 COZY PEACEFUL HOME on a prlvata laka. Ptatura* C larga panalad family room, ceramic bath, braakfaet room •f|d attached garaga. Qulat, acanlc natural 'tobgttlria with a view ef two lekee. CALL NOWI I *14 DELUXE LAKE FRONT CALL TQDAYII C-H-A-R-M WITH A CAPITAL SEEI Luxurious living-Met Include* 4 bedrooms, 2. ceramic bathe, huge family room wIM extra fireplace. Ooerwell to petto end kino-IIZBD pool with all Me extras. Lake privileges on kylvan Lake. You can dictate Me terms. BUZZ BATEMAN TOOAYI •II 100 YEARS OLD CENTENNIAL HOME com- Large wooded lot. FAIT SALE PRICE t20.M0. CALL TOOAYII- *100 OLD ENGLISH RETREAT e striking view ef the lake. 123.750. CALL NOWI I PS2 ■u location tor your country estate. Only 1471 ptr acre more land avellablt. 444-1140 EVES. 447-3534. E*veltabl#._ CALL YALE AREA — Whleperlng pin**, 2 .mllet test, M-lf, spacious *_bedraom home on 14 scree. Exeeltonf Mm, .ene • and pole pirn, mar* land ivellaM*. 121,700, very liberal terms, CALL *4445*0 BVBI *21-4743. JOHN A. ROWLING, Inc. REALTOR 127 W. GENESEE, LAPEER Model Close-Out EASTHAM ELIZABETH LAKE FRONT Thl* lovely large 4 bedroom home It watting fir your inspection. Let us mention lust a tow features, t. Large carpeted -living room. WIM mnMmr ttrepiac*. £ puii finished basement, I. Log eaMn mum. 4. Large lake front lot. Call for further Information. ----NEW-LISTING - 1 bedrooms full basement, 2 full baths, city water and sewer, Price 117,M». PHA. 4 BEDROOM FHA Lore* old family home, full basement, modern kitchen, fireplace, pee heat, fruit trees, 2 car garage, lot Wx2M'. Priced at S2t,700. near GMTC. A GOOD START For the lust married or ■ couple, 2 b x 434 Bste-TO-car 12-«! unIversIty AREA Brick aiid aluminum constructed 12 family unit zoned commercial on ich, t ptvsc read doe* to Oakland! lee-1 University end community coltogu.l ttry | pur growing eras eng contains 2 4-■0*,'room and.bath unit wIM full * .4!iment. Ideal Investment. 141 LAKE FRONT COLONIAL-, acreage, wooded and rolling. Fowj*^ Realty. 3*34322, MS-1404, .4 OP ACI ga* set 35500. TU 1-1117. to acres, m mfiwta*............Pep 330'xt320'. Nelly ere*, weeded railing horses eifiwed, eio.too. Terms. SHELDON, 421-5457. lb ACRES NEAR Ortonvllle, T, MM off Mil. Good Item* end Investment era* MM per acre, term* 127-20*1, 4 to 7. too ACRE FARM, M aCTM « beautiful building life. Phan 2*74712 after ram., R, L. told. 140 South Street, bed 1144. P.O. BOX 231, m. Make your Reyman principle Instead of J ■nil place to stay, This Mr** bedroim brick ranch Is on* of Me best byys In our office, Excellent (leer plan, lane* family room wIM f)replace, TO a large 2Vh car garage. Be with generous land contract terms. WARREN STOUT, REALTOR i45« N. Opdyke Rd. 171-1111 prtvTle of Viiur l,._ „ . TradtT Full price ISLE .IN LAKE ORION ara offering 3 veer round ho cottages for W! term*, call us (usf $12,400 Call ui Toda Lvait FHA i 363-8303 674-3126 335-7900 HALL NEW COLONIAL gpt.%r^ip? room. TO hethsTysement. Af-tec bed garage. Only R7,*t4. VON REALTY ML* 244) W. Huron GAYLORD file baths, large room. Offered at mil down payment Don't welt on this yters^njd endjn lieges. Why net mtk^tfi* best » of your irn to Mis home? why not Tredef Pul ■ I EMI c - No. 20-17: M6VE OUT OF THE HIGH ! , ■ Tiv ides land contract._tor TAX AREA---------------------------moredctol " ~ and Into Me "school ef Me year" I will TR, I___________ uea. Owner moving up North and| and cash tor fl unite *r more, no offering a nice,.. o(d*r, 4 bedraom agents nleaM, <72-7*14. family home. Kitchen recently: u,mVr n»i ---------------i—■-------- remodeled, new IXL cabinets and WC*T SIDE-formica counters. Alum, on the Located etosu. to ppnttec oun-outside, plastered watt*, hardwood Lake, privileges of course. Full prict 121,100. Call now! No. 1-21 MADISON JR. HIGH AREA Extra special 3 bedroom ranch located |u*t off Jotlyn on Crawl beiMment, oil heat, only 117400 with lend ccnli ■villibl*. IF YOU MUST HAVE LOCATION without much ACREAGE ICBBB. Clarkiton, beeuttfu l a paeeefull atmosphere, i w»To 7 ACRES. ____ rotorw, horse loving peot-- paresis to chooM tram. iHr 19 ACRES* ntar •ral Hospital In OHanvOforfo nlea country C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR pPEN7 DAYS CLARKITON ' W Ideal tof for smell bualMM an Mein it. SI2,*M, terms. BALDWIN AVE, FRONTAGE 171 - ft. frontage, corner U. W MS mn*,r^ M-17 * TELEGRAPH ABBA C-t zoning, 2Co fl, frontage, en < ton* Hwy., eioe* to mmM* * shopping. M71 front ft. ACRES — NORTH IIPB Wafer, rawer, franfoe* en J •trrats, Northern Nlgn * Pontiac Motor areo. pcuMM rfiofibig to multiple ep suitable for ehurch. Siam, lend oontrect term*. Annett Inc. Raalton 28 E. Huron St. 3384464 Office Open pvsnlngs * Sunday 14 COMMERCIAL FRONT AGE Elizabeth Lake Rd. 277* frontage. Only ui per front toot, tone quonset, building In need efrepelr, K. L. TEMPLETON, R*oltor 233f ORCHARD LAKE RD. EMMl COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS THREE UNIT! WITH HI FT. 'Wfiiais ssr«ri!%.a HAYDEN REALTY 363-7139 rwri iXClLLENf "Bl/llfiliT it BuiiNEii enraer ___s%Js3ks^m~ :X'X&u&'aUt!*0’ IwaSl le eertatoly t excellent carpeted living room ntra htdraems, fuil Iking distance To St, Benedicts church, City sewer and water. Price lie,m en Land Contract. Ne. <44 PEACE, PRESTIGE, PLEASURE Itatsa Where ^"kSd A^ Pripirty “ fl ACRES ON WATER,/!* octet en secluded eprma tog take, excellent mSS' jSW/l rSd5uitt,,Ul(*!7 Hlflhtend Rd., *73-1244. a choice Lake FttoNt much month Hteiw>M* jirin. and Ink,, tax and Ins. It beef* renting. Be firi call today. No. f- features TO carpeted ihrim *21,700 WIM • on PHA terms S-ACRE ESTATE —C Located In NEW MODELE Clerketon area, Including brautllul I. i bedroom brick ranch wIM full SXi, basement, 2Vk ear attached garage. w“' «n Wl Loads of extras. TO baths, brick fireplace. Meny more extras bit small bant. This. Is, * beeutM setting with towering !r*M. Let I oltsame location, noMIng a qualified 0| only, cieelng NEED A 4 BEDROOM HOME?, Men tooklng for. This large I InfarnnK numerous to i KINZLER LAKE FRONT TRI-LEVEL 4 well planned rooms, wIM colort gjaewiS 8sr«S5iB'4i5rr»j nice shad* and fruit .trera. Clerketon echoer*ra*. w* hey* tent. Quick WILL BUILD ranch home Call for moru Information LIT? TRADE windows your lot. to Laka Angalut Road Clarkiton Meadow* -----CwAiafoft HEARTHSIDE ■ ; / iVb ■__MEB rW* 1 to *24,750. Truly suburMn living M-ll i _____ago of Wetortbro.--—lln| US-10 A M-tl Clerketon Westrldp* of Watortbrt „ ______ (behtodpur Ledf of Lakes Church) pox Bey Estatos Elis. Lake Rd. * William* Lake Rd. RAY O'NEIL REALTY 352,POoNT!A^LAmKRR°Ad room and MM apartment up. Basement with gee Mat. Roomy shaded yard, investtgato Mist WARREN STOUT, REALTOR 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. 373-1111 cedar’ctoseto. WalSeuMower I fireplace and Mr; Many an gKr&aha*■% HAROLD R. FRANKS, Rtoalty EVERETT CUMMINGS, BROKER Lake Road 341-7111 cupancy. FHA term*. 124,700. BRICK BI-LEVEL - 1 bedn TED'S Trading 674-2236 TROY AREA . [EARTHSIDE OWNER SAYS “SELL" Prict reduced. Imagine ever 14M sq. ft. WIM 111 ft, af MeUttfill lake front hv lees Man 337.000. i battle, large living lly ream, 1 natural car attached garage- This Is e BUYI REALTOR 1117 ORCHARD LAKE,ED. 334-3193 - • 314; LAKEFRONT WHITE LAKE - A.bMroowy i etoty home wIM fireplace, in miiis, - * enclosed perch, M “ Easily converted to .— home, Being mn cempetely furnished Ter Only *20,000 with inly &Ll COLLECT 427-3*11 “IK1® septic lenk^mM e2h or -------- available. North Brandi arte, BUILDING SITE WANttb prlvata Whlta -, Indtpendanca or Township. 471-9491 BEAUTIFUL HILLSIDE BUILblNG sites, tow dawn payment. Witters Lake, Clerketon, WMWjto Clarkiton School Area howAr6 T. KEATING 22040 W. 12 MU* ^ Birmingham <113) 435-321* OR , *144*24 Evening Cette WWbMM Tennyson ». ' SayK \ How dull it |> to paut*, To mak* an and. To rust unburnishEd Not to shim in use. The Dutch ; Cbokbook scays it another way: Battar it is alraady to wear out, than rust out, yol SO If you ere net In need 0 rustoteum — ws prseenf fbeeeem eeMenl eMWhMttMJkir.. CLARKST0N AREA DEER LAKE — 4 wooded tots, *WM 8^1.138: BOB WHITE FARRELL 3 ACRES Pentlec Twp. en private « Ara* of eetato homes. FARRELL REALTY 401 N. Opdyke Rd. Pi __________3734m FOR SALE BY OWNER, t M Hsndrtdta «., Wetertord TWow Approx. 11400 eg. ft. mm» otter lot p°R-FAL^gjyri^ ■ ■,fcl*raltot5e MM ment toll If In guftide the VIII Romeo, on Me no tomtn St. Gas end Parmer tor wel REALTOR 4 BEDROOM RANCH ■arty American ef old Mick' and atone extortor In WaMlne Lake Mteraet ret* mortgage can. assumed or Easy FHA tern Your present home or lot In trad MULTI-DWELLING SITE And cmmerclel frontage, right Dixie Near 1-71 flxpraeeway. t ERWIN & SONS SYLVAN SHORE. Very well kept 2-bedroom, l-sto home. Carpet In living room, dlnli IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. tie extra sharp l-bedroom I i, hug* family room, d< lace, TO ceramic baths. fW-car Mated . garage, slate foyer, paved ----1 and drive, nlc* lot, walled i area. !3GtOO..C*Tl 124-2400. | JUST THE ONE FOR YOU w* have a tiMt end clean 1-xxn rancher In Me Pontiac ____iem School dtolrlcf, family room with brick fireplace, ' storms end screens, and t AKE PRONt: J. L. DellvWCo! "* L “ EM 3-71K LAKE PROPERTY, Poeelbto Income house MS 1 bedrooms up and eareo*. *31.000/'|*nd terms, cell Ray <744103 LAKE PROht, LAKE PRIVlLEOI tote, Cemmerao Coder Islaixl, M die Straits, Big Lakes. Fowler, 3*3- areel le ever to build II or more apartments, a wonderful combination end Investment only 121,100 on Lend Contract Terms. , JOHN KINZLER, REaltor 121* Dixie Hwy. . *23-0315 Multiple Lilt. Service Open S:304:30 fwtt A NEW WAY OF LIFE appointment. IS4.7S0, MACEDAY LAKE FRONTt Beautiful brick ranch home built In ' ring room, dining unity room MM scenic siYMi- Your own m Lake . Neva TO 49Sak Housn LISTING - SELLING - APPRAISING - BUILDING CE TOWNSHIP Ml* l .Mdreom ^bunyatow ST Ol tarma. sis.tuv. LET US SUGGEST INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP c*n buy this on PHA or Ol terms S1S.70S. a. In Ml* I bedroom brick home, t carpeted living room, large full Ion aroe, end pirtobi* Mr, fenced NEW M0DEL$ OPEN SAT, * IUN, 2-1 p.m. or by I COLONIAL AND MID-LEVEL: WMt Hum AVON liANCHERt Avon Rd.) lust east i Rd, eke Rd. KRYLON RANCHER * TRI-LEVEL: Hiller Rd. It Keylon Dr. REALTOR PONTIAC CLARKST0N ROCHESTER UNION LAKE 838-7161 625-2441 651-8518 3634171 EYE CATCHER * tor Me email family wh* went a hem* toetoed ef en apartment. * bedrooms, now kitchen W th toed* of cupboard space, bullt-lns, attached 2 ear oarapt, en • larpe lot, Mitot check ttsl* orj* cut, 117,700, GOLD DOOR KNOBS I • No ... but you'll.bb M hpopy with Mil SMdroom trl-tovel Met you won't mind ene little ML Conitrucflon end condition ef Mis home Is(TOPS. 2W-cer^ettoched isrsge, fenced yard, lovely eroe- and 674-2245 FRUSHOUR REALTY REALTORS - MLS 5730 Williams laka Rd. PM-Jra car gerege with eutometle door opener, ful7-basement, ettractlvety landscaped tot alt fenced. Call for appointment phase. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS 313 West Huron—Since 1715 PE 1-7441, Attar I p.m, 121-4041 KELLER "Al 3-f*mlly ii completely 137.50 per 1130.00 per me. Insurance. Call tor eppumnnann itil Mobil* Home In excellent con-litlcn and location, 45X70 ft. lot. itopa end aklrtln* etteched. Owners xxno north, only ee.ooo end move CLARK NEAT, SWEET, COMPLETE a Perry Park, Mle on* Me everyMIng tor young lover* er tor retired Masters, ranch bungalow with full Meement, gel heet, enclosed porch. -M*r /garage, lend contract tonne et 7 Mr cent. "C" It "C" Clerk. ' CLARKSTON new 3-badraqm brick WIM .ii on Wanbrt Like, kitchen entry, tot* ef ctoedte itoraee ihertiwlgits window*. deuDW full Meem ' *. lovely Ik en a line mortgage. 1-hiuwrjrvtP Mle beautiful S-badroom brick i with built-in*, TO ceramic > aluminum storms end mi recrabtlon room with wet ■>,, walkout baument, paved etreet and drive, cerpbtntbi drepee, Move |M refrigerator. *32,700. - Jg proSrty*mSSeVmart hip. .Approx. , ’oulSendlng* in tor year around er mutt tell. Mil owner, en-ixra. Webster-Curtis Oxford-Orion OXFORD *1x110' tot, tik* prtvttoaei, esooa 11000 down. Very nlc* .toko front tot wIM tccete to 4 edlolnlno lakes, *105000. We hsva ether lake front lots,-- DA Mill ■iff!"8 r Northern Pro|Mirty 51-A EXQUISITE WATERFORD HILL Me rotting tor Mle beautiful 3-* ’ ‘ am* Mat give* ranch. Insulated 40 ACRE FARM, |7 *OTM_____ out building*,.to dMr.aroe^lorJf modern st ...Wo on bMCh Rd. Prescott, M bedroom trl-le broezeway, fireplace In living r •tudlo ceilings, walkout family r aluminum storm* end ecreene, p street and drive, Scar garage, priyitogee,. end leuely. to ...-at... but even nicer fe live In. 130.100. MAKE THE RIGHT MOVE with Mithme,. slat* foyer, cere bathe. 2W eer gerege, pevod efre extra ehbrp. MODEL OPEN r TO 6 REDUCED TO $40,800 This contemporary rancher ofter walkout; Meement, beerned eellli fireplace, JW bethe. walk-ln do* etteched ivicer gerege, *x»| Mach fecllltiee end ere* of diet tion. com* ra* ue.totBy, follow * WMt ef Penttac Airport: turn tofl Sunny Beech, (Twin Lake* Sub) end Men right on . Hollow to models. MCCULLOUGH REALTY. CAMPERSSPECIAL TO acre, weeded campsite -pavemmij* eNOTte earner. Ci "^tHUNTERSII Large completely furnlehad^ cabin, modern fecllltiee, excellent burning end fishing. SS300.11100 down. risen. *11,300 en land contrast. C. SCHUEfr EM 3-7188 WOO Commerce Rd. Union Le norIhIrS lake lots, he Gaylord and UWNton, erlva owner, 371-3117. Pontlee. RAPID RIVER HOME SITE Like to sl*ep to eound of s ri 473-3000 sltFErws aa 80 TO 800 ACRES In Lower Michigan. Dairy, grain, beef er hoeel Name your farm Headquarters,." 220 N. Michigan Merlin' Csveriy, OR SALE. 41 ecre farm-new bei natural gas. geod weto Imlby Cl eras. Contect owner, 33*4072. n W, R. yOR M*M. BUD" •rivIlHM hut pinfni McCullough Rsalty, Inc. 1440 Highland Rq. 674-2236 624-2400 Pontiac Wallad Laks RRALTOR MU lots—AwatMi _______ FLATtllY Ri RRALTOR )(M COMMERCE RD. $Kto*Vri3: Hrira, ___ Assoclatas, Inc, A&W R00T BEER DRIVE-IN Downtown Mellon. Often busl-terms en lend oontrect. NICHOUE-HUDSON Associatss, Inc. Aftir 6 9-M. FE 4-8773 a % C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT Davisburo, Mich. iMMtbiATa ■sswmi Clerketon T evelleble. Green Acroe RESTAUR includes. COMMERCIAL BUILDjNGS itlng of • NORTH SAGINAW GROCERY StORE h^nit^ tot’ei prict with $7500 down* LIQUOR BAR “IKSSSM DAIRY SUPREME left ice cream eperefton, CCUld M IggtW j BALDWIN AVE. '\ 5,000 % FT. BUILDING NORTHERN BAR *: apartment mc k rsJ m SQUARE FEET . F—12 THE PONTIAjC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER I, 1069 By Dick Turner ORION AND AmmM JOSLYN T1-75 M-H LAKE ORION »"&r#V!?IS!. %M #*wn. M-24, OXFORD TOWNSHIP Ready for dovolopmonf, thli *1 ecr mkm Is an excel ent •xampla of Eg A1 •1,500 par aero. : BATEMAN ' 5 p.m. i CALL * Professional Building Vorv nlc* M«40 commerc bunding. HM mntral we ttog it with t room* on ooch rtdi. Ni SwrWrtoo enahiff eNekltcl . wSl IW doctor's or dentist's of- TIMES 10,000 SQ. FT. OF WILL CONSTRUCTED COMx MERCIAL BUILDING, swells your , Immodlrt* Inspection. Ov of com or commercial pn cyclonod foncod for I SfopSRy boforo ou dool. Warren Sout, Realtor 1410 N. Opdyke Rd. 373-1111 Ooon gvoo. *mi i p.m.______ 1 MILLION Dollar* hot boon made ovnlloblo to uo to purchase ond assume land contracts. mortgagee or buy homes, lot* or acreage outright, wo will g tvryeu apt for vour equity. Contact TED MCCULLOUGH JR. . 674-2536 McCullough realty Highland Rd. 45-7301■ Hi end 1727 PORC _ Mk or trade. After 4 IbllLAd Good bi_.. storfor. tor 7 343-OOff. dir. MR . JNTIAC HEARSE, Exc. CO.. d|tlon,)sol| or trade. 452-5045 or 1741 AlVBRSlOE 54 CC for cbaln sow. Helmet Included. 442-0504. AriTIQUfc FURNITURE end col-lactors name tor f. 330-1401. CASH FOR CEMENT MIXER. mwi __________ ROOFING DONE FOR CASH-anything of value. 624-1329 are ROOFING DRYER Floor Models krlgldelre portable dish 1 Prlgidelre electric dean SEWING MACHINES IN NEW CABINETS SPECIAL 1147 ZIG-ZAG New. In beautiful cabinet, does the groat zlg-sae stitches. No tachments noodod. to moke bub holes, sow on buttons, overt: fancy illlchos, blind ham, hai ' dresses ale. Guaranteed tor S yn. FULL PRICE *4f,*3tex Included, or pay 14.37 por mo., no Irt added. . Ceil Capitol—Bow “ Machine Credit Dept. 7 o.m.-7 p.m. PHONE 727*4410 If toll Cell col ARTS AND LABOR; _______GUARANTEED . I TRADE-IN I Your olid carpet for new nylon.! polyettar. acrllon, ate. 250 rolls »bie for Immediate instil la* Fraa astimatas. Call Ron FE For Sale MlicalaiiHBt 6? Sporting Goads For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 ■;.1 Yi-. PBtsdtontlwf Saw It tomile PUPK.no I»i|!t7. •••< l» FACTORY BUILT well drilling mochinb. Mpuntod on podge truck. ImTmpHd, Must tp£dye to bid health. Best offer tokos if. ph. Brighton, tTMtoO 1744 Suvil^iXViClR looSoi.1" \________PE 4-M22. . i7fiTcASH''iii lieHT ami londor. us-wn, | -_____' ' ,, MR 4COMPRiSSORS. . iubrkoiion squlpmenl. hydraulic lacks, staam KAR’VY^tYa MCfTORS 473-J4M 110 wiNd Hunjarw «#.IA OENE’I ARCHERY, 714 W. Huron, IRC 060,"'SCRAMBUER A .Troll Bose. For Iho lineal •ervlct and the bat! deal, coma to JIM HAR-RINOTON’S SPORT CRAFT, Vk ml. E. ol L«pe*r an M-tl. Open Sundava. 444.iBB. __ SA.VAOB MODEL 77 and 10 Power "zr“ ewer 3 p.r- BACKHOE LbRAINE 1.4^' 1044 to SI —r» Mwkel. Dtaer 1744 John oore 350. Osnoritprs. 4WI443. — PORK LIFT TRUCKS, SOTO lb! Clark., 4000 lb. .Clerk, TWO lb. dirk, all In dbbd condition, MS- If ISO. 34M332 I _ SHOWfpiirA.TlllLERS, rtneh .50, MUblei $177.50, 4 pro< .00. Sport* r---- SERVICE STATION 4 squlpmenl UL 2-4B44, COMPLETE BELL AND movie outfit, used twici after d-Sihltfl. COMPLETE Technicolor am. ii l2HnSS h.p 1770 models. Brand n«wI Priced from «M7, Flichsr Power, 3277 E, Pontiac Rd„ Fen-tloc.SrS^SOTr---- iKd THE ALL NEW 1970 -asi SKI-D00S 70, NOW IN STOCK-SHOP EARLY ~V I SPECIAL 2J H.P. SNO-JET 9wa|i USED SNOWMOBILE TOO , mo! CRUISE OUT, INC. • Walton FE 04402 Dally 9-ti Sat. 7-5i Clewed Sun, honey hr wlntir» In douilt' nlv§ STOCK r:s.„u. , 9344 Dixie ,fRRTiRl old, AKC. shoti. ST 4.9374, • . _ : pci., siAMlSg'^K.iTtlWjOSgcairta l ..el paint. 4 wits. 3340047. — WeiMaBanIMPor iaLI^ . Pet SupyllBS-teirvIfe lW WOOMING Mr. Edwards’ Hlgh_Pa«hlon Poodle B».?d" 7 "" 335-5259 jrrF>OOOLE ,OROOMTNO SI ond up. puppIss end stud service. 335-4l3t ~uS Ol .4-5497.______________ TAPPON GAS STOVE, go dltlon, 440. Oakland V 1 Aparlmonls, Apt. 203. 27H Henry Drive.^ off E. Wilton, US*D color1 TV„em .......! SWEET’S RADIO AND APPLIANCR INC, WrU “Sure I know what taxes are used for .. an excuse to cut my allowance!” zkFIHg IN CABINET 1969 SINGER SEWING MACHINl, In mcallonf condition. Complete with MMrtlt now ciblnot. All controls built xm!«77 For Sale Miscellaneous 67 For Sale MiiceDaneous GIBSON GUITAR ond case, ES 225. Double pickup. 1230. Call after 4 PM, PE 2-2011 ■__________ 2-YEAR4LD. Ilka now, 5 , plocs Slino«rland drums and cases, Zel-! gin cymbal*. $400. Ml-0500 affer, ____________ . . '0 I 4 PIECE LUDWIG DRVlUftwIfh cymboli, $200. MA 4»MI4r^"^ ALTO SAXAPHONEa B PLAT $200. >M04. „ r.,njJn(Mrtbnin 25 PEDALSe 41 note keyboard, Excellent condition. NEW STORBY-CLARK organ, walnut flnlih with bench, rag. prlca $43$ now laja price $550. $AVI 15 PER CENT SMILEY BROS. FE 4-4721 or 332.5437, ________ . DOtTHOUSES, MOST WlOt. TRAIL BOSS ^rche,ig Loll* Ried. . USE IT ALL Auction S«lH --------------^80 12 MONTHS I b & B AUCTION EVAN'S EQUIPMENT jSSfr 4ZMTI1 ...ClirkltOfl.... 435-35141 iV«Y lUNDAY - _ Tjx°SRjM- 4|0f Dixie Hwy. Mon.-Prl. from 7 i Soturdoy f 11 CONSiGNMENTS WBLCOMB -ASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION. WINCHESTER MODEL 12 SIM, Double barrel 12 gauge 140, , Ranger over A under fralon wood ribbed A billed by Clmmons 4240. Arse lady'* mink stole, will ireds CONCRETE d topsoil. J. H. I I, 37A0444. GARAGE SALE, October 3-4. 74IB. Brooklyn. •__________ GARAGE SALE — clothing, toys, “ Tuos.-Thurs., 7-7. 1215 N. Cass Lk. Rd. I FOOT POOL TABLE, -Sfii 0433 from 6 p.m. tt> $ p.n i 20* DIRT CONVeVORp 14, mlsc. FB 3- I SALB — ___ Item*. Ode 9 I t elate Ingway Rd.# off w. Ctarkaton i bay’s—ksks Orlsnr- Oct. 17, 772 ELECTRIC GUITAR, AMPLIFIER, r__J ttrnual.nirt paid SI20 new, needs string*. $45. aana-toravei-uirr 573-7575. 4*00 River view, Drayton. FARFlsA"epMbo oroaW. bio. Loiloy Spookor, Slop. 4I2-7707. GIBSON EB3 BASS GUITAR, cherry SATURDAY OCTOBER A « AM A. P. Eckert Stoodlng oeW . 1234 w. Commerce Rd., Milford Drtlila hart op Thursday Perkins Solo Service Auctioneer* PH: Sworn Crook________ *37-7400 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2. 10:30 m. Clean houirttoltf auction with omo antiques ond mlsc. Located it - 547 Eort Flint ft., LekO Orion, ionslstlng ■ of 5 rooms 07 urnlshlngs, plus bosomont and itrias. which Includes 2 V SERIES indspanmnoti _____ fill dirt, cloy, groval, -v - a, bMA EXCAVATIONS White Lake. Waterford Twp., of ,*l.‘ If ypu ere .. shill deliver this ORGAN, Model C con- table and chairs, 423-1140. YEAR PARTS AND LABOR]34” TORO RlDlMO mower, 4200.~like GUARANTEE ................ HAMMOND B-V AND Leslie, call EXCELLENT TOPSOIL. Dive after 5:30, FE 2-2745, lawn equlpmant. Flrit National general auctlonaor, Oxford. 424- Plants-TrBGi-Shnibi 11-A BLUE SPRUCE, BARGAIN SALB 711 MODEL A FORD ipdrt COUP* rreTsyaRssssvr” Ingflald trap dMT rlfla; Kantucky tyg rlfla. Call aftar • p.m* I4» CUSTOM ANTIQUE REF INISN ING, Spaclallzlng In furnltura rafInlihlnp and repairs of all typaa. 343-f34l, 250 GALLON OIL DRUM CHAIN LINK ^ air, fb SG$iy. •0,000 UNIT FURNACBg Ilka flaw* 1100b aftar % PB 94977.____________ 1f36 FORD; WHEEL horsa tractor, mowar, anow plow A rototlllar. 427- OARAGE SALE — Lots of poadlas 'rig., gat itov* ai ' Ml Lalaron, i it, 7 to A LB. MlSC. llama, Wad. _____________Mil Emereen. GARAGE SALE, 5370 Farm Rd., off Pontiac Lake Rd., Thun, and PrL, •eilBA " • " • ■ oaraoR SALr, iranar, car lop carrier, metal desk, antique* and many, many omar Itams. Half prlca on otltar thing*. 1121 Oregon off Ci«-Ellzab#th Laka Rd.________ sand, gravel, AND dirt. Latham ^ Precast Ston* 152-2720 or 4521953 U,H "“““morris music 34 S. Telegraph Rd.. across Ttl Huron, FR 2-0547 Ludwig snare drum - condition, just Ilk# new ISO. Call 332-7733, ask ft- SCREENED BLACK Livestock 1 RIDING HORSE* with TS-500 loader and If# TRIUMPH oarfact condltkx or workshop. St 451-144$ aftar ittaga •p. I i.ooo BTU.air conditioner IS cubic leot cheat freezer Crump Electric JUST RETURNED Frem my m i ihep with large truck load of vujoi tiques. Margaret Trimble. 10 ________________________Dixie Hwy. Corner of Hally Rds OE ELECTRIC STOVE^ with pMce 7|jygf ,N '_ a B ITA U'T iTlTL ■■■ Marble top dresser gtewetRi rocker*. deluxe. CD, amplll Itoms. 450 prey Rd„ 1*57 2S HORSE, snow so snowmobile, and sled, am (tort, Ilk* new, also • 1947 enow blade, 203 Chevy engine condition. S450 each. 473-2047. 40,000 BTU ROOM ip-well, clock, tlr ml condition, STS. I p.m. 4702020. _____t, lot* of track. >25 Id HOT WATER HEATER, 30 0*1. . I Consumers approved 507.50 vel 137.75 and 047.75 marred, edrlc electric $495 SHOP US BEFORE YOU BUY PE 4-0 Wood-Ceal-Coke-Fuel FIREPLACE WOOD Pets-Hunting Dogs 79 1-A DACHSHUND PUPS. AKC, control. electric kHchen »r»i aftof 4:30, 332- fib er BP fl OR .LEASE, Carry nf featuring chicken. ltSKSnSTM?: If you can flick a light switch!)I... IF YOU DESIRE AN IX-CEPTIONALLY HIGH NET POTjNTIAlT INCOME year flTOUp Of SUCCfSfUf V IMAGINE • buslnsss a 'iX OtthlNi _ _ ,84 LACK BROADTAIL Jacket, beautiful, newt cocktail daytime dresses eleee *-12. Roy’s raincoat, lip out lining, *12*13. Man’s, top-ceet. lllit ill. 4472S75. CLOTHING SIZE 7-14, 4 .. e*12 neen. ' ■ ■ • - ________ MINK PAWS C®at' excelled com dltlon aba 1A PE 22741. n ^*7^ yjf HOUSEFUL Op FURNITURE, odd WtL INI * buslnes* service with ■tier repeat order*, end you * COPY AND PRINTING . ALL CINTBRB are seif-, automated .reproduction ■ designed to offer PAST, aPPICIENf, feCONOMICAL SERVICE to any Rrinflng needs, MR toetore WHILE YOU WAIT OR | HOUR SERVICE, to any customer tewing excellent duality and service. You are Invited to so* HOUSEHOLD SPECIALS. e«!ecV living mem eufflf wlth>pe. dresser, chert, tolMie bed, with Innersprlng metfress end matching box spring and 2 vanity lamp*, ptoco dlnefta srt wltti 4 chrome chair* and table. All tor SS77. Your credit b good at Wymon’e. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 C. HURON PB S-1501 KENMORE^ GAS^ Dryer, "good eon- i BTU. ISO, 335JS1S. to WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO FAY ere accepted by mm on'» to loin, i COAST CHAIN. men' everywhere. : an your chance «i 3 ROOMS > NEW FURN *2 JO per week $297 Y-Knbi AhtlRIHR, PORCH SALE, disposing of a lection of enflquM, spinning wf eetomede, rocker, cut glen, ch end 2, .104, *24 ML calender, ans tram SM to Birmingham. •tharmottat and oil hot watar haatar. condlUofi Call 47341672, LLL USED OFFICE dasks* chairs* flits* fypawMtars* adding machines* drafting tablas* mlmtographs* sold In Sapfambar at 20 par cant off. Forbaa Printing and Offlca Sup-Pllaa* 4500 Dlxla* OB 34767. ANTIQUE CHAIRS* HUMIDIFIER* - color TV* gas Inclnarator* Mite. 625-3506. 4767 Snowapple Dr„ Clarktton. ANTIQUE CHINA* Sllvar* glass* many othar small Itams. 2881$ a Franklin Rd.* 4. of 12 Mila 3$3 Orchard Like HOUSEHOLD ITEMS SS Must ba told* moving to Florida ____ _______BI - , 10-4* 3558 NiBDiD DONATIONS of good ____________— Bpik*' off pianos for Sunday Schools for i-A POODLE STUbs* grooming $1.; | Parry Baptist Church* 11$0i up* pupolat. 334-4438 or 332-4129. i LUDWIG PINK Champagne dru sat* complete with cymbals* $3S I BB Music * liiBfi <±___ 68^5204_______ PUREBRED MALE German puppy* beautiful mark.- Both In A-l Darcy Drive* B * aSi junior friendly L garsoo selo. Items from 438 Waddlos Rd. N. < LAWN SPRINKLING SVtfimi, to Inch elastic pipe, S3.4S per 100, 1‘ «SLsnLffi,iBsaiVA’ SIZE 14. LADY7* UNIFORMS, Portable rad lodtarao. 2741 Voerhels Rd, b «a±,P hTPTW WANTED TO BUY —etomn* or mm. BASEMENT SALE, od pretties end usable! tiques, 44*7 Edgewoed eft Commerce Rd., Thun,, and fit. BARN SALE. Old LADIES iik WHITE gold oreng* blossom, d I emend engagement rlno. Value SS2S. Will Mcrlflce. SS2M374. lari. stock. RCA, zenith, syivania, priced f 4257.75. we **rvlc* what we Obrt TV, 3507 Elizabeth Lake aiming ___SHE elo8ii_. . .... lures. Oct. 2, 102, Oct. 3, ■IS to dak Hill, left to d, right 10 3411 Reeie. BELOW FACTORY PRICE, complete —----------- closing out, $40 each _________________ 544-7205. BRIDES — BUY YOUR WEDDING announcamants at discount from* Fortes* 4500 Dlxla. Drayton# OR > LAWN SPRlNKt|m’>SmN. i hb to 2 hp„ priced trem JMJO, G. A. Thompson and San, 7005 M27 W. MOTORIZED PARKER GRASS and bat catcher. Ilka new, S12S value for $97 JO. 135 Shirley, Herbs Mewing Service, 332-1311. 7144 Pine Knob Rd.. Clark- Almont Western Store Compieta line of horse cart products* Western clothing* 'boots* longhorn saddles* tack and equipment. 145 8. Main St. . Almoht*, Mich. 798-8080 Open Mon. through Thura. $-4 Frl. and Sat. Vi0 p.m. Sun. 12 noon till 4 Psiriu_ ARABIAN M GELDING. Weanlings. Reg. V* mare. After 4* 625-3593. -BEAUflFUL 6 y^Ear oW isriii mare, 15.2 hands* extra spirited* exp, riders only. Call 852-4375._ GELDING 9 years bid* rust color* gentle for children or adults. 644- havI 3 Purebred Hertford parry, t 334-7602 < Tax qaducjlons given. UPRIGHT PI^NOi Moving Co^ 10 S. Jess UPRIGHT PLAYER" MnH hlnrh -vrmllwnt » FEMALE PUPPIES* 2 ana oenen, excenenr honawhrnkwn. iilun Owner .transferred. USED ORGANS Cheese frem Hammonds and el well-known brands. Prices as GRINNELL'! owntown st ’5 STORE FE S-714S WANTED! PIANO ANO ACCORDION, GUITAR, LESSONS. Sslts-Mrylcs, elm piano tuning. Puleneck), OR 3-5574. NORGE UPRIGHT S tube burner natural gas furnace, hourly BTU output 17,500. $75. 343-3704. OLDJT bottles, A-l COLOR TV SERVICE Johnson's TV PR 32547 45 E. Welf n ____ ___________... 3507 EllieblBr Lbke ild. 4422120. TVs, lev* up CHRISTMAS CARO SPECIALS OF 25 card* par box, to oft cafhlooue pricey assortment at 2000 boxes. Forbes Printing and Office sup-iMI**. —- COMMI STUFF, TIN treys end boxes, chairs, barn oastsr, many odd ns, »ze s.. Christian - Mini ve^near Avon Rd. 4S1-4577, Oct. BRAND NEW FURNITURE *2 JO pgr week KIDNEY SHAPED Devonp Reeseneble. OL 1-2744 after 4. KITCHEN AID TOP of, the line j ” iwashar tor sale, cell 451-1737. KIRBY SWEEPER ICELLENT CONDITION—#45 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. 2417 DIXIE HWY. mm* LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE ----1 at Walton FB 2-6842 J^SSfee*1' required. Ml • $5,950. WrU signs. Must BUY* NlW 2-plac# i.......... aw bunk bads* $60.95 and up complete, new box springs end mattress sets, $49.95 up, Steney’s. M3 N. Cess,' or 7415 Wait Highland ltd, at Williams Lake ltd._________ t-ROOM — (Brand Nbw furnltura) *2*9. Ceth. Terms, Ley-awey. “ ----------- 1 Auburn - .EONARD REFRIGERATOR, goo< condllKm. Sto. i&TlW. LIVING RO(Mft|, BIRANI^nww^gbCKjl ItfW___________________ LANS END TABLE* 81*. 482-f192 MR. ANPERS0N COPY AND PRINTING CENTERS 19 w. 44th Straat aluminum tub* axcallant condition. FB 2-7201. _______________ MAPLE -SOFA BED and chair* 175, gray mahogany bedroom sot* 8100* 4-PIECE BEDROOMS* brand now* i .„ Liftir 'Jars Bargain tr-Baldwin* FI 2-4842. 9x12 Onoleum Rugs $4.9$ Call altar 4 p.m, FACTORY SPECIAL SOLID STATE STEREO AM-PM MULTIPLEX 50 WATT PER CHANNEL REGULAR 4247JP • SPECIAL '$169.50 LIMITED QUANTITV UNIVERSAL " Pally .Mil JUN|TY OARAGE SALE, 14 all good reusable*. Wed.-3341 Vincent St., behind Chapel off Pontiac Like PLUMBING BARGAINS, PI standing toilet, S27.75,, 30-hsatsr, *49.95, 3-plece bath .. *59.75, laundry tray, trim. 417.1 shower stalls with trim. 427.75, bowl slnk, 427.75i levs., tubs, tig and up. 537,75, 2-n.75, threaded. 4AVE PLUMBING CO., 4-1314. POOL LE,. STANDARD tile, $70, life, sax sieo. Both exc. 335-4571 after 3. 1 DIEBOLD SAFE, Stire Iqolpqitiit 73 BEAUTY SHOP EQUIPMENT, excellent cendltlen, reasonable, 343- Sportjap Goode 74 2, 40 LB. BOWS, PIBEROLAS. UL 2- BROWNING 12 ga„ l dir -tv- Winchester M-42, .410 M-12 Trap ...:..... 720 W, Huron 2-YEAR-OLD, small AKC ellvar Call tarly evenings er morning*. male poodle, tS0.:Cell *73-1023. ' 1 OWUMv....................... . - 2 AKC BEAGLE PUPS, AAALj HORSES AND TOP brand* Of equip. ------ - NewHissd. Up to 50 per cent oft. Guaranteed. Double to Ranch, 471* Cllntanvllle Rd., PentTec. 473.7457. REGISTERED QUARTiO HOlUB mare, 3 yrs. old, bred to registered stud. 3500. Tennessee Welker, gelding, 3200. 3332032. RABBITS, DOES AND bucks 333-1423. i bellnl—male papers. Black t White. 375. ( J et.. Pent! stud, >32 First l AKC Dnd, 1SHUND3 regfittri 343-2371. 83-A AKC POODLE 3TUD service. 473- AKC GERMAN SHEPHARD AKC PEKINGfst PI reasonable. FE 32430. aKc BEAUTIFUL MINI-T ' ond WS. AKC NORWEGIAN BLKHOUNDS, 3 mo*., must sell, 332-1472. AKC POODLE FUPPIES for se Black, silver end brewiL 230-3412. AIREDALE PUPS, AKC, excellent family deg. 3M-3241. AKC REGISTERED, Oliver poodle, ....0130 .. . 0173 224-1734 AKC TOY POODLE ' PUMkHH chocolate brown and T let black* 7 weeks old* 8100 and up. 39M139 or 334-6694. BIRD DOG, PBMALB, 333 ■ _____ ■ Cranberry r_... Ferry Lake Rd.* toys* furnltura* dishes* clothing. RAILROAD TIES,, now 12 GAUGE BROWNING* nr* good conditio ’ 6 P.m. 673-3227, 2415 Dlxla P0S Tuts.* tat. 10:15-6 LIKE NBW REBUILT color TV guaranteed, black and white. ST end up. Obrt TV, 3507 Ellzabet Lbke Rd^ 4332W0. ____ AAANUFACTURER'S Cl6s6-OUT STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE — CONSOLE-------- CHURCH RUMMAGE Church-, et toe Resurrection, 4470 Clarkston Rd. eR M15, Oct. 3-4, 7 e.m. to 12 neen. __________' t/ 1250. Cell .BOSTON BULL PUPS. Loveable, _ I beeutUul, AKC, 334-0373 or 23M144. 1747 SNO:JET DELUXE, 19 hp,_mu»! COLLIE PUPS,. AKC^^ble and frt A-l MEAT CUTTING, FREEZER wrapped. We cur* and smoke meets. Cell 373-4133. __________ ROMEO MEAT CENTER — Home dressed meati. A side er a slice FREE MULCH HAY 423-1334 APPLES — DELICIOUS an# Jonathan, you pick, brief, containers. open weekday* tt-4, Saturday 7-4, Sunday 132. Closed Mondavi, French Orchards, 1271 Slate Rd,, south* Ida ef Fenton. BUSHEL CRATES 25c TO 50c. .Apple Valley, 3044 Hummer LMVStoThl. eert et Ortenyllto, 1B743W, ^ 1 ’ CONCORD GRAPES, 44 /a!!Jh|(hel, you plcfc. 441 ShortrWge one.Jflock north ST Boulevard, 2 blocks wait Rochester Rd. -CONCORD GRAPES^ we pick er you TV Combination, 1400. 2 yrs. eld. 412207*. CYPRESS FRIVACY PEtjCE, P sections, I ond 4’ height, *7io per eGNeo. 1 Electric built In range tops, etomtobe steel, 444 each. TALBOTT LUMBER rap Oakland ~ FE *4375 1747 3NO-3PORT, 15 Horae, like new, 4473. 478-2714.____- kRTIC CATS INOWMOBU-IS, “ OentllC 3332147. ANTHONY SWIMMING popli. Call today tor drtalla, RHODES POOLS 6uT|CWAL« KITTENS, *5 each. 534-3414. ______________ CHIHUAHUA Alta TERRIER mix-ad. Also Toy Poodle, apricot, ' me., eld.mil-------- 147 otter 3 p.m. LAST - LOAD. PEACHES, 33.47 a ROCKER, etorm di 435-3344. 211 W. Walton CHIPPED BATHROOM I 31. 7 a.i - OCT. 1, 2. and 2. i Floor Shoo-3355 Elizabeth Lake Substantial down. Call or slop In1 “AcTOSS From the Moll" ^ *^ADhCiJ pr * | TV j)0 AND 40 F6R dlNT Savinas on WAKDcN KcALIT i An 0ur quality carpati. Carpat 94 W. Huron* Fontlac 682*3920 Clinic Warehouse* daaning* repairs If no aniwar call ya-8660 iood condition. Fh * Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" Beauty Shop MbVb lust 2 available. Either at these prim* located salons would make the ---- * — hondseme and sales. FE 32734. FPIDI DA I RE electric good coi 474-1231. cock choirs, *350. 342-7411. OVER STOCK FURNITURE BARGAINS Colonial sofa with matching Mr, $ Mrs. chairs* lelf-dacked reverslbli cushions $39$ value now $188. & Son* : REFRIGERATORS M-59 w - - ---1 now inipment of rpfrlgaratori and ggffiri • ’“Ji? A,S? 1 * ■“♦O' defrost undalmod wv&smu« un,c,M pr,wd ’**■ ABC APPLIANCE .... Dyke COLLECTORS GOLD 34, 30. con-tsnnlal 44, carbine, Hover—tired. SR.3030 430e. Ni2.i3l*, DELUXE MODEL, 12 oauqo eulo-merle. Por Ml* or trad* lor o car COLLIE PUPS, mixed litter, mother Toy ColllO, IS. 4732234. CHIHUahim, Fox Terrier*, while, apricot tpy peodlee, all reo., atud service on same. PE 3-14977 , . DOBERMAN PINSCHER Pupa, AKC' registered,_»loo-II5o, terms evelleble, 334-1713._|_______ ENGLISH SETTERS, REGISTERED eachiM&4 49*5?*’ tMn' ” Candy [bedroom (double d solotr cant Etffcfifo uuK Any Item Sold Separately C — All for 8998 - $10 Monthly ftBhVte ■ KAY FURNITURE '"Id Ht0 K M,li'ln aienwood Center dresser, mirror, 4 drawer chest E. Welten, refused, terms. Creek*, NEW COLOR TV’* priced frem 124*. Doran’s Appliance WariheuM, 347 n.3332724. usd. transit ENCLOtB YOUR SHOWER ever the bathtub ----- I blk. 3. 13*1 E,. 10 M Dally tee Tue* *iii * RUMMAG^ SALE, Frl.., Od. 2, 7-3, 5*1. Oct, 4, 7 neon, Embury United --------- -£ -eh, 1102 E. 14 Mile CVjNRUDE SKEBTER’S Take M-37 to W. Hlqhland, right tol-Hlckory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd., P ■eft and follow signs to DAWSON’S dig. Phone FE 4-2721. | SALES, TIPSICO LAKE ~ ■. I trained. 431-3023. 734.1010 Body, free puP'piEJ, Small Mixed. tu mtn lelld colon, or motel flake, direct 407-9755 7M-9U90 .MUM |M.M«l,a.,»l,M flluw. 1U-MI ......OD, ,/JJ FREE PupP¥TO(36er With cHiiSren ..... ...... .non, euv, iraoe. — Opdyke Hardware beagle for sale. 434-. bfriwd*.Rd.., | FOR SALE, BLACK end free 4 week OLD kitSnsT boxi Farm Equipment and full sized | K FOR FRBf CATALOG TTAT8 on t lac WO 1-8799 PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE -ulflO West Huron SI., Pontiac Omdlfl" „ Own weeknltes " TO BUY, SELL, A BUSINESS Netlenel Butlness - FE 3-7341 to sCll y6ur business imps), If, Lhlft 0 PC. moani. mmoro no. w. o> 1 ANTIQUE WALL CLOCK ■■afaflA..—-----------fc----------Harvest table, end Oescens Bench WANt to SELL? \\ .LTer‘?le?',4!h,,5**U lelllna your business Is.eur butlness J **' ^r' ' Ouallflsd buyers weltlns. Cell cushion. 4247 value, now 4 drawer walnut chest. IN value, mow 127.75. Modern 70" sofa Mrs. Chairs, zip cushion. 1277 value Bunk bed, complete with mattress, ladder and guard rail. 0123 veluo Free delivery Srt mtn WA*RDEN REALTY JLCT NOW Reupheletor- y Big discount HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 441 Elizabeth Lake Rd. __ leer Telegraph) 4*1-234J ) refrigerators. tiTOyil, tebTet r. end chslrt, mlsc. 330 W, Huron, 1 REFRIGERATOR, STUDIO COUch, 1 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS urgentty| needed. Se* ue bei Wamiil Stout, Realtor ......ISk COMMERCIAL UFHOLSTERINOi. 60 335-1700, EVES., OR SAT. 425 454S7 2&1 —■1 ^^1^'^rflMllft1' BrMn-TVT AiFRIOBRAfaRS, OismwasherJ, refriger ■____ BH # * r drewir chert >3.443-74I Pontiac Press Want Ads . For Action drv6r«, demegei Fully guere end WM&m Module, •antatd. Terrific euvlnoe. Terms, \ - . = . CURT'S APPLIANCE *4*4 WILLIAMS LAKE NO. 474-1101 SIGNATURE Portable dlih 150. Exc. cam...... 430. 474-3340. w&rtr— West inghouse Color TV Sets 10 Different medals * at ClosB-out PricBS Terms evelleble Goodyoar Sarvice Store 1370 Wide Track Pontiac, Mich. , v PHONE 3352140 For Salg MIscaHairaous_67 to INCH COPPER WATER FIFE. 24 Mm* * ,tt. end to Inal copper V/i CAR/GARAOETer Mil, |1M enclosure, aluminum frame, with L Themp Ito INCH FLAltlC erem pipe end linings, ne niif to thread pin* Thomason » Itn, TOO* M-W W._______ 3 MILK CANS 310, kitchen counter steel S3, chrome drop leaf table •ixf 4 chain any ttoer boiwior *17, an dsilqn. U4.tS. i Thursday aha i. 7005 M-5t W. | g UMMAO E" $ A h » — w GIFTS—GAGS, jokes, nov.Mi.j, Beverly HIM* Methodist Church. 12 Ley-a-ways. Liberal Bill's Oulpoet, Mile Rd„ ef Evergreen, Vlrm- 3245 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-7474._ _ inghem, I e.m. to I p.m. GARAGE DOOR OPENERS, ditcon-' RUMMAGE AND' ANTIOUE Sill, nilMl6ndBI^H Pah# Creek MMMiHt Church, 1*4.50 Cetllns Rd., OoeiMfOn. Friday, ON.; 2 eert, 177.10 * I 2, 7 3, end Sat. Oct. 4„ O-lSiM. sz eversman land leveler. H4.se Collin* Rd. *77.50 - I 3, 7-3, end .. . .. . M . aLy.".u.T**f 1 "»*'•' •*r,V tUbMERSlBLE'AN6~U|M’1ght ConS^lF^*1-4447. of Hems* r lurnifure, hand-crafted gettoly! ower lewnmower, Wednesday end hursdey aflernoon, 221 Ottawa °"rMI 4-1023end FE 32703 GARAG'E SALE, variety of Including hnrdwere, c h set berbelli 17, conn corlnet *103. IIP Nl MIKtrd Re., Hlghlene. Want Ads For Action / large suits, dishes, old books, tame excellent chritlmgi gift*, *A gee# Clean things. Andertonvlll* Rd. to Clement to 4104 HHIcresl/Cr, gArAGE SALE, /Oct, 2-GAS Tir2331 Oakdale. Bgby clothes, tormels, mlsc. ,*. OARAOE SALE -'llOI June, off Crook* between Auburn end ft. llvd. OcTM, , , GARAGE SALE,’ l*pt. N-Oct. 3. Children's clothing, household Items, mlsc, odds end ends, 9077, Edna jane Drive, I blocks north et! Welten near Will Regers School. OARAGE iALi, START Sept, 30-Oct. 4 from 0-7 p.m. 41) Melrose. | ssfWGrwonT^ 1 SWING 1ST, 430,. FE BaMg. sfred-iatin FAiNfiTwXIWRn? Supply, M7I Orchard Lake. 4*3- SWING SET WITH tTlde!" Alter 3:30* p!rn„ EM 3-707»r STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE with faucets and curtains I47.SS vslut. 134,50. LevetoriM complete Mom n‘ — 114.71, toilets 12,1i> 7 3. .. ________ Fluorescent, J73 Oicherd r. i.eke.-37.' , SET OF WEDDING RINGS, 1300 or meke otter, 4*5-3147. -r. lURFLUl office 6MIR1 And Other mlsc.- attic* (urnl Priced to sell! Rsnewsbl*.! . • office sell. Mui iMMy* at Ort BOULEVARD Fraction of Origlnel cosi 1SUPPLY GUNS-GUNS-GUNS One of the largest selsctlens In Oakland County, Browning, Weelherby, winchester, Remington, Celt end Smith-Wesson pistols, scopes, tights, we do eur own SKI-DOO'S, 13 to 45 H.P. II", 11", end W‘ tracks 30 mechlnei In-slack newt We have a complete line of accessories. Speeeo, tech, sleds, suits, boots, heimati, gloves, custom colored trelTeri, single and STOP OUT THIS WEEKENOI Cliff Drayor'i ' Gun and Sports Center 1S3I0 Holly Rd,. Holly. Ml 42771 Open Belly end eundeyi m 4th. 9-8 p.m. 419 Coeti Baldwin fo rndlem leymour Mkf ffd._____ Aft Aav" A"Hb"llF"i iftiW A y"~ eele* CB set, glassware, baby Items, *n • .aTO* .ffisid' thiMlVATiON FrMV Rip tHIELO STORr III W. LAWRRNCi S Everything to meet your Clethlng, Furniture, JOHNSON SKI HORIi M0T0 SKI SNOWMOBILES Comnlgf* line of • nowm • b111 clothes end boots. ^ YOUNG'S MARINA o*en deny 7 'fir * 1 *. Sunoey to to 4 4030 Dixie Hwy. on Loon Lake I Drayton Plain* , OR 4-0411 Nlw wQ JRI-do(PS~ COME IN AND PICK OUT 1 WHILl FREE KITTENS TO good hern*, good with children, 335-122*.____ GERMAN SHORT HAIR polnto'r nuppTss, mixed, >18. H7.43N._____ GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC rtglstored. 113, 442-W72, eft, 5:30. GOOFED ON COLOR mellhg, AKC poodle pups. I pertly color brown <■ whltl, ail# 1 Week. 1324447. GERMAN SHEPHERD pupplti, also poodle wllh pemrrl74-of52. , EFHpT' OBEMBWC GERMAN SHEPHERD^ F^IF^ AKC HALF COLLiK PUPPlil/Trae to' good heme. Cell otter 5 p.m. 325 KifriNS PREE to goad hetrii Lliir box trained, MS-fun. MIXED PUFP(E| for qale. ... ■ FlMSil" MAJ^R^ AiRBbALlT TyrTaid, 326. MALE, to TERRIER, to Menchester! to m^old, housebrokan, all shot* fuFfIes WANTED EltHIR m/xed 151 0072, "** buy complete litters, FOObLE PUPPIES, resloneblS. AIso y^ups tree' to gee# hemt, OR 3- 3 FLOW DIESEL Tractor, 1 year ARIENS AND TORO inewblower* on display. Layaway nowl Tem'e Hardware, *03 Orchard Lake Ave, $119.95 RECONDITIONED MCCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS PRICED AS LOW AS 173. ’ ' KING BROS. 2734714 Fenilec Rd. at Opdyke DAVlS MAattlNRRY, vw Hemrtlto chain Saw, "Dealer, John Deere end New Idee peris galore. ORTONvILLB. NA 7-22T2. •Irwrol fralltra ' .. hoel trailers, cars. 31 gar month . „ Pick up and delivery, cell Arvl'e Inc. today, 4724444. CAMPER .ON lA fwiinflBTitrio 14 . M12l4. •men 3 wheel blk* nS'*: scratched, 42". mqd*l value. 477.40 value WM> while they Iasi. Ter-rifle values on 14" end ft*’7 models. orafiw ALIO Wf HAVEt A 0000 4TOI KING BROS; Fenttoe^ftftt* Oedvke Buysrs — SilUriMNtthru frm Want Adi. POODLE AKC, mt melei, 445. 473-413*.- IV SELF CONTAlKfO ssr ' I SXggifi'LAlGiTANb'iMXLLr ih^fflSSii mrv 441-474I FB0I»T#R»6 ENOLISH tETTEF. wwje/^yr* eld.^Oeed hunter. FE RASSIfS raV* »aTb. some COOM, cell otter 5. UL 12lb. . AND PICK OUT THE FUife.(Rio aiFMAN ________________ ^•L. YOy OBIIRB WHILl pues, S wi.k. old, C.II 4}42«31 TNI SELECT ION is OQOD. after 9. •men 8TABT AT ONLY 8191. fi----------- RkonfEiilb B^"lS6£irBirSfli. 7^*8 ff-TilVB: tKyiLBi. ell’TefSirce Interior, new ges ref rlgers sltops i. 4*71. UL l-SH*. fy-ploWim, GAi ^raw*' For Wont Adi Dial 3344981 m PONTIAC^RES^VE Travel TraHon iy TlUlLIR, $1695 —•vooooell's - EDNESDAY, OCTOBER I, 1969 Si F—18 IILVIk KAALI. If O stool, shower, oven. 12V-1K l, hitch, lack* ana aWftNfli IT E. Walton. AHar 4:3*p.i Tam pleasure mat I"' deluxe ™tSK *d,w,v: f KAMPER ‘ VILLAGE 373-8350 APACHE p.,ifeTW;i IS THE TIME" EVAN'S EQUIPMENT . 435-1711 Clarktton 435-3514 '* 4307 Dixie Hwv. Mpn.-Frl. trim » a.m.a p.m. HARRINGTON'S SPORTCRAFT, Vt ml. Qy H Sundays. 444-2t22. CLOSE-OUT 4 STARCRAFT 1969 TRAVEL TRAILERS 1969 CAMPERS SEE THE ALL NEW 1970 AUG'S AND STARCRAFTS CRUISEOUT.INC. 4* E. Walton FE 1-4402 Dally bit Sat. *-5i YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT MHlMir ' STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. p77t Hlohland (M-5» 443 *448 Campers—Hunters . Ice Fisherman ;* lake aiyj shore "" Pick Up Campers NOW ON DISPLAY TNEW IN THIS AREA -3 burnsr’lfSve, 13 volts and 10 volts, sloops 4, water storage, water pump, 20 lb. propane tank, 50 lb. box and loads of storage space, also completely ,.—7—Custom made for Ranchero's and' pf Camlno's, Also’t regular pick-up campers on opeclsi sale. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT SU.1711 Clerkston 425-2510 Open Mon.-Frl. from 0 e.m.-5 p.m. Check our deal on -SWISS COLONY * Trailers and truck amp,r'skamper POLD-DOWN CAMPERS iXtt'i to willloma Lake Rd. OR 3-3*81 JOHNSON'S TRAILER SUPPLIES MWWr TR0TW00D WAG-N-MASTERS Wolton at Joslvn _PE 4-5055 *“ EXPLORER ' 'Which l« No. ». In rnotor hWT’* ' sales. Prices start at 00,00S. up. JT, STACHLER TRAILER - SALES, INC. 1771 Highland tM-io)" RMtO FOR. SaLI; V t B N’T UR Y 'OR HUNTING TRIPS, boot oHar, ' WuipmenL^UIlf*0'1'^ *** VAN CMAPM, Loir WINNEBAGO Motor Homes—Trailers F. E. HOWLAND SERVICE R 5-1454 SPORT TRAILER, OEM Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dlkla Hwy.----— 425-41 wARnIR AIRSTREAM SALES 1 AND ALL HAVE MODERN DECOR irlv American • Mediterranean CAMBRIDGE DEL' LIBERTY MONARI REMBRANDT Colonial Mobile Homes PE 2-1457 4744 25 Opdyke ltd, 2733 Dixie Hw 1 kew From Holly Park Your Aulhorlied Perk, Oxford, MUMP Danish King, free Delivery . 300 Milos. Will trade for most (nythina of voluo, Opsn *-» P.M. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES PbtlO Hwy. 23041772 i TiMi nap \T i pKrkT33*'j. Wilton/ 10 X 50 1050 MOBILE X43ACAPBMV, -BRAND- sducedto otiKt SliFNr S euntrysldt Living. 534-1507. itss new MOON r x it;, good condition. fiitiTsltdd, OR 50524. ltd# t4w,” PARTIALLY furnished. 1*44 CHAMPION, 10'X55, carpeting and furniture, exe. condition, on- lot in Pontiac. 52,500. 555-5455, 1*47 ELCONA, 12 x 40, 5 baths, ut on llvng room, located ranberry Lake Vllleao, on cot it. 55,500. 4734*10 for further In- LIBERTY 13**30'. 3 od condition, cersr om and hall. Vacant. 1*45 tfOLLY PARK, 13x40, sklrtod, Igng. 533-7354. sacrifice for S1*00. : CLARKSTON IMf CLOSE-OUT Wjk kAftLEY DAVIDSON, loodg 1VM HONDA 490 SCRAMBLER, 9900. Only 300 mllH, 424^390* Triumph too, in miios, hon6a sl, *o, oi tfoi 1.M mb ffll. ’OR S4I40 sftsr l i»4* cc, Kawasaki pa good condition, ims, 4344137. W-HOiffifCL miK' i 474-2*83, ALL PURPOSE HONDA *nglne, 170 CC, IlkO now 040. 405-750*. A-1 Motorcycle Insurance FARMERS INSI Honda. Phone ury7 prooirty «•' M-200CC D1-340CC 161-500CC 901-750CC ISSSSR! FICtAiyilR emrpnSi,"on sii remaining Olessper, S**vry» Mlrro-craft Mail, Grumman and Dolphin pantoons. tir M40 to W. Highland, right te Hickory RUgo Rd. to Demode Rd., WriM follow sKh to DAWION'I SALES, TIPSICO LAKE, a phonp 42*417*. .________i RESERVE winter angina Anderson's Best Buys NSwl 90cc Honda ... .$339 Newl CB 350 Honda . .$695 New! Honda 50 .$239 Newl Honda Mini $268 Newl 650cc BSA ... .$1095 Newl BSA Endure .. , .$850 New 650cc triumph $1095 Newl 750 cc Norton $1195 Newl 250cc Ducatti . $495 MANY “[MANY MORE! 300 CYCLES IN STOCK LOW DOWN PAYMENT HZ TERMS (All print Pius Tax) ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICE 144S 0. TaHgraptl _PE 5-7105 aayaraj s p.e c a • 4740040 available Deer Hunters Specials (l si..............— mt H* io HUTCHINSOt^ MOBILE DETROITER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK KR0PF Double wide*. Expanda Custom built to your ardor AT BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS Open Dally Jrtiirdiy >nq FLMTOOdD.10 S P.m. day tli s 57 SKIRTED Prankilna-Craes Fsns-Slreemllne smper-Pleasure Me Truck Compere Holly Travpl 15510 Holly. Holt: Iilander^moT iB#™— 1 ?WFXgttmuirwm.~. McClellan Travel Trailers 4110 Highland Road (M-5» PRONE 4744143 . Close Out on '69 Models ' '•-WMt.WInd ' * Wood Lake Lwhbhl CAMPER^ Lit s fsw left to choose troml SALE '69 Modsl Clearance 17%end irWenTT'elnper travel Take M l* W MHe^West HAYDEN CAMPER SALES 145-715* *1 WILL SUIT YOUI ANNUAL CLEARANCE Bank soys "Move 'ami" to Reductions up tQ 51,0001 oSSST*'** ClvT',S’1"Ci341 MU3T SELb—1*4* fflSRf Star.-ip on lot, 455QO. 55*4314. ROYAL-OR-REGAL ACTIVE I or 3 bedrooms 13'xl** living room 30-Gel. gee hat water heater lylon carpeting over rubber pet TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC Telegraph »t Dixie Hwy. 334-6694 -on a WILL BUY USED TRAILERS,. ntlec Mi WHY? , . Run ell ever to fill your mobile X ».Wfi«,»T^P|mUCh HOLLY MOBILE HOMES .not, only m’hXi/iss s? iww IW Moon, Braid Lena. Regent, lemplgn end qnwra, but also Piters s levllesf enolce- of sites to — FALL SPECIAL ALL SUZUKIS SUCH AS 500 CC Titan# regular «999 Sale $799--- 350 CC Rabat* regular 1799 250 cc X6R? regular $729 Sala $620 250 cc Savaoa* regular $89! Sara $725 120 cc Trail Kat# ragular $4 Salt $435 11 months or 15,000 mile warranty. MG SUZUKI SALES 4447 Dixie Hwy, 475-4454 PULL CUSTOM NORTON, extends* springer, SHOO or trade. FE 3-4*00. HONDA 140 — 1*44 — 1500 Looking? FOR THOSE SPECIAL FALL SALES! New Yamahas New 1969 305 CC ..$439 New 1969 50 CC ...$199 K & C CYCLE 2436 AUBURN UTICA 731-03*0 MICHIGAN'S OLDEST EXCLUSIVE YAMAHA DEALER SUZUKI MOTORCYCLES. SOcc. to 500 cc., oil Inlectlon, 12 month* or 12,000 milts warranty. Cycla ac-ctssorlss, Rupp's Mlnl-Wkts. left and tojlaw stont to Of SALES, TIPSICO LAKE, CLOSE-OUT 1969 eHmvGmTvnwM Wlnlsr bast A motor storsgs YOUNG'S MARINA iray^^^^ok^ii S^lltiKVA h5S*-— Ker't Boats t motors wintAr stoRaoe Marine Storage PINTER'S Malta your rasarvatlons now, ^g^ntopnsW REP«^ iarvlce Canty wIBTC.t'&ra SUMMER CLEARANCE I BOATS*MOTORS TRAILERS Harrington Boot Works TERRIFIC DICOUNTS In til boats, rtntaons and canon. AT TONY'S MARINE ohnson motors — S3 years repair ?COrch*«i Lk. Rd, Sylvan Lake USED BOATS Outboards, l-O's, Spesdbosts Inboard Crulnrs, Outbrara Motor* Many to Choose Fram _ LAKE A SEA MARINE_________ S. Bivd. at Saginaw FE 44517 BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER IMIS.WSodwsr aifAdiml Ford, p-i $11*5.3434424, _______ 1*4* CUfTOM CAMPER, M Wanted Carl-Tracks 101 LOW ......-RE AUTOMOBILES. M. J. VAI 30LLARS POR SHARP, wrn EXTRA Dollars Paid POE THAT EXTRA Sharp Car Averill's t 3-9875 3010 Dixie AH 4-4*** Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Sharp Bulats MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Aug. Mrudu. Eoononw~C*r». 1M5 Cl!xle? TOP D0LUR PAID' GLENN'S POE "C^MrUIE^ CAES TOP $ PAID All Cadillacs, Buick Electro 225s, Olds 98s, Pentjacs and anything sharp, with air con-ditioping. WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC BMwwMkawSr r end trailer, 333 CHEVY, 4 shew and go. i 113 rebuilt l chrome wheels SSI*1 32? fENGINl EMIDOaPBED ■......■ trwm. ... steering, canopy swim ri anchor' 11400 cash. 3304*75. 1*45 CE'NtOrV RESDRTlii/lt If, with 400 h.p. Intorcaptor Spatial end tandem trailer, Reeeonebi*. 473-545S eft. 4 p.m. A Few Boots Left for Close-Out I 14VS Shell Lake with *5 H.P. Marc, power trim, tandem trailer, full canva* end mooring cover, lifts. ood engli E 5-4437. RTh AUTO SERVICE ' Rambler a engine ....... i Fi5riifn*Wor^Felctxi, 3C By Kate Osnnn New and Usod Cnrs, 166 1*44 CHEVY IMPALA, *40*. PH 5 2*M or PE *4 144 COEVAIE, S Ip**d7 1500, 4311. iliTSItMVbL'Lb tTAtlON Wei V I, *UlO„ 3500. 1734313. ” 1*44 CHWeLLE 3-bOOR ' Sedan, stick........ interior, r~ ■ "Make me the happiest girl in the world, Robert. Get lost!” lew and Used Trucks 103 1*47 IE TON, I, pickup, *1,1*5. 415- 1*47 CHEVY PICKUP, 41E box, 51100, Oxford Mobil* Tot 35, 435-11*7, New and Used Out ‘44 BUICK SKYLARK, IN dlflan. 3340334. IMS BUICK SKYLARK Sport wagon * passangar. Burgundy with wnlti top. Tlntid glass, factory air can-ditlon, full powtr* tlTt wheel, rod rick. NfW |Mri. till 642-3219. , AUDETTE PONTIAC list W. Mspls Rd. - Troy 1*45 BUICK GRAND sports, 4 spsed titan. 1400. UL 2-1450, ________ ghlft,- whits with ONLY -11*5 i*44 ctinvY Impala hsrdlt — 4114. hardtop, $450. Cell alter 4:50. 412- J0HN McAULIFFE FORD 1*45 CHlVY Station Wagon, Bol Air - with VI, radio, heotor, transportation spatial. Only - SSN toll prlca. . P.S. We've Movedl vs Milo N. of Mirada Mila 1045 S- Ttlagraph Rd. PH SMtSI Tt45 coKvIrrf....iTiNodA'fT-its* Elcomlno. $53*4,^ 37| hors# * PE 2-49*3 and 1 CORVAIR, 2 DOOR hardtop, New end Used Cars 106 New and Used Core JOHN McAULIFFE FORD IMS CHEVY SI Hardtop, with beautiful yellow With black cor. dovan top. V4, automatic, consols, full powar, ready lor the open road, McAullff* Special *981 Tuli PrCp.S. .We've Movedl vv Mile N. of Mired* AAfl* 845 S. Telegraph Rd. PE 5-4181 845 CHEVY, SUPER SPORT, lull oSer'343^32 llk' ntw' b*'t matching intanar.Jllack Snyl root! Full poligr Including Factory air, Puii prlat . $i29a_ BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 3100 Mapla Rd. Tray 642-7000 litf conv4fflbr*,-*B6. .'7*. As Is Speciol -1965 Chrysler 300 4 door hardtop, Light balga atinra sting Hack automatic, power iteeflng brake*. Radio end heater. $795 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2)00 MAPLE RD., TROY, MICH. 642-7000 142 FORD f AIRLANE, |M asm dltlon. *24-271*._• . ~ iwi^FORD, v-a, automatic. H)l. *11- lfiFFORD, 3134 Rockhavanl UL i IMS CHEVY BELAIR, Tom Rademacher Chevy-Olds On US. 10 ot M-15 Clarklton MA 5-5071 106 IMS W. WMo Track S? 4-1084 or "pH 3-7554 r ford, * book> k, txcalfpnt condition, lltf, buy a • pay hara, Morvol Motors, 111 ilangPE fMOTP. 1*44 FORD GALAXIE, 3LS HOP. 424-4131. 1*41 1 A * MUSTANG, stick shift, toll sat of / call anytime after fc ."RtStt- 1966 MUSTANG TIP-TOP $895 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Ooklend Ave. FE 5-9421 ktna Auto. $2791 REPOSSESSION Sentry AcceptancrCorp. 7410 Hi^JandjjTdj^Rbptlac# Mic *t°r 10*OEM; ML IN*. 1 1M4 Ford, 4W43X104I34. ... 1M4 T-BIRD LANDAU, toll 1*45 CHEVY IMPALA Coupe, *450. 1968 IMPALA 1*45 CHIVY 4 DOOR, auto., power steering, lew mileage, 4750. I7f-4340. 1*45 CHEVY IMPALA, 4 door hardtop, maroon, whnewalle, radio, hoator, rear speaker, rear window defroster, tinted windshield, automatic, 213, VI engine, black vinyl Interior, excellent condition, 3*08. 444-45*6. 5004 Tractor, 401-V4 engine, good tires, ready for rood. 3—55 Gel. drums—S.A.E. No. It Motor oil - *35 etch. , Den's Truck Hapglr 871 Dixie Hwy. GMC TRUCK CENTER S:0t to 5IQS Mon.-Frl. 3:00 to 13:00 Saturday 701 Oakland Avenue 335-9731 SALE 19*4 GMC W TON, 1965 Buick LeSabre 400 y”tu'akn^O*e^iKr**r *,**rlnB $988“ Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward -Birmingham Mi 7-5111 MS CORVAIR 2 DOOR axe* radio. CORVAIR 1*44 CONVERTIiLB, original owner, autometlc. *450. 453-6475.______~ 1(44 CORVETTE. 141-7411, attar 5 1*45 BUICK RIVIERA, * way power, iterfar, *14*5. Mi 1967 RUICK Skylark. 2 door custom. afWW&Jm fif 442-328*. AUDETTE PONTIAC Ttso vy. Miptritap^—t—Tray erdtop, c e 11 e n t condition, automatic NORTHWEST AUTO 1*44 CHEVROLET, LIKE i 1*44 CORVETTE - convertible, blue, 300 hto. *2*00: EM 3-0300. 196* CHEVY BEL 3G1I 2924 ^o?%slx?n>,'.Mlawg!r'p,&r: bfonXTm^ddf. 294100 actual miles. Sharp. Call ____AUDETTE..PONTIAC 1967 Buick Wildcat Convertible -R JBttk Flfl’^rCc«.W^^- prics. trade " — W $1995 1967 C0RVETT Fallback, turbo hydro, 258— $3495 VAN CAMP CHEVEOLET . On N. Milford Rd. .h«ifr*[Assr,u- ‘r°wr9om AUDETTE PONTIAC ISM W, MaM# Ed. . . Tray MUSTANG PASTBA^K, iff*, Oerk blue, 3 .peed, AM-FM. 3*Ht»7. 1949 CHRYSLER TOWN end country wogot ------------ - ~ poeMi , *dScn8rol*e, r mlloege, liki 1M7 MUSTANG, HARDTOP, nlct. riM, whitowaii tires, V-Si gold' 1 *1*$ ' - speokors. 41395, 471- MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH $100 UNDER DEALER CQSTI * 1969 .CHRYSLERS 1969 PLYM0UTHS ALL NEWI 15 to chooso from, tom* with tlr 477 M-34, Lake Orion, 49M341 NEW . FINANCE PLAN worklngf 'almost anyboito whh good,nKd. or no credit., 75 care to choose from. KESSLER'S TOYOTA- LAND CRUIIJ|Rt hydrotu 1 p.m. Aute iMErBRca-MarlM 104 Fortign Care 105 1961 AUSTIN HEALEY REAL NICE $445 GRIMALDI CAR tO. 900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 1*45 SPITFIRE, BEST $1988 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward . Birmingham Ml 7-5111 /lark 1*44 SKYLARK CUSTOM convertible, n,MB actual miles, spotless f ' and out, 473-3714 after 4. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD m I SKYLARK 3-door hardtop, V-S, utomatlc, power steering. Now hltewall tires. 21,000 actufl milts, harp and rtady. Cell 442-113*. AUDETTE PONTIAC .. Cali 442-32**. AUDETTE PONTIAC W. Mspls Rd. Troy 1(44 CHIVY IMPALA. 4 deer, v4 tire*, no rust, ex be seen at 215 Pentlec. 944~ CHEVY ms CAPRICE S115P.S73- JOHN McAULIFFE FORD P.S. Wd'veTMovedl W Mile N. ef Miracle Mile. 145 s. Tetoareaty ltd. PE Mg ismssnE® Jnj!LMSHL *tr conditioning. AL HANOUtE w'y.- On M24 in Lake.Orion 693-8344 t&y 1M7 CORVETTE, 3lt, 4 tlntod gloss, 33750. 1*44 SUn Roof Saden *1095 1*44 VW Sedan . *}.*9* 1*47 VW Bus 114*5 Financing Immadlatoly Avallabl* Your euthorlzsd dsolor BILL GOLLING VW Across from Bart Alraort Batv Crooks and Coolfdg* Rd. Jim mlnum away Troy Motor Mall Ml BUICK ELECTRA Custom, 4 >r hardtop, excsllent condition, ■00 ml. Full power, stereo, flit Ml, detoagar, 4, way split front its, privets, 343-5444, 53*75. 1*51 CADILLAC, 2-OOOR, ■ good condition. 5135. PE 3-1 INS CADILLAC 2 door power steering I._____breki 1*4* CADILLAC 1**4, CADILLAC MNVERTIBLE tod, AM-FM, &-1M2. ____________ ffS j^ftlUAd 650^1 Devfllel wof cpndffltoi, good shape, *2900, 335-1509. By owner, 1966 FIAT STATION WAGON $395 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 ihTW 94* CATALINA .4 Charcoal color « torlor. Factory hydramatlc, power araering Sira®,,r”'Low ml AUDETTE PONTIAC lf*» COUPE DE VILLE ilk* new, air, stereo radio, ei gow peinr geM*Tntorler, vinyl top, I5a»r 451-M54, Iff* CADILLAC^Cti^t. DeVIliel IsflpfelMiB minor rapalr. iM7 cHbvy t oOdfc. rutt. 23,000 ml., wit cosh. 424-3554. 47 ibiViTtB REASONABLE, lou tranemlsslon and radiator, M5-35M. ri top, low mileage, 343- transmlsslan 1*43 CHEVY IMPAI jjj ■* 1968 Chevrolet Bel Air Wagon $2195 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Tray 2100 Maple Rd. Troy, Mich. 642-7000 DA B-14M OVER 50 SHARP CARS LARGEST MOPAR INVENTORY PONTIAC DICK CANAANS Motor City Dodge : 1*44 DODGE POLARA convertible. radio, heater, M75, 5*7-4505. 1944 DODOE, • cylinder, 2 d sedan, auto., exceptionally ah 4*2-0433. POLArA, 1 mm*r, A-l extresTPE 34471V condition. 1967 Dodge Polaro 1*47 FALCON .STATtdH. top, fid Intorlor, V* radio, hsster, power ato*rtng, brakes, indy *n* In amMlkiii, clearance JOHN McAULIFFE FORD &?S^^srr4iarr,aii P P.S. We've Movedl “ 1968 Ford XL , Special $2395 BILL POX CHEVROLET *- Rffcheetor Rd. ^ ^ JOHN McAULIFFE FORD PrlCp.S. We've Movedl pff MlractoMM $1395 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Mania Rd. _ Tray, Mkh 642-7000 1M1 FORD, 2 DOOR, stick, somT tranaportatfo here • nay hart. Msrvtl , Oakland, FE T — WaLriJ stereo, f 44WW3. t*jj PAL^U^OOOD condition, best 1*42 FORD, POR PARTS. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD New end Used Cars 106 New end Deed Can 106 wot i*» cadilLAC eCtiPH 6*vm*, UMP goldj elr, many extras, 4,000 JEROME CADILLAC CO. CHEVELLB Malibu, VI oval tires, Sima, c*F-......... ..... IMS CAPRICE COUPE, loaded aeceeteriae. elr. ettor 5 473-1*84. Save $$$ at Mike Sovole Chevy 1900 W. Maple Ml 4-2735 ' Chevrolet Klngawped. a lltlonlng, lull bower. 3*1-0971, GOLD CORVETTE, 1 mileage, 423-0733. ^engln*/dl*c'braketi" exceTiept con* 1475 1, Seglnew St, dltlon. imbT474-i»4. TpiJ dHIiyV, lTk! 1945 Mustang 2t» engine .....,..*150 1*44 Grang Prix Iron) end ......*150 MS to 417 dual quad complete . t *3 Other MMhtol, transmissions And bogy parts available ingteTlsstlon available _____________473-1544 «... 1*43 OPEL, 3 DOOR • Hs hp„ 4 speed with .JM sidewalls, full carpeting car. 115*3. 4*3-4081 ■ _ 41 VW. RADIO, „ HTA T whitewalls, AMS miles, *Mf| body pretty good shape, PE 5-3433. IW CHEVY? MAKE OFFER. ________________35*4034_________________ IM0 CHEVY, BEST oftar ovar 550 373-017*. IMf CHBVY II convartlble, flack, 3358. 474-2M5. SAVE $50 to $300 ■R ON Down SALE VILLAGE TRAILER SALES 44*1 PIXie HWft CLARKSTON SALES.SERVICE-RENTALS ‘ stqragV «. .. TRAVft tRAILERS $5 Monthly i.u . L „ 3 SPEED LAMBRBTT Travel Coach , 15310 Hflly. Rd. Hally MB 4-4771 _JffiSa ^-5=3=,,.. sleeper.. Paetora euthH?'rSeiifr and ' ^ rwitw, mti C»R SAL!S IIATA SPRINO^ROADI Wlra' JSewT vJhl»w»*l radii ^•frelrtoOT^^-AUDETTE PONTIAC low mileage. UlSoo?*?#-* IN; MO Mipept, viRY good dltlon, best otter, cell 37*11*3, 1968 TRIUMPH TR4, EXCELLENT SHAPE SAVE GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Ooklend Ave. FE 5-9421 COM^LlTk DUNE BU60Y hit'. 4*3-0143. -----SU830 . Sunday*. *44-2*23. \ JOHN McAULIFFE f6rd - 1*44 JJIAT 1180 NflOt . Spldei book value. P.S. We've Movedl H0M,M,cSl3^NDA,LB Wawrftrd Standard Auto m 1*42 CHEVY IMPALA STATION Wioon. y-t sulomstle radio, nwtor, 82*5 toll prlca. King Auto. ii prica. l _______________aiLoaoe. i*43 CHEVY IMPALA, 2 Into ttrvlc*. S3 Dwight. I M3 CORVAIR, 4 DOC transmission, ragio end i 1*43 CtjlVV, vy, very good cond le ru*l. 8200. 325-1474. VY convertible, good 1550, after 5, 474UM5. *4* CORVETTE, steering end bra . 4 speed. Timed glass, AM-PM. tow mllsagt. Must tall. 424-1754 collect. after 1)30 p.m, ____________ ♦4* CHEVEOLET » Patjengtr estate wagon, M4 engine, with air, power steering end disc brakes, rack end load carpet, 33,4*5. Call 45IQ419._____________________ 1(4* CHEVELLB MALIBU, to appreciate, OR4M17. lit* corWttb ; convertible top only. clatn. 411-4457 IM» CORVETTE C OM executive. * 1(40 CHRYSlBr, : 90^427, 4-tPfed, ~or best otter, HAHN CHRYILER-PLYMOOTH RAMBLER-JEEP 6673 Dixie Hwy. CLARKSTON N(w and Used Cars MA 5-3435 lOfNtw and Used Cars 106 1969 Puick Convertibla 1969. Buick Hardtop v Electro 225 Electro 225 ' x Pull power ang factory air. 1 to ehoot* from. Factory warranty. Pull prica 4 door. Power end factory elr. Full price $3995 $3695 1968 Buick LeSdbre* r >. x tonvertlbie I960 Chevy Malibu 1 Convertible Power. 3HARPI Pull, price . A SHARP CARI Power. VO engine, radial tiros, Sparkling Red llnlth. Puli price ' $2495' $2195' FISCHER BUICK 515 S, WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM 647-5600 647-5680 WE ENTER THE FALL SEASON ’ WITH FINE PREOWNED CARS . . . . VALUE PRICED.' 1966 FALCON Futura Two-door hardtop, V-* factory four-ipacd, radio, heeler, whitewalls. 1966 PLYMOUnfSport Fury Two door hardtop. V-*, ---- brakes, radio, heater. 1969 MERCURY Montego "MX" sedan Metallic lime In color with black Interior, vinyl V-S, autometlc, power steering, radio) heater, wl $119$ $1193 $2395 1969 MERCURY Cyclone "CJ" , Ty- va, factory four-speed, PM with Polyglot tires, 'nils it $2895 1968 MERCURY Monterey Marauder Two-door hardtop. "390" V-l# automatic# vinyl to®# powar stotrlna and brakes# radio# htator# whHawaii*. $2095 SEVEN 1966 MERCURYS ( Four Door Sedans Two Door Hardtops All V-ti. automatic, power stes . . radio, heater, whitewalls. 1965 MERCURY Commuter 9 Passenger Station wagon, va, stick shift, radio, htstsr. Nat* kits ef room. Hera's lust the ear. y | 1968 MERCURY 10 Passenger Colony Park * fisisis 1 years or RM mils* warranty. $795 $1095 $289$ SPIES' OFFICE NOW OPEN LARRY SHEEHAN'S EVERY SATli^DAYy HILLSIDE lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland -------V---- 333-7863 4— 'JU-14 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER I, I960 Far Wont Ads Dlol 334-4981 New end UsmI Can 1061 New and Deed Can IM 1968 TORINO GT W MikcuRY SmrrTinrv ' 1969 Colony Park Marquis Station Wagon I to choose tram. WITH AIR! Buy P.S. We've Moved! . VI Milt M. ofMiracle Milt „„ HU 3. TsYeoraDhRd. Fl Ml 01 JOHN McAUUFFE FORD 1333 FALCON 3 door with beautiful blSctt SAVE Bob Borst i. t»i ir, cNoronct, Lincoln-Mercury Salts I full price, imp W, MtBlt Rd., Tity Ml 4-2200 i 1*60 bCbSMOBILe. •xctllthf run' I nlofl condition. tl>S. 1333 Valient, Il4i lI'ftVtflrtph Bd. Fl KIWI standard shift. 31.030. UL M3M.I P.S. Wt'vt Moved! VI Mile N. of Mlrteto Milt S. Telegraph Rd.____FEJ JOHN McAUUFFE FORD 1733 FORD Fslrterte 300 Htrdi with bttutllul metallic bronz. v t bitch interior. V-3, radio, hea automatic# powir iliirlnot cjtaranca apaclal at illtf IfEM full P.S. Wt'vt Moved) W Milt N. tt Mlraclt Milt lid ». TdtairaMl_____Ft IH JOHN McAULIFFTFORD 113* FORD LTD Hardtop, « httttr, power steering, brat P.S. Wt'vt Movad! V* Milt N. of Mlraclt Mill ■ 1143 S. TtNuratb _ FEMItl JOHN McAUUFFE FORD IHt FORD Torino fallback beautiful metallfc lime gold flnlih block Intorlor, V-3, radio, hatter union, dot full prlet. P.S. Wt'vt Movad! V3Milt N. Of Mlraclt Milt im i. Ttltdrath Wf. ™ Paly JOHN McAUUFFE FORD 1*4* FORD Gatekle 300 Hardtop, with MMrtHuT mtttdor rod with block Inltrior. Vd. radio, hatter, power trttrlno. brakes, factory tlr VJf, P.S. Wt'vt Movad! toMilt N. of Mlraclt Milt .. 1143 S. Ttlttratlim Ft 3-4101 "*CH I. • ram tlr, powir I and BMC., brakes. turbo- YOUR VW CENTER 70 to Choose From —All Models— -All Colors-—All Reconditioned— Autobahn Motors Inc powar brakM MTS# 443*4317 condition. 33*3. buy hart itaO OLDS, CALL MI-ltM. baton p,m. , , IMS OLDSMOBtLS, dynamic m. < 1966 Olds Toronodo Loaded with til. the eluding ftaiW Save Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 JOHN McAUUFFE FORD 1933 OLDS "tt" LB 3 door hardtop, bttutllul malallc burgundy with black cordovan tan. full I car twite* matt bttutllul TS. Special only 31,Ml. Full prlco. P.S. Wt'vt Movad! to Mila N. Bf Mirada Mil# 1333 S. Telegraph Rd. Ft 3-4131 1*37 MUST AND. ONl Oita htutatn 34. llroa, tills. SHARP) call 343-1 AUDETTE PONTIAC 1967 Olds Cutlass Coupe, V-l, automatic, power1 aMarlnt' Ond brakej. Like new. i Save Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7*5111 BEST OLDS 330 Oakland Avt. ontlec_______Ft 34101 P33 OLDS'ft, t door vinyl hardtop. Fully powtrod.' Air. 17,000 mlloa. 33*30. After 3 p.muLI 33474. frasTfs.OOO actual iMiin,. vranr warranty tor » month*. Lika now. 33.373 313-3071. New nd Used Cars 106 Now ami U»td Cart BRAND NEW 1969 OLDS CLEARANCE. 1949 0UIS 84 2-Door Hardtop. ...33174 with MtomftlCr power steering, brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, covars. .....,$3302 1969 OLDS Royals ................... ....................$3593 ...........i#r tloorlng, brakes, n" NtM MERRY OLDS * 528 N. MAIN ST. ROCHESTER 651-9761 Haw and Used Cora 106 SOLD. 1*33 OlDt. ToroMde. roll thorp, 1 ownor. 31330. 333-7101._ "OVER 50 SHARP CARS LAROdtT ip^mVtNTORV ' DICK CANAANS Motor City, Dodo© 333 Otktand Avt. 333-4333 , 1968 OLDS Cutlass 2 Door v. Sport Coupe, with Vt. automatic, radio, power fleer ing. brakes, while,Us. sparkling red flnl|h, one ”$ifo: MERRY OLDS ' 1968 Olds* 98 luxury Sedan Full power, tectory tlr conditioning. vinyl top, crulio control., $2995 y Suburban 01d§ 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-P1YM0UTH Toronodo, red with bldck vinyl too. tinted gleta, tectory air, power windows, power aealt, c h r o me wheel*. 331*5, 377 M-24, Lake Orion. 4*3-3341, ' 1969 Olds 98 ,r Hardtop. Full power, factory air conditioning# vinyl top# 2 to chooto from. $3795 Suburban Olds 860 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 7-5111 | M ARM A DUKE By Andtroon and L—mlng|Ntw and UstdCtri 106 1*31 CATALINA 3, door hardtop. Yellow with blsck'Interior, Factory -tlr cmIHot. AON Mlli warranty. Cajl 343-3M*- AUDETTE PONTIAC 1333 W. Mapla Rd. , Tray IM PoHt!AtVvftWCTaT »'door hobdtan. excellent condliic day*. Ft 3-1377, Nlghtl. MI umh Blift Irlm and top: AUDETTE PONTIAC W. Mapla Rd. trey 1141 PLYMOUTH. t i run# I960 967 CUTLASS SUPREME# ful powor, air, automatic. 336-3176. 1967 PLYMOUTH 6TX 3 door hardtop, with radio, hotter VI, automatic, powor tteorlng, 44 Vi. rad with black atrlpaa. am black roof. Vary aharp cara, only $1645 "Next time, consult ME before you issue any invitationa l ” ^ NewendUsedCars - 186 1*33 PONTIAC 2 DOOR hardtop. V-l an tires. $195 full prlet. King Auto. 3275 W. Huron. 611-0100, 1962 PONTIAC flood flreidim v————■ 4-—- - 1963 dAfAU NA,$250^ steering A brakes. top. $500 3734600 1964 TEMPEST, 326, power steering, like now brakos, shocks and tires, $490, 602-2266.________. PONTIAC Ntori coupe, brand now tires and shocks. $400. Call 696-6331# altar I p.m. PE 1945 PONTIAC# 2 plus 2# lust llko lugky”autq 1940 W. Wide Track 1965 GRAND PRIX, must sail. Buroui top# trl vinyl now tires, oxtras. $1,195. 363-091ST* $799 TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER BCEN BANKRUFT7 Naad a cart Want to rodatabllah your ei Ip loo1* to chooia from, coll Mr. Al (doolor) 102-3031._______________ DEMOS NOW AVAILABLE 1969 P0NTIACS 1969 BUICKS FANTASTIC 3AVINOS Ovar, and aavo BIG 11 SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 133 3. Rocheater Rd. 331-3300 IfM OPEL STATION WAGON, good condition. Boat otter. Phone 333- 1*31 ROADRUNNER, 313 engine, 4 on tho floor, 1100 dc -------- paymanl*. 137-4723. IM* ROAD RUNNiR, 213 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1939 Road Runnar, 3-door, hardtop, VI, autematlc, powor atearlng, 3 to chooao from, 33493, 377 M-34, LdkO Orion, 3*3-1341 ■ _ tranaportdfkm, 3333, FE 1131 PONTIAC Italian wo good, »*S. 333-4704. Ntw and Ustd Cars 106 New tod It's a Long ‘Way to Detroit, But lust an Easy Hop to Clarkston- Jack Haupt Pontiac Is Offering Detroit Prices, and Service Too, on All ’1969 New Pontiacs We Have No Stripped Down Leaders,, But Do Have a Good Selection of Well Equipped MONEY SAVERS- NEW Next to Our New Cars Turnerized Used Gars Are Best II > T-Bird Lm er, air condltt, ’$1099 1965 Chevy Wagon war equipped. Automatic , radio and hooter. $499 1965 Fard Wagon ir Country Sedan, Power Automatic tranamlailon, v-t. power (tearing, brake*. 135x14 whltawall*. STOCK $2890 1969 TEMPEST Custom S 2 door Iterdtop, trail aquIppM with V-l, 1 barrel 230 angina, turbo-hydremetlc, VL* JU' )’ ) PW,r ,,'•rln',' rtV WnWhlwW, 123x14 ,1969 PONTIAC Catalina *' 1 12 irat Wagon. lte long llil of equipment Include, d.cor group, turbo-hydramatlc, \ Qj 'J ' J I | \ kpooll HAUPT PONTIAC fl , OPEN. MONDAY, TUESDAY, THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M. 0PEk*W|DNESDAY, FRIDAY TILL 6 P,M. , , OPEN SATURDAYS - < On Ml 5 at 1-75 MA 5-5500 7* $1188 , 1966 Chevy Impala Station wagoti, nger. Power : transmission, $1295 1966 Olds 88 Powor oqulppod c transmission. O n ull prlco. $1295 1968 Buick LeSabra-400 «ryPrrm.ff«.c^,ni Mil at $2095 $1688 1969 Mustang Fastback Air conditioned, power equlppe radio, h fl $ave Balance of now Car i 1966 Catalina Convertible on* owner In Ilka new cc $1199 1965 Comat ub laden. Stick ehlfl, later, whltawall tlrea. $499 1966 Ford door, economy, onglna. later end whitewall lira*. $588 1968 Malibu Wagon $2188 transmission. Frlcod , $1399 y ill Mr, Parka# credit manager to payment scheduled at—_- .. MI 4-7500 Nasi loeafkm ot TURNER. FORD 2300 Mobte (IS rMllilfoif ot 1 Front Blrmli Ntw and Used Cara PONTIAC CATALINA, double powor. good 0330. Ft 3-177*._ automatic, condition. 935 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, 0330. 3H-BM3. OVER 50 SHARP CARS LARGEST MQPAR INVENTORY PONTIAC ’ DICK CANAANS Motor City Dodge 155 Oakland Avt. 931-452 New and Ustd Can 106 mi aoats. Low miteaM. Ex-int condition. Call li&ft*. AUDETTE PONTIAC t. Maple Rd. Troy * atai option. Rally whatl. ^ “ powor. Call 642-321$. i AUDETTE PONTIAC Mil 1*61 FIREBIRD Convartlbla. Vtrdaro green with black bucket aaala. Black tap. V4 automatic, posrar steering, console. Ntw tiros. Lodits car. Vary nice. Call 44B2H*. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1030 JN.. Mapla Rd. Tray 1968 EONTIAG (at black Interior* Lika in throughout! Only— . $2295 Flannery Ford On Dixit Hwv. at Double Stoplight Tray ltLt.~2Sb ......... __ RRI ...in, idsrar brake* and atearlng, 33000. Ml-0*71. __________ 1*41 BONNEVILLE * passenger wagon, plr, power brakaa. Hearing ana windows. Luggage rack and iraira tomrai. EstK^twiwr 1*40 PONTIAC”TEMPEST 4 door, <|oublo^dwar, 21,000 mlloa. SliOt. im* fontiac catalina" station wagon, air, powor altering end brakes, auto. 415-73*3.________ ii mH J lltw^aNd Used Cars -106 /a 1*33 SM Handlbus .. ■), 11 Mi toM Commrtlbl* ...I jj! i*A3 Maicury CMrartlbW ." » 1*1 KEEG0 PONTIAC SALES KtteO HARBOR OM-WOO ^oLK^eiyLi*jjHffsy« 1*4* LaMana 2 deer herdtop. Lteht green wlih bleck vinyl top. V-l, lulometic, power •teerlnfi - and brakes, timed glass; miles. Company ear. Call 342-331*. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1130 W. Mapl* Rd. Troy New and U»td Cara 4$$ 1969 Grand Prlx f $3695 v, PONTIAC RftAll ^ II Unlv*r»lty Fl ##10 1*3* PONTIAC FACTORY Ofllctel rental and company cere. Low mileage, several models tp choose ’ from. Priced rHht. Many with AIR CONDITIONING. Call 304213. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1130 W. Mapla Rd. Troy brakaa. Tinted olais. roof rack. Low miltaga. pamo. Coll 342-321*. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1130 W, Mapl# Rd. Troy BttN BANKRUFTT Naad d corf Wanf to raaltabllih your crodlt* 100'a 10 chooao Irom. Call Mr. Al (doolor) 312-Mil. OVER 50* SHARP CARS LARGEST f^OPAROIVENTORY DICK CANAANS Motor; City Dodge PONTIAC TEMPEST On M-24 Loki Orion MY 3-6266 FdwBT stiorlnq and brake!, Only 10.500 Ml. Call 331-UI74. I «.m. to 3 o.m. _______r 33* TEMPEST, I cytlndar, Idaal mlng. 3,000 mlM. Call MBGII*. AUDETTE PONTIAC . xk 1130 W. Maple Rd., , Tray 1*33 RAMBLER CLASSIC, fyl* ET'JLBuSrWbWhSl rTiferl%A! :*Mr WMrrF^HEcgipS^ RUSS JOHNSONlStandard Au^ .1969 REBELS * FACTORY OFFICLAIl CARS. 1ST *4-doors, powir breklt and powor tteoringV radio, Jietotyalr eon- e^ToIell.rpSbj BLER- IISL.1 New and Ustd Can 106Ntw and Used Cara 106 Ntw and Used Care 106Ntw and Ustd Cara 106 1745 GRAND PRIX# $725 P E Wit 174$ CATALANAr^ AUfO., 4 ' h«rtgopr$S73. 47»23i. PONTIAC TEMPEST 2 door. Matching Intorlor. . I ____________ 1975 full prlet. Kino Auto. 3275 Huron. 481-MOO. 1744 CATALINA. DARK GREEN with green Intorlor. Powor and tlr. Ntw car trade In. Xtil 442-3207. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1330 W. Maple Rd.' Tray 1*33 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 door hardtop, powor steering and brakaa, air, tinted window, dean taka ovar payments. 331-7130. 1333 OTO, . SACRIFICE, 17*5.. 333- LUCKY AUTO 1*40 W. Wide Track JOHN McAUUFFE FORD Catalina, with beautiful matador PONTIAC C with £ black aeason special only 31 IM full pr P.S. Wt'vt Moved! W Mite N. of Miracle Milo 1341 S, TetaWaMl Rd. FE 3- 1*37 CATALINA, 2 "r 1337 PONTIAC vertlble 4 tlroa. A-l FIREBIRD con-var, 3 apaad, new 10^ 31500. 412-3070. giber extras, Under 2f,000 1737 PONTIAC DICK CANAANS Motor City Dodge 1*37 PONTIAC CATALINA 3 deer hardtop. Sllvdr blue with Mick vinyl roof and Interior. Factory elr conditioning, auto., fratitmlMlon, powor ateorlng and brakes and excellent flras. Low mlloaga. Now ear trad# In. Cell 442-318*. AUDETTE PONTIAC 1330 W, Maple Rd. Trey 1*47 FIREBIRD, low mileage, e condition, mutt tall, taka e payments, 372-B337, after 2 p.m. steering and »3. siBdB. 1*37 TEMPEST LeMANS 2 doo hardtop, power steering e n brake*', air conditioning, 333-4314. 1937 CATALINA 1933 CATALINA HARDTOP, JXIWir, bast rsasonablo onir. mUm. 1*43 GRAND PRIX, double power, air, vinyl top, now tlroa. auto, tx-ent. 373-0701 ■ i*4l PONTIAC CATALINA, vli ilttf 176$ BONNEVILLE# 4 DOOR hardtop# vinyl top and 1rlm# power •touring lb brakaa# whltawall flrat# alill undar warranty. OR 3-3970. Where Can You Buy A 1965 Station Wagon With automatic transmission a power tteerMg tor only $500 - Village Rambler That's -Where! 1969 Javelin , y*l# automatic# AM-FM radio* factory air condition# whltowalti# vinyl top* $2695 $895 I Rombler Clc , 4 cylindar# itlon. $695 Radio, : $1195 1969 American tiadte! Full jer- ; $1495 Special Oir All , Rambler Wagons 1 9 tb Choate From! Open all day Saturday * to I p.m. VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward | Ml ^6-3900 LOT 631 Oakland Ave. Right Next ta Our New Car ShowroomI 1968 CHEVY Impala Custom Coupe, wHh. willow green flnlih, black top, V-3, automatic, powor ateorlng. 1968 PLYMOUTH Wagon with v-e, automatic, power steering, radio, hooter, whitewall#, glade green flnlih, 1968 PONTIAC Tempert'Hardtop , 2 door with toil gray flnlshr V-l, automatic, power atearlng, radio, hooter, vory 1967 TEMPEST 4-Door Sedan with o maroon finish. ^V-t, automatic, 1968 EL CAMINO Pickup ’ syim a gleaming gold finish, saddle tan: t it's a beauty! - 1966 PONTIAC Executive 4 door hardtop, beautiful Hawaii blue 1 heater, whitewalls, perfect family car. 1966 CHEVY Impqla Wagon ill and var y fine car throughout. riHirngr.^-Triute^ ir, powor ataorlng, brakes, tilt whael, Altec parted, 1968 FIREBIRD Hardtop with automillc, powor atadrina, i 1965 CHEVY Impala Sport coupe, V* automatic, pov 1968 PONTIAC Bonneville BrouBham; automatic, full power 1967 CHEVY Bel Air flnlsli, 2 tone balga Interior, 227 VI, automatic, power altering, brakaa, radio, heater, black Interior, with y-l, automatic, power steering, radio, hotter,, whitewalls, and if, chdrcodl finish, radio. boater, V-l, automatic, i and India Ivory flnlih. Only- 1969 KINGSW00D Station Wagon— , with beautiful Sequoia green flnlih, cuatom preen Interior, V-l, automatic, walla, vary low mlloago. western ' blade, oil motel—all weather cab. $2295- $2095? $2295? $1545“ 42267- $1633..;: $1599^ $1527 $2395 $1295 $2895,,, $1395 $2997“ $2695" BUDGET LOT 630 Oakland Ave. Across-Froift Our Main ShowroomI etc. LOOK I Only— 1965 CHEVY impala Custom Itoupll 1968 FORD Faiirlane $1288’. $1088 $1488 $8953 $763 $1295 $1295, $1495" $999 $1095 631 Oakland at Cass FE 4-4547 F—lg THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY? OCTOBER 1, Containers Amw h Mn fwih 1 Pitcher 4 Flower—-• Silver— 11 Blackbird • U Anoint 14 Individual 16 Unit o£ wire 16 Articles 17 Smyrna — If—elan 38 Even number 40 Eplwopal inslgne 41 Decanter* 40 Superlative ending 46 Former Turkish 22 Legal matter 33 Jason’s lover 34Mus»hne------- mammal 37 Swift course* 28 Greek war god 30 Pots and— SiPtnei't 32 Body of water 33 Assistant 34 Outer 35 Earnings 37 City on thi Ganges 49 Far off (comb, form) 50 Derides 51 River (3p.) 52 Compass point 53 Flower 54 Evergreen 'tree DOWN 1 Wedges in 2 Distinct part 3 Poisonous lisard 4 More conceited 7 Shade tree, 8 Useful container 9 Member of a Protestant i 34 Town ii denomination Galilee 28 Bristle 30 Perm animals 33 County In 10 Projecting pins 13 Natural fat* If Angsts 21 Fruit drink 23 Lion's pride 24 Hops’, kiln 25 Formal ess 26 Another useful container 30 Verb ending 37 Read - 39 Large container* 40 Apportion 41 Argentine timber tree ys 42 Wild rage 43 Great Lake 44 Wintry precipitation $ Poker stakes 27 IlUmannered 47 Correlative of • Plant ovule F" 3 4 5 6 * L 9 iO It 12 fT rr 1* |6 i? 18 19 i 21 IS H r r lr 24 25 26 ■ r 28 29 H r 1 n- 32 m r H r . 96 ... 56 H i 36 H F H W j ■ r i 43 u 46 n i.i 1 M r am 46 W J M L 51 62 n r 54 , People in the News By the Associated Press A. Burns says Hawaii has a different outlook on life than states on the U.S. mainland. “We are an island people—a free people —of all races, colors, creeds and cultures,”, he told the American Bankers Association yesterday in Honolulu: “We are an amalgamation, ,a fusion, of East and West. We are a golden people." Lone Mariner Hailed in Bahamas Bearded mariner Bill Verity was hailed as “a history-king sailor” yesterday in the Bahamas even though his 22-foot boat had to be towed into tiassan by a. Verity was greeted by a police band, a beauty qpeen, and the chairman of the Bahama Tourist Board, Clifford Darling, who presented him with a plaque lauding his solo sail across the Atlantic from Ireland. He landed at San Salvador 17 days ago. Deposed Sudanese Leader to Leave. Country Former Sudanese Premier Mohammed Ahmed Mahjoub, one of several of Sudan’s government officials detained since last May’s army coup, will be allowed to leave for London next week for treatment of a “grave heart crisis,” the authoritative Cairo newspaper A1 Ahram said today. Georgia Governor Gets Unicyele for Birthday la G ■ Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox finally has a cycle he can ride backward while he faces forward—a . The one-wheeler was presented to the governor—along with a red, white and blue cake-on his 54th birthday yesterday In Atlanta.___*____________. . “I’ll tell you,” said the delighted Maddox who shines at riding bicycles backwards, “my next term In office I’ll ride this Into the door.” The one-wheel, no handlebars unicyele Is the sixth cycle Maddox has received since taking office three years ago, but the others were ordinary two-wheelers. MADDOX v Fired Czech TV Exec to Live in Britain Jirl Pelikan, who was fired as director-general of, Czechoslovak television after the Soviet invasion and was sent as counsellor to the embassy In Rome, has chosen freedom In Britain, the Times of London reported yesterday. ★ 4 ★. • The newspaper said Pelikan regards himself as a temporary exile who can campaign more effectively abroad than at home for a humane form of communism. "■Television Programs- ^ Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change*Withotit noticol ChoWnelsi 2-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-7Y, 7-WXYZ-TV: 9-CKIW-TV. 50-WKBD-TV. S6-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV R—Rerun C—Color.. WEDNESDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (50) R C — Fllntstones “' (56) Americans FTo m Africa — “Slaves and Freemen In the Middle and Northern Colonies” (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 6:36 (2) C — News — Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley,-Brinkley (6) R — Dick Van Dyke — Handsome balladeer - brings romance into Sally’s life. (50) R — Munsters- —* After being hit by an ' automobile, Herman panics at the thought of having to pay $20,000 in damages. (56) Photography: The Incisive Art — Ansel Adams’ use of techniques to achieve given effects. -(62) C — Swingintime 7:00 (2) R C — Truth or Consequences (4) C- — News, Weather, Sports (7) C News —‘ Reynolds, Smith (9) R — Movie: “Sunset Boulevard” (1950)—Gloria Swanson, William Holden (50) R — I Love Lucy Lucy becomes v maid at the Mertzes to impress an important guest. ~ (56) What’s ffew — In* “Tom Sawyer,” Tom, Huck, .and Joe find freedom and happiness tempered with homesickness playing pirate on an island in the river. 7:30 (2) Glenn Campbell-George .. Burns, Sarah Vaughan and Bill Medley guest. (4) C — Virginian -n Trampas is commandeered to help six prisoh probationers learn ranching in face,of opposition from nearby townfolk'. - -William Windom and John Dehner guest-star. (7) C — plying Nun — Sister BertrHle tries to help a scholarly priest adjust to the life of a parish priest in San *T a n c o. Robert Cummings and dary Crosby guest-stac. (60). C - Beat the Clock (56) Making Things Grow ' — First in series in which hostess Thalassa Cruso presents different aspects of gardening and the in-—tricacies. Tonight’s topic is watering of plants. (62) C — Of Lands and Seas -^reas traveled by pioneers on their way west are shown. 8:00 (7) C — Courtship of Eddid’s Father — The romance of Tom Corbett ' and Lynn Burton slips on the routine of motherhood. (50) R-Hazel (50) Free Play — First In series on candidates and issues in Detroit’s coming election. Viewers may phone in. 8:30 (2) C - (Special) Cov. Mllliken’s Address ,(7) C - Room 222 -Pete’s class is disrupted by student .Harvey Butcher, who masks his feelings about being fat and unattractive by clowning. (50) C — To Tell the Truth • (62) R — Nelsons 0:00 (2) C - Medical Center — The bruises on a young boy's body convince Dr. Gannon his patient has been the victim' of a beating instead of a Mll%» reported to him. Robert Lansing and Dyan Cannon guest-star. (4) C — Music Hall — The Friars roast, Milton Berle. Joining “roStmast-er“ Alan King will be Jack -Benny, Henny Youngman TV Features FREE PLAY, 8 p.m. GOV. MILUKEN, 8:30 p.m. (2), 10:30 p.m. (9)’ MUSIC HALL, 0 p.m. (4). MOVIE, 9 p.m. (7) ON BEING BLACK, 10 p.m. (50) Jan Murray, Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, Don Drys-dale, Red Buttons and Steve Lawrence. (7) C - Movie: “Walk, Don’t Run” (I960) Hilarious complications ensue for a businessman and a young couple at the Tokyo Olympics. Cary Grant, Samantha Eggar, (62) Highway Patrol 11:15 (7) C — News, Weather, Sports 11:30 (4) C — Johnriy Carson — Eighth anniversary show includes excerpts from past programs. (50) C - Merv Griffin -Mrs. Coretta King, Anthony Newley and Jane Morgan guest. (62) R - Movie: “The Long Night” (1947) Henry Fonda, Barbara Bet Geddes 11:35 (2) R - Movie: “The Secret Weapon” 11943) Basil Rathbone, Nigel Bruce 11:45 (7) C - Joey Bishop -— Betty Walker, Neil Diamond and Singer Marlene Ver Planck guest. 12:24 (0) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe jfej —. “The Double Y Chromosome” and “Mind of a Murderer” 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (50) R -r Peter Gunn 1:16 (7) R-Texan 1:30 (2) R- Naked City (4) C — News, Weather 1:45 (7) C — News, Weather 1:55 (7) C - Five Minutes to Live By 2:30 (2) C - News, Weather 2:36 (2) TV Chapel THURSDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C - On the Farm Scene \ 6:00 (2) C — Sunrise Semester — Math: What is “rolling”? 0:25 (7) C - Five Minutes to Live By 0:30 (2) C - Woodrow .the 1 Woodsman (4) Classroom — “See For Yourself: He&t is Motion” (7) C — TV CoUege -“Competition for Empire" 7:00 (4) C - Today (7) C — Morning Show -r —-“At irtrht~Statrg and photographer Yousuf Karsh guest. 7:20 (9) Warm-Up 7:30t2) C^New8, Weather, Sports (0) Friendly Giant 7:45 (9) Chez Helene 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo (9) C —Bozo 8:30 (7) R C - Movie: ,'Td Climb The Highest Mountain (1951) Susan Hayward, Rory Calhoun 0:00 (2) R - Mr. Ed \ (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) Ontario Schools 9:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read 9:30 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies (56) Singing, Listening, Doing 10:00 (2) RC-Lucy Show (4) C — ’Sale of the Century (56) Pocketful of Fun 10:80 (2) C - Della Reese -Skiles and Henderson, the Sunshine Company and Milt Kamen guest. (4) C — Hollywood Squares (7) C —, Galloping Gourmet —(50) C — Jack LaLanne (56) Once Upon a Day 10:48 (0) C-Hews 11:88 (4) C — It takes Two (7) R-Bewitched (9) R — Take 30 (50) C—Strange Paradise \ (56) R - Tell Me a Story 11:16 (56) Misterogers 11:25 (4) C-Carol Duvall '11:30 (2) C-Love of Life (4) C — Concentration - (7) RC-That Girl (9) R — Mr. Dressup (50) C —Kimba 11:55 (9) Wizard of Oz THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) Real McCoys - (50) C — Underdog' 12:25 (2) C- Fashions 12:30 (2) C - He Said, She Said (4) C — News, -Weather, Sports (7) £_=—Let’s Make a’ Deal, j(0) C — Tempo 9 “(50) C — Alvin 12:35 (56) Friendly Giant 12:55 (56) R - Singing, Listening, Doing 1iM (2) C — Search for . Tomorrow * --—(4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game ■(9) R — Movie: “Union Station”. (1950) William Holden, Nancy Olson -(50) R - Movie: “Rhapsody in B 1U e ” ' (1945) 1:15 (56) R - Children’s Hour 1:30 (2) C — As the World Turns „ (4) C — Doctors (7) C —Dating Game (56) Ready, Set, Go 2:00 (2) C - Where the Heart la_— —(4) c — (7) C — General Hospital (56) R — News in Perspective 2:25 (2) C - News 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (4).C— Bright Promises (7) C—OneLlfe to Live 3:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C — Letters to Laugh-. In (7) R — Bachelor Father (>) R — Candid Camera (56) French Chef — “Roast Goose” (62) R — Movie: “My Wife’s Family” (British, 1956) Ronald Shiner, Ted Ray -• 3:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C — You’re Putting Me On — (7) C 12r-~ Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C-^Captain Detroit (58) C — (Special) The River That Came Back — ..Michigan's vital water resources are examined in a study , of the Au Sable and its pollution. , 4:00 (2) R C—Gomer Pyle . (4) C — Steve Alien — Charles Nelson R e 111 y, Norman ’Wisdom, Jerry Collins and Belland and Somerville guest. , (7) C— Dark Shadows ' (9) C—Bozo (56) Pocketful of Fun 4 :3Q (2) C—Mike Douglas - — Pamela Mason and Irving Fields-guest. (7) R — Movie: “Ride Vaquero" (1953) Rob^t Taylor, Ava Gardner * (50) R — Little Rascals (56) Once Upon a Day (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:99 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Report . From South Vietnam” (9) R C — Flipper (50) R C — Lost in Space (56) Misterogers 5:80 (0) R C — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) Friendly Giant (82) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) A Day at . the Calgary Zoo — St. George Island near Calgary is visited. A Look at TV Old Shows A Revisited By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK (AP) — With all the new shows in position In the network schedules, there Is time to look at the old ones, back for .another season. "Mod Squad’s” trio of young undercover operatives is still solving crimes and salvaging human wreckage weekly on ABC. Tuesday nights episode suggests that Michael Cole, Clarence Williams. Ill and Peggy Liptdn—unknowns 12 months ago-have grown comfortably into their roles, are more assured and work well as a team.!nam war—amputees in * * * | Army rehabilitation hospital The story w&s a bit on the sticky side: The squad took on a bright, homeless Mexican boy, then found he was under suspicion,, as a burglar. But they pulled off his redemption and led him away from a life of crime. hour with his monologue—a batch of beach Jokes on everything from smog to bikinis. In the big sketch, Red and guest star Walter Brennan kidded the Classic Western by.playing rival sheriffs. It wasn’t as funny as screams from the studio audience indicated but tt bad some funny moments during a high-stakes poker game. " * * ' * CBS’s “60 Minutes” bimonthly news show started with a painful but thought-provoking report on some of the 250,000 wounded D.S.fighting men from the Viet The segment showed a brutal face of war, yet the gallant attitudes of many of the shattered young men demonstrated hope and determination. Several said they were glad to have made the sacrifice; most had plans I for busy active lives. Red Skelton, in his 19th consecutive-season in weekly television, obviously purveys a brand of nonsense that never stales. FORMAT UNCHANGED The format of the CBS show, unchanged over the summer, and some easy-to-take singing by the Lettermen. But it was the Skelton turns that made the show. Red, as usual, opened the Yearbook Nude Did It for Rice' PANHANDLING PROFIT It was followed by an off-beat closeup of some young dropouts who adopted panhandling as a profitable way of life. Concealed cameras showed them begging passersby for dimes and quar-ters. Qne-eatlmatod he received an average of $8 an hour by asking for bus fare home. Finally there was a report on a visit to the Soviet Union last summer by 13 students and their language teacher from an Atlanta, Ga., all-Negro high school. The Students loved toe people, enjoyed toe sights, hated the food and felt they had benefited by toe experience. It was a rewarding hour. - Outstanding Seniors! Bare Personalities 1 HOUSTON (AP) - “I did tt for Rice,” says the comely coed whose nude photograph appears in the university’s 1969 year-1 book. * The publication, called The Campanile, is due out Thursday with a picture of Marilyn Penelope Johnson in the altogether and, for good measure, a smaller one of Dennis Rex Bahler also unclad. ★ * Both 22, they were among 15 seniors chosen as outstanding! students by the student body Miss Johnson is toe daughter! of Dr. and Mrs. Brace Willard Johnson of Quincy, 111., and Bahler’s parents are Dr. and Mrs. Dean R. Bahler of West! Lafayette, Ind. WAS HER IDEA “We tried to capture some] sort of their personality,” Cam-1 North U.Pl Fall Color Is Near Peak LANSING (A - The Michigan Tourist Council reports fall foliage should reach a color peak in the northern part of the Upper Peninsula tola weekend. Near maximum color la expected in the Houghton-Hancock and Marquette Island Invasion7 Planned Irish Stew Over Hippies — Radio Programs— WJIK760) WXYK1270) CKIWQ00)WWJ(980) WCAUQiaO) WPONQ 46p) WJMCQ 500) TONIOHT *tM-CKLW, ttavi Hunter WJR. NfWI , NtwMImt. •iM-wpon, Newt, Lsrrv Olson tiOt-CKLW, Scott Room iijs-wjr, |cem tits—wjR, ihowctw lOitt—WJR, Newt _ ItiTi—WJR. Pocui -Sncort lltM-WJR, Newt ...----- WJBK, Mlkt Scott WHgi. Merc Averv StSS-i'WWJ, MW It ctrlien tioe-wjK Ntwt •itt—WJR. Sunnytldt, MutlC Hell »|S*~WJR, Newt WWJ, Alk Veur Neighbor CKLW, Front Srodlt WJBK, Mutle ti(v-wjR, Open Heutt 10,00-wjbk, Ntwt, Conrtd /WRVZ, Ntwt Johnny Ren- ae fyr will Ntwt, Good Mutle WHpl, Don Ztt H|SS WJR* Ntwt, Kdloldo- DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -Swami Vishnu Devananda stood on his head with Joy. His two hippie companions cried: “This is wild! This is beautiful!” Irish tempers boiled. The object of the hippies’ delight was St. Patrick’s Island in Dublin Bay. .Locals call it a “rats’ paradise.” The hippies want to make it a paradise ihr the lovp generation If they can dig up $48,000 to buy tt. ★ w But Irishmen in toe coastal village Of Skerries sky they prefer rats to toe “long-haired and unwashed” and promise a fight to keep the island from being "desecrated.” Homt Swami Vishnu Devananda, op-iitMvJl! Arthur Godfrey .erotor of a chain of yoga cen-ltw-wjR, sunnvtid* tors in the United States and Mt^PON Ntwt, D.P |Can#djl; gidney Raw,c c,Bd ln white pajamas and an Arab cloak; and Frank Hams, in a Japanese fisherman’s ' coat, toured too island today. After cries of delight, Rawle skid: “We have decided ln prln- THURtOAV APTIRNUON Uioo—WWJ, Ntwt wjr, Ntwt. Farm III it WJR Pocui ciple to buy It.” All they need is|said. “It’s not intended to use the principal—cash. this place as a haven for drug pi™ Devananda has put up ^icts or sex-starved hippies. ^ land, Herbert Marriott, has glv-f en toe hippies eight weeks to come up with the remaining $43,200. i •* ' * “They will be stopped,” said Raymond Burke, vice chairman of Dublin’s County Council Planning Authority. “They wUl never get permission to build on the island.’’ r*,_vS * JSiJVS ratj ‘‘Nobody In Ireland wants the hippies here,” said Burke’s mother. panile co-editor Gary Grether said. “Penelope suggested nude efihot of herself because toat is the only time a person is shown as her trae self.” Miss-Johnson is now a graduate student at State University of New York ip Buffalo seeking a doctor’s degree in English. “I did tt for Rice and the Rice community,’’ she said. “But I don’t want to talk.'about it because that puts tt into a class of a publicity stunt.” Miss Johnson appears sitting against a white background with her arms around her knees, Grether said. The photo is full page. | SMALLER PHOTO Bahler’s full view catches him clothed, but there is a one-inch by half-inch inset showing him nude. * * * He had no public comment. Coeditor Conrad Boeck said there is “definite artistic value’’ in the photographs. Dr. Frank Vandtveer, acting university president, said he deeply deplored what the editors were publishing, but defended their right to publish it. The student senate has editorial control over the yearbook. Peak color for the remainder of the Upper Peninsulq Is expected the weekend of Oct. 11-12. Some trees already are turning in toe northern ( part of the Lower Peninsula, “ . ★ 4 * The tourist council- at Lansing .has free maps directions for 24 sug-1 autumn-color toms throughout the state. I gested au 1 throughou Immmmnn Lana's Album Going topless NEW YORK (AP) - Australian pop singer Lana Cantrell says her next album, “The Sixth of Lana,” will have a cover photograph of half of Lana without any dotoes on. The photograph, from the waist up, was taken from toe side and Miss Cantrell, 24, had her arms demurely crossed ln front of her. She said she didn’t really regard It as a node picture—“I’m completely covered by ’ my arms.” , “I was sort of shy about tt at first,” she said, “but'I’d klKMn the photographer for years, and there were just the two of us In the studio.” MlttMII Mllhim wxrz, n CKL", ■ WJR, N« till—WJR, MUtlC Hill liM WCAR, Nfw,.‘ Roll Roi WJSK, Tom ihtnnon WHPI, Don Alcorn SlM-WWJ, Now turn* WJR, torn till—WPON. StoeS Rtport An Irish pubkeeper in London said he planned to put up $24,000 to keep the Island In Irish hands and bar the hippies/ Rawle was unconcerned. TV Tape-Playback Unit Shown . PRINCETON, N.J. \aP) -’SelectaVision," a tape-player designed to attach to any standard color television set and play, back recorded color programs, Wks unveiled in a laboratory model here Tuesday by RCA. * , * The player, which employs a laser beam to broadcast full-color recorded programs on inexpensive tape of the type used to wrap and display supermarket meats/is planned for marketing In 1972 at a cost of less than $4Q0, RCA said. “I think the people of Skerries Tapes will cost less than $10 going to be very happy for a half-hour program, i,” he when they get to 'the company has started work on ah original llbrary of 100 taped programs on sports, education, art, theater, comedy and others ln a broad range of interests. V : * ★ * AU tapes will be made in color but may be viewed on black and white sets, as is presently done with commercial color broadcasts, RCA said. EASY TO OPERATE The player will be “as com-pact and easy to operate as a phonograph,” the company said. * * Robert W. Sarnoff, RCA president, described the Selecta-Vlslon player as potentially the most Important development for the home since color television. It is also likely that-existing home movies can be converted to SelectaVision |t«pes, the company said, r£NJTH SERVICE SPECIALISTS HOD’S FE 5-6112 770 ORCHARD LA*? AVE. F-18 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1869 Possible Cancer-Virus Link ls Found NEW YORK (UPI) - After a ml I line of human cancer cells had ™ 'been cultured in a laboratory for 1‘5 months, viruses popped up among theth. Cancer science has to ask, could this be its long-sought goal — a direct] association of a human cancer with causative virustesr Science has little doubt that ai least some human cancers are caused by viruses. They cause cancers In an assortment] of “biological systems'', and] there is no reasons to believe Pinkel and Stanley Dabrowskl, working in thi Virology laboratory of St, Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tenn., began with the cells of a Wilms’ tumor removed surgically from a 15-month-old boy. It Is a rare and unusual cancer which arises in the] kidney, almost always In very] youp£ children. In recent years! These cells they cultured Inin cells for years before laboratory dishes. Inwall there were 40 passages, thAt is, one culture-succeeding another, and in the course of them the cells began changing shape which, in manifesting themselves VIRUS FOUND At the 40th passage the electron microscope revealed a small virus enclosed in a double Ihelr opinion represented a 'membrane_It was present to 1 nsformation.” m ______________________________.1 IEI , “spontaneous transformation. AS WlrcpIwM the human system Is exempt.; Yet no human cancer vinis has cancer science has learned how to cure It in a high percentage of cases to 10 per cent of the cells, * * * .' I depending on which culture dish If it was, it could 'represent they came from. ■ ■ an-outside force jit worka :* * * virus. Science now suspects the The scientists were confident existence of “slow-acting]the virus hadn’t gotten Into viruses’* which remain dormhnt] their cultures from the culture or other possible laboratory contamination and besides this particular virus had never been detected in their laboratory before. “Obviously, the significance of this observation remains to be determined.'' they said, having provided the detail that will permit other scientists to join them in trying to determine it. The Appalachian Trail tl more than 2,000 mile* long. HER LOT IS A SAD ONE - It may be hilarious to aome people, but Mrs. Alice Case, a 66-year-old widow, see# nothing funny about her one-bedroom house having been built on the wrong lot in Capistrano Beach* Calif. The mistake was discovered s year ago, Just as the house neared completion, and a legal hassle since has kept Mrs. Case from moving in. She’s sitting in the empty lot that belongs to her. yet been identified. Hot, Cold World Spots Noted And that despite years of] monumental trying, to cancer, laboratories around the world. ]There have been a number of! -1claims which proved to be*false' and so at this stage the scien Car OutpuLSlow-Up Seen for Rest 1969 WASHINGTON (UPI) - Death Valley, Calif., gets pretty hot, but it Is not as sizzling as Azizla, Libya. Authority for this assertion is the Environmental Science Services Administration (ESSA) publication Climates of the World. - On July 10, 1913, the temperature got up to 134 degrees in Death Valley. But on Sept. 13,1922, Azizia zoomed to a new record —136, degrees. Other temperature extremes minus 127 degeres recorded at Vostok, Antarctica. “Or when it rains (nowhere in North. America does the average annual rainfall exceed 262.1 inches) think of Arica, Chile, where it pours an Mgflge-jBlJte....hundcgdtha_flt lists who found viruses in their; laboratory cultures of human cancer cells are making no claims. Hiey’re reporting what happened in their laboratory, in ‘'Cancer," the technical journal of the American Cancer Society, thereby inviting other scientists to follow the same experimental trial and see if they come to the same viral end. RARE CANCER DETROIT (AP) — Despite ai For the remainder of the year, fast breaak from the 1970 model estimated production figures starting gate, the nation's auto ,rom , decline of 5.5 per industry has settled down to a ^ ag much as „ relatively slow production gal- cent £ comparison with last lop for the remainder of the cal- ye#r ' en ar yea^. - , ward’s Automotive Reports ’ forecasts a 40j000 drop in pro- industry sources say Septem- duction for the months of October sales figures are expected bW) November and December to be higher than for the same!from ^ yw . ago output of month of 1968, but these are 2,523,000 cars. somewhat distorted because the I ’_'_____________„„ new models were introducedBY MID-NOVEMBER is too early to toll how the buying public will act in the coming] months, but they expect to have a good reading on M970 sales prospects by mid-November. Early-predictions of 9.6-^1111-] on new cars sales during the 1970 model year have not been revised as yet. If the figure is [ reached, it would just about j equal the 1969 model sales. ] ' Some economic .surveys have] Injected a note of conservatism in the auto industry outlook. The Research Center reported Monday, fqr example, that consumers are growing Increasingly pessimistic about the economic outlook during the third quarter. October production of 910,000 units is planned,- down -25,000 from the number of-oatjS, built last year. , Fourth •- quarter production schedules also. have generally been trimmed because of a larger inventory of old models remaining in dealers* hsndi than Most industry sourceslnsTst It University of Michigan Survey I inerrwere a year ago.— <■ ! reported in (JlimateA Of the t " , . . | World include: Interest-Limit End Is, SoughfiS'*"Vrrm: M ’ v v/ Rivadavia, Argentina, 120. i inch of rain per year.’ Dr. John W. Smith, Donald;earliCT"flSls ycaiT Oakland County Board of SWELTERING 58 Supervisors will be asked; On Oct. 20, 1950, at tomorrow • to support s t a t e Esperanza, Palmier Peninsula, legislation to remove tem-jAntarctica, the temperature porarily the interest limits on roSe t0 B sweltering 58 degrees. ] public corporation bonds. ; That’s Antarctica foryou — The legislative committee, bot or warmish one place, meeting yesterday, recom- paralyzingly cold another, mended the piassage of a law. . ★ ★ * which would enable construction >phe lowest temperature ever; of the county’s proposed $9- recorded by man was minus 127 ] million jail and the completion ef drain and sewer projects. The law, as proposed, would allow tiie county to set its own maximum interest rate on municipal bpnds. Buyers have degrees at the Soviet Vostok Antarctic station on Aug. 24, | 1960. By comparison, Greenland is warm. The coldest day thus far reported from Greenland was] Jan. 9, 1954, when the tern- refused to purchase the bonds peratur’e at Northice fell to 87 at the current 6 per cent degrees below zero. terqst limit. PRECIPITATION EXTREMES T I c . ...Jj Climates of the World also I UOSaay events -reports precipitation extremes, ^ _ , The wettest place on earth Sp- in State Capital pears to be Mt Waialeale, Kauau. Hawaii, where annual i, iim AHMiatto era*, . rainfall averages 460 inches. tax to iup-i The driest place is Arica to Chile’s western desert During nJL............am far .ha]most of the year nn rain at aU {•Aral d#v«iopm«nt o# matt produetd | falls at Arica. But Climates of SupSiuS "iSii# **&•*,* Detroit, Flint* I the World credits it with OVfe Grind MpMi* Kalai------- ---- Ainwa wor a jart hit school td AIR POLLUTION COMMISSION Oava Caniumara Powar Co. annual fall,of three hundredths] of an inch. Says Essa: „ “Next time the summer getsi you flbwn (it never gets over ,nyI 134 degrees in North America) 1 think of something cool, like the| To the moon and back To get to the moon you would 1 have to undergo some of the most grueling tests for reliability, rugged ness and depend ability . . . acceleration from 0 to 24,600 MPH, powerful pressure changes, extremes in parature and shocks to rattls every bone In your body...you and your equipment mutt survive them all. And it’s exciting that the very same Speedmaster watch we carry was selected without any modifications by NASA for all manned space missions. This recognition, truly a-reward forexcellence, makes us proud to bo your author*, ized Omega jawelsr. Coma in ... sea this handsoms,2 button, 4 dial. Omega Speedmaster citron-ograph. The only watbh worn by the man bn tha moon. Price 1195. O OMEGA REDMOND'S Jewelry 81 N.‘ SAGINAW, PONTIAC t Free Parking In Rear bf Store Heavy Duty Shock Absorber Guaranteed for as Long ~ as You Own Your Car SAVE *2 Regular Ml 1 3/16-in. aintered-iron piston is 20% larger than most original equipment. Chrome-plate piston rod fights rust, gives longer seal life. Cooling fins reduce heat build-up and lengthen shock life. Charge It on Sears Revolving Charge Stan Auto AecMtorist Dipt- Most Oars Low Oast Installation AvallaMs m open Monday/ Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5.30 “----------------------- Sears Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 azmi^awloKAWDCio, - -■ I,. .• '■ . ,■ ■ 1 • .A Vr/ 'V.-,1" *. ,4 ■* llh'/J: * < r Smk */ n ■- / Ai SUPPLEMENT TO THE PONTIAC PRESS-WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER I, 1969 SUEDE FRONT PANEL ON WOOLEN SWEATER OwHfltf* ■ 0 £7 4 top Only 0*49# 7x35MM WIDE ANGLE BINOCULARS IN CASE 0aritf,39M WAD QQ 40q« Only 1' R. J*tOO The uniisually wlds 11 -dogroo field of view, S' ii tholr light weight, males* thsis Ideal hunting, boating'and othsr fast moving sporting avanti. Pitted carrying' mis also. NAPPED ALL-SEASON THERMAL BLANKETS OwH§K$J4;*p, '4| MM 4 Days Only for 3 ho-stlck cooking wNh no special utensils, 1-and 2>qt. covered s|uco{panc» 5*qt. Dutch even and 10" fry pJL(covor fits both). A 0« nist mMsmOi ' W ^ .- 'j H OLENWOOD PLAZA NorthPerry at Glonwood ' Qpon Dally 10 A.M. to 10 P.M.—Open Sundays 11 A.M. to A P.M. 1* . A / uUi ! MzL-i-y.' pr-si Girls' Cootsi Black/Whit* W Pink, Orange, Turquoise, BIG-SLEEVED PANT TOPS Our Rug. 2.88 NEW VESTED GIRLS’ PILE- SLACK SETS LINED COATS Our Hug. 8.36 *Our Rug. 14.86 12.88 13.33 93 *2 5.96 *11 4 Dayt Only A-ltno skirt, flare-log slacks and sleeveless, button-front' tunic in pure wool, bonded to acetate tricot jersey for fine fit. 8 to 16. 4 Dayt Only One of many styles in cotton corduroys, never-press fabrics and other fine blends. Bush jackets and nautical looks included. 6 to 18. 4 Dayt Only Acrylic Jyiif bonded to acetate. Stralght-leg&nehwtde-leg styles. Solids, plaids, tweeds, checks. Proportioned lengths, 8 to 18. 4 Dayt Only Made up in Klopmans 65% Dacron® polyester/35% combed cotton. With two-button-cuff balloon sleeves and a long pointed collar. 32 to 38:. (R) Du Pont tradtmark 4 Dayt Only One from a group of sets featuring two-buckle and button-front vests with slacks. Orion® acrylic, bonded to acetate tricot for fit. 8 to 10. 4 Dayt Only Wltard for cold weatherl Check, tweed, diagonal and poodle textured fabrics. All acryllc-plle-llned. Double, single-breasted styles. 7-12. BABY’S FULL SIZE CRIB Peg. 30.88-33.84 4% £* mum 4 Dayt Only White or walnut finish hardboard panels, double drop sides. 52x31". INNERSPRING MATTRESS Our Peg. 12.88 AV 4 Dayt Only iW9W^F Nursery-print vinyl cover 27 x 52". IUg. 3.22, Buiqper Pad | i .2.86 DELUXE NET PlAY PEN Peg. 23.66-23.88 |A g>nm 4 Dayt Only Strong Lnetting on chrome-plated tubular frame. Vinyl-covered pad. INFANT WALKER-JUMPER Peg. 7.44-7.46 amam 4 Dayt Only 9uf # Printed vinyl-coated fabric on chrome-plated tubular steel, 2-PC JUMP SUIT SET Our Peg. 3.96 J| am 4 Dayt Only No Ironlngl Lively solid colors or print combos, gold or red. Olrls'2-4. TOT POLOS TURN TURTLE Our Peg. L27 88JLJ 4 Dayt Only TOf Striped combed cotton knits with mock turtle or turtle neck. 2-4. CUTE CORDUROY JUMPERS Our Peg. 1.74 • m*W 4 Dayt Only A half doxen cunning replicas of "grown-up" styles. cotton 2-4. INFANTS’ KNIT DRESSES Our Peg, 2.86 46 '4646 4 Dayt Only MdMM Pull-fashioned, hand embroidered acrylic knit*. 12/18/24 months. »mor firflflf\For Today’s Man ^BAlHlffft-ROUNDER SHAPED SPORT COATS Single- and doubls-brsaitsd ityln with a nsw, subtle shaped-mm. Superbly tailored In a matterful blend of polyester with rayon or worded wool. Traditional, shadow and wlndowpano plaid*, mini check* end new surface-interest weave* In bluet, green*, gold*, brown* and grey*. Regular, short, long. 36-46. BOYS’APACHE SHIRTS HAVE NO-IRON SAVVY £•0.2.44 f AM 4 Day 4490 (A) Permanent press, long-sleeve shirts, 50% polyostsr/50% cot-ton. Row solids and stripes. 8-18. FLARE-BOTTOM PANTS A TOP HIT FOR BOYS Reg. 4.97 ** 0'W i (B) Ivy style, plaid. Never to ironing. 50% Celanese Fortr polyester/50% cotton. 8*18, MEN’S ACRYLIC KMT ’ MOCK TURTLE SHIRTS St? 2.33 (C) Priced so low you can wear a different one every day. Sporty stripes and solids. S-M-l-XL. MIN’S AGGRESSIVELY FUND DRESS PANTS (D) Permanently/^rested. Ivy style flacks in decisive solid colors, plaids ?hd stripes. 28-36. BOYS’ LONG-SUTVH) COTTON KNI SHMTS yhZ' 67* (I) Ring neck, turtleneck, placket and layered-leak stylet In a choice of reusing colors. 3 to 8. JUNIOR UKES FIARED BOnOM SLACKS, T00I Reg. 2.86 m 0A 4 Days M.W9 (F) No-Iron dress slacks, half-boxer style, foir comfortable small-boy fit. Plaids, stripes. 4-7. j 4 Day Only ■blf • supporting, no Sorters Reeded. Nylon on Lycra* span-box, with all-nylon foot. They 'prevent leg fatigue and relieve, muscle tension. IOVfc-14. J (D) Flexible, genuine leather uppers with hard-wearing, oil-resistant neoprene soles. Innertoles are cushioned for standing, walking, on-the-|ob comfort, 6V4-12. Alto pvallable In wide w)dths. Charge It now and savel 100% WATERPROOF POWER PAC BOOTS . Ow Rag. 449 . MAff K 4 Days Oefy 4| X| Our Reg. 7.86 Cff 4 Day Only (A) With servlet, durability and earth fort built In. Crafted with supple leather uppers on oll-rosistant soles. (8) Thrifty choice of service station employees and other outdoor workmen. Durable, wlpe-and-wear vinyl uppers on crspOrUbberioles. 6H-12. Discount Sale ^^^HHreiack, ml itblue^^^^H ao ' ■SI Charge It, save at Kmart. 4 Days Only Rwemomi liRuif, Girls' Sizes 12-14 ^UN-RESISTANT TRETCH TIGHTS nllle, as warmly endear-Ing, In Its easy-fitting, ere- Sheer> SeqmJess Mesh PANTYHOSE GO TO ALL LENGTHS Our Regular 1,26 4 Days Only Cobweb sheer stretch nylon hosiery attached to panties. Nude heel. Mist-tone, suntone, cinnamon. Jr. petite (75-90 lbs.), small (90-110 lbs.), medium (110-120 lbs.), med. tall (120-135 lbs.), tall (135050 lbs.) Pit 7-10. Specially priced now I You can charge it at Kmart I WESTCLOX BOLD ELECTRIC ALARM Our ftag. 2.96 m 4 Days Only -Mo W9 Wakes you, lets you sleep, wakes you again. Catch bn extra nap without oversleeping. AdUMforiat stones are $3 each Dainty 10K gold circlet set with a simulated blrthstone •et with sparkling dla-monds, delight the eye With shapes Unlshed with filigree 4 Day* Only Chrome»plated «ose has movable "srfopsed -.time* rlrtgt Calendar (dale) toe* leather. Wallet has plenty of room for cards, Handsome reusable woodgralrt gift box. Colonial, Contemporary or Mediterranean Styling DECORATIVE POLE LAMPS OurRegularDiscount Price 16*44 to 18.96 An elegant way to have light exactly where you want it, even in limited space. Early American chimney lamps, shaded with amber glass, on beige enamel and brass* pole. Brass* pole suspending two globes of sparkling chipped-ice-effect plastic* Black wrought iron with latticed black-on-avocado shades. Dramatically Tall TABLE LAMPS OF GLASS OR FINE CERAMIC 4 Dayt Only looking for all the world like lamps costing up to $20 moral Satln-finlsh brass* mountings.. Shades art fabric over parch-mom, trimmed with decorative braids. Gold or amber color. Satin Copper and Enamel KITCHENWARE THAT; SHOWS OFF WARMLY A smooth, eleggnt way to keeptW Indispensable necessities of the kitchen within arm's Smartly Sophis UPHOLSTERED |0ARD TABLE, ■OUR CHAIRS If Our Regular 41.88 Tough tubular stool, designed for years of uso. A wipe of a damp cloth koops tho rich vinyl upholstory looking as frosh as tho day you bought It. Tho chairs and tablo both fold of* fortltssly and lock solidly Into placa. Toblo has vinyl, roplacoablo, 35" sq. top. Is 27%" high. Seat and back of chairs aro vinyl* padded. Comfort-dosign, 16" square soat. Avocado Royal Bluo Tangerine . ■ 27x48" AREA RUG FITS IN ANY ROOM Ovr Reg. 4.96 4 Days Only LUXURIOUS CARVED BATHROOM RUG SET Our 'Reg. 4,80 4 Days Only 3.86 5x6' COTTON/RAY.ON BATH CARPET KIT Our D.g. 7.94 4 Days Only S.88 Crisp, resilient rayon pile In lustrous colors.fo go proudly with your finest furniture. Non-skid backing keeps rug flat and Is a safety feature. Charge It. Color-warmpd accent of lagtlna beauty. Ildc 21 x 34" Rug and matching lid cover Jn deep cut-pile French crimp rayon viscose. Latex-coated, non-skid back. Can be cut and shaped tb fit your room. Just pat Into place (no tacks); non-skid latex backing. Preshrunk, washable. Matching lid cover In Included. LARGE-SIZE ROUND STUFFED HASSOCKS Reg. 14,88-15.44 if Q Q 4 Days Only fff^OO Top Is padded with jirethane foam. Covered with heavy gauge vinyl. They roll easlly on 2"Hbrass casters. 24" Bleu, 15to" high; or 24to" d|a., 13to" high. ROUNDS OR SQUARES Padded hassocks built to t take rugged use. Sturdily constructed of heavy gauge plastic in a range of rich colors. Tops are padded with urethane foam, inviting you to relax in stretchout comfort. They're great Ty seats, tool Round has-socks are 15" dia.;12to" high; square hassocks are 14" sq., 12M" high and 15to" sq., 14" high. Our Reg. 4.44 Natural Looking Polyethylene Plants 36" TO 641 GREEN PLANTS IN 8 TUBS Split Leaf Philodendron, 64" tall, supported on wood-and-bark slab. In woodgrain pot. Pofhos Plant, 40" tall, In 8" wooden tub. A distinctive green accent for home or office. Rubber Plant, 36" tall, in 8" tub. A broad-leaf tropical plant. Wipes clean with water. Dubla, 64" tall. In brass-bound wooden tub. Keeps its fungle-green freshness for years. Our Reg. 8.44 4Dayg 100% Continuous Filament NYLON PILE 9* x 12'RUG Ovr Reg. 29.44 23 4 Days Only Plush, practical, durable and decorative for any room In your home. Durogan® "waffle bak". has rubber foam suction cups, won't slip or wrinkle. Charge it. Save over $51 CARPET UNDERLAY 9x12 - Ft. poly Ovr Reg. 5.88 foam rug pad, to" thick. Durable, resilient. gallons 'L' latex hH wall PAINT Reg. 2.97 Gal. Peninsular9 INTERIOR LATEX THRE£BRUSH econo-pak r, j", ana m" *•» w« nylon-bristle bruyhei. Use with M A oil or latex paint*. ^ 7 For living room, bedroom and hall. Flow* on smoothly, dries In an hour. Tool* dean with wator. Whlto and decorator colors. 4 Daysl 4 Days—Reg. 4.97'Gal. Interior nVi-FOOT STEP LADDER Sturdy aluminum. Jtag, 9J7 LIghtwelght and bva oa*y to handle. It'* K MART* LATEX An idoal washable flat.flnish for walls and ceilings. Dries in one hour, with no painty odor. Tools cloan In wator. Whlto and now colors. Reinforced fiborboard. With handles 28x16Vix 14" or cedar-grain under-bod chost, 35x18x6". N 4 Days Only Shepherd or St. Bernard. Mon plush, stuffed with lulose fibre, feealietlc vinyl features. Approx. 16". With "Vita Port" and dutch 7-INCH HOME POWERSAW mmmm H| IMfBK 22.97 fOeOV Only "Visa For)" on this circular saw lets yeo see the blade while cutting; overbad dutch protects operator. Has sawdust election chute. PeVe|op> S,S0O RFM no-load speed. You can charge It. *•«. 4.9716-u.CUW IMMe^ 4.33 Strong fiberglass handle. *•* 497 TEHON-S* HAND SAW C CC «.pi.,M”>™fM.toral*«K.. w#e*rw ®DU Pont traduuik •** AM 3’A-IN. BENCH VUE i.44 With1 swivel bale, 3Mr |aw. 4.X4 tar-174 New ybu can have your mall box In up-to-date colors or the traditional aluminum, at big savings. 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Model P2750 The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS >■ -~;: iken Unveils School Ref LANSING (AP) - Michigan Gov. William G. Millikcn has unveiled a sweeping plan to revamp Michigan’! 'school systems, Including a proposal for a statewide property tax to eliminate the traditional dlstrict-by-distrlct taxation 1 system. Milliken also proposed state aid to nonpublic schools yesterday in announcing results of a five-month study by his commission on educational reform. Jerald Miller, tax expert for the governor, said he knows of no state that has a state property tax for Us school systems. The State Legislature begins a special session next Monday to consider Milliken’s proposals. “Under the present system," Mlljiken “some districts are limited to less than-ISOflf’a year on the education of each child; whHe Ini other districts, the figure mlllige for is mofe than $1,100. &.“We want to even things out. The Michigan’s school district system is at the mercy ^many times of the district voters, who must approve minimum Ullage for thorn to qualify for state aid. As an example, tHe , North Branch I Related Story, Page A-3 Text, Picture, Story, Page F-6 commission does not think a child in one school district is worth only half as much as a child in another,” said Milliken, who succeeded George Romney as governor in January when Romney became U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. school system in northern Lower Michigan did not know whether it would open this fall until mid-September when voters approved millage. ★ ■ * * t Mlljiken said “Some districts have a tax rich base——expensive homes or substantial industry. Others have a very poor base. - “This base, the so-called state equalized valuation, ranges from $3,000 per child in some districts to $60,000 per child In others,” he said. He recommended amendment that would lower thee on local property taxes as a balance to the proposed, state property tax. 1 Regarding aid to private and parochial schools, Millikan said “We believe very strongly that the existence and strength of nonpublic schools can contribute to education choice in Michigan and that education choices is in the- public Interest. SCHOOLS IN TROUBLE “Many nonpublic schools are In .deep financial trouble. Many of them have closed and many more are destined to close unless they are helped,” he said. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) Gov. William G. Milliken Wi VOL. 127 NO. 208 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1* 1909 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Hi pace's-'*•••• io« ADC-Supported Children In f or a Long, By JEAN SAILE It could be a long, cold winter for many schoolchildren in families supported by Aid to Dependent Children (ADC). Funds appropriate by the county Sept. 4 for emergency clothing needs are better than 80 per cent used, and there has been no provision for further funds this year or any for nesjt year, records show. ★ w * The Oakland County Board o f Supervisors had voted extra cash for emergency clothing purchases following yearlong protests by ADC mothers about the county clothing store. A study undertaken by/ local merchants supported the ADC mqthers’ claims that' the store services were inadequate. \ The board set $90,000 aside to be spent at the average rate of $30 per child for 3,000 children In the county. \ There are about $,500 school-age children on ADC rolls, according to Orsi Hinckley, county social services director. Senators Told of Gl Club Graft WASHINGTON (AP) — A gift lion, costly furniture and more than $1 million were part of a flood of illegal profit skimmed by top-ranking Army sergeants from the enlisted men’s clubs they ran in Germany, senators have been told in sworn testimony., Testimony before Sen. Abraham Ribicoff’s investigative subcommittee by a former Army investigator also charged Sgt. William O. Wooldridge— once the Army’s top enlisted man—was a leader in a small band of fellow sergeants engaged In a systematic conspiracy to loot the clubs. * * * Investigator Irvin E. Beard also accused the Army of hiding the facts to avoid embarasslng Gen. Harold K. Johnson, who, as Army chief of staff, had named Wooldridge the Army’s first sergeant major. Cold Winter? By last night, Miss Hinckley reported $76,871 had been spent at the average rate of $29.68 per child for 2,590 children. Before the cash was voted, another 1,000 children had been outfitted at the county clothing store. Miss Hinckley said the cost of that service is not yet available. ' She said the ADC mothers are returning receipts for the purchases they made at private rcjtail stores. A total of 859 families were benefited. ★ ★ ★ The county’s 1970 budget, in final form for presentation to the board of supervisors late* this month, carries no provision for ADC clothing supplements. The supervisors’ finance committee has cut a Social Services clothing request of $350,975 and an auditors recommendation of $141,918 to;$4S,918. NO FURTHER PROVISION Committee Member Delos Hamlin, R-\ Farmington Township, told The Pontiac Press, “The sum represents that amount \( Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1) Rain Chance Seen Tonight,Tomorrow There’s a chance1 of showers or thundershowers in the Pontiac area late today or tonight and again tomorrow, according to the weatherman. Partly cloudy and milil is the outlook for Friday. \ w ★ ★ \. Temperatures- will continue balmy through the period, with the high near 70. The low is expected to be in the 50s tonight. Winds east to southeast at 10 to 1$ miles per hour were to become south to southwest at 10 to 20 miles tonight. ★ * * Probabilities of precipitation are 40 per cent today and 30 per cent tonight and tomorrow. The low before 8 a.m. In downtown Pontiac was 52. The mercury had jumped to 72 by 12:30 p.m. In Today's Press New Dorm^Typtfies Growth AT OU—Pages D-2, D-3 Aren News .. .i. .A,.< Astrology C-15 Bridge Crossword Puzzle P-15 Comics C-15 Editorials A-6 Food Section D-8, D-9 Markets F-5 Obituaries A-9 Smoking Series Sports F-l-F-4 Theaters CM TV and Radio Programs F-18 Vietnam War News C-6 Wilson, Earl ..... C-14 \ Women’s Pages C-l-C-5 % . '■Si;±,1. School Strike, ( , \Clarkslon audience prosily backs 1, teachers' cause — PAGE A-4. White for Black. Grafts of Caucasian skin save | burned Negro woman—PAGE ^-8. ra Military Spending Soviet superbomber report heats ;j debate In Congress'— PAGE C-6. j, istiia>a^s*iwiliiiiiiWSMiiwwiaitwi*'i*i '/■ ■'v$ ■ ‘ ' . ' ' s“ ■ Wt.il /•’ V jU U.S. Rail Shutdown Eyed WASHINGTON (AP) - The railroad industry, threatened with selective strikes by shoperaft unions, has countered with a threat of its own—a trig) tionwide shutdown of rail service. A spokesman for the four involved unions immediately protested that the industry’s announcement was aimed at forcing government intervention in the wage and work rules dispute. But Chairman, John P. Hiltz Jr. of the National Railway Labor Con- ference—which represents management of the nation’s 76 major railroads—said the move would be taken “both, in. the long-range public interest and as a matter of self-survival.” He said the shutdown would be called off if unions did not strike the seven railroads they have designated as the first to feel what the industry refers to as “whipsaw” work stoppages. The strike deadline is 11:01 p.m. (Pontiac time) Friday. The unions’ chief negotiator, William W. Winpisinger, said the strikes would go as scheduled unless the industry’s announcement triggers President Nixon to invoke the Railway Labor Act and postpones the work stoppages for up to 60 days. A dispute between signalmen and the railroads last April was the most recent threat of a nationwide rail shutdown, and this week’s is the third in a little over two-years. Whites Blamed for PNH Ruckus Angry white students touched off a disturbance at Pontiac Northern High School this morning when they confronted a group of black students who were waiting outside for classes to begin. Most of the students had dispersed by 11 a.m„ although some students lingered among uniformed police officers surrounding the building. The blame for the outbreak was placed on the whites by Assistant School Supt. Richard Fell. Several minor scuffles occurred between students, but no injuries were There were about 75 black and about 150 to 200 white According to school officials, many of the students were not from Northern, which has an enrollment of 2,100. There blacks During the April dispute— which was solved without—go vernmont—in-tervention—Secretary of Labor George Shultz forecast grim consequences to die economy. He estimated a weeklong strike would put a million persons out of work in addition to the 137,000 railroad employes. A two-week work stoppage would raise it to 3 million. TO HURT AUTO INDUSTRY Among industries hardest hit by a strike would be automobile manufacturers, which depend on rail shipments of raw materials and distribution of them products, Shultz said. If any section of die country would be deprived of adequate transportation by a rail strike, the Railway act provides the President can create an emergency board to arbitrate the union-management differences. ★ * it The board could spend up to 30 days investigating both sides of the dispute and another 30 days attempting to bring about an agreement. Meanwhile, union members would be required by law to continue working. * Hiltz said “the unprecedented divide-and-conquer tactics of the four shoperaft unions leave the railroads no alternative but to take unprecedented action themselves.” The unions have designated for strikes the Sante Fe, the Great Northern, the C&O, the B&O, Southern, Illinois Central and Erie-Lackawana.------------ Hanoi Changing Students Watch Northern Demonstration school authorities. Police at the scene formed a barricade between the white and blacks, keeping them apart and preventing any major fights. Doors at the school were locked to keep out the outside agitators. Classes were continuing, though some- parents arrived at the school to take their children home. * WASHINGTON (AP) - North Viet-nam’s willingness to see wives of Imprisoned U.S. servicemen is being viewed here as a hopeful sign Hanoi may be reevaluating its prosoner of war policies. Pentagon officials also indicate belief the North Vietnamese move is a reaction to a Nixon administration campaign to focus international attention on the handling of American POWs. LongWalk on Moon in Offing CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (A1 Apollo 12 astronauts may strolK more than half a mile from their moon-lan^Ing craft next month. Also, they plan to collect rocks fak greater scientific finesse than Neil A. — Hie wander 3)000 feet, or about two thirds of a mile, to visit the Surveyor. Their emergency oxygen supply, needed if their main backpacks fail, holds enough oxygen to keep them alive 15 to 20 minutes., A color television camera that can Related Story,1 Page C-10 beam live coverage of their lunar activities to earth has been built and “if It Armstrong and Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., were able to employ on mankind’s first lunar scavenger hunt. Apollo 12 Commander Charles Conrad rates chances as “50-50” that he-will be able to land close enough ro an unmanned Surveyor spacecraft^ on the ttjoon’s Ocean of Storms so he and astronaut Alan L. Dean can1 bring plebes of it back to earth. ■ v All this1 was revOaledin an impromptu press priefing by Navy) Cmdr. ponrad and Lt. Cmdr. Bean Tuesday following a dress rehearsal of their moon walk.. 12 COUNTDOWN TEST Meanwhile, the third Apollo astronaut—Navy Cmdr. Richard Gordon Jr.—helped crews at the launch pad with a countdown rehearsal test for the scheduled Nov. 14 liftoff. Gordon will remain In moon orbit In the Apollo 12 command ship while Conrad and Bean spend some 31 hours on the surface, Including seven hours outside the lunar landing*craft. Mission rules wlU let tho two crewmen mSS can benight qualified in time, will be aboard,” Conrad said. The moonmen plan to make two excursions outside the landing craft, each lasting abdut 3Vi hours and separated by an eight-hour rest period. 'AFirst priority has been given to setting up an elaborate set of experiments, Conrad said. Included is an advanced seismic device to record moonquakes, a sheet of aluminum foil to collect radiation parities streaming from the sun,“-am experiment to measure the density and velocity of radiation near the lunar surface and a device to study the moon's magnetic fields. On Electoral Reform -t- City Charter Vote Set for IS Pontiac will hold a special election oh Dec. 18, the City Commission decided last night. The election will determine if voters want three changes In the Ctty Charter — election of city commissioners on the basis of district only and reduction of This assessment came after North Vietnamese diplomats In Paris said yesterday- they would receive a new group of American women seeking information about husbands missing In the war. • . ; Only a few days earlier the North Vietnamese delegation had tor the first time met with four other American-wives from Dallas, Tex., trying to find out whether their husbands are dead or alive. Since that time the city has used a modified at-large system whereby (he top two,vote-getters In each district face a cttywlde vote. age and residency requirement to 25 years and one year, respectively (pres- ently 30 and f|ve). The issue on districts is whether the city should return to/a system used prior to the 1964 election. 1 Petitions to bring about the election with over 6,290 signatures were gathered by the Pontiac Concerned Citizens Council (PCCC). Some of the present districts have twice the population of others, and redlstrlctjng is expected after I*10 1#!70 census. ‘ ENCOURAGING While North Vietnam’s attitude toward" such private meetings may prove to be of no significance, any sign of movement on the POW problem is encouraging, Pentagon officials say. “They have had an Indefensible world position,” commented one official involved in day-to-day dealings with POW matters. “It has been not only wrong but also not Smart. Now they may be looking for a way to ease themselves out of the fire;’’ *\ North Vietnam may be holding as many as 900 Americans, most of them fliers shot down during the air war. Tito number is uncertain because Hanoi steadfastly has refused to provide a name list—an act which vtolataa international agreements. The Pentagon’s official list of capturad men totals 413 hut thara are Id names on the missing Ust and maty of t)toi| are believed imprisoned. mmnm THE J’ONTl AC I*IUUSft WEDNESDAY, QCTbBER £ 19q0 Rogers,Gromyko OK Further Talks UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) Secretary of State William P. Rogers should know within about a month whether his “era of negotiations” debut with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko is producing results. Rogers and Gromyko wound up their sessions here last night, agreeing to continue U.S.-Soviet discussions on a Middle East settlement. Assistant Secretary of State Joseph Sisco will carry these forward with Ambassador > Anatoly F. “Dobrynin in Washington.-------- launch Big Four—U.S., Soviet, Brltisl and French—undertakings for a Midd' East solution. * Another item discussed was Presi Nixon’s still-unanswered bid to missile curb talks. Gromyko told R I Sept. 23 that Moscow would reply with a and nlace “soon." but didn’t say Rogers hopes that by late October, the United States and the Soviet Union will have agreed on enough groundwork to ADC Clothing Funds Run Low time and place “soon,” but didn’t say when. . DISPLEASURE TO GREET DELAY If the Kremlin doesn’t respond by the pnri nf October, its delay will produce puzzlement and d i s p 1 e a s u r e. m Washington rivaling that prompted by the Soviets’ silence last summer on the presidential plea. Nixon, upon taking office, vowed to s^geek an “era of negotiation,” rather than “confrontation,” with the Communist world. Rogers’ meetings with Gromyko provided the first high-level te ?t. Gromyko heads today for Ottawa, then Moscow. Rogers, returns to Washington tomorrow. Slum Aid Program Slashed by Nixon WASHINGTON (AP) — The Nixon Puerto Rico participating in the pro administration has slashed $215 million ROBERT C. IRWIN Schools,Parents to Take Stance from the Model Cities program—a 42 per cent Cut in funds for rehabilitating some of the nation’s worst urban slums, The White House will allow only $300 million instead of the $515 million that had been ticketed in April to move at least 60 Model Cities projects from the planning stage to program grants during the current fiscal year ending next June 30. Although Congress set up the program in 1966, this is the first year for im-plementing the plans to_ftttack all the Two HUD programs that provide interest . subsidies to 1 o w - i n c o m e homeowners, and to builders of low-rent apartments are the next biggest losers after Model Cities. Their combined outlays will be cut from $39 million to $20 million. ; ■ 4 Birmingham Area Church Has New Organist, Choirmaster ISO COMMUNITIES AFFECTED An additional $20 million will be pared from grants for water, sewer and other neighborhood facilities, budgeted originally at $166 million. causes of poverty within a slum area through one integrated program. Urged Tough The Model iCties cutback, stems from the President’s order of $3.5 billion in governmentwide budget^ reductions to fight inflation. There are a total of 160 communities in 45 states, the District of Columbia and Model Cities was the keystone of former President Lyndon B. Johnson’s urban policies. The idea was to funnel all the renewal that federal-local money could buy into ''target slum neighborhoods. BIRMINGHAM - Dr. Reynold Allvin will be officially recognized as organlst-choirmaster of the Embury United Methodist Church on Oct. 12. A formal reception will follow the 10:30 a.m. worship service. Prior to arriving at Embury Church, Dr. Allvin served churches in Santa Cruz and San Jose in California. Dr. Allvin is ah associate professor of music at Oakland University. He re-, ceived a B.A. degree from San Jose State College, attended the University of doctorate from Stanford University. (Continued From Page One) needed to carry on the clothing store for the Ise of our Juvenile Department and our roster care program. There is no provision for further cash supplements for ADC children after the first of the year.” Hamlin did note, however, that an ex-tralarge contingency fund of nearly $700,000 could be used to meet clothing, needs next year if necessary. A majority vote of the board would be necessary to carry out the fund switch, he said. Without county clothing supplements, an ADC mother is. expected to dress her child from a $12 per month personal allowance. That fund was recently boosted $3 by the state, moving it up “from the $9 level set in 1961 by the federal government. In private sessions totaling about 8 hours, including lMs hours at Rogers’ apartment last night. Rogers feels he has established good first-name relations with his Soviet counterpart. But Rogers won’t predict that personal "friendship between diplomats will result in successful negotiations. I DOESN’T PRESS GROMYKO_______________________ Under the administration’s nonconfrontation policy of not pushing issues it considers irreconcilable at this time, Rogers did not T5Fess Gromyko on Viet-nam or Soviet pressure on Czechoslovakia. On the Middle East situation, Rogers has come to the conclusion that whatever agreement is possible with the Russians now will mark only one step in a long and difficult process. An appeal to parents to assert their authority and a demand for punishment of those responsible for recent fighting in Pontiac schools was issued by District 2 City Commissioner Robert C. Irfvin last night. Speaking at the city commission meeting, Irwin said "This community can’t stand this . . . all thinking parents are going to have to stand up and reject it totally.’’ Cleveland Mayor Wins Dem Primary This year the state added another $22 to the allotment, but Miss Hinckley noted, “That was this year’s legislative appropriation. We don’t know what will happen next year.” Neither do a lot of ADC parents. His next planned step }s to lay before the Big Four a U.S.-Soviet outline of how the major powers could work toward a permanent settlement. After that he hopes for a start on the key ingredient—to bring the Arabs and Israelis to the negotiating table. His behind-the-scenes talks with the Middle East rivals found them far apart. Irwin referred to violence which closed some Pontiac schools last Thursday, Friday and Monday. Centered at the two high schools, the racial fighting resulted In several minor injuries and three arrests. The commissioner said he was at Central last Friday and observed the violence. Irwin said he had talked with both white and black parents and all agreed that those responsible should,.be punished. CHILDREN ‘BEING USED’ He said the children were being used by persons deliberately inciting violence and usurping parental authority. “I saw parents trying to speak to their youngster and being ridiculed by others (students),” he said. Irwin said a conspiracy to disrupt the CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) — Negro incumbent Carl B. Stokes defeated a self-1( styled law-and-order candidate by more than 31,000 votes yesterday in Clevealnd’s — Democratic mayoral primary election. 4 But Stokes won his bid for nomination to a second two-year term only after overcoming a lead of more than 20,000 votes which Robert J. Kelly, an electoral newcomer, built up in white sections crucial to the mayor’s Nov. 4 general election prospects. REQUIREMENT DROPPED The Nixon administration last spring dropped the requirement limiting a Model Cities neighborhood to 10 per cent of a city’s population. Critics charge the expansion will dilute the program and make it meaningless. President Nixon also pared $75 million from Johnson’s request for $750 million in new appropriations for Model Cities, thus dimming the long-term yut-. look for the program. HUD sources say the Bureau of the' Budget is resisting plans for large-scale expansion in the future because the program has yet to prove itself. BLOOMFIELD HILLS — The Cran-brook Academy of Art galleries are preparing three new exhibitions opening Nov. 8 and continuing through Dec. 7. Richard E. DeVore, head of the academy’s ceramics department, will present his latest acrylic collages and ceramics. Also exhibited will be “Towers,” a survey of over 350 towers by architects, engineers, artists and fantasists, illustrated by architectural photographs, drawings, films and slides. Another exhibition is “Lasers and Holograms,” an experimental'exhibition Illustrating the significant changes technology is producing in todayTb art. The final unofficial count gave Stokes 92,219 votes to 60,899 for Kelly, a 48-year-old former city service director. “We’re going to really have to work against Ralph J. Perk,” Stokes sold of the Republican county auditor he will face in the general election. ‘EASY TO CUT .... “The Budget Bureau finds this one of the easiest places to cut,” said one HUD source. • The .latest slash follows the administration’s already controversial plans to curtail another urban renewal program known as neighborhood development or NDP. (Pontiac has two applications for NDP aid pending. NDP is a type of speeded up urban renewal that many locales had hoped to incorporate into their Model Cities proj-ject. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Registrations are being taken at the recreation office in Andover High School for the Bloomfield Hills School District fall 1969 adult evening program beginning this week. Applicants may register daily from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday-Saturday and 7-9 p..m. evenings during the next two weeks. The adult evening program course offerings range from swimming and bridge to upholstering and water colors. Approximately 40 courses and activities are available. The recreation office can supply additional course information. By Pollution Unit Head schools may have existed. September Song for This Year Could Well Be a Drought Dirge “How Dry We Are” might well have been the September song this year. A serious drought plagued Oakland County farmers and gardeners. Last September 3.05 inches of rain dampened the fields and flower beds as compared to last month’s .65 inch. Sunshine, though welcomed by housewives doing their autumn cleaning and outdoor-happy youngsters, toasted lawns an even deeper brown on 26 days during tiie month. The Rumor Control Center of the Human Relations Commission reported 538 calls were handled in the four-day period. The rumor center was organized almost two years ago to act in cases of civil disturbances. It operates continually, but in emergencies human relations commission members man up to 10 extra phones. Pontiac Div. Statement Hit Press Given Two Awards UP-TO-DATE DATA Callers are given up-to-date in- .Rain clouds darkened the skies only two days with the remainder only partly cloudy. In September 1968, there also were 26 days of sunshine.- Hie high temperature reading last month fell on the eighth, a sizzling 90 degrees. The low, 42 degrees, was recorded Sept. 29. No threat of frost hindered late harvests. Mean temperature for the past month was 64.9 degrees. September 1968 had a high of 86 degrees, a low of 45 degrees and a mean of 65.83, formation and any rumors are checked through appropriate agencies. This was tile first time the operation was put into full use. Pontiac Motor Division weiraccused last night of promising a^/ple in the sky” in its rtatemenjjxfegarding air pollutants emanatlu^from the coke fires of ty foundry. The accusation was made by Robert Parker of 791'First, chairman of the city’s Air Pollution Committee. A report he had submitted to the City Commission was discussed last week, but Parker was out of town at the time. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy today and tonight with little change In temperature4 and a chance of showers or thundershowers. High today 66 to 72. Low tonight in the 50s. Mostly cloudy Thursday with a chance of showers but not change in temperature. High near 70. Friday’s outlook: Partly eloudy^ and mild. Winds east to southeast 10 to 15 miles per hour, becoming south to southwest at 10 to 20 miles tonight. Precipitation probabilities: 40 per Cent today, 30 per cent tonight and Thursday. Samuel A. Baker, human relations commission chairman, said in his report, “We would like to believe our center has made a significant contribution ta-our community in replacing rumors with truth. . “We trust the citizens will continue to utilize the facilities to eliminate rumors which, by our experience the last few days, can lead to widespread fear and unreasoned actions.” At last night’s meeting he continued his allegations and demanded a city ordinance be drawn up and prosecution begun against Pontiac Motor Division and others accused of air pollution in the city. He cited an ordinance used in Trenton and submitted copies of it to the commission. A statement from the plant last week indicated work was proceeding on schedule in replacing the six coke ovens with electric, nonpolluting units. One was built and another started, it was reported. Sometime next year the second one would be complete, thus allowed the phasing out of one old unit. Since five operate at one time, this would mean a 20 per cent reduction in smoke from the plant- sometime next >year. GM spokesmen did not give deadlines on total completion, but denied the target date was 1979 as Parker claimed. At last week’s meeting it was pointed out the State Legislature had created an Air Pollution Commission with power to enforce standards statewide. Fighting air pollution also needs expert handling, officials pointed out. Sherwin Birnkrant, city attorney, observed “We could enact a thousand ordinances and it wouldn’t bring any immediate relief without the staff to carry out enforcement.” Parker said Trenton had done it “and we can do it, but we have been passing the buck.” A meeting between the committee, city and Pontiac Motor officials on the subject is to be arranged, it was indicated. The Pontiac Press has received two major awards from the International Newspaper Promotion Association. . In the classification of newspapers under 100,000 circulation, The PYessrivon a first-place plaque and a second-place award.' The first-place award, chosen from 213 entries, was for ln-paper promotional ads on the theme “people who read The Pontiac Press every evening have more to talk about the next day.” The second-place award was for ads honoring all-A students in local schools, and ads about a preelection page of candidate background information. The awards were accepted by Bernard M. Salvatore, assistant advertising director in charge of promotion. Also winning awards were the Birmingham Eccentric and the Detroit News. Milliken Unveils Broad School Reform Tutfdav In Pontiac (•$ recordtd jflja Highest temperature Sun rises Thursday Weather: Sunny •y'f t 63 45 (Continued From Page One) His commission recommended that the State Legislature pay half of the salaries of lay teachers of secular subjects in the next two years in private and parochial schools. Houghton Lk. 62 41 54 4] Milwaukee 65 47 New Orleam 82 1 47 New York rreverse C. 54 41 Plllabvroh 55 St. Loull 51 Tairipa Highest and Lowest Temperature! Till! Date In 77 Year! || In 1697 31 IP 1947 61 S. ste. Marie 54 ‘SI 57 Seattle WtATHIR BUREAU - ESSA Another proposed consitutional amendment also would abolish the eight-member state board of education, now elected by partisan ballot. In its place, Milliken’s, commission has proposed a state director of education, appointed by the governor and confirmed by the senator Milliken proposed a three-year timetable to reform the school systems. He called for votes on the constitutional amendments nextAugust. Legislature sometime after it returns Monday from a two-month absence. Milliken is recommending that two per cent of the total public schools budget be earmarked for parochial and private schools. This year’s budget is $848,6 million, but would soar to $1.04 billion next year under Milliken’s plan. directors, and sizes of regions would be set by a special apportionment commission subject to legislative review. No legislative change in the district boundaries would be permitted under proposed bills. ^ areas, executive department experts say more than 75 per cent of the state’s students go to schools in areas where taxes are expected to be less. ‘DRASTIC ACTION’ Peter Oppewall, Democratic president of the board which Michigan proposes to S’ wish, termed the action “drastic and icai surgery, without precedent In the United Statek.” The superintendent of the state’s public schools, appointed by the present eight-member State Board of Education, would be thrown out under the proposals. Milliken’s action, Oppewall said, would mean “he’s reaching for authority to coordinate higher education as well.” Hie Michigan state board has little control over boards of the state’s three principal universities, Oppewall said. NATIONAL WEATHER — Rein Is predtcled for tonight in the Southeast, the seif to Northwest, the northern Rocky Mountain region and the Great Lakes vioin-F, It,will be warmer in the Midwest and cooler ia the central Rockies- DETAILS LATER Details of Milliken’s reforms are to be spelled out In an address; Jo the Milliken recommended that the present system of intermediate school districts be abolished and replaced by 10 to 15 education regions, whose boundaries would be set by a special commission and subject to approval of the Legislature. Among other things, the districts would be responsible for special education, technical education, transportation, data processing, central business services, curriculum consulting and budget review of local districts. v SAME LOCAL DISTRICTS Milliken "said local districts would remain basically the same, and the “control of tiie schools should remain as close {to the people as possible.” Milliken is expected 4o-aeek an Increase in the state’s present 2,8 per 'cent state personal income tax. increases in the 5.6 per cent state corporation tax and the 4 per cent state sales tax also have been considered but apparently rejected. Mllllken’s proposal to eliminate the ■ State Board of Education, It was understood, would require revising con-sltuatlonal atuhorlty over the boards of tiie University of Michigan, Michigan State and Wayne State in Detroit. The State Education Department director also would appoint regional & a m • While the statewide projperty tax could mean higher property taxes in some As the plan now is envisioned, it would offer a total property tax saving of $320 million based on an estimated 1971 total valuation of $40 billion. 60 horsepower, 124 MPH 500 cc9s 3 cylinders! Thil If thf faituit moving, failfit accelerating tWO- torcycle. Big three cylinder doilgn with BOO ce'l that outperform! tha 750f». A full 60 Hone*' . with a top tpaad or 124 MPH. Blatts through tho V* mllo 12.4 tocondi, and all this It ttofk. GOT IT? Ori IT at ROBBINS SPORT CYCLE 2281 Auburn Road Near Ortjoks Road Phone 552-4651 IUWMMI • HtlmvtnN* • 9IMT0N Induro • Scrambles - Mfcto > Cross-woods or roadfidltyg or whatever QUICK SIRVIOE ON MOST MODELS ' . ',d* MB# M ' ^ WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1909 , p* Input's a Good Wore —It Tells It Like It I ByEDBLUNDEN , Beware, another piece of contagious slarig is on the way. z We've all heard; ‘‘sock it to 'em," "do your thing," "finalize," "bag," "gap,” etc. until we’re right up our tree. Creeping Into the Jargon is "Input." I first heard it used about a month ago at a City Commission meeting. It was a stormy session with a lot of citizen participation (griping). Near the conclusion, a speaker said "These people have all given you their inputs.” . It was a swell word. It covered the feeling, opinions and suggestions put forth, but added dimension. LAYING ON THE LINE Of course, I had been impressed the first time I heard someone say "tell it like it is.” This told me the speaker was about to be utterly sincere and reveal heretofore undisclosed material. But, use of the term soon became distorted. The usage had the most extravagant variation when one speaker said, "I’m not telling it like it is, I’m telling it like it’s going to be, because it sure isn’t that way now.” Catchy words and phrases in our media-oriented Society quickly suffer overuse and exploitation. Thus we hear, “this is really good beer... and I’m telling it like it is.” The use of the word “input" at present centers around office forces. Thus after any type of briefing, hearing or staff meeting, members emerge with “valuable inputs.” GIVE ED A CHANCE * ^ It’s an absolute must that you work "inputs” into your conversation. It can be substituted for any exchange of information or opinion whatsoever , . . "Thanks for those Inputs, boss, I won’t do it again ... we value your inputs, Ralph, but let somebody else talk . . In fact, if you’ve read this far, you’ve gotten “valuable inputs” from this article. This useful word will no doubt degenerate in usage, too. Soon we’ll hear, "This is great beer because it has valuable inputs.” Sorry about that, but you better believe it. AS Wlwphot# DAUGHTER IS MISSING - Gene Tunney, former world heavyweight boxing champion, goes to a Boston press conference in a wheelchair yesterday to discuss disappearance of his daughter, Joan Tunney Wilkinson, 30, while she was on a European vacation. Tunney is recuperating from surgery at New England Baptist Hospital in Boston. He has offered ' a reward of $1,250 for information about his daughter. "Sunda/ Viewpoint” Not recommended for people who get headaches when they think. “Sunday Viewpoint's one of the ingredients of The Detroit News’ -90 Turned On Days. It was designed to give smugness a hard time. On its pages every week, critics, analysts, philosophers, scientists and reviewers explore the whole panorama of human adventure. And if, in the process, one of them should kick your neighbor’s favorite sacred cow, don’t laugh. The next one may prick the^balloon of your own pet dogma. "Sunday Viewpoint" Is npt for mental ostriches. Nor is It for those who grow nervous and suspicious at the sight of three-syllable words. news But, If fresh Insights—even when they threaten your most cherished ideas—challenge you to growth. If wit, logic and literacy delight you. Then, welcome to the pages of "Sunday Viewpoint". They’ll turn you on. Please enter my subscription to The Detroit News quick, and turn me onl , ■. ' NAME L Annest* —1—< —H APT. CITY STATE ' zip : Ptinwe (Mall to: Subscription Department, The Detroit News, 6IS lefayette Blvd., Datroll, Michigan 48231. Or phene 222-2600.1 Check one □ Dally only-40* per week Q Dally and Sunday-90* per week □ Sunday only-30* per week ; BUYI SELL! TRADE I . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! / /'/ FIFTEEN CHILDREN HURT - A truck loaded with apples sideswlped a stopped Montague school bus yesterday afternoon on U.S. 31 at the MuskCgon-Oceana County line near Rothbury, Injuring 15 children on the bus. Two of the AS Wlrtphofo pupils, aged 10 to 16, were hospitalized, one with a skull fracture and one with a broken hip. A bjake lining on the truck apparently failed. 7 Freed Green Berets Heading for Homes TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) — Seven Green Berets, against whom charges of murdering an alleged Vietnamese double agent have been dropped, returried to the United States today and headed for their homes. Col. Robert B. RJjeault, 43, former commander of the Green Berets In Vietnam and the top-ranking among the men, said he hoped the incident "would forgotten . . . "so long as people remember that we were exonerated." An Army spokesman said they were released upon arrival for 30 days’ leave. Rheault said he, the five other, officers and* two enlisted men did not know Thai Khac Chuyen, I their alleged victim. He insisted there was no evidence that the. map had been killed. ‘SECURITY REASONS’ I Army Secretary Stanley R. Resor announced Monday the charges against all eight had been dropped after the Central Intelligence Agency, for security reasons, declined to let lt« agents testify. He said the CIA action precluded a fair trial, With Rheault of Vinegar ven, Mass., were CaptT. F. Marasco, 27, Bloomfield, N.J.; Maj. Thomas C. Middleton Jr., 29, Jefferson, S.C.; Maj. David Crew, 33, Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Capt. Leland J, Brumley, 27, Duncan, Okla.; Capt. Budge E. Williams, 27, Athena, Ga.| and CW02 Edward M. Boyle, 26, AT NEWS CONFERENCE - Col. Robert B. Rheault acts as spokesman for a group of Green Berets against whoa charges of murdering an alleged Vietnamese double % p If N ifefe; THE PONTIAC PRESS, Pontiac and Clarkston, Meet Ortonville Long distance won't come between you after October 2 :r" That’s right. At 12:01 a.m., Thursday, Long Distance charges • will be eliminated on Ortonville calls from Pontiac and Clarkston. Yob won’t even have to dial “l” when making such calls. Listings for Ortonville customers will be* included as a separate section in the April 1970, issue of the Pontiac Area directory. Before then, you may obtain a special directory supplement containing Ortonville numbers by calling your telephone business office, 332-9911. This expanded service is part of our continuing effort to make telephone service a greater value. We hope you will be pleased with the extra convenience and savings. lichigan Bell ionwide Bell System When foiling dried bread, graham ctackers or soda cracker* lor prumbs, keep them from scattering by placing in a plastic bag, / Fasten tightly with rubber band, Roll bag k|)th rolling pin and crumbs will stay in the bag instead of all over the rolling surface and kitchen, Efficiency Report Sef A management consultant firm will be invited to appear before the County Board of Supervisors Finance Committee to tell what the firm can do4or .labilities: Accounts Salary Withholdings Payabla . Deferred Revenue Reserve for Obligations—Federal Cosh In Bonks rrrrr Investment Securities Texes Receivable Accrued interest Receivable . $ 260.152 7,613 63.197 8 44.131 567,768 gv*’ Total Debt Retirement Fund Assets Liabilities: $ 331.662 $ 67X101 Accrued Expenses Debt Retirement Fund Equity ... 331.662 673.108 Total Debt Retirement Fund Liabilities Plus Fund Equity $ 331.062 $ 673.808 COMPARATIVE BUILDING AND SITE FUND BALANCE SHEET Assets: Cash In Sanka .......................... Investment Securities . . ........ Accounts Receivable Accrued Interest Receivable .. Total Building and Site Fund Assets Liabilities: Accounts Payable ..............—------- Total Transfers from school Districts l TEVENUEs GEffffiVofte EXPENDITURES SING TRAN Secondary Grades el Seconds Education ■ISmciIi School ■ oral Sumrr Adult Education Total felementary Instructional Expense ____ . 3redes: Total Secondary Instructional Expanse ......... dal Education: Total .Special Education Instructional Expenst Expanse Total General Fund Casual Outlay Expanse .. ................ I 2 ’y Services: —. Total Community Services Expense ......... .......... » lent Services: ' . . Total Expenditures of Revolving Funds ...........................s 1,220,2?2 TOTAL GENERAL FUND EXPENDITURES, ... . EXCLUDING TRANSFERS, ..................................- MM utgolng Transfer Accounts to Other Funds: Total Outgoing Transfer Expenditures to Other Funds ...... 1NERAL FUND EXPENDITURES PLUS TGOING TRANSFERS ..................................SMW.JB2.301 DEBT RETIREMENT FUND REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES TOTAL GE increased efficiency of county government and what the cost will be. Fihance Committee Chairman George urba, D-Pontiac. who earlier this year told the com-mittee he’d been promised free servide by two consulting firms, reported yesterday that both were, now unable to comply. "It’s amazing a county of this size can’t afford 140,000 to $50,000 which I’m told it (the study) will cost,” Grba said. He noted that estimates by County Auditor Chairman Daniel T. Murphy put the figure nearer $120,000. “Let’s put it out for bids and then we can decide,” Grba said. His committee agreed. FORMER STUDY——____________ Delos HjunUn, R-Farmington Township, reported that the last time the county had such a study made was about 25 years ago. A Chicago firm was employed for $10,000, he said. “The firm made such a lot of recommendations' that the board (the then board of supervisors) was sure it was a Communist plot and turned them aU down,” the former, board chairman recalled. He noted state legislation would be required for such action. In other business the committee accepted the bid of Steve Kruchko Co. Inc. of .Waterford Township in the amount of $1$1,700 fur mechanical altera-tions at the’ old Board of Education building on the Service Center. Carl O’Brien, D-Pontiac, who earlier had refused to vote for the bid, reconsidered when county administrators informed him a 150-day limit had been placed on Hie job. Kruchko had failed to include that information in his bid ££ t The committee also recom mended the infusion of into the drain board fund — a fund running low at $20,000 a^nd committed for nearly half million dollars in preliminary drain construction costs. Schodl Board City’s Osmun “Since then,” he said, “every recommendation made has been carried out.” Murphy, who is county administrator, said he’d be In favor of such a study, “if only to learn whether we’re overstaffed in the Health Department.”. CONSOLIDATION Hamlin pointed out that a reasonable conclusion of such a study might be the lumping of the drain commission, public works and road commission duties in one office. Monroe M. Osmun, Who resigned as a member of the Pontiac Board of Education in June, was honored during an executive dinner meeting of the board last night for his contributions to the school district. Osmun served for 23 years a! a member of the board, seven years of which he was the board’s chairman. - Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer presented him with two plaques, each expressing appreciation for “giving his time and energy, above and beyond the call of duty, to the maintenance and improvement of education for the young people of Pontiac.” Deaths in Pontiac Area Mrs. Donald Mitchell Service for Mrs. Donald (Leona B.) Mitchell, 67, of 192 Seward will.be 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees Siple Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Mitchell died Monday. Surviving are one sister and two brothers, including Raymond Maxwell of Pontiac. Mrs. T. K. Sales Service for Mrs.'T. K. (Mary Ann) Sales, 89, of 4734 Kempf, Waterford Township, will be 1 George A. Kahle COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for George A. Kahle, 80, of 3596 Moberly will be 1 p.m. Friday at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake, with burial in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Mr. Kahle died yesterday. He was owner and operator of Kahle Lawn Mower Service. Surviving are his wife, Anna; one daughter, Mrs. Dale Fife of Commerce Township; two sisters; and five grandchildm. Mrs. Albert Roth BIRMINGHAM - Service for p.m. Friday at Donelson-Johns Mrs. Albert (Ethel M.) Roth, Funeral Home, with burial In 177, of 1245 Suffield will be 10 Oakland Hills Memorial a.m. Friday at Bell Chapel of Gardens, Novi. the William R. Hamilton Co. Mrs. Sales died yesterday, with burial in Oakwood She was a member of Forest Cemetery, Lowell. Grove General Baptist Church Mrs. Roth died yesterday. She of Cardwell, Mo. was a member of the First Surviving are four sons, Willis United Methodist Church Burgess and Henry Burgess both of Arbyrd, Mo., Floyd of Pontiac and Permer Sales of Otfsville; two daughters, Mrs. Genie Shrum of Caruth, Mo., and Mrs. Hazel Clark of Waterford Township; 36 grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. Society of Engineers’ Wives Oakland Hills Country Club, T.P.E.O. Sisterhood, Detroit New Century Club, Michigan League for Crippled Children and Bloomfield Art Association Surviving are one son, George of Livonia; one daughter, Mrs, Robert E. Riordan of St. Louis, Mo.; and five grandchildren. Total Debt Retirement Expenditures end Outgoing Trensters .. .. » BUILDING AND SITE FUND REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES Site Acquisition New Buildings < Furniture Total Building and Site Fund Expendltui Service for Gregory L. Smith, the 7-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Smith of 5155 Farm, will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at Nordman Funeral IRune, Cheboygan, with burial hrCarp Lake Cemetery,-JJidDoygan. Local arrangements were by Huntoon Funeral Home. Hie child died yesterday. Surviving are his parents; two brothers, Robert B. and George A., both at home; two sisters, Wendy S. and Patricia both at home; and grandparents Thomas Webber of Pontiac and Mrs. Joseph Harrington of Levering. Sites Build Contents Number of School Buildings Numbor of Classrooms Number ol Teachers Teachers' Salaries Bachelor's Degree Minimum Maximum ....... Median ........ Master'll Degree Minimum ,\.,. Maximum ....... Median ....i .. nbershlp (as o« 4th Elementary Pupil* Non-ReslljanMSpecial Education) L*STATEMENT OF THE*CONDITION OF THE SCHOOL DISTRICT District ol tht City of Pontiac provides ■ comprehensive pdl ■ pupils A good level of Inetruetlonol materials, weil quaillled la physical facilities are provided All pupils have fuiMev assail • children who are handlcappet tech pupil ovlslon Is m f^^EheLrusr mrs a educational progi eschars, modernise_ ' skilled asalMeiM .lit I!,.?* S ESSS let'No. 349r Public Act! ( VERNON las SCHILLER, 1 / - .i; ^ , Truiurirl (kmtn, iwr 3n k, ■ ml Mrs. Aaron Smith Mrs. Belle Williams Service for Mrs. Belie Williams, 92, of 129 Coleman will be later this week at Gregg Funeral Home, Jonesboro, Ark., with burial in Walnut Ridge Cemetery, ’Jonesboro, Local Arrangements were by Pursley-Giibert Funeral Home. Mrs.vWilliams died yesterday. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs, Gertrude Estes of Pontiac, and one sister. Charles Brittain LAKE ORION - Service for Charles Brittain, 88, of 204 Heights will be 1:30 p,m, tomorrow at Allen's Funeral Rome, with biirlal In East Lawn Cemetery, Mr. Brittain died yesterday. He was a retired shipping clerk of Ford Motor Co. Gregory L. Smith ORTONVILLE - Service for Mrs. AarorMMabel) Smith, 85, of 330 Sherman Court will be 11 m. Friday at C. F, Sherman Funeral Home, with burial In Brookslde Cemetery, W e s 1 Branch. Mrs. Smith died yesterday. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Gusta Moss and Mrs. Vera Kiech, both of Atlanta, Mich.; one son, Gabriel of Atlanta, Mich.,; and one brother, William VanWormer of Orfon-vllle. Mrs. William Woodruff COMMERCE TOWNSHIP Service for former resident Mrs. William (Jean R. Woodruff, 59, of Royal Oak will be 2 p.m. Friday at the Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Mrs. Woodruff died yesterday. She was the (executive secretary and member of the board of directors , of 1 H o 1 e f c a & Associates Inc., a Rochester Insurance firm, v Surviving are her mother Mrs. Mary L1. Chamberlain of Ferndale; two brothers; and one sister, Mrs. Kenneth of Walled Lake. CONSTIPATED O Miff fA IMflf At IAAA ■ BRAN BUDS* Exciting selection of men’s regular $6 wool/nylon sport shirts anchorsorted knit shirts Sport shirts are impeccably made and come in a variety of bold, masculine plaids. All have twin pockets, some with flaps; long sleeved. Buy now for cool days of sport, leisure. S-M-L-XL. Knit shirts in full fashioned Orion® acrylics have short sleeves, in solids, * stripes. Long sleeve Ban-Lon® Texf* ralized® nylon shirts with hi mock, crew neck or placquet collar. S-M-L-XL. 9:30-9) p.m. Men's sweater sets and assorted fall sweaters, val. to $17 Includes reg. 15.99 sweater sets by Waldorf; Orlon®acry^ lie cardigan with pullover. Also ass t, fall sweaters. S-M-L-XL. 10.88 Regular 13.99 warm —outerwear for boys 10.88 a. 100% nylon ski parka Is reversible for double the wear. In a variety of colors. S-M-L-XL. b. Cotton corduroy parka has acrylic-pile lining. Wdrm hood. In olive, bronzeTbhMkMo 14. c. 100% nyhMf oxford parka; acrylic pile lining, snap front. In navy, green dr gold. 8 to 18, FEDERAL'S DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS 1 Mets Next for Atlanta ATLANTA.(AP) - It took Atlanta’* longest winning streak to do it, but the Braves have won the National League West Division championship. The Braves, who streaked to 17 victories in their last 20 games Including 10 In a row, killed San Francisco’s slim chances of tying for the title with a 3-2 vitcory Over Cincinnati Tuesday night. 1 turn was forced at third on Felix 'Millan’s bunt but Tony/Gonzalez made it 2-2 with his fourth,straight single, scoring Garr. Hank Aaron walked to load the bases and Carty, who missed the entire 1968 season with tuberculosis, drilled the fly ball to Tight that scored Mlllan with the winning run/ vi,„- Atlanta, playing before a partisan crowd of 43,974 that cheered constantly, took a-1-0 lead in the third on Niekro's single, Millan's sacrifice bunt, an infield hit by Gonzalez and Aaron's single to left. Atlanta ends its regular season against the Reds Thursday night and opens the best-of-5 series with the East Division' champion New York Mets here Saturday with the National League pennant at FANS LAUD BRAVES. — It was a night for back-slapping in Atlanta last night as fans pour onto the field (top) to congratulate Atlanta’s Braves after they clinched the National League Western Division championship with' a 3-2 decision over Cincinnati. Braves’ slugger Henry Aaron (below) 'is surrounded as he moves toward the dugout. The Braves now meet the New York Mets in a three-out-of-flve series to determine who’ll represent the National- League in the World Rico Carty/ who *hit .387 during the Braves’ surge that began Sept. 9, drove home the winning run with a sacrifice fly in the seventh inning, capping a two-run rally. KNUCKLEBALLERS Ace knuckleballer Phil Nlekro gained THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1960 F—1 Win Brings Celebration in Atlanta ATLANTA (AP) — A strip joint owner stopped the show, shouting, "The Braves win, the Braves win.” Playboy Bunny Patti said she was happy for a "great bunch or guys/' Lunch counter customers and bus riders clustered over radios, grinning and cheering. Fans crowded the stadium field, mobbing the players, throwing confetti, setting off firecrackers. The Atlanta Braves had just clinched the National League West Division pennant with a 3-2 victory over Cincinnati, their 10th straight win. The Braves finish the season Thursday night and then go into the playoffs against the East Division champion New York Mets Saturday. FINAL OUT "It was great," said W. J. Padgett seconds after Hoyt Wilhelm got pinch-hitter Alex Johnson on a grounder to short for the final out Tuesday night. "What else can you say?” That summed up the reaction of thousands of other Braves fans, at the stadium and elsewhere. "It’s the greatest thing that’s ever' happened to the Southeast,” said strip club owner Buck Sessions. "I died a hundred deaths during those last three outs.” Atlanta Alderman Jack Summers declared, "I feel like we just won the World Serlep. I think we’re going to make it.” One fan *aid she had Braves in both Atlanta and Milwaukee, where they played from 1953 until moving to Atlanta in 1966. "I’m delighted,” said Mrs. Mary Burkhardt. "I moved to Atlanta from — would you believe.— Milwaukee a month ago. I loved them up there and I love them here.” Delvecchio's Goal Wins for Detroit BARRIE, Ont. (AP)~=- Alex Delvec-chto scored the last goal of the game in the second period to give Detroit a 3-2 victory over the Los Angeles Kings in a National Hockey League exhibition contest Tuesday. Pete Stemkowski and Hank Monteith accounted for the Red Wings’ other Bob Lemleux and Bill Flett scored Los Angeles’ two goals. his 23rd victory, relieved over the final two innings by veteran knuckleballer Hoyt Wilhelm, who retired six Reds in a row, three by strikeouts. It was Niekro’s sixth straight victory over the Reds this Wilhelm said after the game' that he was "a little nervous” when he began warming up. "In a game like that, you’ve got to be.” Wilhelm, 46, logged his fourth save —he's won two—since the Braves picked him up on waivers last month. Pinch hitter Mike Lum opened the seventh with a single* to center and Ralph Garr, batting for Nipkro, drew a walk, sending Cincinnati starter Gary Nolan to the showers and bringing on' Wayne Granger. ct 40' Town cf 4 0 0 0 TAaron rf . 10 Perez 3b 4 0 0 0 Carty If 3 0 Bench c 4 0 10 Wllholm p 0 0 i Cepeda lb 3 0 i CBoyer 3b 4 0 112111 D Idler c 4 0 _______j ph 1 0 0 0 Garrldo is 2 0 Nolan p 2 0 0 0 Lym If 2 0 Granger p 0 0 0 0 PNtekro p 2 1 Garr ph Rookie Helps Tigers Nail Down No. 2 Spot Af Decals Difficult to After 20th Win in 1969 Finale Obtain at Michigan BALTIMORE (AP) - What do Mike Kekich, Fritz Peterson, Mel Stottlemyre, Mike Kilkenny and Tom Timmerman have in common? They all have complete-game victories over the Baltimore Orioles in running up a five-game losing streak for the American League’s Eastern Division champions,Their longest of the season. ANN ARBOR (AP) - Gold football decals that appear on some Michigan football players’ helmets are symbols of excellence in past games. And the way U-M rolled to victories in its first two games some players were awarded as many as six at one time. SLOW STARTER slow TOM TIMMERMAN Top Player Injured Timmerman, 4-3, a 10 -year minor leaguer making his first major league start, held the Orioles to Beven hits Tuesday night as the Detroit Tigers won 4 -3 and clinched second place in the Eastern Division. Mickey Lolich, seeking an elusive 20th victory, gets his last chance tonight when the Tigers close the season against Baltimore. He has lost 10. Jim Palmer, 15-4, is scheduled to start for the Orioles. Loser Dave McNally, 20-7, was routed, during a three-run, seventh-inning rally which featured Don Wert's two-ruft •single. DOUBLE PLAY But coach Bo Schembechler says "those things are going to be a little tougher to get now.” The Wolverines had little trouble crushing Vanderbilt 42-14 and last week thrashing Washington 457, but this Saturday they take on Missouri, rated ninth in the country. -"The Missouri defense is one of the best in the country,” Schembechler said this week at a news luncheon.* "They play their secondary so tight they’re line linebackers,” he said. .. Their defense hasn’t been scored oh’by rushing yet.” That might prove a problem to U-M, which has ground out 729 yards rushing "Missouri has always been a starting team,” Schembechler said. "And they may be again. They’re starting to get better already.” He said the Tigers have good field goal kicking and punting return games. "We’ll have to defense their punt returns. It’s aa real fine weapon for them,” he said. . The former Miami of Ohio coach said there is not much that can be done against their field goal attempts, which may come from anywhere inside the 50-yatd-llne. The Tigers, who beat the Air Force Academy in their first game and downed Illinois last week, were 7-3 last season , and went on to upset Alabama 35-10 in the Gator Bowl. No Lead Big Enough Says OSU's Hayes CHICAGO (AP) — The days of sitting on a two or three touchdown lead are gone in college football, take It from no less an authority than Woody Hayes of Ohio State who commands the nation’s No. 1 team. Hayes, whose Buckeyes rolled over Texas Christian 62-0 in their opener last. Saturday, told Chicago Football Writers Tuesday that "During a game you don’t know how big is big enough.” AP Winphoto LEW SLOWED - Milwaukee Bucks’ towering rookie Lew Alcindor sits in a wheelchair. after arriving in Milwaukee from Wichita, Kan., Monday. Alcindor, 7-feet-lV&-inches, suffered a sprained ankle in an exhibition game Sunday night. He rode the wheelchair from the plane to a car. Hayes referred to Purdue’s opener against the same TCU team a week before when the Boilermakers rambled to a big lead and had to hold off TCU for a 42-35 victory. High geared offenses in -the college game have developed from the beginning of platoon football to extension of the games by stopping the clock after every first down. in two games. Junior quarterback Don Moorhead and sophomore tailback sensation Glenn Doughty have accounted for 560 of that. It all makes for more excitement, bigger crowds but also opens the door for lopsided victories by teams loaded with talent. "Platoon football offenses are reaching their maximum potential,” said Hayes. “The quarterback is in the game totally and not just a drop back passer. “College coaches experimented and were not afraid to run the quarterback as you can see in the triple option offense. More and more quarterbacks employ the run-pass option. There are ramifications to the new offenses and the big Scoring is not necessarily a drop in defensive football,” added Hayes. John Coatta, whose winless Wisconsin Badgers appear on the verge of a breakthrough because of their potent offense, attributes the big scoring to the greater skills of the players. "Hie kids today all run, catch and throw the ball so well that it is difficult for the defense to keep up,” said Coatta. “If you have a wealth of material, you can put good players on defense. But If you’re short of manpower, the better players go on offense because you must score to win." (Continued bn Page F-2, Col. 2). Ex-Kettering Player Out for Three Weeks Former Kettering gridder J1 m Haviland, who started at the comerback spot for the Miami Hurricanes hi their 16-14 loss to Florida State, will be lost to the team for at least three weeks. . Haviland suffered a shoulder injury late in the game. He is expected to return for the Houston game Nov. 1. Pistons'Coach Wondering... DETROIT (UPI) - A year ago, Bill -Van-Breda Kolff was woundering how he’d survive a season of squabbles with Wilt Champerlain. Ahh, sweet memories. Now Van Breda Kolff must be just wondering how he can Survive the season as coach of the Detroit Pistons. ★ ★ it Van Breda Kolff left the Los Angeles Lakers after the Boston Celtics had beaten them in the seventh game of the National Baskeball Association playoffs. He now begins the first of two years as i coach of a team which finished sixth tn the sevep-feam NBA East last season — and the Pistons didn’t corral a single draft choice of note — again. As if that wasn’t enough of a problem, he faces the prospect of losing his best player soon to the rival American Basketball Association. , Dave Bing, who led the NBA In scoring years ago, has signed an estimated halFmilllon-dollar contract with the Washington Caps, starting in 1971-72, after his contract with the Pistons runs out. "Z don’t think tiwt will affect bis play Ifere," Van Breda Xolff said. "I’ve seen y ■ him play since high school and he only knows one way to ‘play — all out. ” Center Walt Bellamy, acquired In the trade which sent Dave DeBu'sschere to New York and almost gave the Knicks the key to the playoffs, is as good as there is. Critics tack a "when he wants to be” onto that sentence. Happy Hairston will get Van Breda Kolff some points and. pull down a few rebound (18-polnt average and nearly 1,000 rebounds last season) while Terry Dtychinger and McCoy McLemmore do a capable Job on the other side. Eddie Miles ranks among the best guards, and Jimmy Walker, the former Providence flash who has disappointed in the past, has a "new attitude” again. Howard Komives, obtained in, the DeBusschere deal, can also come Off the bench and swish a few. Nets Drop 2 Cagers BROOKVILLE, N.Y. (UPI) - Wilbur Frazier, a 6-9 center, and Elvln Ivory, 8-8, were cut Tuesday from the New York Nets squad as'the club prepared for its Oct. 17 American Basketball Association opener. ■ J. \ Sis yk After Mickey Stanley had been doubled off second oh Cesar Gutierrez’ liner to Dave Johnson, the Tigers came roaring back. McNally walked Jim Northfrup and Willie Horton, then was kayoed’ by Bill Freehan’s double, which scored Northup. Wert greeted reliever Dick Nall with his 'two-run single. Stanley! and Wert had two safeties to pace the Tigers’ nine-hit attack, a a a The Orioles almost came back in the ninth as Don Buford singled in Mark Belanger, but Timmerman got Paul Blair on,a popup to Freehan. Manager \ Earl Weaver played his Oriole regulars for only the fifth time in 16’games since they clinched the division title Sept. 16. ■ALTiMone (Unity cf 4 0 2 1 Buford If 4 0 11 Out trrti H 4 0 0 0 Bl*lr cf 4 0 0 0 Norihrup rf 4 12 0 Moolnin rf 4 0 I 0 WHorlon If 4 10 0 PtWOll It) 4 M 0 Proofiin lb 4 11] Stlmon lb o o 0'0 Wtrf lb 3 0 2 2 BRoblnin lb 4 0 0 0 Prlct c 3 0 10 DJohniwi 2b 4 0 0 0 [Brown 2b 3 110 HoMrcM c 3 111 Timrmtn p 4 0 0 0 ■•Itnatr ll 4l}1 —iNtliy p 1 0 I 0 la III McNtlly (KlO-f)1 :: 42-3 • 4 4 i- 1 lolly (I,Brown). T—till. Loonhi . HBP by McNtlly A-4,W?7 Club Sags on Field, at Gate I Long Road :v- SAN DIEGO (AP)—Baseball fans in San Diego apparently won’t come out to watch a loser, but E. J. "Buzzle” Bavasi can’t blame them. He wouldn’t either. * a w * "These people in San Diego want something to root for,” Bavasi, president of the San Diego Padres said. "I as a fan, can’t see people tooting for a club - that wins one out of every four day*. i* + ■’ * * . )V "But if we can win, as often as we lose, you'll see an appreciable difference tn the audience.” Thq Padres, last in the National League's West Division, have completed thefr home schedule at| 50,000-seat San Diego Stadium, playing before 613,302, an average of 8,177 .a game. Bavasi said it was too early to determlne the club's financial deficit, but he said a season attendance of 800,000 was required to break even. San Diego County has about 1.4 million people. Bavasi said he and p. Arnholt Smith, ¥ ; ' V ■ '■■ ■">' ■ 4 " , * M. ■ - * ■ Ahead for Young Padres j majaorlty owner of the team, would not look-to another city if attendance doesn’t increase in 1970. “We would have to take a dim view of the future if we didn’t pick up next year,” Bavasi said. “If we don’t do a lot better at the gate we’ll have to think which direction to go. By that I don’t mean Ftr Worth, Buffalo or New Orleans. \ \ \ * * "What I mean is right now our ^direction is headed toward the minor leagues to develop our players. Now, If we don't come up with the resources to do this, we’ll have to take what good players we have and sell them to get enough ca*h to sign young players or free agents. "Right now we think we can do It through,our own minor league system.”' But without good attendance revenue the Padres will be in a bind. < DRAFT FIRST "If we don’t draw well there’s no way we’re going to sign ballplayers,' I and said he league going particularly now when we’re finishing last and we draft first. We don’t have the money now and we’re in trouble, a ★ a "We’ll do something about it,” said. "We’ve got to go out and beg money to sign these because now is the time to years from now, when fifth, we won’t be first a "We need the have it because enough. "We’ve had a frugal had to cut down here hadn’t been million) for beeh all right dollars. THE P6NTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1969 The following are top prices covering sales of neatly grown produce by groweru and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as ol Monday. Produce Apples. McIntosh, bu. Apples. Northern Spy. bu. Apples, Wolf River, bu. Grapes, Concord, pk. bsk Peaches, Elberta, Pears, •artlett, Baans, Green Round, bu. Beans, Kentucky Wonder, bu. Declines Edge Adv Market Doldrums Continue NEW YORK (AP) — Declines edged past advances in moderate trading early today, as the market opened on the heels of its fifth straight setback Tuesday. The Dow Jones industrial average at 10:30 a.m. was off 2.11 at 810.08. The New York Stock Exchange’s 20 most-active issues were mixed, as 7 advanced, 6 declined, and 7 remained unchanged. Opening prices included: INA Corp. 35, up ft; Addres-sograph 70, up ft; Raytheon 40. up ft; Chrysler 37V4, off ft; Transamerica 24ft, up ft; and Santa Fe Industries 28ft, off ft. EARLY BLOCKS Early block trades included: American Telephone, 5,500 shares at 50ft unchanged; Occidental Petroleum, 36,600 shares at 25ft unchanged: Atlantic Richfield, 3,800 shares at 101ft, up 1ft; Texaco, 7.800 shares at 30, up ft; Texas Gulf Sulphur, 4,700 shares, 26 70ft; and general motors, 2,000 shares, 73ft, off ft. The New York Stock change fell to its lowest trading volume in three weeks Tuesday, as 0.18 million shares changed hands. The Dow Jones industrial average also hit its lowest point since Sept. 8, finishing at 813.00, off 4.95. Wage-Control Warning Told Sales Test Is for U.S. Car Unionists Say Nixon Vague on Price Curbs By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK M — A test Is coming later this year between the never-to-be-underestimated sales skills of automotive manufacturers and a public .that has be-ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)>Come a bit sus — Labor sources said today President Nixon told construction union leaders at the White House Tuesday to restrain in Beans. Roman, bi Beals, dz. bch. Beats, Topped, bu Broccoli, dz, bch. Cabbage, Sprouts, bu. ............. Cabbage, Standard Variaty. bu. ... Carrots, dz. bch. , .......... Carrots, Cello Pelt. 1-dz........... . „ Carrots, Topped, bu..................3.50 Calory Hearts, Cello Pak, dz. bags . Corn, Sweet, Mz. bag ............ Cucumbers, Dill Slsa. va bu.......... Cucumbers, pickle Site, Vi bu........ Cucumbers, Sllcars, bu............... ©if. di. bch. ......................... Eggplant, bu.........................3.7* Eggplant, Long Typo. pk. bskt....... Gourds, pk. bskt.................... Horseradish, pk. bskt............... Kohlrabi, di. bch................... Lacks, dt. bch.......... ........... Okra, pk. bskt. .................... Onions, Groan, dt. bch.............. Onions, Dry, 10-lb. bag ............ Onions, Pickling, Ik. .............. Parsley, Curly, dz. bch. ........... Parsley, Root, dz. bch.............. Parsnips, M bu...................... Parsnips, Cello Pak, dz............. Poes, Blackeye, bu................f Peas, Green, bu. ..... Poppers, Cayonne, pk. bskt...........3.00 , Hot. bu.................. 3.00 ---- pk. bskt........... 1.75 AllledCh 1.30 Am Can 3.30 ACrvSug 1.40 AmCvan 1.35 AmilPw 1.51 AmMfdy .00 AMOtClx 1.40 Am Motors AmNatGas 3 AmPhot .130 A Smalt llo TS&T 3.40 140 50Vi 50V, SOW AMK CP .3# ArchDan l.<0 5314 53Vi 53 Vi 31 47 6Vi 47 « 17ft 17bb 37W ■ S 41 40 41 I________ JO 341* 34Vi 34Vi Ashld Oil 1.30 41 33Vi 33V, 33Ji Poultry and Eggs * DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP) — (USDAl—Prices paid Tuesday per pound tor No. 1 live poultry. Heavy type hens 30-33; heavy type roasters 35-27; broilers and fryers, whites DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (API—(USDAl—Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (Including U S.): Grade A iumbo 50-53'/,; extra lam 47-40; ---------------------- •mall 34-35. ' 47-40; large 44-47; medium 40-43Vi CHICAGO (AP) (USDA) - Tuesday "■tlart wholesale sollf— —— ~ anged to 14 lower; *3 M A 7314; 90 B *9V%. 1 lower to 1 j-------- bettor grad* " " — 40-413 standards 43-43Vi. ; Livestock DETROIT LIVRSTOCK . DETROIT (API—(USDA)-Hogs 300, U. '1 and 3, 300-330 pounds, 34.50-37.00; ont small lot uX 1-3 37.35; 2-3, 230-30 ipounds, 24.75-27.00; sows U.S, 1- ‘ “ 300-400 pounds, B.M-14.00) 2-3, pounds, 21.30-23.25. Cottle 400, slaughter steers choice 150-1200 pounds, 28.25-21,50; mixed good and choice 37.75-20.25; good, 24.25-27.00; utility cows 30.00^31.50. Veofor too, high cholcu end prime 43.00-44.00; cltolco, 31.00-42.00. Sheep 700, steady choice and prime MV! pounds spring slaughter owes, 21.00-30.00; cull to good slaughter ewes, 7.00-11.00. 4- CHICAGO LIVRSTOCK The New York Stock Exchange NEW YOR K(AP) 22 18* 17^1 AbbtLab 1.10 ACF Ind 2.40 Ad AAillit 20 Address 1.40 Admiral AttnaLIf 1.40 AirRedn ,95a Alu 1.10 —A— 14 7414 73* 73* — ’ S 45% 45V© 45* + J 10 12* 12* 12* - ’ 119 79 7144 79 f 3 16 17* 17V* 17* 4- ’ 27 4049 40* 40* - 1 29 17* 17* 17* .. 23 26* 26* 26* — ’ m rc 24Vi SOW — 0* 43 33V, 33 33 — Vs Gu.ts.iu, ,14 Sib-hi —H— 57 4<% 40* 40* .. 4 60* 61* 61* + * 17 31* 31* 31*- 30 34* 34* 34* 3 52* 52* 52* . 47 49* 4* 40* • 1 24* 24* 24* . 13 33* 33* 33* — S 10* 10* 10* — 1 32 27* 27* 27* — 1 15 37* 36* 36* —1 23 28* 21 44* 227 27* 27 6* 47 Atl Rlchfld 2 Atlas Chem 1 Avco 1.20 Beckman .50 73 101* 101 101* 17 12 12* 12* ■ 6 153* 153* 153* — * 164 37 37 37 +0 6 55 55 55 0 66* 66* 66* +1 3 43* 42* 40* + 4 7 51 If If — V BoisCaa ,25b 10 67’ 31* 31* 31* ■ Cent SW 1.00 Burrght .60 Cal Flnanl CampRL .45a CampSp i.io .. Cap. Cities Bd. CaroPLt 1.42 CarlarW .40a CastleCke .60 GatarTr 1.20 CelanasaCp 2 Cenco I Cent SY Carro Cert-teed .80 CassnaAir .80 cpi iti .oo ChrisCft .OSd Cities Svc 2 ClevEIIII 2.04 CocaCol 1.32 jonEdis 1.10 Con Foods 1 ConNatG 1.76 Consrwr 1.90 ContAirll 50 Cont Can \ 2.20 27 25* 25* 35* . . 4 26* 26* 26* + * 01 68* 67* 67* .+ V 40 17* 17* 17* .... 9 20* 20* 20* + 0 2 18* 18% 10% .... 192 ii* ii* ]]%r! 2 34* 34* 34* + \ 26 155* 155* 155* +1 HoernWal .02 Hoff Eltctm Holidylnn .20 7 34* 3* 34* .... + * ■I % 25* 25* — * P 1.10 2 44* Housatii ttoustLl IdahoPw 1.60 Ideal Basic 1 INA CP 140 IngarRand 2 Inland Oil 2 2 27* 27< 16 10* 10' _ 32 39* 39* 99* 0 25* 25* 134% 11 37* 37* 37* — * 1 25* 25* 25* ---I--- 2 29* 29 29* 3 12* 12* 12* 212 35* 344b 35* 3 40* 40* 40* + * 28 29* 29* 29* Schering .00 ncM Cp .60b JCOAInd .60 Scott Papor i SearIGD 1.30 if 1.20a I ■fOII 2.40 ShellTrn .73g “herwnWm 9 IgnalCo 1.20 InoarCo 2.40 mTth KF 2 S 12 South Co U4 iporryR ,47g 14 GJb IntHorv 1.10 10 J4V, 1* 14- ‘ Minor ,J5p 7 Rw 13}* tljb ■ dick 1.10a 31 3GVe 36 V, 34 V, - Pip |.50 13 3744 374b 3744 Tlfr .95 40 3414 534b 534b StOCil 1.00b StDflliid 1.30 SIOIINJ 1.70g ft 1.70 lowaPSv 1.31 jewel CP 1.30 } i»Vb 4IVb - H Sun dir lb JOhnMon 1.30 Kan GE 1.14 1 334b 134b 334b 9 141 VS 130VS 141 Vi +1VS 1 514% 314b 514b 4- Vi 1 11Vb 11Vi 21Vb ... 4 17Vi 17Vi 17Vi — V —K— 1 m fw gw +i 1 MVb MVb NW —V oco 1.40 BTrn 1.40 TexOSul .40 Ttxislntt .00 Textron .90 Kenncott 1.40 IS. 43ft 43ft 43; KaysorRo Konn—“ Kerr KlmbClk 1.31 Koppers Ml Kreftco 1.70 10 30 1 43Vi 4 034b 01 1 404b 4041 4 30VS 30V TRW Inc I TwenCnt .50p 7 4044 40ft 4044 + 17 5344 53W 53W + 13 374b 37V* 37V* + vmm h iffl at . ► (AP) — (USDA) — Hogs reday were 3.500; butchers were IS higher; fairly active; ship-2,500; j-2 205-230 lb butchers ConfW Cont on 1.50 Cont Tal .72 Control Data Cooporln |.40 CorGW 2 50a Cowles .20 CoxBdcas .50 CPC Inti 1.70 CrowCol 1.511 i; 2-3 20.75. 25.25-25.75; sows steady to 21 higher; fairly active; 1-3 325-400 lbs 23.50-24.50; 1-3 400-500 lbs 22.75-23.75, ................ 2).00-22.75; boars 20.00-1 Cattle 800; calves steers end heifers steady; cows and bulls steady; couple loads high choice end prime 1/175-1 #225 lb slaughter steers 30.00-30.50; choice 950* 1/200 lbs yield grade 2 to 4 28.75-30*00; mixed good and choice 28.00-28.75; standard and low good 25.00-26.00. Several loads high choice and prime ** • “9 4b slaughter heTfert yleT —da | TO 4 28.00-20.25; choice 800-1/000 ... 28.00; utility and commercial cows ........... 20.50; few high dressing utility 20.75-21.00; and cutfars ^17.00-19,50; utility DaycoCp 1 DaytnPL 1 Deere CO DOltaAIr 40 20 30 DetSteel .30p 25 12 ]2 900-1,0( > lbs 27.00- and commercial bulls 24.00-26,00. Sheep 200; wooled slaughter lambs steady; few lots choice and prime 95-105 lbs 28.00-29.00; mixed good and choict 80- DowChm 2.60 131 Dresslnd 1>0 duPont 3.75g DynaLAm6640 American Stocks NEW YORK (AP) • American Stock Exchange selected noon prlcBi-sv teles Net (hds.) High Low Lest Chg. 3 is* mm u% t * EatonYa 1., EG8.G 10 ElPasoNG BltraCp 1.! Aerolet .50a Air west •Am Pftr ,85g AO Indust Ark Best .30fl ArkLGas 1.70 Asamera OH AtlatCorp wt BrascanLt ?• Brit Pet .47g Cempbl Chib Cdn javelin, Cinerama Creole 2.60e Data Cont Dixllyn Corp Dynalectrn \ EquIf Cp ,05e 10* 10< 2 31* 31'/a 31 Va - 148 3* 5* 5* — 88 21 20* 30* - 19 26* 26* 26* + * 356 1 6* 16* 16* v 5 9 059 9 «7 137/i 13* 13* + * 16 \ 10* 10 10 — ‘ 3 N 321/4 32 32'/g 5 8* 1* 0* + 13 27* 27* 27* - •gtz'IS 33 11* 11* 11* • 16* 16* 16* 3 7* 7* 7* — 1 m 104 12Vi 124b 12'/. 4 44b 4b 49b ‘ 1 IV, IVb IV. N mti row 7U4 \ 11 tow 1144 1Mb - lb 2 29 29 29 200 749b 7JVb 7Mb - 4b m iitb 299% ™ by The 4 104b 109b 104b — Vb 1 24b 24b 244b 1 M 34 10 199b 3Mb 1 389b 189b 189b — 9b 111 »V% 19’/b WVz 19 284b 28 28 + V, 5 18 10 » . 10 45Vb 44Vi 44V4 + 9b 13 44 439b 44 + 4b 14 39 3Mb 19 19 3844 3044 3844 — 94 14 229b «9b ...... 1 3444 3444 1444 4 19 Vb 13 If. - W 1 1 3194 11V4 MV4 34 13V. 13 119b — Vb 70 3794 37V, 37Vb-4b 15 39V. 39V» 39’b - 19'/i 19V! nib lev. np 32 204b 209b 20VW 9 2779b 277VS 2779b —3 1 1094 1094 1044 -I- Vb 2 4594 4Mb 444b + 19 33V, 1344 3144 LbhPCbm .40 Loh Vat Ind Lthmn 1.61a LlbOFrd 2.80 Llbb MeN L Llgg My 3.50 UMTV' L13 Litton 1.491 UCkMA 1.20 Laoworho .11 LonoS Cbm 1 LonoSGa 1.12 LongTiLt 1.30 Lucky 01 n.40 Lukone ON 1 LVO Corp LykYng .14g 17994 1744 1744 1 7 V, VA 7 ... 24 2f'(4 29'b 21V. — 1 474b 47Vb 474b + Vb 2 |9b 09b 09b .. 17 334b 334b U4b — R jo 34Vb 34V» 36VS + 9b 37 31V, 319b 31V, + 6 3444 364b 1444 + 24 20'b 20 V, 209b + —u— UAL Inc 1 ft 1Mb 27M 279b f j ’ii JP* $5 23: 14 2194 llVb 21Vb + 9b 14 30 3944 2944 — 19 2344 MVb 2344 + 9 Hvi 14 109b .. 2 234b 234b 234b .. Macke Co MMyRH Mad Fd 1 3244 30 199b 1544 139b I 34'/. 3494 34 7 129b 129b 139b 0 1844 1844 1844 — —D— 11 15 IS 5 47* 7 1 04* 84V _ 13 35* M* MVa tin 1.1 ir Inc MayDOtr 1.60 McDonnD .40 Mom Corp f Mel vSho 1.30 Nat Alrlln .40 NetBIsc 2.20 Nat Can .00 NitCash 1.20 Nit pntil .90 Nat Fuel 1.60 NatGyps ' Natlnd M Nat Steel 2.50 26 0* 0* 8* + 1 7 141* 14% 14* — % —M— 3 19 10 10 1 10 MM 13 249b 269b 149b + 47 41 41 41 — , 12 409b 3Mb 3Mb — 31 47 49b 47 + „ 1 359b 359b 359b 4 9b 4 29Vb 28Vb 28 Va ■ I 29Vb 24 25 12 WA 24V. 24V, . 94 449b 449b 449b ' IS 049b 949b J49b ■ i it ii it ■ 19 199b 199b 199b 62 10994 109 1099b 21.9b - 1 —N— 31 319b 32V, 1294 - ] II 4Mb 4Mb 4|9b + ' 3 WVb WVb TVA + 57 139 1379b 11Mb —I 9 149b 1494 1494 — 10 14 M9b 14 ... 9 119b 219b 119b — . -75 249b 24V. 24V4 — 94 1 10 994 10 4 30V. 3094 MVb — 2 43 43 43 2 llVb 13Vb 119b + 74 9194 »1Jb 0294 + 1 44'4 44*4 449b — 4 22Vi 22'4 22V. — NlagMP 1.10 NorfMkWit 4 Norrlilnd .40 NorAmPhll l (MO.) I 2 249b 294 MVb . 33 9494 MVb 5494 • 2094 W94 MVb 3594 1594 — 5 51 4)9b - 9* - - * 8 -b I 3494 3494 3494 + 9b 14 4494 4Mb 519b -194 41 279b 17 2794 — Vi 16 70 4094 499* - 15 374b 119b 379b • 6 24V, M9b 2494 - 77 321b 329b 3294 - 47 249% 294 2494 . 14 3914 3894 39V. ■ 14 MVb MVb 35V, ■ 439b 394 - '4 _______201. 309b 24 459% 45 45 , 2 llVb 119b 119b 75 451b SIVi 55'b ■ 42 9494 9594 9994 — 94 14 3494 34 34V, + V. II 399b 39 399b + Vi 10 4S9b 454b 4$Vi .... 9 5394 5394 5394 — Vb 32 259% 2594 25'b — 9b 1 21 21 M —T— 4 3094 309b 2494 ■ 1 4494 4494 4494 • 293 309b 309b 10 1294 129b 1294 24 494 6 i - Vb UnlonPMH l Unlrsyal .70 UnHAIrc 1.10 m a Unit MM 1.30 USOypam 3a ifPMt .45 Pjycn .14 Smalt lb UPlohn 1.40 15 499% 4914 I- 9b 451b 459% 459b - ' 20V. 459% — 94 2 119b 119b 119b , 3 41 M 44 + 3 279b 2794 1794 — )i E i rj'* % r s« ftt 35 37 1M4 341% 9 2194 lift 21*4 ,, x7 459% 4594 4594 — Vb —V— 9994 - Eage increases or face the pos-bility of federal controls. The account of Neon’s statement was reported to AFLrCIO leaders at a convention here after the President met with his newly created commission to study inflation in the construction industry. Four AFL-CIO officials wha re members of the White House commission flew from the convention to the Washington meeting. A report to labor sources here said Nixon told the union leaders their most important job is to restrain wage hikes that have been running at an annual rate of more than IS per cent in the construction industry this year. ‘ONLY ALTERNATIVE’ If they fail to persuade their union members to hold down wage hikes, the only alternative is controls, Nixon was quoted as telling the union leaders. The report said Nixon apparently was vague as to whether such controls would cover both wages and prices in the construction industry. - * * * President George Meany of the 13.6-million member AFL-CIO, Which opens its biennial convention Thursday, has said organized labor would accept federal controls if Nixon declared a national emergency, and if such controls were applied to wages, prices, profits, interest rates, corporate salaries and all other forms of income. While many officials of the 17 AFL-CIO building trades unions concede privately that some wage hikes in the construction industry have been excessive they expressed strong opposition to any government policy that-would attempt to put the controls on wages alone. picious and fl-n a n c i a 11 y tightfiated. For SO years or so the markable sales CUNNIFF efforts of the car makers involving high pressure, low pressure, psychology, sex and, it has been claimed, outright deceit — generated a mar for wheels among Americans. Co JM> * 1794 17V4 17V4 - '4 'w 1.13 40 229b lllL 22 -'A —W—X—Y—Z— KS JjJ? 11* JW? 2*9? !14b — Vi 251b 25*4 251b + 4b WnAIr L .50p Wn Banc 1.M iTe) 1M WnUT byerhsi MricS B*n Whittaker WlnnOIx 1.52 Woolwth 1.30 xerMCg .60 ZofilltiR 1.40 3 549% 1494 9494 + 11 3414 3494 3494 - 38 22V, 221% 211b — 1 3294 3294 3294 ... 10 36’4 359b 359b — 0(94 9Mb —1 m 43V, —. ottiarwls* MNr 1 oeiSraerKSMBb mm « extra dividend* tj*!} noted •• regular are Identlflad in fl extra or extra*. b—Annual rf value on ex-dlvMend er ex^litrlbutk date, o-Declared or paid io ter W year. S-Deelered or SOM, btter iteg dividend or split up. k-Ofclered or Mid thla veer, an eceumuletlye li«ue_ with 24'4 24V NoStePw 1.90 30'4 30'4 + 9% 8 1 794 1794 1794 — '4 2294 229b 2294 + V. 24 21 20V. 201b —■ 1 51 54V. 55 ' 87V. 87'4 67'4 30V. 30 30 • .» 115 11V, 11494 ■ 5 2494 2494 2494 3 3794 37V, 37*4 + 34 29V, 201b 201b - 1 1 329b 32*4 329b - 1 313 449b 4 M9b ... occidnt Pet 1 208 25V. 259b 2594 OhloEdU 1.50 13 Mlb 239b Mlb + 9b OW.OR 1.M g 14 319b 21Vi »'/% --- 10 44'4 44V, 44V, . . . '/, 3294 M + 94 • 111b —E— IS 1794 1794 179b -1! 58 73V. 73V, 73V, + QwentCg 1.4 Owen* I IT 1.3 EndJohn .I2p End Jot Essex Int Ethyl Cl EvansP FelrchC 50e Feddei FedDeptStr Flrestne 1.6 FtfChrt Fllntkote Fla Pow FMC Cp FoodFalr FordMot 1 ForMcK FreepSul FruehCp 3 23'4 23'4 23'4 - 9b 3 403/. 40'4 40*4 — 94 22 23V. 239b 239* - 94 —F— 21 00* 70 79 - % 6 15 15 IB + % 5 51* 51 51 + 2 46 46 46 \% * 29 21* 21% 21* + * 11 22Va 22* 82* C CP 1.50 * Corp .40 Gam Sko 1.30 GanDyndm f Gan flee 2.60 GenFd* 2.60 Gen Mills 88 GanMdt 3.40a GPubUt 1.60 G Tal El 1.52 Gan Tlra lb Oanasco 1.60 Ga Pac .80b Garbar 1.10 GfttyOII .38g Gillette 1.40 olobil Marin GranlteC fill GrantW 1.40 Gif AGP 1.30 Oft I Mar Rv 3. of;West FIDI StWnUnlt M GreenGnt .96 24 23* 23 23 13 24Va »24* 24* 24 85* 1 05 (5* 109 35* 35* 35* — * 80 73* 73* 73* -31 23 3 29 29 , 25 45* 45* 45* — 3 34* 34* 34* , 6 17* 67% 57* + * 10 43% 43* 43* - m 2 25* 25* 25* m * ■..... 4 31* 31* }»* f * S3 S88fi8»T.,‘ 6 14V. 1494 14V, ..... I 49V. 49V, 4994 - \A 11 WA 17V. 179b - Vb 7 43V, M'b 43'/,+ '/, II MW 19% 149% - Vb 1,4494 4Mb 1,32 W Ing r—Declared or paid In I94l p|u. •lack dlvldond. t-Peld In .tock.dyrlng 1948, etflmeted eeih value on ex-dlvldend or ex-dlstrlbutlon data. ch+!cVlle3.fx—lx dividend, v—Ex d .alee In full, x-dlt—Ex dliti '-«x"*rlghti. xw-without i«y—With warrant!, wd—Whan trlbutad. wl—whan latued, nd—Next In' bankruptcy or racalvarihlp or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy - • - — z-zc. --------id by !UCh com- » aubtict to in- 13 Of* —P— PacTAT 1.20 PanASul 77g Pan Am .20p - i EP 1.60 ParkeDevIs l *en 2.40 ctGa 2.60 19VoCol 106 PSvcEG 164 Publklnd .459 Pueb Sup .78 17 28*' 26* 28* • 19 19 18* 10* • 7 19*. 19* 19* • 5 16* 16* 16* • 62 15 14* 14* 56 30 29* 29* 20 16* 16* 16* • IS* 15V ii ii 14’b - A car became not only a transport vehicle that opened up brand-new pastimes and created new needs, but it became a symbol of success even when simply an inert pile of metal parked outside a house. Each year the new models evolved as regularly as the sea sons, and as far into the future auto man could peer, all that could he seen was a succession of more “seasons." SALES INCREASE Almost every year the sales figures increased, and now the big three auto makers are sprawling enterprises employing hundreds of thousands of workers. Financially they are more powerful than some industrial nations. Each year, this year included, the industry’s leaders projected what appeared to be astronomical sales figures, but in more instances than not they reached them. This year the forecast is for 9.5 million car sales—and a sales test. ★ if it The obstacles come from different points in time. Of immediate danger to forecasts is that prices have been increased at the very time that consumer resistance may be stiffening. Every important measure of consumer dence is falling now. People are watching their money. Even though sales of the 1970 models shot off the mark—in September alone sales totaled 645,000 units, or 80,000 more than in September 1960-doubts are growing that the pace can be maintained. 1070 IN DOUBT Already some authorities on the lnchistry are forecasting a decline hi sales right through the end of 1969. And 1970 remains in doubt, ah economic riddle. Some forecasters foresee the economic boom continuing in 1970, and that carries with it the suggestion that car sales could boom, too. But the official government view is different. It calls lor a slowdown, and if that happens car sales will become sluggish, also. Just as Important as the financial and economic considerations, almost any auto man will concede, is the increasingly critical view that Americans take of their new cars, no matter how throaty the engine or resoqant the door. Once they ran their hand over the paint; now they lift the hood. Moreover, despite their affluence, many Americans are real- NASA Picks Firms in Moon-Rover Try izing that cars can b« expensive to operate. Garage charges continue to rise. So do/Insurance rateB, taxes, packing tickets. SHOCKING REALIZATION At 11 cents a mile—the government estimate—you could cross the continent by air for less than it could cost by automobile, a shocking realization for those who continue to regard their vehicles as metal slaves that work for nothing. Will all these factors-deterio-ration of consumer confidence, a probable downturn in the economy, the increasingly critical attitude of buyers-hinder the auto makers significantly? it * * You couldn’t tell it from their own forecasts, which call for sales of 13.5 million cars and trucks in the year 1975. Nor do’ the independent surveys and forecasts call for any great lessening of demand. The National Industrial Conference Board, for example, foresees a continued bullish market in the 1070s, basing its conclusions on the prospect of increasingly younger and richer families. WILL BE THERE ed solely on population and financial prospects, the market certainly will be there. But it is unlikely that ever again will it be the docile, receptive, uncritical market of years gone by. Hie sales ingeulty of the car people is going to be tested. Just because, statistically, the market is there doesn’t mean they’ll get it. But neither can anyone ever underestimate the marketing skills of Detroit. HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) -The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has iected two firms to continue competitive negotiations on contract calling for four moon rovers. The space agency said Tuesday that the Bendix Corp. of Ann Arbor, Mich., and the Boeing Co. of Huntsville were selected to continue the project, NASA said it expects the first operational rover to be ready in early 1971. The 400-pound, four-wheeled vehicle will provide I According to city police, transportation for astronauts bers yesterday morning ms and their equipment, with room off with more than $500 fr for lunar samples., |the Progressive .Oil Co., 477 . Saginaw, while the gas atatl attendant was servicing i News in Brief Mutual Stock Quotations NEW YORK (AP) —The following quotation*. supplied by the National AMoel-ation ol S*CU/itl*t Dealer*, Inc., are the prices Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP) - The caih pail, on el the Treasury, sept. 14W949 .cornered lo Sept- 16, 1948 (In dollarl): Balance |#w, ' 9,909,341,811.41 Deposits fiscal veer July I ...... 50,433,411,480.53 47,114,343,401.54 Withdrawals fiscal year 55.059,711,9M .40 50,434.151,471.17 x-343,114,150,139,40 337,101,110.100.08 implied W The 28 10 It Rallt ind. Util. njSE 59.'» 80.5 74.7 B B « » Ago 40,9 43.1 77.9 Veer Age 44,0 90.1 81.1 ‘— High 44.1 87.9 79.1 Ujw 59.7 |0.5 74.8 41.8 - 85.9 7|.l 08.8 71.4 Zoning Appeals Post Is Filled Booker Woods of 300 Rapid ras appointed tb the zoning board of appeals by the City Commission at last night’s meeting. Woods Is a foreman at GMC Truck and Coach Division and his name was proposed by District 1 Commissioner T Warren Fowler. His term will be until Jan I 1971/, and he replaces Oscar BoUn, who resigned. Fid Trnd 33.30 37,87 Plnoncior Prooi Dynm 4.67 7.10 Indutt 4.13 4.51 Pst Store 41.98 48.31 Piet COP uneven Piet Fnd Net Secur tort Orwfh 9.09 9,91 PI Stk 6.81 TIM Incom 5.39 5.99 stock 0.M 9.05 Net West 8.44 7.0* Nil Grth 9.7010.54 Neuwth 14.65 34.65 New Wld 11.34 14.55 7.18 7M Fnd Glh 5.51 5.14 Foundrs 8.31 1.97 Fourtq 11.6418.71 DNTC 11.241232 Ufll 6,30 6.06 Incom 2.29 151 F reedm 8.52 #.81 Fund Am If! 1044 Gan sac 10.03 Glbraftr 114613.46 Group Sac: Aero Sc 8.04 9.70 Com St 13.1014.42 Ful Ad 9.05 9.90 Grth Ind 22.10 22.76 Gryphn 16.0817.57 Ouardn 25.49 25.49 Hamilton: HF| 4.71 8.15 3meda lOO Fd Fd 10.8711.88 Bk 4.79 7.42 in St 7.52 8.22 Fan. 11.6212.70 potion 8.15 8.91 Broad St 14.3215.48 Bullock . 15.1116.55 CO Fd 9.241104 Canadn 10.05 20.69 Caplt Inc 0.26 9.06 Caplt Inv 4.46 4>' Caplt Stir 7.36 84)7 Cant Shr 11.5812.66 Hartwll 15.2016.61* Harbor Hartwll HOiC Lav 12.2813.* Hadb Gor 9.00 9.00 Hadga 12.6913.F7 Heritga 2.81 107 H Mann 15.1115.7' Hubsmn 7.31 7,99 III Glh 5.33 5.83 ISI Inc 4.43 4.04 Impact F 9.2310.09 imp Cap 10.1010.9$ imp Gib 7.48 8.13 Inc FdB 7.14 7A2 Indepnd 9.0410.86 ind Trnd 117114.98 Indstry 6.13 6.70 IntBk Stk 6.87 7.51 Inv goA Inv Indie 12.8612.7 ir !*1» 8.24 8.36 14.68 16.04 ,v, . B unava" Ona WmS 16.1916.19 O'Nall „ unavall Oppanh 7.80 8.52 Farm Sq 8.06 1.06 , Pina St 10.6410.64 Pioneer 12.9114.11 Grwth 2196 24.96 N fra 9.79 9.79 N Hor 27.28 27.20 Pro Fund 10.7010.79 Proydnt 4.65 5.00 Vlste 10.5411.52 Voyag 8.71 9.52 lop Tech 5.07 5.64 lavora 1101 15.09 7.70 0.42 Britain's Mails No Longer Public LONDON (AP) - Britain’s post office steps out on its own today as a public corporation after 300 years under government control. A post office official explained it has become “such a vast and complex organization it is now unsuited to be part of the civil service.^ The post office has a staff of 400,000, handling 119.2 billion worth of business annually. The chairman of the new corpora tion will be Viscount Hall, a La-borite who gave up positions on the boards of 14 companies to take the job. Mom’s Rummage, Thors., *-ll Indianwood and Baldwin Rds. —Ady,‘ Carpeting, bankrnptcy liquidation sale. Bring your measurements. Open 9 to 9. Dixie Hwy. —Adv. Sfoclcs of Local Intend Figure* after markets ch< iange Throughout the dap. net Include retell markup. AMT CerP- ...... Associated Truck . Citizens Utilities A Citizens Utilities B Delr-x Chemical .. Crystal .. Kelly Mrvl Mohawk Ri Safren Prif Critic of Haynsworth Begins Own Probe idl 15.62 17.0# ;unds: 16.46 15.71 36.63 86.68 15.18 15.18 13.36 14.60 9.P 0.33 2.86 12.66 1.93 1104 Investors, Grouj>: _ IDS ndl Mat SoToct Var Fy 7.07 8.66 Inv Rttb 5.01 5.48 llttl 22.46 23.15 Ivtit 15.0416%44 10.35 11.24 4.75. 5.17 20.112’ / ’ 8.94 9.61 ,97 8.6 8.78 178 Mncock 8.30 9.02 obnttn 21.56 21.56 tyilona Fundi: 01 1193 19.76 Cut B2 10,97 21.70 m Concord 15.1615.16 XOflMl Ip 12.2512.62 c8K\iB 4.76 1.20 Cont om 10.09 lilt Corp U 14.0416.41 f|I|i deVgh M 67.04 67.04 p«cal/lnc 12.04 1116 Dafawrt 13.4614.71 Delta Tr 8.22 1.91 pivid shr ira 4.10 OowT Til 4.59 7rjh Downt F 6.13 6.71 Draxal _ 16.31 16.31 r; \mn Eaton At Howard; _ Balan 10.6411,6) > Orwfh 12.90 14.10 Incom 6.07 6.63 ^ Ii I .tfii fl Cut K1 Cut 52 11.0112.10 Cut 88 8.48 9.20 Cut 54 5.26 5.75 Pofar 4.40 4.12 Knlckb 7.36 I.M Knlck Gf 11.2912.37 Laxlngt 9.87 lira Lax Rich 112914.70 Llbarty 6.21 6.79 L fa Stk 5.43 5.98 Ling ,nV iti k Sec plv 11.11 II. •> sac Eqult 1.78 4.10 Me Inv 7.41 8.33 8*I8C Am 8.981B.it |9l SpeeS 14.06 17.3* Sh Dean 33.4111.43 side \ 8.9010M fiomo >10.0410,97 Inv 11.8413.74 Slgm* Tr 9.4S 10. J5 Smith B *.70 9.70 |wn Inv 9.99 9.4t Swinw Ot 7.94 O.M Sever Inv 14.05 t|.39 IfPrm ot s.si s.si Mat* St 49.75 50.50 Headmen Fundi; Am ind 11.1111.17 Flduc 7.34 i.M Sc ten 4.40 5.01 Stem Re* Fds: Bel 10.3130.18 Cap Op 18.01I5.QI Stock 14.1714.17 ,p"nOt 7.15 7.57 ‘ 1.5910-91 WASHINGTON (AP) - The leading Senate opponent of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth’s Supreme Court appointment has sent his own investigator to South Carolina to probe Hayn-th’s real estate and stock records. Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., disclosed in advance of the Senate Judiciary Committee’s closed session today that he had despatched the investigator. It had been virtually certain any move to approve the nomination in committee today would be set back a week. SuTl tXar TWCl . Ttchncl IfcNi} Of 11.3612.42 Muf Marihf n mm Km Maihers MipSn m fellf Greenville, had supplied real estate and stock records going back only to 1964. The Indiana senator wanted to see the records dealing from 1957 when Haynsworth was appointed a deferal district judge. NOT ENTHUSIASTIC “If there are things there that need to be answered, he ought to be the one to answer them," Bayh said of the investigator. In spite of any postponment of Bayh said he ordered his own man to Haynsworthjg home state when the juddPwKl bis stockbroker, Arthur McCall of MW Rat* riN roc8rt iMt YBAR BND Bagdad Copper__v 10-10 11-10 Wf&srr.::. Penepscet Shoe . 10 Second gred* ISEoffi action on the nomination, all indications pointed to committee approval of Haynsworth, although not all his supporters were enthusiastic. ♦ Wi w I’m beginning to pick up tremendous resentment," said a Republican ntember of the judiciary committee who asked not to be quoted by name. Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania said he probably would vote to report Haynsworth to the floor. ‘NOT PREPARED TO SAY’ “But,” he added, “What lido afterward I am not prepared to say yet." The Republican whip, Robert Griffin of Michigan, took pretty much the same tack, saying he had not made up hie mind yet but probably would vote to re-port the nomination. Griffin, however, was understood to be concerned about‘a published report over the weekend that Hayneworth had be«n Involved with Robert Baker, tie controversial former Senate Democratic secretary, in a land deaf In South Carolina. 1 Sfll \ >*\ ^V—A THE E PONTIAC V REW, w EDN ESP AY,\ OCTOBER. l, 1080 W Presidential (comb, form) family 50 Derides 22 Legal matter 51 River (Sp.) S2 i?*°PS,ov*r 52 Compass poiht at Musteline 53 Flower mammal 54 Evergreen *T Swift courses tree ?8 Greek war god DOWN *'Wedges 28 Bristle 30 Farm animals S3 County In 10 Pro! 30 Pots and 31 Dessert 32 Body bf'water 38 Assistant 34 Outer garment 35 Earnings 37 City on the Ganges 2 Distinct 3 ]?Wgonou* lizard 4 More conceited 5 Poker stakes 6 Plant ovule puts 13 Natural fats 10 Angers 21 Fruit drink 23 Lion's pride 24 Hope* Win 25 Formal essays 42 Wild rage 20 Another 43 Great Lake useful 44 Wintry container precipitation 27 Ill-mannered 47 Correlative Bl fellows neither 1 F" 3 i r* & y L F” 9 l6 11 12 13 IT" 15 It 16 17 Ift . i 21 1 r r 24 25 26 ■ r L 28 2S ■ r J ■ Si ■ r ■ r 35 36 R r fapi 44 ■ r 40 j R r k 43 44 45 4T TT m 4b 66. Si 52 53 54 , I People in the News By the Associated Press Gov. John A. Burns says Hawaii has a different outlook on life than states on the U.S. main-. land. "We are an island people—a free people —of all races, colors, creeds and cultures,” he told the American Bankers Association" yesterday in Honolulu. "We are an amalgamation, a fusion, of East and West. We are a golden people.” BURNS -Television Programs- Programs furbished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice! ChdOnolsi 2-iWJSK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ*TV. 9-CKLW-TV. SO-WKBP-TV. 56-WTVS-TV. 62-WXON-TV R—Rerun C—Color WEDNESDAY NIGHT News, Lone Mariner Hailed in Bahamas Bearded mariner Bill Verity was hailed as "a history-making sailor” yesterday in the Bahamas even though his 22-foot boat had to be towed into Nassau by a lighthouse Verity was greeted by a police band, a beauty, queen, and the chairman of the Bahama Tourist Board, Clifford Darling, who presented him with a plaque lauding his solo sail across the Atlantic from Ireland. . • He landed at San Salvador 17 days ago. Deposed Sudanese Leader to Leave Country Former Sudanese Premier Mohammed Ahmed Mahjoub, one of several of Sudan’s government officials detained since last May’s, army coup, will be allowed to leave for London next week for treatment of a “grave heart crisis,” the authoritative Cairo newspaper A1 Ahram said today. Georgia Governor Gets Unicycle for Birthday Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox finally has a cycle he can ride backward while he'faces forward—a unicycle. The one-wheeler was presented to the governor—along with a red, white and blue ‘ ‘ i 54th birthday yesterday in “I’ll tell you,” said the delighted Maddox who shines at riding bicycles backwards, “my next term In office I’ll ride this The one-wheel, no handlebars unlcycle is the sixth cycle Maddox has received since taking office three years ago, but the others were ordinary two-wheelers. Fired Czech TV Exec to Live in Britain Jlri Pelikan, who was fired as director-general of Czechoslovak television after the Soviet Invasion and was sent as counsellor to the embassy In Rome, has chosen free-deni In Britain, the Times of London reported yesterday. ★ W 4r The newspaper said Pelikan regards himself as a temporary exile who can campaign more effectively abroad than at home for a humane form of communism. 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C Weather, Sports (50) R C-Fllntstones (56) Americans From Africa — “Slaves and Freemen in the Middle and Northern Colonies” (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 0:30 (2) C — News — Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (ft) R — Dick Van Dyke — Handsome balladeer brings romance into Sally’s life. (50) R — Munsters — After being hit by an automobile, Herman panics at the thought of having to pay $20,000 in damages. (56) Photography: The Incisive Art — Ansel Adams’ use of techniques to achieve given effects. (62) C — Swingintime 7:00 (2) R C — Truth or Consequences (A) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — News — Reynolds, Smith (9) R — Movie: "Sunset Boulevard” (1950)—Gloria Swanson, William Holden (50) R — I Love Lucy — . Lucy becomes a maid at the Mertzes to impress an important guest. (56) What’s New — In “Tom Sawyer,” Tom, Huck, and Joe find freedom and happiness tempered with homesickness playing pirate on an island in the river. 7:30 (2) Glenn Campbell— George Burns, Sarah Vaughan and Bill Medley r guest. (4) C — Virginian — Trampas is commandeered to help six prison probationers learn ranching in 1 face ftf oppdbition from nearby townfolk. William Windom and John Dehner guest-star. (7) C — Flying Nun — Sister Bertrille tries to help a scholarly priest adjust to the life of a parish priest in San Tanco. Robert Cummings and Gary Crosby guest-star. (50) C - Beat the Clock (56) Making Things Grow — First in series in which hostess Thalassa Cruso presents different aspects of gardening and the intricacies. Tonight’s topic is ; watering of plants. (62) C — Of Lands and Seas — Areas traveled by pioneers on their way west are shown. 8:00 (7) C - Cdurtship of Eddie’s Father - The romance of Tom Corbett and Lynn Burton slips on the routine of motherhood. (50) R - Hazel (56) Free Play — First in series on candidates and issues in Detroit’s coming election. Viewers may phone in. 8:30 (2) C - (Special) Gov. Milliken’s Address (7) c — Room 222 -I Pete’s class is disrupted by Btudent Harvey Butcher, who masks his feelings about being fat and unattractive by clowning. (50) C — To Tell the Truth ‘ (62) R — Nelsons 9:00 (2) C — Medical Center — The bruises on a young boy’s body convince Dr. Gannon his. patient has been the victim of a beating instead of a fall as reported to him. Robert Lansing and Dyan Cannon guest-star. (4).C - Music Hall -If The Friars roast, Milton Berle, Joining “rostmast-er" Alan King will be Jack Benny, Henny Youngman, TV Features FREE PLAY, 8 p m. (56) GOV. MILUKEN, 8:30 p.m. (2), 10:30 p.m. (0) MUSIC HALL, 0 p.m. (4) MOVIE, 9 p.m. (7) ON BEING BLACK, 10 p.m. (56) Jfln Murray, Bishop Ful-1 ton J. Sheen, Don Drys-dale, Red Buttons and Steve Lawrence. • (7) C — Movie: “Walk, Don’t Run” ( 1066 ) Hilarious complications ensue for a businessman and a young couple at the Tokyo Olympics. Cary Grant, Samantha Eggar, Jim Hutton ' (0) 12-o’Clock High - Gal-lagher infiltrates German lines to save nuns from enemy bombings. (50) R — Perry Mason (56) News in Perspective (62) R — Movie: "Fort Worth” (1951) - Randolph Scott, Phyllis Thaxter 9:30 (9) C - (Special) -Governor Milliken’s ad- 10:00 (2) C — Hawaii Five-0 —Escaped Japanese mental patient tries to sabotage Pearl Harbor. (4) C — Then Came Bronson — Bronson finds * himself in the middle between a widow and her love-struck, teen-age daughter. (9) (50) C - News, Weather, Sports (56) (Debut) On Being Black — Ten-week series features original dra’mas on the American black experience. Tonight, Abbey Lincoln and Israel Hicks star in “Wine in the Wilderness,” the story of a young couple — drawn together and pushed apart — whose reaction to one another reveals muc h about t h e difficulties inherent in the black society. 10:30 (9) C - (Special) Gov. Milliken’s Address (50) R — Ben Casey — Doctor sues Casey for (62) R - Sea Hunt 11:00 (2) (4) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: "Heavens Above” (British, 1963) Peter Sellers, Cedi Park- (62) Highway Patrol 11:15(7) C - News, Weather, Sports 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Eighth anniversary show includes excerpts from past programs. (50) C - Merv Griffin -Mrs. Coretta King, Anthony Newley and Jane Morgan guest. (62) R - Movie: "The Long Night” (1947) Henry Fonda, Barbara Bel Geddes 11:35 (2) R - Movie: “The Secret Weapon” (1943) Basil Rathbone, Nigel Bruce 11:41 (7) C — Joey Bishop \ — Betty Walker, Neil Diamond and Singer Marlene Ver Planck guest. ^2:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:29 (9) C — Perry’s Probe Y — “The Double Y ^ Chromosome” and "Mind o) a Murderer” 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (SO) R — Peter Gunn 1:15 (7) R- Texan 1:30 (2) R - Naked City (4) C — News, Weather 1:45 (7) C - News, Weather 1:55 (7) C - Five Minutes to Live By 2:30 (2) C - News, Weather 2:35 (2) TV Chapel THURSDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C — On the Farm Sunrise Math: What 6:00 (2) C -Semester -is “rolling”? 6:25 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By 6:30 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom — "See For Yourself: Heat is Motion” (7) C - TV College-)— “Competition for Empire” 7:00 (4) C-Today (7) C — Morning Show — “Arnold Stang and photographer Yousuf Karsh guest. 7:20 (9) Warm-Up 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, • Sports (9) Friendly Giant 7:45 (9) Chez Helene 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo (9) C-Bozo 8:30 (7) R C — Movie: “I’d Climb The Highest Mountain (1951) Susan Hayward, Rory Calhoun 9:00 (2) R - Mr. Ed (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) Ontario Schools 9:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read 9:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies (56) Singing, Listening, Doing 10:60 (2) R C - Lucy Show (4) C — Sale of the Century (56) Pocketful, of Fun 10:30 (2) C - Della Reese -Skiles and Henderson, the Sunshine Company and Milt Kamen guest, (4)C — Hollywood Squares (7) C - Galloping Gourmet (50) C — Jack LaLanne (56) Once Upon a Day 10:45 (9) C-News 11:00 (4) C - It Takes Two (7) R-Bewitched (9) R - Take 30 (50) C-Strange Paradise (56) R — Tell Me a Story 11:15 (56) Misterogers 11:25 (4) C-Carol Duvall 11:30 (2) C- Love of Life (4) C — Concentration (7) RC-DiatGlrl (9) R — Mr. Dressup (50) C-Kimba 11:55 (0) Wizard of Oz for THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports — (A), C — Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) Real McCoys (50) C — Underdog 12:25 (2) C —Fashions 12:30 (2) C — He Said, She Said (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal (9) C — Tempo 9 (50) C — Alvin 12:35 (50) Friendly Giant 12:55 (56) R - S i n g 1 n g, Listening, Doing 1:00 (2) C — Search Tomorrow (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (9) R — Movie: “Union Station” (1050) William Holden, Nancy Olson (50) R - Movie: “Rhapsody in Blue” (1945) 1:15 (56) R — Children's Hour 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turfis (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (56) Ready, Set, Go 2:00 (2) C — Where the Heart Is (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (56) R — News in Perspective 2:25 (2) C — News 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (4) C — Bright Promises (7) C—One Life to Live 3:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C — Letters to Laugh-In (7) R — Bachelor Father (9) R — Candid Camera (56) French Chef — “Roast Goose” (62) R — Movie: “My Wife’s Family" (British, 1956) Ronald Shiner, Ted Ray 3:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C — You’re Putting Me On (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C—Captain Detroit ' (56) C — (Special) The River That Came Back — Michigan’s vital water resources are examined in a study of the Au Sable and its pollution. 4:00 (2) R C-Gomer Pyle (4) C — Steve Allen — Charles Nelson Reilly, Norman Wisdom, Jerry Collins and Belland and Somerville guest. , (7) C— Dark Shadows . (9) C—Bozo (56) Pocketful of Fun 4 :30 (2) C—Mike Douglas — Pamela Mason and Irving Fields guest. <7) R — Movie: “Ride Vaquero” (1953) Robert Taylor, Ava Gardner . (50) R — Little Rascals (56) Once Upon a Day (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — "Report From South Vietnam” (9) RC-Flipper (50) R C — Lost in Space (56) Misterogers 5:30 (9) R C - Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) Friendly Giant (0$) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) A Day at the Calgary Zoo — St. George Island near Calgary is visited. By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK (AP) - With all the new shows in position In the network schedules, there Is time to look at the old ones, back for another season. “Mod Squad’s” trio of young undercover operatives is still solving crimes and salvaging human wreckage weekly on ABC. Tuesday nights episode ests that Michael Cole, Garence Williams III and Peggy Llpton—unknowns 12 months ago—have grown comfortably into their roles, are more assured and work well as a team. Old Shpws Ar Revisited with his mi of Mach joke: from smog to hour with his monologue—a batch of beach jokes on everything from smog to bikinis. In the big sketoh, Red and guest star Walter Brennan kidded the classic Western % playing rival sheriffs. It wasn’t as funny as screams from the\studlo audience Indicated but It had some funny moments during a highs stakes poker game. \ The story was a bit on the sticky side: The squad took on a bright, homeless Mexican boy, then found he was under suspicion as a burglar. But they pulled off his redemption and led him away from a life of crime. Red Skelton, in his 19th consecutive season in weekly television, obviously purveys a brand of nonsense that never stales. FORMAT UNCHANGED The format of the CBS show, unchanged over the summer, had some eye-filling dancing and some easy-to-take singing by,the Lettermen. But it was the Skelton turns that made the >. Red, as usual, opened the Yearbook Nude 'Did It for Rice Outstanding Seniors Bare Personalities CBS’s “60 Minutes” bimonthly news show started with a painful but thought-provoking report on some of the 250,000 wounded U.S. fighting men from the Viet nam war—amputees in an Army rehabilitation hospital. The segment showed a brutal face of war, yet the gallant attitudes of many of the shattered young men demonstrated hope and determination. Several said they were glad to have made the sacrifice; most had plans for busy active lives. PANHANDLING PROFIT It was followed by an off-beAt closeup of some young dropouts who adopted panhandling as a profitable way of life. Concealed cameras showed them begging mby for dimes and quarters. One-estithated he received an average of $8 an hour by aak^ ing for bus fare home. Finally there was a report on a visit to the Soviet Union lasf summer by 13 students and their language teacher from an Atlanta, Ga., all-Negro high school. The students loved the people, enjoyed the sights, hated the food and felt they had benefited by the experience. It was a rewarding hour. HOUSTON (AP) - “I did it for Rice,” says the comely coedl whose nude photograph appears in the university’s 1960 yearbook. The publication, called The Campanile, is due out Thursday with a picture of Marilyn Penelope Johnson in the altogether and, for good measure, a smaller one of Dennis Rex Bahler also unclad. North Fall Color Is Near Peak Prejudice Claimed in Hawaii Both 22, they were among 15 seniors chosen as outstanding students by the student body. !ss Johnson is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Willard Johnson of Quincy, HI., and Bahler’s parents are Dr. and Mrs. Dean R. Bahler of West Lafayette, Ind. WAS HER IDEA 1 We tried to capture some| sort of their personality,” Campanile co-editor Gary Grether said. “Penelope suggested nude shot of herself because that Is the only time a person is shown as her true self.” Miss Johnson is now a graduate student at State University of New York in Buffalo seeking a doctor’s degree in English “I did It for Rice and the Rice community,” she said, don’t want to talk about it because that puts it into a class of a publicity stunt.” Miss Johnson appears sitting against a white background with her arms around her knees,. Grether said. The photo is full page. SMALLER PHOTO Bahler’s full view catches him clothed, but there is a one-inch by half-inch inset showing him nude. LANSING (A — The f Michigan Tourist Council | reports fall foliage should :: reach a color peak In the 1 northern part of the Up- | per Peninsula this weekend. Near maximum color is expected in the Houghton-Hancock and Marquette Irish Stew Over Hippies Peak color for the remainder of the U] Peninsula is expected the weekend of Oct. 11-12. Some trees already are turning in the northern part of the Lower Peninsula. ★ ★ ★ The tourist council at Lansing has free maps and directions for 24 suggested autumn color tours throughout the state. Lana's Album Going Topless DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) — Vishnu Devananda has put up Radio Programs- jyjB(760) WXVZQ 270) CKIWQOO) WWJ(930) WCARQ130) WPQNQ 460) WJBKQ 5001 WHFI-fM(04.7) !i00—CKLW. $f«Vt WJR. New, WWJ, Newitlmo NOWKOM • WJBK, WCAR, NlWi, M'iSKh foTSo WVJWa'ih. 1 Sporti WWJ. Todov In NlV|WM OolnK f Builnaii. Tim, liW-WWJ, Ti TsepR jwir , Dick Nurlan SpVIdii-S?”'1 Jim Howard! W, Ha WJBK, Mika Scoll WHFI. Marc Avary, *il*_WWJ, Morrla Car liW—WJR, NdWa lilt—WJR. lunnyijdo, WWJ, Aak Your Nalghbor CKLW,' Frank Rrodla WJBK, Muale till—WJR, Optn Houia ioiW~-wjbk, Nawa, Conrad wxyz, Nawa.. Johnny Run- nail wpon, Nawa, Gary Fyrtco WCAR. NOW!, Rad Mill,, WJR, Howl, Good MWIc WHFI. Don Zoo / IllOt—WJR. Now*. Kolaldo- THURSOAV AFTERNOON. tilM—WWJ, Nows WJR, NdWl, Farm CKLW, Hal Martin WJBK. Hank O'Nall Hill—WJR. Focus WWJ, Bob faaslay Swami Vishnu Devananda stood on his head with joy. His two hippie companions cried: “This is wild! Dlls is beautiful!” Irish tempers boiled The object of the hippies’ delight was St. Patrick’s Island in Dublin Bay. Locals call it “rats’ paradise.” The hippies want to make it a paradise for the love generation if they can dig up $4{l,000 to buy it. But Irishmen in the coastal village of Skerrii tiW-WJR, Arthur Oodlroy MS—WJR, Sunnvsldo tiOO-WPON*. Nows, Don Mllhom WXYZ, Now CKLW, Bd MS—WJR, MUSIC Hull 3,00 WCAR, Nrwi, Ron Ros* WJBK. Jom Shonnon WHFI. Den Alcorn liM-WWJ, Nowitlmo WJR, Scores say they prefer rats to the “long-haired unwashed” and promise a fight to keep the island from being “deseprated.” Swami Vishnu Devananda, operator of a chain of yoga centers in the United States and Canada; Sidney Rawle, clad in white pajamas and an Arab cloak; and Frank Harris, in a Japanese fisherman's coat, toured the Island today. , After cries of delight, Rawle said: “We have decided in principle to buy it.” A|l they need is the principal—cash. a $4,800 deposit. The British real estate agent who owns the Isd land, Herbert Marriott, has given Die hippies eight weeks to come up with the remaining $43,200 “They will be stopped,” said Raymond Burke, vice chairman of Dublin’s County Council Planning Authority. “They will never get permission to build on toe island.” “Nobody in Ireland wants the hippies here,” said Burke’s mother. An Irish pubkeeper in London said he planned to put up $24,000 to keep the island in Irish hands and bar the hippies. Rawle was unconcerned. “I think the people of Skerries e going to be very happy When they get to know us,” he said. “It's not intended to use this place as a haven for drug addicts or sex-starved hippies. Wo want a place to meditate.” Meanwhile, In Honolulu, Hawaii, hippies are uptight about the treatment they're getting from the natives. He had no public comment. Coeditor Conrad Boeck said there is "definite artistic value’’ in the photographs. Dr. Frank Vandiveer, acting university president, said he deeply deplored what the editors were publishing, but defended their right to publish it. The student senate has editorial control over the yearbook. NEW YORK (AP) - Australian pop singer Lana Cantrell says her next album, “The Sixth of Lana,” will have a cover photograph of half of Lana without any clothes on. The photograph, from toe waist up, was taken from the side and Miss Cantrell, 24, had her arms demurely crossed in front of her. She said she didn’t really regard it as a nude picture—“I’m completely coveted by my arms.” “1 was sort of shy about It at first," she said, “but I’d known the photographer for years, and there were just the two of us In the studio.” TV Tape-Playback Unit Shown PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) — on an original library of 100 SelectaVision,” a tape-player designed to attach to any standard color television set and play back recorded color programs, was uftveiled in a laboratory model here Tuesday by RCA. The player, which employs a laser beam to broadcast full-color recorded programs on inexpensive tape of toe type used to wrap and display supermarket meats, is planned for marketing in 1972 at a cost of less than $400, RCA said. Tapes will cost less than $10 for a half-hour program, and the compyty has started work taped programs on sports, education, art, theater, comedy and others in a broad range of inter Ail tapes will be made in color but may be viewed on black and white sets, as is presently done with commercial color broadcasts, RCA said. EASY TO OPERATE The player will be “as com* pact and easy to operate as a phonograph,” the company said. Robert W. Samoff, RCA president, described toe Selects-Vision player as |ptontlaliy the most important development for the home since color television. It is also likely that existing home movies can be converted < to SelectaVision tapes, the coni- J yany salfl. , t j rENJJH SERVICE SPECIALISTS HOD’S FE 5-6112 no ORCHARD LAKE AVE ri-sM,