The WeatheY THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL, 122 NO. ! ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1964-56 PAGES un,™^«»™t«7n%o^ Suspect Charged in Lovers' Lane Strangling State Is Given Large School Spending Plan Pocky Claims Barry Should Blame Himself Police Claim Pontiac Man Has Confessed Educators' Budget Answers Charge by Newlywed Arraigned Proposal Could Force Need for New Taxes Defeated Candidate on Lack of Support on 1 st Degree Murder in Killing of Girl, 20 LANSING (l)PD — A group of top college educators dropped a financial bomb in the laps of Gov. George Romney and the legislature yesterday by proposing a higher education budget that could force the need for new taxes. The proposals, calling for hefty increases in both operating expenses and capital outlay, were made by the group called the Michigan Coordinating Council for Public Higher Education. The pregram calls for: • An increase in operating furds for the 10 state-supported institutions of $47.5 million to I17S.7 million. • $52 million for a 1965-66 building program that would be the start of a five-year, $346 million plan which the educators said should be financed through a bonding authority similar to that for the Mackinac Bridge. • 612 million for community college operation. • J15 million for the state scholarship program, instituted by the 1964 legislature on a grant of 6500,000. The 116646 requests alone for the colleges and universities would eease to 6245.2 million compared with 613L2 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) CITY’S FIRST — Those who will handle the reins of government in the City of Orchard Lake Village were sworn into office last night following adoption of a charter a week ago. City Council woman Mrs. Katherine M. Baker bore administers the oath to Municipal Judge Martin J. Kabcenell (right) as Sylvester Leahy looks on. Leahy was elected mayor and Frederick S. Strong Jr. mayor pro tern of Oakland County’s newest city. Other council members are John C. Hall, Everett R. Casey and Kenneth Treacy. Chrysler Chief Talks of 1965 10 Million Vehicle Sales Eyed Pontiac, Tempest Sales Set Record for 10-Day Period Pontiac Motor Division today reported that sales of Pootiacs and Tempests in the first 10 days of December were the highest for the period in the history of the division. Frank V. Bridge, general sales manager, said Dec. HO sales totaled 26,903, a 37 per cent increase over the 19,646 sales in the same period a year ago which was the previous record. “Th$ market for our cars is exceptionally strong,” Bridge said. “The new car buying fever, which was temporarily disrupted by the strike, is back stronger than ever.” Bridge also pointed out that the 26,903 sales from Dec. 1-10 were the best for any 10-day sales period, not counting an introduction or sales contest period. In Today's | Press U.N. D Africans plan counter-attack against Adlai— PAGE 2. Rights Act Caution tempers elation of Negro leaders over rul-ing-PAGE 19. WW II Battle Veteran of the B*u 1 g e recalls famous reply to Nazis—PAGE 11. Area News ...........20 Astrology ...........*1 Bridge ..............27 Comics ............. 27 Editorials ......... 6 Markets .. ..........26 Obituaries 28 Sports ...........23-26 Theaters .......... 34 TV, Radio Programs . 35 Wilson, Earl.....*... 35 Women’s Pages *.,.14-17 Yuletide Stories . .23 DETROIT (AP) - Next year “could be the year when 10 million new cars and trucks will be aoUL at retail in the United States for the first time,'’ Chrysler Corp. President Lynn A. Townsend said yesterday. ■ -M * ★ And by the early 1970s, the auto industry will be turning out Reserve Shift to End in '66 See Summer Training Next Year as Usual WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon is aiming to complete the revolutionary reorganization of the Army’s Reserve forces in about 16 months, it "was learned today. ★ ♦ ♦/. Key officers of the National Guard and the Army Reserve have been told in secret briefings that the objective date for final action is the end of March 1966. -It is expected that Guard and Reserve outfits will go to summer training next year in their present form, some of these officers told the Associated Press. The Army staff, aided by Guard and Reserve officials, already has begun the difficult job of working up solutions for the problems involved in shifting 150,000 Army Reservists and their units to the National Guard. Or ★ Or d One of the first jobs to be handled is the drafting of a “troop list.” This involves surveying the 4,000 Reserve units to decide which 2,000 nr so will fit into the expanded Guard organizations, and how they will be distributed among the states. . TROOP LIST Such a troop list — which is really only a beginning point for the reorganization — is not expected to be ready before mid-February. At that time, the states mil know what units they will lose and what units they will gain. . Plans are being mkde to brief state governors,’ who have a powerful say under the taw na to the disposition of the National Guard within their states. Questions poured in on the Pentagon from reservists unsure of where they stand. about 10 million passenger cars a year, Townsend told the Economic Club of Detroit. The industry “is in the process right now of patting two eigkt-millioo-car years back to back,” be said- “And in terms if vehicles, it win probably sell at retail at least 9.5 mUfiaa units in 1966.” , The 10 million car-truck figure could be reached next year “if recent sales trends continue, if conditions in the general economy during the coming year are as good as they promise to be, and if the country is spared from prolonged strikes and major international disturbances,” be said. * * • Townsend listed these reasons for his optimism: . • “People who buy cars are confident about the future and are giving every evidence of intending to go on buying can.” • Personal income after taxes, “the kind of money people use to buy can,” is at an all-time high. ★ * * • “Business activity is at record levels and rising, and businessmen are expressing their' confidence in the future with the highest expenditures on record for plapt and equipment.” •, * ★ • Signs of particular interest to the auto industry are also favorable, such as the annual scrappage rate of more than five million cars, the 3)4 to 4 million Americans who reach driver-licensing age each year, and “the rapidly increasing number of multiple - car families.” NEW PROBLEMS Townsend said the industry’s rapidly expanding sales has created a new set of problems, such as work stoppages and a shortage of output capacity. * * * “It will be a matter of years rather than months before any of us can breath easy in the knowledge that we have enough margin of capacity to meet peak load requirements,” he said. ALBANY, N Y. W — Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller says Sen! Barry M. Goldwater should blame himself and not fellow Republicans for the party’s losses in the November election. The governor charged that Goldwater, as the presidential candidate, “undermined Republican unity and threatened public confidence in the very future of the party." | Goldwater had aecased Rockefeller of contributing to the GOP defeat. Rockefeller replied last night: “His (Gokiwater’s) positions on key issues of the day did not. reflect traditional Republican thinking nor a point of view acceptable to a great majority of the American people. It is this, and this alone which, in my opinion, resulted in his defeat.” Goldwater, in a copyright interview in U S. News & World Report, said he believed he lost the presidency the day he won. the Republican nomination — July 15. PARTICULAR BLAME He laid particular blame on Rockefeller and Gov. George Romney of Michigan as among challengers for the nomination who had painted a "caricature” of Goldwater. “That “caricature,” Goldwater said, depicted him as trigger-happy and as foe of the Social Security System and led to the landslide election victory for President Johnson. Carl Foster Rusk Urges Allies to Aid S. Nam GMTC Output for Week Hits All-Time High An all-time weekly production high was chalked up by GMC Thick & Coach Division" last week when 3,309 trucks and buses rolled off assembly lines here. ★ * * • Last week’s figure topped tt)e previous weekly high of 3,ljw units established in the third week of May, 1955, according to a division spokesman. * ★ ♦ * Production of " 6,476 GMC trucks and buses in the first two weeks of December is running ahead of last month’s rate. In November, 12,106 vehicles were produced by the division. Predict Light Snow for Area Tomorrow We almost lost a white Christmas, but yesterday’s renewal of snow restored hopes. Accumulation of one inch was recorded in downtown Pontiac. The weatherman expects still more show, but not until tomorrow, when intermittent light snow is forecast for .the afternoon. The mercury may drop to five to 15 tonight, hot it’ll be slightly warmer tomorrow, with a high of 21 to 30 predicted. Thursday’s weaker picture is partly cloudy, windy and colder with snow flurries. The coldest recording preceding 8 a.m. today was 10. The area warmed up slightly by 2 p.m., however, when 26 was recorded. PARIS UP) — Secretary of State Dean Rusk called today for more intimate allied consultations on world problems, a sympathetic reception to the concept of an allied nuclear command and concrete help for the hard pressed South Viet Nam government. Rusk told the winter ministerial meeting of the North Atlantic Alliance (NATO) that the United States hopes its allies "will give tangible help to South Viet Nam. Conference sources quoted Rusk as explaining that the Free World has a big stake in developments in Southeast Asia. Rusk linked the Viet Nam problem with a number of others which he said called for more intimate consultation by the 15 NATO allies. He proposed a system of allied liam Felker, 68, consultation, based on frequent of 1100 & Mil-meetings of deputy foreign min- ford, isters to allow the allies to co- H4« wife, ordinate their policies earlier. Marie, was be- ★ ★ ★ ing treated for Rusk spoke up in favor of the injuries at the ' Multilateral Force (MLF) con- emergency section of Pontiac cept of mixed-manned surface General Horpital. ships armed with' nuclear-tipped Polaris rockets. ' Milford Man Killed as Auto Hits Tree A Milford man was killed late this morning when the car he was driving ran off the road in M 11 ford Township and struck a tree. Dead is Wil- Oakland Highway Toll in ’64 BRITISH PLAN He said the British variant of this idea—the Atlantic Nuclear Force (ANF) — would receive full consideration. Rnik along with the foreign ministers of Britain, West Germany, Italy and the Netherlands were meeting later tonight to discuss ways of advancing the allied nuclear News Flash An 8.7-million car year for the automotive industry for 1665 was predicted today by Henry Ford n, rf«irm«i 0f the Ford Motor Co. Ford also •aid his firm plans to spend 6766 million next year, np 56 per cent over 1164. A Pontiac man who tdld police he strangled one woman And married anoth-er between midnight and noon Saturday was arraigned in Pontiac Municipal Court last night on a charge of first-degree murder.' Carl F. Foster, 28, of 286! & East Blvd., demanded examination when he appeared in closed court before Municipal Court Judge Cecil McCallum, charged with the murder of Mrs. Maurice Crook, 20, of 2401 S. Telegraph. Judge McCallum set Dec. 23 as the date for examination. Appearing with Foster was Pontiac Attorney J. Robert Sterling, who has been retained by Foster’s family for his defense. Foster is being held without bond in the Oakland County Jail. . * ★ ★ The partially clad body of Mrs. Crook, whose second divorce would have been final-yesterday, was found Sunday afternoon in a lovers’ lane area near the intersection of Opdyke and Featherstone. MISSING FRIDAY She had been missing since 11:30 pjn. Friday, when Foster took her out on a date. . • Leu than 12 boors later, according to police, Foster married his housekeeper, the former Mrs. Thana Lloyd, 23, in Bowling Green, Ohio. Police said Foster confessed the brutal murder after questioning and two lie detector tests. ★ • ★ it The victim had been beaten about the head and strangled with her own undergarments, according to police. An autopsy report listed strangulation as the cause of death. LIVED WITH PAIR She and her three-year-old son had been living with the parents of her first husband, Mr. and Mrs. William D. Lynch, in an apartment behind the Miracle Mile Shopping Center. Lynch, maintenance superintendent at the shopping center, learned she had been murdered when he reported (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Officials said the French, along with all the other allies, were invited to this meeting, largely procedural in aim. At the meeting the ministers of the five nations are expected to fix a time, probably Janifery, arid a place for full-scale negotiations oh the whole fleet idea. The Hague has been mentioned as a possible place. The, meeting is expected to be on a deputy foreign ministers’ level, at least until the final phase. PRIVATE TALKS The United States, Britain and West Germany were pushing ahead with private negotiations here for setting up the command. France was left out of the. planning by its own choice. ANNUAL SING - Carolers of the Lincoln Junior High School 9th Grade Chorus opened the 19th annual Christmas musical program presented by the Pontiac State Bank, yester- day, under the direction of George Den tel. Singing groups from various city schools will perform in the main lobby of the bank every day except Sunday from now until Christmas. 8 SHOPPING DAYS TIU CHRISTMAS Legislator Early Backer Stadium Support Cited “I have discussed the possibil- “It is located in the center of ity of a state-owned athletic a circle that embraces four-mil-stadium on the fairgrounds with lion people today and which will ninny of my associates in Lans- be increased appreciably in the ing, and I find strong support future.” j for the movement,” said Rep. Arthur J. Law today. This well-known Pontiac legislator is currently one of the veterans formulating policies and directing lawmaking activities of the House. “I have stadied this matter since it was first broached for the Olympic a,” said Law, “and I gave It my full rapport at that time. “Sister states are taking this -step, and we should do something to make that valuable, state-owned acreage productive. "In the. manner outlined, it could serve a wide variety of purposes and be' made useful to a large number of Michigan citizens. TWO THE PONTIAC PB ESiy TUESDAY, DECEMBER If; 1064 .Actor Bendix Is Dead at 58 -HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Actor i William Bendix is dead. And so, •ty. a way, is Chester'A, Riley, * the pug-faced, soft-hearted fac*. 1 tory worker he made famous in t television, radio and the movies. '"Bendix succumbed Monday at Los Angeles Good Samaritan Hospital to lobar pneumonia, complicated by a stomach aii- • tnent. He was 58. A A A At his bedside were his wife of 37 years, Therese, 58; daughters Stephanie, 20, and Lorraine, 30, and Mrs. Alan Ladd, with whose late actor husband Bendix once starred/ During 'his career, Bendix played characters ranging from brutal villains to everybody’s DOUBLE LOSS -To millions of fans of “The Life of Riley” television show, Bendix’ death was a double loss. It removed'Chester Riley, the harried father. Bendix’ wife once admitted to an interviewer: “Chester Riley and Bill Bendix are alike in a lot of ways. “Bill's bluff let outsiders know what he is like at all. He has all the kindness and desire to help others that IJiley is noted for. Sometimes, when I watch a Riley show, I say to myself, ‘You’d think the writers lived with UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — British Minister of State Lord Caradon today blamed much of the Congo trouble on outsiders be said are trying to perpetuate chaos and' turn the country into* “a cockpit for the Cold War.” In a speech before the U.N. Security Council, Lord Caradon did not specifically name the Soviet Union or Red China, but he said the efforts to stir up trouble in the Congo originated outside Africa. 'A", a a '. The British delegate joined U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson and Belgian Foreign Minister Paul-Henri Spaak in de- Request Due On Extension of Bus Pact . City Manager Joseph A. Warren is slated to report to the City Commission tonight on extension of the city’s agreement With Pontiac Transit Corp. The agreement, which calls for the city to pay bus company losses up to 91,715 per month, expires at the end of the year. Warren has been meeting with Ken E. Totten, regional jnanager of American Transit -Carp., parent company for lo-‘aalbns operations. Warren is expected to ask that tie current bus pact be extended 90 days to work out a longer contract with the bus firm. - In other business tonight, the commission will receive a report from the city engineer on the acquisition of city - owned property for proposed M59 freeway construction. -‘The State Highway Department seeks to purchase city land for the new freeway. .‘A resolution to make application to the Municipal Finance . Corporation for permission to issue tax anticipation notes is also to go before the commission. British Minister at U. N. Raps Congo ’ fending last month’s rescue operation in the Stanleyville area which has been denounced by some African countries as aggression and motivated by bias against blacks. Lord Caradon spid Britain had asked itself whether an effort should be made to'save nearly 2,000 innocent lives from massacre and the answer had been “Yes, yes, yes.’* NO DOUBT “I do not doubt for a minute that the answer was right," he declared. Like Stevenson and Spaak, the British representative deplored the injection of “black racism” Educators Urge Delay in Plans to Expand Branch Campuses into the Congo debate by some of the African delegates, a a ,a He urged the African nations i put aside “polemics and personal animosities” and accept the challenge to restore order and confidence in the Congo. The problem, he said, was primarily one for them to settle. H6 warned, however, that they must not continue giving help to rebel movements in the Congo and elsewhere against legally established governments unless they intend to destroy African unity. MAY SPLIT AFRICA “Those who start civil wars in other countries,” he said, “may find that they encourage civil war in their own, and worse still, may split Africa into opposing camps.” A ' h A He spoke as African critics of U.S. policy in the Congo mobilized for a counterblast at Stevenson’s speech delivered Monday in the council. EAST LANSING UR - A panel of national education leaders has advised Michigan college university representatives to hold off on plans to build or expand branch campuses. A five-member committee told the Michigan Coordinating Council on Higher Education Monday that “no university brandies should be established until a state plan for higher education has been prepared by the (new) State Board of Education. ■-# * "In the future no university should establish a branch except by specific legislative authorization and with a separate, earmarked state appropriation,” the report said. Dr. Ira Polley, executive secretary of the group of state college and university presidents and administrators, said members voted to refer the report to the governing boards of the state-supported schools and make^ it a priority item at its next meeting. DIRECT EFFECT Most directly affected would be University of Michigan proposals to add freshman and sophomore years to its Flint school and to build a branch at Delta College, which serves the Bay City, Saginaw, Midland area, and Michigan Tech at Houghton, which proposes to expand its branch at Sault Ste. Marie from two to four years. The council has no control over member institutions, but serves only in a coordinating and advisory capacity. The committee said when need for a new school becomes evident, the State Board of Education, working through the council and an advisory council established by the legislature, should appoint a committee to The Weather Fun UJS. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY -A Sunny and cold today. High. It to 21 Increasing cloudiness ant cold tonight. L°* five to IS. Cloudy, windy and slightly warmer tomorrow with intermittent light snow tomorrow afternoon. High 21 to 30. Northwesterly winds 10 to 20 miles an hour, shifting to 'southwesterly tonight and becoming southeasterly at II to 30 , miles an hour tomorrow. Thursday’s outlook is partly cloudy, - windy and colder with snow flurries. TMay In NMM study the bast method of solving the problem. “And no existing institution of higher learning should act unilaterally to enter the situation until the committee’s report has been made available and thoroughly discussed,” it said. SAME CONSIDERATION ' The committee, asked by the council to study the question, also advised that any change in the basic structure of an existing branch “should be examined by the same kind of multirepresentational committee as is approved to examine the creation of new institutions.” ★ ★ ■ ★ State Given Large School Money Plan (Continued From Page One) ‘ million in current operations and $33 million in the construction funds. The council, heeded by Michigan State Uhiversity trustee Warren Huff of Plymouth, cited as basic reasons for the need: • An estimated increase of 17,000 college students next year. * * a. • The corresponding need for more faculty and' desired higher salaries to meet the “competition for brains" from schools in Ojther states. - • Funds to "undo some of the injustices and neglect of recent years." In its endorsement of the proposals, the council—which includes the 19 college presidents and .a board member from each school—said it was expressing “concern over the financial crisis facing higher education in Michigan.” “In appropriations per student, the position of Michigan has declined substantially in recent years relative to the highly , industrialized states with which Michigan is most corns petitive,” the report said. However, the immediate reaction from a Democratic lawmaker who will probably have much to say about how much money goes to higher education was that the demands will be pealed down considerably. FINANCE STRUCTURE State Sen. Garland Lane, D-FUnt, the likely chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, said the prog couldn’t be accomplished this year under the ..tate’s present financial structure. Charge Made in Strangling (Continued From Page One) her disappearance to police Sunday evening. Police began looking for Foster when they learned he had dated Mrs. Crook Friday night. ' .# a * He voluntarily came to the police station when asked to by police, Sunday evening. DENIES MURDER Police said he first denied the murder and told detectives he had taken the girl home about 1:30 a.m. Saturday. Mrs. William D. Lynch, the dead woman’s former mother-in-law, told police Mrs. Crook called Foster at the Avon Inn Friday night and asked him to pick her up. Mrs. Lynch told police that she told her former daughter-in-law not to get serious about Foster when she ldft on the date that night. A A it The couple had been dating for about three weeks and had a falling out during the previous week, friends of MrS. 6rook told police. POLICE THEORY Police have theorized that after Foster picked Mrs. Crook up the couple “drove around" for a short time in the area of Auburn Heights and Adams. , Police believe that an argument took place and Foster strangled the woman in the front seat of the car. He then carried the body to the spot where she was found and posed the dead woman to look as though she had been sexually assaulted, police theor- 2 Detroit Women Are Found Slain NATIONAL WEATHER — Light snow and snow flurries f are expected tonight from the Pacific Northwest to the western Lakes area, u will be colder in the eastern hdlf of .the nation and warmer in the central and southern Plains. j DETROIT (AP) Two Detroit young women were found slain today. One had been stabbed; the other shot. The stabbed body of Mary Holmes, 21, was found in a hallway outside her apartment at 8620 Epworth and police said they were seeking a man with whom she is believed to have argued. An unidentified woman, estimated to be about 25, was shot to death in an apartment at 1955 Blaine. Police, held William Bland, 42, for investigation, saying he stopped' a police car shortly before 3 a.m. and told officers a woman had been shot in his apartment. Eye Red Cross View Plans to Join Units in 3 Counties Planning meetings designed to consolidate American Red Cross chapters serving Oakland, Wayne and Macomb counties to a single chapter structure are under way. Kaye A. Buttars of the Macomb County Red Cross Chapter is serving as chairman of the committee on consolidation. Butters said the Red Cress Beard of Governors, the organization’s national governing body, has for sometime been urging chapters whoso boundaries now divide large metropolitan areas to voluntarily take action toward unification. E. Roland Harriman, chairman of the national Red Cross organization said that Red Cross must be concerned with people not geography. a A it “We must insure uniform! standards of service in all chapters and we must concentrate! our resources on providing the' best and greatest amount of! service for the greatest number of people,” Harriman said. COMMITTEE MEMBERS Oakland County residents serving on the newly-formed elude Carleton C. Patterson Jr., chapter chairman; Roderic V. Wiley,,,chapter first vice chairman; James Howlett, chapter treasurer, and Donald M. Mil-1 lar, chapter manager. Birmingham Area News Delay Zone Change Action BIRMINGHAM - Action on a proposed zoning amendment designed to encourage the development of luxury apartments has been delayed for one week by (be City Commission. A public hearing on the planning board proposal was held last night, with only one property owner objecting to it On the protest of Merritt W. Olsen, 599 Townsend, over the lack of side-yard setback regulations, the commission directed City Plan Director William R. Brownfield to return to next Monday’s meeting with No Regular Mail Dec. 26 Regular mail deliveries in the Pontiac area will be suspended Dec. 26 to allow most post office personnel to have a three-day Christmas weekend. A normal holiday skeleton crew will be on duty, however, to process mail that day, according to Pontiac Postmaster William W. Donaldson. A two-hour window service for business firms will be provided. ♦ a . %s The Dec. 26 postal holiday will be effective across the nation, Postmaster General John A. Gronouski announced. Ex-Pontiac Official in Grand Rapids Post Allan S. Olsen, 43, former personnel director for the, City of Pontiac,'yesterday was named deputy city manager of Grand Rapids. Olsen, who held the Pontiac post from 1947 to 1950, presently is city finance director of Manhattan Beach, Calif. He will begin duties in Grand Rapids Jan. 15, according to Grand Rapids City Manager George Bean. The officers learned later that at about 2 a.m. Foster picked up the former Mrs. Lloyd, who had been living with him and his mother and caring for his three children by another marriage. PARKED NEAR SPOT They parked about 300 feet from the spot where the body of Mrs. Crook was found, according to police. The conple then went to an all - night restaurant before starting for Ohio. Foster and his bride, who has two children by another marriage, returned to Pontiac Saturday afternoon, police said. .Police said that after the confession, Foster went with them to the lovers’ lane and showed them the general area where he had thrown Mrs. Crook’s purse. Police found the purse. a a a"'' Police reported that blood found in the rear of Foster’s automobile was examined at the state police crime lab in East Lansiiig. It was found to be from a deer, as Foster had earlier told them. Detective Sgt. John DePauw said that police noticed,, flaws in the first interview they had with Foster about 5 a.m. Monday. He said these errors first led them to believe Foster was the killer. Foster’s first wife, Angela, committed suicide by hanging last Feb. 28. Foster is presently on sick leave from GMC Trunk & Coach Division, where he had been tm-J ployed 10 years. ’ I Olsen complained that it was entirely possible for a new building to be constructed right next to his lot line under the new plan, thereby limiting him in developing his property, a a a The revision of the requirements of the proposed multiple R-7 classification would affect only properties in the ares generally bounded, by Merrill, Southfield, Brown md Henrietta, according to Brownfield. LARGER APARTMENTS The new R-7 formula would promote larger apartments with more green area per unit, ac-c o r d 1 n g to Brownfield, while maintaining existing densities. All new plans for the area would be subject to review of 2 Freighters Collide in Chesapeake Bay BALTIMORE Wf-Two American freighters, one inbound and the other outbound, collided in Chesapeake Bay early today about two miles north of the Bay Bridge. No injuries were reported. The Baltimore Maritime Exchange said first reports indicated severe starboard side damage to the American Reporter and slight damage to the Summit “but we have not verified that yet.” Factory Representatfvo Haro WEDNESDAY—I to 3 P.M. REMINGTON SERVICE Electric Skavtri -Main f loor Sale! Steel Cabinets Our Biggest Selection Ever - Seconds But All Are in Almost Perfect Condition Large Wardrobes All-metal construction — styles with sliding doors, double doors, some with shelves, etc. Utility Cabinets Most useful cabinets In assorted Styles to dtetose 8 from. Sturdy all steel in white or brown enamel M finish. IIS 925.99 Wall Cabinets 1 Mod popular sizes to choosf from, easy to open . 8 . double- door styles In white enamel finishes. m 912.91 Over-Sink Cabineft 54 Inches long in 30- or 27-inch heights. Double door all-steel cabinets "in gleaming white. ■ W 911.91 Park Free on Saginaw St. Hr Use Our Free Layaway — Small Delivery Charge Hi SIMMS 25 SOUTH Saginaw Street STORE the planning board, which would have the power to vary the requirements of the’zoning ordinance as they relate to the pro-posed development. Ia an unexpected move the commission, by a 44 vote, directed the administration to prepare plans for the development of a small parcel at Worth and Webster into a park. For some time, the commission has been considering leasing the triangular property to adjacent businesses for parking. Most interested in the property was the Chamberlain Real Estate Co. In other business, the commission authorized the city manager to advertise for bids on the sale of the Walker Gravel Pit property, appraised at $375,-000. '« APPROVED SALE Voters approved the sale of the 70 acres In the April 6 election. The sale will be conducted under the so-called ‘ procedure the original bids are held for two week* daring which time additional seated bids are received. These must be at least five per cent more than the highest proposal initially received, a a a This procedure is repeated at two week intervals until such time the commission accepts the highest bid or rejects all bids. fS L Bettor Gifts for Your Favorite People Cost Loss at SUMS! 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS 1 I ‘Daisy’ BB-Gunr 1894 Carbino $14.40 setter/Sp*- _ _ ^ tin' Imog. of the 1 1 88 model 94 Im odkon I I 700 Shot Modal 111 $9.50 seller—western toSS 1 carbine, toddle gun. ■ J 700 shot repealer.. m ■ Model 96 Sporter $10:50 seller-modem JWQT rifle with wood stock. 99® ■ Model 25 Pump Gun 1 $1250 tMtr-Amtt- | ice's towns pump M fflHR ■ U Gen. 40 she! J ^ | 700 shot repeater. . Model 192 Cub $5.98 seller—30W m.. gun lor smaller boys. 4898 500 shot repeating Daisy 99 Shots Pocks of Bullseye 4 A. | copper coaled SB's 1 II* j for Daisy guns. 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Folds tor traveling and 14" Complete Outfit .Table Tennis Sat v THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1964 Romney, Key Dems Meet on Budget Surplus LANSING (AP)—Gov. Georg! Romney and Democratic tegis-lative leaden sit down today to talk budget with an argument about the state treasury surplus aiready in full bloom. Sen. Garland Lane, D-Flint charged Monday that by June »the surplus will be 190 to $100 million or up to $30 million higher than Lane says Romney Is predicting. State controller Glenn Allen, Romney’s budgetary right hand, said Lane's statement “just isn’t so.” Allen told the Associated Press Monday night that his staff hasn’t finished putting together the economic figures which would toll bow big the surplus might get. Allen said he wasn’t aware that Romney has cited the $00 million figure Lane credited to the Republican governor. ★ W- W Allen said the last available surplus figure was $97 million as of last July. ■* * .* “We know it’s going to be higher than that,” said Allen, “but we don’t know how muyh. Easy to Rocognizt? SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The International Student Service office in San Francisco insists that among its communications from around the world was this message from a Soviet student: “You will recognize me when I arrive. I am a card-carrying YMCA member.’* Their figure is certainly optimistic.” Lane said he got his estimate from two independent sources and added that revenue figures for the first five months of the 19M-95 fiscal year were a key determinant. FIRST S MONTHS ^ , “It’s unsound to base a prediction on just the first five months,” Allen said. “Sometimes it turns out true and sometimes it turns out false.” The original current year’s budget anticipated a $2 million drop in the surplus. Lane and other Democratic leaders who met Monday said, they’re afriid Romney won’t give them the straight surplus facts. “I intend to give them the figures m we’ll all be to the same boat," Allen said. WITHIN WEEK He expects to have an estimated surplus within a week bat added that the, figure to be used by Romney to his budget message early next year will be further updated. Ljuie, who will head the Senate Appropriations Committee when Democrats take over the Senate next session, sgid Rom- ney wouldn’t ftimish the Democrats with revenue and surplus figures. - ★ ★ ★ “We had to come up with our an,” Lane said. “What we’re trying to do is establish the first state—that is the size of next year’s budget. w Or ♦ Lane said even a $100 million surplus would not last through the next two fiscal years be- cause of state needs. BUDGET SESSIONS The governor is to the midst of budget-planning sessions that are exnected to climax with submission to the legislature of the highest appropriations budget in state history—probably at least $1.$ billion. SIMMS..?*. Again Invites Pope MANILA (AP) - President Diosdado Macapagal today, renewed an invitation to Pope Paul VI to visit the Philippines next April, when the 400th anniversary of Christianity to this country will be celebrated. PARK FREE On Sacinaw St. Downtown Pontiac Park Frew for 2 hours right on Saginaw St. - and in front of Simms tee. fist Parking plus many hours (open to 10 p.m. daily) to take your time for Christmas Shopping. [OPEN] Rmrsdn lannriy hoi | Ml* MWWSMWlSMnM——i SIMMS 30th Christmas-sad The Bsttsr Sifts Still Cost Less Here Sincp 1934 — that’s 30 years age, Simms has given Pontiac and Oakland County folks the better gifts jot .the lower prices. And today we still operate that way. Proof? Just look at this page full of money Mom Floor CLOTHING DEPARTMENT Wow! Regular $1.35 Sellers In Those Otter Stores. But Look At Simms Pries iOleg Cassini’ & 'SEAMLESS Nylon Hosiery 49! 3- Turrat 300 Power... 4.M 4- Turret IN Power... 1.96 4-Turrot IN Power... 11.96 4-Tmrat IN Pewar... 21.11 With instructions and extra slides. In carrying and storage coses. SIMMS.'* ■hgarage doors^ • RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL • Operator and Radis Controlled We Install and Repair Free Estimates 24 Hour Service Vary Reasonable Prices Visit About Our One four Cuarautrr IS Ml 14111 Service 6.1. Joe Doll Accesiorios While they last! flllO While they hut V-RROOM 100'» ' of Values to $1.98 Strombecker Tom Thumb | « CASH ^register without coupon Reg. 29.9S Tom’s k. Price TIM WORLD FAMOUS QUALITY DIKE! Schwinn bikes are btfll Ddst be* cause there is extra quality built into every one , .. extra quality that means lonfler, more trouble, free life. Easy Terms Schwinn quality all the way. Four coat baked on enamel fin* ish. Schwinn tubular rims. Schwinn cantilever frame. Full length chainguard. POUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESbAY*Y)KC&KBgfr 13, 1*64 PRIVATE DETECTIVES : Offices in: PONTIAC—FLIRT—SAGINAW i HAROLD L SMITH IHVESTMATORS 1302 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. ; 24-HOUR PHONE NUMBERS ; PONTIAC FLINT SAG I NX W : FE 5-4222 CE 3-4561 PL 4-8434 Tackles Substandard Housing Problem City Manager Warren Is Pontiac's ‘Mr. Cleanup' BY L. GARY THRONE Well put his first 100 days as Pontiac’s chief administrator, Joseph A. Warren has designed his pet project — a cleanup of substandard housing. And his pet, unpopular with some people, namely landlords, may even provide the 44-year-old city manager with a few physical lumps. One irate landlord has already threatened to punch Warren in the eye. Despite such threats, Warren has insisted on a crackdown on dilapidated housing in the city. It has been a prime concern since he took the top city post Aug. 3. ★ ★ ★ “The City Commission thought it was a real pressing problem,” explained Warren. QUITE APPARENT “It was quite apparent that not much had been done lately in this area, except for urban renewal,” he noted. Warren’s first move was to convene his city hall staff, including^ building, plumbing, electrical, engineering, heating, health, legal and fire department officials. Providing the over-all push, he now bolds weekly meetings on housing standards. The department beads compile a list of substandard dwellings. The list is presented at the weekly sessions and a course of action is selected. PRIMARY WEAPON Code enforcement is the primary weapon employed to persuade home owners to clean up their property. If warnings are not effective city kail takes legal action. Seven cases are currently in Circait Court. “We try to use every facility available including county, state and private agencies,” said Warren. * * *. Keeping a case load of about 30 on their “blacklist”, dqr officials have been able to scratch off 34 substandard structures. VACANT BUILDINGS . They deal with both commercial and residential structures. Most of the buildings are vacant. One family has been evicted from a condemned home to date. One middle-aged bachelor provided an unexpected problem. The man, living in n house owned by the state because of unpaid back taxes, was taken into Municipal Court on a violation of the city’s boosing ordinance. Jailed in lieu of a fine, the man spent a night behind bars before n friend gpt him However, when city workers went to tear the house down, tfray discovered 30 cats had taken up lodgings in the Alwnd-oned house. BUSY AFTERNOON The dog warden spent a busy afternoon evicting and apprehending die “tenants." “Ns spat la the city Is immune to substandard housing,” according to Warren. Sheds, shacks, burned-out dwellings, bearded-ap houses and commercial buildings are scattered la every area. * ★ . A ' Tracing the owner of I building is sometimes time- consuming, said Warren, but out-of-state landlords are being traced. HIS ROLE Warren described his role as a matter of keeping everybody moving on the problem and sharpening up techniques. He brings It years of experience to the task. A similar program has been in operation in Jackson, where Warren was city manager, and “we’ve cleaned up hundreds there.” ■ dr # ' '•#. He hopes to do the same in Pontiac. There are 3.5 million Spanish-speaking Americans hi the Southwestern states. Oas Be Helped! Nerve deafness is the principal 'cpusf of hearing impairrnQnt. There is no treatment or surgical operation that wifi cure Nerve Dedfpess. People that say '"{ con hear but can’t understand" usually suffer from nerve d e a f n e s s. We have available a brochure telling the inside story of nerve deafness. Write to The Pontiac Press, Box No. 33. ALUMINUM SIDING JOE VALLELY DOBBS IS THE DIFFERENCE IN FURNITURE AND IN FURNITURE STORES Scandinavian scoop arm note with lifetime construction warranty. King-size Mr. and Mrs. chairs and ottoman in correlated Scotch guard decor- ator prints or nylon fabrics. e Mr. Chair.............. $99 eMrs. Chair. ..»4. ...... $19 e Matching Ottoman.......$29 e 76 Inch Size .......... $179 e 86 Inch Site 351....... $299 #96 Inch Size . . ....... $239 All pieces have rubber cushions and covered platform decks, extra set of arm eovers... a large selection of washable nanmhyde and nylon fabrics. e Flexsteel High-Back Chair. $119 e Matching Low-Back Chair.. $199 e Ottoman (not shown)..........$38 e 76-Inch Sofa .........$199 e86-InchSize...,.......... $211 • 96-Inch Size ...........$249 TOM’s Hardware & Toyland FE 5-2424 905 Orchard Lake Ave. OPEN EVES. TIL 9 P.M. OPEN SUNDAYS TIL 4 P.M. Heavy Duty ||STEEL . - \ TONKA TRUCKS • Hydraulic Dump Truck » ..... $3.99 • Cement Mixer......... ... . . *4.88 • Gar Carrier *5.99 • Dispatch Jeep.............. $1.58 • Jeep 6 Runabout.... ........ $3.98 • Read Dradaf........ x#..... $3.99 • Fire Eng. Pumper.. ..ii...... *7.19 • Steam Shovel ■............. *3.99 Sofa has lifetime construction, solid walnut base, reversible rubber scats and backs, self-covered deck, extra arm coven, solid bran ball casters. Covered Ihnylbn fabrics. $279. 86” Sofa, $249 • 96” Size, $311 - Same Sofa 110” with 4 Brass Casters, $349 Contoured accent chair hae re-yenible seat and back; lifetime construction, Scotchguard decor* ' ator-print fabrics. $1$l ■ ; Master Chair ha. hand-tufted Back Naugahyde or Nylon Fabrics. Select walnut and Aluminum Base Chair. Chair.....................$10$ Ottoman.........-..««•*• $38 90 days or tip to 36 months to pay? D|0|B|B|S FURNITURE CARPETING 2600 Woodwaid-Bloomfield Hills FE 3-7933 THE PONTIAC PRESS- TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15,19fr^ Conservationist Dies WASHINGTON (AP) - Rom L. Leffler, 71, retired steel exec-utlve end nationally known conservationist, died Monday of a heart ailment He had been the WASHINGTON (Ufr)-A Fed-ertl Fewer Commission (PPC) suggestion that far - ranging “networks” of electric power lines could produce customer savings of ad much as $11 billion yearly has drawn a mixed chorus of reaction from the in- reduction in the average cost of electricity. The FPC chairman said the recommendation should not bo taken as advocating a national power grid under federal control. He said it was not a "blueprint" but rather a set of guidelines and goals for the industry. The report, drawn up with industry help, railed for “hilly coordinated power networks covering broad areas of the country.” 7 The heart of snch a system would he extra-high-voltage Misses' Proportioned, Widewale CORDUROY SLACKS ALL IS VANITY ALL IS... 11 SPECIAL SALE FREE iotu areas of the country. A key private power spokesman, Walker -L. Cisler, president of the Edison Electric Institute, immediately said he doubted that the savings could reach $11 billion yearly. Osier, who is chairman of the board of the Detroit Edison Co., said the FPC had not taken into account the “inevitable effects of continued inflation.” He said the report had “much to commend it” but warned against “a master plan approach” not keyed to regional requirements. Clyde T. Ellis, general manager ef the Notional Hand Electric Cooperative Asoocia- Widewole corduroy slocks with nylon side zipper, side pocket. Proportioned to. fit. Choose from black, green, blue or brown. Sizes 10 to 20. Charge Yours. SppcHwor... Third floor with the purchase ef any 1964 Refrigerator in stock. HAMPTON ELECTRIC 'USE' YOUR CREDIT Waite's Have A Convenient Charge Account For Your Every Need . . . Phone FE 4-2511 He said the FPC survey was “based on a concept of cooperation among the various power suppliers and this is a concept which moot of the commercial companies have steadfastly refused to consider.” $499 .The vast af all;.. favorite of all is our 100% brushed wool sleovelou stylo with a doap-voo plungo front (to show off your prettiest blouses). Light, bright and dark tones; sizes 34 to 40.. Choose from fancy loco trims or tailored styles.' 100% .nylon tricot. S-M-l in Average or Short. Red, Black, Sky Rocket Ice, White, Some novelty prints. Charge Yours. Ideal for. Christmas Giving AQhmj choose her gift from our CIRISTVAS COLLECTION "Dormie" Leather scuff in white, pink, blue, block or Lemon. Sizes tola Choose from many seamed and seamless styles in three Belle-Sharmeer LEG SIZES: Brev for short, slender legs; Modite for average legs; Duchess for tall, full legs. In an array of fashionable holiday shades. ^ >x us- 2.00 Pr. jmhM. r new from Faberge for men after shave., .after shower. ..after anythin®/ Faberge's spirited, self-confident new men's lotion carries a powerful kick that lingers long > on a slightly uncivilized, memorably male note — the most treasured giftoftha year for the most masculine man you know. stunningly presented in Handsome bottle-green decanters capped and crested in silver BRUT for men 5.00 8.50,10.00 ARROW FENWAY CLUM Guaranteed 5 Years ‘KENTFIELD stretch socks 3for*23\ 100% Cotton Wash 'n Wear Smart narrow-rib drew sock with 5 years of wear built into' It. A full one-inch " . longer than most A mens anklets. >*10 colors. . yiDSj Men'i W#«tf . . Street Floor The Fsnway Club Is permanently wash-and-wear because It's labelem "Sanfarized-Plus" — and* ARROW Dura-Neat finish will mointoln th* J |ust-out-of-the-drOwer freshness of this handsome shirt, aH .day longl When appearance really counts jo*n the membership of this exdusivS Fenway Club. See our selection of these carefree shirts. si 'W Jftlff-r - rf*t\ wli MCJudUr MbVmmxto nGl/lut! WjFU VjQLMm j|H| WJw , Y yV mf' “1 fl| ■ |f | $ >1 isB THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1964 ■MOLD A. FITZGERALD President and Publish** -Bwagsw-..* 'w.tasa— -mm~~ JOMM A. fcUT I- |A Foolproof Program ;to Breed Lawlessness I The Weekly Review, published by famates of Marquette Prison, offers ^ith poignant irony, a formula for . {airing a juvenile delinquent. It follows: * • Begin with infancy to give the tiiild everything he wants. In this fay he will grow up believing the #orld owes him a living. f • When he picks up bad words, kugh at him. This will make him {hink he's cute. It will encourage Jim to pick up “cuter” phrases that Jrill later blow the top of your head fff. ★> -★ ★ ** • Never give him any spiritual training. Wait until he is all, and let him decide for him-r s«if. a. Avoid the use of the word “wrong.”* W • Pick up everything he Reaves lying around — books, ' /shoes, clothing. Do everything Tor him, so that he will be experienced in throwing all re-g sponslbiiity on others, o Let him read any printed mat-* ter he can get his hands on. Be careful that the silverware and drinking glasses are sterilized, but let his grind feast on garbage. * o Quarrel frequently in the presence of your children. In this way flaey will not be shocked when the gome is broken Up later. | o Give the child all the ' spending money he wants. Nev-«er let him earn his own. Why - should he have things as tough »;as you did? i o Satisfy his every desire *f4for food, drink and comfort. See Jjo it that every sensual desire is ^ gratified. Denial may lead to harmful frustration. ★ ★ ★ o Take his part against the neighbors, teachers and policemen. They stfe all prejudiced against your child. o When he gets into real trouble Alibi yourself by saying, “I never could do anything with him,” Having carefully adhered to this regimen, parents may then prepare f<5r years of grief—which they will lively have. are being appropriated for state-supported universities, while private institutions have initiated extended drives for funds to keep pace. As examples, Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Pennsylvania and Stanford University launched moneyraising programs for new facilities thkt severally netted them from $83 million to $109 million. it it ★ Inherent in the concept of higher education for those seeking it is the development of the capacity for “thinking big." To provide adequate accommodations for their big thinkers, the colleges themselves are offering striking example of the quality. |Deluge of War Babies gOverflowing Colleges j The maturing crop of postwar Jabies has had strong impact on Jiany facets of our social and economic structure. None has felt it Man than the educational establishment. f Elementary and secondary ichools naturally were first affected. But this year the colleges are taking the full brunt of the rising tide of Jlmerlcan youth bent on higher adulation. ★ ★ ★ * A report from the national * Office of Education shows en-f rollment in the nation’s 2,135 £ colleges and universities this ; fall soared to a record total, of ’ 5,320,294 students, an.increase * of 103 per cent over a year ago. 4 The office expects a comparable ! increase next year. it it ★ | Students entering college for the Ihst time and taking degree-credit teourses increased 17 per cent this ■all, compared with an average yearly rise of 7 per cent for the last 12 ■ears. f Of the total collegiate enrollment, 182,400 students — 22 per cent more than a year ago—are entered in spe* dial noncredit courses to qualify for fimployment. | The educational “plant,” needless fo say, available for the multiplying multitude of students .is bulging at ★ it it Vast sums to meet expansion Verbid Orchids to- Mr. aid Mrs. Lynwood B. (Ted) Young of 92 Stout; golden wedding anniversary. Mr. asdMrs. Ira J. Dovis of 32 Easy; 54th wedding anniversary. Hindsight tells us that buildings the U.S. erected in foreign countries should have been of riot-proof construction. “Is There A Doctor In The House?” David Lawrence Says: American humorist Wnx Rogers said: “Everything is funny as long as It is happening to somebody else.” Edict Changes Power Structure LBJ, McNamara Like Frugality By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON — President Johnson has a favorite word, “frugality.” Since Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara takes it seriously, as be showed again over the weekend, they get along. McNamara’s brand of frugality, like plans for closing military and naval bases and merging the Army Reserve with the National Guard, won’t win him a popularity contest with the people and places affected. This-Js true with some members of Congress, where there are some of i for economy, either because they are In the reserves, or their states lose income when tapes are closed. But McNamara’s thrift, which be was practicing before Johnson moved into the White House, endears him to the President. It’s a case of just what the doctor ordered. Johnson was in office less than three weeks when he said the Defense Department must make “the largest effort” toward economy and “achieve the biggest savings. . ik ★★ Early this year Johnson, facing an election and therefore doubly concerned about spending, was able to produce a budget under $100 billion. It was $97.9 billion. CUT OF $1.1 BILLION The Defense Department’s share of this was |5l-2 billion, a cut of $1.1 billion from last year. Last April, McNamara, writing about his job, said that when he took office he could have adopted either of t w a broad philosophies of management. He could be passive, meaning he could make^the decisions on recommendations made to him; <£ he could be aggressive by “questioning, suggesting alternatives, proposing objectives, and stimulating progress. a ★ * ★ * He said “this activie role represents my own philosophy of management.” It seems a good guess that in the budget Johnson offers Congress next month, McNamara’s Defense Department may ask for even leu than this year. BEHIND THE GUESS This is behind the guess: On Nov. 19 McNamara announced plans for closing 91 military bases and Navy yards in S3 states and five countries abroad to save $477 million. Then last week Moscow announced a 4 per cent cut in Soviet defense spending. This might be a coincidence. Or it could mean both big powers are slowing down the arms race. ★ ★ dr Over this past weekend, McNamara said he plans to eliminate all unnecessary Army Reserve wilts and merge the others with the states’ National Guard. He figured this . would eliminate about 150,009 men from the rolls and save $150 million a year. WASHINGTON - A fateful day in history is Dec. 14, 1904. On this date what many historians will describe as a federal dicta-torship was established in the United States. For the constitutional provision which f has declared] that the people] retain all p o w-ers not spe- LAWRENCE cifically delegated to the federal government or denied to the states now has been altered. Uader the guise of regulating “interstate commerce,” (he federal government may hereafter step In and prescribe whatever feffrictions on American life It pleases and the judiciary cap call It “the law of the lander The decree was handed ddwn by nine men comprising the Supreme Court of the United States. No amendment to the. Constitution authorizing such a change had been adapted by the people, and the court’s ruling now must be obeyed until such time as the people, by constitutional amendment, may repeal or revise the decree. The Supreme Court edict puts virtually no limit on what can be called “interstate commerce” or on the power of Congress to regulate it. The decision not only applies te racial discrimination in restaurants, hotels or other places known as “public accommodations,” but it also coven almost any act or activity within the states which has hitherto been regarded as subject only te local regulation by the states, counties or cities of the country. There are many businesses which claim to be local in nature. Under the new ruling, however, if they obtain from another State materials, ingredients or products of any kind which have a bearing upon the work in a particular establishment, then they some day may be also adjudged -to be engaged in “interstate commerce.” The new decision is so far-reaching that it may affect employment throughout the country. Up to now, there have been many businesses inside the states, which have been considered outside federal jurisdiction. It is doubtful whether any business hereafter will be free from federal regulation of its labor relations and all other phases of its activities. The net effect is bound te be a feeling of consternation when the public really finds ant that the new ruling by the Supreme Court doesn’t jut cover r a e i a 1 discrimination bnt establishes the power of the federal government to la-trude in almoot every activity that has hitherto been called local in character. For the only criterion necessary now to establish what is or is not “interstate commerce” is whether the goods, materials, or equipment or food used in the operation of the local facilities in any way originates or is derived from or has moved in “interstate commerce.” Another part of the ruling is based upon the kind of customer who. seeks service. If he happens to be traveling dhd has crossed a state line, the court can rule that he is or has been engaged in “interstate commerce” and therefore must be given the service for which he applies as a purchaser or as a customer. 4 ★ ♦ Hie people can &11 adopt an amendment either affinning what has been done by foe court or repealing it, but the fact remains that a decision of momentous importance, affecting the constitutional rights of the citizens, has been imposed by a judicial tribunal without submitting the matter to the people to vote on the issue by means of a specific proposal to change the Constitution itself. (CwyrifM, IH4, New Ywt H*r*M TribWM Syndicate. Inc.) Voice of the People: Reader’s Entire Enjoyed. SchoolCqn^rt I want to express appreciation lor the Cllrigtmas concert the Pontiac Nortljern teen-ager*, presented last Sunday. Our family attended and even thenine-and ten-year-olds were spellbound by the tovely'Vtftcee. * ★ ★ * * . , Many thanks to the student! and teachers who had the patience to put this concert on the stage. MR. AND MRS. H. KIPP 40 N. EASTWAY ‘Let’s Stamp Out Michigan Nudist Clubs’ The letter M. J. wrote on smut literature views from New York was very good. Since New York’s problem seems greater than ours, I suggest he go to New York and help those needy people. ★ dr 'dr- ■ I’ve read a lot about indecent literature but no one has said anything about nudist clubs. Is it okay for people to run around 4n the nude throughout Michigan? I know of five-dubs In Michigan and five new clubs now forming. If people want to do something good for our state, stamp out these nudist dubs. BILL BROOKS 1022 CLOVERLAWN Detects ‘Sour Grapes’ in Press Editorial In your sditorial on Gokiwater, I detected a Uttle “sour grapes.” During the campaign your editorUli stoutly supported Barry, so you are not much of a Republican. Gokiwater lost because he had the courage to stand behind his own convictions, and Romney won because he had the foresight to see that President Johnson was going all the way. no matter who the Republican candidate was. ★ dr dr Governor Romney wants the White House for himself and the best way to get there is with publicity. And he certainly got Iota of that. Now he’s going to keep in the news on the pretext of unifying the Republican party. If the “powerful, trustworthy, sound and intelligent leaders” you apeak of who are to pick, up the pieces and start anew hadn’t shattered the Gdldwater-MUler ticket, there wouldn’t be any pieces to pick up. Johnson is going to relax, now that he has beaten that “little man from Arizona” so now is the time for the GOP to back Gokiwater, because four years from now with a little pushing that Republican train is going to choo-cboo right up to the White House. ★ dr- ■ dr. I’m a Democrat who voted for Johnson, bnt I’ve seen the error became of sack tilings as tee Congo, and Viet -Nam, at Johnson seems content to go aad accept honorary degrees. MRS. JERRY LILLY 3404 BALD MOUNTAIN ROAD Ask Public to Help With Christmas Mail Letter carriers make the following plea to the public: a Obtain container large enough to hold Christmas mail when regular mailboxes are too small. • Keep walks shoveled. • Keep approaches.to rural mailboxes shoveled. W it ★ City letter carriers have been issued a solution in ■ small container that discourages dogs from attacking. It will not injure the animal but will discourage him from biting. CHARLES J. SMALLEY, PRESIDENT , N.A.L.C. BRANCH NO. 320 Bob Considine Says: Nature of Our Civilization Put in Doubt by Events NEW YORK - If the fluttering white dove of peace survives December, she (and We) can breathe lots easier. UJf. headquarters, center of man’s most comprehensive effort to build an enduring peace came under mortar attack on the same day t h e erection of a Christinas tree CONSIDINE to the Prince of Peace on the free world’s side of divided Korea produced an indignant protest from the atheistic enemy. Russia, Red China, Cuba and half a dozen African nations continue their charges that our participation in tee rescue of the white hostage* of the Congo constitutes ag- This tripe is prolonged in face of a Belgian priest’s testimony that carniverous Congolese rebels who cannot forage on their * own may now buy human white The Belter Half F gas and electric service!... This is r cneap trick to bilk me cut sf my outboard motor fund!” ‘Possibility of Utopia for a Half Century’ “A True Democrat” lost a trick. Bobby and Eddie followed by Caroline and John-John, with Old Joe sandwiched in for an inside straight, gives us a half century of utopia. A CHINA BOUND EMIGRANT ‘Will Elections Give Voters a Choicer If some Republicans are successful in their attempt to pull the GOP to the left and into their liberal conception of the political meat from a native butcher mainstream, 26 million conservative voters will consider themselves market. disfranchised by the Hew single-barreled, two-party system and will want means of political expression other than the ones offered by Democrat and Republican liberals on different sides of the same left hand. ★ dr W Must liberals control both parties or will elections continue to provide a chance far a choice? VOTER ‘Subdivision Speed limit Goes Unheeded’ I am happy to read of the success A1 Collins and his group had in getting the speed limit reduced and the promise of it being enforced. Residents of Midland Street paid for 25-mik speed limit signs out of our own pockets. They may as well read 55 because the majority drive at this speed. ★ ★ , ★ We have children on this subdivision street going te and from school four times a day. We have had two children hit, and with the traffic it is a wonder more are net hart or killed. ★ dr dr The township police and state police admit this is a bad situation but neither has enough hel^to patrol the area. Wondering ‘Waterford Dog Warden Has Big Heart’ The Waterford Township Dog Warden is a man with a big heart. After picking up a dog belonging to a child at Haviland school, he told the child he would wait for her to call her mother to come and take the dog home. And he waited! ANONYMOUS ‘Christmas Stamp? Give Festive Look’ The attractive Christmas stamps issued by the Post Office this year make any piece of mail look festive, and they coat no more. How much we get from our postal service for how little! ★ ★ dr A sincere “thank-you” to every postal worker for the fabulous job in “getting our Christmas mail through.” JANICE R. ANTONA 193 W. ANN ARBOR ‘Christmas Lights Were Stolei] Again’ We were sure they would not steal the Ughtr off the outdoor Christinas tree again tills year, as has happenad Ion- the last ten years. So ws lit It up again this year and had it glowing Saturday night. Sunday morning they were gone. Later m found t h e‘m smashed along the afreet in various pieces. , -v' Sk it ★ * To (he vandals, if Oey road tela: They wfli be replaced— ae booby frOpe^dr electrified tree just a PLEASE DON’T DOIT AGAIN. . -L..JLP.- ■' 4Jj Science writer Walter SulU-van’s challenging new book about the possibility that other planets may be populated with civilized life indeed raises the question as to whether ours is, as yet. “Regarding your column from Warsaw recently in which you Suggested that the. American housewife should quit bellyaching because her souffle sank and think a bit about the hard life of her Polish counterpart,” writes Harold W. Tuck of Whittier, Calif. “The American housewife under ear Constitution has the right to beef, bitch er bellyache and even criticise ear elected officials. “The people of Poland gave up their rights a long time ago to beef, bitch or bellyache about anything. So.let’s get with it and write a column which will he complimentary to ths American housewife. * it. ★ “The one you wrote from Warsaw was the lousiest column you have written to date.” I wouldn’t go THAT* far* MR. T. "Scores of unemployed men turn down Santa Claus jobs be^ cause they fear dealing with the shopping public at this time of year,” complains Douglas Mann head of the Ohio State Employment Service. Understandable. y 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY; DECEMBER lfl, 1964 How Children Fail—8 could fed they had been right, or if wrong, no more wrong than anyone dee: “I think it will sort of balance.” FENCE-BTlUDDLERS They are fence - straddlers, afraid ever to commit themselves — and at the age of 10. Playing games like Twenty Questions, which one might have expected than to play for fun, many of them were concerned only to put up a good front, to look as if they know what they wore doing, whether they did or not. ;, These self-limiting and self-defeating strategies 'are dictated, above at else, by fear. For many years I have been asking myself why intelligent children act unlntelligently at school. school. Why is so little said about it? Perhaps most people do not recognise fear in children when they see tt. They can read the grossest signs of fear; they know what the trouble is when a phild clings howling to his mother; but the subtler signs of bow a child’s fears mtyjpt influence his strategies. This year’s work has told me. The strategies of most of these children have bean consistently self-centered, self - protective, dined above all else at avoiding trouble, embarrassment, punishment, disapproval or losa of But tba trouble is - and here is a vital difference between school and war — that the adjustments children make to their fears are almost wholly bad, destructive of their intelligence end capacity: The scared fighter may be the best fighter, but the scared learner is always a poor learn- When they get a problem, I can read their thoughts on their facee, I can almost hear them, "Am I going to get this right? Probably not; what’ll happen to me when I get it wrong? Will the teacher' get mad? Will the others kids laugh at me? Will they keep me back this year? Why am I so dumb?" And so on. * * a Even in the room periods, where I did alii could to make the work nonthreatening, I was continually amazed and appalled to see the children hedging their bets, covering their losses in advance, trying-to fix things so that whatever happened they The simple answer is "because they’re scared." I used to suspect that children’s defeatism had something to do with their bad work Itr school but I thought I could dear it away with hearty cries of “Onward! You can do it!’’ AFFECTS CHILD What I now see for the first time is the mechanism by which fear destroys intelligence, the way it affects a child’s life. Promotions and salary increases come quickly to girls with outstanding abilities. Investigate the excellent courses offered at PJ8.L Fite lifetime placement service. Day School aid Evening Division. Indiana Hotel Burns; Guests Are Injured MADISON, Ind. (AP) - Eight t« 10 guests were reported injured today in a fire that destroyed Madison’s Hillside Hotel. fears have driven them. What is most surprising of all is how much fear there is in feniMHff WAYS FIRST QUALITY 9 Mass-ive Theft Case | CHICAGO (UPI) - Two 19-year - old youths today faced grand theft charges after they: were seized yesterday while trying to remove a 400-pound safe | from Holy Name Cathedral during C a.m. Mass. The Pinkerton Detective agency was credited with thwarting an assassination attempt against Lincoln before he was inaugurated. More Than Money £P-m- PEOPLE Are Our Business! •fingertip coats •stadium coats •suburban coats A Gift THAT’S SURE TO PLEASE! A. 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The United States ordered tbe attaches home yesterday, chart-tag that the Rusrians limited theta effectiveness by placing New Trial Asked by 'Intruder' PRICED FROM No Payments ’til March y KllT Hantp* Mr COODNILU many r#coH'«n*oa i^IsM p*r: Northern Plantation Grown •CHRISTMAS TREES a 79 and Up natural trees—no artificial coloring + Cedar Roping « • • per ft. 10* # Trimmed Wreaths • . ea. 1.49 REGAL FEED and LAWN SUPPLY CO. Pontiac Store—2690 Woodward—PE 2-0491 Clarkston Store—6676 Dixie Hwy.—MA 5-2746 LANSING (AP) - Charles P. English, found mentally ill after he barged into the office of Gov. George Romney last May with a loaded gun in an attache case and a knife on his person, has asked for a new trial. '*■ ★ Sr A pretrial bearing tentatively has been scheduled for Dec. 21 in Ingham Couqty Circuit Court. English, of Miami, Fla., and Bo-gata, Colombia, was seized ‘ Jay . Kennedy, a State Police bodyguard, when he invated tbe governor’s inner office. Romney was unhurt ★ * ★ Romney said at tbe time that English claimed be wanted Romney to run for president on tbe national ticket with former Vice President Richard M. ’ Nixon. English later variously claimed to be a member of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Central Intelligence Agency, but both federal agenda disclaimed him. LOSING CANDIDATE English was a former member of the Dade County Republican Committee in Florida and an unsuccessful candidate for the Florida State Senate in 1963. ★ ♦ ★ He waa found mentally ill and ordered committed to the Kalamazoo State Hospital by Probate Judge Jama Kallman tallowing a trial at which the wit-nesses included the governor. Two psychiatrists testified they found English mentally ill and in need of hospital care and treatment. ■ it it ★ John Dethmers, assistant Ingham County prosecutor, sal' Ertgltah has an automatic right tar appeal for a new hearing. The move apparently waa in retaliation against the fioviet action ta imposing travel restrictions on the Americana to Russia. WWW At the same time, Britain recalled one of its naval attaches in Moscow and said it would expel aa assistant Soviet naval attache from London. SPY CHARGES U.S. officials said the restrictions on the Americans were imposed following Soviet charges that thqr committed espionage during a trans-Siberian trip last September. ★ ★ ★ They said Soviet security officials burst into hotel rooms occupied by the Americans and the Briton ta Khabarovsk, seized theta eatjnera, film and notebooks, and then allowed them to continue theta train trip to Japan. * * •* The Americans involved were Col. .George A. Aubrey of Annapolis, Md., the Army attache; LL Col. Karl R. Liewer of Osmond, Neb., tbe assistant Army attache, and MaJ. Jama F. Smith of Mean, Okie., an assistant air attache. Tbe Briton was identified as Lt. Cmdi'. Nigel Laville. 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Adams 647-4470 JERUSALEM, Israeli Sector (AP) — bred was in the market for a new government today followthg the resignation of Premier Levi Eshkol, forced out by a 10-year-old security scandal. \ Eshkol quit after a rift in his Maps! party caused by former Premier David Ben-Gurion's demands for a new inquiry the mysterious La von affair, which occurred while Pinhas Levon was defense minister. * + * There was speculation that Edikol, 69, would again be asaed to form a government but kould accept only on condition that the Lavoo affair not be reopened. Meanwhile, he and his Cabinet remain in office as a caretaker government. NO PURPOSE (Israeli censorship has prevented publication of details of the Lavra affair in Israel, but it is believed to involve the crushing gf an Israeli spy ring in Cairo because of a security leak during Lavra’s tenure.) In his letter of resignation to President Zalman Shazar, Eshkol said: “No practical purpose will be served by an inquiry into an affair that took place 10 years ago. On the other hand, I foresee serious injury internally and externally to die country’s standing and good name.” Ben-Gurion’s demand had lused a serious crisis in the Mapai party, Israel’s largest, to which he and Eshkol belong. Observers felt that the Mapai would have to call on Eshkol again to head the government. Its only other member of comparable stature is Ben-Gurion, but at 78 he is believed unwilling to take over the government. And his demands for a new Lavon inquiry have so alienated the Mapai’s coalition partners that he probably would be unacceptable to them. A special ministerial committee exonerated Lavon in 1960. Ben-Gurion bitterly [objected and resigned as premier the following year. He returned to power a mouth later but retired on June 16,1963. Eshkol, flnmw-t minister since 1962, took over. * I#;;. * * '' Ben-Gurion has said he has amassed new evidence in the Lavon case which would upset the findings of the ministerial committee. ... ‘ V* * * Eshkol and Ben-Gurion had been dose friends while Ben-Gurion was premier. Their friendship is said to have cooled hi recent years. Midland Pastor Dies MIDLAND (AP)—The Rev. G. Walter Schoedel, for nine years pastor of 8t. John Lutheran Church here, died at his home Sunday following an illness of several months. He was 63. VISIT TO DEATH CAMP — Dr. Franz* Bernhard Lucas is the lone defendant of the 21 on trial for war crimes who voluntarily accompanied the court to the Auschwitz, Poland, death camp of the Nazis. He stands beside a three-tiered bunk of the Birkenau Baracks. Truman Knew Life of FDR Was Nedr End NEW YORK ' Type For 37 Years the. 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GET OUR LOW PRICE PRICE PRICE PRICE NO MONEY DOWN 3 YEARS TO PAY WASHINGTON (AP) — Even after 90 years, the weeds on tti yellowed sheet of paper made the eH eddhr mad. “It was th« last sentence, that lousy last sentence that dki it,’ grafted Gen. Anthony C. Me Aulmi az he reread the German wrmmm to Mini te a The gave McAuInfe two hours to surrender his 101st Airborne Division fad the Belgian town it held. AM* teat, the German warned, massed Nazi artillery would "annihilate the VJUi. troops in and near Bastogne.” Than came tha German windup switence — the one that stung McAuliffe because he frit it held a sneer. CIVILIAN DEATHS It said: "All tee serious civilian losses caused by this artillery fire would not correspond with tee well-known American humanity.** On impulse, the hard-jawed commander ft the "Battered Bastards of Bastope*' replied with one defiant word "Nuts.” That reply made McAuliffe a living legend of World War n. < Now 66 and retired from the Army and a big chemical company, the veteran paratroop general talked about the epic siege as be sat in Ms comfortable apartment, high above a busy Washington avenue. DAWN BEGINNING The Battle of the Bulge, ft which the Bastogne siege was a pivotal episode, started at dawn SO years ago Wednesday. That was when the badly wounded German army, after retreating grudgingly since the Normandy invasion the previous June, launched its last-spasm offensive through the snow-cloaked Ardennes Forest Before long McAuliffe found hfanself defending Bastogne, a small cobbled village, with 14,-000 men — an assortment of paratroopers, tankers, artillery men. By Dec. 10, the German ring had cloaed around Bastogne. The American riflemen, machine gunners and bazooka men thig in and stood off assault after assault The gift for the top names on your gift list... BULOVA ____ • t OOP losiftWri WApSlft, WALLPAPERS l» Stock ... Isody for . Irwnodloto Delivery. ' , fn>m29*tr99CM H 24300 VmOelWari Each Bulova is made with pride, so you can taka pride in giving ft, pride in owning it Our Watch Exparto f help you find the perfect ■ Bulova - for you reelf or ! for a gift. Wa have a wide ; salaction priced from $24.75. fstafaliskod IMS 25 N. Saginaw St. A. 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TUESDAY, I^ECEMBER 15, 1964 SES OCT CLEANER-SPOTLESS TOO-IN A- ItchenAid DISHWASHER SCHOOL tflni Lnunows CORBYS I KINDS OF , SHOTS ALL 'FROM ONE SPOT KEYSTONE KEYSTONE Mwl* Scene Book to record skot* YOU GET THIS *1 It roll of ®"Mon Film TWELVE I Thief Made 'Safe' Plans JOHANNESBURG, South Africa UB—A self-confessed bank intend doing with the money you stole? Robber: I was going to put ft in a safe-deposit box. * * * Prosecutor: In a bank? Robber: Yes, I. thought it would, be safe there. robber was being questioned during his trial at Johannes- An annual sale of drugs in burg’s criminal sessions: i the nation increased from $16 * , * * | billion in 1961 to |S billion in Prosecutor: And what did you 11962. • Choose From BUILT-INS-WHITE or COLOR TOP LOADING PORTABLES FRONT LOADING PORTABLES % 2 YEARS TO PAY! NO KANO RINSING RKQBHKD COMPARE and You'll Buy a KITCHENAID SPECIALLY PRICED Forphristmas GIVING! No Payment Until Fob. N Days Soma As Cash! 121 N. SAGINAW FE 5-6189 “Your Appliance Specialist«” QPIN IVBtY NIGHT TlL 9 P.M. QUESTION: Why do children have to go to school, whether they like it or not? mior ccmors uuiz < ANSWER: In the Middle Ages, there was little schooling available to ordinary people. Colleges, however, were founded early to instruct young people of high social rank. By the 1700’s, more general education became available. When the colonists came to America, they brought the principles of education with them. ' The New Englanders were especially interested in education, using such devices as the horn-book (1) to teach letters and numbers. Soon, public schools appeared. In this enormous new country Where the movement of settlers soon began to the westward, people had to act for themselves and think for themselves. So the pioneer in (2) is symbolically shown carrying a book as well as an axe. As towns and villages grew, more and more brain workers were needed T3). 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He Goodfellow was Walter Zentgrebe, in Ms n suburban 70s, a retired Grasse Potato i THRILL YOUR fAMILY with MAGNIFICENT Mesa m GEORGETOWN, British Guiana (AP) — Forbes Burnham today began lining up a new' government for British Guiana after Britain swiftly changed the colony’s constitution to permit the ouster of Mandat Pm* mier Cheddi Jagan. Burnham said he expected to get Ms government fully in ac* , tion by the end of the week. A -A' The new premier’* People’s National Congress party won slightly more than 49 per cant of the vote hi the Doc. 7 election, so Burnham must put together coalition. Ha has been promised the support; of Peter D’Aguiar’s ultraconservative United Force, which woo 7 seats in the National Assembly. With those seats and Ms ownjwrty’s 22, Burnham will have a majority of S over Japan’s People’s Progressive party. ; BIGGEST ?OTK Although Japan’s party polled the biggert vote, a new system of proportional representation dented him a majority in the assembly. Jagan bucked tradition, however, by refusing to resign. A constitutional order forcing Jagan out was initiated in London MOndpy by Colonial Secretary Anthony Greenwood. After approval by the Privy Council, the order was signed by Queen Elizabeth II as British Guiana’s chief of state, and Burnham was sworn in. about to reappoint Mm or to appoint another person as premier, then the premier, and all ether ministers and parliamentary secretaries, are forthwith to vacate their offlcee.” v .j CONSULT GROUPS Burnham, a e-foot-2, 300-pound Negro regarded as a pro-Western Socialist, pledged a "consultative democracy’’ and contact with all religious and ethnic groups. IBs Negro follower* me outnumbered 3-2 bf Ja-gan’s East Indians. Violence between the two radii groups during the past year has caused 107 deaths and millions of dollars in damage; Daft Sat for Wadding of Prince, Commoner ATHENS (AP) - Prince Michael of Greece and 24-year-old Marina Karelia, a commoner, have set Feb. 7 for their wedding. The royal palace announced the date today. A palace spokesman said King Constantine, a cousin of die 29-year-old prince, would he best man. Only relatives and doss friends of the couple will be invited to the wedding in Tatoi Palace outside Athens. The order provides "that if any time before the House of Assembly meets the governor informs the premier that he is i A wife who had completed her I childbearing years in 1090 had I given birth to an average of 3.2■ children; in 1952 the average^ was 2.4 children; and 20 years j from now the/average may be; about 3.5 children Oqntoh Modem, French Provincial or Early American ASTRO-SONIC STEREO RADIO PHONO Tubelos* Astro-Some with solid state circuitry eliminates aft heat and sound distortions! It's so trouble free that solid state components are guaranteed 5 years. Starao FM-AM radio, Mic-romatic record player with Diamond Stylus guaranteed 10 years. YOUR CHOICE ‘398 No down payment required 3-WAY "STEREO THEATRE" * 280 sq. inch UHF-VHF TV e Stereo FM-AM Radio • Stereo Phono .. . . a home entertainment center for the whole family to en|oy. Has 82 channel UHF-VHF tuning, Videometle ODticallv filtered pictures. Micromatic Record Player with Diamond Stylus guaranteed 10 years. .In mahogany. Downtown Pontiac Store '• " Ppntiac Mpll Store 27 S. Saginaw—FE 3-7168 Elizabeth Lake and Telegraph—682-0422 It's Easy to Buy at Grinnell's —90 Days Same os Cash Budget Terms—Christmas Layaway SPfCTA0ULAR MICE PORTABLE TV Chelae of colors Includes roomy dresser, deep drawers, chest, paneL bed finished in beautiful maple. 2 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE Modem styling with reversible foam cushions. All yours for this one low price. Modernized Lawson type, with foam cushions, fuH length Innerspring mattress. finish hardwood. 2 beds, 2 springs, nylon frieze. FREN0H PROVINCIAL IEMOOM SUITE In beautiful antique white. Large double dresser, chest, eOnopy bed, mattress, box springs, canopy cover and matching bed spread. AH PsrMy tor Plenty of FREE PARKING forever 200 CARS TAIL! AND 4 CHAIRS In handsome hardwood and a beautiful addition to any homo. Surprise tha family with this. JUST BIG DISCOUNTS AND LOW, LOW PRICES *25,000 WORTH OF MERCHANDISE MUST BE MOVED BY JAN. 1 TO AVOID THE COSTLY PROPERTY TAX ASSESSMENT. FOURTEEN T-HK PONTIAC PRESS. TUlR8DAY, DECEMBER 15, 1964 Area Musicians Play 15th Century Instrument Tuning her harpsichord is a do-it-yourself project for Dr. Edelgard (Mrs. Alfred) DuBruck of Oriole Road who has one of the few instru- ments in the area. Professional tuners are, as yet, unavailable. The black keys are naturals toith sharps and flats in white. w • The boys attended Seaholm and Grove High Schools and GM Girls Conclude Doll Dressing Project Back in 1961, members of the General Motors Girls’ club began dressing dolls. That year club members dressed 25 dolls. * * ★ In the 13 years since that beginning, the “fashionable” operation has grown until the club now dresses between 500 and 600 dolls. Dolls are purchased by the club from' money earned throughout the year on group projects and are dressed by * the club members themselves. Some members who do not sew donate money to purchase Clothes for the dolls. ★ * * Dolls are presented to the girls and miniature Pontiac cars to the boys in special classes at Mark Twain and Willis Schools, children at the TB Sanatorium and the Oakland County Children’s Home, if needed. FOR VETS’CHILDREN They are also given to veterans at the TB hospital so (hey may have a gift for their children at Christmas time. Last year, the club began working with the Salvation Army, furnishing dolls and cars for welfare baskets. Each year the dolls are on display on a revolving Christmas bee in the window of the Pontiac Retail Store. The tree and display are donated by the Pontiac Motor Division. are much' in demand for entertainment, they are called “The Oxford Five.” COMING HOME The Richard Olsens are looking forward to Thursday this week when young Rick arrives from University of Wisconsin. Chuck Mayne, son of the C. H. Maynes and who also attends Wisconsin is traveling with Rick. Peggy and Ltbett Darragh, daughters of the Richard Darraghs, will have as their guest during the holidays, Ann Kitterman, who is currently living with her parents in Buenos Aires: The g i 11 s went to g r a d e school together when the Kit-termans, some years ago were . living in Birmingham. David Kitterman was graduated last year from Cranbrook School. DINNER Mr. and Mrs. Carl Oxford entertained for dinner at Kingsley Inn last Saturday, later extending, hospitality in t h e i r home in Rochester; Among the guests were Dr. and Mrs. Clayton T. Stubbs, Mr. and Mrs. Hans Fredrick-sen and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Crook. By MADELEINE DOEREN The 20th century has seen a notable revival in the use of the harpsichord both ns a solo keyboard instrument and in ensemble music. The harpsichord had a place in the orchestra as ait accompanying instrument when the first opera and the first oratorio were performedtp Florence and Rome iq the 1900’s. . - Active Jf this movement Is Arnold Dotmetach, working in turn foe Chickering of Boston and Gaveau of Paris, sad also on Ms own account. The strings of this instrument are set in vibration by points of quill or hard leather, elevated on wooden uprights known as jacks. Twitching or plucking these causes the points to pass upwards. Earliest mention of the instrument is under the name of clavicymbalum by Ebfcrhahi Cersne. A.D. 1404. The long harpsichords were often described as spinets or virginals. A few specimens of upright harpsichords still exist. ★ ★ \,Dr. .Edelgard (Mrs. Alfred) PiiBruck of Oriole Road is one of the few area owners of a harpsichord, predecessor to the piano. ■ * * “It is a historical distortion to play early Renaissance dbd baroque keyboard music on the piapo” says Dr. DuBruck. “My harpsichord was built according to my own specifications by the German firm Sperrhake in Passau. h it . * “Shipped direct, it arrived for Christmas 1962. It is a one-manual instrument, comprises four and one-hqlt octaves, has two sets of strings (four and eight foot), also a lute stop. The cabinet is walnut.” REFUGEE Fleeing from East Germany in. 1945, Dr. DuBruck lost all of her property, including a piano, valuable sheet music, land some unpublished scores of the composer, Max Reger. ★ ★ ★ After receiving her teaching certificate, she studied at the University of Freiburg, Germany. Upon being awarded a government scholarship for study at Michigan State tfai-versity, she emigrated to America in 1953. ■ it ★ it While teaching at the University of Michigan in 1954, * she earned both her master’s and doctorate degrees in romance languages and literature. BOTH TEACH She taught at Kalamazoo College, also in the Department of Continuing Education at Oakland University where her husband is an assistant professor of French. Their six-year-old son, Alfred, attends Webster School. Dr. DuBruck conducts the senior choir of Grace Lutheran Church where she is minister of music and teaches French at the Dellma Junior ' College in Oxford. Playing his otm harpsichord built by John Challis of Detroit with the Pontiac Symphony Crchestra this evening in Pontiac Northern High School will be Charles A. Wilson Jr. of Graytyn Street. Mr. Wilson holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in music from tiie University of Kansas. He is minister of music at the First Congregational Church and organist at Temple Beth Jacob. * * * At Kansas University, he studied with the well-known Laurel Anderson, also with Carl Weinrich at the Westminster Choir College, Princeton, N.J. Hie famous French organist, Joseph Bonnet, was also one of Mr. Wilson’s instructors. BASIC INSTRUMENT “The harpsichord was the supporting basis to almost every instrumental combination, chamber music and orchestral," says Mi^ Wilson. “It is now used in the performance of old keyboard mu- Charles A. Wilson Jr. of Crayton Street will play his own harpsichord toith the Pontiac Symphony Orches-" tra this evening in Pontiac Northern High School. Beauregarde, honey-blonde cocker, waiting for the click of the camera, doesn't miss a note of the practice session. sic qnd orchestral music. Its principle of tone production in all its forms is that of a plucking of the strings. “The player’s power of expression is not direct, as on the piano, variation in finger touch having little influence.” ' # h ' it Give Henery, another harpsichordist, was featured with the Oakland University Chorus and the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra in Sunday’s campus performance of Handel’s “Messiah”. Mr. Henery is assistant instructor in music at OU. At 11, You Should Know the Truth About Santa AB3Y «Mr?. Stephens Plays Hostess ! Mrs. Merrell Stephens ppened her Qneida Road borne for /the Teachers’ Exchange Chib Christmas party. Cbtaost-esses were Mrs. Oscar Fors-, fond and Elisabeth Halsey. * * * Assisting Mrs. John Bors-void in the purchase of gifts for children in Oakland County foster homes will be Mrs. W. Mathers Robertson, Mrs. Owen Wright, Mrs. Edith McKee and Mrs. Mary Wagner. Guest for. As evening was Mrs. Fred Townsend. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am 11 years old and I am still confused about Santa Claus. Mom, Dad and my older sisters say there IS a Santa Claus, and the kids at school say there isn’t any. Mom said, MM “Call up Santa “land talk to [him,” So I call thlm up at [Sears’ service [number and udt I get is ■some stupid recording Iwhich says, “This is Santa Claus up in the North Pole, ho ho ho.” * * * ■ He doesn’t let me get a word in edgewise. How can a great big fat guy get his stomach through a chimney? And how ocan he sled to Florida when there’s no snow there? * * * In Omaha there’s a Santa in every store. I just gpt through telling a short,' fat Bant a in Brandies what I wanted, and when I walked outside I saw a tall, thin Santa ringing a bell for the Salvation Army. How about this? CONFUSED ABOUT SANTA DEAR CONFUSED: Climb upon your father’s knee, Sonny Boy, ahd ask him to level with you. You’re old enough tokndw. DEAR ABBY: I am 18 and have been married for 7 months. My husband and I get along very well and I like being married, but here is the problem: ' ★ ★ it I work for the telephone company and the pay is very good, but frith my hours I hardly ever get to see my husband and I stay dissatisfied with myself all the time, ana I can’t get on a different shift because I don’t have any seniority. My mother says that while I still have no children I should work and save all the money I can. a a a I would rather stay home and be a housewife. Living on my husband’s earnings would not be easy, but I would like to try. My husband says I can quit my job if I. want to. What should I do? TORN DEAR TORN: Quit your job and devote yourself to beings full time'wife. it a A dissatisfied wife is a greater threat to a marriage than a tight budget. DEAR ABBY: Our son, a college sophomore, was driving one night when he was side-swiped by a truck, and a horrible accident resulted. His date (a college freshman) was badly injured. They still don’t know how much p 1 a s ,t 1 c surgery will be re- quired to restore her face to a presentable appearance. Fortunately, our son escaped with lesser injuries from which he will recover in time, bid they are both still hospitalized. Naturally, we are sick over this and are assuming ail the bills. Her parents said to us, “Now that your son has disfigured Our daughter for life: the least he can do is marry her!” They had been dating, but pot steady. And we know that our son had no thoughts of marrying this girl or anyone else. (He’s only 19). it it it We are afraid these parents will try to convince our ron" that he has a moral obligation to marry their daughter. He is a sensitive, emotional young man. He# should this behaiidle^?^ ^ HIS PARENTS PEAR PARENTS: Let your ion know that he might be approached with this suggestion, and explain that for him to marry the girl solely out of a feeling of obligation or guilt would be a terrible mistake. Problems? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Hate to write letters? Send one dollar to Abby, in care of the Pontiac Press for Abby’s booklet", “Ho# to Write Letters for All Occasions.” Miss Ashby .Honored at Showers Lynne Anne Ashby is being honored at several showers before her marriage to Robert Edgar Kraiaer, Saturday, in the Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian. She is the daughter of the John L. Ashbys of Westacres. Mrs. Wendell Strait of West-acres entertained at a recent kitchen ’ shower with M r s. Keith Kelly, cohostess. ■ A trousseau shower and luncheon was given'lby Mrs. David N. Eicher of Westacres and daughter, Mrs. -A. G. Gasche pr Chicago, in the Women’s City Club, Detroit. Gifts of linens and kitchen gadgets were opened in the Kirkway Drive home of Mrs. Maxyin Katke with Mrs. Bruce Caii cohostess. Julie Vanderpool will give the spinster dinner in her Grosse Pointe home. The Edgar H. Krainers of Kirkway Drive will host the rehearsal dinner for their son and his fiancee Friday at Devon Gables.' Plans Yule The blue Star Mothers of America, Pontiac Chapter No. 4, completed holiday plans for servicemen at the Christmas party in the Y.M.C.A, club rooms. Guests were Mrs. Irene Kruger of Milford, third vice-president from the Department and Mrs. Charles Green. T Mrs. Jack Heimberger of Wil-wood Road, Avon Township and Mrs. Barry Church of IrwindgU Covijrt put the finishing tonebes~on dolls they dressed for the CM Girls'" club. This year the .Club will donate from 500 to 600 dolls to area organizations for needy children. Calendar of Events TODAY Frances Willard uit, Women’s Christian Temperance Union; 6 p.m.; Church of the Brethren; dinner and Christmas program. WEDNESDAY VFW 1M6 Auxiliary; 1 p.m.; Legion Hall on Auburn Avenue. Parliamentary Law Stndy dab; 1:30 p.m.; Pontiac Masonic Temple, Emt Lawrence Street., XI Gamma Delta,chapter of Beta Sigma PM; 6:11 p.m.; Waldron Hotel; Christmas party with Epsilon Rho chapter. THURSDAY Friendship Clrek of Welcome Rebekah No. Ml; noon; Cutler Avenue home of Mrs. Alfred Marcsan; cooperative luncheon and Christinas party. Oakland County Osteopathic Medical Assistant association; 8 p.m.; Kingsley Inn; Christmas party; open to all osteopathic medical assistants. i American Association of University Women, Waterford branch; Spjn.; Pierce Junior High School conference room; film presentation, "One God.” Bf GERTRUD HUMBERT THE PONTTAft PRKfcfl. TUESDAY, DECEMBER ll, 1964 FIFTEEN PTAs Hlfh: 7:30 WEDNESDAY Jefferaon Jr. p.m.; In Christmas program, “Babes in Tojrland.5’ Board moating at 6:30 p.m. McCarraO 7 p.m.; Christ- Is 7:1$ p.m., in the gym. CfaristmM program, the fourth, fifth, ana nr grades under the direction of Mrs. William Cheat Barts Christmas 8ing will be presented in two performances. Children fat the early elementary grades will present “Christmas Trimmings” on Wednesday at 3:45 p.m. “Joys of Christmas” will be presented by grades three, four, five, and six on Thursday at 7:30p.m. THURSDAY Brflumes 7 p.m. in the multi - purpose room. Christmas program under the direction of mode teacher, James Davis. Board meeting at 6:30 pjn. Crofoot: 7:30 p.m.; multipurpose room. Children and teachers will present a pro-mem entitled, “Christmas Greeting." Mafldm: 7:30 p.m.; annual Christmas program. THURSDAY Wever: 7:30 p.m.; business meeting, followed by a Christmas program. Wieners 2 p.m.; first floor kindergarten room. Lower grades to present Christmas program. FRIDAY Websters 1:50 p.m.; Christmas The Robert J. Everetts of St. Clair Street, Avon Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Sandra Lee to Spec. 4 Gart L. Herzog, son of the Walter Herzogs of Dearborn Street, Avon Township. Her fiance is stationed at Fort Lewis, Wash. An August wedding is being planned. Hair Pulling Task Women are not subservient in Eskimo society, though the theme of male supremacy is dominant and the division of labor remains conspicuous. Women must perform the less pleasant tasks such as cleaning white fox fur and fleshing seal and polar-bear skins. Insist on Written Contract Then Read By MARY VEELEY Coasiltaat to Money Dear Mary Fealty: flaw an ad in the paper on tewing machines being sold cheaper called the and he came d e mon the machine, eourse, cheap wasn’t so and ti " me into buyinhl better one,I making pay* MARY, meats small FEELEY and making it look so easy. He told mo the price of the machine was $140 plus $10 for taxes, or $100, and I paid him $10 down. The next payment was $10, which I paid. Then he turned the matter over to a loan company, to which I was to make payments, and they added $28 for carrying charges. Now I did not buy or borrow from this loan company. Can they make me pay this extra charge? I am an old lady, 71 years old, with Just a small check to get by on. Shouldn’t these salesmen be stopped from going around and not tolling people that the sales would be turned over to someone who would charge them more? L. A. T., Birmingham, Ala. Dear L. A. T.: You knew who can do % best Job of making sock salesmen toe the mart? Custom-era. Women l&e yen — if yon insist on having nay agreement for the purchase of merchandise in writing. Yon don’t mention whether yen signed a written contract, hut if you did it probably details these carrying charges. O you sign every ward, yen lave only yourself to blame. If your arrangement with this man was Just a verbal one, you haven’t any recourse. A dumbest salesman can Just forget to explain .that a carrying charge wtil be added if the merchandise isn't paid for within 30 days. I sympathize with you, believe me — and with all the other women who write me about similar troubles with installment, buying. That’s why I keep on pleading with all of you: Get it in writing! The reason the salesman, or dealer, used a finance company far year ease is that he probably didn’t have sufficient capital of his own to If you purchase merchandise today on a monthly basis, you will more often than net find to pit whit cash yea have to yourself paying one of the 5,000 buy up ouch contract* as yours. TO avoid having to pay carrying charges, you have to arrange to pay on a cash bade, which is usually at th* ahd of 30 days. Dear Miss Feeley: I would like to know if you think it’s a. good idea to pay oft the mortgage on our homo. It cost us $10,000 when we bought it IS years ago. The balance owed is now down to $4,000. We have a 25-year mortgage. My husband and I have several people — home owners—and they say no, don’t pay off the mortgage. But they don’t know why they say No! Can you tell me why? Mrs. L. P., New Castle, Del. Dear Mrs. P.: There are a couple of reasons for yoar friends to say no. The interest on you*, mortgage payments are deductible on yoar income tax return, That makes it easier m likely bo 4 pr cent If you put that $4,000 Mo good investments, you can logically expect a return on your money pester than the amount of interest yod’re paying out In your particular cast, your •mail mortgage at n low interest rate would not necessarily help if you want to sell the house within the next tan years as a prospective buyer would probably not be in a position to handle the transaction. It may be that your friends are assuming there’s a larger mortgage, which could conceivably make the deal attractive to a new owner. However, if home ownership in itself is especially Important to you, ahd you wouldn’t welcome any investment ride at this time, then you might be happier to pay the mortgage oft. rxio” Photographers KENDALE . . 45 W. Huron Bt. Phono for Appointment, FE £3260, FE 5-0322 THIS OFFER ENDS IN 30 DAYS ' ARE YOU ON A BUDGET? I WHY NOT TRY OUR CUNIU! J Merry Christmas to Our Customers & Friends j > from the Staff and Students y 1H4 S. Saginaw Ph: FE 4-SSffS Clever Holiday Theme Remembered for the royal pilgrimage that took place more than twenty centuries ago, the Three Wise Men, Kings Balthazar, Melchior and Caspar, show above, are an easily constructed and meaningful part of the Christmas story. Each is made by combining ordinary household materials—phis a small bottle of gold , paint—in new ways. To make them, you need three empty boxes, a squarish shape about f”x7”, another taller one, 10’*x4” and a round cereal box. In addition, you will need an empty frozen Juke can, colored construction paper, gold, red and green Christmas tape, cotton swabs, white and red plastic tape, black ink, shirt cardboard and some glue. HE’S SQUARE King Balthazar, shown left, requires the squared box. Blue and purple construction paper are glued on the box to ««rt» hit rqyal robes. White plastic tape rims the box cover to make Ms collar. The head is constructed with a piece of shirt cardboard folded into an open square. The "ermine” is made by removing the tips from cotton swabs and dotting them with black ink. When d*y. paste in place. Although each king is unique, the technique for constructing the crown and face of each is the same. An easy way to do faces is to use a cotton swab as a tiny paint .brush. Just dip .it in black ink and begin. Crowns are two Indies high. Cut a length of gold tape long enough to circle the top of each head, attach the gummed side to a piece of construction paper for firmness, then glue crown in (dace. To decorate crowns, dip cotton swabs in gold paint, allow to dry then glue in place. “Jewels” are bits of gummed red and green Christmas tape. GOLD AND RED Melchior, the King shown in the center, is made by wrapping a tall box in gold and red paper. His eyebrows moustache and beard are made by snipping swabs in half and gluing in place. The third Wise Man, King Gasper, is made on a round cereal box base. After wrapping the box in colorful construction paper “robes”, cover smaller frozen juke can with lighter toned paper and glue to cereal box to form royal head. The “ermine’’ foliar is made by cutting a U shape piece of white construction paper about an inch and a quarter wide 12 inches long. Drape it around the box and pinch a crease at the neckline. “Ermine" tails an the tips of cotton swabs glued in {dace. , Quality Training: by Lope2 Sterling Beauty School WaHaa Blvd. at Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains OR 3-0222 Molt* Iite. _ - . . . ’ Shop Downtown and Balthazar, Melchior, and Gaeper, the three Wise iiklCM Men, can be made out of empty boxes, construe- LUMUn tion paper, Christmas tape and point. Let the chit- j _____ "LjJnM-.m dren carry out this project as part of the family's j nlHLn f vUHTHUI holiday decorations. i AT LAST.. .a><..*INVISIBLE HEARING AID for those that hear but do sot understand • run <• m cniwmm Mramaatt • PM) catena Mr m a Na Mr*-M m» • PH* aatlraly III Mn r* Bettor Hearing Service | f 101 k Saginaw — Fb. ft 1-01*2 ' | I awn PMIm Optical. »cmi Praia SIMM a I AMrm ‘ ■■'!■■■ - J | I cay pm. | 1 n I «a laMrMM m nattap j I want fvrttiar MMraiatMa V M TUI} PONTIAC PRESS ^TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15. 1964 Needlework Kit iama SIXTEEN Paper Poinsettias Are Intriguing to Make This velvety flower that sets a holiday mood is much more useful and lasting when it’s made by you. Not only do you eliminate die problems of watering and temperature control that the frtgile fresh pliant requires, hut you can fashion your own poinsettia arrangements with any number of blooms in any size. • Berry-bright blossoms can grace your table as center- , piece or napkin rings from die first holiday parties right through the family’s Christmas dinner. Use them lavishly as gay package tie-ons, as Christmas corsages or boutonnieres. WEAR THEM Twist small ones on clips and attach them to suede pumps for a fashion touch that’s sure to attract compliments at holiday dances. Or use one bright poinsettia instead of a bow to set off a new hair-do. Making your own Christmas flowers is both easy and inexpensive. AD you’ll need are cleansing tissues, white glue, floral wire, book matches, green pipe cleaners, yellow poster paint, and either red food coloring or a small can of red spray paint. If you’re using food coloring, dip white tissues in a bright red solution and allow to dry thoroughly before cutting petals. For spray painting, cut poinsettia petals from white tissues, then spray lightly on both sides of each two-ply petal. One at a time, dot white glue down the center of each of eight two-ply petals. Then lay a length of floral wire over the cement and cover with a dry two-ply petal. USE MATCH SUCKS Dab a bit of yellow poster paint on the head of five The berry bright blossoms of this cheerful poinsettia centerpiece say “Merry Christmas” from your first holiday party right through the family’s Christmas dinner. You can make it easily and inexpensively yourself All you’ll need are cleansing tissues, white glue, floral wire, book matches, green pipe cleaner, yellow poster paint, and either red food coloring or a smaU can of red spray paint. burnt paper matchsticks. Arrange four petals around the matchsticks at right* angles. Add a second row of petals. Twist all petals together at the stem with a pipe cleaner and shape the petals outward as they are on the natural flower. Attach green artificial leaves or holly sprigs. ★ it * Patterns to poinsettias and instructions for many more holiday and year-round decorations and gifts are available in a booklet published by Kimberly-Clark Corporation. It can be ordered by sending twenty-five cents in coin to “Flowers, Gifts, and Gadgets,” Kleenex, Bex S51-T, Neenah, Wis., 54957. Senator Robert M. LaFollette of Wisconsin received nearly 5 million votes as the unsuccessful Progressive Party candidate for president in J924. Ground Stork at Age Nine PALM SPRINGS, Calif (UPD — At age nine, the typical boy or girl knows why the bees buzz and birds hum. So why not level with the' youngsters about human sex life? That is the age, according tb Dr. Robert N. Rutherford, that sex education ought to begin. The expert from the University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, told a symposium on “Population Growth” that life facts at that age would help to solve the related problems of junto-high pregnancy, teen-age marriage, and the divorces that terminate half of these marriages. Which do you want to stop you? A buckled seat belt, of course! Remember what the National Safety CouncH says ... 4 out of 5.accidents happen within 25 miles of home. Alwsyt buckle your seat belt Published to savo lives in cooperation with The Advertising Council and the National Safety Count*. THE PONTIAC PRESS Make ‘Play-Clay’ in Kitchen There’s no need to brave the bedlam of your local toy store to get a last minute Christ-; mas gift to J a n i e ’ s little friend up the street or some' unexpected young guest. , Just step into your nice quiet kitchen and cook up a bath of “play • clay-” Children of all ages love to model and this particular clay will be “mother - approved” to the two ingredients are baking soda and cornstarch . . . both foods . . . which means it’s safe even in the hands of tijoee in the taste-everything stage. WaUnk Hotel PIKE and PERRY HEADQUARTERS FOR OAKLAND COUNTY’S FINEST IN BUFFET SERVICE RESERVATIONS NOW BEING TAKEN FOR CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR’S EVE PARTIK8 BANQUETS • MEETINGS • RECEPTIONS Cocktail Hour: ,$ince both products are also recommended bath additives to sensitive skin, it’s gentle to small tender hands. And it : Won’t spot or stain clothes, rug or upholstery. To make the day, simply mix together in a saucepan 1 cup of cffnistarch, 2 cups of baking soda and 1% cups water to which a few drops of food coining have been added. Bhng to a boil, stirring constantly And continue to cook until mixture reaches a dough-like consistency. Remove from heat and when cool enoush to handle, knead 742 W. HURON ST. PONTIAC 335-9275 Instead of battling bedlam in your local toy store for that last minute Christmas gift for a\ smalt fry,-whip up a batch of “play-clay" out'of baking Soda and cornstarch in the peace and quiet of your kitchen. Don’t Throw It Away... REBUILD IT TODAY! Our npifi will reelere new cemfoit, higher quality Into your present mat- in a black and white drawing you simply can’t see bow mpcS fun this clown pajama bug really is. Not only is it colorful but It provides a jolly way to teach a child to be neat. The clown is big — 33 inches tall. Hang him on a doorknob, back of a door or the bedpost — anywhere in a child’s room. His suit Is white with red polka dots and pompons. Yellow ruffles edge Ms neck, wrists and ankles. His black boots are adorned with red bells and pompons. His white clown face has a red nose, wide mouth and black eyes. There are red pompons on the silly black cap. The hair is yellow yarn. , • , Everything is included in the kit except the - wire clothes hanger to keep the clown in shape. Use one from your cleaners. Both boys and girls adore Decorate Home hr the Season to Suit Decor ' Y-m Home. Christinas. No two words mean more or go together better. To decorate your home or apartment to suit the happy occasion when the family gathers, here are some holiday suggestions. • Deck the halls in keeping with your home. If your house is colonial, be traditional. • If your house is victo- Moil your order and remittance NEEDLEWORK KITMRVICI P.O. Box 767 Dept- 235 Greet Neck, NY. i Enclosed Is $ . Send Needlework Kits 35A, Clown Pajama Bag, with $2.99 for each kit. nan, oe sentimental witn , frankly okJ-faaMoned decorations and don’t forget the ' Christmas stockings hanging from the fireplace. • Be regional if you own a ranch. A Mexican motif adds ! color and charm to modern or contemporary furnishings. I a if you live in an apart- Sheet | ment, be original. If you have City, Zone and State i a terrace, put the tree there ' to save space or work. Add your Christmas gift w r a p p i n g s and along with your gift tag a second tag giving the recipe for the clay since there’s bound to be a request for more at a future date. , DRIES QUICKLY Add a footnote to the recipe advising that the clay dries out bard as cement overnight, within half an hour or so if St. George Unit Holds Dinner at Holiday inn The recent Christmas party to the Ladies Philo^obos Society of St, George Greek Orthodox Church was held in the Holiday Inn. Guests of honor were the Rev- and Mrs. Gus Tsompanas. Members brought gifts to be presented to Pohtiac State Hospital patients at the annual holiday gala on Dec. IS which is sponsored by the Society. A family-style dinner in January will aid the-altar fund for the new church. Art Class Is Planned for Youth Applications may be made now for the winter term of children’s art classes in the Young People’s Art Center, sponsored by Cranbrook Academy of Art Galleries. Young people seven through 19 may enroll in the. classes which began Jan. 5. Classes are divided by ages and are held in the YPAC, located below the library. Further information and enrollment forms may be obtained by calling Cranbrook, extension 345. The winter session will continue for 10 weeks. Classes meet for 90 minutes after school on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. There are three M minute classes offered on Saturday. YPAC instructor is Glen Michaels, who received his MFA degree from Cranbrook Academy of Art. Classes work in a wide variety of media. The engagement is announced of Sandra Carol McFarland, daughter of Mrs. Thomas Ray of Grove Point Drive, White Lake Township, and the Idle Clarence W. McFarland, to James Richard Atkins o^ Mechanic Street. Her fiance’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. James D. Atkins of Toledo, Ohio. The couple plans a July 10 wedding. No Laundry Soap NO is the answer to women who ask if ordinary laundry detergents can be used in electric dishwashers. The successful operation of dishwashers depends on very hot water, a suitable detergent, and the striking force of the water — thereby impeding satisfactory performance: Furthermore, because dishwater detergents do not normally touch hands or skin, they can be much stronger than laundry detergents—and, therefore, even more capable of removing food stains. PHRaamHHMMH mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmimm Have You Tried This? older can be a professional, Black Walnut Cookies Are Varied I By JANET ODELL I Pontiac Press Food Editor I You . readers are wonder-I ful. BuV-Pve always known I that. In response to my re-I quest for several recipes, I you’ve simply flooded me I with mail and phone calls. I Thank you, everyone Mrs. Glenn Kerton of Clarks ton Was the reader who requested the black walnut cookie recipe that was first published in 1952. Mrs. Gene Helbig sent us that one. BLACK WALNUT DROP COOKIES By Mrs. Gene Helbig 1 cup butter -lft cups brown sugar 3 large eggs, well beaten 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon baking soda mixed with a little cold water 1 teaspoon vanilla 3 to 314 cups Rifted flour lft cups chopped pitted dates 1 cup black walnuts, chopped Cream batter aid sugar, add eggs and mix well. Add vanilla and dissolved soda. Sift dry in- gredients and add to creamed mixture. Add dates and nuts. Drop by teaspoon on greased baking sheet and bake 10-12 minutes at 350 degrees. Makes 3-4 dozen. A few days’ storage improves flavor. Mrs. George Bond called in with a black walnut refrigerator cookie recipe that will please BLACK WALNUT SLICES By Mrs. George Bond 6 cups sifted flour 1 teaspoon salt ft teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon cream of tartar lft cup butter or margarine 2Y« cups brown sugar ft cup white sugar *«ggs 2 teaspoons vanilla lft cups black walnut meats - lft cups shredded coconut Grind nuts and coconut through medium blade of food chopper or in an electric blender. Sift flour with dry Ingredients. Cream batter or margarine. Add sugar gradually; beat until fluffy. Add eggs and vanilla. Add nuts and coconut and dry ingredients. Blend well. . Form into 4 rolls, 2 indies j in diameter. Wrap and i chill. Cut into ft-inch slices and j bake 10-12 minutes on ungreased pan at 350 degrees. Makes M dozen. And finally, Mrs. Frank Lanning suggests making Batter Ball cookies with < .» ck walnuts. BLACK WALNUT BUTTER BALLS By Mrs. Frank Lanning 1 cup soft butter ft cup granulated sugar ft teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla 2 cups sifted flour 1-2 cups black walnuts, finely chopped Cream butter, add sugar and beat until fluffy. Add vanilla, sifted dry ingredients and nuts. Chill dough over night or until easy to handle. Shape dough into one-inch ' balls. Place on ungreased cookie sheet and bake IMS minutes at 350 degrees. * While still wisrm, roll in confectioners’ sugar. bMorayou buyt Guaranteed in Writing J Years OXFORD MATTRESS CO. 401 North .tony St., Pontiac FE 2-1111 n SERVING THE PONTIAC AREA OVER 41 YEARS You Stand Inside Door Before Rite By He Emily Post Institute Q: We are making plans for my daughter’s forthcoming wedding here at home. I would like to know if I should be on hand to greet the guests as they arrive, or do I enter the room after all the guests have assembled and take my place up front just before the ceremony is about to begin? A: You stand just inside the door of the room is wMch the ceremony is to be held and receive the gtiests as they arrive. Just before your daughter's entrance, you go forward and take your place up front where space has been reserved for .you. ★ . ★ * Q: I have a pair of hand-cut crystal candelabra wMch I keep on iffy dining room table at all times as a decoration. They are lighted only at dinner time. My daughter tells me that it is not in good taste to leave them on the table when not in use. May I please have your opinion? , A: Your daughter is right. The candelabra should not be on the table when not in use but may properly be put on the sideboard as decoration. A * #>•’ Q: Recently a young woman about 15 years my junior came to my house and I shook hands with her. I was told later that I, being the older person, should have waited for her to make the first advance. Was I wrong? A: You were entirely right. As hostess, it was your place to go forward and extend your hand in greeting to a vistor in your house. The Emily Post Institute booklet entitled, “Table Rules of Importance,” describes how to eat spaghetti as well as other difficult foods. To obtain a copy, send 19 cents in coin and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press. Complete Repair Service Mimeoftaph aid Duplicating Machiies New end Reconditioned CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oekkmd Ave. FE 4-9591 'Belt Studio- PRIVATE er CLASS LKS90NS • CHACHA • FOX TROT • SWING BETTER PERMANENTS ’lO up HAIR CONDITIONING, TIPPING FROSTING AND TINTING $7.50 UP Appointment not neeenary Specialists in Scissor Haircutting FREE PARKING ■ctSr~ fJTBEAUTY _^ r SHOP Riker Bldg., 35 W. Huron FE 3-7186 rap 1 aim .JiwL TUB PONTIAC 1‘KKtig. TUESDAY, UECEMMKR IS, 196* SEVENTEEN Initiates Welcomed by Group The Soroptimlst Club of Pontiac initiated two members at the December dinner meeting Monday in the Waldron Hotel. Thejf are Mrs. Harold C. Crozier of the Oakland County Sheriff! department and Mn. Grace Robinson, manager of the Tasty Bakery. Installing officers were Mrs. Madeleine Doeren, president, and Mrs. Bud Hobmagle, vice-president. FET* BRIDE A bridal shower honored Mrs. Leroy Murphy, the former Alice Kimball. A Christmas donation will be sent to the Pontiac State Hospital recreational therapy department. Clubs, have recently been chartered in Guadalajara, Mexico and East Harrisburg, Pa. Extra* Protection Wintry, windy days call for extra protection for the face. Before applying makeup give the skin a light spanking with good quality witch hasel- Let the natural herbal extracts dry itself. After severe exposure to the cold and wind, soothe rough* cned, reddened skin witii a similar witch hasel applies- ‘Messiah’ Attracts Crowd BY JOHN C. TOUSLEY A long line of cars, extending from Walton ltd. to the University parking lot, gave early indication of the capacity crowd attending the Oakland University and Pontiac Symphony presentation of George Frederick Handel’s Sunday evening’s large audience demonstrated, two things: that Pontiac area residents are interested in hearing music of high caliber, and that Oakland University is rapidly gaining a reputation as a center of culture. While at times the chorus seemed to lack inspiration, the singers performed with accuracy and fine tonal blend. George Cripps deserver high credit for their thorough preparation and for his sensitive direction of the first half of the concert. 8ECOND HALF Felix Resnick, director of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra, directed the remainder of the program, beginning with the Pastoral Symphony. Mr. Resnick is fascinating to watch, and directed with precision and conviction. vided a high point in the concert with his interpretation of "Comfort Ye," and "Every Valley Shall Be Exalted.”. Alice Entrant's rich contralto added depth and inspiration, especially in her moving rendition of "He Shall Feed His Flock.” Diana Henery is a soprano of high caliber, and has the potential of an excellent soloist. Duncan Sells, performing the bass solos, exhibited- a voice of rich quality. Clive Henery, harpsichord accompanist, added authenticity to die program. Sunday night's concert was- held in the intramural building on the Oakland campus. Due to the structure of the building, much of the sound was lost, seating was uncomfortable, and most of the audience found it impossible to see the performers. SHOWS NEED The concert pointed out Oakland’s tremendous, need for a large auditorium. Such ambitious undertakings deserve a proper setting. Oakland University is to be : commended for bringing to I the area fine mimic and musicians. The University has | recognized the long-existent cultural needs of the area, and, by such worthwhile presentations, will provide- enrichment for the adults of the community and education for I its young people. The orchestra not only accompanied the chorus ably, but greatly enhanced the program with their fine performance of the Sinfonia and the Pastoral Symphony. John Wilkinson, tenor, pro- Poll/s Pointers Good for Soles Too By POLLY CRAMER DEAR POLLY-The lining came loose in one of my bedroom slippers and I was completely out of glue. I cut a new lining to fit the bottom of the slipper, dampened it slightly and sprinkled ppwder madi to bold false teeth in" place on the moistened piece. I smoothed out the lining inside the sole of the shoe and it stuck tight. I have often heard that necessity is the mother of invention. I didn’t invent false teeth gripping powder but I did discover a new use for it. — INEZ . DEAR POLLY—My hint will add three inches of growing space (about one size larger) to Sleepers or pajamas for children. I cut the feet off our toddler's blanket sleepers where the elastic is and insert knitted cuffs that I buy for less than SO cents a pair. First sew these new cuffs to the sleepers and then sew the feet on to the end of these cuffs. The bands fit snugly and can be purchased in various colors. For this job I use the zigzag stitch on my sewing machine.— MRS. R. R. GIRLS—I have aa idea that . some of you thrifty ones will be using your leftover balls of yarn to knit these cuffs yourselves. They could be knitted straight and sewed' together or knitted on round or four double pointed needles so there are no seams.—POLLY stead of glass when framing pictures and snapshots. Cut a cardboard back and a piece of this stiff plastic the size and shape of the picture to be framed. Bind together, with the picture In the middle, with colored gummed plastic tape to make a “frame.” Fasten a loop of ribbon or string, with a piece of t h e tape, to make a hanger on the back. This plastic tape is exasperating to work with so do bold the three pieces together with little strips of tape, top and bottom, that can be pulled off later. Apply the tape on opposite sides first. As the last two pieces are applied, miter the corners. DEAR POLLY - The clear plastic covers that come on boxes of stationery and Christmas cards are wonderful to use in- Ihis plastic "glass" is good protection for the picture arid keeps iLflat for grandma’s bul-1 Ietin board. - GRANDMOTHER | Share your favorite homemak-1 ing ideas . . . send them to' Polly in care of The Pontiac. Press. You'll receive a bright,., new silver dollar if Polly uses your idea in Polly's Pointers. Now you con' own a beautiful ELNA at prices just a little above cost. Brand new models with the features that have made ELNA the world's leading name in sewing machines. 1965 *50 00 off MODELS FLOOR MODEL CtE/UUNCE NECCHI’S, $CQ50 Limited amount, from.. 1#W ELNA'S, $QT00 ,'64 models, from.. w ■ Polly's Pointers c/oThe Pontiac Press P.O. Box 409, Dept. A Radio City Station New York 19, N.Y. Please send me copies of Polly Cramer’s new 82-page booklet at 50 cents per copy . Enclosed is my check or money order for 1 Name .......... Address ... ....... City State (Please allow three weeks for delivery.) Beautiful Domelco sewing machine with attractive modern cabinet, reg. $159. A onco-in-a-lifetimo opportunity to own an automatic sewing machine and cabinet for 1 low price. GIVE YOUR CARPET A MEW LEASE ON LIFE CHECK THESE FEATURES: e Zig-Zag stitches e Fancy ft decorative stitches e Blind ft straight stitches e Buttons ft mono-grams Stnrdv rnnctrnrtinn fat SEWING SEWING BASKET KIT H£5 $495 m o> CM w m A great gift Moot Boouti-| fully colored and sturdily built. Hai multi-purpoie .tiny, »a tin-lined. Beautiful at gift ... or yourtelf. 28 calart of thread, icitton, thimble, tope and needles. A Vionor Choir Performs at Women's Club The LeBaron Honor Choir entertained the Junior Pontiac Women’s Club at the December meeting, Monday, in the First Federal Savings of Oakland dub rooms/ Rosamond Haeberle directed the group of 56 sixth grade students who announced their own numbers consisting of American Christmas carols. Assisting social chairman, Mrs. Everett Garrison, were Mrs. Clark J. Adams, Mrs. Eugene Wellman, Marguerite Buttolph, Mrs. Bert F. Griffin, Mrs. Lillian Denno, Mrs. Jamee C/Clarkson, Mrs. Iva O’Dell, Mrs. George Morrow and Mrs. Hlxon Cites. Desk Date Do's, With the holiday season upon us, impromptu invitations to festivities may pop up at any time. To be prepared, keep a pair of hose, clean white feloveq and a kit holding your evening make-up tucked away in a, corner of your dqpk drawer. This ounce of prevention could make all the difference in whether or not you can | accept a date for that very evening. Students to Speak Waterford branch, Woman's National Farm and Garden Association, will gather at 1 p.m. Thursday, in toe home of Mrs. William Shunck. Cohostesses are Mrs. Andrew Adams and Mrs. James Covert. Wiberg Schwoon of Germany and Wilhemina Moon from The Netherlands will speak concerning "Christmas in Another Land.” They are exchange students at Waterford Township High School. The federal government’s lint civil service act in 1003 covered 13,024 of 131,000 Workers. JHmmode, gM % Have Your Carpet Cleaned NOW! fit 8 >< TUS0M CARPET SERVICE Easy Ter ms-Months to Pay DOMELCO INC. . 5400 Dixit Hwy. OR 3-8866 . Miracle Mile Ceftter Phone; 339-4821 -Cute Little Platform Rocker $3995 New, Exciting TENSOR LUES These, modern, miniature hlgh-intensity lamps . }. styled for the individual make terrific Christmas gifts! s , • Specially designed for home or office use ... fit anywhere . . . ideal for piano, desk, sewing corner, or for reading in bed. Lamps swivel . . . have fold-away portability . .■» and give strong, glare-free concentrated light! Wide choice of Myles in a variety of colors and finishes. Complete with GE bulb. Model Shown $12« Others from $9.95 A wonderful Christmas gift, this little chair that's equally at home in living room, family room, bedroom; dr deni Comes in Salem - maple or antique black trimmed in gold ■ • • with cushions in colonial prints or solid-color corduroy. Choice of several popular decorator colors. Christmas Shopping is Fun in WIQQS wonderful world of gifts! Come see our marvelous selection of adorable HUMMEL FIGURINES ■ Sure to please any little girl 1 (or big girl, tool) on ybur gift $5 SNOW ‘WHITE REGENCY FINE ENGLISH DIMERWARE by Johnson Brothers 50-PIECE SERVICE FOR 8 is 8 each of dinner plates, bread and butter {dates, salads, fruits, nd saucers — plus medium-six# platter and vegetable dish. mi Harlequin COFFEE MUGS Boxed Set of 6 in Assorted Colors This elegant, swirl-shape pattern by Johnson Brothers . . . sculptured In pure snow-white earthenware . .. will enhance any tab|e setting — be If traditional, colonial, or contemporary! Buy for yourself and for gift giving, too, at our vety special price. Open stock pieces also available. *395 Dandy for "coffee breaks" of home, these mugs make.a gay and. useful gift for Christmas giving. We have several other styles and patterns in stock,-tool J&. w BOTH STORES OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL 9 24 WEST HURON ST. In Downtown Pontine FE 4-12$4»* ) TELEGRAPH RD. t Long Lake Road 644-7370 Manufacturing Jewelers ALL STORES OPEN EVERY NIGHT ’TIL CHRISTMAS! m 1 \ • ■ EIGHTEEN____ THE PONTIAC PkESS, Famous Name Brand Quality *.. f^tycviafr OF ^Diamond*/ • SPRAGUE and CARLTON • FRIG-IDAlRE • LANE • HEYWOOD WAKEFIELD • REMBRANDT • LANE • MAGNAVOX •SIMMONS • STIFFLE • HARDEN m e«oh of these MAGNIFICENT JEWELS Here is one of the most brilliant and outstanding selections of 1 ONE CARAT diamond Jewelry in our History. Each individual diamond fashion is-executed in the finest tradition of the Jeweler’s craft. Complete Line of Home Furnishings! Lasting GIFTS! You con choose from a complete selection to complement your ideas for home aecor or we will gladly help you select the appropriate color — style — latest design in modern and colonial furnishings. • LIVING ROOM • DINING ROOM • BEDROOM • RECREATION ROOM • PATIO • KITCHEN • LAUNDRY 9f CWi/ 385 Budget Terms 'If Yon With Take Months To Par Convoniont raymwnt Plans. “where quality furnishing* are priced right” DOWNTOWN— lft W. Huron-KE Donald Lovett, Mgr. BIRMINGHAM-162 N. Woodward-MI Robert Fox, Mgr. MIRACLE MILF. -2203 S. Telegraph-FI . Donald Finney, Mgr. DOWNTOWN FONTMC: Free Parking Arm*. I hr Slrrrt in OM Court ho* Stic, Wc wilt Si amp Tear Park lag Ticket. ORCHARD LAKE ROAD It Sure Beats Dasher and Blitzen ... j BUICK SPECIAL 4-Door Sedan *2688 A Distinguished Bar Cabinet ' / Plus $119.0? Soles Tax 1965 Plates and Title And You Get All of These Features! • Super Turbine V-8 • 155 Horsepower Fireball • Sonomatic Radio • Whitewall Tires • Windshield Washers • Heater and Dafrastar • Cigar Lighter • Plunger Type Door Locks • StepOn Parking Braka • Re-Usable Air Cleaner Element • Electric Windshield Wipers • Directional Signals • Dual-Kay' Locking System • Front Seat Belts • 3-Speed Synchromesh Transmission • Self-adjusting Brakes • 6,000 Mile Lubed Front Suspension • Dolcotron Generator Full Flow Oil Filter • Magic Mirror Finish Give Your Family The MPrestige99 Car This Christmas! 210 Orchard Lake Ave. at Williams FE 2-9101 Open Mon^ Tiles, and Thun. Nights ’til 9 o’clock with a top that doubles in size and is covered in' soil resistant plastic! Makes a Tine server for buffet suppers. Holds a complete set of glassware, with each glass in its special place. In lovely oil walnut finish or South American Bovinga. You'll love this piece every time you have guests! S16950 Free Decorating Service.! Open Friday Evening Quality Intwrior. FURNITURE For Home* m Office* lmcinaw jt. At oschaSd iaki avi. FC 5-1174 , PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, DECEMBER. 10,. 1964 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. NINETEEN Caution Tempers Elation vof Negroes Over Decision ATLANTA, Ga. WAP) - Negro leaders, while Jubilant over the Supreme Court's ruling upholding the controversial public accommodations section of the Civil Rights Act, were taking a wait-and-see attitude today over whether full compliance with the ruling Would follow. President Johnson, noting there already has been “encouraging widespread compliance with the act in the five months It has bepn law,” expressed hope the court rulings Monday would result in increased acceptance. Other leaders, Negro By Waterford Board Constable Named Gerald Carter, constable-elect In Waterford Township, was named last night to immediately fill a constable vacancy. Carter will fill the post vacated by DSvid Smith who resigned as constable to accept full-time employment. Smith’s term of office would have run until next April when Carter, who was elected constable Nov. 1, was slated to take office. Carter’s appointment was recommended by Clerk Elmer Fang-boner and approved unanimously by the township Board. * w ★ In other action at last night’s relatively brief meeting, the board authorized the clerk to advertise for bids on two new ears for the building department. SEWER ACCOUNT The board also established a separate bank account for the $150,000 federal loan for sewer planning. The sccoont is required by the government for federal advance finds. Two first notices were read 3 Adults Earn Diploma Credit Three students will complete graduation requirements today as the first term of Waterford Township Schools’ adult education program ends. Those who earned credits toward diplomas are Mrs. Jacqueline Brooks, Mrs. Ellen Johnson and Donald Stickler. * * * A total of 181 persons took credit courses during the first term of .the program;'according to Byron Merritt, adult education director for the school sys-r tem. A new term will begin Jan. 11, Merritt said. and will be on the agenda of next Monday’s meeting. * * * One of them requests rezoning ing of a two-lot parcel on Airport Road, 200 feet south of Pontiac Lake Road from agricultural to residential. NEW LICENSE The other, from Joseph Puer-tas, operator of the 300 Bowl is for a new entertainment license. Such a license is required for establishments that provide floor show entertainment In other business, the board rescinded its resolution of last week introducing a library ordinance and referred the ordinance back to the library advisory committee for a redraft. * * * The action was taken after review of the ordinance by township and library officials indicated that several points in the ordinance were more restrictive than considered necessary. SAFE WALKING A letter from the Waterford Education Association was read urging that early action be taken to provide safe walking facilities for schoolchildren. Township Supervisor James E. Seeterlin said that meetings of township and school officials ever the walking problem are slated in the near future. At Seeterlin’g suggestion, a resolution expressing appreciation to the J- L. Hudson Company for its decision to expand the existing store in the Pontiac Mall will be drafted and considered at a future board meeting. * * * Seeterlin said that the Hudson announcement was an expression of confidence in the community. and White, called for compliance. a it h Segregationist restaurant owner Lester Maddox of Atlanta awaited a decision by the court on his own appeal to a lower court order that he admit Negroes. Maddox said be felt a similar ruling would not be made in his case because he does not engage in interstate John Lewis, chairman of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee which hA been instrumental in many tikfos throughout the South, hailed the court’s ruling on the Civir Rights Act and sit-in demonstrators as a landmark. LANDMARK “The decision vindicated the thousands of demonstrators who made the civil rights bill not only possible but imperative,” Lewis said. “It must be held as the landmark in the struggle for complete social, economic and political equality for all Americans.” Lewis said his organization had no plans for further action at the moment but would wait to see what happens. Another SNCC official, Julian Bond, said “as long as people don’t comply with the ruling there will, be demonstrations.” W WW There was a distinct possibility that further demonstrations would occur at a Birmingham, Ala., restaurant which was involved in the court rulings. The rulings involved the Heart of Atlanta Motel and OlUe’s Barbecue in Birmingham. More ton Rolleston, president 'of the motel corporation, said the decision was “a sad day for individual freedom” and “makes possible a socialistic state and eventual dictatorship.” His motel haa accepted Negroes since ordered to by a lower court. He had appealed the ruling. NOT UNDER LAW A lower court ruled that Ol-lie’s Barbecue did not come under the law because it does not engage in interstate commerce. The Supreme Court overturned this decision. The restaurant owner, Ollie McClung, said he was sorry that the Supreme Court “didn’t see it our way. It seems to me 1nat the ownership and use of private property is basic to the American way of life.” WWW The court also ruled that states must dismiss sit-in charges now that the Civil Rights Act is law. About 130'sit-in cases still pending in Nashville, Tehn., about 100 in Atlanta,about 350 in St. Augustine, Fla., about 40 in Birmingham, several hundred in Jackson, Miss., and still more hundreds throughout the South will be affected. In a statement read to newsmen by Press Secretary George Reedy, the President said: “Now that the Supreme Court also has ruled I think we all Join in the hope and the resolution that this kind of reasonable and responsible acceptance of law “ continue and increase.” will c Euromart Agrees on Grain Prices ENTERS RACE — James Roosevelt, (D-Calif.) announced yesterday that he will run for mayor of Los An-geles. Michigan Electors Cast L6J Ballots LANSING (AP) - The painters worked above, the plywood floor was bare and folding chairs were used as Michigan -electors cast their votes for President Monday. The 21 Democrats picked at the Nov. 3 election, went down the line unanimously for President Johnson and running mate Sen. Hubert Humphrey at a 45 minute ceremony in the uncommonly austere State Senate chamber. WWW The chamber is getting a mild face lifting, but state law is unyielding cm the site of the electoral meeting. So the electors (AP) - Hie six European. Common Market countries agreed today on a single schedule of grain prices, effective in mid-1967. Agreement was reached after 13 months of tough bargaining. It was the major step toward a1 unified agricultural policy necessary for Common Market participation in Kennedy Round tariff negotiations opening next month in Geneva. West German Economics Minister Kurt Schmuecker hailed the agreement as “a giant step toward European unity.’ / Walter Hallstein, president of the European Economic Community’s executive commission, termed the agreement “a great political feat” “If we reached agreement on farm prices,” he said, “it is thanks to the political will of all to succeed in creating in Europe a political force.” The agreement was a triumph for French President Charles de Gaulle, who had threatened to boycott the Common Market unless it agreed on agricultural prices. West Germany, which has the highest wheat price in the community, was the chief obstacle, hut Italy also raised last-minute objections. Effective Jutyl, 1967, tills schedule of prices Isto take effect within the trade bloc: Durum wheat, $3.95 per bush-el; soft wheat, $2.89; rye,$2.38; corn, $2.30 and barley, $1.99. \ World prices for such major grains as durum wheat, barley and com are still 30 to 50 per cent lower than these future prices. The present French price for soft wheat is $2.70 per bushel; the comparable American price is $1.90 and the West German price is $3.20. In recent years the Common Market countries have imported about 10 million tons of grain a year; mostly hard wheat and feedstocks. The community plans to protect its production by setting tariffs on grain imports that not only' cover the 'difference between the world prices and the future market prices but also provide small preferential WARM GLANCE — The Duke of Windsor gives his wife a warm smile at a news conference in Houston, Tex., yesterday. The Duke, now 70, entered the Methodist Hospital in Houston for corrective surgery of an abdominal artery ailment. Driver, 13, Is Hurt as Car Hits Tree A 13-year-old Oakland Township youth is in fair condition at St. Joseph’s hospital after the car he was driving left the road and hit a tree. Paul H. Williams, son .of Mr. and Mrs. Paul T. Williams, 3630 Collins, was traveling west on Buell in Oakland Township when the accident occurred. A passenger, 14-year-old Lome Chiera, of 4891 Gallagher, Oakland Township, was treated for injuries and released. 'Flying Grandpa' Begins Record Nonstop Flight NEW YORK (UPI) - America’s “flying grandfather” left Capetown, South Africa, late last night at the start of a record. 8,316 mile nonstop flight to New - Orleans. Max Conrad, 61, plans to land at Moissant International A i import Thursday morning. He was trying to break his own nonstop distance record for light aircraft with a maximum weight of 6,614 pounds. A Piper aircraft spokesman said last night that Conrad was flying a Piper Twin Comanche named “Let’s Fly.” The plane carried 720 gallons of gasoline, instead of the normal 9Q gallon fuel load. He was expected to remain in the air for 59 hours. Conrad already holds a number of air distance and speed records. dawn warns 804 NOR’ Pontiac, Michigan PERRY Phone 334-9041 Everywhere THIS WEEK'S SPECIALM Take Your Pick From Our Many Variety FRIEDCAKES Hand Cu»», AppUtauce, Devil* Food Cherry, Orange, Nutty, etc. dOZ. mm®, PLACE ORDERS NOW- FOR YOUR Special Decorative Holiday Treats MANY, MANY VARIETIES On Hi* way to work ' or homo from a party, enjoy our specially brewed Dawn Coffey ‘ with a deliciously different Dawn Donut. Dflww peiiPis Prior to Operation MDs Examine Duke HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) ‘- The Duke of Windsor, facing abdominal surgery philosophically, undergoes tests and X-ray examinations today prior to the operation, possibly Wednesday <>r Thursday. Hr. Michael DeBakey, a cardiovascular surgeon, will perform me operation at Methodist Hospital 'll involves removing an portic aneurysm, a ballooning of the artery wall. “I’m not fearfui about the op1 eration,” the former King Edward VIII of England said Monday, “But I think everybody is a little bit apprehensive before surgery.” The duke and the due spoke to neWsmen shortly after/ arriving By train from York City. MEETS DOCTOR The duke, 70, meets DeBakey today for the first time. The former king’s New York physician, Dr. iArthur Antenucci, head of Roosevelt Hospital, had recommended DeBakey because he is “the No. 1 man in the field.” DeBakey, 56, is general director of the Cardiovascular Research Center and professor of surgery at Baylor University College of Medicine here. . ■ ■ ★ * it He and his team have performed 6,500' major cardiovascular operations in the past six years and have a 95 per cent recovery record. One of the physicians, Dr. Edward W. Dennis, head of the Department of Cardiology and director of the Circulatory Dynamics Laboratory at the boepi-tal, said the duke was in “superb general health.” He said blood tests and X-rays would be taken today. \ Due Yule Treat Party, Square Dane* Set by Lions Club Tomorrow will be a busy day for members of the Lions Chib of Pontiac with a Christmas party for crippled and blind children at noon and a Lions Chib square dance for the blind at Central Elementary School, 101 E. Pike, begbiniAg at 8 p.m. ★ * - p’ V The Square Set Dance Chib of Pontiac will lead the dances. Volunteers Jim McClain, Ralph Monroe, Phil Holland and Cedi Stover will supply the music, and Lion MOt Hathaway will lead the singing hi a short program of entertainment which will include the Bell Ringers of Eastern Junior High led by director Coffey. The dance is under the cosponsorship of the Lions Club, the Department of Parks and Recreation -and the Pontiac League for the Blind. WWW The noon Christmas party will be at the First Presbyterian Church, W. Huron at Wayne, and Santa will be there with gifts. Swainson to Quit Post After Jan. 20 LANSING (AP) T- Former Gov. John Swainson said Monday he hasn’t decided when to resign as Democratic national committeeman—but it won’t be until after Jan. 20. ★ ★ * Swainson is running for a Circuit Court judgeship in Wayne County and could not be a committeeman if elected. He la strongly favored in the race and said “it’s looking good." * * . .* He said he’ll attend President Johnson’s inauguration Jan. 20 as a committeeman. The judge? ship primary election is Feb. 15 and the final election April 5, Why Take Less? Change your account to Michigan Bank SQUARE LAKE AT TELEGRAPH RD. START EARNING INTEREST Regular Passbook Accounts with withdrawal privileges .. . no special plans or certificates required. 4% paid pn amounts on deposit 12 months, 3H% p$ft on deposits of less than 12 months. Interest compounded? 4 times a year. Deposits insured up to $10,000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. ' Michigan Bank ’ NATIONAL association ALL OFFICES OPEN ALL PAY SATURDAY 350 MILLION DOLLARS STRONG OPEN EVERY WEEKDAY IMCLUDIM9 EAYUKDAY UNTIL «N TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, id Proposition Passes by 2-to-l Margin VJ. Bloomfield District Votes to 'Keep $ WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP—A better than two-to-on* margin brought approval to a 11-million school building program here yesterday. The district’s second bond issue in 19 months was backhd by a 515-229 vote of property owners. tion apace with growth in the district In granting the funds, they approved a program designed to keep classroom construe- Extension of sewers into the southern portion of West Bloom-field Township has meant .a rapid increase in the number of subdivisions being developed thfere and a corresponding jump in schqpl enrollment. available to build an elementary school on.a site it owns in (he juaior high school now under construction on Orchard Lake Rond. The board of education plans to use half of the new funds II CLASSROOMS The $500,000 unit, to contain about 1$ classrooms, will be constructed on Maple midway between Middle Belt and Orchard Lake roads. Some $1M,IM will be allocated to complete and equip The $900,000 secondary unit was the majbr feature of the $1.6-million bond issue passed ii) June 1963. The new bond issue includes about $200,001) for the purchase of additional elementary sites. FOR RENOVATION Some $100,000 will be spent for renovation at the high school, another $50,000 for construction in the Scotch Elementary School area and $50,000 for contingencies. The tat rate Is not expected \ to be increased to pay for {he developed property to fin the new bonds. will be needed in the future as projected growth is realized. additional bonds. School board members are counting on the district’s increased valuation from newly The current levy of 26.73 mills includes $7.50 per $1,000 of state-equalized valuation for debt retirement. FINAL PLANS The school board, now charged with drafting final plans for the proposed construction, has indicated the building l only present need not be-ing^met by the 1963 bond issue is at Scotch Elementary School, which about 25 pupils over normal c District marked a re jump to a 2,247 l this year k 10 per cent Walled Lake OKs School Expansion WALLED LAKE - Property owners here yesterday took on a $1.5-million debt to build additional elementary classrooms and buy sites. Also approved was a 1-mill tax increase to provide ’operating funds for the new facilities. Margin on the bond issue proposition was 829-721 with 16 ballots invalidated. The millage question, open to consideration by all voters, passed 900-729. Heading the list of construc- tion under the building program will be a 20-room elementary school. The $600,000 facility is to be completed by the fall of 1966. The site has not yet been determined. MOST IMMEDIATE A seven - room addition to Keith Elementary School has been cited as the most immediate need and should be ready for occupation by September 1965. Cost of the wing has been estimated at $140,000. Next fall also has been set iBond Election Set I in Clarkston District ; CLARKSTON - A Feb. 8 special election for a $3-million bond issue to finance construction of school facilities was authorized last night by the Clarks-lon Community Schools Board of •Education. .* Passage of the bond issue Avould allow the school district }o meet minimum requirements i Firemen Slate i 3 Yule Parties To Treat Youngsters in Pontiac Township * PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Children in three sections of Pontiac Township will be treated to Christmas parties in their own localities this week thanks to the money - raising efforts of the township Are department. > The Christmas party at Station No. 1 will take place tomorrow, while firemen of Jos-lyn Station No. 2 and .Opdyke Station No. 3 will stage their Celebrations on Sunday, all at 4he stations. f. Tomorrow's party will be -jointly sponsored by the fire 'department, Hill -Gaze tie. ; American Legion Post No. 1431 and the Auburn Heights Lions rciub. * The party will start at 7:30 p.m. with the lighting of a huge Christmas tree in the community park, adjacent to the fireI hall. for anticipated growth over the next five years, Schools Supt. Dr. L. F. Greene said. According to Dr. Greene, enrollment is expected to swell to nearly 7,169 by 1969. This will require 55 new elementary schoolrooms and 16 sec? ondary-level rooms. The firsf phase of the building program would begin immediately if the bond issue is approved. It would include an extensive high school addition and a new elementary school at a cost of $1.5-million, or half the bond issue total. - . FOLLOWED STUDY Last night's unanimous approval of the special election by the school board followed a six-month study on school housing needs. The school system has experienced a steady enrollment growth since 1951, Dr. Greene said. An increase of 493 students was experienced in the past year. Presently, six of the school system’s seven schools nave enrollments beyond designed capacity. The school district last passed a bond issue in 1958. This $2.5-million issue financed construction of the high school and the Bailey Lake Elementary School. as the deadline for construction of libraries at Commerce, Walled Lake and Decker elementary schools. Some $180,000 will be allocated for these projects and others not finished under the last building program. Another $370,000 is earmarked for purchase of three or four elementary school sites, and property for a secondary school. FOR OPERATION Legal fees, architects’ fees and capitalized interest will account for the balance — about $130,000. The increase in operational levy will be used to operate the new facilities and to improve the district’s vocational training, reading the new mathematics programs being offered. $775,000 School Bor Is OK'd in Holly Election HOLLY *■ A $775,000 backing estimated the system would be has been given to a program for elementary classroom construction here. Property owners yesterday approved the bond issue by a 396-220 margin. Eight of the ballots The funds will add 20 classrooms to the system which is Projections indicate the district will be seven to 12 classrooms behind by the time the additions are completed in the fall of 1966. short 10 to 16 classrooms by 1967-68. However, they noted the growth of a major subdivision would affect these figures. Enrollment in the district has grown by 641 students, or 21.1 classrooms, since 1960. ENROLLMENT JUMPS The school board had expect- be short two classrooms this year but found itself needing four when the enrollment jumped 185 to a total of 2,785. Expected to net $75,000 annually, the levy will be extended j for four years. CHRISTMAS DRAMA - Rehearsing for Sunday’s presentation of “The Star of Bethlehem” at Sashabaw United Presbyterian Church, Independence Township, are (from left) Brenda Woodworth, Martha Boggs, Mick Stierstorfer- and Richard SartelL Nearly 100 students, the entire church school group of the church, will participate in the Christmas play scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Delray Hall, is production supervisor and William Porter, music director. Approval of both propositions will raise the total district levy to 29.23 mills. The bond issue is expected to increase the portion alloted to debt retirement to $9 per $1,000 of assessed property valuation as equalized., NOT COMPLETED The 20.23 mills designated for operation will include 12 mills voted extra. The three elementary libraries and broad renovation at other units were not completed under the building program authorized in 1963 because that bond issue had been based oh cost estimates made in 1961 when construction was cheaper.---- Renovation will include the piping- of water to six classrooms at Union Lake Elementary School and the construction pf additional storage space and remodeling of Space to provide health room, booksjtore, a n,TELEGRAPHRD. • «* PE8-9618 \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DBCE^BBR 15, 1964 THE FIRST CHRIST/ A wRI da ■lc«lr,” Maty laid, "hlllitkI world as orapk-ott had foretold, and Mary | wroppod him in swaddling Lclathas ana (aid Mm in a By LUCESCEBKALR TWENTY-TWO There are mare than 110,0(0 election districts in the nation. FAIR AND WARMER with a RHEEM Warm Air Heating System A you have an long way it's been, too.’’ “By whose order?’’ demanded the prince, K * * v; “By order of your uncle, fey master, King Kerchew who wants it arranged that you should not return to the kingdom.” “But-why?” UNCLE TO REIGN “Silly boy! Because if you don’t come back you can’t be crowned king on Christmas Day and your uncle will be king forever.” , The prince knew feat King Kerchew was not a good king, bnt he had never imagined that he was truly evil. Now he knew and he was afraid. His knees shook and a cold shiver ran down his back. A a ★ But he was a prince, bom to be' king, and so he said bravely, “You cannot keep me from returning to my kingdom to save my people from my wicked uncle.” WALKS IN CIRCLE “Perhaps I can’t,” smiled Womp. He began t6 walk fatly in a circle around fee, prince. As he walked he carelessly drew a line In the snow with a stick he carried in his hand. When be had finished he threw away the stick and said, ‘And perhaps I can, for I do not think you can ever break out of the magic circle I have drawn in the snow.” Or ft ★ The prince rushed toward him but when he came to.the line of the circle he was stopped DISHMASTER* PRECISIONEERED FOR FAST, SANITARY DI8HWASHIN3 (if* a LOANS 1,000 to *5,000 ~) 1st orW HOti HOMAGE ATHO®*1** Cash when needed ! e and toft with Mr. Merle Voae or Mr. Boekaer, who hevo been linatoR Boom, to hundred* of people la Pontiac during the peel M yean. All take e rheaoe dealing fly-by ale■ leaden.) emoaet of year lose to cash at eaee. No paper* to sign until the loon to eloeed. No to pay off (fee balance yea ewe on year contract, to pay ton*, to moke home renin er Improvement!, or tor aay ether Seed parpeea. lee e* today. SPECIAL Tree Parking on ceoMy lot corner N. Sag. inaw and W. Huron Sto: each time yon bring to our office a fell monthly payment. free Parking whenever yea apply fey an VOSS and BlJCKNER 209 NATIONAL BUILDING FE 4-4729 * ' w ’ • V i as surely as if he stood on the edge of a cliff. RACES AROUND Frantically he raced around the circle. He could not cross the line. An invisible Curtain surrounded him and kept him prisoner. Tears of rage stung his ayes. “I’D get out!” he swore. “My friends will get me eut!” “Your friends the turtle and the snowman?” scoffed Womp. “I think it’s hardly likely they will ever see you again.” .* * ‘a The prince clenched his fists and cried. “When Santa Claus comes to Razenpie, the people will know it is Christmas and they will make my uncle leave the throne whether I am there or not. That is the law of the land!” NOXHMHJNG For the first time the smile left Womp’s face. “That is true. I had not thought of that,” he mattered. He scratched his head and walked to and fro swinging fee magic shoes from his hands. “But then,” he cried, sudden- \ ly smiling again. - “Suppose j Christmas < never comes Razenpie!” He sat on t ground and began to pull fee l prince’s magic shoes onto nisi own feet. QUESTIONS WOMP “What do you mean?” demanded the prince, trying to keep fee quaver from his voice. “I (hall go to the Mule Festival ia Fairyland,” said Womp. “There I shall arrange things so feat Santa Claus will be unable to bring Christmas to Razenpie or .Any other kingdom in the world!” * A ★ “You wpuldn’t dare to. touch Santfi Claus! He has magic more powerful than yours!” LACES SHOES didn’t say I would touch him,” replied Womp, lacing up the shoes. ”1 shall merely put him to sleep. A very long sleep lasting, perhaps, a hundred years.” He laughed shortly and stood up. He took three abort steps, waved his hand airly, and swish! he vanished into the forest, leaving the prince im- | prisoned in the magic circle. Teawrrvwi Sint* In Fairyland. New ... • procMen water combination made to cat diihwathing time in DISHMASTER (crape*, wash*, and rime* in one eaty motion. Dithet pel cleaner ... mert lanitary. The touch •f a button rebate* bet, rich tudi that foam away groaie imtantly. (Um any quality, clear detergent.) SEE DISHMASTER AT BETTER APPLIANCE, PLUMBING, HARDWARE AND DEPARTMENT STORES If you can pick it up — YOUR DISHMASTER CAN WASH IT! DI8HM OOirtP.*iooMFias mus, mchmm-im Flag for Canada Clears 1st Hurdle OTTAWA (AP) - Canada’s new maple leaf, flag cleared its first major legislative hurdle early today, winning approval frojn fee House of Commons 163-78. ★ A * The measure goes to the Senate. If approved there, it will be proclaimed by Queen Elizabeth II as Canada’s new national banner. • ★ ★ * “This is a good flag . . . It’s a Canadian flag,” Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson fold fee House in an emotional appeal for approval of the design — a single red maple leaf on a white field flanked by red panels. Nwtototo UNION LAKC HANSEN, METTY & HUNT INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. o -salivas YOU FIRST- INSURANCE —ALL FORMS— PfcoRC FE 4-1668 1543 Baldwin Ava. Pontiac, Michigan Bill Farrah Says, "Win Christmas And Get The Rambler That Goes With Them Grand Prize NEW! // JILT an d LO SS BP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easier to take and mot* effective than the powdered and liquid food supplement, and cos'ts less ineludirw Capfcjles suited to you INOlVJQUAlXV by Uc. Physician, ■M D No Gastritis or irregularity 4 with Medic-Way cepe. DON'T DIET —JUST EAT! As thousands have / done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 Ibe. and KEEP If OPF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 RAMBLER The Sensible Spectacular Or Win One of 119 Other Valuable Prizes. 0n« Luxurious Natural Pastal Mink Stole One RCA 23” Color TV Contolo Cno RCA Globetrotter 8 Transistor Radio , Throe RCA Tapi Recorders Throe RCA Clock Radios Tan IMisoc Combination Can, Opener-Knife Sharpeners One Hundred 18-plooo sots of Country Kitchen Knhros with serrated edges including a moat elsavsr. III m 0MTEST RULES ontry blank frnrn Jnf totoaful 48 contostwits undor ft yaare of aga must ha acoom-Writ# y#«r nama, addron, penied by a parent. phbna, malt* and yaw of bran x. AH entrias must bt depetitod in Mo Draw •axbySP.M., on# Half. Alt It in Hi# Treasure Dnonmbef IS, 11M. Chest and keep tho other half g, Tho prizes will Se nwnrdad ia IM order Mat they are ■**««&**-T" *!S p"Ji<,#n! drawn. The first number droitn whs Me flmnd Prizt, Me ? rho airminyhom Chamberof RMMar. Tha saoond numbtr drawn wina Ma Wafa Stole, cmnmarea will draw the winning ^ muiibar drawn wine Ma S0A Color TV Oonsoio and so on until aN 121 wfaudneeards are drawn. Winners Names Will Be Published In Tha Pontiac Press and Tha Royal Oak Tribune on Dec. 23 and in The Birmingham Eccentric On Dec. 30. NOTHING TO BUY-NOTHING TO WRITE Retnember, You Can Enter Ttu* Only At... VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 Si Woodward Avo<, Birmingham Ml 6-390Q THE PONTIAC PRKSS, i 3EJLJE8DAY, DECEMBER 15, 1964 M.F.L. OFFENSE Tidbt 2nd.... MILE DORA, Bear* Gffyt End..PAUL WARFlELP, 3town$ FianVcer...JOHNNY NORRIS, Bears Taclcle....—BOB VOOBL, Colts Tackle.....Forrest SREGO, Ihckcrs Guard......j/m BARKER, Colts Guard........JOHN GORPY, Lions Center.....BOB P§ MARCO, Cards Quarterback...JONH UNITAG, Colts Halfback.....LEMNY MOORS,Colts Fuiltjack..J/m BROWN, Browns M/KB DfTKA, GUS/A WAY cho/cm Aoet Tight eho, EPfTOM/ZeS THE POOS' oaof JOHN U/J/TA& <3r£AOS A WiNN/HG ATTACK \,A DEFENSE find WILLIE DAVIS, Packers End GiHO MARCHem, Colts Tackie BOB LILLY, Cowboys . Tackle ME RUM OLSEN, Rams Middle Backer., pale ME INERT, Cards LireBacker....joe FORTUNATO,Bears Line Backer....J/M HOUSTON,Browns Garner Back...AIT FISCHER, Cards Comer 'back...ERlcH BARNES, Giants Gaiety......Paul KRAUSE, Skins Gaiety..........willie WOOD. Barkers TWEMTY-THBEfc Russell Hits Winning Shot as Game Ends* Michigan Posh 87-85 Victory After Tense Contest at Cobo LOOSE SHOCKER - Wichita’s Nat Bowman (13) fights for a loose ball against Michigan’s Cazzie Russell and Oliver Darden (56), in their top rated game at Cobo Hall last night. The two teams were rated 1-2, Michigan first in AP and Wichita first in UPI in recent polls. Michigan won the game at the buzzer, 87-85. Howe's Slump Worries Wings DETROIT (AP) — Gordie | the Black Hawks ip Chicago Howe, the slop-shouldered alt Sunday night. “I wish I could time National Hockey League get something so I could help , scorer, is in a • slump, and the | the team.” Detroit Red Wings are worried Manager-coach Sid Abel about it. glanced at the statistics sheet. The last time the 36-year-old “Look at that,” he said. From Our News Wires DETROIT — The Wichits Wheatshockers didn't get a chance to enjoy being ranked No. 1 in the nation. Michigan, the top-ranked team until losing by one point to No-1 braska last Saturday, spoiled the Wheatshockers trip to Cobo Arena when Cazzie Russell hit a 30-foot jump shot at the buzzer to produce an 87-76 victory before, a capacity crowd of 11,265. i * * •* . The latest Associated Press and United Press International I polls, released today, showed Wichita on top with Michigan in the runner-up slot. The voting took place before last night’* game. What took place during the 40 minutes preceding Russell's shot and what occurred after he heard the sound all basketball players train their ears to pick up ... the meshing of the ball against the cords ... was just as stirring. P.T. Barnum couldn’t have pm an a better shov with three rings. The lead .changed hands 15 , I , * t'mes and the score was tied on Lead in Points ; 42 halftime lead, it built its mar-gin to six points, 57-51, for the . Chicago Hawks Ac® most one-sided advantage of the Ahead of Mikita , j ★ * . * Hull Increases right-winger put the puck through the he^ was Nov. 1L That was against the Montreal Canadieas’ goalie, -Charlie Hodge. It made Howe the all-time NHL scorer with 627 regular season and playoff goals, eclipsing Maurice (The Rocket) Richard’s record. “Howe had 10 shots on the net. Nobody else was close to him. Bobby Hull and had five for the Hawks.” HIT EVERYWHERE Howe nodded agreement. “Sure, I hit his toe with oqe, his elbow with another. . .and his stick with another.” „ . 7 • * Howe shrugged, and Abel Since then, Howe h^ ijtayed added: “We’ve got to get Gordie out of this thing and started 658 minutes and 40 seconds wi*°ut f Jj?*1'. w somehow. We are going to sit “U’s starting £ 1 down before Wednesday’s game Howe after the Wings « to in New York and see if we can’t figure some line-up shift that might help him get going.” - Guard's 35 Tops Titans' Big Spree . DETROIT If* — Scoring a _ career high of 35 points, guard | with 33, goals and led JLou Hyatt led Detroit to a -—--------“*■ “ |Mj school point record in its' 123-110 basketball victory over Xavier of Ohio Monday night. Hyatt, a junior, hit on 13 of 10 field goal attempts sad scored a perfect nine oat of nine from the free throw tine. K * *',/*• MONTREAL (AP) - Chica-i go’s Bobby Hull, scoring at a 65-goal-a-season pace, has built a1 five-point lead over teammate, Stan Mikita in the National Hockey League scoring race. Hull, who scored three goals and assisted on five others last week, was in the. No. 1 spot in NHL statistics released today with 34 points to 29 for Mikita. Mikita collected six points last week. * • * # Hull is the league’s leading goal scrrer with 23 in 25 games while Mikita is tops in assists with 21. Trailing Hull and Mikita ta the scoring d tel are Claucle Provost of, Montreal and Detroit’s Norm Ullnfan, tied for the third spot w’tb 26 points. Phil Goyette of New York rounds out the fro five with The No. 1 goalie is Montreal’s Charlie Hodge with a slight "edge over Roger Crozier 'of Detroit. Hodge has allowed 2.36 goals a game to 2.40 for Crozter. Howe’s curreit 12-game slump js the worse of his 19-year NHL career. He had two nine-game goalless periods earlier, from Nov. 25 to Dec, 17 in' 1947 and from Dec. 20 to Jan. 10 in 1953. In the 1947-48 season, his sec- ,. Htfll, aici9t ond as a pip. Howe scored 16 « » goals.> 1943-54, he ended up ....... J » g the NHL in I £ Henry, New York ............ II W 11 Toronto ....* tt.lt I. Gilbert, Now York -----Igt I l* I f. Esposito. ChlCMO ...... » » IS Solon, Montreal ........ f t II scoring with 81 points. FIVE ASSISTS During the slump, the Wings’ top line of Howe, Alex Delvec-chio and Ran Murphy has been somewhat ineffective. Howe has had five assists bpt two of those were on power plays. GM of NABL Team Removed From Post The only time Xavier get close was ia the first period when the Musketeers closed to 8-7 with 17:41 remaining. Bat U-D had five men in doable figures who quickly broadened the margin, including forward Terry Page with 27 points and t guard John jifhrimm who scored 20. * * * • Steve Thomas paced Xavier with 25 potato. The victory was Detroit’s fourth against two losses. Xavier is M. . . . - . .......BENTON HAPBOR (UPI) - Abel is thinking about putting s,m Nicholas has been re-Howe on another line, maybe jesged 03 general manager of with Ted Lindsay and Pit jo* North Ameri-an Basketball Martin. | League, it was disclosed Mon- *’ * . * 1 day night. . “I don't know what to do,” No reason was given for his said Abel. “Maybe change his leaving the club which is in stick. But we can't keep going first place in the league. Jade without Gordie. He’s the No. 1 Collinson, president of the club, man on our team and he has to has taken over as acting manage! going.” I ger. The Wheatshockers tied the count at 58-all, then spent the rest of the game trading baskets with Russell. TIME OUTS Russell, who scored 21 of Michigan’s final 20 points, hit a juniper with 25 seconds remaining to make it 85-85. The Shockers called two time-outs during the next 18 seconds to set up a play, Finally, All-America forward Dave Stallworth tried to drive, but dribbled the ball off hh foot and H caromed oat of bounds. Michigan put the ball in play and George Pomey dribbled to midcourt, then fed Russell. The S-foot-5 junior, bounced the ball once,.*jumped and let fly with a one-hander as the buzzer went off. The ball bit the back rim of1 the basket, glanced into the! twine and Wichita had its first1 loss in five starts. * * * But the winning basket was not all that Russell contributed to Michigan’s fifth win in. six starts. He took game scoring honors with 28 points, 23 of them in the second half. * * * “The basket Carrie scored to tie it at 85-85 with 17 seconds to go was the key plav of the game." Coach Dave Strack explained. “Until we tie it, We still don’t have achance. ” Michigan, idle now until it meets B'ltler on Dec. 23 at Ann Arbor, mitrebounded the Shck-cm 33-56 v Gordy 1st String Lion Unitas Leads NEA All-Pros NEW YORK (NEA) —There were times the last five years when Johnny Unitas must have wondered wtiat a guy has to do to get .some- recognition. It turns out now the answer is to in. Johnny was generally regarded as the greatest quarterback in the game, and it showed in his pay check. # ★ But since the Baltimore Colts stopped collecting champion- Crl»» I M * Myeri Tktoh H15-17 tS Trtali WIcMta .................., Michigan Fouled out — None. Total foui» — wichlta II, Attondonco 11. MS Middies Ponder Hardin's Contract Back Ailment Slows Southern Cal Coach LOS ANGELES (AP) - Unl: versity of Southern California basketball Coach Forrest Two-good has entered a hospital for diagnosis of a back ailment. ~ * * * . “I’ve been bothered with back Rouble for the last six months,” Twogood said Monday. “I’d hoped to make it through the season, but I just couldn’t make He was admitted Sunday and underwent tests Monday, ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -The Naval Academy still is deliberating legal and other questions in file five-year contract of Wayne Hardin, who reportedly is through* as head football coach atpitavy. Officials announced after a two-hour Urte^ing Monday that further sessions would be necessary. “We fully expect to have a statement on Thursday,” Capt. William S. Busik, director of athletics, said. * * ■ * * Ha said any Speculation about Hardin’s status uptil that time would be prematiire, that the “whole spectrum” of his contract was under review. Busik confirmed that the board of athletic control, of Vriiidh he is a member, had been in touch with Hardin’s lawyer, B Nathaniel Richter of Philadelphia. The coach "did not attend the meeting, but Busik said he was advised of proceedings and seemed satisfied with them. 318,800 PACT v . .. The delay only served to heighten speculation that the principal question was whether to buy up all or part of the four years remaining in the contract. Hardin reportedly makes about $18,000 a year. Busik, when asked Monday if this matter was involved, said, “we haven’t gotten that far yet.” • * A ' ★ It is reliably understood that the 37-year-old coach, who. also holds a collateral administrative port in the athletic department, .was told tart week he would be fired from both. Friends said he also «as told that he would probably receive no more than six months pay with termination of the Contract. Past Champion Opens Loop Play With Victory Defending champion Lake Orion Baptist knocked off St.. Lukes Methodist last night in the opening round of the Pontiac YMCA Men’s Basketball League. ' W ♦ Sr Dennis McDonald led the winners with 24 points and Ron Toles tossed in 21 for St. Lukes. In other games, Avondale Bap-] tint trimmed Elizabeth Lake Church of Christ, 73-34, and Pon-I tiac Business Institute nipped First Church of the Brethern, 43-41. Coarad Fulkerson collected 19 potato for the Avondale I team and Jim Lemmons pat J 21 ta the backet for Elisabeth Lake. In the YMCA’s Senior Division, First Baptist downed AH i Saints 13-76 as Bob Martin; poured in 50 points. In a second i game, Trinity Baptist routed’ First Congregational, 83-49. FONTIAC YMCA SASKSTOALL ships after 1969, the all-pro honors went to the Norm Van Brocklins and the Y. A. Tittles. -■#. Or ★ All this has changed. The Colts won the western division title ot the National Football League, and Unitas, still the best quarterback in football, is the leader of the 10th annual ^U-Playen All-Pro team, named todav bv Newspaper Enterprise Association. He polled a higher percentage of votes.for his position than any man in the NFL. He also carried along four of his Colt teammates—comeback halfback Lenny Moore, converted guard Jim Parker, young tackle Bob Vogel and ageless defensive end G• no Marchetti. * *> " + It’s convincing proof why the Colts ease into the championship playoff on Dec. 27. They were two positions ahead of any other team in the league. The 1964 All-Pro team, in fact, is a classic example, of changeover. Paul Warfield and Paul Krause are the first rookies to made the greatest mythical team in football since Jimmy Brown’s inaugural season of 1967. Ten other pros have made the honor roll for the first time —Vogel, Gordy and DeMarco on offense; Davis, Lilly, Olsen, Meinert, Houston, Barnes and Fischer on defense. ^ i It h ’ It Just a couple of votes split out the winners from the second team in several instances. The closest races were at offensive tackle, where.Vogel edged Charley Bradshaw of Pittsburgh; at split end, with Warfeld out-sprinting Frank Clarke of Dallas; guard, where Gordy pulled ahead at St. Louis .Kan Gray; center, DeMarco winning by a nod over Mick Tinglehoff of Minnesota; defensive tackle, a tug of war between giants Olsen and Roger Brown of De- Team Entries in Bowlerama Up to Dec. 23 With the lack ofentries in the team division of the 1964 Bowl-erama, qualifying will continue daily through December 23rd and the finals will be held Sunday, Dec. 27th at 300 BowL Bowlers will not be able to bowl from league play as was originally proposed. It is not permitted by the ABC. Separate Entries must be submitted of $8-69 fee per bowler and squad time arranged with either of eight houses participating ta the troit, and safety, which developed into a three-way battle between Krause, Roosevelt Taylor of Chicago, and another rookie, .Mel Renfro of Dallas. This team is also historic as the first which (fid not include Detroit’s Joe Schmidt at middle linebacker. Joe was knocked out by a dislocated shoulder 's. The tribute to the all-proa -don’t end with their selection to the NEA team. On Jan. 7, 1965, at the Pro Bowl luncheon in Los Angeles, each of the 22 men will receive an individual trophy designed by Pefrocelli, Inc.; a Robert Bruce tailored All-Pro sweater, and an AMF Checkmate bag. The housef which wiU qualify teams for the finals are Airway, Huron Bowl, Montcalm, Howe’s, Lakewood, North HUl, 300 Bowl and West Side. One of every five entries will go into the ffaials. * * ★ These are the current leading teams: LAKIWOOO J- Elliott, Tobias, Idtubock. Rebcnnock. McBride. 3057; Lucafc Toy. lor. LoSorgo, Taylor, Loroni, Wl01 Roorlnk, Lorenz, Teylor, LoBorge. Wright, ttMl FltiMtrkk, Crlvee, wV “ Vodry, Lavreck, Sophomores Sharp in Western Victory KALAMAZOO (AP)-Western Michigan defeated Northern Illinois 86-74 before 4,000 hometown fans Monday night, with two sophomores sharing high-point honors for the winners. Both Forward Chuck Washington and Guard Bob Blohm chalked up 19 points. Substitute guard Don Nelaon, with 17, was high pointer for the visitors. * *. * . Western Michigan went into the lead shortly after the opening whistle and never trailed. At halftime the host team held a 38-29 lead. The game result left both squads with identical 2-3 season records. t Congreoatloni Paul Methodist Chargers Sign Back SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) -r Star tailback Jim'Allison of/San Diego State College has signed with the San Diego Chargers in the American Football League’s 12th round draft Second Team T-Rogtr Brown. Lion, T—Aldx Kwtm. Lions MB—Bill Polllngton, Colt, CM-MWt Hunting, *crs CS—wgyng Wgtker, Lleni H WlA A tawny. P«ck< H—Jim Jgltnion. Jtart I RggggygR Tgytor, Bo. S—Mtl Rwitro, Cowboy* Northern Michigan 5 Collects Fourth Win STEVENS POINT, Wis. (AP) -Gene Summers connected for 129 points end Con Yagadxinski contributed 19 Monday night in leading Northern Michigan to a 194-70 non-conference basketball victory over Stevens Point. . * * . * , Northern Michigan, which clicked on 51 per cent of its field goal attempts, opened up a 47-30 halftime lead and then breezed to Its fourth victory’ta six games. TWttNfY-FOUR THE PQNTiACPRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 196* ri iwcaf It Mwr* J* fthod* Itlcnd M. Main* tt Long IMIM U. M> PoIrtloM 7* St. Franc It, PIL 17. *t. Vincent H SprtagntM H king* Point* H HorwiiMMm lif— 7J, ImM SOOTH •■mS•Kfljnsw* It VlBHl 7t MM* t Mary 4) n«g Murray a How MgxKa Stott *» Goorgo WaiMngkm II, Furman 57 Louisian* Tach a Mississippi 71 Mniea 17. lawa Mato 54 PMtfcrr SNO-CAPS FULL PLY H5 For « FREE MOUNTING 5§ ifcw»'*2fc*17M*| I *Esdima.-Wh0nM4b SI .00 Mam I ■ OWN DAILyV^-SAT. 14 I UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. mm EJwS SEW KING EDWARD Amerkt'i lw>«t btMmOtsr Cardinals to Trade Craig Redlegs hr CINCINNATI (AP) - Roger Craig, the loaingest pitcher,in the National League in 1982*3, and power-hitting < /Charley Janes have been acqulretfby the Cincinnati Reds ih a trade with the St. Louis Cardinals. The Cardinals got knuckiebdll artist Bob Purkey and an unidentified minor league player in the swap announced Mmday by Reds owner William 0. Dri Witt. ★ ★ ★ DeWitt said the minor league player will be named later. Purkey, 35, has been with the Braves Schedule Southern Session ATLANTA (AP) - Top-ranking officials of the Milwaukee Braves will qold a meeting Wednesday in Atlanta, their new home in 1900, to discuss what plans they have in- mind for this Southem city. The first major meetipg of these officials in Atlanta win include Bill Bartholomay, chairman of the board; Tom Reynolds, executive vice president; John McHale, president, and several others. “I don't know just what will be on the meeting agenda or just what time it will take place,” said publicity director Ernie Johnson. “But I’m sure we will frotnu-late a policy, discuss establishment of ticket prices for the three exhibition game and for Cracker home games and the like." Reds since 1958, and recorded his best season in IMS, winning 13 and losing five. That, year Purkey beat every chib in the league at least once .and, com-piled an earned run average of 2.8tv "We’re hopeful that Craig will be < our right-hand, relief man and that James will give us an extra right-hand hitter in the oytfield,” said DeWitt. LOSING TITLE . Craig won his ‘Hosing’’ title with the New York Mets, winning only 10 games and losing 24 in 1962. In 1963 he won five and lost 22. The Mets traded Crfjg to Louis and he was 7-9 for the Cardinals last season with an ERA of 3.25. Craig started his career in 1955 with the eld Brooklyn Dodgers and- has a World Serfca record of 2-2 for the Dodgers. , , James batted .223 for the Car- Philadelphia 5 * Trims Warriors at Charity Line By the Associated Press The foul shooting of the Philadelphia 76ers and San Francisco’s Wilt Chamberlain enabled the 76ers to defeat the Warriors in the only National Basketball Association game Monday night. The 76ers hit on 39 of 43 foul shots for a 119-112 victory over the Warriors at Pittsburgh’s Civic Arena. The Warriors, on the other hand, missed nine of 29 charity tosses. All of the misses were by Chamberlain, who also made' six and was the game’s high scorer with 40 points. dinals last season. Re hit five home runs. Purkey compiled a 11-9 record last season, with most of his victories coming in the final two months. His ERA was 3.03. Following his 23 Victories in 1962, the most won by a Reds pitcher in 18 years, Purkey dipped to a 9-16 record in 1963. The acquisition of Craig will enable Manager Dick Sisler to move Sammy Ellis into the starting rotation. Ellis was the ace of last season’s, bullpen corps, but wasn’t happy being a reliever. North Squad led by Tackle Jtrry Rush tb Play in Senior Bowl MOBILE, Ala. (AP) - All-America tackle Larry Kramer of Nebraska heads i 27-man .North squad announced today for (he 16th annual Senior Bowl football game Jan. 9. The squad—as did the South team announced Sunday—includes for the first time two Negro players. They are 9-4, 240-pound Michigan State tackle Jerry Rush and Utah end Roy Jefferson, a 6-2,190-pounder. Defensive Coach Takes Grid Pod WICHITA, Kan. (AP) -George Karras, a specialist in defensive football, was named head coach at Wichita State University Monday. Karras, 35, admittedly ohe of the highest paid assistant coaches in college football, was given a three-year .contract. His salary was not announced, but it is believed to be about $13,000, $500 more than ha was receiving as defensive coach at Massachusetts. Karras had served as defensive line coach at Wichita for one year before accepting the Massachusetts post last August. The South’s Negro players are Olympic sprinter Bob Hayes and Bob Fel’s, Florida A. & M. backs. Big Ten quarterbacks Rich Badar of Indiana and Tom Myers of Northwestern will direct the North offense. All but one of the 27 North players were picked in the drafts by National and -American Football League teams and three of the squadsmen were first-round choices. NO. 1 CHOICE They wane Rush, picked in AFL first round by Boston and in the second round by the NFL’s Detroit; Indiana fullback Tow Nowatzke, No. 1 by Detroit; and back .George Donnelly of Illinois, an opening , round choice of San Francisco of the NFL~ The players turn professional in the game. Members of the winning team receive $900 each and each of the losers gets $700. Chicago Signs Guard CHICAGO (UPI) - The Chicago Bears have signed UCLA guard Kent Francisco. Francisco, who was drafted 14th as a 'future” a year ago, is 6-feet-2 inches tall and weighs 245 pounds. Crane Skaters Deadlock, 3-3 WRESTLING CAGERS - University of South Dakota’s Jay Hannies (right) piles into scramble for a kx Purdue’s Dave Shellhase during a first half last night. Purdue ae ball in Lafayette, Ind., won, 80-77. N.C Dumps Vanderbilt College Cage Meup Continues By The Associated Prate Whoops! That crazy-bouncing basketball has given Which!ta an up - and - down feeling faster than you can sayCazzie Russell Russell and the rebounding Michigan Wolverines f 1 o o,r e d No. 1 • ranked Wichita 87-85 Monday night, less than 34 hours after the Wheatshockers bad evicted the Big Ten club from the top spot among major college powers. day night, received five first-place ballots. HIGH SCORERE Bob Lewis hit for 31 points, 4 A.M. Cranbrook’s hockey squad picked up some help from a Harper Woods Notre Dame player yesterday and tied the visitors, 3-3. The Cranes were trailing 3-2 late in the third period when a Notre Dame forward, trying to clear the puck, shoveled it by his own startled goalie to give Cranbrook the tying goal. Cranes captain Tom Pfaff scored the other Cranbrook goals. Ted Bunt and Dick Moon collected two assists each. Wichita’s first loss and North Carolina’s 84-78 decision over ninth-ranked Vanderbilt promised another shake-up in the national ratings. The top ten list underwent wholesale changes last week, as reflected in the Associated Press poll released today and based on results through last Saturday. Cunningham at Greensboro, N.C., as North Carolina handed Vanderbilt its second straight setback. The Commodores lost to Virginia Tech 8944 Saturday and tumbled from third to ninth in the AP poll. Vanderbile is 3-2 on the season. The Tarheels have won five of seven. Russell Rides High for Celts in NBA Race Wichita, with four straight victories at that point, drew 23 of 33 first - place ballots and outpointed once - beaten Michigan 309-279. The Wolverines, surprised by Nebraska 74-73 Satur- wiiiisiii-msni ■ Never before in history has a single brewer produced ten millkm barrels of beer in one year. To Anheuser-Buach, of course, this industry record ia a tremendous source of satisfaction. But this record is for more than that It is a clsar indication of tile successful cooperation of American management and labor...of toe continued growth of America’s prosperity... of toe ability of good products to win ever-increaaiaf acceptance in the marketplace. Anhaneor-Buech beer is produced for enjoyment and* refreshment But ten million barrels of beer produces other things: employment for toougawHg of people who work in our breweries... income for farmers sind for folks who work in the paper, msial, plastic, and glass industries.. .and funds for federal and state taxes to improve schools, build roads and fight poverty. This year alone, for example, the beers brewed by Anheuser-Buach will provide more than $90 million in federal ta*ee and more than $45 mil-, lion in state taxes. When that ten millionth barrel rolled off the production line, we stopped and drank a toast to the milUons of people who enjoy oar " fine beers. Thanks...ten million of themi Russell had 92 rebounds and 89 points for the week, increasing his lifetime totals to 14,673 and 10,009. He has average 23 rebounds per-game in 600 NBA starts. WyNbasi's Imported Block Mohair ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. ST. LOUIS-NEWARK- LOS ANGELES-TAMPA-amf soon HOUSTON Distributed In Oakland County . The woll-groomod young men wear* block'mohair. Hit favorite style Is Wyn- , ham’s high two-button modal with an unusually high luster, smooth to tha touch. Tha jacket features trim lapels and hacking pockets. The slim trousers with an extension waistband have Side tabs. Sizes 3 5 to 46 In regular, short, long and oktrf long. An exceptional NEW YORK (AP)-The Boston Celtics figure to ride high in the National Basketball Association as long as BiU Russell stays in orbit — and big Bill is still soaring. Not one of last week’s top ten teams held its position in this week’s polL St. Louis, upended by Missouri 72 • 59 Saturday night, slipped from fourth to 10th. San Francisco and Minnesota climbed into the Nos. I and 4 berths, respectively, and split four first-place votes. * * * UCLA, Duke, St. John’s, N.Y., and Kentucky all advanced after successful weekends. The Bruins, No. 6, trimmed Oklahoma State 98-51 The Blue Drils, No. 9, routed South Carolina Hl-72; the Redmen, No. 7, nipped Miami, Fla., 79-77 and the Wildcats smashed Syracuse 110-77 to gain tha No. 8 spot. Russell crashed two career barriers last week — grabbing his 14,000th rebound and scoring his 10,000th print — as the Critics won four in a row for a 23-6 season mark and a five-game Eastern Dvision bulge over Cincinnati. Golf World Series Okayed byPGA Honor Swim Star of U. S. Olympics PORTLAND, Ore, (AP) -Avery Brundage, president of the International Olympic Committee, gaid Monday right that’ Don Schollander had upset one of his good speeches on the decadence of American youth. Brundage spoke at a Portland civic dinner honoring the 18-year-old Schollander, winner of four grid medals in the recent Olympics. The Olympic Games produced great successes by young people, Brundage said, but he added that the United States lags far behind other countries in many areas of sports although “we have more spectators.” DUNEDIN, Fla, (AP) -Warren Cantrell, president of the Professional Golfers’ Association of America, announced Monday that the PGA has approved the World Series of Golf. “This event will be recognized by the PGA as its official world series,” said Cantrell.’ The event will match the winners of the PGA championship, Masters Tournament, USGA Open championship and the British Open championship, in case one player wins two of these top tournaments, an alter nate will be selected for the World Series. Ex-Duke QB Best in UFL CLEVELAND (AP)-Quarter-back Bob B rod he ad, former DUke University star who led the Canton Bulldogs to the United Football League championship this year, was named the UFL’s most valuable player in a poll of the league coaches. Results of toe poll announced Monday showed that Brodhead was named on four of seven ballots. Coaches were not permitted to vote for players on their own squads. A i i HUBERT blSTRIBUTORS, Inc. Mr. and Mr*, Floyd Shotwall 125 E. Columbia, Pontiac Bootery § 334-0725 | Phont 338-4073 HE POUTJAl- PHK8S. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1964 LA*$K6ufax DetroitTech Downs • Alma Unit, j 00-101 ALMA (AP)-Wlth John Gar-za shooting 46 points and Roland Tony 32, Detroit Tech de- top Contenders Battle and St. Frederick has tasted victory but once in five outings. 8-DAY CALIFORNIA4 Clarkston and Kettering are off to slow starts. Clarkston, Wdyne-Oakland cochampion, owns a 1-1 mark, ttxi kettering, Tri-County titlist, will enter the game with a 1-2 rec- LEAVES From Detroit-December 26th MCUMfc RETURNS January 3rd R.mM THu Rail /> M BW Bl IR.Kl 4 Ni.hu II.,1,1 W L B M T— IM1 ROSE RORI. PAKAIIK TICKETS ROSE MVL CAME TICKETS U. of M. Gridders Practice in Cold PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE 702 West JIuron FK 8-9613 jMk IWiar Mall M l . »ifr Ph. l.«2.1220 Champion Michigan began preparations for the Rose Bowl football game. Monday with con-' ditioning drills in 22-degree V FV"?-■ mWm MB TWRKTY-nVS, Koufax compiled s 1.74 mark, the official NL pitching records dlyloeed today. Hs yielded only 43%rned runs in 223 taotogi, Koufax also pitched the moat shohttts, seven, and . had the highest winning percentage, ,71* on a record of M victories and only fiv# defeats. He was Sidelined for.the final six weeks of the campaign with a sore arm. li* 23-year-old star captured the ERA crown in 1N2 with 2.S4 and in 1963 with 1.88. The lowest previous average before 1964 was 1.66 by Car! Hubbell of the New York Giants in 1933, SECOND BEST Don Dryadale, the Dodgers’ ace right-hander, was the ERA runner-up with a 2.19 average. He also topped the league in games started, 40, innings pitched with 321 and total batters faced, 1,264. Chris Short of the Philadelphia Phillies was third in the earned run competition with a 2.20 mark. Then came Juan Marichai of San Francisco, 2.49; Jim Burning of Philadelphia, 2.63; and Jim O’Toole, Cincinnati, 2.66. it * ★ Earned run averages are computed by multiplying the number of earned runs by nine and dividing the total by the innings pitched. Larry Jackson of the Chicago Cubs posted the most victories, 24, while Marichai, the league’s only other 20-game winner, pitched the most complete games, 22. The Giants’ righthander's won-lost record was 21-6. Southpaw Bob Veale, of Pittsburgh, was the strikeout king with 250. He also issued the most bases on balls, 124. NHL Standings SWIMMER LIKES HORSES -i Snooks Rourk, 18, whose swimming coach says she has champiooship potential, does what she likes to do best — shoe horses. The green-eyed blonde from Coral Gables, Fla., led the Gold Coast high school conference for three years in the 400-yard freestyle before turning her attention to blacksmithing. Starts for Knicks High School and the winner will take over first place in the loop. Ia some of the other local | contests, Clarkatoa plays host to Kettering, West Bloomfield Journeys to Waterford, St. Oar Lady of Lakes, Detroit St. MSU vs. Utah in Tourney. EAST LANSING (UP1) - The draw for the Loe Angeles basketball classic, which opens Dec. 38, has pitted Michigan State against Utah in an upper bracket contest. Tie winner of the MSU-Utah game will go against the winner of the contest matching Southern California and Iowa. In the lower bracket the pairings have Minnesota playing Washington and Arizona playing UCLA. Losers of the first round games will go into a consolation bracket. Ponfisw for a game wttfc Emmanuel Christian. Others have Dsckerville at Cntssmrilla, Goodrich at Dryds St. Cecilia at Ferndale St James, Warren at L’Anse Creuse, Roseville at Highland Park sod Flint Northwestern st Saginaw. In « game set fay'tomorrow afternoon, Cranbrook will play host to Oak Park. BOTH UNBEATEN OLSM and St. Michael go into tonight’s scrap with unbeaten marks. They share the loop lead with 3-0 recods and own overall marks of 4-0. .Both teams have a Iqt of height. OLSM has M John Stol-nickj, the team’s leading scorer, while the Mikemen have Rick Lavoie, a 6-2 forward who puts fiji punch in file attack. The Mikemen wen both games last year and the Eaglets will be trying to halt that striag. Winner of the tilt this evening will be in ike driver’s seat in the race for top honors in the league. St. Frederick’s tilt with Waterford OLL will be a battle to stay out of the league basement. WOLL is winless in three tries , The souad, which will face Oregon State Jan. 1, to Pasadena, Calif., to working on conditioning arid regaining top season form this week to Ahn Arbor. The Wolverines leave Sunday for the Coast apd heavy two-a-da" ''rilbi . „ Offensive guard Rich Hahn and defensive linebacker Barry Dehlin rejoined the squad after missing half the season because of operations to correct knee injuries. FAULTY TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED WMTTO IMAY INANANTEE 1956**61 MERC- 0-MATIC *106 Complete RELIABLE Transmission 756 N. Pity St. _____FE 4-0701 NBA- Rookie Adjusting I YEARS OLD. IMPORTED IS MTTIi FROM CANADA IY WHAM WALKER IMPORTERS INC., OCTROIT, MICH, lij PROOF. ILEN0E0 CANADIAN WHISKY. NEW YORK (AP) — Jim I (Bad News) Barnes is too busy studying to pay much attention to the drum-beaters who are touting him as the National Bas-1 ketball Association’s rookie of the year. * * * “There is so much to learn,’’ said the 6-foot-9, 240-pounder from Texas Western College! during a break in the New York Knickerbockers’ workout Mon-' day. “I’m still having a tough time i adjusting to the pro brand of! play. I had no idea there was so much work to be done in making the change from college basketball. *. * * “In college, I played four years with my back to the basket Now I have to learn to play facing the basket. In college, there was plenty of time to set .up plays. In the NBA, we have 24 seconds. We can’t go from side to side, as we did in col-! lege. The plays. have to be shorter, snappier.” Barnes, who has earned a> starting Me with the Knicks; along with rookies Emmette Bryant, Howard Komlves and Willis Reed, .has proven to be a rugged rebounder, with a good touch and an outside shot, a definite advantage for a big man in the NBA. * A ★ But in modern pro basketball, a rookie doesn’t spend most of his offtime practicing shots. He has to study. “In college ball,” said j Barnes, “you play each team once. You see' certain players! once. Here, we play each team‘ 10 times. You have to knowj each player, what he does best, j what his weaknesses are. This; means study and when I am on the bench, that is what I am doing, studying the other Star-spangled way to play Santa Here’s a gift for your child or grandchild that: 1. never needs batteries 2. doesn’t take houre ’to assemble Christmas Eve 3. helps to provide tat your young- ster's future as few other gifts can ' It's a U. S. Savings Bond—a gift that will grow and perhaps some day contribute to your child’s college education, a home of hie own, or maybe even help him play SantA himself. Meanwhile Uncle Sam will be using the money to help nuke sure all chil-dren grow- up with the freedom to 0 celebrate Christmas the way they do today. . Put U. S. Savings Bonds down on yoqr Christinas shopping list and see if you don’t enjoy this star-spangled way to play Suita, prices start at $18.75 for the $26 variety.* And you can shop right up until Christmas. Quick facto about Series E Savings Bonds e Tew get beck $4 for every $S at matprity (1% yean) -• Tew pay ae state er local tocams tax and eaa defer payment at federal tax aatil the Baade ere cashed S Tear Bonds are replaced free if lest, destroyed er stolen e Tea can ret year meaty whan yea need it toy f leads tor sn H leads tor wirsst li Keep freedom in your future with U. S. SAVINGS BONDS These are presents... and there are presents Don't choose just any present lor the VJ.P.’a on your list or yo&rnext-door neighbor. Give Canadian Club, the whisky men prefer tp get — by better than two to one over any Other brand. A* usual, Canadian Club cornea in four elegant gift wraps. All are brilliant foil, with gay ribbons and handmade bows. So now you know what to get for every man on your Holiday lipt. (Except maybe Uncle Joe, who wants a new set of dominoes.) q MRAAIYYALKER i SONS UMHO YNLKRVULCNNtt Next time you're at your favorite package store, tell the man you want a case of die world's most wanted gift ,. 86.13 $3.85 Hell know the one w TT* you mean. cemta* f cm mu Gift-wrapped at no extra cost. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, IWM Venturi Is by Tourney Choices RECEIVER' WON — Middleweight champion Joey Giardello winces from a right hand tossdd biy Rubin Carter during foe 14th round TWENTY-SIX Crafty Champ Defeats Carter . Joey Is Successful * In First Defense . PHILADELPHIA (AP) - It was like the ok! matador against the young, dangerous bull. . Middleweight champion Joey Giardello came perilously close to being gored but he called on every trick he learned in 18 years of pro battling to beat strong Rubin (Hurrican) Carter jp his first title defense Monday night. A rousing finish in the last ‘five rounds of the 15-rounder earned the crafty, 34-year-old champion the unanimous decision over the muscular, 27-year-old second-ranking contender from Paterson, N.J., at Conveo* tion Hall. Giardello was cut over the left eye and shaken by a jolting left hook in the fourth round. Carter had his big chance in that round but be Mew it. Giardello absorbed several other solid left' {looks to the jaw from his ever-threatening foe but Pal Jopy always managed to slip away from the brink of disaster. There were no knockdowns. •i won rr “If I only could have made him fall,” said Carta*. “Just once, if I could have made him fall. That was the difference. I won it clear — at least 9 to 6 — but a fall would have clinched ' it ■ Mail “I had him so the hook but let him get off. He’s cagey and takes a helluva punch. Look at the great fighters he’s fought and node have put him down for the count.” 4r ie ♦ ‘‘He fought my fight and . didn't press as I expected him to press,” mid Giardello. ‘‘Ho didn't fight inside and made it easy fbr me. That .had a lot to do wifb it-" This'was GiardeQo's first title defense since be wot) the crown from Nigeria's Dick Tiger on an upset decision at Atlantic lity, N.J., Dec. 7,.M$$, 11) Carter, a pro forpO |ears, bad scored.53 knockouts*) 14 pro fights. A fast puncher with a flashy left hook, he Minted pn the hook to undo the a*mpfc% He came dose in &s^ fodr# only. FIVE POINTS The officials had Giardello the winner by the following point scores, based on the. five points a round: referee Bob Polls, 72-68; Judge James Mina, 71-86, and Judge Dave Beloff, 70-87. The Associated Press scorecard had Giardello a narrow winner, 69-68, Carter entered the ring a 6-5 favorite after being a 7-5 underdog at the weigh-in. Giardello weighed 160 pounds — foe exact middleweight limit .tg Carter’s 156ft. The Crowd of 7,652 paid * gross of $85,245. Giardello lected about $50,000 on his 60 per cent and paid carter $10,090 ' from his end. The champ earned about $5,000 more' from the television to several cities. Giardello’l record is 97-22-7, Carter’s 20-5. of their championship bout last night in Philadelphia. Giardello retained the title mi a decision. Star defensive tackle Alex Karras ended his 1964 season with the Detroit Lions on a sour note. He asked coach. George Wilpon to trade him to another team: * "I don't know any of the reasons why," Wilson skid Monday after revealing Karras' requested. "I bad planned to talk to him later. The only thing I asked NBA Standings BASTMN DIVISION Wm lmI Net. SaMw Boston ------- 23 4 .3*3 — Cincinnati .... 1* 11 .Ml S Philadelphia ... U 14 JD TVS New York 7 It Jt* 14Vi WESTBBN DIVISION Las Angeles ... W 10 AM - ■ St. Louis.....is ti jirt m Baltimore ...... 12 17 AV4 t Detroit .11 W JS7 TVS San Frandeca * It jot Mi Sports Promotor Dios NORTH HAMPTON, N.H. (AP) — One of Canada’s most successful sorts promoters — -Eddie Quinn — died Monday at the age of 51. Tackle Asks to Be Traded NEW YORK (AP) - Who are really the ‘‘Big Two” of American golf? Is It Jack Nteklaus and Arnold Palmer, the leading money winners and recent victors in the international. Canada Cup competition in Hawaii? * * * Or is ft any combination qf Ken Venturi, Tony Lema and Bobby Nichols, winners of the three Mg medal play champion-shipe? Venturi, the reigning U.S. Open champion, would like an answer. If necessary he would like ft in a head-to-head, winner-take-all match on five of the best golf courses in foe country. * * * ‘‘I always have thought — long before this year — that winning the U.8. Open was the i major achievement in golf and ' that the man who grabs ft 1 should represent Ms country in an event like the Canada Cup,” the Professional Golfers Asso-...................the Year said Alex Karras 'Sour' on Detroit Lions I “I thought this five years ago. IH think it next year when I may not win anything.” j Venturi said in order to ac*.j cent his point he would like to j team with Lema la a challenge match against Nicklaus and Palmer, the best three-of-ftve best-ball matches on five outstanding courses. * * * I “Let us put up $10,060 each and they put up foe same, let television sweeten the pot for perhaps a $100,000 purse and see what happens,” Venturi said. “I’m sure Lema would be all fof. Mm was If ft yia$ ina or any of the coaches, He said, “no.” lo f thought it wbukl be best just to let it go until we could talk about ft.” . • ■ Karras, who left here Monday to visit relatives la Clinton, Iowa, had no comment. Hie burly tackle sat out the t$63 National Football League) season under suspension for **<880)fdent Dave Moreno (244dH6 . . and fony Ledesma (23fc265— 681) sparked Huron (Hamers into tricing seven points from Savoy Motel and a tightening of thariM* inthe Horan Bowl Wednesday Night. “A’Mjfofe last week. - •. * Andy Service draped she of eight points**) Arro Realty apd saw its load over foe'Cleaning crew trimmed to three points. Huron had a 9002 series. Chock Larrts beaming over a 7-16 conversion recently hi the Howe’s Lanes Senior Classic. j The Avon Eagles Mixed League at Rochester Lanes last week had a 219-246-679 by Lary Gary and 243—626 by Gerry Hints. She also recorded 201-221—616 and Chuck Kftson 232 » night in the Kings 4 Queens circuit. « --Saturday’s Ins k Outers at Bowl listed a 213-237—632 for Ray Branchaau, a 221-236-625 for Joe Foster, a 264-525 for Mary Keller and 212 for Nancy Jarrell. MONTCALM .^Beverly Burnham of Brown’ Five hit, 246—607 Tuesday in the Fisher Hill loop at Montcalm Bowling Centre. Ken Buckley posted a 227 for Ctark’a Drive-In. ' Airway Lanes bohfHhg included a 224-239-631 by Lorraine Cloutier in the Thursday Ladies Major Clastic. Joe Fllka bowled 233-571 among the Kings & Queens Friday. Last' Wednesday Virginia Bltchetar with 212 (814) and Doris Boucard with 846 were tops la foe Airway First circuit. The 223—576 bowling of Evelyn Davidson and 529 of Betty Bantien paced the Airway Keg-lerettes Thursday. * *. St. Benedict’s Mixed League bowlers Sunday at Lakewood Lanes reported a 247 for Gary DeFrayne and 215 for Clan La-Barge. Wednesday’s Indepen- Women’s bowlers saw H«t-' Oi Biggs hit her first $60,. a MjKi Sunday night's PinspilleftJW tured a 211-203-608 effort by Forrest White, and Bill Roberta 231, Owen Collins 22^ MtiCge O’Brein and 528. For the Hight of IVavel Vqjues. Chevroleti Pontiaes * Buicka At The Only Showroom In Oakland County Where You Can Sea All Three. HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC ICS 8. WaaMmcW St. Orfocd gambling activities- His this year was expected to Vitalize the Lions' defense make them contenders vision enr- * Karras first few but was groin injqi SLOWED BY INJURY “He played very well, as as could be expected,” Wilson said. “A lot of people did realize that he was hurt, the injury definitely limited effectiveness.” Wilson addedi “He must have been serious or he wouldn't have saM anything.” -J , The eoqph himself Jb» been 0* subject* o( speculation Ex-PCH Swimmer Paces Oakland Team Former Pontiac Central swimmer Leon Mellen won two events Saturday in pacing Oak-‘ University to a 51-42 victory over Schoolcraft College. Mellen, a sophomore at OU, captured the 200-yard butterfly in 2:49.0 and posted a winning time of 6:25.5 in the 500-yatd. freestyle. In addition, he swam, a leg on the winning 400-yard medley relay team. Oakland SI, Mm 401 "medley relay—Oakland (Krogarud, Olbaon, Melton, Koehler) 4:34.7. 300. freeatyto—Zebell (S), Ford (I) 1:00.*. lire Mom (0) ______ TOO Individual medley lymont (S). Hayse (0) DM | - Patterson (I), Phillips (•) ■ IN freestyle - z.bell (S), Koelttor (0) , Barca low (0) jUX lit heckatreka — Olson (S>. Krogsrud mmmj ‘V (1) SUM. SBittooMyM relay ithoolcratt (Matey, Hunter, Zebell, Patterson) 4:117. He was rumored to be considering a move to the Chicago Bears and it also waa'ItiMred that there was a jab awaiting him in the American Football League if he wanted it. 'As far as I know,” said, “I’m not going. And want to go anywhere.” Wilson added he had a ing scheduled with Lions’ ownef William Clay Ford next week to “discuss a few things litened like to get straightened MONDAY*! PI® _ - tv The Associated j&atwI-pSi Beyer (S) ogsrud (0) SH&sgssir velLl5fto^Jwckxma* Miss, and Urry Can*, m. Uyrell, •raft, Miss., U. BOtSI. W«S> —l Memo l.silt 13M, Mexico, mtpolntod Ken Cirruthers, Ml, SMttfe.WMM 10. ... SANTA WONNNr Cam. - Amos Lin-Las Anitotos, knocked out Thod ____lUPTiidini. X4>a^ ♦. _ DALLAS — Jimmy Bmda. 17*. Dallas. —sh, tTBr Little Rock, $f4#* WHEEL ALIGNMENT • Sciontifically measured and correct cottar and camber • Correct toe-in and toe-out (the chief, cause of tire wear) Welt Can IJTF - wniy iplntad Mick HOW, Speln, A smoother. safer ride reducing acci-dent potential when we Tru-Balance and Tractieniza Your Tires and more important... adds longer life to your tires. KottSm! MONROE SHOCKS Free Installation 6 Cyl., V-8's, - AHX Beni __ MRi I teethe rwelghtt. . l ij Ti’Npto NOTTINGHAM, BnBIHHI sum. tS7,» England, awl ttAWb Special STANDARD ENGINE REB0ILDERS SOEOO Thia includes .. . Rings, Rod Boar-ings, Main Boaring, Grind Valvas, Fit Pint, Daglaxa Cylinder Walls, Gaskets, Ott and Laberl -ALSO- FACTORY REBUILT ENCUfES 226-6671 ao-ttlt Jack Daniel’s is Qiarcoal Mellowed the same way it was nearly a century ago The gentleman on the left started at Jack Daniel’s . Distillery a good many years ago. He learned our Charcbal Mellowing process from Lem Motlow, who learned it from his uncle, Mr. Jade himself. And a long time before he retired as dnpf richer last year, he taught these men. But he still comes out to the Hollow once in a while to make sure the ricks are being stacked and burned properly. I You see, the Qiarcoal Mellowing process calls for a pretty special charcoal. It starts with a hard maple, growing on high ground. The tree’s cut and brought down to our sawmill where it’s sawed up. Then the wood is stacked vqy carefully in ricks so it can be burned in the open dir. (That’s so the wind and smoke will carry away everything but the purest charcoal possible.) When the charcoal cools, it is ground up fine and packed tightly 10 feet deep in wooden vats. Next, our just-made whiskey is trickled in. And what comes out 10 days later ... drop by drop... is only die smooth sippin’ part, ready for aging. This ancient Tennessee process is rime-consuming and costly because it has to be done just right. But we agree with our richer ' emeritus here that what it does for jack Daniel’s is worth all the.pains we take. And after a sip, we believe, you'll agree too. CHARCOAL MELLOWED & DROP 6 BY DROP . TENNESSEE WHISKEY • 90 PROOF BY CHOICE • DISTILLED AND BOTTLED BY JACK DAN IEL DISTI HER Y * LYNCHBURG (POP. 384), TINN. THE PQNTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1964 TWENTY-SEVEN p/enn Miller Disappearance Still i SaMpON|r ," Hylton reeds. “PiceadQ-JjC was almost deserted. The Opmans had oddly laid off for a jrhlle with titefr V-ls. “I’d boon having a little lata party at my flat, and Glean was one of the boys —mostly must-dans — who’d dropped by.* Miller — then tMding the concert orchestra of the supreme Allied forces and broadcasting from London to the troops — was the last man to leave toe party. * * * ■ "[if '■ '1 “I walked outside the flat with Mm,” said Hylton. “He looked up in the eoU night sky, and said, ‘Well, Jack, it’ll soon be over now.* I'm sure he was referring to toe war. Ho and Miller and said go«fl>ye at about 2 NORTH U AKI2 V None ♦ AKQJ1076 to J 10 8 WEST BAST to J ID 14 to 7 6 5 V K 10 8 V 9732 toll ass to Q 7 S 2 to 9 6 4 3 SOUTH (D) to AQ9 WAQJ834 ♦ •2 toAK North and South vulnerable Bomb West North Baal 1 to Pass 3 to Pass IP Pass Sto Pass SN.T, Pass IV Pass 7N.T. Pass Pass Fa« Opening lead—4 J. By OSWALD JACOBY A bid in toe dub convention , as developed by Harold S. Vanderbilt is the pimp response to one chib to show a solid suit. Specifically, the club opening shows at least 18 high • card points. The one diamond re-ponse is negative and denies hokHng: A — two aces; B —I •an ace, king and a queen; C —two kings and two queens. All other responses are forces to game and a Jump response in a suit shows a solid suit of at least six cards. Ik chances are th JACOBY seven with the North and Sooth cards, bat the Vanderbilt convention made it a cinch. North’s three diamond r e sponse showed the solid diamond suit Note that two diamonds would have been a simple response since one diamond would be a negative bid only. % Astrological ^ Forecast || jt. By SYONEY OMARR Fx WoBoaUoy -Tbo wlM mon c*n,r*l< Ms Aostloy ARIES (MOT. t! gel wtiot you go Inner feelings. tot fully Informed, a convictions. Shrug off otrned only wffh me ft after M you HEED tog logoi mmSSftr. GEMINI (May n to Jung »): M around Information ososntial. Da HMI task research. Bo sura of Voursaff. Then you can make rapid progroas. Ex- m alert. Olhanrlsa. ce to goto EMO-Do not repent past 'THTlJuly II to August a): Caratr matter takes precedence. Realize you nay hove to 4n a IRtta." Than you actually maka Rtotor — hxfty. wtjjjom. State ^oTiaI* a to tapf. a>: Trykto ...—-.1—.... •- —• - '•—•■nation could ira you are talon. Toko ^UBRA SELF-"" bp I In fruitless n ifflc. Double Cf self-exprIssion. “r you will e to Oct. at: Kay, to *—-*• —I Let * Vjur * Scorpio (Oct. a to Nov. : sura likely to be OBphed .by You must be patient, careful. day "fa IRPIO ( likely » must be Involve- _ _____ —------ prise evoryond by being extremely fi %£s f IB 9BKVIIR/ BHvw---- vnN comfort. Gfaplay una* Be cheorful. TNn you will South bid three hearts as a waiting measure and Nerth made a second Jump to five diamonds. This second Jvqnp showed either an eight-card diamond suit or seven plus an outside king. It also denied an outside ace since North would have cue bid if he had an ace in addition to his solid suit. South's five no • trump bid had to be a request for kings. It could not be a request to shew strength is suit because North had already shown n solid suit Hence North’s six-heart bid showed two kings and South had no trouble counting 13 easy tricks at no-tnimp. V*CflRD Sensei* The bidding has been: West North East 14 Dble. Tam 2 * Pass IV Pass T You, South, hold: Mitt VAQII 4KJ54 48 What do you do now? A—This bus — tour hearts! TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of bidding three hearts, your partner bids three diamonds over your two spades. What do you do now? a.m. A tow hours later and Miller was gone. SLIGHT FOG Miller, then 33, headed far Paris with a pilot to arrango a . .'J“ ‘;fcr Ms „ ' The single-enghw Horseman took off from on airport near London in a slight fag. IflQer’s disappearance was not reported until 12 days lator. A tone communique said an intense search ovar the plane’s intended MO-mile route had yielded no dues. * * * “Lost,” said the communique, "presumed dead.” Waters of the English Channel were searched but no wreckage was found. RUMORS SPREAD Miller’s disappearance fostered rumors which still circulate. These ranged from the belief that the Gomans shot down his plane to the theory that be crashed in France and, an amnesia victim, died later, unrecognized. BERRY’S WORLD happened to him,” says Hylton, “but on that night he did keep saying that be wanted to get near the fighting and Jbat he was going to do his damndest to get a peek at it. But who really knows?” , Project Gemini Unmanned Plight Is Slated Jan. 5 IVVBNT Y-EIGHT TUB POliTIAC PKKbb TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1WI Selling Pressure Is Heavy Says Coverage of Aged to Stay Stock Market Drops Sharply The following are top prices coVering sales of iocaliv &•**>■■ pnxiuce bv growers and sold by them in wholesale package lota. Quotations art furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets at of Friday- Insurance Chief Vows Continued Protection trend as Investors followed their usual habit of seeking refuge In these stocks during a down market, and also because of a proposal this week that the price of gold be Increased throughout the world. INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE No particular piece of bad news triggered the further decline but analysts stressed that the industrial average had broken through the “support” level NEW YORK (AP) r- Heavy selling pressure knocked the stock market down to a sharp loss early this afternoon. Key stocks, fell fractions to around 3 points. In contrast with yesterday's lazy trading (4.34 million shares total) today’s first two hours brought turnover of 3.33 million shares compared with 1JB million for the like period yesterday. Prices declined on the American Stock Exchange, with gold shares higher. Corporate and U.S. Govern- Continued LANSING (API __________ protection under the Blue Cross-Blue Shield plans for the aged and those living on fixed incomes was Pledged today by State Insurance ^Commissioner The decline was general, taking . in steels, motors, rails, chemicals, airlines, retails, tobaccos, electronics, drugs aerospace issues, electrical equipments and other big stock groups. Gold mining stocks continued Mayeraon made his statement at the opening of a public hearing in Lansing on proposals by Produce mil axtr MM Poultry and Eggs duck! I 31-Mi h light type Mas ii iJE iKJlere «iS 'Navy typ* ymme y W young torn firm pricei Oh hen turkey! sue offering* appear light an DETROIT BOOS DETROIT (AP) - Egg price* peM per OMMt by first receiver! (including U.S.): White* Grad* A Jumbo (Mil extra large 1U4; taro* 32-35; medium 24-trWf (mail atWlii Browns Grad* A targe 32-32W; medium 24-21; check* Item CAOO soma, boos 'CHICAOd (AP) — CMcaao Mercantile Bxehange iWtw ataadyi whelaaata buying prices unchanged; 93 More AA STM; 92 A S7Mi n I ft^it c |M> cere CHICAOO POULTRY a (AP)—(USDA) — Live Livestock OaTBOIT (APi—(Ul Smell luMly everege n Wears active, steady to grade! weedy to —1~ “ steady, B M fTS-ss! ^Hogs 200-225 strong; I an active ..... Wm to prime 24.00-24.75i high #52 to advance against the general t bonds were mixed. The New York Stock Exchange Ms ' 4s.) 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St Peckaglna » I? mu StudBbuker Sun Oil 1b tTc'f «m 88 - w 11M 11 + M J1 ine 11M 11M ... . 19 14 14 14 .. 4* an* *2 at - w 41 #* 41W DM — W MM MM MM — M 41 3P4 33 m If Hi 99M 39W + M J IM* 17M 10 + M Si DW 57V* 57'4-V* 7 IIM MW 1IW ' ' S5 45W 45 «M + M • i*w law mm ..... 2 ISM ISM ISM..... 55 SOM 54W S4W — M -31 if+3 1 FT F”* SI 8m V 37M-W 14 ta> TaMate. Only M cents et Sknme Grothare Drugs. tf. JAMU BrifefttliWtV WBf S. Merry gsrtahnaei BOX REPLIES • At II E.m. today tiiere ware replies at The' Pres* Office ta the fat- II, 18, It, «, §7, It, 84, 85, N, Us 111, Iff. c,-agias,rggMri TW5 HBSHiwSSBr- FUNERAL HOME wpaariwad Mr Funarasv woBiSro ~mn . mm DTE. Pursley eUNTOON ‘ lUNeRAL HOME VbOUftS-SiPLE EeteMUhed Over a* V; API ECE-COMBO ANY OIRL OR WOMAN N#EOING a trkindSy adviser, phone FE 2-5122 Mn.lMk, r- - — — - - Urn. I Confidential. ______ „____A)ml8Tli ___s plus I class biiom Mr only SIS. Leant Che-Cha, Swing. Pax Tret. 235-0372 tor appointment aWlppKTte FE fm* or 4M-I4*A FOUND - BROWN KEY CASE ON ^rdL^tlEMi Sanderson. FE H4N. found: WIQ&iNA gravad. Near Central High ‘ ■arite.i LOST GOLfi B1ACIL E Y with OVER 25 CHARM*. MUCH SENTIMENTAL VALufc, SUCH, M S OR 4 F R ATE R N I TV PINS, MICHIGAN FOOTBALL. SMALL WATCH CAM, FISH, Slip. F L U M B SOS, HORSESHOE, SHELL. BTC. LIBERAL REWARD TR 3-2534. L&iT - MALE OI*jUAN Hair Felntar, vicinity SlivartMli, M24 area, FE 44177 days. FE LOST: IAMONTH-OLO BRITTANY Spanbl. mats, From Groan Lake vtcMty. Name "Wiitle". i.d. tag an collar. Orange and whlte.Abevt 20 Inches hl#i. Goad reward. FE HOt ten, after S mm- call EM 5-723*.__________ LOST - BLACK AND TAN A N O Airedale irixed, answers la "Otar-He". Strayed tram Lake Orion vicinity. 4M-IM3. STRAYED: GERMAN SHEPHERD. femab/4 rnos. old, chlldren'e pat. Reward. Vicinity Judean St. FE H1T2.____________> . 2 MEN—EVENINGS steady workers. CALL *514424. S time, 1 lor part-time work, lor a company who In eavaral years ol ggarailan not never had a strike or a layoff. Steady, year-round work. In encase of Slit Mr fuN time, or SM part lima. Far Information call Mr. Baker at FE MM srn-f ghi. ing fri mit. I. FE 2-021 f —FE2-21 >r mat*. Group hoapit- ar necessary. CALL M IND^ FRU tram till T ATTENTION Start Immsdiately Mechanically Inclined Man No Mbs experlenca necessary as we wW train you. Must be abb b ‘ ---- on S440 gar month ta b permanent. Call OR t along srt. Jab Qualify to operate any motor i building equlpmant Mjga BBM year* experience in boring, P titling, assembly, etc Experts at apply. Sgaeawg SRml a ye Paid hollders. 527-1117. (y employment, with a monthly Income, at well celbnt opportunity tor i be moving M a new targer kxeilon. with a I potential. This is an _ - An experienced man can't afford b pass! SPARTAN DODGE m s. Saginaw St. FE a-tiai Appliance Salesmen Pontiac's Largest Rttail Department Store . .Salary—Commission ..Earnings to $8,000 yaar. . To raplaci salesman recently promoted. . .No Canvassing v . Car Necessary .. Permanent opening-5 days a week. benefits. ..Apply Personnel Department doily between 9:30 a.m. and 9 pjn. Montgomery Ward / Hetipfu|8w|J M MILL AND LATHI HANDS, kadirt OafsTies N. Martas, Csaar. AUTOMOTIVE ENGINE REBUILDER 7Sf\.............. ARE YOU WILLING TO WORK HARD b earn *7M gar year and wHk tab ---- unlimited .***# -it 4wiw and b*u* *eod car. R apart to Michigan Stab Employment Serv-Ic*. *42 Oakland, wednaeday at S ■ cm. AM tar Mr. Bryan. Auto Body Painter Plenty et wprk ta be 4sn*. Ha*** MuriM, Ctarkston, esk tor Mr. KwitDuaMy. 34 s. Mam St. Apply b person I Auto Mechanic ‘ MONIGATTI Chrysler, FtymeWth, Vplbnt 40*5 Auburn Rd., Utica BOOV AND FAINT MAN, APbLY in par sen, lit S. Rechaibr Read. Chrlseman Chevrolet, Rochester, s6Vt, It to 22, F6R #ULL-tlME raaMurant work. Apply Hit's, art KTiadar, Bump and Paint Man Goa* pay. plenty et work. VAN CAMP CHEVROLET, Milter*. MU _5SP ^^■"■iKjpbniy *.~ZSffiAUTO,°EEY*d»7 ■01.56V wantbo Mr pull time •mpbywwnt. Apply k person y, frmn —‘ — steedy dAhWffUts WAMT16. uHI6n —L Rough-In work. OL l-*7M s. t&im e»f--------- ■s. 145 W. Huron.__ CAREER SALESMAN $525 MONTH, GUARANTEED It wu ire ambltbue. married, wiling ta work, we need tour men ta hab ut handb bad* pouring tab mb area. Net tonal Cancarn. *•—■■— —da cam—1— isrlng an __________call LI 3-- CHANdlNG JOBS? >45*5 tar eppdntmenl. _____________ _____S3H372. DENTAL TECHNICIAN. FUU. M WI4434S. DESIGN ENGINEER, EXPERT ancad ta plant layout. Or with air handling equipment desirable. Tab-phone or write tor appointment. Claude B. Schneibley Co., Hally. DEPENDABLE rth JUMP** 6n Brunswick auto, pin sailers. Aon ply In parson. Lakewood Lanai, Sin DO YOU NEED MONIYt I NB*6 hab. part or tags 'MHte FE saw. __tor Interview. OR *4477. GATstA+IOtrATTENDANT, DAYS, experienced. Beet ot working conditions, good gay. 47 S. Huntor, Birmingham. Ml 44*54. OAS STATION ATTBNOENT. FULL or part Urn*. Must be anpartonead. Sunoco station. Telegraph at Ma-■618. _________________■ GIVE YOUR FAMILY A GREAT BIG CHRISTMAS PRESENT I FIND YOURSELF A JOB, THROUGH INTERNATIONAL 690 E. MAPLE Ml 4-3692 GUITAR TtACHlA WANTlfi. HEATING SERVICE MAN. UNUSU nMdaelhi for experienced mai .OAHSSI. »,.Wnc«V« , m YEARS OR OLdfck 86A lenitor end general maintenance work, day*. A steady position. Write Pontiac Frees Sen S4. MARRIED MAN 25-40 WITH CAR. Ta manage an attabIWiad grocery route In tbit area. Excellent opportunity tor the man who can apply himaplf In i*H manapwnent Cell Dairen collect. LO 7-454* tor miscellaneous IRON A N 6 structural abet <“"— Itt parlance or Ptoeee mail —-----■------- previous I mg layer and salary ex-pected b FardSc Freea Bex )J5. ’NEED 2 EXPERIENCED SERVICE station man, muat have references. 5555 Andereenvtlb Rd., WebrforcL OB >4511. Aa1T~fimi~bdi.iVifcY hUlP wanted to work avaa. Mid, weekends must have car. MJO Inside help needed, apply attar 7, Chicken Delight, 13*2 W. Huron. , PERMANENT PARt-TIME Would SM • week does the gap between Income and outjot Flexible 20 hours wiably. tmone *24-3221 or 54547*2 to arrange tatar- -PORTER- Frebrably from 4* b 5* yaar*. ob. Exparbncad. las Tam Martney ______L Ana, 2141 tar fire degt. Age. 2145 tor italic* dept. Applications received at clerk's ob flee until 5 p.m„ g * rteedy. em^ment7wweeri^2M«! experience not necaeeary. A. L. »jR53r«s !?^bn Ad-. Trey. 5*547*8. _______ ^J itaghac. cm SSS- SHd?t toD(L,*Mj*f WaVU Kelp WriMMte f***Af*. TQ _ S| ■ Monr'Misni sajrs&a, ___TSum. i Oood*taSUI? e^ TIME FOR A CHANGE PUNT SUPERVISORS PERSONNEL MANAGERS HIGH CALIBER MEN ACCUSTOMS) TO DEALING WITH PEOPLE ■ INTERESTED IP YOU WOULD _________ IN LASTING AND FERMANEN • EMPLOYMENT THIS MAY WELL EE YOUR OPPORTUNITY 8f”A LIFETIME. SEVERAL F0SITIO5U OPEtriS SIMM to MMM RANGE LET US PROVE IT TO YOU MUST SR ABLE TO (TART WITH- mujmiii FOR PERSONAL AND CONFIDENTIAL DISCUSSION OF TWO POSITION, PHONE MR. SMITH AT FE 5-0431 FOR INTRRVIIW APPOINTMENT. iVtTiMS SALES ENGINEER, SAL- r plastic snpMimct. Salary $11,-Jr^JCagrwrltar, j^yr^ experience nan- 'mIchigan Personnel SERVICES C0RP, semi-rItiBeo gentlemBn for work hi lauebry. FE 4-1*30 tar Immediate openings. Cell FE IIS er apply RCA Service Co., _.l Elbe bath Lake Rd., Pontiac Egual Opportunity Emptayar. WANT Permanent WORK? Pre-Christmas Job Specials, Now At International, Opportunities You Won't Find Later In The Month. 690 E.J Maple Birmingham Ml 4-3692 WANTED WANTBO-SALESMAN bar countar tolling Un modem izetlon. Apply 7540 Cooley Lake Rd.. Union Lake._______ WE NEED A MAN OVER 30 FOR BMd.>WriteI«M. Active ’ MIDDLE:AGto .LADY cere tar 4yeer ob tody yu.. - FE 5400*. atTIntion T6V------ DEMONSTRATORS Join tor national argaMbitan, earn mo to n*Jfi^T£mmwrv No convening, no party elan. Cali FE 54715 between 5 and 1. A HAPPY NEW YEAR how aaty » b to en|oy a fine Income with AVON'S product*. Full-or part-time openings NOWI Please phone FE 4450* or writ* Drayton Pblns P.O. Box 51. 64kV siVflfM, i 6ayi, Livi"i^ If desired. *M. MM1M. " fcAlY SITTiR, OWN CAR. 1 cKBd, May weak, * ta <:M. 5744713. BABY ilTTER WANTED, VICINITY FE 541*0. UalarLaka am* EM Mitt BOOKKEEPER ~ Mjsrr=| - MICHIGAN PERSONNEL SERVICES C0RP. 73* S. Adams Rd. tlrmtasham _________*474*40 BUS GIRL WANTED FOR FULL time employment. Apply In parian only, Frank's Restaurant, Kaego Harbor. COUNTER OIRL FOR DRY CLEAN- WAITRESSES Far day and night ehlft. Top wage*. 'weidwari. “Hmefswakendt. Apply ft Hu*£*l Colonial Heuee, MWDIxIa. __ MxPiRilNCEB-WaitrSsi WANT-ed tar nights. Nbkta Paw Food*, 2*30 Highland, Hlghbnd. Apply watarbm ------ 4553 w, Huron. OIRL' WltH TRANiFORUTigHT-4 • weak ta gat iRaab and a« housekeeping. 2 adults. GIRLS—GIRLS—GIRli heur to start. Adply iMI.iM eta, or M p.m. 1* W/Huran. Office ML Hout«>reiew .luWMPira lady iiurrkD, stay with jru wwMLM'sMSTarlSR SSSa. MaTuM vWJMan 86r bAiVilT-(UTUII WOMAM fOft B!Tail wr^^aaLcxx PIZZA COOK, 1XFRRIRNCRD PREFERRED. GOOD PAY, FRINGE BENEFITS, PfU PIPER RESTAURANT, 4370 W. HURON. CALL PE 5-4741. uglMilb practical nurse tor MO'S office, S4 “— * —" Trir >y — Manpower Inc. 14 S. CASS TELEPHONE WORK Open tags for 4 glrta, no experl-once necessary. (45 ana week guarantee plus Incentives and bonuses. 52 waaks a yaar. Apply 10 e.m. to 4 p.m„ I* W. Huron, WArtklte WITH ARILL «M». SHORT ORDER COOK, AAALE OR tomato. Apply Gave: Grill, 575 YOUNG MAN1 High school graduate to tell retail on our u bet bar. On the lab . . c----- re looking a grpwtn group ■-and I w. only. Firestone Store, 1M W. ran SI. An equal opportunity employer IwpleyiEt Ageoclee 9 EVELYN EDWARDS DENTAL ASSISTANT ..... S225 Age IMS. GLAMOR RECEPTIONIST ... SIM Ago 25-35. Tranap. Tyring, RECEPTIONIST • SECRETARY 5400 Age SMS. LPN-DOCTOR'S OFFICE .. 5400 S years experience. KEY PUNCH ............. MHO I year* experience. JSiuASaoer TRAINEE Age IMS. Transport TELEPHONE K 4J1544 • MICHIGAN PERSONNEL Services Corp. 77* S. ADAMS RD. BIRMINGHAM 647-4660 hutredleiii-Scbeele 10 A Better Income by Learning IBM Machines LEARN IBM KEY PUNCH, MAp CHINE OPERATION AND WIR. ING, COMPUTER PROGRAMMING. 4-WBBK COURSES, FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE, NO MONEY OOWN. GENERAL INSTITUTE 2252S Woodward Famdab CALL COLLECT 543-9737 RE 4-4509 ATTENTION 1 Mechanics needed, enroll now Auto Mechanics Auto Body ColliMton WOLVERINE SCHOOL 14M W. Ford. Detroit WO Mitt FINISH HIGH SCHOOL At H<5m8. Dipbme ewardad. Writ* or ahant tor F REE booklet, Nettonal School ot Horn* Study. 177*1 JpSN Read, Dapt. FF, Warren, Michigan. Phone SL 7 342*. ’ IBM TRAINING Learn ISM, Keypunch, machine operation 'and earing, 1401 con* outer .programming. Mich. Stab Beard at Education aaproiwd. Free placement Mrvbs. Free parking. Complete financing - No money SYSTEMS INSTITUTE FE 443*8_____________54742M Work WnleB Mole ________11 A-1 CARPENTER WANTS WORK at all kinda. *741(74 ALL FHAsir DBNEhAL buTLB-h* cm^fr’^SSusal’’ da. ?"myi self. 557-4311. Ask tor Hamid. CARPENTER WORK 3342155 EXPERIENCED PAINTING; IX-cmKi eptrk. Pi MM*. ! LIGHT HAILING ODD JOSS OlfWRf TI*Al w6klf. ^p^NTiWjpW.flOB' J6WT- CLEANING AND WALLWASHUtO. IRONlNGS^WkHTED MRS. MOI-ean. FE 5-7517. _________ PRODUC.. — ...w..RS SUPPLIES AND STRUCTURAL STEEL .. ■..... FI 45531 EUUJPING PRODUCTS I BUILDERS SUPPLlll ANO STRUCTUR/' CINDER AND CONCI iBssllsItbta' 'kpnwidbJBeridiBaa If USED I ' “ DrniMEMig 4 TaBeriBg l* ^Swlibie!1^ 'Jffig V& H: MBvteg aiii Tredtiteg H Ul MM* or *243515. I& REASONABLE Complete Insurance sea ROBERT TOMPKINS OR 4ISU LiGHt NAulino and MOVlMB, Otaap. Any kind. FE 54251 PBlEtiBj * loeerEtlBg 13 REASONABLE FRICE5. FE 5---- QUALITY WORK ASSURED, PAlNt- Ttl*visi«N-RE tm fit, birch cupboards, gas hMl. i olr-cond It tenor unit. Utility Sit MMhKiKy CawwitSiit*11' 5to anf'MMPlng. m plu* dosing coat*. ^ __INT LOT. Judah Lake area., 75x3*1 toot. Blacktop StraaL Near par month land can-NORTH OF ROCHESTER, Wipe CITY OF SYLVAN LAKE Flrsf offering. Nearly mw S-b ream with vestibule antranea. n____ carpeting, attractive . ____kitchen kick refrigerator, full ___ mm chad garage and large, wall Erirriniiil y *,*'0##- ,erms *° K. L."fempleton, Realtor W Orchard Lake Read'M249M SEE THIS FRESHLY “Can't Find Rentals?" ova Into a government heme I i little a* MW and have pay-OWM ~----------at. City wide Ideation*. Smiley INCLUDING SUNDAY CLARENCE SfREEf Just off N. 'Parry. 3 badroot.... . car garage, all heal, priced far Immediate said at 14,500. Terms. Saa or call WM. B. MITCHELL. WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE 14 E. Huron FE 4-5101, ivaa. 0024141 KBBMI FE 54545 Vallaly OL 14413 KAISER ALCOA ALUMINUM SIO-' ING. AWNINGS. OPT T Oft & STORM WINDOWS-POORS, PATIOS, ROOFING. SUPERIOR FE 44177,_____________ NEW HOUSE AND REMODELING KAR-LIFE BATTERY CO, Oanaratari Regulator* Ifarii Batteries $5.95 Exchange PE 5-It 14 3*0 Auburn Floor Sowodiag £ CARL L. BILLS SR., FLOOR SAND Inu. FE 2-57W. JOHN TAYLOR, 'FLOOR LAYING, •ending and ftnlMilng. 25 year* axparSaca. 331-4075. R. G. SNYDER. FLOOR LAYING. Black Uqta| CHRISTMAS GIFTS FO* BVJIRY. ONE. Full On* of boat* and mo-tort, cans** and mariM oocaam riot. U*a aur tree layaway plan. “Your Ivinrude Dealer" Harrington Boat Works Alum. windows, door*, aiding. ADDITIONS GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Ettlmala* ~ OR 4.1SI1 NEED UNUSUAL REMODELING? CARPENTRY. NEW, EEPAIR AND farmlca. 3154001. INTERIOR F trailb.4*^ Cement Work canaad cement cam FE 5417.! Fireplace Weed HeatiMf Service Floor Tialmg May ami SMgh Hdcc EXCITING PUN IN FRESH, CLEAN outdoors. Bring ysur group, *n|ey thrill of horse-drawn Heigh ride* through anew covered ftotoiL wood*. spaghetti, french bread, tasty salad, ♦teeming coffee. Write, call far free brochure. Upland Hills Farm, Noomi iM^iuvrEogiit mprovements ______JUtpns. steps aSing and cam# m Construction Co. 4 FE 5-9122 HOUSES FOR SALE TO EE MOVED - All modern, delivered la your let. D'hondt Wracking Campeny, gw Jaatyn. _______ Jaritgriol Service SOUTH SIOE^-COMPLETE MAINTE- MOTOR EXCHANGE CO. ENGINE KEBUaOING-ALL CARS AND TRUCKS EXPERT TUNE-UPS U t. SAGINAy Plastering Service PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES P. Movers FE 44444 PLASTERING, NEW AND REPAIR Private Investigators apoMoamp uHHtyJ IfOirxlM'). Lake rights WOWI st,ooo, *300 could i In. 151.74 month phis tu_ Bl Insurance. HAGSTROM REALTOR, 4NI W. Huron, OR------ call 412-0435. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Large treat, L so feet Mail year-rou Blacktop rat •cnaoi ous ar ooor, W miles nai of Pontiac. 51,000 down, <40 f CLARENCE C, RIDGEWAY REALTOR M W. Waltpn 331-40*4 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Borders Pslnl Creak. <7,— . WANTED LISTINGS IN ORION AND CLARKSTON AREA. ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE I4M< 2M W. Walton PE 54712 multiple uiriBalimviaF “It’s the usual amount of homework. It just seems a lot'' because I’m doing it!” IEADY FOR OCCUPANCY, NEW 4 BEDROOMS, t BATHROOMS. PlNIMO ROOM, 2W • CAR AT-TACHED OARAGE, STORMS AND •CRKlNt. LARGE CENTER EN-trance, 75' SPLIT LEVEL, LAK^ PRIVILEGES. <23,900. NO CLOSING COST. OPEN EVENINGS. FE 44545 or 01-7397. Sale Hemes "SMITH" PADDOCK STREET ^ St _________-brine room and kitchen. Sta finished tecahd floor easily ba thada Into "BUD" Bloomfield Township Acres Attractive 3-bedreom ham*, lal privilege*, lecaled In daalrable dude* Mparate dining roorr baswhent, gat heat and he Mr. Only SIAM down, balance an land centred. “Bud" Nicholie, Realtor m Ml. Clamant tt. FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M. FE 5-0198 R0LFE H. SMITH, Realtor 144 S. Telegraph FE 3-7241 EVES. FE 3-7301 Bsldwln-Columbia area. <251 moves I. Payments chasper than ■roaeftt ram, at under 141, laxas and Insurance. 3324324. 141 W. Cornell. OPEN DAILY ♦ fo I, Including your prat Including SYLVAN MANOR .- y 4-BEDROOM HOMES. 4*27300 SYLVAN Ol-lCM vacant - m6ve Sight in. i Tubbs Rd., off Airport Rd. owner, OL 14974.______ WALOON AT ALMOND L A N E, Clertutan. Brick, 1350 sq.ft. I174H. ARISTOCRAT >UILDERS TOWERING OAK . Nestled amid the tree* you'll this pink and pretty at-— sided cozy home. Yeung too W. Huron OR 4 Evenings call 024435 WARDS ORCHARD Claaa to Whitfield School, spa* —— '—me home, basement. _____je. $7.70. Terms. J. J. J0LL, Really FE 1-340________or ____ 412 LOOK! Ranch $12,375 Bi-Level * $12,875 0nly$125 Down LARGE LOTL LAKE PEIV LEGES, PAVED STREETS, CEI TRAL WATER SYSTEM. OCCUPY JANUARY Coming About Jan. 15th , New 1W Bath Bi-Laval Buy Before Prices Increase Open IMS, closed Tl Taka Commerce Rd., I_,_ South Commerce, 2 miles to Gian, gory him riO>t la medal* Americana Homes 624-420C WATERFORD AREA featuring carpeted living n hall. Gga heat, enclosed p .«%3-c.rtgaT and^l Terms M suit. *10,900-*900 do HILLTOP REALTY 473-5234 ‘ WATERFORD* TOWNSHIP -.»A*fO open Sun. FE 44109 Wallpaper Stemitr Floor laird art, polisher*, hand senders, furnace vacuum cleaners Oakland Fuel A Palm, 434 Or chard Lake Ave. FE 5415S. I basement, theta two la at yours ter Christmas. HILLTOP REALTY 673-5234 MIXED AREA TUCKER REALTY Must sell by owner, a few houses. Incomes MgRMOij properties. Econe Dixie Hwy. Mixed Area CHRISTMAS SPECIAL BIG BOY DRIVE-IN, DIXIE At Silver Lako-Totograph at Huron. BOB'S RESTAURANT, 1011 JOSLYN Tree TriRMRing Service A.e: dalby tree service Tree, stump ramovsl, trim, Iran* planting. FE 5-3005, FE 5-3025. 0AM 4 UkRRY'5 TREE TRIMMING B RamevaL FE 24449 gr tntm. HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME your pries. Any Dm*. Ft S4S95 LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING ruotrish, fill dirt, grading and grav el and front and loading. FE 24403 lioMY HAULiMi BaraoES ANi basamanta claangd. 474-ISO. TALBOTT LUMBER 2!?? JS5SS. -^ ••^Saa'jarylc** FE 44575 I, L*s CLEANING -Heat and build Inga. mcanOR14415. A INTERIOR AN 6 EXTERIOR palming, I r * g asHmaloo. jWM-anfiad. R eaten abli ram AAA PAlrttlOe Add decoBaT- I’m* Trucks tc Rent Vb-Ton pickup* IWToA tfak* TRUCKS - TMCTMl AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks - Semi-Trailers Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. .<25 I. WOODWARD PE 444A PE 41441 Open Dally Including Sungp “ Upkebtarieg MEIER A OLSON UPHOLSTERING FE 5-3*97 Fraa. Estimate* PE <-1<54 BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS walls and arindaw*. Roes. tertian guaranteed. FE S-M3I. Ml It ACL C WALL WAiHltfO -and up per room. W4»5i. nar kit. Payment* left* than rat Hurry. „ R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 IS Oakland Open 9-7 ffar hours, FE S441S er FE t-1344 LIST YOUR HOME WITH US Mixed Area WHITTEMORE STREET. NEAR PONTIAC MOTOR VACANT, IMMEDIATE POSSESSION on (Ms 1 ------*-— dlnlng room, Cl full batamenf, contract ar* ___ . ft* In by Christmas If you hurry. . WARDEN REALTY Model at 61 Court N. of Mt. Clemens Call 334-6683 JAMES A. TAYLOR, Realtor 7731 Highland Rd. (MJ9------- Evenings EM 3-7544 Waterford Extra nlc* 3-btdroom ham* lecat-ad an large landscaped let hi the village at Waterford. Hat large living room, large kitchen which Includes refrigerator, rang*, wither and dryer. This ham* hat garage, oil ham and Inchidat ca—* ana drag**. The condition of hem* It perfect. See It fodsiyl DON WHITE, INC. 191 Dixie Hwy. <74 OPEN'OAILV TO < PJt*. jjrwl. fully totutotodT oak doors, plat' fared wells, full besemtm, nice neighborhood, das* to sdnoll. will sad on Isnd aonfract, 112,-too, SUM dawn. PHONE 682-2211 vvlWlS Val-U-Way GOV'T Representative ORION TWP. $250 DOWN, $45 PER MO. INCLUDING PRINCIPLE A NO INTEREST. 1-BEDROOM, FAMILY SIZE KITCHEN AN DOINING AREA, GAS HEAT. LINCOLN JR. HIGH AREA $250 DOWN, $49 PER MO/ EE NS. PERRY PARK $250 DOWN, $53 PER M0. INCLUDING PRI^IPLE AND I" SERVICE OPEN DAILY 7 TO 7 SCHRAM CUSTOM eylLOERS ARCHTv—SERVICE—FINANCING Your Plant On Yaur Lot Ours Or Ours WE have; SEVERAL TWO- AND THREE - BEDROOM HOMES available with low down payments. mMm payments START AT APPROXIMATELY MM. OFF JOSLYN 3 badraem*. carpeted living ream, large dining mam, kitchen with bulgrin even and rang*. Garage with extra storage space, pafle fir outdoor living, i Meek* to Narlhgrh High. Price reduced to HUM. Term* can ba arranged. DUPLEX realm "rwWd! vrxtf IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 741 JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 Aland Open *-9 tours, PE <4410 or FE 1-1144 5T YOUR HOME WITH US IRWIN NORTH END — 3-bedroom bunge- Flsher Body. Has gaa ham. lavatory, carpeting and alun. siding. Can ba bought an FHA h mar yardldnca. Has NORTHWEST SUEURBAH — Ham It i lovely 2 bedroom heme situated on comer tot wHh Scar garage, has carpeting in Ihring room and rugs In tha bedroom. Situated near shopping cantor. NORTHEAST SUBURBAN - NIC* ANNETT Washington Jr. Nigh J' „ ' sun gawn. West Suburban LA2^NBY WEST SIDE _ " 2_ with gas heat. Screened and ON THIS BNII BOV LAZENEY, Realtor <*multTplTiistinoseWicIW< Frushour Struble Life With Father will j* much ftgUftr wh*B you :3r“vri^r slums carpatog.1 JMMG Wntor matching ouHt-fnt, i IpHk mm m W» . i a wm patio, an canal la Cedar Island Lain. <34,790. , A-l BUYS TRI-LEVEL BEAUTY lly roam with flrapfaica. batoxa kitchen wINi bullf-lnt. Hal water heal, torps S-------“ ^ ------- Immedlafs as IN BY CHRISTMAS mat of Pantiec. 1 bad rooms a family raim. carp Mad Hv-mem. with fireplace, separate 65 A. Country Estate wfth fireplace, fRMts $n*Clf terttoO gerege. Haatod WATERFORD REALTY O'NEIL IB! S i The Top Trader ling dining room, 1 2 NEW BEAUTY RITE MODELS Open . 3 to 7 Mon. Thru Fri. Open 1 to 5 Sat. and Sun. 6808 Bluegrass FE- 8-0466 STOUTS. Best Buys Today rag*. This he neighborhood i in ba douM* an land cemract Office Open Sunday, 1 to 4_ MULTIPLE LltTINO SERVICE (conn GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR 1 P>,‘W IS w? Walton ________PE HM HAYDEN NEW HOMES 3 BEDROOMS TRI-LEVELS RANCHES IIGCar Garage * BT Let fncudsd WILL EUILO ON YOUR LOT -OR OURS Open Mon. thru Sat. 7-5 J C. HAYDEN, Realtor 3156 Laks Angelus Drive Lake Angelus Golf View Estates course. MoOtm built-in kitchen, large family ream, waik-eut base-mam phis pltsdwd 1%-cpr garage. Dial* Highway M Sllvar Lake Read. Rkmf to Walton Blvd.. toft to Lake Angelus Orlve, rigm le model. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor ISM PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 7 I* 7 -------- MLS EM 34475 ACRE - WITH THIS LL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS — ^oVcsKSSplEWwrr,tii**** W>1 — ! WARREN STOUT, Realtor --^ *1. OpOykS Rd. Ph. FE 54145 CREDIT PROBLEMS ANO RE TIREIS. For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 ANYTIME SAT. OR SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY GAYLORD WEST0WN REALTY 471 Irwin off East Blvd. FE <-2743 attornaons. LI 24477 Ev4 FIRST IN VALUE hiitW WEST SUB - 3-bedroom end oal fireplace, wall-to-wall carpal, g heat, attached garage, lake ph I leges. *12,500, farms. WALNUT LAKE - vac*nf. 1 bl roams with' attached garage, lar tot, leka privileges. >, MWlW* hAWdi«rrtad. .irwJhiaHwiy or lomity room, attachedlib-car garage. All Mila on WCxIW corr— M. Only S14.J00. Terms or trad*. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor , MS PONTIAC CK. RD. OPEN » h OR 44417 MLS OL 141 « LthAcfMfe I.ot loos than sioo DORRIS A SON, REALTORS M Olxl* Hwy. OR 44M MULTIPLE LI ST I NO SERVICE JOHNSON WATERFORD TOWNSHIP 3bedreom ranch homo, large Dying rqgm *™ lace, beemad I, storagt narana on roar i lot. WsRSm distance to . Priced at eniy »,?». S4S0 DOWN movo In today. S bad-rotm home sltuatad an largt lot. Wilt suburban arta. Payments only in par month. HA TERMS lovely Argent ranch horns, local ad close to Water-lord High School, gat heal, family room, tttochMearaed, largo fenced comer lot. Vary wqH lend-tetped. 'Approximately 11,000 Including coott wiM^meva you In. SONNEE JOHNSON 404441 JOHNSON A SON FE 4-2533 MILLER I ■ ROOM WATERPORO RANCH In now condition. Carpeting. Iliad bath, batomont, now garage. M. itroge^Only SI It, gat ih fin . HI-HIIL VILLAGE A- Planned Community ^sissassrts.’sis with ’ H|U| LADD'S, INC y 114 Sunday ltd LAKE PRIVILEGES Rapid Lakt. north at wettan (j » lots, oath WWW. IS4S as WmNed Certructs-MH. AM Zinur's Realty Waterford Hill Manor Lam* sstats lots on on* at Oi Iwid County's mast boautttul st dMsIsns. Pricsd from SX7SS. DON WHITE, INC 6fini DAILY TO I P.M. 1 TO 50 UNO CONTRACTS UmeMhf wontsd. Sts IN Mar 'warren STOUT, Realtor OS N. Opdyks Rd. FE HI41 Open Rvs*. ‘til I pjh. CASH-FOR UND tONTRAfTS, irtyplo. PE S44SI. . C PANGUS, Realty *30 mm or- Call CaMsd NA y-nis Salt Farms . 4Vk ACRES - 1-BEDROOM H. C. NEWINGHAM 34-ACRE FARM tor hers**. Near MS4 In M mors. IILtaa. Tsrm*. . C PANGUS, Realty 634 MIS Call Collect NA 7-MI5 . MIKES AREA 4 BEDROOMS, ■t S4.SS4 lull prtca. NICHOLIE Lands for Investment Acreage for Building Farms With Buildings UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 4465 Dlxls, Clirtutsn 63M61I Eves. 646-1433 TWO ACRES. J-ROOM COUNTRY MADISON JR. HIOH AREA UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 1465 Dixie. Clarkston 636-1015 Eves. 63S-1453 t?U£ro in 1 TO 50 UND COtfRACTS urgently wanted. So* ui beta WARREN STOUT; feoltor pi ■ your land contract, lame o nsl Call aw. HHtor, FE Ml71 rokor. mo enoaaoth Lana Read. *±rs available, oas-itx. ARRO REALTY 5143 CA44-ELIZAEETH ROAD ...Van Walt, NEeb^NO'-CONTR^T^EX Realtor, 6617 Commerce Road. QUICK CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS Clark RM Estate. FE 3-7144. Res. FI44WiMr. ClartL , lAlbVrO LAND CbHflLAcVi I. CAPITOL SAVINOS i SN., 75 W. Huron. FE 4 MoRey to I L0A.'*S ns to sim Insured Payment PI EAXTE^E UVINCS1 Sale Heusehoki Goads 65 34-INCH GAS STOVE; 1 SECRE-tsry desk. FE 3-476 altar I p m. BouliA AND 1 SINOLi BOX sprtng and mattress. 67>3554. hv lin6l6um ruos 'sm PLASTIC TILE K E*. VINYL ASBESTOS (Random) Sc Ea CERAMIC TILE SC Ea ASPHALT TILE (RANDOM) 4c Ea THE FLOOR SHOP • HSS ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD NORTH END 3 bsdroomi. lull hasqn heat, hardwood Noort, II ill Mr. CacMIL FE % hh Business Property 3? Dixie Highway w tt. on Dixie, 13S It. LOon Lake, zoned C l. Ids* cotton for motel or other morel*! ui*. 6 - room me homo rented ot 345 par mi 617,500. term*. Wottrford—5200 Sq. Ft. Eulldlng masonry construction, on main rood. 3 ottlcet |u*t re- etc. 3 levator lot. 1 FA hooting atoms, but duct wiring. Vacant. ' FINANCIAL WORRIES? Lot Us Help Youl BORROW UP TO $1,000 36 months to pay crodlt IN* insurance available BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY OFFICES NEAR YOU LOANS to $1,000 Usually on (trot visit. Qulc friendly, helpful. Ff 2-9206 It th* number to coll. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 303 Pontiac Slat* Bank Bldg. __6:30 to 5:34 - Sit, f l34 t*V LOANS COMMUNITY LOAN CO. LOANS to $1,000 ____Laka prtvli beeches, docking. 1 IIP month. Owner, m, .-v-~ LAkE PR64ERTY FOR 4ALfe ... ---- around cottage m year around o. CoM 673-37*1. WANT YOUR PRICE? CALL NORM RICK - REALTOR " WAtKINS LAKE 461-63-65 S. Jessie 3 apartments -on big comer I needs repairs. Mixed. S1.30O cal Total price. PAUL JONES, Realty FE 64SW MoFt|E|E Lems 1st and 2nd MORTGAGES S1.ltt.0R MORE NO APPLICATION FEES 643-2300 SYLVAN 615-1146 MORTGAGE ON ONE ACRE uk. With iso-toot treeing*. No eecrilt el lee. B. D. Charles. Equitable Form Loan Servfc*. 64347BL IN down phn doting costs. HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty MM UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-M04____________ 1*3-7111 S3 A COUNTRY HOME an acre ot land. 3 bad rooms, dm kitchen with buitt-tn*. Full imtnt. si4,a»5. Sl,4*0 down. C. PANGUS, Realty git MIS Ortonvllle Call Cal lad HA 7-341S ROCHESTER AREA HOMES Realty UL 3-3131 UL 2-5375 Lets-Aereoge BUILDING J __ Iteagin* Real *Es- ntt. FE 3-1M*.________ 2 LOTS, ELIZABETH LAKE ES-talas. Many shad# frees. Bargain. FE 3-7541. H. Riggins. F ACRES 6N SASHABAW ROAD, new ulHHy bulldlni, (artlja toll, nice neighborhood. SL400 with S4» down. Coll, 661-5660. DO YOU HAVE SELLING OR MECHANICAL ABILITIES?. Standard Oil has ovoilobl* * profitable good vokimn location In Ih* Pontiac area. Financial and training pro- II, 6M-3M1. FOR LEASE - BULF STATION with 1 bays and 2 hoists. Airport and Williams Lake Road. Doing excellent business, capable -* parting 2 good man. Mop Hen and esk for Harry OR S4?R CASH- CASH FOR Home Owners WIDOWS, PENSIONERS CAN fUflELE. CHECK, LOWtST RATES IPI ............ S 6.25 41 ............. MX* 44 . • S2SJ4 2nd mortgagas til- Borrow tor ANY u Consolidate BINs NOW Fui tmo repair am FE 8-2657 This HOT-SPOT DRIVE-IN Hilo business Inv ittv (Or your mo trlpl* horn In d Acres^ Mart of Wotortord TbwnohM, v e4 Pontiac Mall, vldlng, It-------* $1,750 per WARREN STOUT, Realtor Ot N. Opdyfct Rd. Fh. FE M165 114,500 down Midine VALUABLE Real Estate. Why not chock it out today? WARDEN REALTY' 1434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 Swops 1PS3 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE, good condition, 4134, or trad*. Studobokor. 6-cylinder, Stick, Silt, 41*5. or trad*. 6*3-4166-APARTMENT size oas Stove _______Sylvan Lake. JACK L0VEUND 2114 Cast Lake Rd. ChoicI i-ACRt lots in sUi division neor Oakland Unlvg^y Abo neor I-7S Interchonge. 51,204 51,600. B**u*mtl rolling country % ^v-WiLV*™ 7 Excellent Opportunity te hevo that heron y^v* alwoyj '__._. i SmLh mu. unatl homo only S_y. Lepeer, $10,700. 80 Acrt Form ^”MWa5S*“s Prudential Roar Estate Ml L Moln . Lopeei 664-8484 Hoc near factory. Approx. 00,500 down which includes r" -A—t Largo blacktop parking lei ' Hardware For **l* or loot* with buy. Locotod wool of F moln highway In good n Drug Store Good wort aM* comer *IL „ Pontiac. Established over 30 yqprt. Includes liquor I Icons*, prqocrlp. tlons, fixtures and equipment. ROa-sonable terms. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT PROFITABLE 3 MAN OL------------■ ------- Rssi hat mot. si,500 Invontory. ideal loca-tour day operation. On mt Spectacular Savings I Laundromat with 13 waths Wealthy owner able to take I bock factory bars. Large walk-coolers. Very good Is It. No food or dencing. owner and wMa retiring. 033JM0 Including mol ortot*. tow down payment. STATEWIDE-LAKE ORION ami* Attar 6, OR 3*7000 THk * PURt JblL_ COt HAS A 2S4MLGALL0N MAY SERVICE STATION FOR LEASE ON M-Jf WEST. ALIO A 1 - BAY IN WALLED LAKE. PAID. DEALER TRAINING AVAILABLE IF DESIRED. CALL JACK AttOERKM -JdaYS *03-3364 - NIGHTS," OSS ___payment. Quick fiwkgi with courtoou* experienced —— sailors. Crodlt Nf* bwaranc* able. Sian In or phono FE S4111. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. N. Perry St. • PE 54121 ■ » to 4. Polly. Sal. 71* 1 WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $1,000 Wa will be glad la Itatp you. STATE FINANCE CO. Sot Pontiac stata Bank Blda- FE 4-1574 tor portable TV or \ I ooll. OR BLOND TV, 24" FOR ELECTRIC dryer. OR 34471.____Wz:W-. ELECTRIC dryer- USED FOR 4 months trad* tor gas J 5-1752 before 3;24 a.m. LONG STUDIO COUCH, 4" _FOAM i lor typewriter ortglnoNy I SEARS^VERSIZE WRIHGER I ___TRAOE17S7 CHEVY WAGON, good shop* for pickup. Call FE Salt Clothing t BOY'S NAVY BLUE BLAZEJI! *1X0 13, Ilka new. OR 4S210. PERSIAN BROADTAIL CAPE, ilZE ■HI! dMflifl|» ...—..— sweaters, slia 13. EM 34366._______ KEODING dOWN WITH STAND-out URdarollp. Slzis 1-10. 662-3775. 3-R00M OUTFITS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $288 $3.00 WEEKLY NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-piece (brand now) living room, davenport and chair, foam cushions, i slop-tables, matching coffee table, 3 decorator lamp- Im *137. Only MJE weakly. NEW BEOlOOM BARI H>Wc* (brand now) —---------- double drtttor, book-cate bill and chest, box spring i matt ms*. 1 vanity 4)17. IIJ4 weekly. Visit gvr trad04n deportment tor more bargains. * FEARlON'S FURNITURE 1)0 E. pika • Brtween°P*34< 1964 Necchi Demo Lifetime guarantee on part* and Bbor and private sewing lessons. BRAND NEW caMnat Indudsd — ---- Choice ot walnut, mahogany lend. Full prtca far maattae and cabinet. 465 Elizabeth Laka from The Pontiac k______ ANTIQUE'S - CORNER SH s, upholstered chair, -til down light, talavlsion Call FE S-1737. APPLIANCE SPECIALS GB Shew and Tall all spaed record player. *27.75. GE 1l,rPortaW* TV 1*915 Kelvinator Refrigerator If* Mg frsiMOr," SITS. Frlgidalr* Range. 34" Big ovon, deluxe, ns*. . Hamilton Gas Dryer, all temps, stainless drum, 4164. Hamilton 14-lb. wMhor Installed, Guaranteed, II74. **6000 HOUSEKEEPING SHOP < ot Pontll iron St. WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE ... our 14 W. Plk* Mom Only Table and floor lamp* from .. S 2.75 Eloc. ironers from ..... 427.15 ^---------— gfjw, 2-pc. living room n AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG SEWING W chin*. "Fashion Dial *r—*H “ ton hoMs. blind horns, . .. etc. Maple cabinet. Toko • ments ot 15.25 per it—■ months or S42 Cosh b A BEAUTITUL Twin noodle automatic Singer, used. Dial-a-design with button-holes, monograms, hemming, sic. 5-yeer guarantee. Full pries 16646 or 14.46 monthly. DornsIco, Inc. FE 6^521. ______ _______ SINGER PORTABLE, REBUILT. BATHROOM VANITY1 AND *t66l. complete. $47.50 and up. Peer- ■■ BRAND NEW. Largs--------- small size (round drop loot, row tangMar) tables in X S and 7 pc sals. S24.7S and up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE^ CHILD'S FULL-SIZE BED \ springs. 14 N. Marshall. COAST WlOE VAN LlHfcL . FE 44164. Furniture COLONIAL' FURNITUR6, Li iJ A selection, everything tor your hr—* Family Noma Furnishings, Dixie Hwy., cor. Tehmraph. COMMtRCTAr FREEZER Wit H IW, NOW unit. SSB. MA 54404. DINETTE SlTl DIMING ROOM DINETTE SET- coii fnmx ‘ ‘ aU’^RIC DRYER __________642-NW iLECTRIC StOVE, 150.'TOUCH, 135. FE 4-5*43. S. FE 47*74., FREIGHT DAMAGED A washeFr'SndAdryIrs FIRESTONE STORE IN W. HURON 1337717 PRVRKlT UPRIGHT, LAST^yttW* I76S ntodoto. Guorontood tor I years, 4327 valu* *197. acrrttfteO. Ns down poymont. Michigan Fluor-ooeont. 371 Orchard Lake 7. OAS RANGE AND REFRIgISaTSS sudsaver. 145. 222-4367. Wi M—EheW S*4t 6S KIRBY VACCUM 1*7.50 E- -—I—swrlter 13310. lo. zig-zag 159.50 OR 41101 S3Vk> party « st clarinets. M: ior.dafljb rt * Appliat MAPLE DINING ROOM SET, S7S. I Hot point rang*. 135. FE 33469. NORGE AUTOMATIC WASHtk, completely rebuilt, exc. condition. OPEN DAILY 8 to 8 low and used furniture ot oil kind*. W* buy-sell-trede. 7 day*. Con-ilgnmonts welcome. We finance through a national (Inane* com- "hZU'S AUCTION SALES *v 1.1(71 or Clarkston Rd. DROP LEAF DINING TAIL overstuffed chair, drapes, stove, vacuum cleaner, lawn m porch 41 Jl. Irregulars samples. Prices snly tsetory can give. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake 7*5. 543-3514. ENCYCLOPEDIAS, i*64 EDITION, a vo lumas. ■“ LIONEL trXiW, small T6V*. Call FE S-14N. OFFICIAL TOURNAMENT PINO pong tabls. id. Pi 35472. INE 47-POUND BEAR BOW AND one 36-pound Grimes Bow. Good tar huntbig or target. Call PE 34442. ru.».™.. -nr.., M*4d. Cost _ sacriflc* 565. S433515. ■ OUiTY1 CONCRETE FLOORS Use Liquid Floor Hsrdsnsr PHILCO STEREO WITH AA6-FM, PM radio Mend console. *175. IHsnninoust stereo — AM-FM radio, blond consol# 1149.50 Admiral rtarao - AM-FM ^radku ^amptonTelectric W. Huron , FE 42515 .... 34141 ......... --------- Lake Orion Bn‘c- BulldsriSupply FE HIM -------HUHII tfWnHBT non-freezer OWNERI MqqHa~* —~ Frse ho SAVE UP T BAG Tile Outlet REFRIGERATOR AMD STOVE FOR sale. UL 3-2271. UCRIPlCk LATE MODEL FULLY refrigerator. After 4 S44W. SILVER FOX SEVfcN-PIEGE DIN- SPECIAL no A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OP FURNITURE - Consists ot: Fplac* living room writ* with 1 stop-tobies, 1 cocktail t*M* and 3 taws dresser chart, full tit* bod inner spring mattress and springs, to match with 2 vi Spiece dinette set, 4 chrome chair* Formica lop that*. 1 boofcci 7x12 rug Included. AH for $377 WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 13 9. HURON FE 4-4741 FIRE__________ FE 32154 USED .. _ REFRIGERATOR SwooTt Radio A Appliance *17.75 VASHfeR, S25, ELECTRIC STOVE, SIS. Dryer, *25. Retrigefator with top freezer, 149. Gas stove, S2S. 21-Inch TV m. Refrigerator 125. WINTER CLEARANCE I 14" Frlgidalr* rang*. 1764 n ) Frlgidalr* fraozor, upright. ‘ Frlgidalr* Olshvrishor. ALL SPECIALLY PRICED. CRUMP ELECTRIC 3465 Auburn Av«. FE 43573 EASY TERMS ...... $37.4 .......147.75 ......S47.75 ..... S47.75 .... S67.75 FE 41466 Antiques ■ 65-A . KINDS; BEAUTI- TABLES, POT-BEL-■im aiwea. Many onHquoo Hams tor jritt giving. Y-Kfiot Antiques, 10345 Oakhlit, Holly, MB 7ll7(. soub Walnut secretary1, a I—, over 164 yam. FE 31513. IMV 7V * Hedies 66 3 11-INCH TV'S. GOOD CONDI-Hon, tso each, FE HITS. 2t-INCH fhilco, vRy good condition, mahogany cabinet. FE EL6n6 RCA. 36" Ok. BRAND 21" GE with doors, 467.7S. Bill Fttruoka A Son*. ToLHuran Shop-ping Cantor. 23-INCH ADMIRAL CONSOLE, EX- MAPLJkSSAONAVOX STtREO CON-sole, with AM-FM radio and mul-tiplexer, Hk* now wiM 24 albums. 1254 cash. *42-1547. REcdttbitiokeb and guaran-toad TVs. SEVERAL TO CHOOSE FROM. JOHNSON'S RADIO & TV 41 E. WALTON FE E-4969 STEREOPHONIC HI-FI, GOOD CON- coMnrt, '437, Ml 4 Water Softeners ______66 DRAYTON SERVICE WATER 40FTNER. REPAIR Al . INSTALLATIONS. 6734444. WATER SOFTENER RENTAL. U limited gallon age, SI par mar *73-1277. Universal Soft Wotor. For Sale MiscaliamoES 67 I FAIR OF ANTIQUE IRON HORSE , Walk-In iolrmrswr 11'xl3'. ___ after. 1715 Auburn Rood. UL 34344 or UL HIM.______ 4-^3WHigr^RAILER. ALUMI-with mower attachment, sump pumas sold. npalroA and rented. Cone's, FE 5-6643. 434. OH 6734634 after S p.m. dWMOJIiW 6Ai wXtSr MIAYKI. 145. Soars auto, wrtor softener, 3W yoarartd, SH MS-2674. AfYWKrfivk tiuRSitY shaFSo CMrtmns treat. Scotch, 'ffiMmt pin*, Md Balaam. Select pleturo-window trots* spodoltv. 1417 Jos-lyn ot First st. ANCHOR FENCES r E 5-7471 quarters. Opdyks Mkt, Ft 37741. JmHod. m 647-1577 FURNACES, OAS OR 51 _ --------- at* service. Best financing. No GOOb r_— hh, -th HOT WATER HEATeCIOGALLON Gas Consumer* approved. tWJO value 537.75 and *47.75. marred. Michigan Fluorescent, 373 Orchard HOUSE TO BE DEMOLISHED moved, as W. Huron. FE 54127. KINCSliV IMPRINTING MACHINE complttt with type* Forbit, Ofl 3-9747. LUMBER 4x1 plasterboard 4x7 V-groov*d mahogany . (Abovo In IS or mom) Burmeisters Terrific buy*. Michigan Fluor**- cant, 373 Orchard Laka._______ NEW AUTOMATIC WAtER SOFT- PLUMBING BARGAINS^ FREE_ 1 'iplec _________ ________116.75; heater *67.73; 1-piece baHi art*. $54.75 Laundry tray, trim, *17.75; Supply. 3671 Orchard Laka. 6433134 STAINLESS STEEL DOUBLtSINKS (27.75. O. A Thompson, 7005 M57* Sinqer Diol-A-Matic In walnut cablnrt. utad. Juo _ tor docorattvo stitching, button-ho loo. lowing on button* and regular oguring lobs. Written guarantee. u*w payments ot *5.00 par month CpSTgrta OI 166.00. Moke '""1STMAS. Rich Center*. 445 MERRY CHRISTMAS. Rlchmon other* Sowing Contor*. 46S Ellz-rth Lake Rd., ____________ 335450. STAUFFER POSTURE MACHINE, oxcrtlont muscle tenor and olen-derlzor. OA 43647. SUNbiAM.....WAFFLE IRON SI*. ■—tryor SIS. Gym Belt Call 3344727. TALBOTT LUMBER Faint closeout Sal*. Interior Laytox, enamel and Flartros-Tonq, 41 to llC5 0*IStai>J Avo. FE 44144 - Vni ialvation a*mV Everything It me Clothing. FumHure, —- . „-------- USED GAS AND OIL FURNACES. A-l CHRISTMAS TREES. SPRUCE, fir and pins. Buy tret now. cut whan ready, your toots. DAILY. 3 miles wart rt Commerce VH-logo. 3733 Slerth Rd. 444-0635. ATTRACTIVE NURSERY SHAPlb Christmas trots. Scotch, Norway pin* and Balsam, select plcturo- CHMSTMA$ TREES ■......... Baldwin* mour Lakt Rsid.___________ PICK YOUR CHhlStMAS TREE ON the stump. Bring th* whots f— I ty. 11 and up. Atoo bundles pin* bought. Mon dally. iTn nbrth ot Ponttoc. V» mil* a Christmas Try* Farm, 1774 Dixie Hwy. MA 31W. -----FORTATiON OR6WN Sprue*, balsam. Scotch plno — «.»I.P^D^ 1*13 N. Main, next door to Dovoy’s Market. Rpchostor, 6J31511. 3YEARDLD BLACK AND tAN 1764 SCHWINN TIGER BICYCLE WITH LIGHT AND BOOK CARRIER, LIKE NEW. FE 34633. S TRUMPET, MS. RECORD FLAYER, doll buggy, train ort. UL 33473. TRUMPET, US. RECORD HayM. “ buggy, train art. UL 33473. HeuB TeEb MedilRdry 61 5 .HORSEPOWER 214 3 PHASE Ksllogg Amoricon pir comprossor. IS gal- tank with box. used less ' year. FE 44173 ohor 7 pjn. Camaras - Servks 70 FHOTOORAPHIC RETOUCHING AT GALUGHER'S W* toetvr* Chickorlng, Fischer, Kimball piano*. Lowroy and bransen argon*. Our sorvlco .... boot — Our pricos th* lowort. Our forms or* Ihs longest. EXAMPLE: NEW PIANOS FROM 93*9 USED PIANOS FROM SIM IT WILL FAY YOU TO SHOP BEFORE YOU BUY. , GALLAGHER'S MUSIC IS B. HURON Royal Oak Slam Open dally 7: •N SUNDAY Ft __ £ FROM 1* ?0*J P.M. FREE PARKING BETTERLY'S BAftOAINS -sod Organ*—No Money Down Conn caprice ......... I16J* / --------d Spinet .....*20.25 Mahogany ....... NUI I Pianos, No Money Down Grlnnoll C.............. Upright Plano, a ro Across from Blrmlnghai cbNN Minuet with lbsli_ Cabinets. Sustain and percussion, damonrt raters. ■ ■ „ 12,170.00 ValUd 11,550.00 MORRIS MUSIC 34 1. Telegraph *-----*~hn Tsl-Huron FE 30567 FOR THE BEST BUYS lit I GRINNELLS Used Piano Specials UPRIGHTS FROM $49 . rioned—I .ONSOLE 1 .. $199 Small Grands From $165 Ttachtr's Studio Piano SLIGHTLY USEO $389 LOW, EASY TERMS Grinnell's (Downtown) ’ S. Saginaw FE 37161 Start hours 7:31 to 7:** FREE PARKING HAMMONb ORGAN, MODkL M-lW, “To now. OA 330*1. YOU W> OLD FASHIONED UPRIGHT PIANO USED BUNDY CLARINlt 170. USEb PIANOS: UPRIGHTS FBOM 540 - spinets from IMS “ solos 7mm SI77 — some MOO, III studk) u om* musk Grlnnoll's, WAITED - SPINET PIANO, GOOD 7ft ACCORDION, GUITAR LESSONS. - -i-i.-. - OES4W6. Sporting Geeds hsv* over 350 gwi* In sk Scopos mounted fro* tor Chrlstm BEAR Archary Equlpmont FISHING Tockl* ] Surf Board or poddol Board Cliff _ Qua and 15210 Holly Rd., Drtysr's ty OM Sundi Iparim too* M Of 3X15 ; ir 3, OR 3034 31014. I dirt. OR OF THE BEST Akb DACHSHUND pus*, terms, stud dog*. JaWIms, FE 1-2530. OASHSCHUNDi-l MALI BLACK- rnw wio« pb ww. j> AKC DACHIHUNb PUPPIES, r|a! AKC OACHSHUNO PUPPlBi, DE-—*1 holds until Christmas, OR Atit MINIATURE BLACK- nHAUl AW’ IIAUTiFUL ILMk TqY AKC BBAOLE PUPPIES, CHAM- AKC DACtiSHUND PUPPllt dog*. ESTELHEIMS, FE * -----. . KKAK.-IU' wti'.ssVsT BLACK liTREIVER. FEMALE, sJCE-Sfc— I 'istorod.'OL 1481 DALMATIAN PUPS - AKC RiGIS-* rod, shots. Just rmt lor Chrlst-ts jilv^ng. CaH Farmington — DOBERMAN PINSCHER, 1AL4, obedience trained. 3331501. ENGLISH iETTEir GERMAN SHBFHERb PUPS, AKC term*. gC B-IOW. GERMAN SHtAHEAb rnaio, Black and deep tan, Par- will hold *tll Christmas. EM 36443 attar I p.m. GUINEA PIGS. 03.75 EACH.JILL Fat Shop. SS Williams. FE 46633 IDEAL CHRliYMA* PRlilN’r, Ta^Tarrlor ----- • PARAKEET, BABY MALES, *4.15. 308 Flrrt, Rochostor, 651470A « 3074U (C, BLACK POODLE PUPPIES. AKC, BLAC wks., show quality. OopMT win hold “til Christmas. 651-3445. POODLE FUFFIES. StUD MkkV-irskarts, canaries. Pot h. porskoots, s. CRANE'S. U POODLES, AKC PUPPIES.-SILVER toys. (54 up. OR 34772.____ PUPPIES. 6 WEEKS OLD. MOTHER S Mint |ob, m plywood floor. MMW and , taw minor regain. May M mm at Ramin Nonary, ail Orton Rd., Laka Orion. MM Ofl Mdi la Lako Orton Lion* Club. P.O. Box n* AUTO INSURANCE wBm" Anderson Agency FE 4-3535 1044 Joslyn Ave. "auto INSURANCE for anyone bon NlchoHo P« MW SPECIAL DISCOUNT ON AUTO INSURANCE FOR N0N4RINKERS TMo policy written by CITIZEN* MAN. tOVOO «* If ym> and ott— mbmbon af m# family am no C"hBRUMMETT AGENCY MIRACLE MILE_____PI M On fi $497 1957 VW PATTERSON CHRYSLBB-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT DODGE-DODGE TRUCKS MSI N. Main St. ROCHESTER______OL MU* VW SIDAN. INI. BLAfk, 1942 IlUI karmann OHIA, RA-dta. haator. faad candtttan. 1 owner. i Ijf lflLcJBir~iynf a> a-g Bal Air Adeor hardtop. Turquatoa fkitah wim matchli*t trim. Vs an-•Mi, Pawargllia,' radio, haator. oaupa. Fuel Inlactkm. Condition Ski naw. Far Manhattan call TU Min. ' whitewall* *3*5. Bal Air Itaaor aadan. Smart capper flnl*h wim matching trim. V* an- AUiTIN HRALEY, SPhlfk, *r< suPer IoimI amble r 550 Oakland FE Sta421 ' glia, PowOrgtlda, power staarlng, radio, haator, whitewall tlra*. Tha ■harpaat ana M town. Only . *991 Brook wood 4taadr (tattan wagon. Gray axtorlor and gray Interior vs angma, stick mm ...... 1*95. Patterson Chevrolet Co. Repossession 1943 TR-J Convartlbta, No maiwy dawn. Call Mr. Jbhntan. MA 5-2404, Dealer. WAGONS. FOUR irranty. Priced to tall jonk rate*. COME OUT ■ THEM TODAY I Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER U mite norm of Miracle Mile 17S* S. Totoaroph FE MOl Hi VW: S-DOOR SEOAH WITH aim roof. Radio, haator, white walls. Recent motor tan* up. E* cel lent condition. S1.295. FE 5G3S1 SUPERIOR RAMBLER New End Ustd Can 106 . Economy Cars. SSSS Dixie 19*7 BUICK HARDTOP COUPti, •OOO ONE, A I OWNER. PRICED TO SELL TODAY. PEOPLES AUTO SALES 4* OAKLAND PE XBS1 Repossession l No n I. Call Mr. Jahnoon, MA S-Sf>4L Doolor. IMS BUICK SOOOR. RADIO. HEATER. AUTO. TRANSMISSION, POWER STEERING. POWER BRAKES. ABSOLUTELY fi| “ DOWN. Tah* «... PP_________ *24.75 per monm. CALL CREDBT MGR.. Mr. Pork*, st Harold Turn- iSi Suicic special, j-door, stick, S79S. OR 2-2177. Repossession tail Bulck Spoclal, no manor---- Call Mr. johnwn, MA 5-2104, Deal- ROLET ttL SlDW AT OUR NEW LOT, ItBI S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2721 CLEAN UP SPECIAL _______ Over 100 cars and trucks. S2M1.NI ' THE NEAREST THING . to o New Cadillac IS A USED ONE FROM WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1231 N. Woodward ML 4-1*20 ——*—t Michigan COUPE DeVILLE PATTERSON CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT • DODGE-DODGE TRUCKS loot N. Main St. ol t-ssss ROCHESTER CORVAIRS 1944 Mann convertible aqua with whit* top i trim, f-----~ 19*2 Manso coup*. Autumn gold With fawn trim. 3-spood, radio, haiifar, whitewalls. Only . Sl,0»5. Patterson Chevrolet Ca. 1104 S. Woodwond Av*. AM 4-2725 BIRMINGHAM ■LRCTRA -22T AOOQ R New -i Used On It 1942 SUPER SPORT CHEVY. LOW FISCHER BUICK W5~CHEvAaiW. _Mlw TlftBt. WCHivV WA. heeler, uMtawnlta, .............. 11,991 Patterson Chevrolet Co. S4 I. Woodward Avo. Ml 4-2733 BIRMINGHAM Credit or Sudget PROBLEMS? We Con Finance4|pul 100 Cars to Select From I Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 LLOYD'S 1250 Oakland Ave. Repossession I Corvoir Convoillblo, no money ----------------------A stick, radio. 45HM19. 1964 CHEYROLETS polo Sport Coup*. Lagoon oquo h aqua trim. Vt engine, Power-de, power stoorlng. Very nka. Hi impel* Moor aodan; Do_______ Blue with Bhw Mm. VI angina, x—_— .... 22.295. amor tad, k top. VA AM-PM radio, 1 eooton elr < tlonlng and many more toot___________ An unusually like-now car S2AM. Cl New mi Reid Cere $666 A MARMADUKE corSltloni SSmfilSr PATTERSON tySLER-PLYMOUTH-V “ttfflSLY foeroR _____c YOUR CREOIT II O.K. COOPERB—4273 OlXH-rORAYTOH $333 1934 FORD Wdanntdn*. will radio, good condition, and, goo ttrool No monoy downl PATTERSON TRUCKS OL MS33 HEATER. AUTO. TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES. P O W |R STEERING, POWER BRAlAI, ABSOLUTELY “ DOWN. Toko *19.73 par monm. CALL CREOIT MGR. Mr. Parte of HaroM Tum-ar Ford. Ml 4-73M. New ood Ueetl Core 1H 19*1 FORD 2-DOOR, RADIO, HEATER. ECONOMY ENGINE, WHITE-WALL TIRES. AeSOLUTELY NO Taka auar poy- ELLSW0RTH AUTO ond TRAILER SALES FREE' EEINO THIS AO WITH YOU A-RECEIVE YOUR 1943 LICENSE IM IPtMAOtK hrdtop 1942 Ford Country taden 1942 Ford Folrlono Moor sodan 1942 Rombtor 4door sedan 1941 Pontiac 4-door hardtop 1999 Ford Adoor todon. tm Dixie Hwy. 1939 FORD 4. STANDARD SHIFT, vary nka. FE 3-7442. H. Riggins, 1939 FORD OALAXIE 2-DOOR hordtop, V-S, automatic, 1-owne-car, *5 down and 34 a wook. WE FINANCE Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 __ _ mil* north ol Coo* Auo.) Spartan Dodge PAIRLANE SPOnt* AM-F M radio, r r stoorlng. Only <2,395. j Starr angina er, wfetJSa BIRMINGHAM it condition. 21,73*. ^E 4-1444. 1943 RED CORVETTE STING-RAY. 2 tops. All powor. 31*4997. 1941 CHtVY I. 4-000*, POWER glide. Low mlloogo. Wholouio priced, on W. Unlverjlty, Roch- ester. OL 2-0411. ,______________ 943 CHEV? IMPALA HARDTOP. 4*2-3492 - 1964 Chevy Impalo 2-door hardtop, VI angina, automatic, heeler, rodlo, whitewalls. Only 52,495. Crissman Chevrolet I CHEVROLET IMPALA.'V-S, S-------o, whitewalls, white r. 52,200. OL 1-4494. Ctaon I Only 52,015. JEROME F E ROU SON, Inc. FORP Doolor, OL 1-9711. 1*42 CHRYSLER "NEW YORKER' ' ” " dffe ------- Credit or Budget PROBLEMS? We Can Finance Yoiil Call Mr. Darrell FE 8-4528 — ANYTIME — SPARTAN DODGE INC. 1940 FORD GALAXIE 2-DOOR, V-S. 1943 FALCON. 2-660R. whttowolls, automatic tlon. 51.250. 452-541S. 1940 FORD 9-PASSENGER WAGON, whitowall tiros. V-S, automatic, radio, heetod, powor brake,. Take over payments *22 month, bolonco S4S0. OR 44412._________ 1940 FORD CONVERTIBLE, RADIO, hootor, almost llko now. and -full prlco at only *795. MARVEL 291 Oakland Av*. FE 3-407* 1940 FALCON 4-DOOR, RADIO, HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES, AUTO. TRANSMISSION. ABSO- LUTiLY tlO h^EY DOWN. Taka over payments ol 514.07 por monm. CALL CREOIT MGR., Mr. Parte at Harold Tumor Ford. aM ______________ PASSENGER WAOON. RADIO. HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ' ABSOLUTELY NO MON I DOWN, Toko over payment, *27.44 por month. CALL CREDI . MGR., Mr. Parte at Hamid Tirfn- ar Ford. Ml 43W._________ itst PAlCON STATION WAC . RADIO, HEATER, ECONOMY ENGINE, WHITEWALL TlRE|.^AO-SOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Toko over payments of S25.7S por monm. CALL CREDIT MGR., Mr. Porte ot Harold Tumor Ford. Ml 4-731*.______________ 1941 I*OrB "COUNTRY SEDAN ST A-tlon wagon. Bright rod finish, with matching Interior. V-S angina, >-u - power ^*te«rinfl^pow Easy tarma. PA1 ROLET CO. 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. *“** $1795 BIRMINGHAM Chryalor-Plymoum Chryaler's famous full factory war ranty. Wouldn't It l» » ptaoaun - car wWl thta pro lawn, and la' t. Darrell, xi 'ainaior — jj4-9222. NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) Just V4 mil* north of CSn Avo. Spartan Dodge automatic, powor Mooring, radio, •horpl Only 51,995. JEROME FER-GI^SON Inc. RochMtar FORO 1929 FORD SEDAN, 3S9 TRI-POWER mPSatBtTgilRIte lr< mosEtriiiiita alon. 454 Cttavy lockod reor 1919 CorVetto convertible, Power-gllde, radio, niitori idhltoatallo. Rod ond whlto exterior, red In-torrtar with Mock top. Only *1,79*. Patterson Chevrplet Co. 1*4 S. Woodward Avo. Ml 4-2739 BIRMINGHAM',. H off hub Chovy. 1939 Ford. OOOd 0 FE 5-4329. CROWN IMPERIAL COUPE 1964 $1800 PATTERSON CHRYtLRR-PLYMQUTH-VALtANT DODGE-DODGE TRUCKS ?*M N. Mom St. OL MM ROCHESTER WE FINANCE Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw F£ 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 1962 FORD Galaxie 500 Hardtop 4-door wim radio., heater, d,— nut finish, V-S mine, Crulse-O-Matlc. power steering and whit* walls. Extra nlcal $1688 Call Mr. Dava Sylveater at — McAULIFFE Hilltop Auto Soles, Inc. WHERE YOU CAN ' BUY WITH No Money Down and Our Pre-Delivery 100 Per Cent Guarantee *39 PLYMOUTH ..... '31 PONTIAC WAOON . •K FORD ......... m PONTtAC. I 99: W FORD S-DOOR, STICK S 'S* PLYMOUTH ........... ‘41 RAMBLER . ...S 795 '41 FORD, | AUTO., 2-DOOR *i •ST CADILLAC CONVT....Pi '42 MICROBUS ........ *1.291 'if CHEVY IMPALA '43 FORD, AUTO. . ■42 OLDS HARDTOP ........ MR CHEVY WAGON ...... S2.195 —C 40001 — . 41,395 . 51.495 By Anderson A Leaning New Md Ueed Can IM mmmtJ mm CREDIT MGR., Mr. Perks, Herald Tumor Pend. Ml 4-7M. Now and deed Cars 106 1*44 FORD OALAXIR 2-DOOR HardSop. v-s angina, automatic, power ■ tearing, brakas, — 2-year wi pruietiion. No S SIMS WEIKLV. ( NOW OPIN Additional Location 855 Oaklanc Ave. Capitol aut6 sales For fine uead car buy* .. vs 312 W. Montcolm FE 8-4071 .*^57 1944 F®fo fairlanE FdS5r UtoWyjp-—l j----------- m die, like 1964 Ford Galaxie 500 4-Door >/-8 enolnp, Crulit-O-Ission. Only New aad Need Cm WI* PONTIAC GOOD MOTOR, beta eftiir. PrMMW. 1959 p6ntiAc bonnivillE C6H-—bta, 1-Gwnar, 47400 mllaa. Ml r, prlead tor quick StK Ft ftTf^BRsSK *CH«VR0i4t CO. 1114 t. WOODWARD AVB« BIR-minoham. 1962 OLDS F-85 9-Passenger Wagon wim v-s angina, automatic mi champagne giw tintah. Onto - $155$ Call Mr. ** “ McAULIFFE PORD 420 Oakland Av*. - _______hb JEROME OIDS ond CADILLAC New Cor Savings — Today CALL FE 3-7021 Credit or budget PROBLEMS? We Con Finance Yoal 100 «ars to Select Framl Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7&S3 LLOYD'S 1250 Oakland Ave. 1*37"PLYMOUTH, RUNS 550. SAVE Spartan Dodge It truly "uniqua" in all tha wo Any aid car aedaptod at dc payment, and H need not be 9 tori Call Mr. Darrell, credit ordlnalor - 338-9222. NOW OPEN Additional Locatidh 855 Oakland Ave. 1963 Foid .Galaxie 500 2-Door im vs angina, stick shift, and fhli $1893 Russ Johnson RAMBLER-PONTIAC On M24 In Lake Orion LAKE ORION _____MY 3-424 Mafic trantmlul $444 $2395 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER SliKa 1930“ ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD 'Home at SERVICE after the tale' OR 3-1291 1964 FORD 4-Door Galaxie 500 ’ with platinum gray flnlih, V-4 angina, Crutia-O-Matlc, power attar; Ing. Ready to go at only— - * $2444 Call Al Pateri AT JOHN McAULIFFE 1964 Ford 1963 FORD 2-Door Sedan This one has a 4-cylinder « gine, light blua finish, radi heater and whitewalls. Only — $1377 Call Mr. Don Rosts at - McAULIFFE 1964 Ford -Galaxie 500 Hardtop . 2-door with tha 252 , V-S angina, Crulta-O-Matic tran«mltalm,_radto' $2695 ' BEATTIE ■Your FORD DEALER Staca 1930" ONOIXW HWY. IN WATERFORO fijm • of SERVICE attar tha tala" OR 3-1291 1964 Ford Custom Special $209,5 BEATTIE ■Your FORD DIALER Sine* 1910" ON DIXlI HWYrW WAtltmORD "Horn* of SERViCE attar tha lata" OR 3-1291 Repossession 1964 Ford l, whitewalls, wheel a $2595 BEATTIE ■Your FORD DEALER Since 1920" 4 DIXIE HWY. IF WATERFORD Home of SERVICE afMr tha sale" OR 3-1391 1944 M«6 Wagon, 9-pastangar country aadan. VC wtth doubto power. CrulamO-Matk. Factory guarantead. Your old car er 5100 dawn. Finance, 52,395. Stark-HIckay Ford* "CLAWSON" Value House 14 Mil* at Crooks Read Clawson - 1' 588-6010 '43 PONTIAC 4-(6 CHRYSLER ^ ■42 GRAND PRIX 962 Oakland' rE ^ 8-9291 WANTED' RESPONSIBLE PERSONS OR FAMILIES TO ASSUME THE PAYMENTS, ON ALMOST 20* CAM THAT MUST BE LIQUIDATED IMMEDIATELY FOR YEAR END TAX REASONS. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN ’ Here art tome example*: CAR * FULL WEEKLY PRICE PYM'TS. ‘40 Ford 2-door 5t97 SLIJ ■40 Mercury 5297 S3J1 '51 Chevy Conv. 5197 $4.11 '39 Flat *177 53JI f SUV Kind Auto Selles *39 at IttoaDath Laka Real FE 8-4088 kSr*wftaM*rwRih $2595" BEATTIE 'Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Home of Service after tne sale" ___OR 3-1291 MUSTANG, ^CYUfTDtiR. STICK. S2, 250. OA 8-3002. 1965 MUSTANG Convertible This one hat radio, heater, aut matlc, pa war ttearlng, brake whitewalls, end knack off caps. It • beauty st SMy — $2887 Can Mr; RagtaWhit* at — McAULIFFE FORD * 1945 MU ST AN Hardtop 3-spaad. 82,195. Ml 4-1444. 1945 Ford falcon futiJRa, hardtop, 219, V4, automatic, r* dta, htator, OL 1-0229. 1951 LINCOLN, 2-DOOR, HAROtOP S3 down, M a week. FDII p--- Capitol Auto Satai, Montcali Oakland: FE B4B71. 954 MERCURY. A TRAMlW •— car. 545. FE 3-3317 if" * $555 mi COMET t-daar, with radio, haal •r, slick mittl A new car trad In I No manay downl PATTERSON 1961 COMEt THE ULTIMATE IN ECONOMY. I an* owner rad beauty, has radk automatic, 3-dear, whitewall tlra and custom trim. LLOYD'S LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland Ave. New Location 1 ■ ______FE 2-7142 Oldsmobiles ’ 1959-1964* —Many Medal* on Dtaplay- Birmingham Trades Suburban Olds USED CARS 343 |. Woodward Av*. BIRMINGHAM 942 OLDS M. 1-DOOR, HYDRA-matlc, power staarlng, brakai. Radio, whitewall*. 25,000 mltat. A-l, HAUPT PONTIAC 1942 PONTIAC Starchlef 4-doc . . die, heater ^ower tteerlng, brake*, hydramatlc transmission, lust Ilka power staarlng, gold wl... .- '57 or '51 or '59 will Ittaka d peymantl 34 menfht on belsnoe, 19*1 PONTIAC Tamp*at ipoctt coi dawn payment I 1941 TiMPEST CONVERTIBLE, rad HAUPT PONTIAC Mlta Harm *f U.S. 10 on « CSTON ' . MA 5 OUTH station wagon, local car, ana owner trad* tael PATTERSON CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT tiODGE-DODGE TRUCKS tStl N. Main jt. OL 1-1551 ROCHESTER 1943 RED PLYMOUH CONVEfctl-bta. go Man commando, tadtas Ci tl.CSOTCdll OR 3-940S. 1941 PLYMOUTH "BELVEDERE" cylinder < condition Easy pay $1595 BIRMINGHAM brakes, radio. Ilka nawl- Only — *2,295. JEROME FEROUSON, jne. Rechadtor PORP Da* tar. OL V971L 1943 VALIANT :7S¥RnC ikiW convertible wim. radio, haator, ax-caltant lire* and a NEW CAR WARRANTY TO 5S400 MILES. A performance. Economical •rata and It can b* purchi___ LOW COST NEW CAR' TERMS. Your't today tor only $1495 BIRMINGHAM Chryslar-Ptymouth Delivered NEW 1965 PLYMOUTH FURY $1969 Heater • defrostor, '* Mg " cigar llghtar, cylinder engine, fmnt seat MM Seeing Is believing OAKLAND CHRYSLER • PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland 235* 1944 PLYMOUTH W STaYK only 4,000 mltat and has CAR FACTORY WARRANTY TO 50.000 MILES. Equipped with —-matlc tranimiutan, radio, I power steering/ whitewall tin ______________ Don't f one I Save plenty! Full pi $2195 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plynnoum 911 S. Woodward Ml 7-3214 1955 PONTIAC. RUNS GOOD, BODY ' 1100. MA “**- 1954 PONTIAC STARCHIEF. 334-1045 attar 5:30. 1954 PONTIAC EXTRAS, 1250. MY 3-4062. Repossession fnr Pontiac Hardtop, no mow dawn. Call Mr. Johnson, MA 5-24 Bmdar, - ■ 1959^1 TONTlAC~2^DOORitHARDT0! down tnd $7 a week. WE FINANCE Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 (AcCats open to letilwhne street I 495 OLIVER BUICK Double Checked -USED CARS- . '41 RENAULT Gordlnl 4-door ’to PONTIAC Catalina. t1,095 ’42 FORO Falrlana 500 . 51,NS '44 INVICTA Wagon .53,895 '41 BUICK Etoctra hardtop ..S1J95 '42 BUICK Invlda wagon ... '43 LaSABRE Hardtop, Pbwar '44 BUICK Skylark 4door .. 52,595 '43 BUICK Saaclal 4-door . 51,595 '44 ELECTRA 225 4-door htioa 53,375 '44 W4LOCAT 2-door hardtop 13,795 '41 TEMPEST 4-de< '41 CHEVY Inipala Canvt. ... 51,N5 '43 ELECTRA 225 hardtop ... '43 PONTIAC Bonneville wgn. 52,095 '« CHEVY to ton pickup ... '43 RAMBLER American 2-dr. '54 OPEL Wagon, radio . 51.495 '43 RENAULT R4 4-door ... '41 OLDS "IT' Hardtab . tot BUICK Saaclal S-daor ... si,343 *44 BUICK LtStbra 4-door ... '43 BUICK Rtatara Hardtop . 52.195 '43 PONTIAC Catalina wan. .. SIAN OLIVER BUICK ,N4Mp?!!3!i2 Laka $777 MM PONTIAC Catalina wagon, •taming, braket, good local nar tradel lla manay daaml PATTERSON wipTnancb Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 Nato mi Used Cmb 1*94 PONTIAC SONNBVILLB, A dlttonlns. HHi. . m? •™WWITIK--------------- GRAND PRIX wRR power etoertnq, brakes, buckets, saddle tan finish, only 52.993. Homer Bight pontiac-suicidchevrolEt entire OA B253S 1944 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX' 3-door barefita ataamafte a. dfabta geawr.jwte^hietojGWhlle^ate ^taegToONto,oTtLlStar Rd. fas* ij&mr 1 Mijupl,' 194* PONTIAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP Ventue, auto,, 4 new tlraa, sharp. Call 4M-2391. 1441 TEMPEST 4-DOOR WAGON, 4-cyllnder. stick, new rubber, taw 1941 PONTIAC CCnVERTIBLS, tionally ctatn.' Must tall. OL 14441 WE ARE A VOLUME DEALER —W4 can Dailvar— '65 Chryslers —TODAY— —We Cen Deliver- '65 Plymouths —TODAY— —w* Can D*ilv*r— * '65 Ramblers -tooay- BILL SPENCE CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT RAMBLER-JEEP MTS Dixie Hwy. Credit or Budget Problems? We Can Finance Youl 100 tars to Select from! Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7863 LLOYD'S , 1250 Qpklond Ave. 1943 BONNIVILLB COUPE, PULL power, air conditioner, axealtant shape. Call attar 3:31 p.m. tAkB 6v4k ^AVMENfl" 6fl A n Tempest custom automatic, • month. 4734551. 1943 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. ' 1963 Pontiac A Marlin aqua Catalina hardtep, that li tha Ihafp NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Olrtdeer Showroom) (Just to mile norm of Cess Ave.) Spartan Dodge 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA ADOtill sedan. Power staarlng and brakes. Hydramatlc. 52,525. Phona 4734345 attar 4 p.m. 1964' CATALINA/ 4-DOOR, AUTO- 4-5385. FE 1964 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE/ 1964 Pontiac Catalina Wagon . gar wim automatic, powe hat only 14,003 miles. Only — $2995 Russ Johnson RAMBLIR-PONTIAC* On *M4 nl Laka Orton LAKE ORION_______MY 34344 WANTED MBNTe ON ALMOST __________ THAT MUST BE LIQlilDAtEti IMMEDIATELY FOR YEAR END TAX REASONS. ABSOLUELY NO-MONEY DOWN Harrsca some examptas: - ;ar full weekly met PYMT. 1*7 S1J1 *1*7 Itjl fir lie' *597 54AS '35 Chavy '59 Plymouth ‘41 Pontiac tot Chrysler '54 Chavy Pickup Plus M 1 12.21 . MS9 at Elizabeth Laka Road FEROUSON, Inc, « D Daatar, OL 1-9711. -iBLlti AMCKIdAM. 1 mechanically. FE 1 Brand New Shipment of 1964 > AmbassqdoriB FULLY LOAPBD: RADIO. POWER STEERING, POW- . ER BRAKES, TURN I till-CATORS, OIL FILT0b< DOUBLE ACTION BRA MBS VISIBILITY GROUP, LIGW" GROUP, INDIVIDUAL R» CLININO SEATS, WHim, WALL TIRES, P U btl WHEEL COVERS. Pram . • $1,977.77 I 999 down, 24 montiit on batanOB VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-3900 St "SELECT" USED CART -Mostly 1 • owner naw - car trfliM. Easy financing bank rate. No fair attar, Baal or trSUplRI0R RAMBLER. ’ 550 Oaklond FE 5-9421 We're wheeling and dealing the all-new 1965 Rambkrs. See them nowl Used cars are being sold at wholeeale to make room for the new car trades. ROSE RAMBLER 1145 Commarc*. Untan Lake _________EM 3-41SS : 1963 Rambler Classic Wagon with stick shift, radio, haator' and It economy plus - Sea it today -taka a ride, and you buy — Only— $1445 Russ Johnson RAMBLER-PONTIAC On M24 In Laka Orton LAKE ORION MY 34244 1*41 NASH METROPOLITAN, GOOD ■ftaga. DA I-14M. 1963 RAMBLER SfAtlON WAGONS, 2 to choose from, priced from * '’superior RAMBLER 550 Oakland FE **421 1944 RAMBLER AMRRICAN, 1100 $222 1953 STUDEBAKBR 1 PATTERSON 4-4414. Opdyki Hardwar*. BUY YbUR NEXt * OLDS OR RAMBLER FROM H0UGHTEN 4 SON Northwood Auto Sales* . BSOLUTBLYNOMONEY DOWN OOOD CREDIT—BAD CREDIT *< 41 ________ ________. 'mm ■54 CHEVY STATION WAGON'S49S ■40 CHEVY STATION WAGON *597 '40 DODGE, 2-PpOR S597 '57 FORD, 2-DOOR **47 '57 JWCk. 4-DOOR '57'BUICK. 4-DOGR '57 BUICK. 4-DOOR 140 FALSON WAGON '59 PLYIWpUTH, 3D00R Jl47 »*147 M: WALK II ... DRIVEOUT NO PAYMENTS TILL PElT NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES 3013 Dixie Hwy. NEXT TO "SFARTAN DISCOUNT rr/itpr “ DIG INTO THESE VALUES FROM VILLAGE /V RAMBLER'S DEEPFREEZE.. 1964 Rambler Ambassador 990. Tha top of the line. Includes electric windows and air conditioning. Savo $3500. 1964 Ramblers, new and used. Factory official cars that ora nice, from $1395. 1962 Chevrolot, Bel Air, automatic, V-8 angina. A Birmingham trad# and roal sharp. Only $149$, 1961 Ramblor convertible. This one is a real . buy at only $695. ___________ 1960 Falcon. Thora art big savings on this Birmingham car. ,$595. 100% MONEY-BACK GUARANTEEI Don't Gamble on a Used Car-Come in and Got All the Facts! 666 S. WOODWARD - BIRMINGHAM ^ Ml 6-3900 1 JO 6-1411 \ THIRTY-FOUR THE FONT!AC i'Httab, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1964 VOLCANOES STILL ERUPTING—Clouds of smoke and steam continue to rise from the Atlantic Ocean around the new volcanic island, near Iceland, which has been named Surtsey. The original crater on Surtsey is still active. The island, now nearly a mile wide, AP MmMm was thrown up by eruptions which started in November 1963. Craters of the new eruptions are still below sea level, but Surtsey is expected to expand considerably if the eruptions < U.S. and Canada Near Accord on Cars WASHINGTON (UPI) - The United States and Canada are nearing agreement to abolish tariffs on automobiles and auto parts sold between the two countries, U.S. officials said today. Congress would have to approve such an agreement. Ultimately, the move could lead to a Common Market ii cars, although in the - beginning, tiie smaller and less efficient Canadian auto indns- Road Group Receives Bids on Material Bids have been received by the Oakland County Road Commission on 1965 requirements of several types of-bituminous paving and patching materials. A total of 10 bids were submitted on two types of liquid seal coat material. American OH1 Co. of Southfield was low bidder on both types with bids of $130 and $132.50 per thousand gallons. The bids ranged upward to $179 per thousand. Seneca Petroleum Co. of Chicago submitted the low bid of S12S.80 per thousand on liquid asphalt cement. There were six bidders, the highest asking $161. * * * Two companies bid oh tar, with Barrett Division of Allied Chemical, Romulus, submitting the low bid of $167.90 per thousand. High bid was $210. PATCHING MATERIAL Bids on hot and cold patching material ranged from $7.35 to $9.50 per ton. Ann Arbor Construction Co. of Ann Arbor was fort bidder. * "The road commission used sdme 254^)00 gallons of liquid asphalt and nearly 160 tons of patching material this year, according to Audrey Ellixson, purchasing agent. fry would still require some protection. Officials see these benefits in freer trade: • The U.S. auto industry would have tariff-free access to the Canadian market, which is expected to grow by leaps and bounds once Canadians are offered cars at lower prices. The Canadian auto industry would be encouraged to concentrate its efforts on items it can produce well and cheaply. This would lead to economies and to lower prices which in turn would permit Canadian firms to compete for the expanding market. Canadian consumers would pay less for cars. Tim same models now cost about 18 per cent more in Canada than in the United States. Tariffs to be abolished are the U.S. levies of 6.5 per cent on vehicles and 8.5 per cent on parts and. Canadian duties ; Shastri Plans Visit : to U. S„ Soviet Union : NEW DELHI (UPI) - Prime -Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri • said today he (dans to visit the : United States apd the S o'v i e ‘ ; Union “sometime in 1965." * He made the statement in re- • (narks to the Indian Parliament. ’ Shastri gave no specific dates ; tor the trips. JLigitte BARDOT -PLUS-Smmey, Seir Comedy'. "The ARMOROUS GENERAL" of 17.5 per cent on vehicles and 25 per cent,on parts. Talks have been going on in Ottawa and Washington for the past few months. They began after U.S. parts makers complained to the Treasury about the Canadian government’s plan for promoting exports of Canadian auto parts. DUTY REMOVED « For the past year, Canadian firms have been excused from paying import duties on parts if they would expand their sales abroad. U.S. parts makers say this puts them at a. competitive disadvantage. Actor Morgan Mason, Son of James He's Ready to Retire From 9 1 n By BOB THOMAS AP Mevfe-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD - Morgan Mason, after four months of acting -the role of Elizabeth Taylor’s son.is pre-pared io nounce his retirement. He is This is one of the tidbits reM la ted by Moth gan’s mother,| Pamela Mason, ust returnedl from the Paris THOMAS Paris filming of “Flight of the Sandpiper.” She had been suffering from laryngitis, a dread disease for one of the town’s most avid talkers. She had recovered enough to deliver a few tart comments on the film and its participants. ★ * * ■ Of her son’s career, she reported: "He’s back in school here and I never thought it would happen, but he’s glad of it. I think he’s had his fill of acting. “It was a long, long picture: seven weeks in Monterey, two weeks here and nine weeks in Paris. I don’t think he would have minded so much if he had been working all the time. But RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYi DAIRY Featuring Our Famoui , Ko*h*f Com«d B««f SPECIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY IwHwl -. n Wednesday Only Special! he would be called only two days a week. MANY DELAYS ‘There were countless delays, At first they were working six days a week in Paris, but Elizabeth put a stop to that. And all of. her bathing suit scenes in Monterey, were reshot because she finally lost 15 pounds.’’ Mrs. Mason said she only visited the set twice during the entire filming Her absences were purposeful. For one thing, she didn’t want Morgan to feel any conflict of authority between the director and herself. * * * “And also, people on the picture are terrified of me because I talk,’’ she added. She is just as happy thatJIor-gan is now more interested in an aviation career, rattier than acting. His father, James Mason, also hopes the boy doesn’t grow up to be an actor. MEN LIKE ACTION Said Mrs. Mason: “Acting is not a satisfactory line of work for men. Most males like to be men of action. But an actor’s most significant action is the result of control by other men — writers, directors and produc- ers. So they can’t really have much satisfaction in their The recently divorced Masons were again united in Europe with their children — daughter Portland was also on the trip. Despite the cosiness of the family picture, Pamela remains pointed in her remarks about her ex-husband. "I think people like James are so silly living in Switzerland for a tax advantage,” she commented. “It’s such a dismal place to live, anyway. And they have to be so careful about being places at the right time so they don’t lose their residence. South Korea President Home From Germany SEOUL (AP) —'President Chung Hee Park of South Korea returned to Seoul today from West Germany, where he signed; an agreement for 639 million in I commercial loans to his gov- “For instance, Richard Burton had to hurry out of this country and finish the picture in Paris, even though Jt ail takes place in Monterey. It’s so foolish. I’d much rather pay my taxes and Uve where I want.” . end adv Tues PMS Dec. IS Nearly one million Ftarto Ricans reside in the United EAGLE PMtilaoto POPULAR THEATER -MAURICE CHEVALIER Plus 2nd HIT! IKHIim«AMHDROS.BQIMNNQOUCIIOR rt /* iHONEVMCtoN HCflfeLfe / MteKr NRNcr Robfflr M v Park also sought closer economic cooperation between South Korea and West Germany to talks with German officials during his week’s visit in Bonn NOW! ! SHORT SUBJECT: 7:00 & 9:00 FEATURE AT 7:15 A 9:15 THE SCREEN COMMITS THE PERFECT COMEDY! aK*5«eBwaiid$ PETER ELKE SELLERS SOMMER ash°tinThe1' ItmuMJBEl____ »»NMMIKN* UNITED ARTISTS HURON FRIDAY “MARNIE” A “BEDTIME STORY” SAVEthe,^ Cash for Next Years GIFTing with a CHRISTMAS CLUB ********* Ever had that burning desire for all th« CASH you'd need for Christmas? Here's a bright idea that will light up the faces of everyone on your Gift List next December, and the whole idea gets brighter every month ... The idea, A CHRISTMAS CLUB . .. Want to be even brighter? Open one large enough to cover Year-End expenses too. t OPEN YOUR 1965 CHRISTMAS CLUB NOW $ 1.00 Eveiy Other Week Builds - $ 25.00 $ 2.00 Every Other Week Duilds - $ 50.00 $ 4.00 EveiV Other Week Builds - $100.00 $10.00 Every Other Week Builds - $260.00 $20.00 Every Other Week Builds - $500.00 National \ Bank 16 Conveniently Located Offices Downtown Pontiac... W. Huron ... N. Pony... Keego Harbor... Walled Loko.... Union Lake ... Milford . . . Lake Orion ... Waterford ,.. Woodward ... County Center.. . Romeo... Mall... Rochester... Univenlty and Bloomfield Hillo Member Federal Depotit Inturance Corporation l: THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1964 THIRTY*# IV#' —Television Programs— Programs furnished by stations listed in this column aro subjoct to change without notice. Channel S-WJWMY Chowwt 4-WWJ.TV Chnnwi 7-WXY9-TV Ctwnot t~CiaW.1V Ctownl S6-WTV8 TUESDAY EVENING 6:00 (3) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: “The Electronic Monster'1 (In Progress) (!) Woody Woodpecker (56) America’s Crises 1:31 (2) (4) National News (7) (Color) News, Sports (9) Bat Masterson (Repeat) v * ( 45 (7) National News 7:« (?) Naked City (Repeat) (4) (Color) Weekend Fun for the children at Detroit’s Christmas carnival at Cobo Hall (7) Rifleman (Repeat) (9) Detectives (Repeat) (56) Jerome Hines 7:99 (4) Mr. Novak (See TV Features) (7) Combat (See TV Features) (56) Challenge 6:11 (2) (Special) NATO in Danger (See TV Features) (9) Target: Corruptors (56) Government in America 8:99 (2) Red Skelton George Gobel heads guest list. (4) Man From U.N.C.L.E Solo matches wits with mysterious foreign agent —all over a dove. (7) McHale’s Navy One of the boys is put in a sack and mailed to San Diego to see his baby daughter. (56) Heritage 9:69 (7) Tycoon Walter hires son of old friend as Thunder Corp.’ efficiency expert, (9) Let’s Sing Out (56) Psychology of Con-valesence 9:99 (2) Petticoat Junction Rumor has it that Billie Jo is engaged to son of Kate’s archenemy. (4) (Color) That Was the Week That Was Betty Comden and Adolph Green—writers and performers — are guests, (7) Peyton Place Dr. Rossi continues his fight to dear himself the hospital. (9) Front Page Challenge 19:99 (9) Doctors/Nurses Widower who doesn’t have much use for himself plans to commit suicide. (4) (Special) Battle of the Bulge (See TV Features) (7) Fugitive • Kimble is trapped in underground shaft at missile site — and Lt. Gerard knows it. '(9) Newsmagazine 19:99 (9) Other Voices 11:99(2) (4) (7) (9) New Weather, Sports 11:99 (7) Les Crane 11:99 (2) Movie: “Panic in the Streets” (1950) Richard Widmark, Paul Douglas, Barbara Bel Geddes. (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (9) Bingo 12:99 (9) Movie: “The Man Upstairs" (1959) Richard Attenborough 1:99 (4) Lawman (Repeat) (7) After Hours 1:99 (2) Highway Patrol (Repeat) (4) (7) News, Weather WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:19 (2) On the Farm Front 6:11 (2) News 6:29 (2) Sunrise Semester 9:99 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:59 (2) News 7:99 (2) Happyland (4) Today v Puppeteer Herman Aicher and the Salzburg Marionettes guest; interview with “Doll House Book” author. (7) Johnny Ginger 8:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:39 (7) (Color) Movie: “Toy Tiger” (1966) Laraine Day, Jeff Chandler. -8:45 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:99 (2) Movie (Part 1): “Till the End of lime” (1946) TV Features Battle of the Bulge By United Press International MR. NOVAK, 7:30 p.m. (4) Teacher Novak becomes in-Volved in near-tragic hazing accident when he assumes sponsorship of off-campus club. COMBAT, 7:90 p.m. (7) U.S. soldier (Roddy McDowall) claims he was attacked by English-speaking Germans in American uniforms. NATO IN PANGER, 8:00 p.m. (2) Report on opening day of NATO council meeting in Paris and problems besetting Western alliance. BATTLE OF THE BULGE, 19:00 p.m. (4) Documentary about epic World War H battle, presented on 20th anniversary of its start on 85-mile Ardennes front in Belgium, told through narratives of soldiers, Including Gen. McAuliffe. USW, 11 Producers Plant-Level Steel Negotiations Open PITTSBURGH OB—The AFL-, May 1, the earliest possible CIO United Steelworkers open contract talks with 11 major producers today amid scathing industry criticism. These are plant-level negotiations. The national contract la scheduled to be reopened the first of the year. * * * In a Joint statement Monday the 11 major companies, which represent more than 79 per cent of the nation’s steel output, scored the union for announcing would reopen the contract. The companies said this “gut the country to the disturbance ‘ a potential crisis date.” HIGHER PAY The USW, which last month said it would reopen the contract to seek higher pay and total Job security, is free to strike 120 days after the nation-‘ talks start. This would make Robert Mltchum, Dorothy McGuire. 9:19 (56) All Aboard for Reading 9:99 (56) Numbers 9:56 (56) Children’s Hour 10:99 (4) Make Room for Daddy (Repeat) (7) Girl Talk (9) Canada Schools 19:19 (56) Your Health 19:99 (2) I Love Lucy (Repeat) (4) (Color) What’s This Song? (7) Price Is Right (9) Across Canada 19:35 (56) French Lesson 19:59 (56) Spanish Lesson 19:55 (4) News 11:99 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Concentration (7) Get tiie Message (9) Friendly Giant 11:96 (56) Interlude 11:15 (9) Chez Helene 11:29 (56) For Doctors Only 11:99 (2) McCoys (Repeat) (4). (Color) Jeopardy (7) Missing Links . (9) Butternut Square 11:59 (9) News 4:99 (2) Movie: “Ghost Chasers” (1861) Bowery Boys. (4) Mickey Mouse Club (Repeat) (9) Popeye 5:99 (4) (Color) George Pier rot Film tour of Belgium (7) Movie: “Cavalry Command” (1963) John Agar, Merry Anders. 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:99 (9) Rocky and Friends (56) What’s Neyr? 5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny 5:56 (2) Sports (4) Carol Duvall Ice Jams Clog Alaska River Spews From Banks; 40 to 50 Evacuated AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Love Of Life (4) (Color) Say When (7) Father Knows Best (Repeat) (9) Bingo 12:29 (56) Friendly Giant 12:25 (2) News 12:99 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) Truth or Consequences, (7) Ernie Ford 12:95 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:56 (56) All Aboard for Reading 1:99 (2) Jack Benny (Repeat) (4) News (7) (O'-lor) Movie: ”1 Love Melvin” (1963) Una Merkel, Les Tremayne (9) Movie: “Canyon River” (1956) George Montgomery, Peter Graves. 1:19 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (56) French Lesson 1:15 (4) Topics for Today 1:25 (56) World History 1:99 (2) As the World Turns * (4) (Color) Let’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News (56) Adventures in Science 2:99 (2) Password (4) Loretta Young 2:29 (7) News 2:25 (56) Numbers 2:39 (2) Playhouse 2 (4) Doctors (7) Day in. Court 2:59 -(56) Interlude 2:55 (7) News 3:99 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:16 (9) News 3:29 (56) Memo to Teachers 3:25 (2) News 3:39 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 90 4:99 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPI) —Gigantic ice Jams clogged the Klutina River in the Alaska interior today, pushing the river from its banks and causing the evacuation of 40 to 50 persons. Col. Bud Turner, director the Alaska Defense Office, said about one-third of the 150 residents of the copper center, 200 miles northeast of here, were evacuated in 62-degree-below-zero weather. Most of them were taken to the nearby Copper Valley School, he said. “Our main goal right now to keep these people alive,” Turner said. “It’s too cold to about anything else.” * * ★ A seven-mile-long jam on the Kenai Peninsula southwest of here has completely stopped the flow of ttie Kenai River and residents of Soldotna and Kenai were warned to be ready for immediate evacuation far case of a sudden thaw. Turner said neither of the towns was in immediate danger. OVER LANDSCAPE The Klutina, fed by Lake Klu-tina and glaciers in the Chugach Mountains, surged around the huge jam, and began picking " way. over the landscape. A ground party said the siti tion was changing practically hourly as the river flowed haphazardly outside its banks, changing- course as new jams strike date. However, since the crippling strike of 196969 - the most recent one — union and management have tried to meet in advance of formal negotiations to provide breathing room, w ★ W Industry’s statement followed the first meeting of union chairman from the 11 companies and heir management counterparts. The statement said in part: wtl be no national agreement until all local Issues are settled, an approach that already has brought grief to the auto indus- try mis year. To t " I complicate matters, McDonald is facing Me toughest opposition for president in elections that come up in February, smack in the middle of negotiations. He is opposed for mother four-year term — his fourth — by USW Secretary Treasurer I. W. Abel. Hoffa Appeal Is Up to Court Ruling Not Due for Some Time In Case “We hope that the union will reconsider and not put the country to the disturbance of a potential crisis date. The union must know that reopening notices will not induce the companies to grant demands that are economically unacceptable.” The union’s demands, as outlined last month, include higher pay, but no specified amount yet; unlimited unemployment pay for senior workers and more paid holidays, longer paid vacations and more liberal holiday and vacation eligibility requirements. Murder Trial Is Postponed Delay Beer Exec's Case at Least Month The murder trial for a beer company executive from Farmington has been adjourned for at least a month in Oakland County Circuit Court. Steelworkers now earn an av- The postponement for WeUs erage of $3.03 hourly and get IS. Herrington, 45, was granted seven paid holidays. when the name of one of the Union President David J. Me- assoeiated with the case Donald has put no price tag on was mentioned in testimony the package, but has said it is ] presently being heard in an-not inflationary. j other trial. CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) —. The fate of James R. Hoffa’s appeal of his jury-tampering conviction is in the hands of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals today, but a decision is not expected for some time. The controversial president of the Teamsters Union sat through five hours of arguments Monday by four defense attorneys and two government lawyers. * ★ * Hoffa held a news conference afterward but refused to discuss the appeal proceedings, because it would be a “discourtesy to the judges who heard my appeal.” Hoffa, however, lashed out at his archenemy, former Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, calling him a “spoiled brat.” UNION MEETING Hoffa left for Chicago Monday night to attend a Teamsters meeting. The Appeals Court is expected to take weeks — or even months —before ruling, if the conviction handed down March 5 in U.S. District Court at Chattanooga, Tenn., should be upheld or reversed. Herrington’s trial was to have begun Thursday but it was felt by court officials that it would be difficult to select Jurors because they might be prejudiced. This jury term ends Friday and a new jury will begin Jan. 19, the date expected for the Start of the Herrington trial. Herrington, a wholesale sales manager with the Stroh Brewery, Detroit, is charged with first degree murder in the | shooting of a dentist, Dr. John R. Foster, 3130 W. Long Lake, The statement said that steel West Bloomfield Township. INDUSTRY STATEMENT | The industry statement said “the-union’s program goes either to taking for the steelworkers an unfair share of the proceeds of the business at the expense of others, or increasing restrictions upon the companies.” The industry also took the opportunity to deny union claims that producers were enjoying their greatest prosperity ever and that workers were not sharing the fruits. ACROSS 1 Baked apple dumpling 4 Milk wheys 8 Nutritive material., 12 Malt brew 13 Fish sauce 14 Musical instrument 15 Edible seed 16 Torment 18 Fusing 20 Measure 21 Affirmative 22 Within (comb, form) 24 Cicatrix 26 Assam silkworm 27 Health resort 30 Warning signal 32 Cancer or Capricorn Stick. 35 Landed property 36 Driving command 37 Sheaf 39 Sandarac tree 40 Chalcedony 41 Anger 42 Thrall 45 Holding rights 49 Miserly 51 Fish 52 Indigo 53 Shield bearing 54 Potato storage place 55 Flower 56 Statuary (ab.) 57 Group of matched pieces DOWN 1 Feline creatures 2 Hodgepodge 3 Possible result of too much sustenance 4 Cloys 6 Ardor 6 One who leases 7 Deed 8 Size of paper 9 Mortuary roll 10 Exude moisture 11 Forest creature 17 Sacrificial Mocks .-p- 19 Biblical division ;tg 23 Chemical element 24 Male deer 25 Morse for instance 26 Foe 27 TOey go with sauerkraut-21 Century plant fiber 29 Genus of maples 31 Presser 33 Hokkaido city •• 38 Elicit Immature seed 41 Percolator coffee holder 42 Mast 43 Cotton fabric 44 Cuckoo blackbirds 46 Feminine appellation ., 47 Miss Adams 48 Dispatched : * 50 Moths Answer to Previous Punle The shooting occurred Sept. 16 at Herrington’s apartment, 32777 Grand River, when Foster attempted to force his way in to see Herrington’s wife, who had filed for divorce and had dated Foster. At the time the Herringtons was 37th among 41 industries in 1963 and that “only a moderate rise in steel’s position can be expected” for the first nine months of 1964. It also said the steelworkers average hourly earnings are 88 cants above the figure for all manufacturing. I were attempting a reconcilia-! McDonald has said that there * tion. Service for Veteran MIDLAND (API — -Funeral service was held Monday for Marvin E. Wyman, a Span* ish-American War Veteran. Wyman died Saturday at the age of 88. He served with' Company^ of 95th Regiment of Michigan Volunteers during the Spanish War. Hoffa, free under $75,000 bond, was convicted with three other men of trying to influence the jurors in his 1962 conspiracy trial at Nashville, Tenn. That trial ended in a hung jury. He was sentenced to eight years and fined $10,000 after his conviction in Chattanooga. The other defendants, also appealing, were sentenced to three years each. They are Edwin King, former head of the Nashville Teamsters; Larry Campbell, business agent of Teamsters Local 299 in Detroit, and Thomas E. Parks of Nashville, the only defendant not present for the appeal arguments. ★ w W Hoffa said in his news conference that the pressure on the Teamsters has eased since Kennedy, now senator-elect from New York, left office. “There .is no question the flood of subpoenas has ceased and there is no question that the conspiracy to sow dissension in our union also ceased since Comic Carson a Standout in Her 'Advice' Handout WILSON By EARL WILSON LAS VEGAS — I get bushels of mail from troubled people j asking me to help solve their problems ... but I believe that Sue Carson, the comedienne, burlesquing a woman psychiatrist I and advice-giver, does a better job in her act in Monte Proser’s "Ziegfeld Follies” at the Thunderbird than any other living person. “Our son has picked up with bad com-' panions in our slum neighborhood,” a mother says. “He steals, takes narcotics, he has hit his father in the mouth and now he has hit me in the month and also stolen my purse. What am I to do?” “What you should do,” the woman psychiatrist says, “is to move to a nice, dean, fresh neighborhood—and not give your son your address.” i ★ ★ ★ The late Ted Weems told columnist Tony Zoppi of the Dallas News his craziest experience. A drunk kept saying “You’re not Ted Weems — you don’t look like Ted Weems.” Ted Weems said maybe be was balder, but he was still Ted Weems. “You’re NOT Ted Weems!” the drunk persisted. “All right, now, if yqu’re really Ted Weems, let’s hear you say, “Is everybody happy?’ ” ★ ★ ★ Frank Sinatra said he asked Dean Martin if he fell down much while drinking and Dean said, “Yes, that’s the only way I get any rest. .. Frank passed along the report that Vice President-elect Humphrey was back in his father’s* drug store mixing tranquilizers for Bobby Baker . . . Don Rickies says the speed- —---------— , up movie schedules are getting ridiculous: “The last movie I Robert Kennedy left office, made, we shot in 35 minutes.” sa**' Arturo, the famous Las Vegas maitre d* at the Hotel , n« Riviera, took this opportunity to deny that he remains loyal Innocent rleos to Beldoa Katleman, one-time proprietor of El Rancho Vegas,' “merely because he has lots of money.” Says Arturo, “It’s Entered TOT Two because be has lots and LOTS of money!” THE MIDNIGHT EARL Radio Programs— WJR(760) WXYZG 270) CKIWftOO) WWJC93Q) WCAR0130) WRONG 460) WJBKQ 500) WHFM=M(94.7) •iM-WJR. News WWJ, UBm CKLW. Newt WPON, Mews, Sports WMF I, Mews WCAR. Nows. Secured! WXYZ, NOWS i: 15—WJBK, News, Rpbort U. TiO , ^•,sssrs :■ M mKsHM M WJR, Business Knight ‘ 7:SO—WwJ, News, Phone, Emphesis - WCAR >R, Soyd Ctrender Ml-yvxYZ. Toon B WJR. Sports MO-WXYZ, Leo A Ion Music WJR. CronWte. Music 1:00—WPON, Kettering BOS- MMm . WJR, News, Music liW-JWWJ, voice et Chrtsrmes News Bmphesis fiM—WWJ, News, emplwsls, fiW-WJR. Solvation Army . 10:00—WJR, KeleMoscope WXYZ, Madcap Murphy, . WJR, Notes, Sports ^ I1:!0—WCAR, Commentary I MS-WCAR, tsovd r arender lltSO-CKLW, MUSIC *111 Dew - WJR, MOM. 1 wwj. Music Scari# WEDNESDAY MORNING <■00—WJR, News. Agriculture . WWJ. News. noBe^r . . WXYZ, Writ, Music. News CKLW. Perm, aye Ouener WJBK. News. Merc Avery WCAR. News, Senders / WPON. News. Arisen# WHPl, McLdodsvtlle. USA OtSS-WJR, Music Hell WJBK, WPON, News, Whitman CKLW, Butf Dev Its 7:IO—WJR, NOW1, MutlC CKLW, News. Bud bevies tiSO—WJBK, News. Avery Aik Netriibw WXYZ, Breakfast Cl CKLW, Joe van WXYZ, .MUSIC, News WRONBfOAV APTBRNOON IlitO—WJR, News, Perm WpON, News, Ron Knight ” WWJ. News, Musk ■ WCAR, JMM> Delzell . , WHPl, Lorry Payne, Nows. Honk Bur dipt WXYZ, Avery, Musk, Nows CKLW, Now*. Joe Van -11:10—WJR, Bud Guest Show ItOO-WJR, News Art Link letter WHPl. Newt, Burdick JP-WJR, Women’s War IS WJBK, Ni WPON. N WCAR, Newt. Beceroll. Ik"Hell Murder Suspects Two Pontiac murder suspects, Carol Burnett, summoned for jury duty, was excused - she a man and a woman, stood mute j to attend an Equity hearing in regard to her shuttered “Fade 4u.ir arraignment Out, fade In" . . . John Wayne, whose illness caused a delay In In Circuit Court yesterday and I »>» filming activities, is ready to go to Durango, Mexico, Jan. 3 .5. ■ ftVpr for if is] ! with Dean Martin to start “Sons of Katie Elder” . . . Eddie W wu.»nt ninne were entered Fisher’ll cut short his Las Vegas cafe stint to entertain at the LBJ hv^Judm1 William ^ Brer for! inaugural ... Dahlia Lavl, who just finished “Lord Jim," will Aardn White, 38, of 31 Edmund I d® “Sa™*8 of Kalahari” (the rote once planned for Lis Taylor). and Viola Payne, 43, of 46 Hib- ★ ★ ★ hgjj| trial dates were set, | ■ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: One Broadway theater s bar is do* w * ★ fog so well that the producer will dose the play and sign the White is charged with second bar for a year’s run. degree murder in the Oct. St. WISH I’D SAID THAT: This is the year that will go down in ihtyiting of Lawrence Cleghom, political history as the one in which the elephant wished it didn’t 39, of 434 S. Sagfoaw at Cleg- have such a good memory.—Arthur Maisel. horn’s home. White is free on REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Only fools and dead men don’t $1,000 bond. | change their, minds. Fools won’t. Dead men can’t.”—John H. A first degree murder charge Patterson: was brought against Mrs. Payne earl’s PEARLS: “You think .you got trouble?” asks She!-when she allegedly stabbed her j b Friedman. “I know a centipede with athlete’s foot." husband, Robert, during a fighti ,Tm g,ad to be appearing here,” Bob Hope said at a USO fo the South Side pool hall dinner. "McNamara closed so many bases that thert art few Nov. 18. She la held to the coun- p^ces left for toe to play " •. .That’s earl, brother, ty jail without bond. | #»■> pr r1 4 r f" sr IT rr 12 13 14 rr 15 \l nr 21 24 Zb J H 23 23 X 33 34 3T 42 43 U 47 48 43 &l 52 53 54 55 55 57 T9 GASH NOW! ■^BANKERS PAY OFF ALL ACCOUNTS Replace with one payment One Place YES... you can remodel'yeur heme and pay your bills tee! One lew monthly payment includes everything. Widows and pensioners eligible. FE 4-6141 CALL for freo appraisal OjMralar on July tnryJmyU kourt. IfunnbU to mil. mail rou/uui !BANKERS NAME | 1 Investment Co. ADDRESS T | | IIW. Lawrence CITY j 1 PONTIAC thirty-six Tl THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1964 on mm Pear Santa: Wort To Siva SANTA a Helping Hand ? The Perfect Gift For The Man In Your Life! SUEDE and LEATHER COATS $3995 to $6995 SWEATERS *595To$1495 Men's & Boys' 17 CU. FT. TRIMWALL REFRIGERATOR e No defrosting aver e Adds decorator touch to your kitchen t A A 005 Modal 776N ^KrV «low «• 3.75 pat weak NO MONEY DOWN B. F. GOODRICH 111 North Pony i FE 2-0121, REALLY CONVENIENT Gift with a lift!price *124. BERRY AUTOMATIC Opens, closes garage door from inside your emr tins iirulno fnmflr gfftf Tirnrfr **~r *— rr*-1*1- —1 Dewy Airtndurtlc opoor, ctenei door, HaMa up lawns Otrao wlalitHw, had weadwcpjotecttee. Bectfewk cewpeweiiH puarantnnd nan year- DICKIE LUMBER 2416 ORCHARD LAKE RD. PHONE 682-1600 HOURS: 700 AM. to 0 P.M.-Saturday 7:30 AM. to 2 P.M. SCREENS-SCREENS WE GOT EM'... STOP IN AND LET US Shiow WHY KNOX IS THE FINEST AVAILABLE. X 67 W. 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Iffll SHOPPING DAYS TILL CHRISTMAS The Weather m Hmmt/ . I THE PONTIAC PRlfSB BV® TO VOL. 122 NO. 268 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1964 -86 PAGES Suspect Is Charged in Strangling State Is Given large School Spending Plan EducatoW Budgel Proposal Could Force Need for Now Taxei LANSING OJPI) — A group of top college edu cators dropped a financial bomb in the laps of Gov George Romney and th< legislature yesterday bj proposing a higher educa tion budget that coulc 'force the need for new taxes. . ■’ The proposal*, calling fo hefty increases in both opera! ing expenses and capital outlay, were made by the group called the Michigan Coordinating Council for Public Higher Education. The program calls for: • An increase in operating funds for the 10 state-supported institutions of |47i million to $178.7 million. • 852 million for a 1965-66 building program that would be the start of a five-year, $346 million plan which the educators said should be financed through a bonding authority similar to that for the Mackinac Bridge. • 812 million for community college operation. • $2.5 million for the state scholarship program, instituted by the 1964 legislature on a grant of 8500,000; The 1965-66 requests alone for the colleges and adversities would come to |MU million compared with $Ul.t (Continued on Page I, Col. 3) CITY’S FIRST — Those who will handle the reins of government al the City of Orchard Lake Village were sworn into office last night following adoption of a charter a week ago. City Council woman Mrs. Katherine M. Baker here administers the. oath to Municipal Judge Martin J, Kabcenell (right) as Sylvester Leahy looks on. Leahy was elected mayor and Frederick S. Strong Jr. mayor pip tern of Oakland County’s newest city. Other council members are John C. Hail, Everett R. Casey and Kenneth Treacy. Chrysler Chief Talks of 1965 10 Million Vehicle Sales Eyed i Pontiac, Tempest Sales Set Record for 10-Day Period Pontiac Motor Division* today reported that sales of Pontiacs and Tempests in the first 10 days of December were the highest for thq period in the history of the division. Frank V. Bridge, general sales manager, said Dec. HO sales totaled 26,903, a 37 per cefft increase over the 19,646 sales in. the same period a year ago which was the previous record. “The market for our cars is exceptionally strong,” Bridge skid. "The new car buying fever, which was temporarily disrupted by the strike, is bade stronger than ever.” „ Bridge also pointed out that the 36,903 safes from Dec. HO were the best for any 19-day sales period, not counting an introduction or. sales contest period. In Today's Press U.N. D Africans plan couhter-attack against Adlsi— PAGE 2. Rights Aft Caution tempers elation of Negro leaders over rul-ing-PAGE 19. WW II Battle • Veteran of the Bulge recalls fampus repjly to Nazis—PAGE 11. Area News ........ 30 Astrology .......... 87 Bridge Comics .jfftT.......37 Editorials 6 Markets ........... 88 Obituaries .. ......39 Sports ..........33—80 Theaters ...........34 TV, Radi# Programs . 35 Wilson, Earl . .....35 Women’s Pages .....14-17 Yuletide Stories ...33 . DETROIT (AP)- — Next year “could be the year when 10 million new cars and trucks will be sold at retail in the United States for the first time,” Chrysler Corp. President Lynn A. Townsend said yesterday. And by the early ,1970s, the auto industry will be turning out Reserve Shift to End in '66 See Summer Training Next Year as Usual WASHINGTON. tAP) - The Pentagon is aiming to complete the revolutionary reorganization of the Army’s Reserve forces in about 16 months, it was learned today. ’ *. * * * Key officers of the National Guard and the Army Reserve have been told in secret briefings that the objective' date for final action is the end of March 1966. It is expected that Guard and Reserve outfits will go to summer training next year in their present form, some of these officers told the Also- -dated Press. The Army staff, aided by Guard and Reserve officials, already has begun the difficult job of working up solutions for the problems involved in shifting 150,000 Army Reservists and their units to , the Natiqnal Guard. ★ A. «*. One of the first jobs to be handled is the drafting of a “troop list.” This involves surveying the 4,000 Reserve units to decide which 2,000 or so will fit into the expanded Guard organizations, and how they will hr distributed among the states. •••.'* TROOP LIST Such a troop Ust — Which is' really only a beginning point for this reorganization — is not expected to be ready befi^e mid-February. At that tjme, the spates will know what tinits they will lose and what units they will gain. , ' Plans are being iphde to brief date governors, who have a powerful sqy under the la# aa to the disposition of the National Guard within their states. y. Questions poured fo on the Pentagon from reservists, unsure of Where they s^nd. about 10 million passenger cars a year, Townsend told the Economic Club of Detroit. The industry "is in the process right now of putting two eight-million-car year* back to back,” he said. “And in terms of vehicles, it will probably sell at retail at least 1.5 million units in 1115.” - The 10 million Car-truck figure could be reached, next year "if recent sales trends .continue, if conditions .in the general economy during the coming year are as good as they promise to . be, and if the country is spared from prolonged strikes and major international disturbances,” he said. fr; ’, ★ w Townsend listed these reasons* for his optimism: • “People who buy cars aire confident about the future and are giving every .evidence of intending to go on' buying cars.” •Personal income after taxes, “the kind of money people use to buy cars;” is at an all-time high. ♦ • “Business activity, is at record levels and rising, and businessmen are. expressing their confidence in'the future with the highest expenditures on record fdr plant and equipment.” and “the rapidly increasing number of multiple - car families.” NEW PROBLEMS Townsend said the industry’s rapidly expanding sales has ere- ‘ ated a new set of problems, such as work stoppages and a shortage of output Capacity. ’ * * * “It will be a matter of years rather than months before any of us can breath easy in the knowledge that we have enough margin at capacity to meet peak load requirements,”'hesaid. Rock); Claims Barry Should Blame Himself Answers Charge by Defeated Candidate on Lack of Support .ALBANY, N.Y. l*> — Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller says Sen. Barry M. Goldwater should blame himself and not fellow Republicans for the party’s losses in the November election. : The governor charged that Goldwater, as. the presidential candidate, “undermined Republican unity and threatened public confidence in the very future of the party.” * < Goldwater had accused ' Rockefeller-of contributing to the GOP defeat. Rockefeller replied last night: night: , “His (Goldwater’s) positions on key issues of the day did not reflect traditional Republican thinking nor a point of view acceptable to a great majority of the American people. It is this, and this alone which, in my opinion, resulted in ids defeat.” Goldwater, in a copyright interview in U.S. News & World Report, said he believed he lost the presidency the day he won the Republican nomination — July 15. PARTICULAR BLAME He laid particular blame on Rockefeller and Gov. George Romney of Michigan as among challengers for toe nomination who had painted a “caricature” of Goldwater. “That “caricature,” Goldwater said, depicted Mm as trigger-happy and as foe of the Social Security System and led to the landslide election victory for President Johnson. Police Claim Pontiac Man Has Confessed Suspect Arraigfted in Death of Girt Found oft Lovers' Lane Site A Pontiac man who told police he* strangled: one woman and married'anoth-er between midnight and noon Saturday was arraigned in Pontiac Municipal Court last night on a charge of first-degree murder. Carl F. Foster, 28, of 286 S. -East Blvd., demanded examine-tion when he appeared in dosed court before Municipal Court Judge Cecil McCallum, charged ' with the murder of Mrs. Maurice Crook, 20, of 2401 S. Telegraph. Senior Assistant Prosecutor Jerome K. Barry Jr., set Dec. 33 as the date for examination. Appearing with Foster was Pontiac Attorney J. Robert Sterling, who has been retained by Foster’s family for his defense. Foster is being held without ' bond in the Oakland C o u n t y PARIS (S) — The United States, Britain and West Jail. •» Germany pushed ahead today with private negotia- * tions for setting up an Allied nuclear command despite id di- France’s refusal to have any part it in. e vorce would have been final yes- This move, reported by Allied sources, over- terday, was found Sunday after- shadowed the opening of the annual year-end minis- a l°T1er8’ ne#j r J the intersection of Opdyke and Featherstone. Carl Foster Allies Push With N-Force gmtc Output 3 School Districts for Week. Hifs >0K Bond issues All-Time High. Property owners yesterday approved bond issues to finance school construction in three Oakland County, d i strict*. A 31.5-million building program in the Walled Lake dis: trict passed by a 830-721 margin. Also on that "ballot was Last week’s figure topped toe a proposition for a 1-mill in-previous weekly high of 3,190 crease in operations levy, r .. . . .. «. . . ... . «LUL---------k.. • QAJI 700 trAto An all-time weekly production high was chalked up by GMC Truck & Conch Division last week when 3,309 trucks and buses rolled Off assembly lines here.. terial meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. France was left out of the planning by its own choice. Ui. Secretary of State 1 Dean Rusk has told President Charles de Gaulle that American proposals for a mixed-manned nuclear fleet, or any arrangement growing out of that multilateral force would be left open for ultimate French participation. Rusk, Britain's Patrick Gordon Walker and West Germany’s Gerhard Schroeder scheduled a private meeting to discuss the nuclear commanfrsidea. * The United States .and Ger- Predict Light Snow units established in the week Of May, 1955' according .to a division spokesman. Production of 6,476 GMC truck* arid buses in toe first i two weeks of December is run-: ning ahead of lari month’s rate. In November, 12,106 vehicles which won by a 960-729 vote. Successful in the Wen Bloomfield district was a 31-million bond issue. Win margin for the question was 515- • Signs of particular interest to the auto industry are also favorable, such aa the annual scrappage raft of more than five million cars, the 3% to 4 million Americans who reach (kiver-Iicensing age each'year, were produced by the division, stories on Pdge 20. 229. A 3775,000 bond issue in the Holly district carried by a 298-220 vote. For further details, see MISSING FRIDAY / She tmd been missing since . . _ 11:30 p.m. Friday, what Foster for Area Tomorrow Less than 12 hours later, according to police. Footer mar-We almost l«t a white Christ- ^ u, the for- but.y”t.e.rday a 5anewaJlof mer Mrs. Thou Lloyd, 23, In mow restored hopes. Accumula- j^wllng 0rMII> Ohio tion of one inch was recorded in downtown Pontiac. Police, said Foster confessed The weatherman expects still J* brutalmurder after ques. more snow, but not until tombr- and two lie detector row; when intermittent light mow is forecast for the after- * . . .* , noon. I * . The victim had been beaten * , - , •. . • about the head and : strangled to with her own undergarments, sc- I 10 to 18 tonight, but it II be ^rding to police. An autopsy ....------ MU------------- rilghtty warmer tomorrow. report listed strangulation as the many prefer the* origlttar fleet of • to 30 pre- cause 0f death. .; dieted. ' ^ *Q“a. IIVFD WITH PAIR Under this arrangement the Thursday’s weather picture is ■ .. 4. •• alliance would create a fleet of partly clpydy, windy and colder *** ** tares year-oM son 25 surface, ships armed with a. With snow flurries. hadtoeen living witoltoe.parents tol.1 of y nuclear-tipped Po- NORTHWESTERLY,WINDS' Mr. WiEo let iansmissnes. Today in Pontiac, winds are apartment, behind, the Miracle . Britain wants to expand the northwesterly at 10 to 20 miles Mile Shipping Center. ' idea into an Atlantic nuclear an hour. , . . . \ The coldest* recording preced- "fototonance superfo- ing 8 a.m. today was 10. The area warmed up slightly by 1.. p.m., however, when 22 was re- -corded. force and to include Polaris submarines, some of Britain’s own V-bombers and possibly landbased missiles. Following Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s recent-meeting in --------—:——■—~— Washington with President Johnson, the British have been given . . . • , c i n I a green light to try to sell their Legislator Carly DOCK6T idea to the West Germans. ■ ■■ i ' ..... Final control still would rest in the hands of the* President of, the United States. This is one feature de Gaulle strongly op-poses. Ministers of the 15-nation NATO alliance met to review the state of the alBanceand look int.detail at the postwd'of^de-fense maintained by the Atlah^ • tic community. In a sense, the new British proposals for an Allied unclear system offered a chance for the United States and France to avoid a clash inside ike NATO conference itself. The discussions can take place qutside the conference hall among the countries interested. Lynch, maintenance supc tendent at the shopping cen-, learned she hod be on murdered wheu he reported (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) ANNUAL SINg 4 Carolers of toe Lincoln Junior High School 9w Grade Chorus opened the 19th anndal Christmas musical program presented by the Pontiac State Bank, yester- day, under the direction of George Deptel. Singing groups from various city schools will perform ini the main lobby of the bank every day from now,until Christmas. Stadium Support Cited “I have discussed the possibil- “It is located in the center of ity of a state-owned athletic a circle that embraces four-mil-stadium on* the fairgrounds with lion people today and which will many of my .associates in Lans- be increased appreciably in the ing, and I find strong support^ future.” for the movement,” said Rep. Arthur g. Law today.1 - .This Well-known Pontiac legis-. lator la currently one of the vet- ' erans formulating policies and directing lawmaking activities of the House. “I have studied this matter since it was first broached for toe OI y m p i e s,” said Law, “and I gave tt my fall support at that time. “Sister* states are taking this step, and we should da something to make that valuable, state-owned acreage productive. ★ '* * “III the manner outlined, it could serve a wide variety of purposes and be made useful to a large number of Midiigan citizens. ' &. • vV Arthur j. law THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUKjSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1964 fJSSSr Is Dead at 58 <■2 HOLLYWOOD U.S. policy in the Congo mobilized today for a counterblast at U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson after he accused them of injecting “blac^ racism” into the Security Council debate. Ambassador Achar Marof of Guinea told newsmen a strategy meeting would be held today by {he 18 African and 4 Asian nations who have charged before the council that the United States and Belgium committed aggression -by sending paratroops to rescue whites held by the Congolese rebels. ♦ * * ■ Hie Organization of African Unity also called a meeting of foreign ministers of Its 34 member nations in New York today to discuss the Congo situation. .... Vv * w . Most African delegates who had denounced the ’ United States and Belgium in the council debase , refused to comment on Stevenson's blistering repty Monday. But they plainly did not relish Ifis charge that they were guilty of “irrational, irresponsible, insulting and repugnant language.”-. WAS EXPECTED “Jifit about what we .would have exjtedted,” said one African. “How else could he justify Educators Urge Delay in Plans to Expand Branch Campuses Request Due oh Extension of Bus Pact City Manager Joseph A. Wap ren is slated to report to the City Commission tonight op ex- . tension of the city’s agreement with Pontiac Transit Corp. The agreement, which calls for* the city ,tov'|&y bus company losses up to >#1,715 per month, expires at the erefof the • year. . Warren has been meeting with Ken E. Totten, regional manager of American Transit - Corp., parent company for local bus operations. Warren is expected to ask that the current bus pact be extended 90 days to work out a longer contract with the bus firm. In other business tonight, the commission will receive a report from the city engineer on the acquisition of city • owned property for proposed M59 freeway construction. The, State Highway Department seeks to purchase cltyjarta - for the new freeway. A resolution to ipake application to the Nfuiiicipal Finance Corporation for permission to issue tax anticipation notes is also sion. EAST LANSING ID— A panel of national education leaders has advised Michigan college and university representatives to hold off on plans to build or expand branch campuses. A fice-member committee told the Michigan Cordinating Council on Higher Education Monday, that “nd university branches should be established until, a state .plan for higher education has been prepared by the (new) State Board of Education. . “In the future no university should establish a branch ’except by specific legislative authorization and with a separate, earmarked state appropriation,” the report said. Dr. Ira Polley, executive secretary of the group of state college and .university presidents administrators, said members voted to refer the report to the governing boards of the, state-supported- schools and make it a priority item at its next meeting. DIMgpPreEFECT Most directly ■ affected would be University of Michigan proposals to add freshman and sophomore years to its Flint school aqd to build a branch at Delta College, which serves the Bay City, Saginaw, Midh ' area, and Michigan Te$iKat Houghton, which proposes to expand its brancjMit Sairtt Ste. Marie from tw«io four years. The cpuricil has no control iber institutions, but only in a coordinating and advisory capacity. The committee said when need for a new school becomes evident, the State Board of Education, working through the __________L council and an advisory council before^The commit I established by the legislature, should appoint a-committee to study the bekt method of solving the problem. “And’ po ^existing, institution of higher learning should act unilaterally to enter the situation until the committee’s report has been made available and thoroughly^ discussed,” it said. SAME CONSIDERATION The committee, asked by the council to study the question, also advised that any change in the basic structure of an existing branch “should be examined by the same kind of ’multirepresentationar committee as Is approved to examine the creation of new institutions.” State Given Large School Money Plan ’’ “; ' ’ ..." V (Continued From Page^OfSa) million in current ^perations and $33 milUo* in the con- America^ actions in the Congo?” Pro-Western nations voiced praise for Stevenson’s speech, in which he said many of the countries criticizing the United States are openly supplying military. aid to the Congolese rebels. . “it was a good speech, a very good Speech,” said Foreign Minister Jaja Wachuku of Nigeria, ode of the few African nations that have supported U.S. and Belgian actions in the Congo. ’ Ambassador Arsene Assouan USher of th# Ivory Coast, African member of the Security Council,’ said the speech contained “the seeds of compromise. He has shown when might get together in our i point,” NO APOLOGIES Stevenson told the council the United States had “no apologies to make, to any State appearing before this council” for Rs part in the operation which rescued 1,700 white civilians from the rebels. *• Fail UJ5. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY) - Sunny nnd cold today. High 18 to 88. Increasing cloudiness and cold tonight. Law 18 to 18. Cloudy, windy and (lightly warmer tomorrow with intermittent light snow tomorrow afternoon. High 22 to 30. Northwesterly winds 10 to 20 miles an hour, shifting to southwesterly tonight and becoming southeasterly at 18 to 31 miles an hour tomorrow. Thursday’s outlook is partly cloudy, windy and colder with snow flurries. Teeey In Penttec Owjfy As* .1* Penltac MenUey I* Peetlec Tkh MM In H Yun MenUey-1 Temperetufe Chart 47 32 M 12 New Or loam a 30 It M Naw Vert « 30 PaMiton 25 12 Omaha » it Traversa C. 21 If PhashM Albuquerque N 11 PMahurgh Bo»ton 47 11 SON l.k. CMy 41 21 Chicago 34 12 S. F----------'— “ J Cincinnati 44 It. K 1._________ . Denver ... 51 27 Tampa . 72 44 Detroit 15 11 Washington - il, headed by Miehi-_ State University trustee Warren Huff of Plymouth, cited as basic reasons fQt* the need: • An (estimated ’increase of 17,000 college students next, year.: ■ . * * • The corresponding need for more faculty and desired higher salaries to meet ttie “competition for brains” ffom schools in other states, • Funds to “undo some o( the injustices and neglect of recent years." In its endorsement of the proposals, the council—which includes the II college presidents and • board member from each school—said it was expressing concern over the financial crisis facing higher education In Michigan.” “In appropriations per student, the position of Michigan has declined substantially in recent years relative to ttie highly industrialized states with’ which Michigan is’most competitive,” the report said | p However, the immediate re-, action from a Democratic lawmaker who will probably have much to say about how much money goes to higher education was that the demands will be scaled down considerably. FINANCE STRUCTURE State Sen. Gariand Lane, D-Flint, the likely chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, said the program couldn’t be accomplished this year under the state’s present financial structure. Charge Made in Strangling (Continued From Page One) her disappearance to police Sunday evening. Police began looking for Foster whfen they learned he had dated Mrs. Crook Friday night. He voluntarily came to the police station when asked to by police, Sunday evening. DENIES MURDER Police said he first denied the murder and told detectivesAd' had taken the girl horh^about # a.m. Saturday./^ Mrs. Wjlliapi^L Lynch, the dead wonuuft former mother-in-law, told police Mrs. Cf|ook called Foster at the Avon Inn ^Friday night and asked him to pick her up. Mrs. Lynch, told jtitiice that She told her former daughter-in-law not to get serious about Foster when she left on the date thit night. ■ At *' . IK. The couple bad been dating for about three weeks and had a falling out during the previous wee A, friends of Mrs. Crook told police. 2 Detroit Women Are Found Slain Eye Red Cross1 °lfminghqm Consolidation Area News View Plans to Join Units in 3-Counties Planning meetings designed to consolidate American Red Cron chapters serving Oakland, Wayne and Macomb counties to a single chapter structure are under way. Kaye A. Button of the Macomb County Red Cross Chapter serving aa chairman of the committee on consolidation. Button said the Red Cron Board of Governors, the or- -ganization’s national governing body, has for sometime been urging chapters wh oh e boundaries now divide large metropolitan areas to voluntarily take action toward unification. E. Roland Harriman, chairman oI the national Red Cross organization said that Rad Cross must be concerned with people not geography. ; * * We must insure uniform standards of service In. all chapters and are must concentrate resources on providing the best and greatest amount of service for the greatest number of people,” Harriman said. COMMITTEE MEMBERS Oakland County residents serving on the newly-formed dude Carleton C. Patterson Jr., chapter chairman; Roderic V. Wiley, chapter first vice chairman; James Howlett, chapter treasurer, and Donald M. Millar, chapter manager. . \ Action Delayed on Rezonihg No RemM MoH Dec. 26 Regular mail deliveries in the Pontiac area will be suspended Dec. 26 to allow most post office personnel to have ft three-Christmas weekend, normal holiday skeleton crew will be on duty, however, to process mail that day, according tp Pontiac Postmaster William W. Donaldson A two-hour window service for business films will be provided, * * - * . The Dec. 21 postal holiday will be effective across the nation, Postmaster General John A. Gronouski announced. BIRMINGHAM - Action on* proposed zoning amendment de-‘ signed to encourage the development of luxury apartments has been delayed tor one week by the City Commission. A public, hearing oh the planning board proposal was held last night, with only one property owner objecting to it. On ttie protest of Merritt W. Olsen, Ml Townsend, over the lack of side-yard setback regulations, the commission dl-City Plan Director Wll-Brownfield to return r’s meeting with nun standards. Olsen complained that it was entirely possible for a new building to be constructed right next to his lot line under the new plan, thereby limiting Mm in developing Ms property. * * * The revision of the requirements of the proposed multiple R-7 classification would affect only properties in the area generally bounded by Merrill, Southfield, Brownand Henrietta, according to Brownfield. LARGER APARTMENTS The new R-7 formula would promote larger apartments with more green area per unit, accord I n g to Brownfield, while maintaining existing densities. All new plans for the ijMf a would be subject to review of 2 Freighters Collide in Chesapeake Bay /BALTIMORE UK-Two American freighters, one inbound and the other outbound, collided in Chesapeake Bay early today about two miles north of the Bay Bridge. No injuries were reported. The Baltimore Maritime Exchange said first reports indicated severe starboard side damage to foe American Reporter and slight damage to the Summit “but we have’not verified that yet.” the planning board, which would have ttie power to’vary the requirements of the zoning ordi-riflnce as they rdtate to the proposed development. In an unexpected move the commissiob, by a 44 vote, directed the administration to prepare plans for the development of a small parcel at Worth and Webster into a pork. For some time, the commission has been considering leasing the triangular property to adjacent businesses for parking. Moat interested in the property was the Chamberlain Real Estate Co. In other business, the commission authorized the city manager to advertise for bids on the sale of the Walker Gravel POLICE THEORY Police have theorized t h a after Foster (ticked Mrs. Crook up the couple “drove around” fo? a short time in the area of Auburn Heights and Adams. Police believe that an argument took place and Foster strangled the woman in the front seat of the car. He. then carried the body to,-the spot where she was found' and posed the dead woman to look as though she had been sexually assaulted, police theorized. The officers learrted later that at about 2 a.m. Foster picked up the former Mra. Lloyd, who had been living with him and his mother and caring for his three children by another marriage. PARKED NEAR SPOT They parked about* 300 feet from the spot where the body of Mrs. Crook was found, according to police. The couple then went to an all • night restaurant before starting for Ohio, Foster and his bride, who has two children by smother marriage, returned to Pontiac Saturday at Ex-Pontiac Official in Grand Rapids Post Allan S. Olsen, 43,. former personnel director for the Cjty of Pontiac, yesterday was named deputy city manager of Grand Rapids. Olsen, who held the Pontiac post from 1947 to 1950, presently is city finance director of Manhattan Beach, Calif. He will begin duties in Grand Rapids Jan. 15, according to Grand Rapids . City Manager George. Bean. Tartly iopmamShMoa Horn WEDNESDAY—I to 3 P M. REMINGTON SERVICE Electric Shavers attain floom NATIONAL WEATHER — Light snow and snow flurries are expected tonight from the Pacific Northwest to ttie western Likes area. It will be colder in the eastern half of the nation-apd wanner in the central and southern Plains. ' •) . • '• V ; •• § •. \ l j. DETROIT (AP) V Two De-] troit young women were found slain today. One had been stabbed; the other shgt. ! The stabbed body of Mary | Holmes, 22, was found in a hallway outside her apartment at 8620 Epworth and police said they were seeking a man with whom she la believed to haye. argued. ’ An unidentified woman, estimated to he shout 25, was shot to dedth in an apartment at ft55 Blaine. Police held William i committed suicide by hanging Bland, ,42, for investigation, say- tost Feb. 28. Ing he Stopped a police car Foster is presently on sick shortly before 3 a.m. and told leave from GMC Truck & Coach officers a woman had been shot Division, where he has been train his apartment. I ployed 10 years. , ^ « • //*' Police said that after the confession, Foster went with them' to the lovers’ lane and showed j them the general area where he had thrown Mrs. Crook’s purse. Police found the pure*. Police reported «that blood found in the rear* of Foster’s automobile was examined at the state police crime lab in East Lansing. It was found to he from a deer, as Foster had earlier told them. Detective Sgt. John DePauw said that police noticed flaw* in ttie first interview \hey had with Foster about 5 a.m. Monday. He said these errors first’ led them to believe Foster was the killer. Foster’s first wife, Angela, Sal#! Steel Cabinets Our BiggestSelection Ever — Seconds But All Are in Almost Perfect Condition Large Wardrobes AH-metol construction — stylos with slidii doors, doubt* doors, some with shelves, « Beige finish. Ji Utility Cabinets Most useful cabinets in assorted styles .to choose from. Sturdy all steel in white or brown enamel, W Wall Cabinets Most popular sizes to choose from, easy to open • double door ’ styles in while enamel finishes. 785 I 812J8 Over-Sink Cabinets 54 inches long In 30- or 27-inch heights. Double door all-steel cobingjs - in gleaming while. Park Fre« on Saginaw St. Use Qur Fro* Layaway — Small Delivery Charge SIMMS 25 SOUTH Saginaw Street STORE 13® Pit property, appraised at $375,* 000. APPROVED SALE Voters approved the sale of the 70 acres hi the April < election. The sale wlU be Conducted under the so-called “probate Court” method under which procedure the original bids are held for two weeks daring which time additional sealed bids are received. These must be at least five per cent more than the highest proposal initially receiypd. * * At ; This procedure is repeated at two week toforvals until such time the commission accepts the highest bid or rejects all ^ bids. Better Sifts for Vour Favorite People Cost toss at SIMMS! [‘Daisy’ BB-GunT i 1894 Oarbine I ' *1450 wNw/Sp*- _ _ J Inws. of *• m 1 88 1 medal 94 lover odbion | | 708 Shot Model 1lT $9.50 Mller -western rt|QA carbine, saddle gun, f ** 700 shot repeater. f 1 Modal 95 Sporter ■ $10.50 seller-modem ||Ay 6 rifle with wood stock. ■ 1 700 shpt repeater. Rg Model 25 Pump Gun JQS* 1 Medal 102 Cub C $5.98 seller-30V4" roAA fl gun tor smaller boys. 1 500 shot repeating 8^ Daisy BB Shots Pocks of Bulheye ^ A, copper coaled St's 9 11® tar Dan^gynv H j Children’s Pup Tents J U.S. Army Combat green,- waterproof plastic ■ ■ | Mattel Va-Room Motor ^148 ■ Fits the bicycle—loud motor noise.. ■ Etch-A-Sketch Draw, design, etc. o nd ibtn erase to All Steel Wagons #100 Rex Rocket 088 Wagon — 15x32" body, rubber lire W Radio Wagon Q88 5 fox 18" body, rubber tires .w p O. of proportionate low prices. Baby Grand Piano Ploy reol tunes—with $eot bench . Soldier Combat Set Holmet, guns, bolsters, grenades, etc.. 444 SHOP SIMMS SPORTS DEPT. FREE $1.00 Bosobol With Baseball (Novel Special! Fielder Glove i $4.95 oil leather fielder's rtta QQ I . glove with ’ fine details. ■ Regulation size-at discount Plus free baseball. <■' mmimmmsmMmit________ ‘WILSON’ Autograph Golf Ball$--Doz. 5“ Pro Shop Quality—‘KENT . Better Golf Bags ! . olity golf with lively rubber | centers, vulcanized I covers. Limit 1 box. ' Country club styles— pipO | organ tubesT, embossed k leathers, compartment--- bags. Best ever quality. J88 ' $32.88 Genuine‘COLEMAN’ Make 2-Biimei: Camp Stove £ $21.95 Vo{W * Complete Outfit „ .Table Tennis Set k Simms Pric* 488 Set consists oft paddles with .special 'better control' surfaces, regulation net and quality table tennis balls. SIMMS..?*. ITOYSX SPORTS -2nd fleer] ;enne«3 —fingertip coats —stadium coats . -^-suburban coats EXTRA! HOLIDAY BONUS! Pay Mthing inti Rtxt Mary ; then take 6 months THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1964 HAKE OVER PACES The number ot people living on farms has decreased from 32 million jta 1910 to 13.4 million ROBERT L. PLUMBING EXPERT SECRETARIAL TRAINING Promotions and salary increases come quickly to girls with outstanding abilities. Investigate the excellent courses offered at P.B.I. Fiee lifetime placement service. Day School sad Evening Division. * Catalog Available on Bequest Call FEderal 3-7028 Pontiac Business institute 18 W. Lawrence St. Pontiac How ChiWwi Fail—=8 Fear Can Destroy a Child's Intelligence Open evenings till Christmas Write or Phene 682-1010 By john Bolt ^••xsraserst A year Mgb I was wondering bow a child’s fears, might influence Ids strategies. This year’s work hap told me. The strategies of most of these children have been consistently self-centered, self - protective, aimed above all else at avoiding trouble, embarrassment, punishment, disapproval or loss of status. This Is particularly true of the ones who have - had a -When they get a problem, I can read their thoughts on their faces,-I can almost bear them, “Am I going to get t)ds right? Probably not; what'll happen to me when I get it wrong? Will the teacher get mad? Will the others kids laugh at me?. Will they keep me back this year? Why am I so dumb?” And 80 on. Even in the room periods, where I did all I could to make the work nonthreatewbd I was continually amazed and appalled to see the children hedging their bets, covering their losses in advance, trying to fix things so that whatever happened they Indiana Hotel Bums; Guests Are Injured MAiXBON, Ind. (AP) - Eight to 10 guests were reported injured today in a fire that destroyed Madison’s Hillside Hotel. The.40 • unit stucco buiijliog was full when fire broke'out about 4 a.m. All guests are believed to have escaped. The hotel overlooked the picturesque Ohio River city of Madison from' a hill 4t,the east end. TEEN-AGERS LEARN TO' DRIVE • Lkansa* by Sin* of Mcbfeaa SAFEWAY DRIVING SCHOOL could feel they had been right, or if wrong, no more wrong than anyone else. “I think it will sort of balance.” FENCE-STRADDLERS i v They are fence - straddlers, afraid ever to commit themselves — and at the age of 10. Playing games Uke Twenty Questions, which one might have expected them to play for fun, many of them were concerned only to put up a good front, to look as if they know what they weVe doing, whether they did or not. These self-limiting and self-defeating strategies are dictated, above all else, by fear. For many years I have been asking myself why intelligent children act anintelligently at school. The simple answer is “because they’re scared.” I used to suspect that children’s defeatism had something to do with their bad wok in school but I thought I could clear it away with hearty cries of “Onward! You can do it!” AFFECTS CHILD What I now see for the first time is the mechanism by which fear destroys intelligence, the way it affects a child’s life. So we have two problems, not one: to stop children from being afraid, and then to break them of the bad thinking habits into which their fears have driven them. What* is most surprising of all is how much fear there is in school. Why is so little, said aboutlt? Perhaps most people do not recognize fear in children when they see it. They can read the grossest signs of fear; they know what the trouble is when a child clings howling to hit mother; but the subtler signs of fear escapetbem. .<* SCARED CHILDREN It is these signs, in children’s faces, voices and gestures, in their movements and ways of working, that tell me plainly that most children in school ve scared most of the time, many of them very scared. Like good soldiers, they con- trol thefr fears, live with them, adjust themselves to them. But the trouble is — and here is a vital difference between school and war — that the adjustments children make to their fears are almost wholly bad, destructive of their intelligence and capacity. The scared fighter may be the best fighter, but the scared learner is always a poor learn- 28 Mass-ive Theft Case CHICAGO (UPI) — Two 19-year '- old youths today faced -grand theft charges after they were seized yesterday while trying to remove a 400-pound, safe from Holy Name Cathedral during 6 a.m. Mass. The Pinkerton Detective agency, was credited w i t h thwarting an assassination attempt against Lincoln before he was inaugurated. More Than Money PEOPLE Are Our,, Business! HOME OWNERSHIP need not be a distant dream! It you are misting the joys and mdapandanca, the trua sans* of socurity, tha paaco of mind id,homo ownership than, now's tho timo to call Capitol Saving*. Sine# 1890, thousands of young families throughout Oakland County hove investigated and preferred our Homo Loan plan over all the others. There's far loti 'red tape' with our plan and in most cases payments bettor than, rent; Moke an appointment with on* of out loan specialists today your now homo moy bo right around tho homer Opm «UHy 9 i.e. t* 4 p.w.—Sstu/d*y 8:30 a.m. to 12 Noon *Caffiol i Savings * loanY * * ASSOCIATION * . * r.qrr.nnpf * ***** 75 West Huron Established 1890 FE 4-0561 Member Federal Home Loan Bank System 8 Iti9fln9| I vTUAUQ TERR 8YAW-IA !32A3jq OT 3SIU2 2‘TAHT T3I3 A 2T3XMAJ8 JAMH3HT 3HIAH0IH2A7 "OexHST II voy one ,uiovr tsifoois sxil bhovr snl IIs tol mooJ elit ,998 vox ftiolmoD slilBMSv sli Hliw budsjilib id Xflil To gbfiBsuorit dfiw ivBivr Junnsrii notloo tJ?00I ni miaw vox q99jf o! ,iqim jnidisoid sdil 11b silio Inoios To’bJoJ .lararnva ai loos .i9tviw ZfllQflO 3M0M3J3T OH :YHH02 XDIflT IHT 230Q QUAD 3JTTIJ 21HT 3JIM 3JDA5IIM 2‘Y3MM3q YAOJ1UTA2 URHT YAuMOM H390 M.q 0E:9 ot .M.A OE:Q BONDS WHERE MORE MEN BUY FOR THEMSELVES Olive Corduroy conies on strong —big on sty la —long on woor —pile lined —knit or suode trim A. “Crosscountry" cotton corduroy fingertip coat with two podk-ets behind zippered panel front. Furry acrylic pile lining. ..17.9S B. Bulky-knit foldpver collar tops 40" stadium-length cotton corduroy. Body lined with furry. acrylic pita. .............19.95 C. Imported suede leather shoulders and pocket trim on laminated cotton corduroy 'suburban. Acrylic pile lining. ....$29 All 36-46 Bond's Pontiac lyiall Shopping Center THE POX^HAC PRites: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1964 Utilities Firm Mctrt Turns Irregularly Lower The following art top price* covering sales of locally grown produce by. growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots.. Quotations are furnished by the Called Move in Bid to Get New Indictments NEW VORK (AP)Utilities were firm while steels and rails softened in an irregularly lower plans a 2-for-l stock split and a dividend hike. SHREVEPORT, La. (tIPI) -Charges against a Louisiana truck driver, the key man in the FBI’s investigation into the killing of three civil rights workers Produce Poultry and Eggs PSTKOIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-PrleM p*M par po lor No. I qurffty Era poultry: M typo hew IMS MwNro ewor I DETROIT______ DETROIT (AP)—Ebb prlcoo paid por dozen by first receivers (IncludlnB U.S.): ----V&rad. AJwnbP Livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAOO (AP) - (USDA) - Hogs 1,500; buMwro mostly 8 higher; 14 100-HO lb bwmro 14.SM4.75; II haad at 17.00; mlxad 14 1*8-330 Ibo 14.80-1420; 230-250 Ibo 15.50-1425; 2-3 250-270 Ibo 15.0b-15.75- 270-300 Ibo 14.75-15.00; 14 150-400 lb otwt 12JO-11JS; 400-500 Ibo 11.7S-1SJSI 2-3 SOMSS Ibo 1125-11.75. Cattlo 15200; calves Ml olauflMar steers 8 lowor to 8 higher; load prlmo TistO lb 820; blob choice and prlmo 1,150-1250 Ibo 2420-825; cholca 1200-1,400 Ibo 21.50-24.25; good oil «T 21.00-22.50; taw loodt mlxad cholct .... prim* *501280 lb tlouBMor baltaro 21.75-24.00; Choioo 000-1,12$ Ibo 8.71 • 332*1 . otoors active, steady 8 strong; low grades steady to waak; cows active «u steady, 2> haad Mgb chain H prlr steers 820; law choice 142024.71; M goad and low chokt 2320-24.00; go fl2S-8Jll few lets chokt halters 3LI , |i fa Host 800. Earrows and gilts imdar I 8 fully steady; heavier weighty 50 higher; sows steady. Fow salat U, S. . 280-225 lb 1420-14.75; U, S. 1 S 2 I*0-230 lb 1425-14.M; 111 14088JS 1520-14.8; 3 1 1 80-80 8 14.754*20; 1,1 * 4 300-400 8 sows 1011.71. Veaters 200. No early solas. stock market early today. Trading was fairly active, w ★ w Most changes of key stocks were fractional. Consolidated Edison was actively traded and up a fraction following a report the company the industry embarked on labor contract negotiations. Opening blocks included:' AT&T, up % at 66% on 5,000 shares; Chrysler, unchanged at 98% on 8,900; and Westinghouse Electric, off. % at 49Vs on 3,900. ★ W t, Monday The Associated Press average of 00 stocks dipped 1.1 to 321.1 Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange AdmkM Air Rod 2.50 Co 2*0 Ludt AlkgPw 1.04 AjjiidCh. 1.48 81 20 -..lSJ# Amerada 2.40 ' -osdi .58 dost 1.8 tat JTil AExpor 1.50b — FPw .75 AmOptk 1.10 AmPhoM JO AID IM 1 Am TAT S — Tob 128 ■ Zinc i2i AMP Inc M Ampsx Cp IHiBWil n 2.58 1l flk MS H >■••• 2 238 228 238V 47 88 12 52 —18 1 188 188 188 - 8 7 448 448 448 + 8 XI 55 528 528-8 I 41 118 418 — 8 4 188 188 *88 + 8 7 328 328 328 ..... 24 4t 818 '418 — 8 II 18 18 18 — 8 73 lln 14 11—8 5 208 208 208 + 8 1st gt:ft=& w ftp p 18 * m + 8 5 48 48 48 - 4 378 178. 878 BlgelowS VS S& 1,8 BorgWsr 2.20 Briggs Mta BrlggsS 1.40s wfo if ip Iv1!T.JK„ ! J*8 S8 Bw + jb! JohnsMinv 2 JonLogsn .70 JonfSBL 2.50 Joy Mtg 1.50 Kals*r Al .40 KsyssrRo M LlggtttOM 5 ulShon'l^TSTn LlvingsO ,74t LockAlrc 1.40 Lotws Thsat Unit Com l LonoS Oil 1 LonglsILt -ft Lord Coro Lorlllord 1.50 LTV Jt Luksnstt 128 Col PM 281 CollohM 281 Colum H 20 savs CdnPac7 1.50a CaroPLt 1.14 CortarPd • M Com Jl .. CotorTroc .21. CiliwMi 1.88 Concolnst -SO CtrroCp 1.48 CtrMMd .78 CsksnoAlrc 1 CTi* CtjjMII OtP^l §§£' Mod Sq Gar MogmoC 1.48 Mtgnovx .48 Mondbow 3 Morquar .250 oilbBn 1 MayDStr 1.20 Mcall .40b McDonAIr 28 Marat la MerChop .200 4 tl8 M8 218 + 74 S8 28 28 7 43 418 418 — .. I 318 318 318-8 12 44 Mb 44 - + xl 18 ' Kt 18 + 7 118 118 - - 7 338 338 3*8 —Vk II 458 458 4M ’i tt'ft ft t ft ft ft n3^ Cltte* Sv 3.10 ClevEIIII 1.30 American Stocks 44 318 (18 1 318 318 jCrook P 1.48a Data C«d Draper 1 EquityCp OSr Fargo Oil* Fly Tl*ar Gan Daval Treasury I 1 Position WASHING TON (API — Tha CMti position ’ pi Mw trsosvry parapeted with grragyliig dm a y*ar ago: ‘ 4,448,4*2247.11 f J—— “ i r I seal Year Ji 44.418278,337.H wait Fiscal Yaar- r&F*’* 1 418 418 418 1 118 118 118 8 738 738. 738 — 8 «3 48 478 478— 8 R 5 518 5 ft 5 III'D111!" . 4 2121’A 21Vk ftftl* ft BU I 228 2 U8 W8 1*8 + 8 4 73 7t8 718 - 8 3 45 4* 43 -8 1 448 m 448 + 8 lll'Ki Ford Md F6r«HirD Frtopt S 1 FruohCp 1 3ft £3+1 OanMHkrjO 4 4*8 44 4* j— 8 wr'ftft; 2 138 138 1(8 I 518 548 388 SIB rands 3.41 Kollsman Ml Cal 130 —Jllind 128* SMOII NJ 30 ibid lion 1.48 Si Packaging Stanwar 1.30 StaufKh 1.40 SlorlOniB .to MNRjJ 7 388 3*8 388 - 8 f ft ft ft::: 3 1008 1008 1008 .fVlii 11 Mb Mb N8-30 Mb *78 378 — f ft ft ft ::: 11 Mb ft ft -8 I ft ■ ft Stocks of Local Interest Figures atlbn dsclmal polnlb^qrb sigh ' OVER TNI COUNTER STOdCS The teUswtngquqUUenr-do^iwt necas-sarlty represent atTusI transactions but Chompkn h Citkans Utl _______ Utilities Cleat t Diamond Crystal ........ Bthyl Cora. Mohawk Rubber Co. .......... Michigan loamlou Tube Co. Ptonaer Finance ..... gatraw Ptfiwng Varners Ginger Ak . BONOAVBEAaat «.a-» Noon Mon. MJ 1812 ’ 88.4 fl.8 13. PteV. Dw 81.4 jtt.1 M l 012 13.. Week A«0 12 4 101.1 n.i 112 *14 Month Ago 812 1032 M.4 11.4 14.* Year Ago 80.7 101.4 *82 112 ' (I. 1844 High Kl MM 8*2 ..*12 14. 1844 Low K( 1042 S3 10.1 13.1 1141 HM 12.2 iK 01.5 11.1 It] 1143 LOW 71.7 HJ 17.5 00.4 l£- in Mississippi, w-----ftHIV yesterday. But he and the 20 others ar-rested faced the threat of new charges today. | The Justice Department. dropped the original charges against Horace Doyle Barnette: The FBI said he had confessed his part in the killings, and the alleged admission was the main # * weapon in the FBI case against f $ $ w $ $ NEW CAMPERS — This economy camping unit for GMC’s {popular Handi-Van model makes outdoor living a real treat. Featuring several variations, including a unit that sleeps . two adults and another that sleeps two adults. and two children, these conversions are fac- tory installed. The Handi-Van features a front-mounted 153 - cubic • inch, four-cylinder engine developing 90 horsepower. A 230-cubic-inch “six” achieving 140 horsepower is available optionally., * A Justice Department spokesman said the charges against Barnette were dropped so the government could “clean up” all the cases at the. same time and put the evidence before a grand Jury in an attempt to get new indictments. Barnette, the only one of the 21 arrested outside Mississippi, was also the last one to have the charges against him'dis-lissed. i ■ w Although Barnette appeared to be the keystone of the govern^ ment’s case, Barnette's attorney said he had made no statement to the FBI, ae far as he knew. THROWN OUT Charges against 19 of the 21 were thrown 6ut by a U.8. commissioner in Meridian, Miss, file refused to admit the alleged con-on of Barnette as evidence in a hearing, ruling it was hearsay. Barnette, who moved from Meridian to Cullen, La., about four months ago, was not present at the Mississippi hearing. Charges against another of the group were dismissed a*few days later in Gulfport. ★ ' ★ * Ten of the 21 — including nette — were charged with conspiring to kill the three civil rights workers! while the other 11 were charged with having knowledge of the alleged plot. Barnette was arrested in Shreveport two weeks ago at the same time the others were picked up m Mississippi. i Investing HA .% By ROGER E. SPEAR Recreational Vehicje Line Widest in GMTC History A. If 17,000 is your total available cash, you should have a ; m ™| »»i« i jng up to 2,200 pounds. As a per- substantial part of it in savings [ ^models,^ \JJ\ carrier witha 10-window and loans or some other type ^ofieredbyGMCln- Uon ,t ^ a comfortable of institution Where your money d®1* one-half, tbree^uarter s^atln capacity for up t0 eight —in k. —jiiu .Miuua 4a -mu I and one-ton niciniDS that ac- I F y H 6 CMC also offers its convert- will be readily available to you. I and one-ton pickup* that ac-I would not buy Telephone commodate a wide variety of while the stock is acting so bad- c*mPer I*0*"®*-ly but would put 94.000 into sav- Newest in this, wide line, the togs and the balance .into a I factory-installed conversions for strong growth situation, to help the Handi-Van feature.five vari- The latter includes bed and protect you and your children against inflation. I suggest Consolidated Foods. * Q. “Can you give me some , information about Upjohn? The shares do move but late- [ are the Suburban station wagon ly have always, stayed close .O&fcagftoMy Wltn rey «wr*ge ^ three-ouarter to the 90 mark. Is this a good corrtpartmen^and two 96-rnch ! growth stock to buy and upper youth beds. , ,tonpickups. ^ hold?” F.H. " , ALTERNATIVES All of these vehicles can be A. Upjohn is an excellent eth- Other alternative or supple- equipped with three-speed, four-iCai drug manufacturer. Earn-1 mentartr conversions provide a I Speeid, or automatic transmis-were relatively stable from side storage compartment, JWo j giong. power steering J Iffh 1M2 hilt a io ner forward storage compartmflits, ! brake UAW Blasts Insurers' Plan LANSING (AP)-The Unite^ Auto Workers union today urged rejection of the proposed Blue Cross-Blue Shield' expert^ ence-rating plan as a “soak the sick” arrangement. Douglas Fraser, member of the UAW International Executive Board, called the proposal ‘tohd and costly medicine.” * * Fraser, to prepared testimony before State insurance Commissioner Allen L. Mayerson’s public hearing on the Blues’ proposal, said the agencies could economize by other methods. Blue Cross (prepaid hospital servjqe) and Blue Shield ‘(prepaid medical) have proposed an experience, or merit, rating system for subscribers. EXTENT OF USE The BlUes have community-wide rating. Under the experience or merit system their rates would be gauged to the extent Of use of their services by individual, subscribing groups. The Blues say a switch to the experience' rating system would permit them to. compete more favorably with private hospital and medical insurance compan- MUMtoy-t HI DIVIDEND* DECLARED Rato Hail VacateVlS* IRREGULAR Hilton Hotels .11 iMt 1141 A go ver nor’s commission which has studied the Blues operations has come out in support of the proposed change. Lodge Calendar Pontiac Shrine No. 22 order of the White Shrine of Jerusalem. Christinas ceremonial and dinner. Wednesday, Dec. 16. Dinner 6:tt p.m. Ceremonial at 8 p.m. Yvonne Berryy WHP. Adv. With the introduction today of, van or a smooth functioning per-Q: “Recently I lost my hu»- ' several new ’ .factory - installed : sonnel carrier, band. I would tike to invest camper conversions for its pop- Tailored to the needs of those uiar Handi-Van model, GMC who require economical, dura-Truck & Coach Division now of- easy-tomaintain trocks, . the Handi-Van features a front- fers the widest line of rficrea- \mounM isanrubic-toch, four-cyl-tional vehicles toiti history. Ij^ engine developing 90 * * * {horsepower.' Ran^ng from the economy- j ♦ ★ » er amount in American Tele- | class Hapdi-Van camper to a ^ 230-cubic-inch “six” achtev- phone or gome comparable i luxurious Coachette * cruiser ! jpg jgj horsepower is available" company. I have children in available on a GMC chassis, the {optionally, school. Would it be best for | division's Complete line of travel i *' ’v A „ me to In v e s t in growth j and camping vehicles is tailored j uiluvisby van stocks?” SLA. j for Weekend and vacation camp- As a delivery van, this vehi- ] ers. \J cle offer? 211 cubic feet of cargo I In addition to various Handi- [?»*“ 97,000 to give me a regular return. My in-laws suggest I invest in savings & loans; my mother wants me to buy | A m e r i c a n Telephone. My j banker advised a smaller | amount to savings and a larg- ationS including a unit that sleeps two adults and another that sleeps two adults and two children. ed model PB-1909 as the forward control unit for integrated Value-Van mobile home bodies, such as tile Country Cruiser and its smaller companion, the Country Cruiser Two of the most popular of the GMC recreational vehicles and 1959 through 1962 but a 10 per jforwara storage compartm«ts, j brakes, and convenience and cent gain was recorded to 1963 ; «tiUty and t®1*1*’ a comfort accessories. One-half - - - - ■ ■ i «A«.ni*te co* a#