City Seeks More Endorsements of Its 2 G/MWl^ct
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By ED BLUNOEN The Pontiac «ty Commission has received several endorsements from civic and social organizations supporting two giant city projects — the propose ISO-million domed stadium and the $100-mffiion plan for urban renewal.
The PonUac site near 1-75 and M59 is In the nming for a proposed stadium
for the Tigers baseball and Lions football teams.
Although other proposals come and go,‘ Pontiac’s remains one of the most economically and geographically feasible, city officials have pointed out.
The Pontiac site will ^have greater accessibility for more' of the state’s residents, especially those in FlinLand Sagiiia^^ it has been stressed.
PRESENTS ABM PLAN—Deputy Defense Secretary David Packard uses charts as he presents the Nixon administration’s antiballistic missile system plan to the Senate Afmed Services Committee yesterday. At his side is Melvin Laird, secretary of defense, who also testified before the committee.
Laird Sees an Option if Peace Talks Fail
WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird pledged today that if the Paris peace talks fail to end the conflict,,in Vietnam, “We will have aq alternative as far as the war is cm-ceihed other than the present conduct.” He did not say what that alternative would be.
Laird made that statement after Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., shifted the course of a Senate hearing away from the hotly contested antiballistic missile (ABM) system with a critique of Nixon ndministration handling of the Vietnam war.
Fulbright said the question of armaments and their control is linked with that of the Southeast Asian conflict.
‘MR. NIXON’S WAR’
‘Isn’t it possible, Mr. Secretary, to realize that we are not now and never have been winning this war?” he asked Laird.
“If this administration continues and escalates this war in Vietnam, it will soon be Mr. Nixon’s war,” the senator said.
3rd Coed Slain
“I would just like to say that this administration is committed to end the war in Vietnam,” Laird said. “We are presently engaged in very important peace tmks in Paris.” ,
. Then he declared:
“I want you to know that we are hopeful that we will be successful in the talks ... but if we are not successful, and we pray for success, I can assure you that we will have an alternative as far as the war is concerned other than the present conduct of that war.”
Lqird denied that the administration
Near Ypsilanti
The Pontiac Plan for the 29-acre renewal lands south of downtown is rapidly approaching actuality, according to reports.
Deals for the first parts of a multiuse complex of facilities are expected to be announced shortly.
dropped the old Sentinel missile defense project because of public protests, insisting that the change came “because we have a better system.”
Laird said discussion ol a shift from city defenses to the Safeguard system. President Nixon’s plan to defend U.S. offensive nuclear bases with’’antiballistic missiles (ABM), was under way even before the public protests against deployment near Boston, Chicago and
Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., told Laird it appeared to him the protests had led to re-examination of the missile defense program and the shift to “a completely different mission.”
But Laird, defending the administration plan before members of a critical Senate foreign relations subcommittee, said the public protests were only coincidental.
YPSILANTI (fl - The body of a young woman, whom police believed to be a University of Michigan coed, was found today off a roadway leading into a cemetery near the Wayne-Washtenaw County lines.
Prosecutor William F. Delhey of Washtenaw County said preliminary investigation indicated the body was that of a coed who had left the U. of M. campus Thursday night to go to her home in Grand Haven.
%
In Today's Press
Ar9a Nbws
County solid-waste disposal , cost pegged at $60 million — FACE A-l.
OvrtimB Isstf
Proposed legislation pits unions vs. management —PAGE A-f. Pfan» Tragedy
Memphis stunned by death of 15 leading citizens — PAGE B4.
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The body of the latest victim was found by a resident near the entrance to a cemetery at Cemetery Road and Cross in Van Buren Township.
Prosecutw Delhey said the girl was clothed when found.
SIMlLARI'nES NOTED
He said police “noted similarities” in the circumstances of the slaying today and the previous two. •
The State Police ^mobile qrime laboratory from East Lansing was sent to the scene. State Police of the Ypsilanti post headed the investigating teams at the scene.
hotels, apartments, an arena and restaurants, rising 12,14 and 20 stories.
developer in the urban renewal area, it has been stated.
Expected to be built on the now-vacant land is a variety of businesses such as
I The City Commission is actively seeking endorsements by any groups for both projects. The comniission feels the endorsements will help it convince the Detroit teams real support exists ip the community. Endorsements also 'will point out community willingness to back
The latest to support Pontiac Plan publicly was the Bemis-Olsen Post 113 of the' Pontiac Amvets. Their endorsement states the Amvets “will do everything in our power to promote ar|^ expedite the growth-and rebuilding of our city.”' Backing the stadium proposal are endorsements by two governmental
units, Ihe Oakland County Board of Supervisois and the City of Rochester.
Rochester^ statement vows the city "will be most^ppy to cooperate in any way ... to havcxthe stadium located, in your (Pontiac) conMinunity.”
Other stadium ^dofsements ^ave been acknowledged from two city uAW Locals, 596 at Fisher Body plant and '653 at Pontiac Motor Division.
The Weather
(. WMllMT tumv SOTKCrt
Colder, Windy
(Dtttiii Piat 1)
THE
Home
Edition
PONTIAC PRESS
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY. MARCH 21, 1069
VOL. 127
NO. 37
★ ★ ★ ★
-44 PAGES
IOC
Board Approves Restudy of Site, Replies to Blacks
The Pontiac Board of Education last night formally approved a three-month reevaluation period for study o f “alternative sites and alternative plans” for planned west side high school facilities and reported on demands made by the Black Student Union (BSU).
Vote on the three-month reevaluation was 5-2, with board members Mrs. Elsie Mihalek and Mrs. Lucille Marshall dissenting. Mrs. Marshall said she felt that a reappraisal wouldn’t change the situation.
Reds Unleash Fury, Blast U. S. Bases
The reevaluation statement, which urges all citizens of the school district to join in good faith and unity to end the racial discord in the community, calls for suspension of architect’s planning for a high school on Pontiac State Ho^ital land.
The board also will ask that legislation to permit sale of the stateK>wned land to the school district be withheld until the end of the period.
RESPONDING ID BSU Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer and Business Manager Vernon L. SchiUer responded to the BSU demand for “free bus tranivortation to and from school for all age groups.”
The board authorized the administration to develop a total transportation plan for in-city students (elementary pupils who live more than one mile from school and secondary students more than I'A miles away to begin in 1969-70.
SAIGON OP) - The Vietcong and North Vietnamese smashed at American bases with renewed fury today, hitting them with rockets, mortars and infantry assaults that caused serious casualties and losses of aircraft, vehicles and fuel.
In one of the heaviest series of blows since the opening of the spring offensive 27 ni^ts ago, enemy rockets and mortars hit 65 allied bases and towns, and infantry assaults ripped into three of the bases.
However, the Americans said many blood trails and drag marks were found, indicating the enemy took a number of wounded and dead with them when they pulled back toward the Cambodian border at daybreak.
The attack began shortly before 3 a.m. when mortars, bazooka-tj^ rockets and small arms hit the American camp 50 miles northwest of Saigon.
All the Americans killed were victims of the bombardment.
MSU Fills Top Spot
It was the largest number of attacks since last Friday, when 70 bases and towns were hit.
All of the enemy infantry attacks were on American bases along the northwest approaches to Saigon, between 31 and 51 miles from the capital.
12 AMERICANS KILLED
Twelve Americans were killed and 47 wounded, while known enemy losses were 38 dead, U.S. spokesmen said.
Ten of the Americans were killed and 28 woqnded in one attack on an artillery base.
EAST LANSING UP) — The Michigan State University Board of ’Trustees today named an economics professor. Dr. Walter Adams, as acting president, effective April 1.
On a 5to-3 party vote, the five Democrats and three Republicans named Adams to serve a term at the discretion of the board. He succeeds Dr. John Hannah, who is expected to be confirmed shortly by the Senate as chief of the Agency for International Development (AID).
Spokesmen said only five enemy bodies were found after an estimated 400 North Vietnamese attacked the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division’s Fire Support Base White b^nd a 150-round mortar barrage.
'The board said Adams would help the university meet the challenges facing it “while the search for a permanent successor to Hannah continues.”
After Adam’s name was placed in nomination by Democratic Trustee Frank Hartman, Republican Kenneth Thompson tried to nominate Provost Howard Neville but his motion was ruled out of order.
Board Chairman Don Stevens called Adams “one ol the most distinguished” MSU faculty members.
Stevens said Adams is “one of the most popular teachers on campus” and has served aS an appointee to federal posts under three presidents — Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson.
A graduate of Brooklyn College and Yale University, Adams has been on the MSU faculty since 1947.
This plan will be presented for board consideration by May 8 and progress reports on its development will be presented at each board meeting.
By a 52 vote, the board approved purchase of three new buses immediately to help alleviate in-city transportation problems. Mrs. Marshall and Mrs. Mihalek were opposed.
(Continued on Page A-10, Col. 2)
Chance of Rain, Low in 20s Seen
Sunshine, showers and gusty winds heralded the first day of spring yesterday.
Authorities did not release the girl’s name or giye any hidication of the cause of ^er death.
It was the third case in recent years of a coed being slain in the general area. Both previous murders are unsolved.
Following is the U.S. Weather Bureau official forecast for the weekend:
TODAY — Mostly cloudy, windy and cooler with chance of showers, high 40 to 45. Partly cloudy and colder tonight with a low of 24 to 28.
TOMORROW — Partly sunny with little temperature change, high 40 to 45.
SUNDAY — Increasing cloudiness and
POUND ON FARM
The two previous victims were Eastern Michigan University students who disappeared from the Ypsilanti campus. The body of Mary Fleszar was found on a farm in Superior Township several days after she vanished from the EMU campus July 9,1967.
The second slaying was that of Joan Schell, who was last seen hitchhiking from the EMU campus in Jyly, 1968. Her body was found a day later.
The temperature in downtown Pontiac IT’S THE TOOTH — Mrs. Gary A. Gough of 644 Melrose two front teeth. Two weeks ago she took Nicoll to the dentist at 2 p.m. was 37.	-	smiles at her 4-week-old daughter, Nicoll, who was born with and learned her teeth are fine and will continue to grow.
Combined MD-DO Schools Eyed
LANSING (AP) - The Michigan State Medical Society has proposed a conference to work out a plan to enable Michigan’s.three medical sdiools to offer students the option of taking medical or osteopathic degrees.
The society suggested yesterday that Gov. William MUliken ask the State Board of Education to call such a conference, to include medical doctols and osteopaths.
A spokesman for the osteopaths said they would attend any such conference—“But only to straighten them (the MD’s) out.”
“We feel it just can’t be done,” V declared George Abdllla, administrative manager of the Michigan Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons Inc.
Abdllla said the proposal is contrary to
present standards of the state association and the American Osteopathic Association.
“Our (national) association would not accredit any schools making such a joint degree offer,” he declared.
The medical association proposal is for the University of Michigan, Wayne §tate University and the new Michigan State University Medical School to allow their students to cho<»e either MD or DO degrees by adding courses to meet the requirement dor a doctor of osteopathy.
Dr. Ross Taylor of Jackson, chairman of the Medical Society Council, which serves as its board of fetors, made the proposal in a letter to the governor.
Taylor said the m>tional degree approach had the support of the governor, the three schools and the society plus the Board of Education
Citizens Committee for Health Care.
“Michigan’s medical schools,” Taylor said, “are the first in the nation to indicate the feasibility of providing educational opportunities for those persons interested in obtaining the DO degree in an established university offering medical training.^’
The conference, Taylor said, should , have complete representation from both the medical doctors and the osteopaths. Such a conference, he said, should be able to resolve the differences that exist between tlie two groups.
“In 50 years,” Taylor predicted, “it will be all one practice—one standard of competency—I don’t care what it is
Taylor said the medical society supports a proposal by Milllken in his budget message for financial support of expansion of medical education programs at Wayne, UM, and MSU—including planning for a four-year medical school at Michigan State.
Taylor said the society also contends Michigan needs two more medical schools and these also should offer both
called.’
The quickest^ way to get more doctors, Taylor said, is'to expand at the. schools already existing.
Asked where these might be located, he said possibilities would include any existing school with facilities for such trainings
Taylor said the new Michigan Cbllege of Osteopathic Medicine, under construction at Pontiac, also could qualify when it had the facilities and staff to offer complete medical training,
'I

A-i'2
THE PO^^TIAC PRESS, FRIDAY^ MARCH SI. 1960
Nixon, Bunker to Huddle on
By JQHN M. mCHTOWER AP SfMelal.CwTe^MMleflt WASHINGTON-President Nixon is expected to seek from Ellsworth Bunker in consultations starting this weekend the atnbmador’s views on how soon Shuth VtetnaiA may be politically and militarily strong enough to permit the withdrawal of some U.S. troops.
J. Goodpaster at San Clemente, Calif., Sundif^ morning
' Goodpast^, the No. 2 U.S. military man in South Vietnam, Is on bis way to take over as NATO commander in Europe.
Nison's advisers in the talks will be Secretary State William P. Rogers and presidential auistiuit Henry A. Kissin-
defense, Melvin R. Laird, who made a war-zone inspection last week.
The consultations will give Nixon the chance to meet his Saigon ambassador face-to-face for the first time;
dedslons on pdicy dianges are due to come out trf these talks.
The question is one of several major issues believed certain to come up after Nixon and his chief foreign policy advisers meet Bunker and G«>. Andrew
ger.

Nwws Aimlysis ^
LAIRD'S VIEWS
Nixon already has the views on U.S. troop reduction of his secretary of
; Bunker reportedly also has been anxious to make a visit home for some
Administration officials say that no
APPROPRUTE I^ESptmSE
At present, Nixon is in the position of having said that if enemy attacks on the cities of South Vietnam continued some “anwopriate response” would be made but that any action taken would be judged primarily fw its possible effect on the Paris peace talks.
The offoisive has been going on for four weeks. If the recently launched U.S. counterdrive around l^gon is the
“appnvriate rrapoose” of which the Presided spoke it has not been so labeled
One question the preddent is expected to put to Bunker is how much pressure there is in South Vietnam for retaliation. So far, informants here say, there has been no persistent pressure. And since there has not been significant pressure in the United States, this apparentiy has allowed the President to play out a waiting tactic in the hope that the assaults on the cities would cease.
Another and related issue whlp^ Bunker and the President are expected: to discuss is the stalemate in the Park peace talks as seen frwn Saigon and the: effect on the talks of the N«th Vit^naw-: Vietcong offensive.	> ;
NO DOMESTIC ATTACKS So far Nixon, who took office just tvio months ago, has escaped any widespread; or concerted attacks in Congress or the country on his handling of the war and-; the peace negotiations.
Bill on School Aid Asks Record Outlay
LANSING (UPI)-A record WOO million in state aid would be poured into Michigan public schools during the IMO-70 fiscal year under a bill Introduced in the House yesterday.
Cosponsored by 52 representatives, it is $210 million over Gov. William G. Miiliken’s recommendation and $284 rotlUon above what the schools now collect
A major item in the bill would allot $30 million to schools in inner-city areas. Currently ghetto-area schools get $6.3 million.
Rep. George Montgomery, D-Detroit, chief sponsor of the massive measure, said Detroit would get about $15 million of the money for programs for the economically kprived.
The bill also would take tee ceiling off
allotments for transportation, vocational education and special education costs.
GOP Congressman Hails Nixon's New Approaches
By JIM LONG
New approaches rather than new programs is the aim of the Nixon administration in fighting Inflation and the spiraling cost of government, Congressman John Anderson of Illinois said today.
Anderson, second - ranking Republican In the House behind Michigan's Gerald Ford, presented his <1ews at a fund-raising breakfast for Congressman Jack T McDonald of the Oakland-Wayne 19th District.
Some 200 persons paid $50 each to attend tee third annual event at the Kingsley Inn in Bloomfield Hills. The proceeds are used to cover McDonald’s expenses not reimbursed by the government.
While Nixon has been in office only two months, it li apparent already that the President is serious about combating inflation, the nation's number one domestic problem, said Anderson.
"And even though we have barely scratched the surface, we have begun to see ne\y guidelines, new hope and new spirit," he added.
An example of this concern, said Anderson, will be dramatized when tee budget submitted by President Johnson before he left office is slashed by^. as much as $3 billion.
It takes “considerable courage" to take this kind of action, said Anderson, when the large number of people involved is taken into account.
He cited the announcement last week by the postmaster general that there will be no further patronage appoint-* ments.
INCLUDING HIMSELF A number of people were offended,, "including myself," said Anderson, "but It's this type of thinking that proves we are serious.”
Anderson also predicted that there will be a drastic reorganization of the executive branch of government.
"He was appalled," said Anderson. By cutting back on aides Nixon was able to make the trip at a cost $100,000 less than past presidential visits abroad, according to Anderson.
Anderson said that "the winds of tax reform are blowing in Washington"—not of gale force, but stronger than any time in the nine years he has been in office.
The Weather
The Hduse Education Committee is now studying two other state aid bills. One bill follows the governor’s recommendation of $690 million for schools and the other, a Department of Education budget, calls for $7.47 million.
In other action, a bill outlining the line of auccession to the governor's chair was given preliminary approval with a final vote date set for next Wednesday.
At that time, it’s expected a major battle may erupt over whether the Senate president pro tempore or the speaker of the House should succeed behincUhe lieutenant governor, secretary of state and attorney general. The bill, as approved by the Senate, provides for the president pro tempore before the speaker.
Birmingham Area
Drug Expert ; Will Speak at ] Local Schools i
i
BIRMINGHAM'^ Dr. Allan Y. Ckteen,: a consulting psychologist at - thjB^ University of California, Berkeley, will' speak on the perils of drug addictimi airi: abuse at several schoob in tija; Birmingham district next week.
His schedule includes talks at 9;S a.m. at Groves High School and 2 p.in.; at Seaholm High School, both ik Thursday.	; •:
Dr. Cohen will speak af, Derby Junk^' High at 7:30 p.m. Thursday and at!^ p.m. Friday.
He will hold an informal question-and-; answer session at 8 p.m. Friday in the-Village Pub, a local teen center at 136'" Brownell.
AMENDMENT EiCPECTED
The House, which prides itself in being equal with the Senate, is expected to amend the bill, putting the speaker bbfore the president pro tempore.
DONATIONS
Funds to underwrite Dr. Cohen’s visit; to Birmingham are being raised by donations from schools, residents and various community groups.
Dr. Cohen graduated from Harvard
TO MEET AGAIN-Former President Harry S. Truman looked like this when University in 1961 and received his Ph.D..
A fkAM triAA vxfAeMAn*	Ri	«rkiia* nt $tiA TTG itt Hifiiral nsvphnlniTv frAm HiirvarH "lA*
the then vice president, Richard M. Nixon, gave him a guided tour of the U.S. Senate—Truman’s old stamping grounds—in 1953. President Nixon will drop in on the 84-year-okl Truman today in Independence, Mo., on the way to a West Coast weekend.
in clinical psychology from Harvard ih' 1966.
The House also passed a resolution extending its bill introduction deadline until April 16. Originally, the deadline was set for March 17, but an overload of bill requests and a shortage of staff to write them up has resulted in a logjam.
One of the things leading to this was the large number of "spear and briefcase carriers" who were to accompany Nixon
Some 1,250 out of a total of 3,350 bills still remain to be written.
In committee action, a bill designed to protect consumers from paying for unsolicited merchandise sent through the mail was reported out by the consumers and agriculture committee.
Didn't Make Any Prbmises on Rec Fund Split—Romney
He is a former student and colleague of Drs. Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert and has engaged in extensiyir research with psychedelic drugs.	'
The measure would allow anyone who receives such goods to dispose of them in any way without obligation to the sender.
DETROIT (UPI) — Former Gov. George Romney today plunged into the feud over the $100 million recreation bond by denying he made any preelection promises about how the money would be spent.
Last November, the voters approved issuing $100 million in bonds to improve
Parochiaid Fpes 'Turned On'
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report
PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly cloudy, windy and cooler today with chance of showers, high 4$ to 45. Partly cloudy and colder tonight, low 24 to 28. Partly sunny wHh lltao temperature change Saturday, high 46 to 41. Sunday outlook: Increasing dondlness and warmer. Winds west to northwest 26 to 28 miies per hour today iMeoming northwesteriy 12 to 22 miles per hour tonight and 18 to 18 miles Saturday. Probabilities of precipitatioa: 26 per cent today, 16 per cent tonight and Saturday.
Porch-Light Campaign Set
DETROIT (UPI) - The organizaUon mobilizing opposition to state aid to parochial schools has planned a porch-light campaign in Detroit next Wednesday to flash disgruntlement with parochiaid.
Mrs. Harriet Phillips, state chairman of Citizehs to Advance Public Education (CAPE), is asking householders to turn on their porch lights at 6:30 p.m. if they "believe we must support public education and oppose diversion of public funds for nonpublic education.”
It is also offering bumper stickers. PETITION DRIVE
Meanwhile Roman Catholics who oppose parochiaid are beginning a petition drive through their own organization. Catholic for Public Education.
Mrs. Phillips said yesterday CAPE is coordinating , efforts of a dozen groups fighting parochiaid. Besides tee porch-light campaign, CAPE is urging those opposing the concept to write to their legislators in Lansing to say so.
Working with CAPE are the Michigan Education Association, the Michigan Congress of Parents and Teachers, the Michigan Association of School Administrators, the Metropolitan Detroit Council of Churches, the Jewish Community Council, the American Civil Liberties Union and others.
existing conservation and recreation facilities and to develop new ones.
Gov. William G. Milliken has recommended that $60 million be spent for urban recreation areas and $40 million for' outstate projects. Conservationists, however, are claiming they were promised a 70-30 split in favor of forests and streams while Romney was governor.
Romney said, however, that he "consistently stated during the bond campaign that the final determination on the allocation of the bond proceeds would be made by the Legislature.„ upon recommendations by the governor.”
“While I had discussed a tentative 70-30 formula breakdown in my 1968 budget message, from the beginning of‘the bond campaign in July and on all later occasions where ^ spoke in favor of the bond issue, I repeatedly stressed that there was no commitment to a 70-30 formula.” ,
He said he had reviewed all' the campaign material used In newspapers and on radio and TV and "insured that no commitment for allocation” of the bond proceeds was contained in them.
BLOOMFIELD HILLS - T Bloomfield Hills School District and ttur Bloomfield Hills chapter of tee Midiig^ d Association for Children with Learniig; Disabilitiiis, Inc. will sponsor an in*; service instructional program «ii]C Wednesday at TTaub Elementary Schooh from 1 to 4 p.m.	;:
The topic is "Teaching and! Understanding of Children With Learning Disabilities."
All elementary teachers in the Bloomfield Hills public school system and teachers of St. Hugo of tee HUIs will participate jn the program.
Speakers include Dr. John Dorsey, Birmingham pediatrician; Dr. D. M. Honeyman, a Detroit opto ip„e t r i s t; Francis McRae, a building principal in the Madison Heights School District, Drs. Walter J. Ambinder and Sandra Lyness from the Wayne State University Learning Abilities Laboratory and Mrs. Julia Handy from the Birmingham School District.
Farmington Twp. Teen Shot to Death in Detroit
UNFORTUNATE MATERIAL Romney added it was “unfortunate” that some material which was handed out by the Department of Natural Resources before the campaign began indicating a 70-30 split but “did not point out 1 the tentative nature of such a forinulp.”
A 19-year-old Farmington Township youth was shot and killed early today in Detroit after an alleged argument.
Detroit police said Jfohn Zimba of 28604 Grayling was shot about 2:30 a.m. at 14th and West Warren. Witnesses said the shooting occurred as Zimba and two companions argued with tWo Negroes.	: r
Police said they are still searching for tee Negro pair, described as males, one
The Michigan Federation of Teachers has also come out against parochiaid.
H. »id h, ,ui. Milita ,„d u». ‘bS‘
300 Mothers Working for Milloge
A task force of 300 mothers vitally concerned with their children’s education has been working behind the scenes to get out the vote in Wednesday’s millage election in the Waterford Township School District.
The mothers’ goal is to get at least 70 per cent of the parents to the polls.
it Sir"”““	""«>"• ^	!•«
Their campaign is being waged with telephone calls, and will continue into election day when voters will be asked to approve an additional 9 mills for two years for operating the schools.
The job is a formidable one since only 30 per cent of the parents who are registered voters in the district cast ballots when the same millage proposal was defeated last December.
"We fully realize what our children wUl face and we all asree 1000 times over that only with the test education and our love will they be able to face up
to the decisions teat will have to be made,” she added.	^
APPEAL TO PARENTS
MOTHER OF FOUR
I^priving children of an education will not lessen the complicationii and
^ NATIONAL WEATHER—Rain is expected tonight from New York through the New England states while snow is expeded over upstate New York and the eastern port <rf tee Great Lakes area. Showers are due over most of California, and parts of Nevada and Arizona. It will be colder from. Arkansas to the northeastern states and mild elsewhere.
Mrs. Winston Hopp, a mother of four who helped initiate the campaign two weeks ago, said she believes that if another 40 per cent of the parents turn out the millage proposal will pass.
Mrs. Hop^, 3^ Pitt, appeared before the Wate^ord Township School Board last night to ei^iain the program and to thank members "for what ymi have been doing for tee future of our children.”
^	^ ‘*®P*«* ®n me *or their educa-
tion-let the fine teachers of Waterford do that,” she Said.
tehool Board President Donald Porter haiied Mrs. Htep and the other
Describing herself as a typical; middle-income mother, Mrs. Hopp said.
"We can’t afford to do any less than our best,’* said Porter, “because that is all we can pass on to the next generation.”	'*
- !f

THB yOl^TIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. MARCh'21, 1969
A—8
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LONDON (AP) - Britain’s outspoken fomer foreign secretary, George Brown, tri^ to promote a frioidly handshake between Arab and Israeli diplomats the other night and wound up telling the Arab off, one of his aides confinnbd today.
The incident was first reported In the newspaper today. Witnesses to it gave this account:
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hands with a friend Of mine?” Brown asked.
SAT. HOBBS Bajn.teBp.in.
REFUSES HANDSHAKE The ambassador said he I would not shake hands with an I Israeli.
Brown replied that unless the I Egyptian shook the Israeli’s I hand, he would never again I the Egyptian ambassa-A dor’s hand.
Ask For YOUR FREE HAM TICKETS SIMMS IS GIVING 50-FREE EASTER HAMS AWAY!
Brown, Egyptian Ami Ahmed El-Feki, and Yeshayahu Anug, the minister at the Israeli Embassy, all attended a dinner Tuesday night. After dinner Brown was talking to the Israeli diplomat when the Egyptian ambassador approached to say good night to Brown.
‘May I introduce you to my friend from the Israeli Embassy?” Brown asked. Anug extended his hand, but the Egyptian refused.
"Are you refusing to shake
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Dearborn His. Girl Top Citizen
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Council Mulls Problems of
County Lakes
inventoried," Humphreys noted.
Brokerage Firm Reports Earnings
BIRMINGHAM - Goodbody & Co., securities brokerage firm, has reported record income from opeartions but a drop in earnings for 1968, according to Joseph Davis, manager of the firm’s Birmingham office, 115 Brown.
Income from operations reached $117.4 million, compared to $89.9 million in 1967. Net income was $4,096,000 in 1968 compared with $5,006,000 in 1967.
Goodbody’s total assets grew from $415.6 mUlion to $551.3 mUlion, while its capital Ainds Jumped from $35 to 106 million.
OES in Oxford Area Plans Chicken Dinner
OXFORD •TOWNSHIP - A chicken dinner will be served Sunday from noon to 3 p.m. by members of the Thomas Chapter No. 428, Order of the Eastern Star.
The dinner, to take place at the Oakwood OES HaU. 5855 Oakwood, wiU be open to the public. Donations will be $2 for adults, $1 for children under 12.
THE PONTIAC PRESS
FRIDAY, MARCH 21. 1969
WIXOM — No r^y i giv«) to end an old and growing problem — tile deterioration of Oakland County Inland lakes — at a Huron River Watershed Cmincil meeting last night.
However, representatives from state agencies and Midiigan State University s^ solutions are available, but it wiil be up to the lake front pn^rty owners to assume greater interest and financial re^iondbility if they want to preserve tlM lakes.
Dr. Clifford Humphreys of the MSU Department of Natural Res.ources Development said there is no doubt that lake front pn^pierty owners have been coiKerned over the increasing pollution and use of their lakes.
However, he believes the lakes’ problems of pollution, channeling by developers, w^ growth, inadequate sewage facilities on lake front lots and over-usage should be attacked from a "team concept."
complexity or problems
llie team concept which utilizes tedmiclans representing several spedalizations such as hydrology, bacgerlology, land use, chemistry, soil tedmology, lake level control, etc., is needed, according to Humphreys * the multiplicity and
Supervisors Reevaluating Garbage Processing Plan
Solid waste dii^sal, as outlined in a recent Drain Commissirai study, could cost county residents $60 milUon over the next 20 years.
Notification that the Southeast Oakland County Incinerator Authority does not intend to participate in the plan caused supervisors to take a closer look at alternate plans yesterday.
The $60 million would be paid by 50 Oakland County communities rather than 64 if the authority and its affected communities withdraw.
Harold Kelly of Jones and Henry Engineers of Toledo, who undertook the ^study for the Drain Commission, said prices of processing garbage would go up 65 to 70 cents to a total of $12 a ton as a result of the authority’s withdrawal.
businessman, appeared before the board briefly to say that his company would be willing to build a $20-million incinerator for the county and to operate it on a long-term basis. He said a full presentation will be made before the public works committee of the board on April 27.
The study was also referred back to the public works committee for further review.
MOST FOR COLLECTION
He told supervisors that 80, per cent of the program’s cost would be devoted to collection; 20 per cent to the cost of • facilities.
Several supervisors quizzed Kelly about the plan, some of them asking about the validity of estimated costs, some of them seeking means other than incineration to dispose of garbage.
Brandon Driver Doug Grovesteen Checks His Bus
complexity of problems facing the
"Attacking Just one problem such as reducing usage, dredging or pumping is not the answer for complete recovery of a Me. All of the problems have to be
3/ School Buses in Area
The possibility of using state land for an ash disposal site was raised by Lew Coy, R-Wixom.
A need to get approval of contracts with all local governments involved in the plan was seen by Kelly as being the main time-consuming factor of implementing the program.
Richard Ankerson of Detroit, a private
This, he said, would entail greater eiq)«ue, but it is necessary if lakes are to be controlled effectively.”
Panel members were Jerome Fulton, executive secretary of the Watershed Council; George Tahck, Michigan Department of Nahmal Resources: Hans Haugard, vice diairman. Watershed Council; James Smeets, Association of Michigan Lakes and Streams; and Humf^ys. They extensively debated the means of financing lake improvement projects.
SPECIAL ASSESSMENTS
in Defective-Brake Recall ASM He\3ring Monday
at County Courthouse
Four area school districts have 26 school buses subject to possible brake failure included in the nationwide recall of 10,450 buses produced by Chevrolet Division and GMC ’Truck and Coach Division.
In addition there are five other potentially defective buses owned by private area groups, mostly churches.
area belong to Faith Baptist Church (1), Waterford Township; Forest Hills Church (1), Farmington; First Baptist Church (1), Lake Orion; Stone Baptist Church (1), Pontiac; and Lapeer State Hospital (1), Lapeer.
Hie ways and means of financing ranged from special assessment of lake front property owners, more state aid and general taxation.
The panel agreed that new money, increased Interest from both the public and private lake front owners, and more effective use of existing controls are the essentials In beginning a county-wide cleanup of lakes.
All of the buses identified so far were produced by Chevrolet. The number of GMC buses has not yet been disclosed.
The affected school districts are Birmingham (8), Wailed Lake (7), Brandon (5) and Lapeer (6). The 1967-68 model buses are involved.
Other Chevrolet buses said to be in the
Announced Wednesday,'the bus recall is to correct conditions for the possible malfunction involved in the hydraulic brake system.
Dave Blomquist, assistant superintendent for finance of the Brandon school district, said if its five buses are recalled, the district would ask General Motors for replacements while the recalled buses are being serviced. He said the district has three spare buses
that could be used in event of emergency.
James B. O’Neill, director of physical plant and transportation for the Birmingham school district, said he did not anticipate any problems as a result of the bus recall.
RECALL INDEFINITE
Farmington OKs, New Pact for Garbage-T rjasb Disposal
FARMINGTON - The City Council has approved terms of a new — and altered — contract for garbage and rubbish disposal.
Under the new pact, which will take effect when^thc present contract expires in June, McCready Trucking Co. Inc. of Brighton, a private collection firm, will expand' its pickups to include materials currently collected by the city only in special monthly pickups, according to City Manager John Dinan.
savings of about $2,000 in labor and abojft $1,500 in equipment um."
“We do not definitely know for sure if all eight buses will be recalled. And if they do, the recall will probably not be all at once."
He noted the district does have extra buses which can be used In, the event of breakdowns and or for the servicing of buses.
James Jessup, director of transportatfam for the Lapeer School District, said the district has not been notified "in any way whatsoever" that it possess defective vehicles.
He said all buses operated by the district have passed the State Police inspection, and there has been no indication of any malfunction. Unless notification is received from GM, he said, the buses will not be withdrawn from service.
The public wili have an opportunity to state its views regarding President Nixon’s plans for an antiballi^tic missile system at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Oakland.County Courthouse auditorium.
Supervisor Niles Olson, D-Or ion Township, chairman of the County Board of Supervisors planning, building and zoning committee announced yesterday that his committee will conduct the hearing.
Commissioner Tag Favored
County commissioners?
If the present County Board of Supervisors has anything to say about it, that’s the way they may
be
. The board voted in favor of a f resolution from its legislative committee yesterday urging the amendment of Senate Bill No. 12 to designate supervisors as the Board of County Commissioners.
Other legislation recommended by the board would allow the coun-. ty to designate the Department of; Public Works as its agent in carrying out a solid-waste disposai program.
ANTIPOLLUnON BILLS
The board went on record as being in favor of present bills in the state House of Representatives to divide some $335 million of voted antipollution funds.
The biiis would allow local participation in sewer programs at 25* per cent of cost, the remainer to come from the state and federal governments.
A minority report, regarding disbursement of $^ million intended for small communities, failed to win support of the board.
It was the contention of some city supervisors that most of the money is raised in urban areas and that those areas will not benefit from the grants.
Attorney Is Named
%
as County Auditor
CHECKED THROUGHLY
Notices describing the new service will be distributed to residents in early April, he added.
In other recent business, council awarded contracts for the city’s spring tree-planting program, initiated this year.
The present contract calls for Mc-^Cready to mak«i, weekly pidKijis of household waste with a limit of six cans per residence, Dinan said, with grass clippings, dirt and similar rubbish handled by the city itself on a monthly basis.
With the new contract, Dinan said, the city will be out of the business, and the private firm will handle refuse without a residence limit.
COST OF CONTRACT Cost of the new contract will be $37,700 for three ^ars. Including ^,000
for the added service.
“The new system will be more convenient,” Dinan commented. “People won’t have to rementber tl^ monthly pickup. Also, there won’t be the duplication of equipment. We anticipate
BID ON TREE VARIETIES
Four nurseries bid on the four tree varieties — Norway maple, sugar maple, Imperior locust, a^ pine oak — offered in the program.
The Cole Nursery of Circleville, Ohio, hMi the low bids of $9.95 per tree on Norway maples and $12.75 per tree for imperial locusts. The amount of Norway maples available from the nursery was limited, however, with the result that Cottage Gardens of Lansing, the second low bidder, wiB supply 20 at $10.50 apiece.
Cottage Gardens was also low with a quote of $9.85 per tree for sugar maples, while Steinkopf Nursery, 208 1 5 Farmington, Farmington Township, was low bidder on pin o^ wiih a price of $15 per tree.
Planting wiil begin on the weekend of March 29-30, Dinan said, and will continue the next two weekends. The manager said he hopes to notify customers in the areas where planting win be taking place each weekend.
WaUed Lake Schools Supt. George Garber said this morning that the seven possibly defective buses owned by the district had been checked over throughly by mechanics and are back in operation.
“As soon as we read about the callback, we checked with our Chevrolet service agent," Garber said. He said the buses had then been taken off the road temporarily for the inspection and added, “we intend to keep track and follow the situation very closely.”
George Fulkerson, a Birmingham attorney, was unanimously named yesterday by the Board of Supervisors as a part-time member of the county board of auditors.
F^ilkerson, a Democrat and former congressional candidate and candidate for prosecuting attorney, will be paid up to ^,500 a year. He will serve until Dec. 31,1971.
Other appointments made by the board yesterday were as follows:
Board of Health: Lew L. Coy, R-Wixom, five-year term.
Parks and Recreation: Frances Clark and Velma Austin, three-year terms; Supervisor Frank Richardson, R -Waterford Township, until January 1970.
Medical Examiner: Dr. Bernard Berman, three-year term.
that body, however, are to come from its own budget. Some $16,860 of additional County funds will be needed. Members were previously paid at $20 per diem.
Supervisor Lawrence Pernick, D-Southfield, who had earlier introduced a resolution in the personal practides committee to limit supervisors’ salaries to $7,500 a year — despite service on other boards and commissions — did not get his resolution to the floor. The committee did not report it out.
Service Building Construction Plans Hit Snag
APPOINTMENTS REAFFIRMED
District Asks 3-Mill Renewal
Plans for constniction of Oakland County’s service building hit a temporary snag yesterday. The building would house the Department of Public Works, the Drain Commission and the county’s department of facilities and opertitions.
The Board of Supervisors tabled a proposed rosolutiOn to transfer $314,000 out of its utilities fund. The money would have been used to start road constniction and extension of utilities to the proposed service building site on Watkins Lake Road.
Holly School Election Monday
The board reaffirmed the following appointments:
Building Authority: Milo J. Cross, three-year term.
Board of Institutions: Maurice J. Croteau, Charles B. Edwards Jr. and Thomas H. O’Donoghue, 3-year terms.
Appointments made by Edwards, chairman of the board, and approved by the board were:
Planning Commission; Edwin Adler and Victor Woods.
Huron River Watershed Council; Fred Houghten.
Personnel Appeals Board:	James
Mathews. Mrs. Mary Bawden was also named to the personnel appeals board, but declined the appointment. The vacancy was referred back to the committee on committees.
Ad hoc committee on roads; Supervisors Lee Walker, chairman, Frank Richardson, Carl O’Brien, Niles Olson, Mary Bawden, Mahibn Benson and Fred Houghten.
Plans for a film on county operations moved a step forward as supervisors approved the use of private donations for such a purpose. Estimated cost of the film is ^,000. Donations will be sought by the local affairs committee.
Supervisor Carl O’Brien, D-Pontlac, introduced a resolution — referred to the legislative committee — which would concur with state legislation regarding conflict of interest.
RENTAL CONTRACT OK’D
It would prohibit supervisors and the business associates from accepting ar fees, commissions^ salaries, or oth( things of value from the county or froi any of its departments or agencii during the supervisor’s term of office.
Meantime, supervisors had alreac approved by the necessary two-thir( majority a rental contract for tl Rochester District Court at 134 \ University, Rochester. Fred Houghtei R-Avon Township, is part owner of tl building. Rent will be ^,900 a year.
HOLLY — Voters in this school district wjll be asked to approve a request for renewal of 3 mills for three years at the special school election Monday.
Voters approved the 3-mill rate in June 1968 for only one year.
He added that if the millage renewal request is defeated, the board of education is almost certain to come back to the voters, and within a very short period of time .
millage renewal Is a critical need and will definitely have to pass in order for the school district to function at full strength,” he said.
Russell Haddon, superintendent of schools, is hoping for a turnout of at least half of the nnore than 4,000 registered voters in the district. He is cautiously optimistic concerning the outcome of the election:
“We are only asking f«- a renewal but the revision (toward) in property valuation for many reridents will mean a hi|^ tax bill anyway. The board is hopiiig that the highw valuations will not
‘“nie board, of course, wants to avert that situation since plans are currently being readied for a bond issue package for a Junior high sch<^l building which prol»bly will go to the voters in June. We do not want to hit the people with two, requests at once” the superintendent explained.
hm • negativa
elecUoii." Haddon said.
Haddon said the millage renewal request is a minimum need and is strictly for the day-hxlay operations of the school district.
“We want to stress, however, that the
BUDGET GAP
The school head noted that increases in property tax valuations this year will bring in about $163,000 in new money for the school district.
A projected five per cent increase in student enrollntent would mean that $213,000 in addition to the 3-miIl renewal will be needed to run the district during the 1969-70 term, leaving a budget gap (d $50,000.
Plans for the building will be presented before the full board April 3 and action is expected to follow.
Contemplated at a cost of $2 million, the service building is the second major construction project considered by the board in the past month. Supervisors in February approved leasing contracts which will permit construction of a $9-million law enforcement-jail complex.
PER DIEM PAY OK’D
The board also approved a $35 per diem pay for boards and commissions, including the Oakland bounty Intermediate School Board. Funds for
The board noted the absence of vice chairman Alexander Perlnoff, D -Southfield, reported to be Improving after a heart attack. He is in Mount Sinai Hospital, Detroit.
A short memorial for Ralph A. Main, former supervisor, who died Feb. 4 was conducted by the board.
Spaghetti Dinner Near
OPPOSES TRANSFER
DAVISBURG - The Davisburg Jaycees will hold a spaghetti dinner tomorrow at the Davisburg Methodist Church. Serving will be from 5:30 to 8 p.m.
The funda for the service center were set aside from unappropriated surplus by the old board of supervisors.
Speaking against transfer of the utilities funds were Supervisors
Lawrence Pernick, I>Southfield, Lee Dinner Set TomOrrOW Walker. D-Madison Heights, and WUUam	• vw
Richards; D-Royal Oak.
Haddon said he expects th6 State Department of Education will make up the difference.
All three objected on the grounds that the county should have a priorities list for needed projects.
CLARKSTON The Joseph C; Bird Chapter 294,^.OES, will sponsor a spring smorgasbord from 5 to 7 p.m. tomorrow i at the Masonic Temple, 2 N. Main. The public is invited.
■ /■. -V
i
dEORGE FULKERSON
/

-*	^ T&E, PONTlXc PRESS, FRIDAY. MARCH 2l. ]
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• H
V, % i


THE PONTIAC PRESS
41 West Huron Street
Pontine; Miehjgah 44054
FRIDAV, MARCH 21, 1969
MOWAW M. RtMIMU, It Fmidmt u« Fu^Uihtr
W. mKb BxteutM tne •BdUitw
Seerttary and Advartlttng
itioM«aa M. Fimnuu
Urge Approval of ABM
One of the stickiest issues that awaited President Nixon’s assumption of office is that of the antibal-listic-missle (ABM)| system oi;iginaUy| proposed by Presi-j dent Johnson.
Congressional op-nehts of the sys-^tem Nixon advo*
'ates (considerably deduced in extent from the Johnson concept) question the effectiveness of it and its estimated cost of one to two billions annually.
if it contributes to the security of the Nation.
NDtON
Proponents, however, see ABM as an essential diplomatic bargaining weapon, apart from its protection against ballistic missiles, for ti^e Nixon Administration in its negotiations with the Soviet Union and Red China looking toward establishment of a worldwide state of nbnaggres-sion on the part of the Communists. As for the cost, they argue that, with a national budget of $186 billion, the cost of ABM is relatively insignificant
The Nixon plan,, however, has the n\erit of flexibility. There is room for modification should the U.S.-Communist diplomatic climate reflect meaningful “progress toward amity.
It has been abundantly proved that the only international influence the Communists respect is that of military might—or the ability to combat it—despite their hypocritical protestations to the contrary.
Uhder present circumstances and until the day when communism sincerely renounces world domination, the welfare of America rests on her ability to deal from strength in its relations with aggressor nations.
We feel that implementation of ABM would go far to beef up President Nixon’s stance in his diplomatic maneuvering with such powers, and that Capitol Hill should approve the protective system he seeks.
Indications are that, despite some little opposition there and also on the par| of the public, the Congress will give the President his way.
Levin Opposes Parochiaid
As a firm opponent to State aid to nonpublic schools (parochiaid) we commend State Sen. Sander Levin, D-Berkley. on the | public stand he re-1 cently took against | the issue.
The senator ad-1 vanced two main |
vision that cails for separation of church and state.
reasons for his position:
• The $40 -million eati- LEVIN mated cost of parochiaid would have to either come ont of State aid to public schools, or tho -. amount be raised by some form of additional taxation.
The first course would deal the public school system an economic blow it could scarcely withstand, and the second would inflict a burden on taxpayers of similar gravity.
★	★ Ar
• The concept is unconstitutional. in conflict with the pro-
The specifics were spelled out in 1961 in an opinion handed down by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black, and were given added weight by the late President John F. Kennedy when he said, “I believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute . . . where no church school is granted any public funds or political preference." (92 per cent of nonpublic schools are church-oriented.)
★ ★ ★
Parochiaid proponents are fighting hard for their cause. Parochiaid bills were introduced in the State Legislature last year but failed of passage. Another bill has been introduced in the new Legislature and is now before the House.	V
Again we say that the principles of parochiaid are ethically wrong, economically disastrous and a dire threat to the State’s public school system.
Parochiaid should be defeated.
Reviewing Other Editorial Pgges
Voice of the People:

Waterford School Vote Discussed by Readers
^ I don’t like a tax increase any more than anyone else, but 1want my child to have a good education. I hope the Waterford voters realize what the children will be deprived of if the millage isn’t approved.
DR. ROBERT SCRIVENS
Economists tell us the cost of living, increased 4.7 per cent in 1968. Washington increased our taxes 10 per cent, the State has a new 2.6 per cent tax on our income, Waterford Towndiip inovased my taxes 66 per cent for 1968 and I read in The Press that it will be increased another 24 per cent for 1970. With the 24 per cent announced increase and Superintendent Tatroe’s proposal, the Waterford tax collector would take over one-half of my Social Security for each year. What can ifUred people do but sell their retirement homes and live in trailers to be able to move where the least greedy politicians rule?.	^
M. A. MATEIf
'^'69
'May Be Some Rough Weather Ahead, Mate!'
Waterford residents must realize that>ours is a young and growing community. Anyone living here must know it is only a matter of time for sewer hookup, paving, etc. These things have nothing to do with the education of our children—no more than the 24 per cent equalization of valuation does. Let’s piut our diildren’s education first, where it belongs.
MRS. CHARLES PAGE MRS. ELDEN HICKS DONELSON BRANCH CONCERNED PARENTS OF WATERFORD
Our sewer cost $1,180 across the front of our house and over $1,000 to bring it up to our house. It will cost more when we get our water and sewer bill. Vote “no” on March 26.
MRS. E. LaBARGE
David Lawrence Says:
Nixon Not Weakening on War
WAwSHINGTON-Out of the
33.000	American troops who have died since the beginning of the Vietnam War, more than 10,000 were killed since the “peace” talks started at Par-is 1 a 51 M a y, and at leasti
65.000	werel wounded dur-| ing the same 10 months. LAWRENCE
Commdnist casualties have been heavy, too. But human life is wasted without much concern by the North Vietnamese, who are confident that the United States will withdraw from the contest and leave the whole region open to domination by the Communists.
But what could this mean to the future of American foreign policy around the giobe? Thus far. President Nixon has shown no signs of weakening from the position previously t^en by the United States.
Air Force which can bomb all enemy bases and transportation routes, and a Navy which can blockade the port of Haiphong and prevent delivery by sea of shipments to our adversaries.
The situation in . Vietnam presents a chalienge which, if not dealt with realistically, could lead tp a miscalculation of America’s resoluteness and cause the Communists to broaden their aggressive campaigns and inevitably bring on a third world war.
Vietnamese get more and more help from the Russians and the Red Chinese, the risks to the United States will be multiplied.
BETTER JOIN?
Waterford Township proposes a 25 per cent increase in property taxes; we are paying on a sewage debt; it is rumored surtax will continue; we pay Federal, State, County and City taxes. Blue Cross, haircuts and gasoline costs increased. Now the Township wants , to pass a nine-mill vote in school taxes. At this rate I can’t feed, clothe or groom my boy to go to school. I can vote against the school tax even if 1 have no choice on the others.
MRS. D. TIKKA
Work of Press Photographer Prompts Letter
On every continent there will be a feeling, particularly among the weaker governments, that the United States will not be of much help to them and they had better join the Communist side.
Pontiac Press Photographer Unternahrer did it again. Last week there was a picture of a most fantastic, fascinating, Picasso-like load of rubbish imaginable. And going along through Bloomfield Hills yet. Next day, g beautifol study of a woman and child, portraying love, and somewhat after the manner of Renior. It is rightly said that a picture can say more than a thousand words.
A FAN
Applauds Pontiac Central Basketball Team
Mr. Nixon has promised an “appropriate response” to the offensives by the North Vietnamese, especially since these seem to indicate clearly there is no intention to reciprocate in any way for America’s bombing halt which began last autumn.
If the President lets the situation drift along while American casualties steadily increase and the North
Mr. Nixon has been hopeful that the Soviets would enter a new era of conciliation and that many world ' problems could be resolved by diplomatic talks and perhaps sifflimit conferences.
But will the President be negotiating from a position of strength or weakness?
What happens in Vietnam can be a turning point in world history.
itw
eublMlwr«.Hall tynSkal*)
The Pontiac Central basketball team is to be applauded for a tremendous season. Special congratulations go to Coach Ralph Grubb on his first season as head coach.
MOLLY MeINTYRE PONTIAC CENTRAL SENIOR
Another Opinion on Waterford Taxes
For many years my Waterford Township taxes have been increasing at an average rate of 17 per cent per year. Projecting this into the future, anyone living in or moving into Waterford Township and owning or buying a $16,000 home can look forward to paying approximately $127,500 in taxes in the next 25 years. How .many times have wages been cut in the last year due to taxes?	'
WILLIAM H. WALTERS
Bob Gonsidine Says:
Reader Tells Incidents of Undelivered Mail
Last Friday he toid a televised n e. w s conference that, in view of the current offensive by the North Vietnamese, “there is no prospect for a. reduction of American forces in the foreseeable future.”
Time Not of the Essence at Peace Talks in Paris
S. VIETS LACKING This comment is evidently based on statements 'by American military commanders. Just publisheti that the South Vietnamese
Peace Hopes Dim
The Son Diego Union
It is the misfortune of the, conflict In the Middle East that the head of the Egyptian armed forces was killed in batUe even as there was some faint js-ellmlnary’ progress at the United Nations over four-power discussions of (he conflict.
Militarily, it is doubtful that the death of Gen. Abdel Moneim Riad in a Suez Canal Egyptian-Isi-aeli duel will have much effect on the perpetual low level war in the Middle East.
agreement among the an-t a g 0 n i s t s, rapprochement between Russia that champions Arabs and the United States which supports Israel, ratification by the Security Council and the conciliation of President Charles de Gaulle in France.
-Not even a madman would believe peace possible at this time.
match our venturing to our expanding technology.
As the initial lunar effort draws to a close, should we embark on a vigorous program of solar system exploration? Should we strive to reach our sister planets, from Venus and Mars to Jupiter, and discover whether life exists on them as welt as^on^artii?-------	-----
.WQuU»h^	to take
over-lpiles ..... ‘ ■ •
esponsibility of their defense for at least two years.
Likewise, Defense Secretary Laird sayn his military chiefs are convinced that U.S. troops cannot be withdrawn until Hanoi pulls all its forces out of South Vletnpm.
The Soviet Union has spent millions rearming the Arab nations after the six-day war in June 1967. But the Arab nations still are disorganized, poorly trained, economically unable to afford large scale hostilities and afraid o f tackling the Israelis again.
larael, on the other hand, is strong, confident and willing to use its military power to defend its position.
Nor is it likely that the nqw emotions that have been fanned to fever pitch by the death of General Riad will bring a major war, although there Is admittedly some dapger of fire wherever sparks are present.
_______________Arthur C. Clarke, noted
scientist, believes that scientific - .	^ opinion has swung to tiie view
Space Exploration life not only may but prob-
~	'	ably does exist on other plan-
ets. This very likely is true even of Jupiter, once thought to be biologically sterile but now described in Sagan and Leonard’s “Planets” as having
The HilMale Daily News
Decisions about the nature and extent of postlunar space exploration must soon be made. The nation’s course over the next decade or so wUi fall to the present Congress and the Nixon administration.
Of late there has been considerable talk of delaying the program until some of the problems here on earth are resolved. It would place human values above technoTogical advancement.
favorable to life than any other planet: not excepting the earth.”
Clarke quotes Tsiolokovsky’s words of more than half a century ago, “The earth is the cradle of the mind — but you cannot live in the cradle forever.”
Now, as before, peace in the Middle East depends upon
Perhaps, however, a couple of points should be considered. One is that money diverted from the space program would not necMS^y be devoted to campaigns against poverty, hunger, urban decay, and so on. The other is ^t, given the jMemiae that it is man’s destiny to probe the univente In which this little planet swims, we might as well get slaHed
--B^rt I f	U a n o I
government did order its forces to go back north as a device, this doesn’t mean that the aggression could not be Immediately resumed as soon as American troops have returned home.
What ' is ■ being left unanswered is the larger question bf how to deal with Russian participation in the Vietnam war through financial aid and the supply of arms. Under the circumstqnces, the natural course tor President Nixon to pursue is to find out whether the Russians intend t o maintain their hostile role toward this| country.
RENEW BOMBING?
This countiY has a powerful
PARIS—An American representative at the Vietnam truce talks always arrives early at the scene, the Hotel Majestic — which isn’t very.
The first thing he does -tis go to the bathroom. H< is a student of I history aiid re-| members that" the Duke of CONSIDINE Wellin^n once practiced this tactic whenever he felt the oncoming conference would be long, tedious and probably - distcfissing,;_____
le Vietnam truce arrives early at
I
Verbal Orchids
Mrs. Walter R. White of 2716 Crooks: 84th birthday.
Mn. Emma Wortuian of 147 E. Howard; 84th birthday.
Mrs- Leaa Eckelbar of 1699 GilMings; Mth birthday.
He is at his chair, standing, when the North Vietnamese and the Vietcong (National Liberation Front) people come ih. He bows,'' They bow. Then he, along with the representatives of the Saigon government, who havejiot bowed to the enemy, site down at the big, round green-clothed table.
There is a clockwise arrangement for speaking. The representative to the left of the representative who had made the final forma.1 remarks on Thursday of the previous week then shuffles his papers: «nd begins to tqlk. NO CHALLENGES • A» a rule he talks, uninterrupted, for an hour and a half. ' Almost all of what he says is repetition. He said it, essentially, the previous 'niursday.
There are no challenging interruptions.
it is a speech by the North Vietnamese or the NLF fellow, is then fully repeated in French and English.
Ah, now (the men under attack in V i e t n a m will be pleased to learn) the translation is completed. All rise. It Is time for the 29-minute toilet and sandwich break.
‘PLENTY OF TIME’
After 20 minutes there is la meme chose—which then has to be “translated” into North Vietnamese and, if necessary, into South Vietnamese, which necessitates a drawl.
“They have all the time in the world,” this short, fat Amerioan^id^ the other speaking of the other side of the bleak peace table. %
“They know we’re'not going to clobber them, whatever they do. They know, or at least they feel, that time is on their side; that the American people will get fed up with the casualty figures — they never pubfUh their own much heavier losses-and there will be a big move |n the U. S. to get out of there. A president rises or falls on how he follows public opinion.
“So we try to mdteh them. It isn’t easy to be as relaxed as they are at the table. To outwait them is one thing; to satisfy demands from home that we jget cracking here in Paris is iunhething else.”
We have lived at the same residence for 20 years. In October we did not receive an announcement from Pickford, Michigan. In January we^faiied jo receive car insurance from Howell, Michigan and an announcement from Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Others received theirs through Utica, Rochester and Pontiac post offices. Some things come a week late, but these three never have showed up. All had correct addresses and zip codes. Servicemen are not the only ones not receiving their mail. How much else has gone astray, I don’t know.
MRS. H. LOCKHART 8848 ORRICK, UNION LAKE
Incident Raises Question About Justice
I witnessed a divorce case in Judge Beer’s court recently and I can’t believe what happened. The attorney from the I^end of the Court Office read opening statements to the judge that his office had evidence of child neglect and otiier charges agafost the mother that would prove her unfit. After a few sessions in closed chambers between attorrteys and the judge, . the divorce was granted and the children left in custody of the mother. And they call that the haU of justice?
MRS. HAZEL GREENE
'•‘Drivers Pay No Heed to Sound of Sirens
Why is it when people hear a siren they just keep on theii merry way instead of slowing down, pulling over or stopping
Jo show some courtesy?	..
JANET MOYSES
Question and Answer Are teachers at Waterford Township High and Mott High getting paid a full day’s pay for only working about five hours that they are In the bulMIng? I understand the entire teach-Ing and office staff changes at noon from the Township personnel to Mott personnel.
REPLY
Mr. Alexander at the Waterford Board office tells us the teachers are vforking the same number of hours they always have: Waterford Toionship teachers work from 7:15 to 2:30; Mott from 9:15 to 5:1S.
Question and Answer
When the unmolested speaker has finished, the translators take over. There is np simultaneous interpretation, as in the United Nations. Hie whole dreary business, If
The American was asked how it was like, eyeball to eyebaU.
“These people have come to Paris with me attitude that they have won the war in Vietnam. Nothing can shake them of that opinion. They have come to dktata the truce
GenM yea please teU me where to buy a threfrdimensienal chess set?
GEORGE B. LAUINGER 160 DRESDEN
“It could take a long time.”
ty

/
REPLY
There may be others in the area, but of the stores we checked at random, only Martins’ Games, 263 Pierce^ Birmingham, carries them. J They’re on order end should be in in about a week. If wC hkar of other dealers, we’ll let you know.


Deputies Play a Key Role in Wofer Safety
Soon people will be flocking to Oakland County’s lakes. There to protect and assist them will , be members of the County Slieriff’s Department Water Safety Division.
Although the safety division deputies patrol the lakes year-round, their busiest season is just about to begin.
★ ' A
A large portion of the officers' time is spent warning boaters of violations, such ' as registration, reckless operation or pulling skiers without a mirror or obseper. About 3,200 persons were warned last year, The divisitm’s officer responded to 40 b 0 a t i n g accidents; four of which w^e fatal, and 35 drowning calls, including 19 that resulted in deaths.
27 DROWNING^
Altogether, 27 person . drowned in the county’s lakes i: 1968.
The most frequent watercraft violations last year were inadequate s^ety equipment, reports Lt. Dginald Kratt, head of the division.
★ ★ • Off-lake activities of the division include giving lectures bn water safety and boating to children and adults, maintaining marine equipment, tracking offenders With dogs and training in the county Tactical Mobile Unit.
tHB PpNTIAC press: FRIDAY. MAR^H 21, 19g9
'Rush of News Is Demanding'
AP General Manager Sees Special Needs
NEW YORK (JFI - Wes Gallagher, general manager of the Associated Press, said today the bewildering rush of news in 1968 demonstrated as never before the need for aggressive reporting, enterprise and the assignment of specialists to cover various areas of the news.
“The news year was momentous one with event after event stirring .readers’ emotions,’’ Gallagher said in annual report.
♦	★ A '
“As the kaleidoscope of news
spins faster in a complicated world it has become more and more necessary^ to have reporter-editor speciaUsts dealing with the news,’’ he said.
“In these emotional times even the most diligrat and conscientious editor and reporter will not e s c a p criticism , because the more emotional the news the more it inflames the partisans who interpret it in the light of their own background, prejudices and suspicions.’’
RACIAL TASKFORCE In the riots that followed the . assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Gallagher said the AP “was prepared with its racial* task force to a highly trained personnel to these difficult and emotional areas of news coverage.’’
“In Vietnam our AP reporters have dominated the news for these many years,’’ he said. “The Tet offensive which destroyed many South Vietnamese cities brought forth the best in the dangerous business of war reporting.’’
★	* ★ Gallagher’s report was mailed
to members in advance of the annual meeting in New York April 21.	'
Despite the fact that the presidential campaign was one of the most emotional 1 history, he said, “ T h Associated Press, by the use of top veteran political reporters backed with tape recorders, emerged from the campaign with cbmplete coverage and not a single complaint from any candidate.’’
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NAB Has 10,146 Jobs for Summer
DETROIT (AP) - The National Alliance of Businessmen | announced Thursday in Detroit! it has lined up 10,146 summeri jobs for Detroit-erea youths. | The group says it plans to find summer jobi for qll youths who want them. Last summer the alliance located >rork for. some 10,000 youths, a spotes-! man .said.
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■mu
&

Dems Push Williams for M$U Presidency
Former six-lerm Gov. G. Menncn Williams^ is being promoted by state Democratic regulars for the presidency of Michigan State University, House speaker William A. Byan suggested earlier this week that Democratic leaders very much want Williams in the $4fl.000-a-ycar job,
' ' •* ' * '
MSU Trustee Kenneth W. Thompson of East Lansipg, formerly of Birmingham, said he feels Ryan’s push i*s obviously politically oriented William’s selection will depend on the party’s influence with the five Democratic members of the MSU board of trustees — the seven-member ^ unit that mu,st select the next president.
NAME MEPJTIONED ^ • Trustee Chairman Donald Steven's of Okemos, a state AFL-CIO official and normally a party-line Democrat, ,said Williams’ name has been mentioned but there’s n o. guarantee he’ll get the post.
Thompson, a Republican, said he personally didn’t sec Williams as a candidate to be considered seriously for the president of the university.
* ★ ♦
; He feels the board of trustees is taking an objective approach to the selection. “I don’t view the selection by the trustees as polticially oriented,” he said.
The other Republican, trustee i is Stephen S. Nisbet o f Fremont.
OTHER DEM MEMBKIUS Other Democratic mdmbcrs of the board of trustees are { Warren Huff of Plymouth, who! reportedly is eying the 1970 governor’s race and could use an assist from Williams; Dr. Blance Martin of East Lansing, a newcomer to Democratic politics; Frank Hartman of Flint a long-time educator with a light political portfolio; and (Mair A. White of Bay City, a former member of the State' Democratic Policy Committee.
Stevens said the board "isn’t suggesting names at this point. W'c want to see the r e c 0 m m endations of the selection committee first.”
★ ★ ★
A 12-member faculty-student selection committee, headed by Prof. John Taylor, Is being formed to present recommen-
dafions to the trustees. The unit will indude one black faculty member and one black student.
"We are asking* for nominations from all facultf and students, other universities, alumni, foundations and persons in business and industry,” Taylor said. "We expect to get at least 150 nominations.”
HE WON’T Ih(TERFERE	1
John . A. ' Hannah, 66, is j scheduled to step down as MSU 1 president later this month or early next month after 28 years ^ in the post. He has said he; won't interfere in the selection j of.his succes.sor.	]
Williams is expected to return to Michigan in midrApril or early May from his position as U.S. ambassador to the Philippines. His recent resignation from foreign service was routinely accepted by the Nixon administration.
* w ★
The former governor’s desire to serve as MSU president is no secret, though he never has stated publicly he wants the job.
Williams’ age (he turned 58 last Feb. 23) could work against his getting the post. Major; American universities have been turning more and more to younger administrators 1 n' recent years.	I
PROTESTS LIKELY	|
Undoubtedly, if Williams Is appointed, there will be cries of, protest from Republicans and| others, claiming the choice was i purely political.
THE PONTIAC PREijS. FRIDAY. MARCH 1969
World’s oldest tree is said toi be the bristlecone pine.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MARCH 21. 1969

Big and Small Air Views on State Overtime Bill
LANSING (AP) - Th^na-tton’s big three automakei^s argued Thursday against pending legislation that would Map a juaximum on the amoMit of overtime employers may require of their porkers. ,
And a mushroom grower from imlay City pleaded simply -., “I’m only a small guy but I got a right to liVe too./this will kill me.”
United Auto Workers representatives, meaimhile„ told the House Labor Committee that extensive overtime , is “cruel
punishment, immoral” and contributes to unemployment of women, blacks, youth and elderly-
After more than three hours testimony, conimittee chairman James Bradley, D-Detroit, was nearly shouted down as he adjourned the hearing.
TIME PROBLEMS *
“What about the communication workers?” yelled one per. son. “What about the restaurant workers?’? All their repre-er got to testify because of time senatives, along with those (rf
OU Club Gets
SAE
lor
The Society j of Automotive Engineers has selected the SAE
student Club / at Oakland is/ an outstanding
University
student branch for 1968.
The award will bring the student club a plaque plus a check for $100, which is for some scientific, educational or professional use. The OU club was the only one in Southeast Michigan to win the award.
proUems. Bradley said he planned no further hearings <m the
“We cannot see the need for or the desirability of this restriction,” said Malcolm Denise, Ford Motor Cb.’s vice president for labor relations.
American Motors Corp. and other management personnel, nev-
Spring Meeting Set by Council of Boys' Clubs
Presentation will be made by the Detroit section of the SAE to the student club chairman, Bill Garrity, a senior from Madison, N.J., and the faculty adviser, Gilbert L. Wedeking, assistant professor of engineering at OU.
The outstanding SAE student branch-program is .spimsored by the Bendix Corp.
The annual spring meeting and banquet of the Michigan Area Council of the Boy’s Clubs of America will be April 9 at the Devon Gables, Bloomfield Tovmship.
The council is an important force in the boys’ clubs movement, providing the chie medium through which interest and active preparation of laymen In the boys’ clubs of America are maintained, said Howard Dell, chairman of the Michigan area council.
Frequently the council is the channel through which ideas and proposals flow to the national council, he added.
Registration for the afternoon meeting will be from noon to 1:15 at the Devon Gables. The banquet starts at 6:15 p.m.
ed success and growth of the automobile industry,” Bramblett said.
Stover cited a “severe sImmI-age of skilled tradesman” and
Denise said that, because so many automobile company jobs depended on the performance of other jobs' “one group of em-in a plant... having the t to refuse to work could have a chaotic effect.”
Voicing similar objections were General Motors Vice President Earl R. Bramblett and George H. Stover, dtrfector of production prograihming and traffic for Ctffysler Corp. ‘VITALUY IMPORTANT* 'Freedomi to schedule reasonable and necessary overtime is vitally important to the continu-
“Without the abUity to schedule extensive skilled trades oveiv time to meet this shortage,'the entire production process could not function.”
{Nresented by Caroline Davis, di-iployers as justification for not
...........	.........Ir •
rector of the mammoth union’s I hiring women, or not promoting women’s department.	those that are hired.
Lino Ghilardi, president of Lapeer Farms Inc., spoke against the legislation on bMialf of some 40 mushroom growers In Mi comb, Oakland and Lapeer Counties.
‘This will break our backs,’ he told the committee.
William E. Stirton Jr., managing director of the Detroit Tooling Association, said the legislation would be the “death knell of our industry.”
The position of Michigan’s six regional UAW directors was
‘Employers in the automotive and parts industries consistently abuse the prerogative , they have arrogated to themselves of unilaterally requiring overtime work, much of which cannot be justified <m the ground of genuine emergencies,” she said.
“This abuse of managerial
authority is not confi^^ to the motor vehicle industry,"
ta-»hdded.
State Capital New^riefs
THI eoVCIINOR Wofktd In hl$ Detroit office.
THB SENATE Met briefly end conducted routine
Bills Introduced Included:
HB28M, Komes. P r o h I b enforcement and national guard
from belonging to organ tz-._____________
advocating or su^portjn^ racial Inlustice,
juries to grant SB433, Richai carry -----------
>w 23-man
------ to witnessc..
on. Mako It a felony to and wittiout license a Btgun.
----- . _____ng. M a k a It a
misdemeanor to Inhale, Ingest o r otherwise introduce Into the respiratory
" arattn^f mng"“ ■
nndltlon^ mhllarstlon or euphor
-assed and sent to the Senate:
IB2226, Ziegler. Abolish recrimination . a grounds for denying divorce; grant divorce to the party least at fault.
HB206B, Pears. Revoke law enforcement power Of the mayor of a fourth-class city.
second-class district courts to sit at
It
I
HB2S30, Holmes. Prohibit sale of liquor
■j anyone not possessing -	"-----
purchase Identification card.
HB2(35, Holmes. Create an _______________
homicide commission to Investigate cases "• homicide by lew enforcement --Btlonal guard personnel.
HB2830, Holmes. Outlaw possesslor ny military firearm.
HB2842, fflttenoer, prescribe the powers nd. duties of the department of dmlnlstratlon.
HB2374, Montgomery. Increase state eld
ir cent of costs
she
‘CRUDE UNNECESSARY’
She teamed the “compulsion”
“And excessive overtime has the effect of contributing to the rate 6f unemployment not only among women but among younger and older workers and members of racial and ethnic minority
Mrs. Myra Wolfgang, international secretary treasurer of the Hotel and Restaurant Employes Association and a mem^r of the governor’s commission on the status of women, said the proposed legislation was “a beta work overtime “a cruete and ginning—a very weak beginning, unnecessary remnant bf a more * beginning, primitive era in our industrial' ®he called for “some'guaran-listory.	,	tee that voluntary overtime
“Women Who want and need work are hurt,” Mrs. Davis said, “because laws purporting to protect them are used by em-
means just that.”
“Excessive overtime is a punishment,” Mrs. Wolfgang saidr “a cruel punishment.”
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OUl
Trig font!AC PRESS. FRIDAY, MARCHf 8it| 1000
Tech Center Bids Rejected for Hiring Bias
Res
rces Center Land Purchases Nearly Completed
[ thelapproved last night by theip^cels of land owned by	better coverage at lower The coverage also includes next fall dt Madison is 1,126
The purchase of one of last two pkvately o wnedl Pontiac Boardof Education. I City of Pontiac. Vernon L. parcels of land for Its planned Besides the remaining Schilter, school’s business man-Human Resources Center wasiprivately owned land there are ager, said ftat Uie city is
f The remaining 35 bids sub-; ihitted for construction of ai $l.S-miUion Northeast Oakland; Vocational Technical Center | were rejected unanimously lastj night by the Pontiac Board/of Education because of reported discrimination in hiring practices of some of the subcontractors.
Hie refusal to award the contracts was done on the recommendation of the Michigan Civil Rights Corpmission (MCRC) Compliance Division which investigated all bidders for compliance. The commission found the major caitractors in compliance with MCRC and school board policin on nondiscrimination in hiring practices, but six of the subcontractors were not in compliance so the commission recommended rejection of aH the bids.
S/fe Resfudy Approved; Demands Are Answered
fllontinued From Page One) To solve the problem for all of the 2,519 ih-city students qualifying for bus transportation, Schiller said, the district wbuld need to purchase at least 21 buses, at a total cost of |l||ll,200. He estimated garages and paric-ing for these buses at $50,000, and gasoline, oil, maintenance and drivers at $90,208 a year.
Total first-year cost for the plan would be more than $300,000 above the present iruispor^tion costs, he said. Michigan reimburses school districts only for the busing of The four low bidders for cwj- students who live outside city struction of the center, to be limits, located on North Perry near
Madison Junior High, also lost answer to the BSU demand out as a resuTt of earHer in- for “a reversal of the present vestigation before a social decision to phase out Jefferron meeting held March 13 lor the junior High School,” Whltmer purpose of awarding contracts, told the capacity audience of Only one of the four low about 200 the board plans to bidders. Gold Star Products of meet with parents of Jefferson Detroit, which bid for food students to discuss the planned service equipment, had been | phase-out found by the com^ssion to be|	audience
Jefferson PTA had Already, of other facilities would not ,	-
any homework for black history courses. They demanded an investigation.
Lacy said that would be checked and asked
! situation
working on papers to transfer the property to the school —'poprd.
TOe $3.75-milli(m center will acconunodate 2,300 elementary students. Target date for completion of the complex, located east of City Hall, is September 1970.
Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer rep^ed that federal funds sought from the U.S. Department of Housing and
overall cost and be easier tolcatastrc^he insurance up to admininster on the school level. I $6,000 maximum at $3.50 per athlete.
that parents report names of teac^s not complying with the I )pollcy of mandat(Mry icllon in afro-American history.
! said the demand that teachers of . black history courses be black was not practical. It Is desirable to have more black social studies teachers in the senior high schools, he added, pointing Out that all teachers must be chosen on the basis of tbeir qualifications as teachers of history, black history included. ARE UNANSWERED Unanswered was a 10th BSU demand presented members Dr. Robert Turpin and Russell Brown and schools administrators at a meeting at Central High school March 10.
This demand asked for change in policy on attendance excuses to make the rules more
Whales Not Killed by Oil
Urban Development for the center may not be aMuxwed until May 1.
EARLY SPRING START He said that since it was hoped that construction bids
TIBURON, Calif. (AP) - Tissue tests showed no oil or oil dispersants but were inconclusive as to cause of death of six whales found recently on California beaches, federal officials said Thursday. Conservationists had expressed fear the whales were infected by the giant oil 'slick off Santa Barbara.
would be let to allow an early spring start, the administration was working on plans to start consh'uction on at least the main portion of the building.
Further plans would be made upon the approval of the federal grant by HUD, ^itmer said.
Premium will be $2 per student, with an optitm for year-’ round 24-hour-per-day coverage for a premium of $12. Senior interscholastic sports also are hisured.
ts partidpafing i n football, basketball wrestling will be charged $1.75 p r e m i u m’S, and those participating in all other interscholastic sports will be charged $L50 premiums.
The board decided it would not be liable for any expense incurred as a result of injury to students Iwyond that provided by the policy.
Purchase of two pwtable classrooms each for Madison Juiuor Ifigh School and Northern High School was approved by the board.
Assistant Supt. William J. Lacy said projected enrollment
students.
A weight room at Northern will be converted into a classroom. With the two portables, the school will have facilities for projected enrollment of 2,188 regular students.
FURTHER STUDY
A r e c 0 m m endation for purchase of two portable classrooms for Mark Twain Elementary School was withdrawn by Lacy to oiable ihim to further study anticipated enrollment there.
KITCHEN and BATHROOM REMODELING
Gerald Talbott, director of the U.S. Fish- and Wildlife Service Laboratory here, said the cause of death could not be determined because of extensive decomposition of the carcasses.
About 8,000 whales migrated northward through the Santa Barbara channel each spring.
'The board unanimously approved appointment of the Bank of the Commonwealth of Detroit as paying agent for the $19-million in sdiool district bonds issued Aug. 1,1968.
The bank, as paying agent, will redeem the bonds as they mature.
INSURANCE TRANSFERRED The board also transferred its student accident insurance for the 1969-70 school year from First Agency of Kalamazoo, to G-M Underwriters of Detroit.
Schiller said he studied the GM plan and felt it would pro-
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unanimously vetoed the flexible. The board will respond
Other low bidders. Brill; ‘THEY’RE NOT TEACHING’
Electric Co. of Pontiac, Dale charges that many Pontiac .schools were not teaching black history, even though it mandatory, flared up Assistant Supt. William Lacy responded to the BSU demand for mandatory black history courses.
Many parents, both black and white, charged that their children were not bringing home
Cook Construction of Pontiac, and Inter-Lakes Mechanical Contractors of Union Lake, or their subcontractors were found to be not in compliance. ’They submitted bids for electrical work, general construction and mechanical work, respectively.
’The board directed the architect to advertise for new bids on the project.
The Argentines average a consumption of beef per inhabitant of half a pound a day. ’The average consumption of chicken is just 9.9 pounds annually.
Brltanny, in northern France, got its name when Celtic tribes, driven out of Britain by the Angles and the Saxons, came into the region.
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A—12
smmt
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, lilARCH 21. 1969
Trans-Pacific Air Roufe Confroversy Rages
WASHINGTON lAP) - In-dations to the board in 1968: nuendos of political plot and Pan Am would give Northwest counterplot—none of them prov- new competition across the able—have complicated a gov-inorthem Pacific to Japan; emment realigTiment of U.S.|Northwest and Trans World Air-airline routes in the Pacific !lines would join Pan Am In the worth $500 million.	central route to Asia through
The pl(d theor>> involves for-jHawaii; Eastern Airlines would mer President Johnson and Rol-lgo against Pan Am in the South itically well-connected industry Pacific, and 26 major U.S. cities representatives known fanciful-{would get new nonstop or one-ly as “rainmakers.”	plane service to the Pacific.
* .. ♦	; Some months later, however.
It holds that Johason ar-|when the five-man CAB sent its ranged late last year fw ;pis fa- decision to the White House, dlf-vorile airlines to get cushy newlferent carriers had been select-runs to Hawaii, the Orient, ied.
Southeast Asia and the South Pacific.
Talk of the alleged plot, circu-
lating in the Washington rumor {work of routes, the Iward Insert-; mill, came to the attention of American Airlines as a transiUon officials for Presl-i fourth carrier across the «ntra dent-elect Nixon. One of Nixon’s Pacific and substituted Braniff first acU as President was to!International Airways and Con-suspend President Johnson’s itinental Air Lines for Eastern route awards and reopen the on the South Pacific leg.
Now for the alleged counter-plpt. This theory holds that Pan Am, which o{^ses any new competition in the Pacific, and Eastern, which won with the examiner but lost with the CAB and President Johnson, stimulated articles implying cronyism in the Johnson decision. CHARGE DENIED Writers of two of the articles most frequently cited—syndicated columnist ^bert Novak and Washington Post reporter Ridi-ard Halloran—deny they were approached by any airline.
Also, according to the theory, AMERICAN INSERTED I Eastern and Pan Am arranged While adopting Park’s frame-
for a Senate speech by Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich,, about airline rainmakers, and for a letter campaign from ators and congressmen urging that President Nixon review the route awards.
The man responsible for Griffin’s speech, chief aide Cecil Holland, denied knowing anyone in the airlines and said the speech was the senatw’s idea alone. Members of Congress wdio wrote urging a review also denied the letters were instigated by any airline.
The counterplot theory further
maintains, that the governments ot Ahstraliai and New Zealand w^e contacted to make representation to the State Department for review. Flag carriers (rf both cwntries fly the South Pacific route ai^ are eager to avoid i^w competition.
‘NOf RESPONSIBLE’
Diplomatic sources said Eastern and Pan Am vien not responsible for the Australian and New Zealand actions.
Nelson Rockefeller was ru-
trans-Pacific airline case for White House review. COUNTERPLOT ’THEORY
Nixon’S action, in turn, gave rise to the theory of count^lot.
It goes like this: Tie losers under Johnson’s decision stimulated published stories of alleged presidential cronyism, spurred a Capitol Hill campaign for a Nixon review, stirred up foreign governments to oppose the awards, and arranged for Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York to put in a good word at the White House for reopening the case.
On Dec. 19, President Johnson I adopted the CAB’s reconunen-' dations. He. vetoed American’s' route to Tokyo. Like Eisenhqw-j er, Johnson was prompted by| Japanese objections to new competition for Japan Air.
The storm broke. The Industry buzzed with indipant rumors that airlines employing large numbers of Johnson i friends had been favored by the board by the president.
The “rainmakers” were somehow responsible, it was said, for the board’s revision of Ex-{aminer Park’s “model” decl-
Both theories lllustrlte how a govemment-replated business might exert' pressure for a favorable decision, but there is •cant evidence to support cither one.
The trans-Paclflc air controversy got its start in 1966 when the Civil Aeronautics Board tried for a second time to expand U.S. airline routes In the Pacific Basin.
President Eisenhower In 1960 vetoed an attempt to realip the routes, which were estab-li.shed in 1946.
Month-long hearings were held involving 16 airline applicants.
Sion.
MOSTI.Y MYTH’
But a source close to the White House decision insisted the rainmaker thesis is “90 per cent myth."
President Johnson, being fully aware of the sensitivity of the case, avoided talking to any airline representatives about it, the source said.
Hearing Examiner Robert L. Park presented hts recommen-
The best any rainmaker can promise a client, he said, is sp^y access to the White House and the confidence of the
ifflclals with whom he deals.
offlc
From there, the lawyer said, any argument a rainmaker ad-
vances for his client must stand on its own.
mpr^ to have exerted weight with the White House in favor of review. His Inotiier Lauroice is Eastern’s single bigpst stock-; holder.
A final facet of the counterplot theory holds that Eastern and Pan Am, which stand to benefit most from any review simply because they were the b^ losers in &e J(^son decision, wo’e heavy contributors to hist year’s Nixon campaip.
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City Owned Vacant Land for Sale
The City of Pontiac will receive sealed bids for the purchase of property known os the "former Lake Street Yard" located on the Southeast corner of Lake Street and Michigan Air Line Railroad in the City of Pontiac, Michigan. There are 301.7 feet of frontage on Lake Street, 629.95 feet on North side along the railroad, 420.15 feet on the Eos.t property line and 570 feet on the South property line. The land contains 203,630 squore feet on 4.68 acres, more or less. Present Zoning is Residential-1 with the understanding the zoning will be changed to multiple-family dwelling district R-3 prior to this sole. Bids will be received until 2:00 P.M. on Monday, April 14, 1969 at the Purchasing Department, City Hqll, 450 Wide Track Drive. Area map of the site, legal description, and a statement on the Site ond Neighborhood is avail-
able ot.^^ Purchasing Department, City Hall, 450 Wi3e Track Drive, Pontiac, Michigan at no
cost. Bidders will be required to submit a statement covering the proposed use, and on estimate of time when construction will start and be finished. A ten per cent (10%) Good Faith deposit Is required, with each bid. The unsuccessful bidders deposit will be returned after the determination of the successful bidder. The bids will be reviewed by the City Commission of the City of Pontiac ond acceptance will be based on the highest and best use allowed by thw zoning consistent with future development of the City of Pontiac. The City reserves the right to accept Or reject any or oil bids, and to split or allocate frontage sotisfoctory to the bidders.
Floyd D. Smith, Purchasing Agent
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Are Your School's Activities Novr Appearing In The Press?
THE PONTIAe PRESS
turn to This Page Tuesdays, Fridays for Senior High School Mews
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY. MARCH 21,
B—1
Science Fair Under Way
IN THE NAME OF SCIENCE — Mice don’t bother Sister	Pontlae Prn> Photo by E4 Vondonworp
Mary Raymond or Our Lady of the Lakes senior Julie Gar- in the OLL science department today from 3 to 6 p.m. and wood as the two work on a science project for the high tomorrow and Supday from 1 to 6 p.m. Winners will compete ■chool’s Science Fair. Competing projects will be on display in the regional fair next Friday and Saturday.
By CHRIS GINGRAS
Our Lady of the Lakes High School is sponsMing its seventh annual Science Fair this weekend.
Science students from the seventh through 12th grades have entered projects in the local fair. Their exhibits are on display until 6 tonight.
After the judging tomorrow morning, the projects will be displayed in the OLL -science department Saturday and Sunday from 1 to 6 p.m. There is no admission charge.
Students who receive the highest ratings will compete in the regional fair at Bloomfield Hills Junior High School March 28 and 29.
METROPOLITAN FAIR
Regional winners wiU then compete at the Metropolitan Detroit Science Fair in Cobo Halt, April 8 to 15.
This year is the 12th anniversary of the Cobo Fair, which was organized to stimulate an active interest among junior and senior high school students in the fields of scientific study and to give recognition to talented students.
* * ★
Sister Mary Raymond, moderator of the OLL Science Club, announced that, for the first time in the history of Lakes’ fair, the first-place winner will receive a recognition.
This exhibitor will be an automatic winner at the Birmingham fair and will be certain of entering at Cobo Hall.
Some of the outstanding experiments this year are: a physics project by Ralph Berg on ‘‘The Possible Design of a Flying Saucer,” Donna Keenan’s exhibit showing how ‘‘Various light Waves
Affect the Learning Process inj:^he Planaria,” Nanette Cadillac’s "^balt Increases Guppy Propagation,” Julie Garwood’s “Antibiotic Proves to Act as Carcinoma Agent,” Steve Gingras’s
math project ‘‘Graphing and Adding Equations in Modulo Two,” and Grace Garwood’s “Mutations in Bacillus subtilus Result from Ultraviolet Radiations.”
Student Panel Hour Revamped at Holly
By MARCIA CLARK The Holly High School Student Coundil has initiated a new type of council meeting.
From now on the organized part of the meeting wilt be brief and cover only
The remainder of the hour set aside for the Student Council nieeting, will be devoted to conunittee work done. ’This also provides time for Norman Jones, principal of HHS, to talk over new ideas’ with the various committees.
The newest Student Council committee, the Sports Complex, is headed by Jo Narrower. The committee was set up to poll the student body on plans for an enlarged sports complex at the high school.
The proposed program would build a new sodded track and a cluster of six new tennis courts. It woujd also enlarge the electronical facilities in the press box on the football field.
New lavatory facilities and drinking
PNH Acts to Better Junior at Novi At west eioomfieW
Is Chosen for U.N. Pilgrimage
Its Race Relations
Top 2 Seniors Told
By LARRY HELTSLEY
Due to the recent sit-in demonstration, human relations have been the main topic of discussion at Pontiac Northern this week.
. In order to find solutions to some of the problems of the school, faculty members as well as students have stepped into action.
* * ★
Immediately after the demonstration, 13 teachers met with a member of the administration and two s t u de n t representatives to uncover and discuss the problenos at PNH.
This meeting resulted in the formation of an afterschool discussion period to which all students were invited. Because of the overwhelming response, the
Drama Special Next Week at Waterford High
* By JANICE CRISP
Waterford Township High School will present selections from tlvee plays next week.
Wednesday’s presentation will take place during school hours, and all students who purchase tickets i n advance mdy attend.
★ * *
Tickets will be on sale ail next week for 50 cents.
Thursday and Friday night performances will begin at 8 and tickets are SO cents for students and $1 for adults. 'Those with activity cards will be admitted free.
FORENSIC WINNERS
Winners in Waterford’s forensic contest have been announced.
They include; boys’ oratory — Keith Vauthero, first, Mike Showier, second; girlp oratory — Ina Johnson, first, Becky Perry, second; humorous reading — Aleta Williams, first, Sandy Rieth, second; serious interpretive reading — Geni 'Thruston, first, Sally Nelson, second.
★ ★ ★
The winning group readings were “And People All Around” and “Alice in Wonderland”; the top two in radio news were Bill Kennel and Ed Bertrand,
March 27 the District Forensics Contest will be held at Waterford. ’The winntfs from WTHS’ competition will compete with schools from all over the area.
WTHS’s magazine drive has come to a close. Sophomores won the class competition with a total of $1,039.90. Seniors were second with $894.08, and juniors last with $609.45.
★ ★ ★
’The total amount for the whole school was $2,544.
Tuesday the Bite and Gripe breakfast seminar was held. The bgi^akfast sponsored by the Domestic Exdiange Group, was completely sold out. Most complaints and objections seemed to be centered arouiid Waterford’s dress code. A ^oop4s now working on a nfW and morib UbvaNode.
Anotiicr brewfast is scheduled for' April when progress may be reported and new ideas or complaints raised.
discussion group had to be moved into the school cafeteria.
Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, schools superintendent, also met with sue school leaders in ord^r to analyze the situation. These students discussed the problems of the school so that the. city school administration could more easily understand the environment at the school.
Human relation meetings are now being held every hour of the day on Tuesdays and Fridays. Eight teachers have donated their time and their rooms for the meetings.
★ * ★
A pass may be obtained from any of the teachers and the student must report to the designated room instead of his study hall, 13 students have been appointed as discussion leaders.
The Human Relations Club has proposed a splash party for all members and guests.
All interested sophomores and juniors may attend College Night to be held Wednesday at Pontiac Central. Representatives of 35 colleges and universities will be present to assist students in their choice of colleges. Counselors from PNH will also help.
'Che Pontiac Northern a capella choir received a “I” (superior) rating in the recent Michigan Vocal Ensemble Festival held at Pontiac Northern recently.
Directed by John Tousley, the choir received the excellent rating on a combined rating of singing and sightreading. On the singing selections the choir received two “I’s” while picking up an “I” in sight reading.
In this competition, a “I” is the highest rating a choir can receive. The choir performed “The Laughing Song”, and “The Litany.” — —
DANCE TONIGHT
Cheerleaders are sponsoring a dance tonight from 8 to 11-in the school cafeteria. The theme of the dance is “From Rags to Riches,” and the music will be provided by the Bill Stone Key. Tickets for the dance are 75 cents.
A Student Council Activity night will be held March 24 at PNH. All recreational facilities will be open and a local band will play from 7:30 to 10 p.ip.
★	★	★ .
Doors will open at 7 p.m. and close at 10 p.m.
All proceeds from the dance will be donated to the local Easter Seal Committee.
Members of the junior class team were victorious in the recent pancake-eating contest. Finishing in second place was the Varsity Club team.
Hosie	Hillie	and	John	Wyzogoski
emerged as individual winners by eating 23 and 20 pancakes respectively in the 15-minute time period.
★	*	. *
Bruce Kleinschmidt has, been awarded an Evans Scholarship for the Univefsit/ of Michigan. He was chosen through a regional screening committee for his services as a caddy at Bloomfield Hills Country Club.
Additional School Nows Found on Pago 3-2
By THOM HOLMES
Novi High School junior Carol Bruce was chosen to be a delegate to the United Nations Pilgrimage for Youth. The program is sponsored by the Odd Fellows and Rebekahs of America. Carol was chosen for a speech she had given.
The judges also considered her involvement in school activities, concern for the welfare of the* conununity, her character and her leadership qualities.
* ★ *
When she goes to the U.N., Carol will become acquainted with behind-the-scenes U.N. activities; she will meet various foreign delegates; and she will have a complete tour of the U.N. complex.
About 150 teen-agers will participate in the program. Ellen Lyke, junior, was chosen as Carol’s alternate.
The NHS Band is sponsoring it’s annual Pancake Supper tonight from 5:30 to 7:30. For $1.25 (adults) or 75 cents (students), guests may eat all the pancakes they can hold.
Senior Randy Beach was a guest at Oakland Community College today. He was invited to attend a luncheon press conference geared to getting the OOC story to students more effectively.
Principal Gerald Hartman has started a Novi Archery Club.
Ticket Sale Near for PC Musical
By GERI KUNKHAMER
'Tickets for Pontiac Catholic High ^hool’s production of “Bells Are Ringing” go on sale Monday.
' The play, under the direction of Howard Hoeflein, drama instructor, will be presented Apdl 25, 26 and 27. Cost will be $2 general admission and $1 for children.
Tuesday, the history classes, under the direction of Sister Regina Curran, toured the Pontiac Motor Division of General Motors Corp.
The hillsides surrounding the school were covered with students this week as the teachers, celebrating the beautiful weather, moved some of their classes outside.
CAREER DAY EVALUATION
The National Honor Society held a meeting Monday to evaluate Career Day.
Wednesday classes were shortened, and students dismissed at 12:18 p.m. The faculty held a meeting in the aftempon.
Thursday, half of the senior class went to a retreat at St. Basil’s Novitiate in Pontiac. Their day of recollection began at 9 a.m. and concluded at 3 p.m. ’Ihe latter half ’^of the class will go for its retreat April 2.
The senior religion classes this week were visited by Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Smith and NDs. J. Nickman who discussed and answered questions from the students.
‘"The Chess Ganie at Chessire,” will be presented April 3.
’The Student Council sponsored a skating party recently.
'The Juniw claiss announced this week that the Junior-Senior Dinner Dance will be held April 18 at Devon GaMes and the prom will be on May 15 at ttfo West Ball Room at Mercy College in Detroit.
By SHARON CARR
It’s official now at West Bloomfield — Debra Weglarz is valedictorian and Glenn Saltz is salutatorian.
Debra is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Weglarz. Graduating with a 4:00 average she plans to attend University of Michigan and study to be a linguist.
* ★ *
Debra, who transferred to WBH after two years at Our Lady of Mercy, has been active as a Laker.
She is a member of the Spanish, French, Chess and Ski clubs and the AFS and National Honor Society. With all this, she still finds time to keep up with her piano and guitar playing.
Salutatorian Glenn Saltz Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Saltz.
Also planning to attend U. of M., Glenn has a 3.87 average. He transferred to WBH two years ago after attending Cass Tech in Detroit.
i^ *	*
Although he belongs to the National Honor Society, he has not had time to participate in many school activities because most of his time is taken up with Jewish youth activities.
In 10th grade he became a member in the Temple Israel Youth Group (TYG> and the Michigan State Temple Youth, and subsequently was elected president of the TYG as a senior.
IMMEASURABLE BENEFITS
Glenn revealed that his benefits have been immeasurable from such participation, as he belonged to the Mitzvah Corps which worked during the sufnmer in the inner city, and now volunteers his services twice a week as tutor in the same area.
With the Laker basketball team on its way to Lansing, The Talent Show scheduled for tonight has been postponed to April 2.
To show team support, seniors Kevin Gawronsk, Rick Kosko, Dave Burt, Ken Dore, Brian Ricshell, Warren Hughes, Kym DejsJardins, Dan Hartman, Rick Stanker, Mark Dirasin and Robin Brennan and juniors Dick Curran, Allan Dore and Kim Woodruff dribbled a basketball to Grand Blanc, where the quarterfinals were held Wednesday night.
★ ★ ★
Monday evening WBH will present the National Shakespeare Company’s production of Macbeth at Warren Abbott Junior High School. 'Tickets will be $2 for adults dnd $1.50 for students. 'The doors will close at 8.
Thursday evening, the Michigan State University Jazz Ensemble will be presented at the Junior High also. Sponsored by the high school band, and the American Field Service Club, it will begin at 8 with the price of admissiem at $1.
fountains would also be installed near the field.
The $40,000 project would be financed by federal aid, contributions from local businessmen and from money-making projects held by the students of HHS.
* ★ ★
Principal Jones stated, “We need these added facilities to bring Holly’s track and field up to the level of other schools in our league.”
A committee of five Student Council members met with Jones to discuss student handbooks to be distributed to incoming freshmen next year.
COMMITTEE MEMBERS
Committee members are Rene Wolverton, Jackie Lussier, John Winglemire, Greg Kindinger and Tim Burns.
Any suggestions on material to be placed in these handbooks should be forwarded to these students.
* ★ ★ ★
A suggestion box, for students to voice their opinions on the work being done by Student Council is now being built in the shop for placement in the school library.
The annual HHS talent show will be held April 18. Auditions will be held after schbol March 31, in the Studfflit Center.
★ ★ *
A Flint-Metro League Student Council dance will be held March 29 at the Davison KF Hall. This dance will feature Sam the Sham and several local groups.
Admission wifi be $1.50, and tickets are available from Brad Addis and any other student council members.
★
The Spanish Club held a bake sale Monday.
The Eager Beaver Battle of the Bands, originally scheduled for last weekend, will be held April 3 in the high school Student Center.
Five local bands will play.
A Future Teachers of America Club field trip to Central Michigan Aniversity is being planned for the near future. Their sponsor, Richard Jacobson, will accompany members.
There will be a meeting of the Holly Alumni 'Thesday, March 25, at 7:30 p.m. in the Holly Senior High School.
★ * ★
“We would like to invite anyone who has graduated from the Holly School system to attend this meeting,” urged the officers of the HHS Alumni.
Committees will be appointed for the annual Alunuii Banquet held each spring.
Halls at Oxford Resound With Sound of Music
By CAROL PRINCE
Music could be heard through the halls of Oxford High School aU this week.
Students are practicing for tomorrow’s State Solo and Ensemble Festival at Ferndale High School.
★	★	★
Auditions for piano scholarships were held Wednesday. Students who participated were Bob and Bill Dunham and Mary Ann Smith.
★	★	★
Mixed ensemble sang for Oxford Music Club members Monday evening at the Congregational Church. Soloist was Mike Billgren.
Do you have anything you would like to get rid of? Give it to the seniors of OHS for their Auction Sale March 31 at the Oxford Junior High School.
The money goes toward the senior trip to Bermuda. ’There Is^also a car wash every Saturday at tlie Sunoco gas station.
★ ★ ★ ^
Sharon Dick is the winner of a $5 prize for the poster contest. Science Qub sponsored this contest for the science Fair.
North Door Singers wiU be at OHS March 27. 'They sing rellgiopii, folk and pop music. Tickets may be purchased at the door for $1.25.
PMlIdc Pratt Phot* by
TOP TWO — Debra Weglarz (valedictorian) and Glen Saltz (salutptorian) take advantage of the sunshine on theii* way to classes at West Bloomfield Township High School. Debra .yarned a 4.00 scholastic average and Glen 3.87.
B-2
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1969
Groves PROAAofes 'Camelot'
■	English Setup
By BENITA ROSEN "In days of old, \^en knights were bokT seems to be the thought behind the Wylie E. Groves High School Ji^or Class selection of a theme for the anhual class-sponsored prom. “Camelot" has beM decided on as the theme by a vote of all the juniors.
chaperones; Anne Bemadini, Jeff Despard, Michelle Heist, Judy Merriott and Sue Simpson, decorations; Bob Heuar and Dave Lc^an, publicity; Barb Brewer, sophomore wwkers; and Denise Baughman, tickets.
Committtfe chairmen for the event have already been picked and are now working to fulfill their responsibilities by the May 3 J-Hop deadline.
Music win be provided by the Oklahoma duo of Teegarden" and Vanwinkle.
Recently, ,14 students were announced as having won 19 awards in the Scholastic Writing contest. The ttoee, possible plgcings In the competition were an adiievement key (highest honor), honorable mention and commendation, (second and third places, respectively).

MONTH OF HONORS
Juniors who are prom committee chairmen are Joanne M e n z e 1,
This has been a honor-achieving and an award-receiving month for many Groves students with writing and journalistic talent.
Sue Dickson was awarded a n achievement key for a short^short story, an honorable mention in the light verse category and a commendation for a journalism news story.
By GEORGIA ROSEWALL Waterford Mott’s Curriciflum Planning Committee has developed a new EkigUsh program to be initiated next year.
Labeled Phases tvn and Quest, the program will replace the in-esent English classes.
Scott Duncanson’s coverage of basketball game earned him a honorable mention.
Walled Lake Vote Has New Aspects
KEY PRESENTED Steve Eyler’s entry in the formal article category won a key. Steve was also presented an honorable mention for a literary article along with Paul Hilfinger.
Purpose for this change is to give students better Ijackground in all of the different phases of English in a one-year course instead of the usual me-semester coursr- that only deal with one subject.
Students wdU be grouped accwduig to their intereitt, aMlity, past experiences and their future goals in the English department.
i \

By JOANNE SANDERSON The projected opening of Walled Lake Western High School next year has had its effects at Walled Uke Central this year.
One is the election of officers for Student Council (SC) at WLC and delegates to the Constitutional Committee for Western (Con Com).
grades to vote is because next year they will be the majority of students at both high schools.
Donna KatzmSdek earned an honorable mention for her poetry and Robin Knight’s informal article also rated an honorable mention.
MORE FLEXIBLE
“With this type of program, we hope to be more flexible and do more for the students individually,’’ stated Sue Shipley, head M the English department.

CAMPAIGN SPEECHES
There Is something different about this year’s election. The present eighth and ninth, graders will be hllowed to vote. However the candidates for any office will have to be students who are now attending WLC. The same regulations will go for WLW.
The reas(m for allowing the lower
The candidates running for the offices of SC and Con Com will make campaign speeches at both junior highs.
The officers for the council will be elected under the present constitution. Ihe delegates for Con Com will form a constitution and next year the officers of their Student Council will be elected under the terms of that constitution.
For her light verse entry, Elli Kramer won commendation and Laura Miller’s editorial was judged an achievment key winper. Honorable mentions were awarded to Steve Mintz for his general article and to Dennis Nelson for his informal one.
Waterford Organization fw Retarded Children has scheduled a general meeting Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Pierce Junior High cafeteria. Anyone interested is bivjted.
eontiK Pr»i» rn*l» by Bdwird R. Ntbli
2 at Avondale Get Capital Call
Along with the boys’ track team, girl joggers are running in the halls.
The Jogging Club was started under the direction of Mrs. Richard A. Sauerbrun, home economics teacher.
PON-nAC PRESS CORRESPONDENTS For her column in Groves’ newspaper. The Scriptor, Benita Rosen received an achievement key. She was also awarded a key for a feature story.
TTie girls run every night after school and will run outside when the weather gets nicer.
By KAREN SHEUMIN Chuck Lovelace and John Williford, both juniors, recently returned from the Presidential Classroom for Young Americans held at the nation’s: capital, March 1-8.
The club Is open to any female student or teacher who wishes to improve their physical fitness. The club has had a larger turnout than was expected. The club had its first meeting on Mardi 5.
The classroom’s purpose was to give young Americans a chance to study the judicial, legislative and executive branches of our federal government.
Christian Juniors Hold Candy Sale
"It was one of the most interesting programs that 1 have ever participated in," says John. "The classroom gave me a better insight into how our government actually works.’’
A national student-body test was given March 7, to determine what students had learned during the week. Both John and diuck received diplomas from the classrpom.
By KEVIN BALLARD The Junior class of Oakland Christian High School is currently selling three different types of candles, the "Polly Doodles,’’, chocolatecovered mints and chocolate bars with almonds.
Proceeds from this sale will help finance the Junior-Senior Banquet at the Raleigh House in Southfield, April 18.
The journalism class of OCH puts out a school newspaper, the Sword and Shield.
7
Girls at Dominican Will Honor Fathers
LOST — Dayid (Bill Benish) and Lisa (Barbara Lowenthal) search , for themselves in the contemporary world of confusion. The Andover High School dramatists will present the first performance of "David and Lisa’’ tonight in the Little Theater. Tickets will be sold at the door.
Kim Serota earned double commendation for his editorial and feature story entries.
Honorable mentions went to Sue Van Lopik for her literary article and to Pat Vivian fw her entry in the poetry category.
By ANDI BARNES
Plans were in full swing this week at Dominican Academy for ttie annual Father-Daughter Banquet to be held Sunday.
This year, instead of a breakfast, the event will be an afternoon luncheon.
The activities will include Mass, luncheon, and various acts from the school talent show. Some of the outstanding forensic speeches will also be delivered.
Andover Play Set Tonight
By ANN PETERS
Bloomfield Hills Andover Hi^ School’s Drama Qub will present the first performance of “David and Lisa’’
tonight in the Little Theater. Tickets will be sold at the door.
The international society for high school journalists. Quill and Scroll, inducted sty new members into the Groves chapter.
Quiet Day at Brandon
B'rom the Talon (yearbook) staff, Kathy Bartlemay, Penny Blumberg, Dianne Fekete, Linda Shahan and Sue Sklar were accepted into the society.
Laura Miller, Scriptor (newspaper) staffer, also was inducted.
Tuesday, the junior and senior girls were guests at a career day at Oxford High School. The girls were able to get first-hand information concerning various careers.
Included were retailing, food management, graphic arts, t o mechanics, and the opportunities available in the Army, Navy and Marines.
By MARJORIE WIOMAN "Silence is Golden.’’ That’s what the boys said today as the contentporary history class presented its Sadie Hawkins Ribbon Day at Brandon High.
The girls bought the ribbons at the beginning of sdiool and had to remain silent for the rest of the day.
j... ,	*
Directed by B. W. Chapman, “David and Usa” stars BUI Benish as David and Barbara Lowenthal as Lisa. Marjorie Van Halteren is the student director. The play will be presented again tomorrow night.
“David and Usa’’ is the story of two young people in a mental institution who help each other by helping themselves. This play is a dramatic contrast to Andover’s fall performance of “You’re a ’ Good Man, Charlie Brown!”
The requirements for Quill and Scroll are that the student joining must be in the top quarter of his class academically, have been involved in journalism for at least two years and be recommended by his adviser and approved by the society as having made a superior contribution to the school’s publications.
Thursday, the senior sociology class visited a Jewish synagogue in its study of comparative religions. The girls visited the Congregation Shoarey-Zedek in Southfield.
If a Ul’ Abner got a girpto talk the ribbon was claimed by him and another ribbon was purchased by the girl.
The ribbon day got everyone in the mood for the Sadie Hawkins dance toni(^t in the gym at 8.
Last week Andover’s annual assembly honoring the outstanding music and art students was held. This year’s art winner was senior Peggy Hees. Senior Don Clark won the award as outstanding music student. The prize is a summer trip to Europe.
SPECIAL! FRI.-SAT. ONLY SPECIAL!
Last year’s inductees who are still attending Groves are Sue Dickson, Scott Duncanson and Debbie Thomas, all Scriptor staff members.
PoniiK Prtti PMM ky RM Wliitar
ARTFUL ACCEISSORIES — Colorful accents designed to tiao- Mall. Included in the wide variety of merchandise are please the young generation %park the Young Design Shop in bottles, paper and straw flowers, stationery, mugs, jewdry, the stationery department cf The J. L. Hudson Co. at the Pon-	beads, rings and paper dresses.
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5-10
Our Regular 1.99 Pr.
WOMEN'StTEENS' STRAP and BUCKLE
"MOC" SHOES
Sporty strap and buckl^ mocassin slip-ons. For milos of comfortaiiM walking. Intran up-pors. Nood no polish./ong woaring intranito solo and hoel. In blapk or mecca brown. 5-10.
Our RemlarSSc pr. Tots*
TERRY CLOTH RAINING
PANTIES
SIZES
2 to 6
21t
Cool, abso/bent cotton terry cloth panties, Oxtra comfortable. Soft as a washcloth. They come In white and colors, for sizes 2 to 6.
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ANDREA RAE LINGLE
ADAM PENNY
MATTHEW WEBER
WENDY NICKSON
TERESA FRAZIER
•^ALAN GIBSON
Wofneni >^ec/iion/
Art Classes Geared hr/ Preschoolers
^Befween-Season' Parties Shorten the Wait for Spring
Since the Pentiac Creative Arts Center opened nesdly a year ago, everything has beep new. One of the newest ideas justing put into practice is a 10-week serjes of art experiences for preschool children.
Presented in cooperation with Oakland Community College, these two-hour sessions in Operation Artstart are designed to develop ear training and eye-hand coordination.
There are still a few places open in the course wdiich meets Tuesday and Thursday mornings through May 29.
By SHIRLEY GRAY There’s many a &lip between spring on the calendar and real spring weather. To help while away the wait for budding trees and sweater weather, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Torgerson are having a “looking forward to spring’’ party tomorrow evening.
Some of those gathering at the couple’s Bloomfield Village home are just back in
set an East Indiph mood at their Birmingham hom^iomorrow night with incense and curried dishes.
Joining thepi will be Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H^, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Swanson/ Dr. Richard Reilly, Mrs. Weber^Sherer, Dr. and Mrs. John Ingold and new residents, formerly of England, W. and Mrs. William Krafter.
town, now that the worst is over; fop It, v^o
example. Dr. and Mrs. John Wiant, went on a lengthy DAC cruise.
Robert Nelson, who’ll be theaf with Mrs. Nelson, is back from skiiqg at Vail, Col,, with his daughter.
The Paul Witzels, who ^tered some in South America, will'
Completing the gues/list are Mr. and Mrs. David Helm, tife M. A. Mitchells, the Clyde Rechts/Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Sobel and the Lyil ORIENTAL A
n Wetherbys.
The Michigan Embroiderers Guild met yesterday at the Glengarry Road home of Mrs. Kenneth T. Carlson, president.
Int^or decorator Mrs. Charles DiGibria, of Birmingham, spoke informally on the use of texUles and color.
Most of the guild’s 30 members live in the Birmingham - Bloomfield area. Mrs. John Abbott of Bloomfield Hills is secretary.
Among the classes 'Scheduled are creative drama, drawing, rhythm band, oral composition, painting and songs. Others are puppetry, children’s crafts and creative dance.
Instructors are Joyce Cotter, Barbara J9nes and Marge Gibson. A nurse-aide is on duty at all sessions. Midmoming snacks are provided.
Anyone wishing further information about the program may contact the PCAC or the Conununity Services office of Oakland Conununity College on Opdyke Road.
An attentive group of preschoolers surround	pwiue pm> Ph#io» by ibward x. N«bi«
Mrs. John H. Gibson of Silverside Drive, as she activities in drama, mtisic, dance, arts and crafts conducts one of the first sessions of Operation are scheduled for the 10-week series. Registration Artstart at Pontiac Creative Arts Center. Creative is still open.
rs. William K. Downey will
Jiving Shower Has Hostess In a State
Women Demand Abortion Right
Arrange to See Friend
Aged Drivers Not Necessarily
During Day, Says Abby '
'	^	'	/	" NPiW'vrkDir	___
By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute The following letter has been chosen as the prize-winning one for this week. A copy of Emily Post’s Etiquette has been sent to the writer.
Dear Mrs. Post: When my husband’s cousin’s engagement was announced several months ago, I asked if I might have a shower for her, suggesting eight to ten people plus us. She was thrilled and asked if it could be a “kitchen shower’’ as the attendants were going to have a “personal’’ shower for her and she thought the church would have a “miscellaneous shower.”
A couple of weeks ago she handed me a list of names and addresses which totaled 25. I explained to her that we didn’t have the finances, space, or time
By MARY ELLEN MYRENE
OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) - Women demanding passage of a law to legalize abortion are organizing a campaign of pressure on the state legislature.
“We’re rounding up everyone we can to demonstrate, to protest, to do whatever they can to* c o n v i n c e legislators that people are really concerned,” said Marilyn Ward, spokesman for a study group backing an atortibn bill.
“The legislators apparently are afraid of this issue and I don’t know why,” she said. “Our polls show tremendous support for liberalizing abortion laws. It even surprised me.”
Bills that would allow women to have abortions at accredited hospitals under counsel from doctors have been stalled in House and Senate committees since the beginning of the legislative session Jah. 13
Mrs. Ward said polls throughout the state show as many as 80 per cent of the women questioned favor liberalized laws.
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: About three years ago my husband and I began a friendship with another young couple. Perhaps we saw too much of them, but talk of wifeswapping develc^d. Against m y husband’s strong veto, the other man and I began an affair which lasted almost a year.
About seven months ago, guilt-ridden and miserable, I told my husband all. He was wonderfully forgiving, but never wanted to see this other couple again. The other man’s wife knew about us and she blamed herself, for she had pushed the idea in the first place.
not interested in this man, but I do love his wife. Signed,
“BLUE GRASS” DEAR “BLUE GRASS”: Better find another couple. I can’t blame your husband. If you “love” his wife, see hep in the daytime.
in.
This woman and I were almost like sisters, and now the hiendship has ended. We are all in our late twenties, and we did have a wonderful four-sided
friendship. I can’t seem to warm up to any other couple. If is definitely all over between this other man and me, but my husband says no, he doesn’t want to see them again. Is he being fair? I think we’ve all grown up a lot.
Am I wrong in wanting to resume our -friendship ? I give you my word, I am
DEAR ABBY: My husband rushed me to the hospital to have my baby as I started to get pains in the lower part of my back and since I never had a bal^ before I was told that is where the pains starL
Well, after I got to the hospital the pains tapered off and nothing happened so they finally sent me home saying it was “false labor.”
1 got a bill for $43.50. Since it was false labor and nothing happened, do I have to pay this bill?
NO BABY
DEAR NO:	Yes. (And not
confederate money, either.)
DEAR ABBY: How does this grab you? ITie other day while visiting my mother-in-law, I noticed two hand-painted plates that were mine. I was shocked when I saw them and asked, “When did I give those plates to you?” She replied, “You didn’t. I .saw them down in your cellar during those three weeks you and Tom were separated. 1 figured they’d just get broken, so I took them.”
What would YOU have done?
MAD REDHEAD DEAR MAD: I’d have told her that now that the danger of “breakage” had subsided. I’d like to have my plates.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Young Hotfoot this day gets sthek behind a whiteJialred driver on a turnpike.
Passing, gas liedal to the floor, he snarls:
“All you old people ought to turn in your licenses.”
He’s wrong.
An “aged fivers” study by the research department of the National Safety Council (NSC) shows that age, taken by itself, is not a good indicator of driving ability.
For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1.00 to Abby in care of ’The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056.
Dr. 'Thomas W. Planek, head of the research unit, found health may be • more reliable single indicator of driving ability than chronological age.
The study involved 3,500 drivers beyond age 55 and an analysis of 200,000 accidents by drivers of all ages.
Dr. Planek said safety proposals that would rule older drivers off the road are geared to some specific age “largely because this information is easy to get and usually beyond dispute.”
High Fashion Business
SOME RESTRICTIONS
to prepare for so many. 1 thought she had understood, when she came last ■evening with an additional list of 15 names.
I told her I was unsure and repeated our previous statement. Today she was back telling me what decorations she wanted so she could use them at her reception, too.
What shall I do? Call off the whole thing? We simply haven’t the finances to take care of so many people and we certainly can’t afford the decorations she has in mind. I want to be a good cousin and wish her well, bpt am rather up a tree. Can you help me down, and keep peace. — “Bridal Fatigue”
Dear “Bridal Fatigue”: My first advice is to call the whole thing off. ’The bride had no business asking you to do more than you felt you could. If you go along with her wishes, you 'trtll end up feeling imposed upon and tesentful, and \ if you don’t, she will feel you haven’t done all you could.
My second suggestion is, in order to “keep peace,” to propose to someone else in the family, or a close friend who might be in a better position to do it than you, that they give the shower instead.
You might also tell the bride you would like to entertain her and her fiance at a small luncheon or dinner at some time before the wedding, for which you could make the {dans without consulting her. It need not be a showw, but merely a celebration, with faipily only, or family and closest friends.
A final alternative would be to ask another relative or friend to give the shower with you, thereby cutting down on costs and dividing the work.
Profits Slim as Models
By BEATA LEVY
PARIS — Any husband feeling outraged at getting a $900 bill for his wife’s dress from a Paris fashion house might like to consider this surprising fact: The profit margin for the fashion house concerned is likely to be only around $40.	' ,
designed to stimulate numerous other activities.
These are now well diversified. The sale of fashion accessories, mass produced, and mass marketed generally by independent manufacturers in the couturier’s name, benefits from the designer’s reputation gained in the secluded haute couture world.
True. Older persons are more likely to have a physical condition that limits driving. But four out of every 10 persons under 45 have at least one chnmic condition and one in 10 of the^ has some restriction on activity.
Planek and his colleagues recommended that a test of physical function be made whenperson first gets a license — and ^gain at later periodic re-examinatimi time.
Of the selling price, rather more than 40 per cent goes" to the state. The amount remaining is almost completely taken up with wages, materials and overhead expenses.
The 20 leading fashion houses in Paris create 100-250 models twice yearly. Taking the top end of this estimate, the total potential model output of the whole industry could be about 10,000 models a ' year. Assuming an average $40 profit margin per model, the total potential profits for the industry thus comes to a little under $1 million a year — shared among 20 houses.
The council reported that 35 states require a re-examination for renewal either periodically after the first license or when a person has reached a specific age, ranging from 57 to 75.
EARN ROYAL'HES
SAFETY ’TIPS
Uicensing agreements are concluded with manufacturers all over the world; merchandise such as shoes, ties, stockings, glasses, perfumery, lingerj| and scarves, earn royalties between 7 and 12 per cent which have become an Important sojOrce of income to each fashion hoi||lei^

REMAINS IMMUNE
eonllac Pratt PhMt tr RtH WlnHr
Losing just isn’t in the cards for this pair of Pontiac JaycetteS. They seem to have a few tricks of their oion for a successful card party and fashion show Monday: From left are Mrs. Mike Cirka of Walnut Street, Pbntiac Township and Mrs. Jack Nicholas of Preston Street. The event, open to the public, takes place in First Federal Savings of Oakland at 7:30 p.m. Fashions will also be shoum.
The industry remains Immune to modernization and automation since 95 per cent bf each gament is hand made. Production costs rise steadily, while demand remains at a relatively low and static level.
The haute couture world thus might seem doomed. In fact, however, the picture is far firmn gloomy. The capital invested in each collection is not measured against the purchases made by a limited number of rich women but rather as an overall publicity budget
Perfutnery is another all-important and highly profitable sideline. Most fashion houses sell perfume and toilet water under their name, a separate company having often been created for the purpose.
Many houses also cater to menswear. This activity seems to be fast-growing throughout the industry and holds out the promise of a golden future.
’Thus the show goes on. ’The publicity value of the collections said to be created for the happy few; has become immense in the conquest of new markets for a large variety of fashion-house designed articles.
Their original function has changed — but the one constant factor no house can do without, is its designer’s talent.
Authors of the study, financed hy Colonial Penn Insurance group, passed on these safety tips for older drivers:
•	Have a regular eye examination. You may not realize that your sight has become too poor to read road signs rapidly^
•	Restrict driving if sick. Both chronic and acute conditions may greatly alter ability to drive.
. • Don’t drive during snow or rain storms.
•	Avoid rush hour and night living as much as possible.
•	Use familiar streets and roads. Statistics show it is hazardous for the older person generally to drive on unfamiliar types of roads — say expressway versus town streets.
Date Is March 31
/
The annual cup and saucer card party of Pontiac chapter 228, Order of the Eastern Star, will take place March 31 in First Federal Savings of Oakland, instead of next Monday, as reported in 'Thursday’s paper:^
, ; -\ :v .	■ 1-	■'	,

THE -PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MABCH 21, 1969
Buyer" Still Gypped Though Told Truths
BY MARY FKELY Oonniltaiit in Money Management “Tall me tn^,” says the consumer, “and I’ll be a smart-shopper.”
Well, maybe. The National Better Bureau and the varipus State Attorney Generals have long been spreading the truth about tile multiple frauds prac^ ticed year after year on the consumer — and the consumer still succeeds in getting himself gyped.
Warnings by federal authorities that certain so-called “remedies" for certain ailments aren’t remedies at all havmi’t kept the cimsumer from trying them. Admonlti^ that unexplained charges on long-term installment buying may prove more than the consumer can alTord haven’t kept him out of the store.
So how smart is be going to be when the Truth-in-Lending law goes into actloa later this year? Wh^ the total cost of a loan or an installment purdiase must be spelled out to him according to the law, will be shop around to find out where he can get the best deal and sav money? Or will be shrug and say “So wbat? Everytiilng’s high these days."
If consumer reaction to Massachusetts legislation — effective in 1967, requires full disclosure of finance charges — is
any guide, apathy is about the upcoming federal law. part of most the federal lawinidim can jwhlch will be implemented this expect in the way of gratitude (year. One of the main objectives for the Truth-hi-Lending law. ;of T-ln-L is to force lenders and 'Hie Ma^diusetts “tnitb-in-retailers to tdl the public ek-> lending” legislation Is consid-acUy what it will cost to do ered quite comparable to the business.
Season Ends With Pianist
Anthony di Bonaventura, pianist, will appear in recital Wetlnesday at 8:30 p.m., in Oakland University’s Dodge Han Auditorium for the schod’s final program of the current >ason.
The program will include Dallapiccolas “Sonatina OuMoica, Beethovens Sonata In A Major Op. 101, Ouqiin’s-Scfaeno No. 4 Op. 54, Four Plano Pieces from Kodaly’s Op. 11, and Ginastera’s Sonata
★ .♦ .........^
With six major European tours to his credit, repeated performances with the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra and most North American ordiestras, di Bixiaventura is (Hie of the most sought after young artists of the day.
He is a graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music and was a pupil of the late Mme. Isabelle Voigerova.
New Ygrk Music, Art
OCC Sponsoring Tours
'sponsoring two Nevf York City tours this qiring.
concert weekend bei^s March 28 in Lincoln Center witii Faust” by the New Yorit City Opera Company. Saturday afternoon “II Trovatore” is scheduled at the Metropolitan Opera House.
In the evening there is a performance of the New York Philharmonic. Sunday afternoon will bring a Palm Sunday oratorio of mass in one of Manhattan’s cathedrals.
ART TOUR
An art tour is scheduled April 11-13, and will be prefaced by a seminar April 8 at 8 • p.m. in Room L-208 of the Orchard Ridge Campus, in which styles and periods of the New York exhibits will be explinred.
Visits to the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the A limited number of tickets Guggenheim and Whitney are available at the Festival Museums are scheduled with Office, Oakland University. Exhibits of DeKooning, Kandin-
Ofiiriiind Conununity College sky watercolors, William Sidney
Charles Sheeler Dayid Smith.
- ★
Evaiings will be devoted to a perfOnnance of “ M a d a m e Butterfly" at Uncoln Center, and a visit to Greenwich Village galleries and nij^tspots.
Is your type of man intellectual? Picture “HIM” in this attractive pullover. You might call it a modern classic for the discerning male. It is knitted of knitting worsted in a two-color combo, making it tweedy. If he wears sizes 36-44, make him this sweater in his two favorite colors. Free instructions are available by sending (1 self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Needlework Editor of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056 along with your request for Leaflet B-346.
YWCA fo Take Children fo See Detroit Shows
'Fhe Pontiac YWCA has scheduled a Saturday Qiltural Series for children at the Detroit Institute of Arts Entertainment is designed exclusively for boys and girls school age and older. All shows are staged in the Art Institute Auditorium.
* * *
AprU 5 - “Alice In Wonderland" (film).
April 12 — “This Was America” (Musical Revue).
a April 26 — “Rumpelstilt-skin” (hand puppets)
May 17 “Ybfing Andy Jackson" (live musical play).
A bus will leave the YWCA at 30 a.m. and return at 2:00 p.m. YWCA staff members will accompany the children. Registration is limited to 40 children. Call the YWCA for further information.
Nutritious Drink Starts the Day
iFor a low calorie, complete breakfast or lunch, or both, beat up in the blender Vt pint of skim milk, banana and two tablespoons of -wheat germ. Stir occa8ion)l|Uy while drinking it.
' A ★
The shake is nutritive and filling. If you make it for youngsters, add a small slice or scoop of ice cream.

The last youwa
STARK HICKEY FORD ROYALOAK
REV. ERNEST WARDELL CORDIALLY INVITES EVERYONE TO HEAR
GOSPEL SINGING the ASHE FAMILY
SATURDAY, MARCH 22 at 7:30 P.M.
Apostolic Faith Charch
93 PARKDALI OFF OALDWIN NIAR FISHER BODY
Both tours Include tound-trip jet transportation accommodations at the Park Sheraton Hotel.
Reservations and further infmmation may be had from the OCC Community Services Division, 2480 Opdyke Road, Bloomfield mis, 48013.
That Red Color Isiff Harmful
Sometimes meat around the bone of young poultry' is discoloared. This is due to the leaching out of blood from the porous bones of young poultry that has been frox^.
When tills blood goes fixim the bone into tile surrounding soft tissues, a red or brownish discolo^ area may appear in tiie cooked meat. According to ySDA home economists, wholes(»neness of tiie meat is not affected.
CLOSE-OUT SALE
OVER 150 PATTERNS
50% DISCOUNT
16-Pc.Scl........  *3’®
45-PcSct...........♦12’®
INCLUDES FINE CHINA AND EARTHENWARE
' ♦	\
ALL SALES FINAL
NO REFUNDS - EXCHANGES - OR I.AY.A-WAY
DIXIE POTTERY
5281 Dixie Hwy.
62.^^0911
See What We Have For You
For SPRING
AVON-TROY CARPET
1650 Auburn Road - M-S9 - Roehatter
Rotwoon JolM R and OMiiiiadro Jload Mon. and Tum. to 5, Wad., Thun., FrI. 9-t; Sot. 9-4
Phone 852-2444
Mr, and Mrs, Newlywed Special
Designed for today's tempo of living and the taste of young moderns, this 14 piece contemporary houseful is now Specially Priced at Dobbs ONLY for Newlyweds until March 31. You must present this od to any of Dobbs friendly Decorating Consultants when you come into the store.
UTieces Reg. *1028 Sale *777
Flexsteel Sofa of sturdy Lifetime Construction with extra arm cops in Nylon solid or print fabrics, Scotchgorded for extra durability. Regular $250.
Mr. and Mrs. Chairs and Ottoman upholstered in Scotchgorded prints of fine correlated Nylon decorator fabrics. 3 PCS. Regular $310.
Contemporary Dining Suite, sturdily constructed, includes round Walnut plastic-top table with extension leaf qnd 4 matching chairs with black vinyl seats. 5 PCS., Regular $169.
Bedroom Suite, beautiful decorator designed in Walnut finish includes 9-drawer Triple Dresser, Vertical Frame Mirror, Full or Oueen sixe Panel Heodboanl with mobile steel tram* aniJ a smooth-top Deluxe Serta Mattress and Box Springs. 5 PCS. Regular $S09.
TOTAL REGULAR PRICE ON ALL 14 PIECES, $1028 ... SALE $TT1
Furniture Professionals, Consultants and Designers at Your Service at No Extra Cost
2600 N. Woodward, Bloomfield
Near Square Lake Road, LI 8-2200, FE 3-7833
OPEN Mon., Wed. and FrI. 10-9; Tues., Thurs., Sat. 10-5
THE FX)NTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MARCH 21. 1969
B-iJ

pj! Mon. thru Sat„.9:30 to 9:00
ii	'

MISS DALBY
MISS HOWELL
MISS JUNE
MISS SOPER
MISS HOOTS
Five Wedding Dates Are Announced
Dolby-Bihl
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E, Dal-by of Richwood Road announced the engagement of their daughter, Carol Ann to Hilding E. Bihl, son of Rev. and Kfrs, Hilding Bihl of Etoerscm Street. A fall wedding is planned. Dalby’s fiance was graduated in the charter class of Oakland University.
O’Shaughnessy of Forest Drive and George B. E. June Jr. of Clarkstm, and Mr. and Mrs. James D. Addison of Lincoln Park.
Moody Bible Institute students, Susan Fay Soper and David Lee Taylor, are planning a June 28 wedding. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Neil
Howell - Lee
Spring vows are planned by Joan Marie Howell, daughter of the D(hui G. Howells of West Bend Court, Bloomfield Township, and Andrew Wasson Lee, son of Wasson G. Lee of Ortbnville and Mrs. John Snyder of Metamora.
June - Addison
Alice Dawn Amelia June and William Robert Addison are planning a June wedding, llieir parents are Mrs. Alvin
Broiled Sandwich
Here’s a tasty sandwich idea from the Consumer Marketing Service. Spread toasted bread with peanut butter and then with seasoned cottage cheese mixed with bits of crisp bacon. Broil 24 minutes and top with a hot tomato sauce.
Cut flowers will keep longer If a dash of salt is added to flie wafer In which they are kept.
W. Soper of Lake Orion, and the Albert A- faylors of Jacksm.
Soper-Toy lor
Hoots - Boiley
June vows are planned by Lynn ®Evelyn Hoots and Edward Bailey. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. George R. Hoots of Woodland Drive and the William R. Baileys of Carleton. The couple are students at Midwestern Baptist College.

Polly's Pointers
Watch Fire Hazard
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY - I am writing about Michael’s Pointer for making a ramp with boards over steps to transport a lawn mower to and from the basement. Our gas company repairman warned us against storing a gasoline power moweb in the same room as the gas furnace because of a fire hazard. Could a Polly expert verify this? — MR. W. F. S.
DEAR MR. W. F. S. - and others — A fire prevention office tells us that a gasoline-powered mower should never be stored indoors but in the garage or other outside place. Thank you for bringing this to our attention. Michael did not say what type of mower nor what part of the basement but this will advise those who might think as you evidently did. — POLLY
DEAR POLLY — I am just a bride and every time I try to vacuum my medium shag rug, many balls of fuzz form and clog up my cleaner. I am at a loss as to the caring for this rug. Ideas, anyone? — TONI
Duchess of Windsor l^iUerii
DEAR POLLY and Dorothy
- There are many uses for that extra, leftover paneling. Pieces can be used for making radiator covers or to cover old ones. Cover a shabby piece of furniture like a table, desk or bookcase. Use them in various shapes as back boards for plaques, pictures, mirrors, cpat-of-arms, etc., to hang.
They may be cut in small pieces to make coasters place mats. How about writing board that reaches arm-to-arm on your favorite chair?
pieces could make magazine rack with separate compartments or a knick-kack shelf.
Did you cover the doors in the room that was paneled so that they blend in with the wall? These are only a start but when your own imagination gets going I am sure you will come up with many more ideas. LOUIS
Neat and narrow, with a nice arrangement of jacket seams and darts that nip away the silhouette—perfect with the sidezipping subUe^ of the spare a-line skirt. Try it in a grey lightweight wool for dinner drama or do it up in linen with contrasting bands for that southern Vacation.
ready-to:wear sizes that produce a better fit and are easier to make. Order normal ready-to-wear size and allow oiie week for delivery. SOME’THING NEW: Pattern books by classification: Coats and Suits; Duch-of Windsor; Ensembles; Spring and Summer Dresses.
Other fabric suggesUons: shantung, raw silk, silk and wool worsted, four-ply wool crepe. N-26 is cut in Misses’ sizes 10-18. Size 12 requires approximately 2% yards of 54” fabric.
To order pattern N-26; state size, include name, address and zip code. Send 83.00 postpaid. Send orders fmr books and patterns to SPADEA, Box 323, Dept. PX-6DW, Milford, N.J. 08848. Tel: 201-905-2201. This pre-cut, pre-perforated Spadea Designer Pattern comes in
Each book $1 plus 25 cents p 0 s t a g e and handling. Hard Cover Catalogue $10. NEW IDEA: First time designers have published sewing secrets. Bookletsvl, 2, 3, 4 and 5 — 80 cents plus 15 cents postage and handling for each. Hard Cover Edition $5. ALSO NEW: Hair Pattern Booklet-do-ibyourself— 60 cents plus 15 cents postage and handling.


Springtime Beauties For Your Young Ladies
* ★
DEAR POU.Y - I suggest that Dorothy put that extra paneling on the walls in her closet. My aunt did this and placed a square of cedar or pine in each closet to give a nice scent that did not carry onto the clothes hanging there. It also made her broom closet look neat and smell clean.
diamond
elegance
$300
The most beautiful diamond sets ever created!
New in concept, exquisitely styled . . . diamond bridal sets to excite and delight every woman. Choose now . make her fondest dreams come true.
OPEN AN ACCOUNT
WITTNAUER
NEW 1969 Watch Beauties
Come in and let us
*	show you our mag-nififl^ent selection of
•	Wittnouer watches" . . . each a treasure to own, a treasure to give.
$45.95
24N.SAfiMAW
DOWNTOWN PONTIAC
BUY! SELL! TRADE!
USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS!
/?*

Super straps.*.
Bold new buckles, patent shows the first shine of Spring!
Choose bold-buckled "Shipmate" in Block, White or Blue potent, sizes \2V2 to 4 or "Tradewifid" stropf^, buckled ond perfed in block, white, blue, rad, or white and blue combination. Sizes 5to8,8l6to4.

SIZES	BUST	WAIST	HIPS	*LENGTH
10	M	M	j	r
12	M	»
‘From Nap* of Nack to Walit.
Bloomfield Miracle Mile

A. POLLY FLINDERS DRESS
One of many styles with the delicate hand-smocked look. Lovely yellow print with white collar and cuffs. Size 7 to 12.
. POLLY FLINDERS is beautiful in polka dots. Lovely navy polka dot skirt with white top and green sash. Sizes 4 to 6X.

C. SPRINGTIME COAT in a blend of fibers. Navy with white and red window pane plaid. Spicy white double breasted buttons.
Sizes 7te 14	®26
Sizes 4 to 6X $20


Bloom^ld Miracle Mile SquarefiOke




B——6
THE PONTIAC PHESS. FlUDAV, MAHCTI 21, 1969
. Memphis Stunned > by Plane Tragedy
MEMPHIS (AP) — A shock turned into a subdued, memo-iWoodrow W. Wages, 52, presi-wavc of death hit and stunned rial to Baber and the other vic- dent of the town % Chamber of the city <rf Memphis,	tims.	iCommerce and one of those who.
Those struck hardest were the Five of those who lived perished, families of 15 leading citizensthrough it returned to Memphis I	★ ★ ★	'
killed in the Thursday crash of Thursday. Dr. 1<enneth C. Cald-| “Mr: Wages-he has been a a chartered private plane at well, a dentist, described the daddy to so many of us sailors,” New Orleans, leaving ,t7 chil-attempt he and Frederic W.jSaid Seaman Larry Spencer, dren fatherless.	Thirkield III, 19, made to rescu^J “Anybody who had a problem
*	★ *	the youth’s father:	jwould come to his office and
But the ripples of tragedy “Standing there with the boy, he’d listen. He did so many quickly spread through a metro- trying to pull his father out. It“‘‘	'	'*	^
politan area of more than one was tragic. TTie flames came in million people. The 15 men, oh him, and he waved to his son most of them owners of their just before he was engulfed.” own businesses, knew a lot of people, had a lot of friends.	f " , ^
The story was page 1-alI of	‘“copilot Bill Stoval and Leon
page 1-in both the city’s	the elder Thirkield a me-j-*'
things for people but he never wanted you to know it.”
★ ★ *
Of tlie Memphis men killed in the crash, 13 were passengers and two were crew menibers—
papers.
BIG HEADUNE The Press-Scimitar used Us biggest headline print.
The Commercial Appeal
chanical engineer, was Billy Jo Spence, owner of a saddlery and clothing firm.
* * *■
“That kid is shook up bad,'
ir,::
‘ ^	‘	^ ■	to pull him through a window
hut his feet were stuck. We tried Gov. Buford ^'ington ordcr^	j,	„
a Tennessee National fiuard „ transport aircraft based at ‘
Memphis to go to New Orleans .	.	„	.	.
lodav. Its mission: Return the / group of sailors gathered at tlic furniture store acrass from “This tragic accident , . has	Naval air station,
taken the lives of so many tal- Th®	hy
ehted and dedicated citizens,”.
Ellington said.	|
'IRREPARABLE LOSS’
“The loss to the city Is irreparable,” said Mayor Henry l«eb.
The flight had started out for ^
British Honduras, where the party planned to take part in a jaguar hunt and fishing expedition sponsored by the West Tennessee Sportsman's Association.
Hayes.
The only one of the 16 dead who was not from the Memphis area was pilot A. R. Tennyson of Houston.
(Adver(ls«iT'«nl)
Now Many Woor
FALSE TEETH
With Moro Comfort
To ovoroomo dlicomfort when dentiiTM ellp. elide or looeen, iuet eprinkle n little PA8TBETH on your pletee. PASTiaTH hold* denturee nrmer You e»t better, feel more comforteble. FASTKETH u nlknllne — won't eour. Heljw check plete odor. Dentures thet at ere essentlel — — “Our dentlit regulei... H et ell drug counteri.
FLAGS
OUTDOOR • INDOOR ALL TYPES
CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES
55 Oakland Ave.	FE 4-9591
Hie grief and shock were felt Intensrty in the close-knit suburban community of Millington, where five families received death messages.
'* * *
The five crash victims from that city of about 20,000 were personal friends and most were leaders in the civic life of the town.
BUSINESSMAN	!
“It just doesn’t seem possible for something Uke this to happen,” said Mayor Tom Hall.
Perhaps the best known tim was Rodney Baber, two-| term president of the Downtown Association of Memphh, owner of a printing firm, pi^dent of a chemical company, and head of a club that provides care for the widows and orphans of police officers and firemen killed in the line of duty.
A planned night of gaiety for the Downtown Association at its annual awards banquet and salute to working women was
AmOVNCEMENT NOW A REMINGTON FACTORY AUTHORIZED \ ELECTRIC SHAVER SERVICE and SALES WE SERVICE ALL OTHER BRANDS GENUINE FACTORY PARTS AND PRICES
THE SHAVER SHOP
61 W. Huron	6560 Cass Ave.
_ ..	^  .... luHt III gM«ll* III* a.M. ilgf.
Pontiac, Mich. 334-1411	Detroit, Mich. 81S4226
X t HJJUkft.AAJULAJUUUU.»XkJL8JL8.tJL«JLAJULOJU^
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Come running . . . this without question is the greatest buy in luxurious 4^mfort you'll ever. find. A big, sumptuous man-size recliner that vibrates-recllnes-even has a built-in heating element. That’s right... a built-in heating pad so you can lounge, recline, or stretch-out all the way and enjoy a marvelous massage with soothing, body-penetrating heat. Here's relaxation so incomparable, so complete, you’ll find tensions, tired muscles and fatigue fade like magic in moments. But hurry. We have only a limited stock of these great chairs at this special price ... and when they are gone no more are available. Choose from glove-soft, easy to clean Vineile in colors.
STBATOROGKElfROCKER-RECLlNER
Or if you prefer a rocker, this chair has no equai. Not oniy featured is custom, "extra-iong" rocking action ... but it, too, also vibrates-reclines-and has a built-in heating element for matchless relaxation. Whether you want to just sit and rock, partially recline and watch TV, or stretch-out for a refreshing nap. Choose from carefree Vineile in colors.
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A Spanish Mosterpioc* with o Flair, Dostinod to Capture Complimonls....
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, ll^IDAY, MARCH 21, 1969
Daley Tip: Politics Is Name of the Game
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By BICXW^T	I Daley's choice for last year’s
WASmNG'TON <DPD—A minor Democratic presidential nomi-mystery has developed oyer nation.
Chicagt^ Mayor Richard J.| In a put-do\yn of Hubert H.
Humphrey, Daley said someone i assuming that Daley meant the else would have ||||||||||^^ hast name of a former presi-made a strong-	|<ient. Maybe he meant the first
er candidate someone with
C
Junior Editors Quiz (
SWITZERLAND
WOUWmiNS ACT AS ..4\	NATURAL
QUESTION: How did Switzerland avoid two worid wars?
ANSWER: Our map shows little Switzerland ringed around by large and important countries. The Swiss people have ties with their neighboring nations. There is no one Swiss language. The people speak dialects from German, French, Italian or ancient Latin.
WEST
the “name of a tbrmeri» resident.”
It Was widely assumed that Daley was referring to Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. But then along came Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn., with a rebuttal for that theory.
Ribicoff said Daley did not support Kennedy at any time before, during or after the Democratic convention at Chicago.
WHO, THEN?
Whom, then, did Daley have in mind?
I posed this question to a group of poiitical pundits the other day and it led to some rather interesting speculation.
name. In that case, Abe Ribicoff himself could have been it.”
“A good point,” tl^e first pundit said. “Or it could have like Truman Capote, the famous author.
‘TOO INTELLECTUAL’ “Truman Capote is a bit too intellectual for Daley,” ti»e third pundit said. “A better guess wouid be Rooseveit Grier, the footbali piayer who was Bobby Kennedy’s bodyguard.” “That won’t hold water,” the second pundit said. “Roosevelt Grier was too closely identified with the student groups that were tormenting Daley at the convention.
doubt that Daley was talking about John “ hower,” one pundit said. “The last time I diecked, Ike’s son was a Republican like daddy.”
“That’s right,” another pundit said. “And I think we can rule out Rep. Robert Taft Jr., R-Ohio, for the same reason.”
Yet, with all the understanding they have for their neighbors, the Swiss have stood together as a nation.
The Swiss story starts with three cantons, which are quite like our states, grouping together in 1291 to defend Aemselves from outside attacks. More and more cantons joined this alliance.
HE’S RETIRED “I doubt he was referring to Franklin D. Roosevtlt Jr. either,” the third pundit said. Young Frank has more or less retired from politics.”
“And so has Sherman
Adams,” the first pundit said.
“Wait, a minute,” the second pundit said. “We are onlylL
The high mountains of their homeiand heiped the Swiss as they fought back their attackers. So did the sturdy courage of the people. All Swiss men were trained, and still are, to bear arms and fight in defense of their country.
So successful was the Swisis plan that the country gained the respect of all nations. Its neutrality is guaranteed by the great powers.
Modern Swiss boys use that ancient weapon, the crossbow, as training for rifle shooting which foilows later.
(You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in cars of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.)
“I agree,” the first pundit said, “and the same thing goes the Jefferson Airplane. Daley would never have support^ a rock music group for the nomination.”
“Well, then, how about Cary Grant?” the third pundit said. “He’s a big favorite with Daley’s generation.”
IT’S POSSIBLE “It’s possible,” the first pundit said.
‘But I think we have Hseen overlooking the most logical bet — a man who shares Daley’ hard line attitude toward demonstrators. I’m convinced the man Daley had in mind was J. Edgar Hoover.”
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B~8
^llE i»Ol«TIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1969
Education/Culture Future in County Planned
Teddy Asks Recognition of Red China
Although the D & R wanted [of the group, said talk centered the groups to set up some around joining efforts of public
About 50 educational and At least one group went cultural leaders star ted little further than 1 planning the future of educatkm discussion. Aubry Crawford of and culture in Oakland County Detroit, leader of the cultural at a workshop and brainstorm-'discussion group, said that the ing sessions at Oakland Uni-participants, numbering about versity earlier this week. ii6, were from two faction'15^ The workshop, one in d series Detroit versus Oakland County, of five	sponsored by thel	Detroit	leaders	in cultural
Oakland	County P 1 a n n i n g	activities,	such as	symphonies,
(omnbssion, was under the	libraries,	art and	theater
direction	of the international	associations, said	that
firm of Development and were struggling to survive, Resources Commission (D & R) while those from Oakland based in New York City.
The firm was retained last June by the planning commission at a cost to thej county of $5,000 plus planning < ommission staff resources, and: an $80,000 federal grant from| the Department of Housing andj Urban Development.	|
The D & Tt staff presented j working papers to thej conferees, c o n t a iningi NEW YORK (AP) - Sen. Ed-information on Oakland County ward M. Kennedy has called for educational and c u 11 u r a 1 an overhaul of U S. policy to-opportunities, and proposed ward Communist China, fnclud-discussion questions.	ing pulling U S. troops off For-
DISCUSSION GROUPS
China a seat on the U N. Securi Throe discussion groups werc ty Council, formed following the staff Kennedy, in a speech Thurs-presenlations in an attempt today night, also calhsl for pool their	knowledge	and removing	all travel and	non-
project their	predictions for	the istrategic	trade barriers	with
county.	[mainland	('hina and opening
(Advfriucmeni)	Iconsular	mi.ssions there	until
Missoun Wife Says "S"'"
Truly A BIBSSIIIQ Massachusetts Democrat _	,,	_ told the National Committee
To nfillBVO Pllos U.S.-China Relations, “Surely,
Treatment Shrinks Plies, can foreign policy, there has Relieves Pain In Host Cases I been no fiction more palpably , absurd than our official position I that ('ommunist China does not exist.
Kennedy, the Senate assistant imruly been * blessing!’	majority leader, called on the
(Note: Doctors have proved in Nixon administration “to rectify most cases- Preparation H* ac-lthe errors of the past’* by offer-'
iiiallV •Rrtnif« inTlttmAn n^ninr. .,	sa
ing Peking “a clear and attrac-tive alternative to the existing impasse in our relations,"
(^nty maintained they were fighting to be Irnrn.
In a combination of mutual interest and appreciation, the factions decided to m^t again to work together in promoting cultural activities in both areas. AGREE ON MUTUAL AID The groups agreed they couldn’t survive without each they other; and rather than fighting, they would help each other, Crawford said.
guidelines for establishing future plans for Oakland County, one educational discussion group spent most of its . time identifying t h e problems from an institutional point of view.
Oakland University, Lawrence Institute, Oakland Community College, and public and private schools were represented in ' ‘ group,
Robert Cell of Detroit, leader
and private school agencies, the aggressive vocational education program in Oakland Coimty, and sociological problems in teaching.
Arden Tiley of D e t r’‘o i t, discussion leader in the second education-related group, said that his group concenb'ated on its own concerns and relationship of Oakland County education to the entire metropolitan area.
He said the group felt that continuing education county is not contained within
the boundaries, but, extends into other counties and into Detroit.
W ★ .it
D. & R represeotatives wi take notes from the discussion groups for a final report to the planning coinmission, in helping to determine what Oakland County can accomplish in the future.
★ ★
Other sessions planned in the next month will be o i transportation, land use housing, welfare, government and finance.
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A CrUry Junior High/School student organization will conduct a “call-in” for Information about Wednesday’s Waterford Township mlllagc election.
I The Crary Students for Better [Education (CSBE) will man telephones from 2 to 4 p.m. Monday and 'Tia'sday to answer calls for interested votefs.
The main school number may be used by persons seeking information Crary , is at .SOI N. Ca.ss Lake.
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Who says an economy car has to look like it just got off the boat?
Not the people who designed this new Chevy Nova.
An economy car has no more obligation tp look humble than it has to ride harsh, they say. Or cpimp you for space. Or drag up a hill.
So the Nova Coupe you see here came out looking clean and well groomed. With a smooth, stable ride. With room to take fiv6 comfortably (six iii the sedan)
without any knees or elbows left over. And with a democratic choice of standard engines—four, six or V8 -all designed to tesptmd energetically on regular gas.
It also came out with something else you won’t find on any other economy car, built here or abroad-no-clutch driving for under $70. You get it when you order Toi^ue-Drive on four- or six-cylinder models.
Of course, we realize there are still those who may miss the reverse prestige of driving something coij-
spicuously less ttian this new Nova. They’ll just have to go some place other than their Chevrolet dealer’s tofindit.
When it comes to economy cars, we only sell the fresh homemade kind.
Puttiiic you first, kseps us first.
COVERING UP —Drake guard Don Draper (right) tries to get a backhand shot past UCLA’s Lew Alcindor in an NCAA semifinal game in Louisville last night but Big Lew knocked the ball away. UCLA won, 85-82.
Keego's 1940 Tilt Is Vivid Memory
By FLETCHER SPEARS
It’s 29 years old, but still fresh in Waldo Ashley’s memory iiank Is the trip to Bast Lansing as coach of Keego Harbor Roosevelt back in 1940.
Ashley, who is celebrating his 60th birthday today, is athletic director of Waterford schools. In *40 he %as basketball coach at Roosevelt and busily engaged i|} trying to win a state Class C basketball championship.
That same school—now West Bloomfield—is trying to do the same thing today but in a different class. This year’s edition of the Lakers is after the Class B crown and was slated to meet Kalamazoo Hackett in the semifinal contest this afternoon.
Paired in the othef semifinal were River Rouge and Menominee. The winners meet tomorrow morning at 11:39 in Jenison Fieldhouse for the title.
CAME CLOSE
But back to Ashley and Roosevelt. Unless the Lakers win the state title this year, Ashley will still be remembered as the coach who came the closest to a championship.
“You bet I remember that game,” says Ashley of the finale against Williamston in ’40. “I’ve played it over a million times and we still lose.”
In reaching the finals, Ashley and the Roosevelt Presidents had wcm 22 in a row. They beat Saginaw SS Peter Si Paul in the quarter-finals, 49-22, and bumped
Cedar Springs, 45-30, in the semifinals. “I believe our game against Cedar Springs was the first hi^ school tournament game played in Jenison Fieldhouse,” recalls Ashley.
Then came the finale against Williamston.
“We were down 26-12 at halftime,” Ashley« continued. “Eddie Haines (guard) finally tied the score at 35-all with SO seconds to go. We missed about four shots in those last 50 seconds.
“Then one of the Williamston players — he didn’t do much during the game — picked up a loose ball in our end and took one bounce and shot. It must have been about midcourt. He just shoved it with both hands and it went in with four seconds left.” Williamston won, 37-35.
Ashley, who played some semiprobasketball in the Detroit Triple A League, compiled a 734 record in five years with the Presidents.
“All but one of those losses was In tournament play,” said Ashley. “That one was to Oxford when iny Invther came down here and beat us. John Abel was coaching at Oxford and they came liere and had i good night in our own gym. Pete (Waldo’s brother) scored 18 point*.”
(Continued on Page C-6, Col. 4)
UCLA vs. Purdue for NCAA Title
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - UCLA and Purdue meet Saturday for the national collegiate basketball title, but UCLA Coach John Wooden isn’t banking on a repeat of the teams’ season opener whdh UCLA beat Purdue 94-82.
That match was played at UCLA, and Wooden thinks Purdue is a vastly improved team.
*	*	*
The Bruin , coach, seeking a n unprecedented third straight NCAA title and the fifth in six years, was anything but complacent after UCLA held on for an 85-82 victory over stubborn Drake in the semifinals Thursday night.
★	★	★
Purdue gained the championship game with a convincing 9265 win over North Carolina in the first semifinal.
FLOOR ERRORS
“We’ll have to play a lot better than we did tonight,” Wooden said of a Bruin team that hit 56 per cent of its field goal shots, but comnutted 22 floor errors , and technically won on free throws.
Referring to Purdue, Wooden added, “If they played all season like they played tonight, we wouldn’t have beaten them last fall.”
Purdue Coach George King was a iittle happier with his team’s performance.
“I don’t believe we were looking ahead to anyone tonight,” King said.
But when questioned before the second game about the possibility of meeting UCLA, he said he would let his Boilermakers run with the Bruins just as they did in their first meeting.
UKE PRESSURE
“We like for a team to pressure us,” he said, “so we can develop our running game.”
And King added that Purdue has picked up more poise and togetherness in play throughout the season.
But King faces the same large problem he did earlier—UCLA’s 7-foot-V/i Lew Alcindor proved his All-American ranking against Drake with 25 points and 21 rebounds.
. ★ * *
“If we had Chuck Bavis,” King said, “we probably would play them straight away. But since we don’t ...” He wouldn’t say just what Purdue might do. Bavis is Purdue’s 7-foot junior center who is out of tournament play with an injury.
SCORING DUO
Wooden’s chief concern in meeting the Boilermakers Is the guard duo. of All-American Rick Mount and Bill Keller, who bombed the Tar Heel defense with their outside shooting.
*	★	★
Mount hit 14 of 28 field goal attempts and finished with 36 points. Keller connected on nine of 19 floor shots and wound up with 20.
*	#	★
“I don’t think we can guard him (Mount) one-on-one,” Wooden said, adding that “I’ve always been highly impressed with Keller.”
DRAKE (11)	UCLA (U)
o E Rtb. A RF T	O F Rllt. A FP T
Pulliam . 4-U 4-5 5 a 4 U	Sha'rd	2S M	2 3 4 4
willlamt 0-1 (Ml 5	4 4 0	Roiwt .	.4^ 2-2	3 3 2 14
Wlia . . . 5-7 3-4 4	1 3 13	AlcWOT	1-14 2-14	2 3 3 25
McCartar 10-27 4-4 1 3 2 4 Haltz . 34 1-3 13 5 7 Drapar .. 5-13 ^3 1	1 2 12	Vallaly	Ml 1-14	4 5 5 22
Odom ... 0-2 0-1 204 0	WIcka	0-2 04)	1 0 1 0
Wana'kar 4-7 1-17	14 2	Swaak	04) 04)	0 0 1 0
Zellar . . 4-12 4-4 3	1 3 12	Pat'aon	0-0 2-2	0 0 0 2
Gwin .	04) 0-1 1	0 3 0	Scho'ld	0-3 2-4	0 1 0 2
3M3 10-14 37 12 30 03	3040 22-44 44 )011 05
Draka ...........................32 43-02
Wooden also pointed to Boilermaker depth whicih He calied better than UCI^’s bench strength. ^
RESERVE STRENGTH Thursday night King went , to his bench early in the game. He credited his ability to do so as one of the reasons Charlie Scott of the Tar Heels was held . to 16 points by at least three defenders, including Mount.
Neither King nor Wooden was planning on any line-up changes for Saturday, the day, as Wooden said, when “it’s all over, one way or the othw.”
NORTH CAROLINA (45)	PURDUE (23)
O F Rtb. APr-	----- -------
Bunting .,7-13 5-7 7 2 ',. ..
Scott ...4-12 4-4 4 4 3 14
Team rabounds—brakt 4, tiCLA 4. Foulad out-UCLA, Haiti, Vallaly. Total (oult-Draka 30, UCLA 21.
Wings' tine Sets Record in 4-2 Loss to LA's Kings
The Birdie was out after worms this morning and ran into Mr. Crow.
“I think I’ve got all the winners of the state tournament games,” said The Birdie, and he proceeded to tell his tale of the tournament;
CLASS A
Ypsilanti over Mumford; Ottawa Hills over Northwestern
CLASSB
West Bloomfield over Hackett; Rouge over Menominee
Champion: River Rouge (Sorry Lakers)
Class c
St. Stephen over Houghton; St. Paul over White Pigeon
Champion: St, Stephen
CLASSD
St. Martin over Webberville; Frankfort over Marquette Bishop
The Birdie would be happy to have “Crow” for West Bloomfield to prove all the “experts” wrong. Go Lakers!
By United Press International It was another one of those nights for the Detroit Red Wings: You set a record ■ but you lose a game.
The Wings blew another chance to h-place tie with Tdrwto 'Thursday night and so keep alive ho^s' for an East Division Stanley Cup playoff berth when they dropped a 4-2 decision to the Los Angeles Kings.
Just the night before,-dhe Wings tied Oakland 4-4, and, like Thursday night, the Maple Leafs were idle.
But despite the loss, Detroit’s powerful production line of Gordie Howe, Frank Mahovlich and Alex Delvecchio accounted for both the Red Wings’ scores to set a National Hockey League record.
RECORD FALLS	*
Since that line was formed five games into the season, the trio has scored 107 goals to break the old mark of 105 by Montreal’s Maurice Richard, Toe Blake and Elmer Lach in 1944-45.
Howe scored the 730th goal of bis 23-year career and the “Big M” rebounded in his 46th this season.
The win let the third-place Kings close to within six points of second-place Oakland in the NHL West Division and put them three points ahead of fourth-place Philadelphia.
® -Meanwhile, Chicago’s Bobby Hull was setting a record of his own—and break-
1-4 0-0 2 1 2 2 Mount 14-28 8-9 4 3 0 3
G.TuttI* -2-4 0-13 13 4
;; 2-19 2-3 5 5 3 2
.. 0-2 0-0 1 2 4 0 Kaufman 0-1 2-36142
.0-1 0-1 4 2 2 0 V
h'rd 3-4 1-12 0 17
Chadwick 1-2 0-0 2 0 0 2 Lonof'ow 0-1 (
oo 0-0 0 0 0 0	HELPING HAND-Bill Keller (left) of Purdue clutches the ball and reaches
" 25-42 15-25 37 i5'ii 45 ““"Si-ro 14-22 51 17 20 92 out to break the fall of North Carolina’s Ed Fogler, who tumbled over Keller’s
......... 35 30-45 back during their NCAA semifinal game in Louisville, Ky., last night. Fogler
reboundj-Norih caroiina 1, purdua”:,**"” picked up a foul on the play. Purdue won, 92-65, to advance to tomorrow night’s finals against UCLA.
Fouled out~None.
Total fouls-North Carolina Purdue 90.
THE PONTIAC PRESS
FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1969
spom
5fh Straight Loss
Boston Defeats Detroit
WINTER HAVEN (AP) - The Detroit Tigers have lost five exhibition games in a row but manager Mayo Smith doesn’t seemed too upset.
“We’re just not playing very well and we always go through a point like this in spring training,” said last year’s Manager of the Year.
The Tigers lost 5-4 to the Boston Red Sox, the team that is expected to give Detroit the strongest run for the Eastern Division title of the American League.
Detroit made two more errors in the game to up its exhibition total to 23 and opponents have scored 23 unearned runs. The Tigers only made 24 errors all last spring.
Boston’s winning run came in on an error.
Joe Sparma started for Detroit and fared poorly. He walked Reggie Smith, then Mike Andrews singled. Carl Yastrzemski lined a triple to right scoring two runs, then came home, on Ken Harrelson’s ground out to make the score .3-0.
Norm Cash and Dick McAuliffe narrowed the gap to 3-2 on homers. But Boston got two more runs in the fourth when Gerry Mosses doubled and came home on pitcher Ken Brett’s single and McAuliffe threw wildly to first after making a nice play on Smith’s groimd ball. That moved Brett to third and he came home on a sacrifice . fly by Andrews
McAuliffe hit his second homer in the sixth and Detroit got another run on
DRTROIT	BOSTON
. ------------ .3 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 TaiiaWI c( 10 0 0 Sparma p	.	2	0 0	0	Patrocll »9	3 o o 0
Ctrnich c	4	0 0	0	Alvarado si	10 0 0
Trac'wtkl 2b	1	0 I	0	AAotas e .	.	4 110
Brown ph	.	1	0 0	0	Bratt p . .	.2121
3b ..1 0 0 0.
singles by Tom Matchick and A1 Kaline, a fly by Cash and a wild pitch. But the Tigers couldn’t undo the damage created by Sparma’s bad day as the veteran raised his springtime earned-run-average to 4.84. He has Walked 12 in 13 innings.
Meanwhile, Smith made his second squad cut of the spring, sending shortstop Junior Lopez and third baseman Ike Brown to the minors. Their departure gives rookie Dave Campbell a clear shot at an extra infielder spot.
Catcher Bill Freehan, who is out of action for at least two weeks because of a broken nose suffered Wednesday,
watched the game from the stands Thursday.
“I wouldn’t have come if we were playing a National League team,” he said, “but I’ve got ^to see how the Boston guys are hitting.”
•A ★	★
Freehan was hit in the nose by a ball thrbv^THjv teammate Jim Northrop. The freak ac(Wnt happened during batting practice anh Northrop, an outfielder, was pitching.
Earl Wilson was scheduled to start today’s game in Clearwater against Philadelphia.
E-Sparma, 4 DB-Oatrolt 4.
4 7 1 Tatalf 18 5 8 5 811 882 888-4 388 288 88X-5 bP-Bp>ton 1.
MCAullHt.
ing one of his own—but the outcome was almost the same. The Boston Bruins tied the Blackhawks 5-5.
Hull’s two goals were his 54th and 55th of the season, breaking his own NHL scoring record and putting him at l60 -polflt» l» the year______________
-------- 3B-Ya»triamskl. HR-Cash,
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OU Swimmers Look for Honors
Nine Oakland University swimmers are in Springfield, Mass., this weekend looking for honors in the college division of the NCAA swimming and diving championships.
Mike Campbell will be going for the Pioneers in the 100 and 200-yard freestyle events, while Greg AUar will swim the 100 and 200-yard butterfly events.
» Ed Engelhart and Richard Bishop are slated for the 100 and 200-yard backstroke, and Englehart will then join Allar, Campbell, and Bill Nadlonek in the 400-yard medley relay.
In the 400 and 800-yard freestyle relays, Campbell, and Ipngelhart will team with Ron Mickelson and former Pontiac Northern star Steve Yedlin.
Alsd in tlje competition will be Art Colton, a senior from Grosse Pointe High School, and Jack Parker of Battle (Creek Lakeview. They’ll compete in the one knd three^meter diving.
EMU Tankers Lead After Opening Events
CHICAGO (UPI) - Defending champion Eastern Michigan University holds a 21-point lead going into*^the second day of competition in the NAIA swimming and diving tournament.
Forty-nine teams are competing in the three day event. Claremont-Mudd of Claremont, Calif, and Simon-Fraser of Vancouver, B.C., are in second and third place, with 78 and 62 points respectively.
A ★ A
Eastern Michigan scored in all five events Thursday night and won the last two in piling up a 99-point total.
Defending one-meter diving champion, Keith Gill, a sofdiomore from Hazel Park, took the honors again for EMU. jiThe school’s 400 yard medley relay team established an NAIA record in winning in 3:39.1. The old record of 3:45.4, set last year by Claremont-Mudd had been lowered once earlier in the day by Eastern Michigan in a qualifying here.
Freshman Lester McCormick o f Warren placed second in the 200 yard individual medley.
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C—2

TH^fPONTIAC PRESS, yRJDAY, MARCH 21, 1969
Jerry Heard, 21, six fmt tall and 180 pounds, quit Fresno State College last fall in his junior year and decided to take out after Mcklaus, Casper & Co. on the $6 million pro tour.
“I’ve wanted to ply on the golf tour since I was 11 years old—I couldn’t wait,’’ the strapping young athlete said today. “I came from an athletically minded family. My dad played pro baseball and even had a contract to go with the Cardinals.
FINAL ’THAT IS A FINAI^Boston College coach Bob Cousy goes Uirough aU of his motions while coaching his team to a 73-61 victory over Army in the NIT tournament yesterday. vSaturday will not only be the finale of the
AP WirtPlwto
tournament when Boston College meets Temple, but it will be the final game of coaching for Cousy who is retiring after tomorrow.
"But he got married instead. “No, I don’t Intend to go back »college. This is my life now. I think I can make the grade.’’ Heard is cme of the brash, new breed of hungry tigers who have abandoned other pursuits—including higher education—and ' into the rich ^If tour.
Owls Meet Boston College
Surprising Temple in NIT Finale
' NEW YORK (AP) sr- The points in that decisive 10-point
/ Temple Owls, who tired of play-1 run. ing perfectly in New York, and! Before that, the Owls had disnow only Boston College stands jsipated an eight-point lead to in their way of top billing in the | only a 29-26 spread at halftime. National Invitation Tournament.! 'The lead changed nine times ; “I don’t think we did a thing before Joe Cromer’s two bas-wrong all night—the perfect kets for Temple tied the count game,’’ said Coach Harry Lit-!wack of the overlooked Owls; after they pulled away from!
Tennessee 63-58 in the semifinals ’Thursday night for their third straight upset.	{
at 49 as the Owls began press-
Arthur Ashe Gets to Quarter-Finals
Their perfect tune came after! Boston College, the first teami
ST.
,	- PETERSBURG, Fla.
picked for the NIT and the one|(AP) _ Top Seeded Arthur that has received top billing,lAshe breezed into the quarter fi-' beat Army at its own control nals of the Masters Tennis Tour-game 73-61.	nament Thursday with a third-
*	*	*	round 6-2, frS, win over Eng-
’The results left Temple and land's Peter 'Curtis.
BC to plav for all the marbles! The victory paved the way for on national television Saturday a quarter final mtitch between at 2 p.m. EST, In Madison Ashe and Ray Rufnfes of Aus^a-Square Garden. Army and Ashe victim In the United Tenne-ssee, the 1-2 defensive States’Davis Cup victory in Deteams in the country, meet at ‘member, noon for third place.	.
Ruff ells beat Jun McManus of CREDITS PLAYEIRS	Berkeley, (]alif., 64, 6-0, leaving
“Ifou have to give the boys;Ashe the only American credit,’’ Litwack said after the I tournament.
Owls, now 21-8, scored 10 straight points behind a press
turn a 4944 deficit Into a 5449 lead.
“They’ve been getting second and third billing to LaSalle and VillanovB all year In Philadelphia.’’
John Baum, Temple's 6-foot-5 jumping Jack, hit the final three
ing.
AHEAD TO stay
Bill Strunk scored to put the Owls ahead to stay and Baum added his three points.
Eddie Mast of Temple finished with 24 points, 12 in the final half, and Cromer had 11 of his 15 after intermission against Tennessee’s 1-3-1 zone.
Bob Croft and reserve Rudy Kinard, who hit all but two of the Vols 30 points in the second half, finished with 21 and 19, respectively.
Boston College, running the nation’s current longest winning streak to 19 in a 24-3 season, chose to forsake its fast break against the bruising Army defense and disciplined offense and waited patiently until midway through the final half to pull away.
We wanted to beat them at their own game, not shove ours down their throats,’’ said BC Coach Bob Cousy, who will retire after the final. Playmaker Evans, who had 13 points and seven assists, said, had to play a slow, patient game. You have trouble getting
Next Tour Stop
PORT CHARLOTTE. Fla. (JB - The $15,000 Port Charlotte Open, the newest stop on Ladies’ Professional Golf As-soi'iation tour, got under way today with 52 professionals and two amateurs competing for the top prize of $2,250.
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nmg.’’
Although trailing 29-26 at the half, the Eagles finally ahead to stay 42-40 when Tom Veronneau scored and was fouled as Army’s Mike Gyovai fouled out.
Veronneau missed the free throw, but 6-7 teammate Terry Driscoll rebounded for a basket. Driscoll later hit a free throw for a 4741 lead as Army’s second starter, S6 center Dick Simmons, fouled out with 9:36 left. Driscoll led BC with 28 points. Doug Clevenger had 25 for Army.
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Army
CItvngr
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Fouled ouj—army. GyovaL
Tafalt M 11-32 73
Pro Golf looks Good to College Dropout
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)
Weaver, Bob Smith and Ray Floyd.
round icot JaekaonvHIu u Llonot Hebort Lorry Mowry
Dick Hirt.......
J«V Hdiwii . Brucd Crtmptan .
Tom WMikopr . Leo Trevino ... Frenk Boynton . Frenk Beerd ... Ken still ....
Terry Wilcox . Chris Blocker . Tony Jecklln ..
Dow FlnsterweM . Fred Hess
Al Bolding .....
Terry DIM ........
- Rodrigues ...
They look at Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaiis, BUI Casper, and Gary Player and say—apparently—what better way is there to become a mUlionaire?
AMONG LEADERS Heard popped up among the leaders of a tightly bunched pack after the first round of the $100,000 Greater Jacksonville Open tournament Thursday.
He fired a 68, four under par, which placed him in a tie with six others, just one stroke back of pace-setting Jay Hebert, the 41-year-old veteran from Lafayette, La., leading at 67. ^erry is one stroke ahead of Nicklaus, two in front of Palmer, three better than Casper and four in front of Player—not bad for a rookie.
Dave Stockton, Dewitt
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‘These kids have no fear whatever,” Uonel Hebert, veteran of 19 years on the tour. “They just tee that ball up and blast away. ’They are really tough.”
“It’s not like when I was breaking in,” said Gardner Dickinson, the Ben Hogan prototype whose been on the circuit since 1952 and who is tied with Heard at 68 in the first round. THEY WAITED ‘"These guys don’t even introduce themselves. We always introduced ourselves and then we’d wait around on one foot waiting for Sam Snead or Ben Hogan to say we could play.'
In the 68 bracket with Heard and Dickinson were Larry Mow-
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' A
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 198»
San Diego 5 Makes Grade for Playoffs
G—8
By the Associated Press The San Diego Rockets are the National Baskethall Association playoffs.
They clinched fourth place in the Western Division hy whipping the Atlanta Hawks 115-97 Thursday night for their fifth straight victory.
ONETOOMANY
ISTOOMANY
i
San Diego now has a 36-43 won-lost record. Even if the Rockets should lose their last three regular season games,! they still will finish ahead of j fifth-place Chicago.	j
Miami scored a 116-108 victo-l ry over Dallas in the American! I Basketball Association. Only! one game was scheduled Thursday in both the NBA and ABA. I
.. i
COHO RUNNING —A fisherman’s silhouette framed by craggy, melting ice means coho salmon are on an early spring run in Lake Michigan. Mild weather has drawn many
anglers to the St. Joseph-Benton Harbor area. Fishermen in boats score more consistently, but this fellow made a catch fishing from the pier.
Elvin Hayes sparked San Die-| go with 24 points. Cou Hudson led Atlanta with 23, 19 in the third quarter for a San Diego Sports Arena record.
Donnie Freeman, with 22 points, led Miami over Dallas as the Floridians withstood a late Dallas rally. Ron Boone topped the Chaps with 26.	i
Wants to Argue With Ump
ABA Standings
Eatttrn Division
Won Lost Pet. Behinfl
Lippy After 'More Lip Rule'
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35	.507	18
By The Associated Press It’s the eighth inning. The Chicago Cubs, trailing by a run, have the bases loaded and two out. The batter, on a full count, is called out on strikes on a borderline pitch.
Should Manager Leo Duro-cher let the umpire have
protest a ball or strike call. l:do their talking Thursday- Ran-'inning on singles by Walt Hri-think it has taken a lot of color jdy Hundley, Ernie Banks and niak and Mike Lum and a out of the game,” Durocher saidjJim Dunegan homered in a 9-2 throwing error and pushd Thursday. "And that’s what Mr. | exhibition rout of the Oakland across another run to edge the Kuhn is looking for, suggestions Athletics.	Royals 5-3.
to add more color and speed up	*	*	*	j Tonunie Sisk, Luke Walker
the game. „	Philadelphia edged St. Louis and rookie Denny Riddlebergerj
PARTIALLY AGREED	fourth in-1 combined to pitch an eight-hit-
•<T	i* ___M "'"8- highlighted by Richie Al-ter as Pittsburgh blanked Cin-
nf	® Ipn’s grand slam. Rookie Ron cinnati 5-0. Andy Messersmith;
of ‘he PhUs smacked a HovI Wilhelm and Pedro Borbrn should he hold his tongue and rule. I know the commissioner	scattered six hits in raiifnmia
wait for a key situation in the agreed that at least you should	homer.	fi
ninth inning?	be able to holler from the bench STOMACH ACHE	_______________•
If Durocher has his way,, once in a while.	Later in the day, St. Louis
when to chew out an umpire! "Last week I talked with Mr. Manager Red Schoendienst was^ may become an important parti Kuhn about this, and he agrees i hospitalized in S,t. Petersburg, ojp managerial strategy, like'that it would be a good idea to!severe stomach changing pitchers or sending upjlel a manager protest a calledjP*''!*''’- Schoendienst was to re-» pinch hitter. And Lippy Leo ball or strike — not. repeatedly,	Ihe hospital overnight
thinks Commissioner Bowie!but maybe a couple or threeobservation.
Kuhn may be on his side. | times a game without getting!	★	★	★
"Since they put in this rule a I thrown out. ”	j Carl Yastrzemski had a triple.
Miami 116, Da Has 108 Oniy game scheduled.
Today's Camti
New Orleans al New York Minnesota at Kentucky Miami at Oakiand Oniy games scheduied.
Saturday's Games
Houston at Oakland New Orleans a^ Minnesota
NBA Standings
Yank Hockey Team Loses Fourth Game
I Left ect. Behind
55	27	.658
Western Division
53	27	.663	—
-J—- —V I—..............--------—	I can Iasu/.CIII9IV1 iiau d iiTjjic,| STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)
years ago that you cant Durocher’s Cubs let their bats.two singles and a walk in Bos- - The US. amateur ice hockev
....................5.4 triumph over Detroit, team faced a dismal prospect
,	Dick McAuliffe Norm Cash today, with four defeats in four
(Jtrl N tariy-ninl	^Ihomered for the Tigers.
33	47	.413	20
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games a'rr'ady and a key de-San Francisco used home	unlikely to play
runs by Willie Mcf'ovev and again in the world champion-Ron Hunt and four San Diego ships.
errors that let m fiv un-arned Bob Paradise, of the Rwhes-runs to defeat the Padres 8-5. ter Mustangs Club in Minnesota, *	*	*	has hurt the tendons of his left
The New Vnr'- ''ankees won wrist, their sixth straight for a 10-3 ex-	*	*	★
hiHiiir-n record hi' downine Coach John Mayasich, more Minnesota 4-2 as Bobby Cox worried than ever after Thurs-arov" in two - nc and rookie day night’s 5-0 defeat by a Bill Burhach hurled five score- ragged Canadian team, said, "I i"Ss innings.	don’t know when Paradise canl
The Hoii.ston Astros unloaded playi again, pr whether he will! n hits and beat Montr''al 10-7. play at all In these champion-i Atlanta broke a tie in the 10th ships.”	|
7	p The 35-year-old coach, who is!
'general manager of the Green; Ed s Horse Invited Bay Bobcats club, stepped in fqrj Paradise against Canada.
YONKERS, N.y. (AP) -j	★	*	*
Twinkle Hanover, a 6-year-old' The Americans now have! New Zealand-bred gelding i played four of their five oppo-
irlnrlutl at Cleval.

Phlladalphla at Baltimc
Seattia al Cincinnati
..... San biago
New York at San Francisco Only games scheduled.
it Boston, afternoon
Atlanta at San Diego Chicago at Detroit, afternoon Only games scheduled.
U.S. Teams Tied for 1st
owned by television star Ed Sul-jnents once, with only Finland to livan, was invited today to com- come. The Finns, too, have lost pete in the $50,000 International all their games thus far, and the Pace at Yonkers Raceway on Americans’ big hope is to win June 5.	against Finland Saturday.
PERTH, Scotland (AP) -Bud Somerville skipped the! United States to a 1210 victory | over defending champion Calgary in the fifth round of thej World Curling Championship' Thursday. The Americans are' tied for first place with Canada and Scotland with 4-1 won-lost records.	!

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Vyilliam J. Borland
A resident of Drayton Plaint, "Bill" Borland is a graduate of General Motors Institute and a firm believer of safe driving and pleasant motoring. "Bill" is proud of his staff of factory trained mechanics who do all types of work from Front Wheel Alignment to a complete overhaul of motor and transmission. Quality workmanship plus factory ports assures you of complete satisfaction.
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c-^
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 21, 1969
By Tht AukIOMI frctt TBursBav't ftnultt Phll»(l*lphi» », St. Louis 1 New York, A, 4, Minnesota t Aiienle S. Kansas City 3, to inning Houston to, Montreal ;
Pittstxirph 5, Cincinnati 0 Boston S', Detroit a '
Chicago. N. 4, Oakland j .sen Francisco S, San Diego 5 California 4. Cleveland I Only games scheduted.

LOS Angeles Lauderdale. FI New York, I
^Chicago, N, i San Diego vs
Boston vs. Chicago, A. at Sarasota, Fla. Calltornia vs. Cleveland at Palm Springs, Calif.
B-Clevelamt vs. Seattle at Tempe, Arli
New York, N, vs. Chl< ta, Fla.
Philadelphia vs. Bosi Pittsburgh
Chicago, N. vs. San Diego vs. C ' San Francisco Springs, Calif.
New York, A, I
^«:''c,t^y'‘vs.
Chain Saws at
READY TO GO — This trio is hoping to battle the men’s teams in the Florida International 12-hour endurance race at Sebring, Fla,, tomorrow. Awaiting their turn for a practice drive on the track are Liane Enge-
Air Foils Removed
man of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, seated at the wheel of the Austin Healey, along with codrivers Janet Guthrie (left) of Great Neck, N. Y,, and Donna Mae Mims of Pittsburgh,
Nothing as Yet Resolved on AFL-NFl Realignment
-----------------^
Porsche Favored at Sebring
SEBRING, Fla. (AP) — Alr,the track record by almost fouriimum of three liters for sports foils are the in thing in interna-; miles an hour as qualification I prototypes—first of a kind ex-Honal road racing, but favored i began. ,	perimental cars—the fastest lap
PALM SPRINGS, CaUf. (AP)
•T|ie Joint meeting of th^ National and American Football League labored into its fifth day today with no sign of agreement in sight over the compounded probiem of realigning for the 1970 season.
Emerging from a series of meetings, both joint and by the individual leagues, which lasted well into the ni^t, ^[^ommissitm-er Pete Rozelle said nothing definite had been resolved Thursday.
In fact, said Rozelle, he was ^ot optimistic that the problems would be settled today.
“It Ls not impossible but—,” the commissioner said as the day\^ong negotiations were re-Bumetl.
There then posed the prospect that the thing will be taken up iat a spring meeting in New I York in May. Communications ;by committees vdiich would I have to be named would be set tup in the Interim, Rozelle said.
I Boiled down, the issues as far as public interest go, are: in the 11970 merger of the ex-warring 'leagues, will the old NFL remain a separate identity of 16
AFL keep its KWeam image; or| will there be total realignmoitl of the 26 teams:
The NFL, Rozelle confirmed,! still stands on its demand for] the 16-10 alignment—with no de-i viatiims from its ranks, and any, expansion teams, as projected | in the futpre, to go to the! younger AFL,
AFL owners, it became known are unified more than ever in calling for complete amalgamation, and offered a plan to the NFL that would create four new; divisions in the over-all league,] two with seVen teams and two with six teams.
The NFL, Rozelle said, rejected the plan. Owners in the NFL, it was learned, prefer numerical groupings of four or five teams now in the four divisions.
So the closed sessions contin-e. Rozelle said the joint and separate league meetings have been lively, even noisy at times, but not acrimonious.
I teams and the relatively new
Saw Sarvict
1MI laMlwin -> 1IMM2
Porsche removed the wing-like, uNOFnCIAL TIMES
devices from its brand new open ,, ,	, .	.....
cockpit cars %r only a couple!. Veteran drivers Gerhard Mit-
hours practlc^for Saturday’s r‘«''^do ^hutz of Germany
Sebring 12-hour endurance race. I	^
“On this bumpy track, the airi^J? “ds or 1 5.009 m.ph. foils were making the cars vi-!Th«but in^ brate too much,” said Rico	''kely Satur-
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was 110.759 by Scooter Patrick in a Lola-Chevroiet.
Lola, surprise winner of the 24 hours of Daytona in February, was only a couple seconds slower than the Mitter-Schutz Porsche and another of the Ger-„n,u	man factory models driven by
Steineman, manager of the Ger-	. , ,	.	, . Jo Siffert of Switzerland and won a title in the National Jun-i
man team whose long-time re- The official lap record, set by putation for reliability has beenil^*ke Spence in 1967, in a high tarnished in recent races. i	Ghaparral-Chevrolet, is
Champ Is Ousted in JC Tournament
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HUTCHINSON, Kan. OR - A surprising victory by Carthage, III., over defending champion San Jacinto, Tex., leaves fouri semifinalists who never have
To his surprise, the cars were a full second a lap faster without the atr foils and, to no one’s surprise, the fastest of all Thursday.
One of the four Spyder open eockpit models making their racing debut for Porsche beat
111.032 m.p.h. Last year, when ' power limits were cut to a max-
Weafher Enters as Factor in Ski Cup Event
Wild Hurling MSU9
Ti, driven by Mario Andretti of j Nazareth, Pa., and Chris Amon !of New Zealand was only 'bnth fastest, but its 113.815 WATKRVILLE V A L L E Y. P b was easily competitive.
N H. (AP) - It was no surprise Drivers had all of today to im------	prove their qualifying times and
earn a spot closer to the front for the race starting at 11 a.m. EST, Saturday.
Brian Redman of England. |ior College Basketbajl Touma-The fastest Lola at 114.105	i
m.p.h. was driven by Califor-I The pairings match Paducah, nians Ed Leslie of Monterey andjKy-- with a 294 record, against Lothar Motscenbacher of Bever-|Burlington, Iowa, 29-6, at 7:30' ly Hills. It is one of movie star io’clock, CST, tonight, and Car-1 Jim Garner’s entries.	thage, 39-5, vs. Pittsburgh, Pa.,
NEW FERIURI	j	'upset S» J«Mo
A brand new 12-cyliner Ferra-7^73 Thursday night on Rhea
that Austria’s Karl Schranz was II I Bi/*II A fnvored to win today’s giant sla-I I Q lorn race, but it would have pIjU 7 been quite surprising if the '	races had been run in good
weather.
MIAMI. Fla. (AP)- Wild	^.S. Weather Bureau
pitching by University of Cin-	rain Wednesday night,
cinnati hurlers, who gave up 12i;:h„„^„„ Th..r«H«v tn he«w bases, on balls, helped Michigan Stale University come from be-
hind for a 9-7 victory Thursday in the Miami Collegiate Invitational Baseball Tournament.
Walks were involved in seven -of the Spartans runs.
changing Thursday to heavy snow, which was expected to soften and slow down Mount Teeumseh’s Bobby Run for the North American Alpine Skiing Championships.
The three days of racing are the finale of the World Cup ser-
'Rocky' Colvin Joins Saints
Taylor’s long shot that was in the air when the final buzzer sounded. San Jacinto had just tied the score at 73-all with 45 seconds left.
Pittsburgh, the nation’s only undefeated judo team, needed an overtime to get past Vincennes, Ind., 77-76. Pittsburgh’s Joe Butler hit two free throws with 21 seconds left to force the, overtime at 68-68. Perry Johnson got 36 points for Pittsburgh.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The New Orleans Saints of the National Football League today announced the signing of free agent Jim “Rocky” Colvin, an eight-year veteran defensive tackle.
In the, women’s races Thurs-i The 250-pound, 6-foot-3 Colvin, day Berni Rauter of Austria i who attended the University of
Third baseman Joe Gavel drove in two MSU runs in the
U1 nusuiainiiu aiiciiucu uic uiuvcioiiy ui
lof*	™	Lil” Ibcr first giant slalom race Houston, previously played for
‘bc scason, defeating Amerl- Baltimore, Dallas, Minnesota ning run across ta the ®>Rhth cans Marilyn Cochran and Kar- and New York in the NFL. He with a long sacrifice fly to cen-|^„	^ second. I did not^ay last
Dick Bouldin (0-1). who wasi tagged with the lo.ss. relieved the Bearcats’ Gary Thompson in the seventh and proceeded to walk home two men who had been let on by Thompson.
Michigan State, 2-2, plays Army today.
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Tfay PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 21, 1969
H
C——S.
in Local MU Event
Olympic Gold Medalist Sharon Wichman of Ft. Wayne, Inti., will be among the stars on hand for die Regi<Mi 6 AAU swimming and diving championships which opraed this morning at 0 a K1 a University.
Migs Wichman won the SOd-i Another Olympian on hand is meter breaststroke at Mexico'Sue Shields of Louisville, Ky., City last fall and placed third1o|who was third in the 100-meter gain a Bronze Medal in the 100-; butterfly at Mexico C i t y Another is Terri Adda of Indianapolis, Ind., a member of
Derby Car Exposition
yard breaststroke.
THREE DAYS The Olyinpic champion
among 400 swimmers and divers competing in the three-day event. Competition opened today at 10 a.m. Starting time is 10 a.m, tomorrow and 9 a.mv Sunday>.
the U.S. team.
Competition for both men and
on Schedule
A Soap Box Derby Exposition
S	COLISEUM
TATE FAIRGROUNDS
WOODWARD at 8 MILE V
Men's PrWe Cindy C. Pointer Internal Revenue ~-||y Double:.0-S) Paid $21.20 SiOOO Claiming Trot; 1 Mile: Ada's Darling	5.00 ;
leau Council
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Whisbv Ernest Perlecta: 14-3) Paid Sti.OO 7th-t220« Cond. Trot; 1 Milt ^ohlman Hanover	11.|
Top Notch Pick
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IHI^ISSd Clalmlng Poet; 1 h Janice M. Grattan	5.00 3.20 2.40
earborn's Hal	.........
Ickory Gamaun Perftcta; (2-4) Paid S203.20 Attandanca 3,471; total handl
tst-S)70O cond. Trot; 1
Adon]s_Dream High Lloyd Count Ten Josedalo Treasure
Affair
3INS-41300 Claiming Pact; I ......
The /Vlander	Go's Fire
Daring Dan	Pelrina
Empire Express Christine Abbe ^ _ Banana Royal 3rd_si000 Cond. Poce; 1 Milo;
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At OU, Miss Wichman will swim die 100-yard breaststroke preliminaries tomorrow morning and the prelims of the 20b-yard event Sunday morning.
Among the other competitors^ on tap lor July at the Pontiac are Michigan high school Class Mall.
A champions Larry Driver of! The exposition is the joint Birmingham'Groves, Greg Penn project of th® Oakland County womeh is slated in 34 swimming 1 Trenton and John Sherk of Parks and Recreation and diving events in the ou	Cornmission and Chevrolet
pool which is located in the | SETS RECORD	rfli	Michigan along with
i Sports and Recreation Building. I Driver set the record of 1:00.8 t^^and	Ewnty J a y c e e
I in taking the 1 0 0 - y a r d	f"'* the Michig^
R e c r e a 11 o n and Parks
Horse Racing
Wolverine Results
1 breaststroke last week at East .	• ;•
Lansing. Penn will c6mpete i„ Association, the 100-yard backstroke (: 55.9), The event is a state-wide while Sherk is slated for action invitational for boys who have in the 200 (1:48.0) and 500-yard built Soap ^ox Derby racers. 11(5:48.0) freestyle events.	All who have entered a
Chevrolet-franchised Derby are ! On today’s schedule werfe thejinvited to place their racers on , iio also I preliminaries in 100-yard display July 7-12 at the Pontiac ;o;	1	Milo:	butterfly, 500	freestvle,	100	Mall.
ijo	2>l|pii!k“Rosa5.M allo backstToke, 200	individual	At stake in the competition
Pico; I Milo:	medley and 400 medley relay..:will be a paid scholarship worth
Loo lw 2.60ichwk“'cou“i"n	” ™	i Ope-mcter diving for men and $3,000, which is offered by the
(3-4) poid S52 70	3«» three-meter divinp for womeniLawrence Institute
----------■ ....-:	iwere slated for 3 this afternoon. | Technology in Southfield.
iiio Finals in the swim events are * set for 7:30 this evening.
3:40	SATURDAY SCHEDULE
' “	«£!!;SS)'-fe2idM8',J.dT.co‘?^i”Mii.:	. Preliminaries	open at 10	a.m.
Gary's Jo Anne	11.80 4.50 2.90 tomorrow in the 200 butterflv,
ouk'e''Mack"*'^	aio 100 breaststroke, 200 freestyle,
••fert’eSintJ;""'"* '’*“'i5.6q“6.30 4.40 400 individual medley and 800 , 45 ^5 f^gggfyjg relay. Men’s
3.80 3.20 Cui
3.001 QUINELLA;
i4th-S10,000 Inv., . Robbie North 3.80 Forty Nlner
Wolverine Entries
FRIDAY'S ENTRIES
Jay Express
Nalheless ■ Trot; 1 Milo:
Forward Al Darn Wary Sulky Boy ^yptlan Crusader
. , . Egyptian Crusader 41^1700 Claiming Paco; 1 Milt: ,Chub Volo	Bug Eye
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Windsor Results
THURSDAY RESULTS ... .—J Claiming Pact; I M OH-Yankee Luck	24.70 17.40 11.20
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Carl Brawer Talks About Comaback
diving are at 3 p.m. Finals in exposition. The county Jaycees the swim events open at 7:30 will feature Junior Miss talent shows each night.
DETROIT (AP) - Sid Abel, general manager of the Detroit Red Wings, said Thursday former National Hockey League all star defenseman Carl Brew-las discussed the possibility of a comeback.”
Abel said he talked with Brewer within the last few days but emphasized the ex-Toronto Maple Leaf star said ilothing definite about returning to the NHL to play with Detroit.
The Wings acquired the rights’ to negotiate with Brewer March of last year in the trade that brought Frank Mahovlich, Garry Unger and Pete Stemkow-ski to Detroit in exchange for Norm Ullman, Paul Henderson and Floyd Smith.
The 1650 freestyle, 100 freestvle, 200 backstroke, breaststroke and 400 freestyle relay are on the Sunday sched-' ule. Preliminaries are at 9 a.m. and finals at 5:30.
CHAMP HERE
Gerry Lacey, a s s i s t a n director of Oakland Parks and Recreation, said the week-long event would feature an appearance by Branch Lew, 1969 soap box derby champion.
Lacey said he expects some 150 to 200 cars for the
Light-Heavy Has Tuneup
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Ir all swimming events, men heavyweight champion Bo hi will compete first in	a|Foster returns to the ring next'
particular event and the|week in a tuneup test to I women’s competition williprepare him for a future title' follow.	defense.
I Foster agreed, Thursday to meet Eddie Vick in a four-round lexhibition March 28 at Indianapolis. Vick knocked I Foster to the canvas when they meet last year but the champion came back to stop IVick. Foster hopes to make a title defense early this summer.
Mat Tourney at Fairgroundsi
The fourth annual invitational Greco-Roman Wrestling Tournament, is slated for 1 p.m. in the White Rail on the Michigan State Fairgrounds Saturday.
I Some 75 to 100 wrestlers are I expected from the New York Athletic Club, Chicap and j Minnesota mat clubs along with many from state colleges and high schools. The Michigan I Wrestling Club is defending LONDON (UPI) — Charles champion.
W. Englehard, an American ■ Among the wrestlers on hand industrialist who has built up alivill be two 1969 state Class A formidable racing empire in high school champions — Roger recent years, has been elected:Duty (154) of Royal Oak an honorary member of the'Dondero and Bill Davids (103) British Jockey Club.	of Hazel Park.
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Saginaw FE 2-

C—6
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 21; 1969
By JERE CRAIG A new regime has been reorganizing the scene at Wonderland I^anes since December and now the Hochstein family is ready to tackle the spring and summer season as well as lay the groundwork for next
Frank Hochstein Sr. and Jr., plus Richard Hochstein are the new owners with the two Franks running the operation at the 24-lane establishment onj Richardson Road not far I
from Walled Lake. |of work putting the place In the Richard continues tojshape they wanted, manage the family’s 18- “The machinery is running
lane Dearborn Lanes.	« ^jeaner
.................. land the scores are goin’ up,'
Weve been in the bowling;the younger Frank noted, business since 1949 and wanted "Everybody has been scoring to buy another place,” Frank better In the la.st month.
Jr. explained.	| "All the people seem so nice
"This looked like the best one business Is good.” Of; business opportunity. It course everything Isn’t perfect.
Wonderland just prior to Ghrlstmas. They have had a lot
Lakers Make New Bid for State Crown
(Continued from Page C-l> | TTiere were some other neaf On Waldo’s desk when he misses for the Presidents. Ibey arrived this morning at the were in the quarter-finals again
•Ttn gjad they didn't pulls'* Devaney, now lootbnll candles on it, we’d all get co«ch at	Nebraska,	the
burned.”	j	Presidents	moved to	the
In Class C, Saginaw Stephen duels Houghton, while Grosse Pointe St. Paul is paired
f
semifinals in 1945 and again
Fight Rescheduled
under Charlie Guinnip in 1948 before losing.
HOUSTON (AP) - The Joe Frazier-Dave Zyglewicz heavyweight bout scheduled for Ap^ WALDO ASHLEY	was rescheduled Thursday for
Former Keego Hirbor Coach	Promoter Earl Gilliam
announced.
with White Pigemt.	{Class D tilts, while Webbervllle
Marquette Bishop B a r a g a takes on Detroit SL Martin in meets Frankfort in one of thel the other.
Sifford Seeks Ryder Berth
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI) -Charles Sifford, first Negro "	"	"	golfer to win a major
In the Class A semifinals tournament on the pro tour, is today. Grand Rapids Ottawa in the running to become the Hills meets Mumford while No. *>rst member of his race to play 1 ranked Ypsilanti takes, on/" the Ryder Cup matehes. Detroit Nwtheastem.	'	*	*
One Pin Is Short of ABC Top Ten
- Rog-
MADISON, Wis. (AP) ei WIemer was a pin short of making it among the top 10 in the regular all^vents standings of the American Bowling Congress tournament Thursday.
Wiemer, of La Crosse, Wis.
Defending Champ Out of Portsmouth Tourney
PORTSMOUTH, Va. (AP) ^ The defending champion bowed out as Don McCune led six other members of the Professional Bowlers Association’s top 20 money winners into Friday’s
seems like people'are moving‘We have one big headache, buti!*®^,	head-to-head matches of the
onr this wav	'we’re eonfirient of ootiina itigyrac^e N Y^ ^	$45,000 Portsmouth PBA Open
However, he contributed a 671
out this way.”	we’re confident of getting it>
So the Hochsteins took over at straightened out,” he added.
F’rank, Jr., his wife Carolyn
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and their two sons Danny, 5, and Joey, 9, live in Dearborn Heights but they have just put a down payment on a house In i Oakland County and will be ! moving closer to the business.
! "I think Dad will be moving, too.” he said. Frank, Jr,, is the only serious bowler in the family. He has severs
series to the 1,259 total with which he and Bill Zierke of La Crosse took over ninth place in the regulr doubles standings.
Thursday night.
McCune, from Munster, Ind., blasted out a 1,373 six-game block to take a 92-pin lead after four rounds. ^
The 128-bowler field was trimmed to 16 and last year’s Portsmouth Open champion, Don Johnson of Kokomo, Ind., fell 10 pins shy of surviving the filial cut.	,
McCune totaled 5,187 for 24 games.
Sifford’s hopes of a Ryder Cup berth were improved considerably Thursday by a decision of the Professional Golfers Association to raise his Ryder Cup points from 35 to 70 for the Los Angeles Open victory. It boosted Sifford brpin 17th to 10th place in the current Ryder Cup point standing.
Mike McGrath of El Cerrito, Calif.’, was second with 5,095. McCune rode a 289 game into le lead, which had been held by Bud Horn of Los Angeles after 18 games.
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A heavy turnover In the two-man competition has marked the past two outings weekend of the 27th annual State Eagles Bowling Tournament at Savoy Lanes.
Former leaders Lou Knight and Reuben Mars of the Motor City 2265 Aerie tumbled to fifth
place during the past two weekends.
Muskegon’s Art Grover and Marty Hughes assumed the top spot by posting a 1349 last Sun-
NHl Standings
M 24 I 14 211 110
L(KjAL LEADER
irm Montville, although slipping to third place in the all events, continued to give Waterford the singles leader with his 706 and Jim Lafnear of the local 2887 Aerie stands second.
Pontiac’s Ed Boetcher, Aerie 2287, grabbed fourth place with his 687 handicap singles total.
FRANK HOCHSTEIN JR,
101 Anpol Phllidef^
sanctioned 700 series,	with
personal highs of 279 and 757.
"I carry about	a	19 0
average,” he reveals, "but in our Monday night Masters have a 207 now, I think.”
The Hochsteins expect promote afternoon leagues next fall, although there possibility cf some	evening
openings.
The only philosophy I have
rpiit
p’m'sburBh	.. .
ThurtMv'i Rnlilti Montrtal J, PIIKMiroS 3
IS 4S 10 40 166 242
Philadelphia 5, Minnesota 2 Los Angtlai 4/ Dttroll 2 Only gamtl Khedultd.
Today'! Oamai
New York at Montreal Detroll at Toronto Bolton at Chicago Phlladalphia at Mlnnaiota. PIttiburgh at St. Loull Oakland at Loi Angela!
Will Doctor Expos
MONTREAL (AP) - Dr.
about bowling is I think it’s a | Robert Brodrick of Montreal sociable sport. You get out and {Thursday was appointed the meet new people as well as; team doctor for the Montreal your friends who you might not Expos of the National League, otherwise see If you didn’t get!League.
out at least once a week,”! ------------------------------
stales Frank Jr.	i	Th«,!d.y'! P.,ht!
If the Hochsteins can transmit TOKyo^L"K,,»ra.72*,VV Japan.
---- . . ---- Baico, 120'/^, Philip.
this approach into establishment’s atmosphere, bowling In their section of the North Oakland County Association area is bound to benefit.
All men interested in the proposed 16-teara, 8 0 - m a n Monday night travelling classic league next season are requested to meet at 1:30 p.m. Sunday at Huron Bowl.
Organizer Fran Bertram will outline the current status of the plans and hopes to establish the league’s basic founddtion at the
(sphere, f»«*h|ryMiijg^uHj.
West Side Lanes’ Jerry Pema :pprts that next year' Amyican Bowling Congress Tournament at Knoxville Tenn., already is limiting its weekend reservations to the final Saturday and Sunday.
AHan* Bymas
Cate" Wolfe
Total 583
Total 670
HURON BOWL
2626 Elizabeth Lk. Rd.
FE 5-2525
:S — Htdgemon LtwU, C«ll(., knocked out Miguel Hernandei. 141, Monterrey, Mexico. T.v PORTLAND, Maine - Leo Olllore.
5r»k'"TSnoS{;y'-'¥l,*..,'''?SJ:
Peaks. Istanf, Maine, outpointed Gant Roberts. I53. Portland. 10.
MCSOtaes Mar 31
NCAA*ClulnSpl«nVhlP! ^
Purdue *2, North CerSTlne . UCLA IS, Drake 12
Boeton Conege 73. Army It Temple 13. Tcnnenee M
For the first time in the tour’, history, the third-round leader failed to qualify for the match play. Horn finished 17th.
The top five after Friday’s 16 matches advance into Saturday’s nationally televised finals.
The 16 finalist! (24 gimt totals):
1.	Don McCuna. Munster, Ind., S,)I7.
2.	Mika McGrath. El Carrito, Calif.
Motor City’s E. S. Electric retains its team lead at 3073 although Muskegon and Mount Clemens entries took over the fourth and fifth places. Mitch Deeb of Detroit is still leading all events.
The tourney will last until earlv May at Savoy.
STATE EAGLES MEN'S BOWLING Handicap Team Standlnss Team	Town	To
1.	E. S.	Elacfrlc, Oalroll	W
2.	Shield	Aluminum, Dttroll	31
3.	Motor	City Makeups, Detroit	31
--------------- ...„|,mn	21
IM. Clamant 21
PALM BEACH GARDEN, Fla. (AP) — Gene Littler tops the money-winners on the golf tour with $52,428 through the Monsanto C)pen, the PGA announced today. Miller Barber is second with $52,380 and Jack Nickiaus third With $46,238.
.rgman Rooiing, nr I. Clamant Esgltt,
HtndIctp Sinalet .. .,,rm Monlvllle. Wsisriord
2.	Jim Lafnoar, Walsrford
3.	Kenny Daran, Mutktgon
4.	Ed Boatchar, Pontiac
5.	Oant Btrgtrip, Walsrford
D. Holt. Detroit'
3. John McDonOuph,
Lou^nlgf
I. Lao Koanlo, East Datrolt
2. Nicholas Kramar, Hamiramck
Ron Endrast, Travtrtt CHy 2. Rill Rapkt.
Ed Davit, Hani Park

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THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 21, 1969

Tehnessee College Building Burned; Strike Ends at SF State
% ^
By the Associated Press
A two-story ,acience building at Lane GoU^e in Jackson, Tenn. was destroyed by a fire believed to be arson, and violence hit widely scattered high s<^ooIs. But the longest student strUre in the natim ended at FVancisco State Ck>llege.
The presidrat of predominantly Negro Lane College, Dr. C. A. Kirkendoll, said, “I personally believe it was arron.” Lane reopened eight days ago after a lO^y shutdown due to a student boycott, extensive vandal-. ism and other fires of a suspicious nature.
★ ★ *
Kirkendoll said he thought the fire was "triggered” at a campus meeting called by the Black Liberation Front.
At San Francisco State, the
Black Students Union ended alchemical Mace to std)due pro-4V^:jnonth strike during udddr testers. A television cameraman there were fire bombings and r *« «”’«*ted add charged with
about
negotiated with schrol Presidmt 200 students threw rocks .at a »	j f be Junior high school to protest the
would announce details today. ETHNIC STUDIES Ihe .settlement called for school of ethnic studies and
been active in dvll rights wcn-k. NO EXPLANATION The Rev. J. F. Cooley, who
creased enrollment of minority taught seventh grade, was fired group students.	iby tee school board Wednesday
Officials at Denver West High vdteout explanation. He had or-
School said a teacher who was termed a “racist” by students would be transferred at his request, in tee wake of.w rpck-terowing melee teat led to more than 20 arrests- and three teju-
gadzed demonstrations at grocery, store opposite the all-Negro school to protest a limit oh the number of studrats po:-mitted in the store at one time.
The high school and two junior high schools In Piscateway, Bloom Township High School hi N.J. remain closed today, but a Chicago suburb remained Police waded into a crowd of eight elementary schools will closed after .disorders Wednes-about 300 students and usedireopen. .	day.
All 11 Sdhools were closed after. scattered fist-fighting between white and Negro Students began. About 10 per cent of the 1,400 8tud«its are Negro.
A student demand for African history courses had been approved, a sdiool official said, and other demands would be negotiated.
The high school and junior high school in New Brunswick, N.J., remain closed after students battled Thursday.
Police arrested 11 students at Harper High School on Chicago’s Squte Side after fightteg between whites and Negroes spread outside tee building.
At other sdiools:
• Buffalo, N.Y.-Students at le State University at Buffalo planned to cixifrcmt Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller today at a campus ceremony, to press de: mands teat led them to seize the administration building for 16 hours Wednesday.
The State University Construction Fund ordered a halt in construction at tee nearby Amherst campus, after protesters h a-r g e d that' constructi<»i unions at the site employed no Negroes.
★ ★ *
The demonstrators also seek
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an end to defenseK»)nnected research and the Reserve Officers Training Cwps on campus.
•	Houston, Tex.—Mark Rudd, a leader of last spring’s protests at Columbia University in New York, defied an administration ban and spoke at the University of Houston without incident.
University officials said steps had been taken to withdraw campus recognition of Students for a Democratic Society, which sponsored tee speech.
•	Chicago—Two students and a campus guard were injured in a cafeteria brawl at Chicago State College, which canceled
classes. ’The school has been troubled.for more than six months. Negro students seek tee resignation of President Mil-ton Byrd, a white.
Albuquerque, N.M. — City officials held up final approval of a contract to make tee Civic Auditorium available for the national SDS convention.
SDS has court action pending against tee University of Texas, which barred the conventiem
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• Newark, N.J. - Students at Essex Community College threatened w class b^cott and vdwed to prevent Dean George Barton, whom they charge with “racism,” from entering his office.
iiester, N.Y. — Mrss Martin Luther King Jr. has been asked to become one of 11 trustees at Colgate Rochester Divinity School, where Negro students ended an 18-day sit-in.
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GLENWOOD PLAZA North Perry at Gienwood

/

THE PON I I AC PRESS. FRIDAY, MARCH 21j 1969
,’k
Bridge Tricks^ From Jacobys
NORTH AAJ932 VAJS4
♦	973 4^4
TnEST	EAST
'AS	A*
V10987	¥Q3
♦ K1082	♦JOSi
4bQ963	«KJ1087S
soimi (D)
4kKQ10876
VK62
♦	AQ
♦	A2
Both Tuliimbls W«tt North Eut
Pas	3 4	Pass	4N.T.
Pass	5V	Pass	5N.T.
Pass	6 A	Pass	6 4
Pass	Pass	Pass
Opening lead—V 10
By OSWALD &
JAMES JACX)BY
“Well, partner!” growled North, “you just about won first prize for throwing the dummy.
“What do you mean?” replied I South. “I knowl I could have made my contract by stripping my hand, running all my trumps and throwing West in with his last heart to make him lead a diamond up to my ace-queen.
But that play would fail if hearts were to divide 3-3 or if West should happen to unguard his king of diamonds. My play was much better. It would work against a 3-3 heart break or if the diamond finesse was on for me."
★ ★ *
“Not that at all,” said North. “1 was referring to your play of the jack of hearts at trick one."
“How was I to know that
| ja-Yeor-Q/d Gefs I Award for Service
GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -A j:-; I youth inistrumental in the for-nation of an intra-city student council for Grand Rapids high 'school students Thur^ay was ■■' i named recipient of the annuai
East held the double toniqueen, there would ^!ave beeni^^y queen?” said South.	ho way to develop three heartl^JTl^/^^?;-
South’s nlav at trick one was L • i t. * n. js - j-	Larry Donston^ 18, a Student
u A	au ' ^	tricks but the diamond finesse Lt Ottawa Hilk Hich School
as bad as North thought it was.	. p' uuawa m is mgn ^)cnool,
At slam contract you play as'^^ available to was the second Negro to win the safely as possible to make the I’	^^'^^rd.
slam and disregard overtricks. I You take the overtrick only if it I comes with no risk.	=
* *
South did not need to take a heart finesse. He would make his contract any lime West held the queen. He should win the first heart with his king. Then, after drawing trumps, he would cash dummy’s ace. This time the queen would drop and everything would be find.
But, if the queen did not drop,
South could come back to his hand and lead a third heart toward dummy's jack. If West held the queen, this would set up the jack for a discard of the diamond queen.
Suppose East held the queen’
If hearts were 3-3, the fourth heart would still set up. If East started with four or five to the
ROBIN MALONE
'By Bob Lubbers

Qb-The bidding has been:		
West North	East	South
		14
Pass 2¥	Pass	34
Pass 4¥	Pass	44
Pass 5 4	Pass	?
You, South, hold:		
4AK<5 V32 ♦S 4AK10864 What do you do noW?
A—Bid six or Mven____
depending on the tort of bidder your partner la. A mere five hearts would be ■ frightful underbid.
TODAYS QUESTION Instead of bidding four hearts your partner has bid four clubs over your three clubo. What do you do now?
Answer Tomorrow

Astrological Forecast
"The «rtM man cnnlrali OtMlny ... Aitrelasv palnM IM way ARIES (March D-Aprll )*): By nina. you could ba ctlatoraling with
taKen ......... .. __ _____________
being loollsh. Your ESP worke TrujI hunch.
new prolacl. Work quialjy behind thai •canal. Ba rmarvad, conaarvatlva ' making clalmi. Don't tall all you know CANCER (June Jlvtuly 21); You prodded to complata a pro act. Ba but don't taka on more than you .... handle. Accent on dailraa rather then
nece»»IWe». Strive for belan— ------------
product with univeriel appeel.
tS-Aug. 12): Soc .. .......
ght. Your aenia ol royelty ennenceo. Y— —	“-----
.
everything VIRGO (Aug. 23- Sept. 22): Accede to tequeal tonight lor co-operation In com-munlly protect. You are Impratilve. Most will believe whet you lay. Follow through — have wmethlng constructive to oUf r LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.	22):	Accent!
tonfghl It on travel. Also, thero Is emphasis on messages, correspondence,' special callt. Know this — keep com-mumcetlon lines clear. Ona at a dltlancai could gat In touch,	!
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Roullna!
on publicity SAcVtTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dac. Ouattloni from mata, partnar may oulra raMarch. Laava — ------
—CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22-Jan. 1»): Gel basic task* finithad. especially chores -laled to home, family. A ' it spolllghled. Make co you avoid tenteieu dispu...
“ AQUARIUS IJen. 20Feb. II): Be reel Islic about prices, oilers, temptations Avoid sell-decepllon, Stubborn IndIvIdusI may not bivs up easily. Your sssets -are tie oblectlve. Be poised. Guard yoursell, ei the clinchet.
PISCES (Feb. )t-March 20): Don't let up where protecting your Interests Is toncernrd. Someone wants to catch you Ut guard. Actually, Important-----------■-----
Daily
. Almanac
By United l*ress Nnicrnational Tiiday is PYiday, March 21sl, tlie 80th day of 1969 with 285 to follow.
Tile moon Is between Us new phase and first quartef.
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars knd Jupiter.
4 w ★ tills day in history:
In 1990 Thomas Jefferson of Virginia became the first U.S. secrefaiy of state in the ; Cabinet of President George i Washington.
In 1918 American and | German soldiers fought in the I key World War I BatUe of the j Sonine.
It. 1945 some 7,000 Allied planes dropped more than j 12,000 tons of bombs on i Germany in a daytime raid.
In 1962 Premier Nikita Khrushchev pledged t fa g t Russia would csoperate with America in peaceful exploration of space,
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAV. MARCH 21,: 1909
Deaths in Pontiac Area
John O. Garrett
Memorial servicfe for John 0. Garrett, 80, of 5181 Tangent, Waterford Township will be 1:30 p.m, Monday at Church of Our Savior, Birmingha Arrangements are by the Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home.
Presbyterian Church, with cremation at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, T r o *
Arrangements _________
Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford.
The boy died Wednesday, as a ninth-grader at Muir Junior High School, Milford,
,Mr. Garrett, a retiredjand was a member of Boy mechanic for National Transit Scout troop 171, Milford, and Corp., died yesterday.	Ithe Muir Junior High Glee Club.
Surviving are his wife. Surviving besides his parents Virginia; a stepson, A. C.|are three grandparents, Mrs. Monteith of Pontiac; four Burt Raumsure of Denver, grandchildren; four great-Colo., James Gay of Wyoming grandchildren; and a sister. land Samuel Curtis III of Memorial tributes be made to Florida; and two sisters Sandra the Church of Our Savior. C. and Betsy, and two brothers, Scotty C. and Stacey C., all of
LANSING (AP) - Michigan Statt University students would be denied state scholarships under a bill iptroduced in the House Thursday by Rep. Thomas Ford, R-Grand Rapids.
Ford says his proposal attempt to keep MSU of from “denying scholarship benefits from the economically needy child.”
Alex G. Kokins
home.
Alex G. Kokins, of 29 Niagara died yestei^ay. His body may be viewed after 3 p tomorrow a t S|)arks-Griffin Funeral Home.
Max E. Newman
Service for former Pontiac resident Max L. Newman, 58, of Harrison will be 1:30 p.m.
Mrs. Adolph Davis
HOLLY — Mrs. Adolph (Sylvia I.) Davis, 64, of 219 Elm died today. Her body is at Dryer Funeral Home.
The proposal stipulates that scholarships shall not be allowed for an applicant who is to use (it) at any state-supported college or university which uses the sliding scale method of determining tuition....”
Clarence E. Stewart
GROVELAND TOWNSHIP -
tomorrow at Donelson-Johns ^*^*ce for Clarence Funeral Home with burial in Stewart, 62, of 7273 Tucker will Oak Hill Cemetery.	“ 2 P ™- Monday at St. John’s
Mr. Newman, a salesman,lEpifopal^urch died Wednesday. He was a life ”mte Chapel M e m o r
member of Elks Lodge Lansing.
Surviving are his wife, Marjorie A.; a son, James E. Luke of Lansing; a daughter, Mrs. Allan Coffey of Mt. Morris; two sisters, Mrs. Henry Karwas and Mrs. Lyle Saum, both of Waterford Township; three brothers, Ward Jr., Wesley and Erwin, all of Waterford Township; and four grandchildren.
Spec. 4 Larry Strahan
Cemetery, Troy.
Prayer service will be 8 p.m. Sunday at Dryer Funeral Home, Holly.
Mr. Stewart, a retired fanner, died yesterday. He was a member of Holly Masonic Lodge 134 F&AM, Electa chapter 160 OES, Davisburg Rotary Club and chairman of the bishop’s committee at the St. John’s Episcopal Church.
Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Reah Stewart of Holly; and a brother.
Contributions may be made to
t. John’s Episcopal Church Memorail Fund.
Stephen B. Tusai
Service for Spec. 4 Larry Strahan, 19, of 92 N. Astor was to be 2 p.m. today at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home military burial in CHiristian Hills Memorial Cemetery Rochester.
Spec. 4 Strahan was killed March 11 Kcombat in Vietnam.
Surviving are his wife, Irene; a daughter, Linda J. at home; his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Homier Putnam of Pontiac; his
grandmother, ^IH/ a^American Motors Co. and was 1 H	Overlook Methodist
Lrik^urch, Woodstock, N.Y. Ibd^ S	.L«lge No. 119, ^M
(Pratsville, N.Y.; the Scottish
Legislator Hits MSU Tuition Plan
OU Art Film 'Pornographic'
Two Oakland University students have charged that a pornographic movie was shown in a classroom yesterday.
Students Daniel M. Cassidy and Judy Cross, both 18, told
Oakland County Sheriff deputies that a film was shown in the Science Building featuring nude males homosexual activities.
MSU is the only state-supported institution of higher learning in the state with such a tuition plan.
SYSTEM EXPLAINED Undfer the system, resident undergraduate students pay $184 a term tuition. If parental income is less, the student is eligible to apply for a tuition reduction based on that income. Lowest point on the scale is $123 a term.
’The student is ineligible for a fee reduction, however, if he receives scholarships and grants of $95 or more per term—re-5s of the total parental income.
An investigation revealed the movie had been viewed and cleared by' a faculty committee before the showing, aqcording sheriff’s office. The investigation continued today.
According to an OU spokesman, the film was shown as part of a fide arts festival which began Tu'esday Admission of 50 cents was charged.
A General, Motors Corp. system to increase the work force — aimed at training supervisors rather than employes — was outlined today thd annual ,Plans for Progress meeting in Washington, D.C.
Harold S. McFarland, 32: Lakewood, Bloomfield Hills assistant director of personnel relations, and Chiet Francke’of the fnanagement training department. General Motors' Institute, outlined their “New Work Force” program.
State to Open Bids for Area Road Work
Bids will be opened April 2 by the State Highway Department for two projects totaling an estimated $1.1 million Oakland County.
Construction and paving deceleration lanes and crossovers on 4.5 miles of U.S. 10—Woodward Avenue between Square Lake Road in Bloomfield Township and Oakland Avenue in Birmingham is estimated to cost $420,000. Completion is due Oct. 31.
MSU administrators set that; policy “on the basis that (the| Construction of 1.78 miles of $95) is approximately half the widening to four lahes and total fees paid by the individu-|paving of the existing roadway al,” explained Kermit Smith,'pn Walton Boulevard near assistant to the MSU provost.	lOakland University is estimated
*	*	★	to cost $720,000. Completion is
‘This method negates the fl-due Nov. 15. nancial worth of the scholar-
BIRMINGHAM - Service for Stephen B. Tusai, 47, of 941 Forest will be 3 p.m. Sunday at Manley Bailey Funeral Home, withfCremation at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, ’Troy.
Mr. ’Tusai died yesterday. He as assistant zone manager for the Detroit office of the
ship by taking money away from the needy student and absorbing it into the coffers of the university,” argued Ford. ‘FANCY BOOKKEEPING’
He charged that MSU, through “fancy bookkeeping,” has cost the taxpayers “over $1 million a year.”
Capistrano Legend Hard to Swallow
System Utilized by GM
Plqnlo Increase Workers Told
Force program are not intended
to be used in, a standardized way throughout General Motors.
“We recognize thpre is no fixed,body of knowledge about;
The stated objectives of the program, now in operation in GM plants across the country, are:
To develop better understanding on the part of GM managers of GM’s equal opportunity policies procedures and to explain the characteristics of the New Work Force and of the condition, problems, and expectations of disadvantaged groups.
To help managers build more effective programs for recruiting, hiring, training supervising and retaining members of the New Work Force.
Eight more recommendations for denying students the of the Equality of Educational privilege of attending school
14,000 PARTICIPATING
McFarland and Francke told the Plans for Progress meeting some M,000 supervisors already participating in the program with more joining every week.
The program, Francke said, points out the difference in the characteristics of those coming
cultural patterns, group
variability and the human skills necessary to deal effectively with all behavior,” McFarland said.
School Board Okay: 7'Equality' Proposals
DETROIT (AP)-Dilapidated Detroit General Hospital, which is in danger of losing accreditation. has a budget surplus of $501,000 and ' city councilmen are furiotls.
“They have need down at that hospital,” said Council President Ed Carey. “G o d knows they need all the help they can get.”
Opportunity (EEO) report were presented to the Pontiac Board Education last night by school administrators.
All were approved but one a proposal to intensify efforts to d|velop new courses or modify existing courses so they more effectively meet the needs of Pontiac students.
should be review*^ by parents >nd students, and annually by the board.
member Dr. Robert Turpin said he wanted to further study the proposal.
Assistant Supt. William J. Lacy told the board that an EEO recommendation to evaluate and expand the Individual-Instructional Program currently in operation is being implemented.
‘FUNDS NOT AVAILABLE’ Although a proposal had been submitted to establish five
He added that a continuous nservice training program is proposed for those wh administer this policy with emphasis placed on c 1 o s _ ;ooperation and communication with parents.
additional centers to serve all ol the city’s secondary schools, Lacy said that funds under the Elen)entary and Secondary
in to the New Work Force as Education Act Title VIII were opposed to traditional hirings,	available.
Among the characterisUcs of Lacy also told the board that the New Work Force are a ^^der Title I to expand greater age span, m o r e y,g	school programs
females, minority g r o u p s, gj, a^eas of the city poverty less education, differ-|jgggjjjjg ent culture and more arrestj	-k * -k
records than normal, he said.
He said that some parts of the
McFarland emphasized that ^„u,d „ot qualify for
ho manoffomont trainincr. r .	.	,	...m:&i^ t
the management t r a i n i n gLfunds under Title I materials in the New Workl^^^j^.^^ jg poverty areas.
j Two other EEO recommenda-'tions on community school pro-
happy to see his proposal killed dhurch, Woodstock, N.Y. Snd ln commlttee^lf MSU “gets off
sister, Cheri of Pontiac.
..	^	./.|i____ iRite Bodies of Boston, Mass.;
Mrs. Cosme Villegas jgjjd Aleppo Shrine of Service for former Pontiac ®ofton,^ss. He was a veteran
resident Mrs. Gosme (Frances)	War H-
Villegas, 52, of Monterrey,	are his
Mexico, was yesterday
In Frances; his
wife mother, Mrs.
Monterrey. Burial was there.
Mrs. Villegas died Tuesday.
Surviving are her husband; her mother, Mrs. Auanlta Villereal of Pontiac; five daughters; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Hernandez and Mrs. Harry Prall, both of Pontiac; and six brothers, including Nicholas Villereal and David Villereal of Waterford Township Jesse Villereal of Pontiac and Manuel Villereal Birmingham.,
Michael Tusai of Pittsburgh,
____ three daughters, Betty,
Mary Ann^nd Cynthia, and a son, Michael, ail at home.
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, Ford added that he would be Calif. (UPI) - The legend saysj the iswallows return to this historic mission on the same
Pontiac Teen Gets 'SSI'
A third recommendation be policy for denying students the privilege of attending school, called for improvement of model letters which are sent to parents.
Lacy said the letters would be modified to indicate a more personal interest in problems of the students.
Plan to Divert Hospital Fui^ Hit in Detroit
Carey, and councilman Mel Ravitz said they were dumbfounded when Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh’S financial experts suggested the surplus be given to the Department of Public Works, which is running out of operating money.
“I’m not going to be\ icused of robbing a hospital,” ^arey said.
UNUSUAL SALARIES City Controller Bernard Klein\ and Budget Director Walter Stechere said the surplus comes from unused salaries of the' short-staffed hospital. They also recommended transfer of another $350,000 from the Health Department, mostly to come from unused administrative salary money.
A quart of milk weights 2.15 pounds.
CPLOR ANIENNA
ALL CHANNELS, 2 TO 82
the sliding scale or stops that method of automatically putting a child in the highest tuition bracket” if he gets a scholarship.	**
Boys' Club Award
day each year because a kindly „ , . „	,,	.. ,	,
padre once gave them shelter	Norvell preslden of
after an irate i n n k e e p e r ^^e Ponhac Boys Club destroyed their nests.	®	®
Scientists discount t h i s Citizenship Award to 15-year-old
said. These include some programs to develop better human relations and break down racial barriers; and to include more teachers in the community school programs.
Lacy proposed that the policy
The MSU tuition plan has come In for mmch criticism from Republicans since its adoption two years ago by a Democratic majority on the MSU Board of Trustees.
,	Mack Downey, the son of Mr.
explanation of the migration,
and the Franciscan padres who g.
run the mission today don’t!
. Shirley last night at an
SprInBfWd Townrtijp' H«U,	"p™"*;
D«vHburg, “i-'-i—" «* «;«> P M '
attach any religious significance to the swallows’ return every March 19 on St. Joseph’s Day.
'awards program at the Boys’
Club.
iM chanmd from Agrlcollorol
'Creeping Ugliness' Decrie(d by Milliken
Norvell commended Mack for ihis outstanding service to both The annual arrival the Boys’ Oub and the j Wednesday of thousands of|community.
swallows was heralded Tuesday; An award also was presented !by the appearance of scout to the Pontiac Boys’ Club birds which always precede the basketball team as the area main flock.	champions.
James A. Bingham '	7	***^-^'
®	liam G. Milliken stressed con- P«vate.
PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Pray-ers will be offered for James A. Bingham, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. James Bingham of I960 Grandview, at 11 a.m, morrow at Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiac, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac.
’The infant was stillborn Wednesday.
His parents survive.
After spending a warm ' summer in the eaves and fyO. I LicenSe crevices of the Mission San
Juan Capistrano, the tiny birdsj fQ ResfOUrofeur lake flight to Central America,____
servatlon Thursday as he toldl
;	u. , u .. labout other urban problems,
Michigan architects to be con-	involving hu-
stantly alert to the creeping man relations, ugliness” of their environment. I	* w ★
“Despite all the good resolves
In an address to the Michigan Society of Architects, Milliken said“unless we make beauty as valuable as abundance in this country, shabbiness and bad; taste may overwhelm ns all.”
and the fine intentions of one two or 10 years ago we simply are not making much headway in the area of human re-I lationships,” he said, xa March 21
thane. S
M9.MM.7 there. s;3y«20" W OT.71 h hmee N 5)905' W 709.40 fl.l »®5.'30" E 177.51 ft. *0JO* OOjn* 0* I ginning, axcwt>no »h.rrtrom	Pf,v
dascrlbwi ai; Cotntnwiclni at a point IVj tha NW corner of Sac. Ml ram thli poinf of^ roos; inenca W to the cantor line of hlg^ wav; thanca N to »«flon line; there. E ** point of beginning. Subla'-* *« fh* m* of tha public.In aark_Rj[
where they spend the winter.
i LANSING (AP) - Luck o the ;draw has given Clement O’Neil owner of Nelson’s Restaurant at Houghton, the “No 1” license GRAND RAPIDS (AP) —The; issued under a new State Health
Pay Suit Filed
Samuel C. Curtis V
He discussed the recreation COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - bond issue '^bi^ ‘s ^
" Memorial service for Samuel c.jf'^Bisla ure Curtis V, 13-year-old son of Mr. recommend^ and Mrs. Samuel Curtis IV of Jor Por ion of the $100 milhon 4456 Driftwood, wiU be 2 D.m.lProP°sal be used m urban tomorrow at Milford areas-
Civil Service Status for Post
“Surveys just recently com-jpleted demonstrate convincing-jly that the greatest need for I recreation facilities in Michigan 'lies in those southern Michigan bounties where most of the T	rwi- i people live,” Milliken said.
LANSING (AP) - The State,
Civil* Service (Commission has PEOPLE’S MONEY authorized (Civil Service status He said 80 per cent of the for the former unclassihed pc^'state’s tax revenue comes from sition of secretary of the Na-|urban areas, “so we are nof tional Resources Commission. | talking about the sportsmen’) ★	★	★	money—rather, we are talking
The former unclassified po- about the people’s money, and slOon, paying $19,000 a year, all toe people are entitled to was held by Robert Furlong, re- benefit.” cently retired. The new post, to	*	★	*
be filled by Civil Service ex-| The governor said people can-amination, will pay a top of not be made to better ap^re-$17,497 a year.	date beauty in (heir environ-
U S. Labor Department has filed Department licensing system, suit in Grand Rapids District Chances of the restaurant get-Court against Hill & Thomas ting the number were 30,000 to Contracting Inc. of Lansing, one since some 30,000 food es-seeking $3,923 in alleged unpaid tablishments and food vending back wages for 24 employes of locations come under the new the firm.	licensing provision.
a> baglonlng at a pt. disl. N 7W. . and N 57»M'34" W Sec. corner; thanca S 0°S^ E 7» thence S 65-40' W approx. MO Jt^.' «H
.. ------- ,45 „ , fhanca S 57°J4'34'
...........’ It. to pt. ol bag. and coni
Ing approx. 3.9 acres more or lass.
3. A, L. Valentine, 98M Anderson Road, Davisburg, Michigan, reouests zoning ol tha lollowlng described property to bo changed from (Parcel «1) Agrlcultural-Rasldatitlal III
Parcel #1—Part ol the NE 'A ol Sac. 21, T4N, RBE, Springllald Township, Oak-■ " County, Michigan, Is described as u«u,.i„lng at a point at the Intersection pi the center-line ol Andersonvllla Road
KINNEY'S
SHOES
For thf WkmU Famllr •
PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE
! “We can only lead them. We, can encourage them to protest to the lltterbug, publicly cob-denui those who pollute natural beauty, and raise i collective cry against the con-
SAFEST IN mSTORY-The top dtatiotr of the National Safety Council, the Award of Honor, has been presented to (general Motors for the 20th time for achieving toe best-record of industrial safety in its history. Howard Pyle (left), president of the council, awards
a plaque to James lit. Roche (center) of 425 Dunston, Bloomfield Hills, chairman of toe GM board of directws, and Edward N. Colfe, 1371 Kirkway, Bloomfield Hills, GM president.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP

di Iho NW 'AJrf Sre.
NE V4 of Soctlon 7\i T1N» R8E, • - Towns^, Ooltld"^ CwnW.
m public li m Barrtttp
zoning of ihi following dfscrlbed property to be chenged fronr> Agricultural Retidmial I district to Com-
o"ho rIgiS
T4N, RBE,	.... .......... ........
County, Michigan, described as commencing at the NE corner ol said Sec. 13;
------ s 01°14'00" W 1001.19 ft., -—
Iter of Ellis Road. Thence i 1056.31 ft. along the said
_____ to the point of bHiInnIng)
continuing along said center S O-St'— .. 461.02 It. to the Intersection of the canter ol Holcomb Rd.; thence N 69>44'20" W 263.90 It. along the canter of Holcomb
252.74
o the point of beginning.
[ further given that the le f maps of tl
be amended may be <
..... _ Jhe Springfield TownsI
Clerk's Dffice, 6651 Ormond Roi
uni during regular office
Monday through Friday ' tho Public Hearing. DAVID H. FIELD,
March 21 and April T'
. . J Township of SprIngfidB, County of Oakland, State of Michigan, will be held - ‘^e Springfield Township Hall, 650 way, Davisburg, Michigan, begin, at one o'clock P.M. Eastern Sfan-Tlme. on Saturday, April 5, 1969. . ..„.Aed budget for fiscal year 1969-70 will be submitted.
March 13, 1969
March 20, 2|, I
Notice Is hereby given th
Annual TOwnshIp Meeting of ------------
-• .u- T----u._ -X Lgijj, Oakland
County, Michigan will be held at White Lake Township Hall, 7535 Hlgh..... Road beginning st 1 o'clock p.m.. Eastern StandarcT Time on Saturday, April 5. 1969. At such time, 4n addition to other regu-
-	---------.. -----------------jg;,
lures and estimated revenues <
d fre consld^ FERDINAND C. VETTER, Township Clerk March 17, 31, 1961
CORRECTION.
The featured band at the
HAWAIIAN GARDENS
on Saturday, March 22 is
THE BIG BAND OF
FRANK JAMES . ..
The ad in yesterday’s paper was Incorrect.
RARE DINING PLEASURE
GERMAN CUISINE PREPARED IN THE AUTMENTIO TRADITION
r
OLD GERMAN FAVORITES
»3.25
SAUER BMTEN
Saveiy P«t Roast marinatad in win* and vinegar and (rash vagafablat coakad (a parfoclion taivad with ginger snap sauce and German potato pancaket.
ROULADES Of beef
*3.25
Thinly sliced Beef filled with eld ceuntiy tpleeg sauteed to er getdah brown and finished Tn a fine wine souce and German potato pancakes.
WEINER SNITZEL alt| Holstein *3.25
Thin slices of Wisconsin milk-fed Vodl, breaded, and Pan fried as only our chef can do — sorvad with-poached or fried eigg with old ceunfry sauce and Gor-, man potato pancakew	- i

ILNELM’S RATHSKELLER
SERVINQ BAVARIAN FOOD WiEKDAYS 9 to I, SUNDAYS 1 to T 406 Main Stroot Rochoster	6B1-9I2I
SEA & SKY
Tropical FUh and Bird Haven
TROPICAL FISH PLANTS BIROS PIRANHAS SEA HORSES
Many complete aquarium set-ups very *P«ciaiiy priced this month inciuding space-saving siim-iines for booksheives.
223 Main Street, Rochester
FOR REAL
SMISFACTION4A
^ your Food	^
"SHOP THE STORE
WITH Tur cdkdtam	4
WITH THE SPARTAN
ON the door"



i.'

C—10
THE PONTIAC I>RES3. FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1969
Safeguarding Teens Against Narcotics—W
Pot Boils on Issue of Whether to Legalize Pof
EDITOR’S NOTE — This is help guard their children Or, at least, should severe
the 19th in a series by o prize- against its ill effects.) ii^^nfny science writer who pro-tJidls parents with background OR the narcotics and drugs odd Suggests ways for them to
By ALTON BLAKESLEE Associated Press Science Writer
penalties for possessing it be reduced?
Proponents of legalizing it are atfparentiy growing in number. Some controversies overj They argue that it is
The Gourmet Adventures of
vJo^4(Hil
tbem.CarameU ■re perrcti for oihrr quick •weeU. For cm-unpl«, bnl ■ packai* of ririmoU with ■ lildo milk ,.. then itir . in touted pecaiu or iniunt eoffo* powder. Makw ■ delieiout top. pinr for ic« creem. Stir in lame peanut butter, cool and apread on cracken or bread. How about pourina caramal mixture oxer popped corn ... a greal treat for
It'a alwaya a treat to cat at JAYSON'S, 4I9S Dixie Uitthway-■I Hatchery Rd., Drayton Plainat 6TS-T900, “Where Dining Fhwaun and Hoapitality Go Hand-in* Hand.” Enioy the dynamic Jaaa Oroup, J. C. Heard l^o, Monday to Saturday... Friendly, Conrtc* ana Service from Charming Jayaon WaltruMa.
aSLPFVL HINTi
E|ga acrambled in a douhle holler
with a litda butter are much
J.Ce HEARD
Recording
Artists
Formerly at Delroll Playboy Club. Mon. thru Sat.
vJo^riOHA.
marijuana .are growing warmer.
^ould "pot” be legalized?
NEW POLICY
FRIDAY NIT|! Barbartlla T: alid 11:10 FavarNaatatliM
EAGLE
dangerous than alcohol, which kills thousands of Americans each year. No one become physically addicted to pot, they say, and it doesn’t kill anyone unless he accidentally harms himself under its influence.
Marijuana, they assert, is safer smoking regular cigarettes.
Proponents hold that people should have a right to enjoy a mild drug that brings them a sense of well-being, that offers way to relax, to fantasize, to have social and intellectual communion with other people.
They argue that if pot were made legal, many drinkers would give up alcohol in favor of marijuana.	Arguments over reducing
OPPONENTS* VIEW	legal penalties for _	'
•	. u X marijuana involve such {>ouits
Opponents counter thatgs whether severe laws really alcohol is so badly abused that discourage use of pot - some authorities say yes, others no —
Meanwhile, scientific research is being stepfied up to answer vital questions about the mind drugs, ahd to fill in serious gaps in knowledge about them: Exactly how many high [ischodt or college students — or adults — are using or abusing drugs, and what kinds? Why do [ people use or not use various [ drugs? What really are the I psychological, social, physical 1 or genetic effects from occasional or long-term use of various drugs?
BARbAliqiA
DUMtHiEMra
UcbK)GNAlli=
MW’nil'IIMWIMlsi
five to six million Americans are .outright alcoholics, and that marijuana has the same potential to produce an equal greater number of people who would have problems from pot.
"Because we have rumheads, there is no rea^n to have potheads,” is one argument Opponents doubt that many alcoholics would give up booze, and postulate that six million "marijuahics” might come along atop all the alcoholics. The cigarette smoker, they add, can go about his usual ‘ while he smokes, but the marijuana smoker cannot.
A Marijuana Sale In Progress?
alcohol pushed many people!Narcotics and Drug Abuse of toward drinking.	|the President’s Coi^ssion on
PARENTS WORRIED	Enforcement and
Administration in a 1967 report.
‘There is evidence that majority of heroin usfirs who come to the attention oif public authorities have, in fact, had prior ex^rience with imarijuana,” the Task Force says.
and whether such laws lead to contempt ,not only of drug laws* but la^in general.
Manyparents are worried, orl . ...	. „„„„
FUnF •vtn«*{{t«anaa to	BUt tlllS Q06S flOt 1116811 ul&t
Sfnj nr""e ‘^ads to the other in the stepping stone to injecting or	marijuana has
[intrinsic quality that creates a heroiA liability. There are too
"mainlining” heroin.
"The distance from the dare 'ito try ‘pot’ to ‘mainlining’ very short,” says J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
On more of a middle ground, others argue that the real question irf not w h e t he r marijuana iv potentially dangeroilsr^cause all drugs, even aspirin, are. They oppose
ness, Such effects lasted for five or six months.
MIGHT AFFECT STUDENT In human terms. Dr. Joffe says, this could mean that taking a couple of LSD trips might affect a student for an entire semester.
*	★	★
Medical researchers also testing drugs that promise help heroin addicts break their habit. Two such drugs are I methadone, and cyclazocine. The National Institute of| Questions	and	issues about
Mental Health is granting funds I most of the mind-influencing in increasing amounts toj drugs bum in fires of emotions qualified researchers, seeking'and opinions, answers to just such kinds of! questions.
LONG-TERM EFFEC’TS One research' target is to learn what are the long-term effects of marijuana when used regularly, as against occasional, smoking of the kind of| stickers” of varying potency that are available to most.users in this country.	i
Better answers to some questions can be obtained now. because the truly active ingredient in the marijuana plant, tetrahydrocannabinol or THC, has been synthesized and purified. The real effective dose that an animal or person gets can be controlled in suchl experiments.'
Research is deepening into other types of mind-influencing drugs.
Where Can You Buy The Best For Less?
HERE’S A
CUE! .
including
Walker’^
Cue
Club
1662 !?. Telegraph Rd. >/z Mile N,of Holiday Inn
BIRMINGHAMi
Nominated for 4 Academy Awards
“2001, A
SPACE ODYSSEY" Mon. thru Thurs. 8:15 Only
Friday 6 and 9 P.M. Saturday 2,6 and 9 P.M. Sunday 2,5 and 8 P.M.
BLOOMFIELD
Nominated for 11
Academy Awards “OLIVER”
I Matinees Wed., Sat. and Sun. at 2:00 P.M.
Mon. thru Sat. . Evenings at 8 P.M. Sunday Evening 7 P.M.
I All Seats Reserved, Box Office ■ Open Wed., Sat. and Sunday 11:00 to 9 P.M. Mon., Tuas., ■Thurs. and Friday 4:00 to 0:00
many marijuana users who do not graduate to heroin, and tbo many heroin addicts with no known prior use of marijuana, to support such a theory. ^	.
But other authorities disagree|Moreover, there is no scientific experiment with LSD, Dr strongly. College students scoff,basis for such a theory.	[Milton H. Joffe of the Bureau of
at the statement. Few ^ PREDISPOSED TO USE Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs apparently use heroin They do, ,	^ ^	^ i « found that monkeys who take-
not themselves see or know of a .	® ® ® ® ® ®	r sn fnr Hva nr aix Hava suffer
progression from mild| hypothesis is that some people ^SD for five or six days suffer
marijuana to opiates.	who are pr^isposed to
rnwMftv iM rmrTTfts	marijuana are also predisposed
COMMON IN GHETTOS	,,groin use. It may also be
On the other hand, heroin	and the case that through the use of
.	..	other opiates are in f	a c t marijuana, a person forms the
legalization because they	sayicommon in ghetto areas,	and personal associations that later
not enough is known yet about there is evidence that some {expose him to heroin.” the long-term effects from heroin addicts had first been on the question of any
For example, in one recent
an impairment in their learning I ability.	I
The monkeys became less I efficient in making fine dis-1 discriminations about colors, r patterns, and bright-1
regular use of pot.	exposed to marijuana.
And still another view is that The charge that marijuana prohibition of marijuana may leads to use of addicting drugs be pushing many youngsters to needs to be critcally examined, use it, just as prohibition of says the Task Force
#Vy^T DISNEY

JOMN OOPOTHY JAMES JANET
SESSliP 10MMV KEV.M
ll'Miiiiiiilli
;OLOR fkmidinPANAVISION
£/vreRrAf/fMtNr
lOMING WED.. MAR. 26th - JULIE ANDREWS‘‘THE STAR ”
Readers can obtain ' a booklet on drug^ and narcotics by sending $1 to: The Pontiac Press Box 5
Teaneck, N.J. 07666
association between marijuana and crime, “the differences of opinion are absolute and the claims beyond reconciliation,’’ ®n,the Task Force says. It holds that neither side in this debate can prove their case.
One likely guess, it adds, is I that "given the accepted I tendency of marijuana I release inhibitions, the effect of I the drug will depend on I individual and the I circumstances. It might, but I certainly will not necessarily or ] inevitably, lead to aggres (behavior or crimes. The KMise will depend more on I the individual than the drug,’’ since there is no evidence that marijuana changes a person’s basic personality structure.
Much stiffer penalties, gov-I erning even simple possession of I various mind-influencing drugs * were imposed by Congress last fall. It became a misdemeanor -subject to fines and jail terms to possess LSD, or to possess barbiturates and amphe^mines unless you could prove thkThey had been prescribed for you. State laws also have been becoming tougher.
- NEW BOONS
The next five to 10 years may well see a hundredfold increase in the number of drugs capable of affecting the mind, top authorities predict. Some will ** become new boons to treat mental and emotimal ailments. And some likely will be used illegally, or abused.
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Children Under 12 FREE! Showtime 1:00 P.M. Fri., Snt., Sun*
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—Liz Smith, Cosmopolitan
20TH CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS
CHARDONHESION
laiaARTliURP.lACOBSproduclaM.
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ROOD^McDOWAli MAURICE KIM HUNTER JAMES WHITMORE „JAMES DAIY yNDA HARRISON^ wMc’pwiwcTiotB
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1 OAIA OPEHINQ MARCH 26 WATERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATRE

THE t^QNXIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1969
Yo-Yo Skiing Looks Tame After Italian Runs]
CEDitOR’S NOTE - This is the third in a series on skiing Europe, toritten by vacationing staff^ Lois Friedland.)
By LOIS FRIEDLAND
CERNINIA, Italy - A descrip, tion of yo-yo skiing—as practiced by Michigan skiers zipping down half-mile runs and riding up the chair lift for another go-around — made bur Italianj friends laugh.
Dick and described this midw e s t e r n skier’s practice during a suntan break in the middle of a seven-mile run.
■A
Cerninia, an Italian ski town in the shadow of EH Cetnino
LOIS
rmrmrmrmnnnnnrii
SAVOY LOUNGED
-LANES-
GOLD CROWN ROOM
BUSINESSMEN'S
LUNCHEONS
DAILY
Complete
Dinuers z COCKTAILS
B All Food Prepared " o to Your Order by Our • NEW CHEF » 130 S. ’Telegraph Rd.
: 334-6981 3
O AAliUUUUUllJUULlltJt jQ
(The Matterh(«ii), offers the longest runs in Italy.
A half-hour ride — bn. three cable cars — bri^s the skier to the Plateau Rosa — about 11,000 feet above sea level The Plateau Rosa is on the Theodul glacier which is skied all sum-'mer. The village is at 6,000 feet. UNBELIEVABLE VARIETY
The major run from the plateau offers an unbelievable variety of skiing guaranteed to make any Michigan skier ecstatic. The sheer thrill of skiing along a vast terrain until you are forced |o stop because of exhaustion — not because it’s the bottom of the slope — spoils the skier. I’m afraid for Yo-Yo skiing.
Furthermore, hugging the moutain terrain, which hasn’t-been smoothed and pampered-by a snow tractor — khows you exactly how well you ski.
★ ★ ★
The trails st Cervlnla meander down the side of Alp — ranging in width from eight feet to a quarter-mile.
On a clear day the superb [skier can leave the marked trails at his own risk and carve his own path down the mountainside — usually through heavy powder.
TOUGHER RUNS
Another mountainside, reached by another cable car is also available for those desiring tougher runs.
On foggy days, the skiers follow the markers — spaced 20 feet apart never leaving them.
WWW
The fog, which often comes this time of year in the afternoon, is so dense that you often have difficuity seeing the skis on your feet.
The village of Cerninia consists of hotels, apartments and shops. The village is limited in size by the traditional paths of spring avalanches. Most of the skiws are Americans on tour — whose leaders know where to find some of the best skiing in ~	English and Italians.
c—li
Sitmlny Spn ini
ROAST PORK wilh APPLESAUCE
Entertainment by
MIKE OROS and “THE WISEMEN”
WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY
PONTIAC LAKE INN
7880 Highland Road	673
CLOSED MONDAYS
The hotels available range from frineds we met through Franco
luxury to dorm setups.
MEIET THE REGULARS We stayed in a friend’s apartment, again very similar to the Northern Michigan summer cabins.
When visiUng a new ski area - make friends with some of le area regulars. They’re generally easy to approach and usually intH'ested to meeting friendly Americans.
For instance, we skied with to
— our friend who arranged the apartment stay. He went back to the flatlands to work, but we skied with these new people through mountain areas that would have taken us days to find by ourselves.
★ ★ ★
They als^ introduced us to their charming custom of afternoon tea/mth “Grappa” a regional /liqueur made from grape^'^ They look askance at lerican habit of the “coke
They also introduced us to the local cutters — and beamed
nightlife in Cerninia which sists of dining and discothe-quing.
★ * ★
We were taken to 01 restaurant — the Copa Pan which we might never have stumbled across. The Copa Pan offers classic Italian food and English-speaking waiters. You around a mammoth fireplace surrounded by stone walls covered with mask carved from tree baric made by
ceilings.
The next night we went to a restaurant recontoiended by friends and struggled to sign language with the waitress until a nearby diner took pity and translate the menu.
Now Open
SUWAY 1 P.M.
tnmieta - '
iSalactlm'
SVNDAT
SPECIAL!
The overseas movement of general cargo through Virginia ports during 1967 totaled more than 2.4 million tons, 12.6 per cent more than the previous year.
^r. Oaks Says:
(EDITOR’S NOTE - This is another in a vjtekly series of articles issued by the OakUtnd County Medical Society.
Oaks is the collective voice of the society.)
a matter of some conjecture, but it is alleged that there are at least one million criminal abortions performed eyery yhar in the United States, compared to about four million
At thn Famous
FRENCH CELLAR
..at —....... —
HOWPS LANES
^he Colleague Collectioir*
Featuring:
Bob Koith i	Jorry
«<MutiofprEvaryont”
Wad.,FrL,Sat.NNM
this is a problem /tremendous proportions. And, is one that the human race cannot long Ignore. In fact, abortion has been called “the most severe pandemic disease I the world today.”
■k it -k
Elsewhere ’the problem Is wn more acute. In France, example,idt is claimed that there is one Illegal abortion for every live birth.
There is talk, there is debate and even legislation. A bill has even been introduced to the current term of the Michigan legislature to liberalize our so-called abortion law.
for
OBORTION DEFINED But Just what is an abortion? By deDnition, the expulsion of the human fetus from the
SATURDAY Special Smorgasbord
German r- American — Italian Food
FROM 6 PM TO 10 PM
^3.95
Dine to the Relaxing Music of Xhili" at the Organ
Playing Any and All Requests
We Cater To All Types of Banquets Wedding Breakfasts and Receptions ...
Complete Menu at All Times
We VlQII Be Serving Your Favorite Cocktails
e Bs
>v at Sunday Banquets
ving T iundo)
F<Vttitl04
WIDE TRACK at WEST HURON FE 2>1110
Abortion Severe, Widespread Problem
uterus within the first 12 weeks of pregnancy — before it Is viable, constitutes an abortion. k -k -k
Society pays no attention to those dtpulsions which occur spontaneously. These are referred to as miscarriages. However, when the expulsion produced by some form of external interference, and without the sanction of thoK impowered to approve, it is called a criminal or illegal abortion.
★ ★, ★
If, on the other hand, an abortion is performed by licensed doctor in a respected hospital and for a significant reason, the abortion is called therapuetic and judged to be legal.
UBERAUZATTON AREA It is in this latter area that current legislation wotild liberalize abortions, including for the mother’s sake as well as the unborn offsiwing.
Abwtions, with minor exceptions, are illegal to this state and county. It is doubtful to our culture If the reasons for abortion will ever be much
25 Americans Identified as Killed in Viet
WASHINGTON UP) - Twenty-five servicemen killed in actiofr in the Vietnam war have been identified by the Defense Department.
The list includes eight men iflied to action from the Mid-|iest.
Killed in action:
ARMY
ILLINOIS - Pfe. Themn A.
-------- Alton) Ptc. Gorild L.
itvillo.
Staff Sgt. Raymond E.
--------Sallartburg; Spac. 4 Donnla
. Martin, F/ankforl.
MICHI8AN i — Saac. 4 Rkhai 'aarull. Pantlae.
OHIO — Spac. 4 Donnla W. C iffin.
M)
MISSOURI .
Longiton, Ava.
OHIO — Pfc. Jamat T. An< Columbuf.
Died of wounds:
OHIO-«on'R"B"r^,Dav.«t.
Changed from missing to dead
Pfc. Bart S. Snydar, Pantdala.
-----	Pfc. Jarry 0. Yc
beyond those considered of a therapeutic nature.
★ ★ ★
Time and the steady progress f medical research will continue to diminish the conditions that might permit legal abortions. There will be less medical cause to termtoiate pregnancy.
Whatever the accomplishments of the medical profession, however, it is fairly certain that some (wnditions will continue exist that will preclude continuing some pregnancies. Thus, abortion will retoain a necessary measure.
NOT EASY TASK The current situation, whichi is to encourage women to continue an unwante/d cy, is not easily accomplished ... nor always advisable. Nevertheless, this is! exactly the situation.
The problem is involved andj begs for a solutim. There is no pat answer and, to the end, a most delicate balance must be struck. The very size of the problem demands a solution or at least some effort in that direction.
Of course, no problem would exist if mankind would become more responsible about prepancy. Unwanted prepan-cies would be avoided, and abortions for this reason alone would diminish.
This, however, can not be recopized as the exclusive solution to the problem. There must be still other answers.
(Do you have a question for Dr. Oaks, send a card or letter to Oakland County Medical Society, 346 Park, Birmkigham 48009.)
SUNDAY LIQUOR PHONE 3344TT5 Perry at Pontiac Road
Deffd Itut
Corner Elizabeth Lake And Cass Lake Roads
1 BLOCK WEST OF HURON
TUES.,WED.y FRI., SAT., SUN.
I Dauer to $ha Fabulotu
“SUNDAY
FUNNIES"
I Pontiac’* Great

FLOOR
SHOWS
EVERY
SATURDAY NIGHT
it DENHIS SALLEY Comedy M.C. ic ED HENRY Sensational Rook a
PEANUT CELLAR

SING-A-LONO FrL-Sat.-Sun.
“A trip back in time to the days of real entertainment.”
Pitcher and Bottle Beer—Wine — Liquor — Peanut!—Straw Hat!-Sour Sheet#
Call:
363-9191
Co to tJntoa UlcrVillage, Wr.t of Poniia« 9099 Hutchina Rd. Taka UnioB Lake Road North Itk Miles, erMsmu* **.-■*-Tam OB HatrhiB! Road — Oae Block.	UNION LAKF.
Died not as a result of hostile action;
MARINE CORPS
MiyieAN	JIpopv
NEBRASKA - Pfc. Taritioc E. Bamay, naha.
Missing as « result of hostile action:
ARMY
HoanaSia "**'*'^'*	*®*- *'•" "•
not as Si result of hostile action:
ARMY
WO Philip R. PamMlI, WO David P. NAVY ,
•oitRwaln's AAatg S.C. Htrvty / L.
«7 CHARLIE BROWN'S SINGALONG Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday DON LORD and BEVERLY HILL
andSATURDAY Singalong with The Fabulous
BOB SPRINGFIELD
CHARLIE
BROWN’S Singalong
SAME GREAT FOOD,
With FuU Time FUN
, 673 W. Kenaett
y Oakland at Tsiagrapli Phona
332-7111
Oakland County Public Safety Association
(A privately owned and operated Aaaociation)
Presents this program . . .


,'?rna(

npkv-

SAT


‘gSh,
■
»OAO
®«y

fE
Jjbi
f-7386
'iUlCe, ^950
call
§1 Boor
To The Public
The above program will be preaented ai advertiaed, in the location indicated in the above ad, and at the timet indicated.
The Waterford School Syitem ia in no way connected with this pretentalion and the use of the achool gym doea not in any way indicated the School Syatem'a endorsement, apon-•orahip, or approval of the preientation.
The Program it being preaented by the Oakland County Publie ^fety Aiaociatlon, a private enterprise, which to not, nor doea not intend the public to conatrue aa • Civie Organiaatioh.
C—12
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. MAECH 21, 1969
Lenten Guideposfs—27
Tips on Winning Acceptance; Be True to Yourself and God
By MABEL TODD
1 dW ev«7thlng wrong from the day I started work some years ago in the gear factory.
First, I was givo) a uniform whidi consisted of a shirt and a pair of slacks.
Strange as it may sound, I had never worn Blacks before.
So I didn't know whether shirt should be worn MRS. TODD inside or outside the slacks. I decided outside.
★ ★ *
No sooner had I started to follow a man named Donny to my work table than 1 realized my decision was wrong. All the other girls looked very trim with their shirts tucked neatly Inside their slacks, and dainty kerchiefs peeping out from the pockets of their shirts. I heard giggles as I walked by with my flapping shirttalls.
We finally arrived at a long bench where 20 men and women were at work. I was given an Instrument called an air gun. "Look it over and get the feel of itt" Danny told me.
BHB SCREAMED
When Donny turned on the air, the gun began to Jump like a bucking bronco and I screamed. Some at the table gave me an old gear to work witti. “In time you'll learn to grind these to a radius of one-thousandth pf an inch," he said.
, ♦ e ♦
I didn’t really believe him and I was ready to quit. Having recently lost both my husband and my father, I was very lonely and unsure of myself. Furthermore, I had lived a sheltered life and was quite naive.
★	★ A
After several weeks of struggle. I did learn to grind the gear to one-thousandth of an inch. My self-confidence began to increase.
But by now I had another problem. I could tell that I was not accepted by the “gang" in our department. They were not rude or hostile—just, well,
CHAIN LETTER One night Art, who worked Just across from me., came aroimd the end of the bench and gave me a long sheet of paper with one end folded over. “This Is a chain letter to Walt," he explained. Walt had been inducted into the Army only a month before.
Not knowing Walt, I started to hand the letter to the girl next to me. But Art would not accept this.
AAA
“You, can write something. Look back over what’s been written and you’ll get some Ideas,’’ he insisted.
I did so and discovered that almost every letter contained words to this effect, “When ‘ gang gets together I’ll hoist a drink for you.’’ Not being a drinker, I sUU did not know what to say.
TAUGHTTO PRAY My mother had taught me since childhood to pray about every situaUon I faced. So I bowed my Head and some lines of verse came into my mind. I picked up my pencil and wrote down words like this to the unknown Walt;
“I, too. will drink for you, “In a church beside a table where a group has knelt to pray.
“And the drink will be a special kind of brew.
“The time will be Communion,
“And we'll drink the precious wine.
“As we drink we’ll say a prayer
“That God will shield you and your pals from danger.
“So remember that we care,
“As you fight on some foreign field.”
myself apart, I thought. |me and said, “Mabel, please The next day I was at myjshut off your gun." bench when I saw Danny head-1 1 turned to look at him, and ing for me. Here it comes now. Ibis eyes were gentle. “Mabel," I said Jo myself. I’m about to he said, “we in the office read be fired. Danny came behind 'what you wrot to Walt and we
want you to know how proud we' are to have you in our factory."
For the rest of the day I was in a kind of daze. Eveyone seemed so friendly. “Mabel,
will you write a few lines fOr me to send to my boyfriend overseas?” . . . f’Mabel, will you write a verse for me to give my parents who are celebrating their 30th wedding anni-
versary?”
Though this experience happened some years ago I’ve never forgotten the truth I learned from it. Winning acceptance and esteem from other
people comes not by com-promismg one’s principles, but because one remains true to himself anjl God.
(Copyright, IMS, by Guideposts Associates, Inc.
Next — Suren H. Bqbington, California doctor who escaped from Communist Russia after World War I, tells how his father taught him never to quit
Pridoy & Saturday March 21 A 22
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I folded the paper and gave! it to the girl next to me. Thcn| suddenly I realized that my words would be read by everyone else down the line.
■ A A A
Sure enough, as the next girl passed the paper 5n, she pointy to the verSe I had written. Now I have really set
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Buying a brand new car or truck between March 1 and Apial 15?
/
Finance it at Community National Bank, and we’ll give you a handsome plaid blanket and carrying case absolutely free.
All you do is ask your dealer for Community National financing. Or arrange the loan yourself at any ^ of bur 20 convenient offices.
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It’s a fringed benefit from Community National.
One more good reason to bank at Community.
Most people do.
National I Bank
20 Offices in Oakland and Macomb Counties •Telephone 334-0966
■■I -
V-
D—2
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1969


'VI	if' ffMtf*
ismess and Finance
MARKETS
Trade Moderately Active# .
The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the
Stock Market Heads Lower
Four Promoted at GMC Truck.
NEW YORK (AP) - The “is to be expected after the re-that secret cease-fire talks ini
Petroit Bureau of Markets ?s of market headed lower ear- cent string o advances. Wednesday	F .	..
the Vietnam War were under
Produce
Apple elder 4gal. case Apples. Dellcinus, Golden, tH Apples, Golden, C.A., bu. Apples, Delicious. Red, bu. Apples, Red. C.A., bu.
.. Jopethei), C A„ bu.
Apples, McIntosh,—C.A.,
. ....- Northern Soy.
Apples, Steele Red. C.A., bu.
veOETARLES
Cabbaoe, Curly, bu. .....
Cabbaae, Red, bu.
Cabbage, Standard Variety, bu.
ly this afternoon in moderately “In order for the market to\„„„ “armomnti., lo active trading.	make a meaningful advance,”
The I>ow Jones industrial av- they said, “it must do so in '''	. . ^ „
erage at noon was off 2 80 points stages in which rises are fol-| Associated Press average s wat 917,33, The Dow had be<m lowed by profit taking.”	"a°"tV
ahead 0 99 of a point at 11 a n. STRENGTH FADING	?lrif o« T.6 and“ uTliUes urn
4 75 trams continued to outnumber rphey also said there had been changed.
4 00 losses but by a very slim mar- news “that would cause anyj Fifteen of the 20 most-actlVe I75 8>n	significant change in the mar-issues on the American Stock
^ Brokers said there was a ket”, adding that the strength!Exchange showed gains, 3 were »j w “.spurt of profit taking ' which the market drew from reports lower, and 2 were unchanged.
Ar^a Men Reassigned in Service Department

'ar&tfy Hoot, dz. t
The New York Stock Exchange
Radishes. Black. '
a.50 NEW YORK (AP)
Rhubarb, Hothouse, S-lb.
1. dz. bch. 1 50 Ekc
Rhubarb, Hothouse, d
GettyOM .380	22 77’
3.00 Abbott Lab . LETTUCE-SALAD GREENS i	^
...	.4.	12.50 I'*
(hdt.) High Low Last Ch«.
I 67	66^ 67
Goodrich T.72
Ctltry, Cabbaoo, Hi.
Addre!
I 18'/r	W/9 18^11
lAdml
' 70*^a 69SS 69’i — H
Aetna
lAirRedtn )50
Poultry and Eggs
OCTROIT POULTRY	I AllcSpllf'
DETROIT (APIC(USDA) -^Pi>lce$ ppld, AllledCb per pound for No. 1 llw* nnnltru	! ahi^pICi,.
type hens 24-26;	__ _
25-27; broilers and fryers Whites 20'r2). | Alcoa 1 — ducklings 37.	AMBAC .50
DETROIT EGOS	lAm^Alrlfn ^80
^DETROIT	i S2
fno UJ
s Chains
47 49	48^4
90	28	mk	28	I
U2	28\a	284%	284%	-
25	20'a	194%	194s
15	53'a	53	53	|-
7	224%	224%	224%
)S6	32	31’a	31’/a	-
9	364%	36'^a	364%	-i
GrantW 1.40
Gl AAP i,30
I 27^11
12 73V4 73	7V'9
» 25	25'/a d
34 544% 544% 54’/a
« 45-46
n 37’ a
lA Enk
l.SOa
40; small 2932.
CHICAGO BUTTER, EGOS CHICAGO (AP) - ChlcagqpMercanme:^'^** Exchange - Buffer steacTyT/wholesale; buying prices unchanged; 93 Score AA'	,
59 35^/s 35’'a 35’a
tmMFdy .90
63 34	33'j 334%
k 47’% 47	47'% I
. 92 A 4
Cars 90 E 6
90 B 634%;
. 89 C 62.
'VAmPhot .
unchanged; 8? per cenf A Whiles 45; mediums 36; checks 27.
licsale buying prices
Smelt r
368 52‘» SV't SVn
(hds.) Nigh Low Last CIm
82 54</4 534% 54’/4
Reyn Met .9q	241 384% 374% 37V4 — »^4
ReynTob 2.20	87 42‘/a 414% 42
263 124% 12	124%
55 58’a 574i *
RoanSel .47g Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola RoyDut 1.8 Ryder Sys
1638 27'/a 27	27'/% +
12 58Va 57’/a 57% - Va
2 32	3144 32
Gulf Oil 1.50
2 26'/4
■ 26‘/% -
HalMburf 1.05
HectaMng .70 Here Inc 1 HewPack .20 Hoff El-rtrn Holiday ■■
dayin wl dvlnn .35 Iy5ug 1.20 Tiesfke .40
36% 36'/a
—H—
564	52%	51%	52	-
29	71%	70'/a	71%	+
6	324%	32	324%	+
27	44'/%	44’/a	444%	--
.......... I?'"-
Scientif Data SCM Cp .60b Paper i
SbdCstL 2.20
I 82'/% 82
5 71'/4 71’4 7I'/4
Searl GD 1,30	46 42'/% 42	42 — 4%
"-rsR 1.20a	167	68>/%	66'/a	66%-V
.. ...	3^ ^5^	_
22	sS'/a	53	53%	+
122	364%	354%	35%	—1
Shell Oil 2.40
I 72
KF 2	126 44% 4
28 434% 424% 434%
HousehF 1
34 128’/a 126'/a 126% - ’
HousfLP 1.12	18 42'4
60 38	37% 37%
SignalCo .. SIngerCo 2. Smith KF SouCalE 1. South Co 1.14 SouNGas 1.40 Sou Pac 1.80 Sou Ry 2.60a Spartan Ind ' ‘
Livestock
X Corp 31 37% 37% 37f%
lAnacond 2.50	29 52	51'a 51%
iTchOan 1.60	70 59
cutter 19.(KL20,50;j And OG 1
canner 17.^19.W.	jAtl Rich 1,
Vealers 25; not enough for market test. | Atlas Ch .t-Hogs 25; not enough for market test. Atlas Corp
ilaughter lambs 29.50-30.50.
CHICAGO LtVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA) Hogs 3,500;
e 90-JI0 lb. Avco Cp 1.20	200 38	37% 37%
102 1 44% l4'/a 144%
StOCal 2.80b	114 65'«'a 65	65% -f
4 Cp 1.40	200 37’/a 37	37
IngerRe... . Inland Sll 2 InterlkSt 1.80 IBM 3.20
40 36% 36% 364% -
354% 354% 35% 4
StdOMOh 2.70 St Pdekaging StauffCh 1.80 SterlDrug .70
Inl Pap 1.50	131 40’4
1-2 200^230 lb butchers 22.00^22 25;	.
200-240 tt)t 1^21 50-22.00; 1 3 330 400 lb sow 11.75 19.25; 1 3 400-525 lbs 16 00 18.75. Cattle 300; calves none; load cholc
Sheep 100; package cht 100 lb wooled slaughlei jiackage choice 117 lbs w
10 67% 67% 67%
American Stocks
iTlc«n Slock[BucyEr
A*r«|#l .SO* Air West AlaxMa ISe
^jlBodd C
Kerr Me l .bC KimbClk 2.2( Koppers 1.6C Kresge SS .34
1.20	67 243% 240'4 242
t 33%	33*4	33^4
Asamera Oil 607 37'. 3I'4
CambSp 1.10
I Petrolm 118 20
>1 Chib 42	8>]
117 12% 12'% 12%
2 3711 37% 37%
2 12% 12% 12%
19 23	22'w 22% 4
5 17% 17% 17'I
15 25% 25% 25% t
) 36% 36% 364%
17 17% 17Vi 17%
CastleCke .60
CeianeseCp 2	132 6
122 49'% 47»i 47%
Cerre
Cert te
CessnaAir
Giant Yel .40	81 15'i
HoernerW 82
' ?5-. T
er Oil .50	18 17% 17%
Mohwk. Data 122 74%
CFI Sll ( '•]Ches Ohio 4 % ChIMtl SIP P 'ChIPneu 180 '4 Chi Rl Pac i»ChrisCrntl I Chrysler 2 % CITRn 180 %! Cities Sve 2 '4,ClarkEq 140 %jClevEIIII 2 04 '4|CocaCol 1.17 CoUi Pal I 20 Col (in Rad RO Colointi
8 27% 27'4 2754
71 574i 56% 56%
47 20% 19% 19%
Treasury Posifion
CBS 1 fflb
ColuG«s
ConN«IG 1,7* J3 30V« 30
ConiPwr 1 90	304 4
n 3.30	51 *5'f *4»» (
Copt Oil 3
coni on •
WASHINGTON (AP) -
I Coni Tol .(
1 posl-lcc.____
-	-	-	____ larch 18. 1969 com-i Corn Pd 1
pared to March 18. 1968 (In dollars);	CorGW 2.5
Balance	Cowles SO
4,275/403,642.83	6,157,243,475.04 CoxBdeas .
Deposits fiscal year July 1	jCrouseMln
132,848,886,948 90.106,226.287,131.23;CrowCol I.! Withdrawals fiscal yeai^..,	------- ^
180 I37'4 135% 136
9 24314 243'4 243%
I 31	31	31
Total

iCrownZe 2.20 145073.033,026.19 132.192,495,591.30 Cudahy Co -361.358,673.345 94 352.643,003.026 29 Curllss Wri 1

) 51'4 50'x 50%
544 31% 30^4 31't
23 109% 109<4 109%
187 39	38'% 39
ir Sieg .45	36 22%
LIbOFrd T^S) LIbb McN L Llgg My 2.50 Ling TV 1.33
I 21	30% 20%
Unlroval .70 UnItAirLIn I
17 13	12% 12%
123 53% 52% 52%
LockhdA 2.20	59 43’ t 42'»
LoewiThe tones Cf LoneSGa ■
12	57 23% 23% 23%
,24	71	27% 27	27
i 23% 23% 23%
77 53% S3'i 53%
29 53'4 52% 52%
MOrtlnM 1 MayDStr 1
Mead Cp 1
38 36	35% 35% I %
771 21% 21	21%
35 1 02% 101% 101% - ' 2 22% 22% 99%	'
92 60Va 59%
30 37% 37% 37»/a + %
MtStTT 1.24
8 112'4 1J2	112
NatCaih 1.20 **^slry 1.60 Dist 1.80
-N—
8	37% 37% 37'
9	51	50»
22 62'/4 62	..
91 123% 121% 123% -M%
121 44% 43% 43'
% - %
n. 404e 4
' 28% 2B'4
37 36% 3S'3
-1%
NatLead 3.40 > Nat Steel 2.50 lat Tea .80 ^ev Pow 1 08 NEngEl 1.48
12 17% 17	17»/9
Day PI 152
lolkl^st 6	274 99% 97'y 98%
STOCK AVERAGES
'jNoAmRock 2
CempilM by The Associated
OeltaAir .
^	-w DenRGr 1
ind Rails UMI StpcM
I 15% 35% 4 %
9 207'» 2(714 20% 4
■«*
9 1 0	1 99 3	1 4 7 9 335.7 0
n 2%0	59 75% 75
28 39'Si 39	39	4
I J99.1 duPont 1.25g
413 4 159 4 136 5 292T Dyna Am
DOWr-JONSS AVERAGES
I	37%	37%	37%
6 153% 152% 153 T 45	21%	28%	28%
30	19%	19'i	19%	4^ :
—E—
78	25%	25'4	25%	4-
92 '71
Occident 80b OhioEdls 1.50 OklaGE 1.08 OklaNGs 1.12
17 37’> 37'/* 37%
26 40
» 67% 6
iPasoNO 1 lira ^ 1.10
ndJohn 12p Ihyl Cp .72
49% i
» 36% 36’4
Stocks of Local Interest ,
Figures effer dec I
12	31’/	,
34	52»4	52’I	52%	♦
10	23%	23%	23’v
—F—
60	74‘4	72	72	-
13	19%	19%	19%
15	26	25’»	25’^
aantative inter-dealer
f markets I
kdown or|F,a	152	23 47'/4 j
Clfiztns Utititlei
Hr«* Ch*fnlc*l
5 ' ‘-3 FoodPirr .*0
’’-‘iFordMol 1.40 -0 J/ 0 ForMcK -
13 JJ'» ilVi 31!» -
13 S7<, S6*4	4
1	*$»« 6SM tSH - Vi
.........
I ‘31Vi 3IV4 31V»
.uji: ............
37V* + V«
PacGEI I.! PacLIg 16 P*c P,l .: P»cPwL
III Law Lilt Chg.
Four Pontiac area men have been promoted in organizational changes in the truck product service departrtient of GMC Truck and Coach Division, L. E. Goodwin, truck service manager, said today.
G. M. Vallad, 1870 Wa Bonnet, White Lake Township, was promoted to the hew position of product service manager.
He is a graduate of General Motors' Institute and was responsible for the chassis product service section in the truck product service activity for the past several years.
160 21’/4 20'/a 21‘/4
► 49% 49% 49% + '
^•30 7S'/s 74'/a 75’/^ 4'lVa
64 26	25% 25% +
57 34'/a 33% 34'/4 4- % 3 49	48%' 48% — V4
52 39% 38% 39% + % 170 40% 405 62 33% 33
61 37% 35% 35% -1%
133 113	111% 113
62 28Va 28V4 28»/4
wnWm 2
68 35% 35'/4 35’/a 4-
6 58’/a 58 5ft - '
117 22% 22% 22% 4-
42 36	35% 36
22 67 <4 66% 67
60	29%	28^9	29’/S	-|-
_T—
16	25%	25	25	-
28	56'/a	55%	S6’/9	4-
29 43 % 43% 43% 4-
125 27% 27’/a 27% 4-
imesMir .50	2 444«
47 33’/i 32' J 33' i +
49 42'4 42’/i 42’4 4-
154 43% 43	43
32 52I4 52	52’/i -
58 26	25'a 25%
USPIyCh 1.50	33 76''4
277 45%
53 35% 35	35% -h

-V—
45 27% 27'/a 27% 4-9 26'/j 25% 25% -VaEIPw 1.08	20 29% 29’^ 29% L
_w—X—Y—Z—
m MO 28 55% 55	55'- +
•t 1.2ft	3 24’/4 24	24'/4
* ’ '	•	27 34% 34'a 33'a -
Prime Rate Hurts, but It's Not Illegal
NEW YORK - At suburban real estate offices and in corporate offices, they call the prime rate the crime rate, and sometimes it seems a more accurate description.
The prime! rate today is 7.51 per cent, meaning that is thej lowest borrowing rate for a bank’s best customers for the very safest purposes. All other rates — foi homes, automobiles, travel, boats —rise upward from this
CUNNIFF
Rather than being a crime, however, the situation Ameri-evolving each day is a crunch, a shortage of lendable money, a shortage planned by. the Federal Reserve and de-
LARGE VALLAD J. B. Large of 10478 Tamryn, Holly, was promoted t o supervisor of the service training, promotion and
veterans—when the ceiling on lation in 30 years. Hiis will such loans also is 7.5 per cent, [mean dn enormous demand for Because of such rates, be-'capital for homes, schools^ cause of a shoirtage of lendable | reads and water and sewer sys-funds and becduse inflation tas terns.
pushed $30,000 homes into the| “State and local govehunents, $40,000 category in less than two whose debts now amount to years, an enormolir problem! about $115 billion, versus $75 bil-now exists in the housing mar- lion five years ago, are expect-et	|ed to require some $250 billjon
Painful pressures are thus from capital markets between being exerted on millions of; now and 1975.”
Americans in the vast and It’s tough enough to get mongrowing middle class, peoplejey at any time, but with an whose	ambition—and	some-j anti-inflation battle going oh, it
times only way of living gra^e-isoon may be impossible for fully—is to be a homeowner. some people and businesses and It is a bit different with the I governments. Many of them will large corporations, some of think it a crime, which are ignoring the highi rates and continuing to borrow,' partly on the assumption that what is high now may be higher tomorrow.	;
News in Brief
Construction materials valued at $980 were reported stolen from a new home site at
vey indicates that corporate
snendine for new nlants ond|0'“>"° w "ship yesterday,
SPENDING TO RISE A Commerce Department sur-
uir x-cuciai rvcBcivc oiiu u«7-t_________	lownsniD yesieraay,
Slei	^" equijmfnt mayrisellp^rcenfl^i"^ to Oakland County
T	._ oVlast year, or double the es-sheriff’s deputies.
’^is IS the much-heralded imates of just a few months' Sporting equipment valued at
$300 was stln yesterday from With such an mflationary a warehouse at 515 Sportsmen, Rose Township, according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies. Taken were a n outboard motor, water skis and other items, deputies said.
ing money hard to come by. it is,	________
hoped that Americans will be threat before it, the Federal Reprevented from bidding up the serve might be inclined to tight-pnee of goods. But it is far from Lp the spigot even more, reduc-painless, as the Nixon people ing to a trickle the flow of funds had hoped.	j to banks in an attempt to parch
WITHIN THE LAW ,	! the economy back to its senses.
A crime? Some people think i Even aside from inflation, so, but in a strictly legal sense'there are other factors forcing ♦roinin„ „ r A ♦ i „ „ “h oK’cial catcs todav are with-lup the demand for money. The “"'y bccause population explosion, for exam-publications section. He	forecasters estimate
Rummage Sale, Jimmy Day Amvet Auxiliary, 206 Auburn Ave., March 22, 8 a.m. —Adv.
Rummage Sale, St. Paul
GMC in 1963 and served asl"®'*'’^	^°''®‘^“!!.«n®*u®‘'"’®f5|Church, 165 E. Square Lake Rd.,
®®|times hastily, by state govern-tha by the year 2000 the wor dIgjg^fjgy „j,j	32,
^ ^" mAtifc	innniilRnnn mioht nnnnlA fn cIy .	.	*	. * -
school instructor and a r
.population might double to six 7 . to l no service and parts manager in'	^ billion	■	^ ^ "
the Cincinnati zone.	'"w^t th^r highe^T^ce^the Consider what this would Rummage Sale, St. Vincent
ofL
Large succeeds William	V" ^	Paul Hall, 9:00-2:00 Satur-
Hamilton, who has bee	output, between $3;day, March 22.	-Adv.
ket. That’s one effect of the""!"	investment are re-	Suouer Baldwin United
anti-inflation plan. But others,IProduction 'I'.t’es
for various reasons, must con-'f."*^ services. The total rises|Methodist Church, Friday 4-7 tinue to borrow.
appointed supervisor transportation.
Hamilton of 2327 Winkleman Waterford Township, has had extensive experience in the truck service department during the past 12 years.
into the trillions of dollars. !?•"'• IN PERSPECTIVE	1
Eventually, before deflation Goodbody & Co., a member of begins, this could mean evenjthe N.Y, Stock Exchange,
GEATER HAMILTON E. G. Geater of 2470 W.
Walton, Waterford Township,*cities.
-Adv.
BOND AVERAGES ComplM by Th* AuoclalM Prati M Id Id Id Id Ralls Ind. Ulll. Fgn, L. Yd.
higher prices for homeowners cently put this demand for capi-and others who. use the goods tal in perspective with this com-and services of such firms.'ment:
More important, even, is the ef-| “In the United States...there feet on potential home buyers. I will be another 100 milion popu-
High rates mean at least two-------------
things; First, mortgage rates art likely to continue rising.!
Second, no matter what rate a| party is willing to pay for a' mortgage, there’s a real chance he won’t obtain it, especially
Prev. Day 63.2	84.1
Week Ago 63.*	'
Month Ago 64.1 Year Ago, 65.0 .....7 Higr ‘
78.0	90.4	76.9
7.5	90.3	77.0
8L4	90.6	82.3
1967 Low 64.6
95.6	84.9	92.5
78.0	89.1	78*4
was promoted to supervisor — fleet service. He joins the home office organization following several years as Memphis zone service and parts manager. All deal will report to Goodwin.	'
UNLIKELY PROSPECT Here’s one reson why. If the Here’s one reason why. If the unlikely that a bank will wish to Ideal in gove^ment - backed I mortgages—federal housing
Mutual Stock Quotations
NEW YORK (AP) 'FIndncii
WnBanc 1.3d
WnUTel WdSigEI l.tO •■(eyerhr 1.40 ./hltlCp 1.40 White Mot 3 nOix 1.5*
13d 43''j
I4( t
13 47’e 47H 47>4
13 341* 341* 344* -
30 30	2?4. 3»(i
»5 350V. 357'/. 358
130 47** 47V* 47** +
..... ....	44 51** 51'/* 5)'.
Copyrighted by Th* Asioclated Press 19*9 Sales figures are unpfliclal.
Unless otherwise noted, rafts of dl dends In thi laregoing table are anni^ disbursements based on the last quarterly — semi-annual declaration. Special or <tra dividandl or paymanis ncl dtslg-sted as regular ara Identified In th* 'Mowing foomotes.
a- Also extra or extras, b—Annual rat* plus slock dividend. ^«-Llquldellng dividend. d—Declered or t>eld In 19*9 plus • • dividend. *--P*ld last year, t—Pay-------------- -	-sllmalad cash
able In stock during 19*9, esllmated casi on *x-lyld*nd or e g-Declarad or paid n-DaclareC — —
distrib
dividend or i
„	____ after stock
...» », up. k—Declared or paid , year, an accumuletiv* Issue with dividends In arrears, n—New Issue. p~ ~ lid this veer, dividend omitted, deferred no action taken at last dividend meet-...j. r-Declared or paid In 19*8 plus slock dividend. t,~Pald In slock during 1940, estlm*led cash valua on ex-dlvldand K-dlstrlbutlon dale.
Sales In lull.
'	X- Ex dividend, y-Ex
I In lull. x-dls--Ex dll right!
cia- CalliHl. >
ants.
* issued, nd—Next day
being raorganltad under the Bankruptcy
“s^lleT
PacTAT i!20
37^^29% 29’fc 29% -6	26%	26%	26%	-
13	50	50	SO
38	34'4	34'•	34'/%	-
10	7VM	71’1	71%	-
—I?—
26	37'4	36%	37»4	t
15	27'/j	27'4	27’4
68	29	21%	21%	-
13	22%	22%	22%
4	21%	21%	21%	f
12	26%	26%	26%
64	22%	72%	22%
74	34	34	34	i
2)	26>^	25%	26	-f
269	58'^	57%	S7''T	- - % ’
7	27»»	27%	27%
15	47%	47
American Music Reports Increase in Sales, Earnings
It Progrm;
...7.94 8.69
Indust 5.18 5.67 Incom 7.81 8.54 InGth 9.99 10.95 Fst InStk 9.6210.54 Fst Multi 11.13 11.30
Fl«t Fd
9.70
1 9.19
11.14 12.17 I Unftvail 27.76 27.76
(atkad) Thursday;	Fla Gth 7.W 873
Aberdeen 7.98
8.94 9.77
Group:
Ik 7.T« 3.17 13.59 14.19 7.48 8.30
Am Divin 1l.**)3.'74
Incom 3.55 3.79
9.33 10.19
Am Grin 7.35 7.99 Fund Am 10'.40l)'.37
n Mut 10.3011.3*
Anchor Group:
'cap	9.58	10.50
Grwin 13.8415.17 Inv	9.4010.53
Fd Inv 10.4311.43 - Assoclald	1.55	1.70
Ax* Houghton:
Fund A	8.3)	1.93
Fund B 10.33 11.33 Slock	7.9*	0.70
Scl Cp	4.44	7.33
Aero Sc 9.5* 10.35 Com SI 14.57 15.93 ^1 Ad 9.47 10.57
New Eng 10.44 11.53 New Hor 37.98 37.90 New WId 14.40 15.03 Newlon	14.5418.00
Noreast	17.0317.03
Ocogpn	9.3010.14
omega 8.75 B.05
100	Fd 14.31 17.03
101	Fund	10.7411.74
One wms 14.3314.33 O'Neil	18.0519.30
“Costs have gone up 10 per cent in the last year,” said Mil-ton Brock of M. J. Brock & Sons, Los Angetes builder.
Bernard Janis, president of Janis Corp., of Miami, Fla., estimated the cost of a $30,000 home has risen 20 per cent in the past year and wiil rise 10
Penn Sq
Grih Ind 22.46 23.13 Gryphon 19.29 21.08 Guardn 27.69 VM HAC Lev 13.5614.M Ham Gth 10.05 10.99 5.45 5.95

Hartwell 16.3017.81
1.72
9.24 ,9.24 20.29 20.29
15.27	16.73 10.00 10.93
8.47 9.26
12.28	12.28 14.57 15.92
8.88 8
14.6015.96
15.62 16.27
Bullock 16.0017'^3
CG Fd 10.15 lO.V; Canadian 18.6120.13 Capit Inc 9.47 10.38 Capit $hr 7.82 8.57 Cent Shr 12.01 13.13 Channing Funds;
H /jann ______________
Hubsmn 10.9310.93 ISI Gth	6.11	6.68
ISI inc	4.99	5.45
Imp Cap 10.70 11.63 Imp Gth	8.38	9.11
Inc Fnd	13.19	14.42
Plan Inv 13.3014.54
Price TR 34.00 24.00
Providnt 6.24 6
c FdD
12.23 13.37
Ind Trend 14.57 15.9?
12.97 14.17'
7*53 8.23
insBk Stk 6.49 7.09 Inv CoAm 14.4515.79 Inv Guld 10.34 10.24 Inv Indie 14.7514.75
Rep Tech 5.93 6.4S
RosenthI 9.8610.78
Schuster 17.8019.45
It inv Uneven
Special 3.37 3.68	IDS r^l 5.39 5.75
Shrhid 13.50 14.75
Chemical 18.1619J6 Inv Resh 4.93 S.39
Cap Fd 11.0913.13
Ivv	26.79	26.79
Johnstn 21.35 21.35 Kay stone Funds:
Cus Bl 30.14 31.03 Cus B3 21.60 23.56 10.1811.12
14.0 15,0|FreepSul 1.6C
A<i cAiI 3*1 lAj \Z	i.<v / //*/* //•/« fj'm -ti
25 3?%	3?’% 7 % ! E®
111 34% 34% 34'/V -
22.9 30.0 FruehCp l.Vo 47 3ft’'» 37'.e 37%
•	PPG Ind T.ww
•	ProctGa 2.60 •, PubSCoi 1
American Music Stores Inc.i '*1 oday reported sales and: .''learnings for the six months ended Jan. 31.196d.	j
Sales totaled $16,039,008 for an | increase of 3 per cent over thej
_______ H $15,580,174 for the comparable
”o 4st 15 * 4i'‘i I	period last year,	|
n »i* m 75V, *	, E a r n i n g s' after taxes
u	; ;S|amounted to $738,742 for an
IT S*',	*•'<* +	of 4.8 per cent over the
I J,V!*	$705,150 for the same period last
Inveet 1o!l411.10
Cus K1 0.10 9.94
h C&D 1.09 2.04
Cus SI	21.92 23.9J
Cus S2	12.0313.13
Cus S4 4.40 7.00
mr ............
Com St 11.47 11.47 Sec DIv 14.34 IS.U Sec Eqult 4J9 4.S Sec Inv	I.SS	9.34
Setae Am 10.75)1.43 Sel Specs 14.1410.43 Side 10.9912.01 Sigma	11.70	12.07.
Smith B 10.1410.14 Sw Invest 10.03 10.04 Sever Inv 15.41 17.10 StFrm Gth 5.09 5.09 State St SI.» 52.25 Steadman Fds:
Am Ind 14.2215.54 FIduc	0.04	8.01
Scien	6.Z2	4.00
Stein Roe Funds:
Bel '	21.1021.10
Inti )4.)8 14.18
Cons Inv 13.0013.17 Consm Inv 5.73 4.24 Conv Sec 10.4411.43
TMR Ap 24.70 29.17
Corp Ld 14.41 17.99
entry Cap 14.22 1S.3S ~	■ - ”55 14.92
IS 79.05
Liberty	7.47	0.30
Lite Stk	5.24	5.73
Lit* Inv	7.43	0.34
1-----f-.-
Tachvst
Techncl
7.19 7.0*
Caned 39.19 39.19
Pubikind .>51	30 12Vi 17 I2'i
PugSPl 1.40 i Pullman 2.00
( 43'* 4?*» 43
DowTh In
gif'!}; *T^
Drexel
Dreyfus
15.22 14,03
Capit I2',7212‘.72
7.39 7
3.93 4.30
FrMey'i tol Dividend* Declared	Gen Elec 2 40
Pt- Stk. at Pey- , Gen ?di 2.40 Ret* riod Recerd able I Gen Mills io STOCK	I Gen Mot 3 40
gro Industrie*	lOOpc	- - - -
tWln Disc	20pc
REGULAR
Cant Banking Sys .11	0
Bouttnvn Drug .20	0
TwI^DIsc .^. .	..#5. ,.0
79 33>< 37*» 37**
e-o sxr-UDU'
S-2 CTelEI I. Gen Tire
4-	IS Genesco 1
5-	15 G* Petit'c 4-2 ‘Gerber 1.1
20 29'* 20**’ 29
37*S 37*4 -«• //I .24’* 27 344 30** 38	3I'«
|R*nco Inc 9; '* Raytheon 50 ** I Reading Co
39 27*. 27 —
241 47>. 42'* 41 75*4 25’i 5 J9'i 39', y 39'. 39 S9	I9H
106 2/1* 27'* 27’,*
I 45»e 4
24 02^ II
* year.
T';. Earnings per share were $1.32 ‘ '* based on an average of 560,800 7shares outstanding for the current period, compared to' '	$1.28 for the same period last
year ° ba.sed on 550,000 shares outstanding.	‘
;! American ^lisic Stores in ''^ Pontiac include Gfinnell’s and ; WKC Department Store.
0.19 9.72 17.39 17.39 13.94 15.24 .11.51 12.51 >Wlrd:
13.37 14.4) 4.92 7.S2 leclal 14.0515.34 15.99 17.37 14.51 15.14 14.43 15.90 15.30 15J0 10.42 11.4) .	10.5*11.32
Eqult Olh 11.77 20.57
Manhtn 7.14 IJ7 Mass Fnd 11.7) 11.00 Mass Gin 12.2913.43 --------- --9917.48
15.99 17.48 8.75 8.75
Temp Gl 22.00 24.04 Tower MR I.U 9.49 Tran Cp 9.97 10.14 T*»*nC Gin 5.00 5.53 Unit Mut 11.07 12.77 TwenC Inc 5.45 5.94 Unlld 11.4412.50
7.91 I
Grwtn
Incom
S^lal
Stock,
Eberst
Egret
lOTs*
McDon 10.1411.22
M 10.22
ty's 14.30 IS.43

M 11.43
Mu Omin 1I.24 I2.'24
10.32 20.00
Frm BMu 12.44 12,44 Fed Grtn 14.87 14.25 Fid Cep .................
NEA Mul 11.41 11.44 West jnd
--------- 14.04	14
Scien 8.79 9.,, UnFd Can Uneven Value Lin* Funds: V*l Lin 8.99 9.85 Incom 4.14 4.88 Spl Sit 9.54 10.45 Vances spl 0.49 9J0 Vandrbt 9.5* 10.45 Vang SJ9 4.11 Var IndPI S.79 4.29 VlklfM 7.07 oi! WellSt In 12.18 13.53 Wash Mu 14:57 15.92 Wellglor .............
House Prices Skyrocket-More Increases in Sight
NEW YORK (JV-If you plan to buy a house this spring, forget about last year’s prices and don’t laugh when the salesman tells you “this place is a steal at $40,000.”
Higher interest charges on mortgages, higher taxes and insurance and rising costs of lumber and other materials have sent house prices skyrocketing. More increases are in prospect.
per cent more to about $39,500 in the next six months.
Drilling Barred in Pacific Area
LUMBER PRICES SOAR The cost of lumber rose 50 percent in the past six months,*' he said. “Why? Who’s the one pushing it up? Most of our lumber comes from the big Douglas fir mills on the West Coast and they’re selling to the government and Japan at inflated prices. We’ve got to pay their prices to get the materials we need.”
Advance Mortgage Corp. of Detroit said in its semiannuail survey that today’s house buyer will pay, compared with a year ago, an average 10 per cent price increase, a 1V4 per cent rise in interest rate and a 5 per 9ent increase in taxes and insurance.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of the Interior Walter J. Hickel barred today oil leasing on some 55,000 acres off the coast of Santa Barbara, Calif., where a well blew out and oil polluted the beaches.
Hickel al$o issued more stringent petroleum operating regulations for the federal offshore area along the entire California coast.
He said that drilling and production in the Santa Barbara channel would remain shut down indefinitely until the Interior Department is satisfied that its resumption would be safe.
Hickel said it might be necessary to abandon entirely a Union Oil Co; drilling platform, where the well mishap last Jan. 28 spread an oil dick over some 800 square miles of ocean as well as the area beaches.
Hickel revealed his plan, prompted by the Santa Barbara pollution, in a statement following a closed meeting with the House Interior Ommittee.
It came Just ahead of a scheduled weekend visit by President
U. S. Plans 10 Visits to the Moon
HOUSTON, Tex. OP) - If tha first manned lunar landing comes off as planned in July* a space official says, it will M followed up by a series of other$ for “a sum total of 10 voyagea to the surface of the moon.” !!
br. Thomas 0. Paine, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, told the Air Force Association convention yester* day:	5-
If we do make the first touchdown this summer, we’H follow that with three similar voyages, each time increasing! the scientific equipment.” i Each of the first four mooii landings, he said, would leave equipment to measure lunar! surface disturbances and to riB» fleet laser beams back to earUfll OVERLAND EXPLORATION I
The six later landings, hi said, could be set up in areal of the most significant interoi$ and could include overland €$▻' ploration.	>
“We’re talking here reafty
Fid, Fund 17.6* 19.vr Fld j.Trnd 27.19 29.55 ,
Nat Invest 7.89 8.53
12.40 13.7 .8.45 9.2:. 14.59 15.77 #0.20 22.00 13.93 15.22
...Nixon to the polluted area. Nix-iabout man’s conquest of tht j on planned a helicopter inspec-seventh continent,” be sai^; ition of the Santa Barbara beach noting that the moon has aboilt area during his weelqend visit to'the area of North and SouJk ICalifpma.	'America,	i

For Want Ads Dial 3344981

THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JVIARCH 21, 1969
Winston Churchill Memorial in U.S.
or ouaroian%?^ than d*m
lawful for any, parant, median or i custody or darga of;i
1 any sldawalk or on
.	ao. ■.	■ P'***!'' O'* olfier waapons!
tp Be DedicatedfeSSSWAff"”
^	XI. .Forfe
nighttime, without authority of the rnril ef Thanba any parani, gagegian or permission of the owner	of such	*• liianiw
havinii custody or ^rge of ; premfses;	'	----------
•«* ®* fwenty^ne (29) Spit years Ip knowllngly permit such minor to floof or sea
possession or use any any floor, wan,
firearm, sling shot, air gun, air rifle, air place of public a_____
Disfoi. n. oMk., --------„ defined (30) Wrongfully throw or propel any
licensed shooting snowball, misslla or oblect from any
THE FAMILY QF RAYMOND D. “'Own sincerely wish lo express to elr relation, ■->—j-
... . - jSropel any
4>TTTmrsxT »»	0’^!?**' PlsohofSeP end us^ pefsbVor automobire,-
FUliluN, Mo. (® — The	ordinance are hereby (32) Wilfully desfroy, remove, damage,
dedication of the Winston I^n^Sp J«?for? aJS’U I* U’lz‘.5 pm^er^^ .JSt ‘h'li: oTn?"*;r ^^“publ’l^ ChurchiU Memorial and Library. ?Ln% '’“rwr4'?^	» re'‘''lf;dr“a'nt,*"2,arr''£ox^'’»
here May 7 will be a day-lone	'' **.. *’’* „'*l»oi’e"on of me light, street sign, traffic control device,
^	a ''“3 Chief of Police after all court fines and railroad sign or signal, or mark or post
attmr,	i costs have bean paid.	hand bills on, or In any manner mar the
it it	XII. PENALTY — Any person**"* of, any public building, or fence,
eommitinp any of the acti of disorderly */*«' or tjoje wlfhin the Township, or --- ct Iwteinbefpre mentlonad_ or Who
them at the loss of husband and father. Special thanks • to Pastor Rev. Lee Lalone for his kind words. Also to C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home for their kind help.
Mrs. Raymond D. Brown ,
the restored Church of St.
fif E FAMILY ■ OF DAVID ’ L. CLARK sincerely wish lo express their gradltude and appreciation for me many acts of kindness.
Mary, Alddfmanbury, brought meaning .herit?^ $ha'ii to the campus of Westminster “ ...........
College from the bombed ruins W e!,r.id’'’5i'e
a disorderly person wimin the omPOttV belonging to the Township or meaning .hereof shall be guilty of a ™move the same from the building »' rnisdemaanor, and upon conviction O'*®*, *'’*'■* '* "*^9 be kept, placed, ih.r^t i.*,— g	competent ?,ored,	‘ .............
from their friends, relatives, and neighbors for the lovely lloral offerings. A special thanks to the employees at GMTC and St. Joseph's Hospital. Also to ma Rev.
of itg site in London, is the
__	disconnect
Hundred and no looms “""’"O?	•"V Township water meter WE
Dollars and costs of prosecution without proper aumorlty;	hs
----------- ,he rauntv iail not <“> Commit the offense of larceny, by fr
J'...	"	sle*l!r\o. n* Ihn nron«r*v nf >nnth.r	<h
Emil Konti Funeral Home. Steven Clark and families.
WISH to" EXPRESS our
Jr. and Rev. Sparks^Srlffln — -hd Roger
fine and imprisonment
*	discretion of the cour,.
It was at Westminster that	.,\^'’?*'-Ep
Churchill delivered his
Ordinance No. 42 adopted October 23, 19*1 »
4mts for or* concerning money t
curtain” speech in March 1946. wi^'^h^'^SS'^1^lf^^^^ SSivIry,*
recent bereavement in the loss o our .husband and father, Willlan u—r,----------Special thanks h
writing Sparks-Gfiffin Funeral Home. Mrs.
War If policies.
*	*	*	ortlnanM*u!iall°ba heW vow'°'lneffecti5e	lass'!* " IN LOVINd MElrtORY of Mary Ida
. the principal dedication *ft,'S“r’''l'a“!lSl}y*''a '{’hi“rJM	a "w'SnTe?."ul mother, woman In aide,
speech Will be given by admiral -Hons har.^^	°"^,dr
of the fleet, the Earl Montbat-'at a'reguUr loard mining AMr?h 1^	* tr'SS"'**"'''
ten of Burma. Also present will ’***■	arthur j. salley,..	°	• ""'"o"' *"»* '“'o'"*''
be Winston S. Churchill II„
f person repeatedly
ufATepcriDn	HutHvse or neressmg sucn other .,w,.sj,	a,,	u^ou'".
MARCH Ji ioM	or his .family, whether or not	.‘*9 90ur friends, and all whom
,e.«ueai or to. use any	.... .......
- threatening,, vulgar. Indecent, obscene, PROPOSED ORDINANCE NO.	'"'"'""O language over any
DISORDERLY PERSONS	PFNai Tv
WEAPONS ORDINANCE	AN ORDINANCE TO PROHIBIT AND -A ■	,
AN ORDINANCE PROVIDING FOR DEFINE DISORDERLY CONDUCT- TO Any person commiting any of me acts THE REfxULATION, U S E, PROHIBIT ACTS DETRIMENTAL TOl mAn«	conduct hereinbefore
PROHIBITIONS ON USE OF WEAPONS THE PUBLIC PEACeT T(3 PRESERVE mentionert.	.k„. a. .
IN THE CHARTER TOWNSHIP OF THE PEACE AND GO()D ORDER IN'
WATERFORD, OAKLAND C O U N T Y , THE CHARTER TOW^NSHIP O f‘
MICHIGAN: TO PROVIDE FOR THE WATERFORD AND TO PROVIDE PUBLIC PEACE AND SAFETY OF PENALTIES FOR THE VIOLAT^N PERSONS AND PROPERTY: DEFINING THEREOF.	VIOLATION
....... "	■“	the charter TOWNSHIP 1
OF WATERFORD ORDAINS:	I
that. Mother
was you.
Missed by your children.___^___
IN LOVING MEMORY Of f=red
Loit and Found
and white male
LOST - BLACK I
___	_____ ...BRADOR
Retriever, female 7 yrs. old, named "Moxle", wearing red collar, vie. Cranbrook and Lone Pine Rds.
off truck In vicinity
ng spike of Tclei
1 PART TIME MAN $50 WEEK^
Married, 21 or over and depen dable. Call OR 4-0520 from 5-7 p.m tonight only.____________
outdoor work, $2.75 |
start. *4t-92*0.________ _
ACCOUNTING CLERK, experienced in payroll, billing, receivable payable. Apply Rochester "-------------
II SL, Rochester, Michigan.
A -1
experienced In Cooking-Cleaning, must have .recent city reteren—
PANY wants experienced a
arouno worn, gooo nospirai ana retirement benefits. Apply to Square Deal Cartldge Co. 13401 Eldon Ave., Detroit. 48234. 365-*400. An Equal Opportunity Employejr^_
AUTO PAINTER
Must be experienced, plenty of
Sammy Vaughns, w
March 21, 1967:
around and whispered Come ‘ gently
Aviotion Electronics
Technicians and Installers, good pay, profit sha-’— —
THE MEANING OF WEAPONS,
PROHIBIT THE USE OF AIR GUNS,1
fine nof fo exceed One Hundred and no lOOths ($100.00) Dollars and costs prosecution or by imprisonment In
Put our arms around you, never lo
TWENTY-ONE .YEARS; —IS FOR PENALT— \TION THEREOF.
0 exceed
,'IT'	yr wilt such tine ana
Imprisonment In the discretion of fhe
This ordinance shall it known as the "Disorderly Persons" Ordinance and ^	It shall te deemed sufficient. In any
■ THE ■■ CHARTER " TOWNSHIP 0 F "ovuUs*hel^SSf *to'°detilI?"fh.“*.»™	REPEAL OF ORDINANCES. I
WATERFORD, OAKLAND COUNTY, by such short W(i, and by nrfereiJ?!	**‘''9 * <"sorderly
MICHIGAN HEREBY ORDAINS:	' to tK number her^	pe;*<ms ordmance, adopted Allay 20,
SECTION I. DEFINITIONS - The Section U.	)9M is hereby specifically repealed,
word weapon,, as usad herein, shall Any person who shall	"	----- --------- "
tf\ClUdO Sny tnatritnuMit iiodul In Mb*	...ia*.i_ as..
pl^ulilan
daughter, Mildred and Rita
Vaughns._____	___ _
IN LOVING MEMORY ot Ford R. Paddock who passed away March
s, darts, B-
of any
d within It, .. -,
jnt, gat, spring ___________
compressed air. A "sling shot" shall deemed a weapon within ma meaning
DISCHARGE
a a disorderly
10 shall ei
ordinance, t|dopted May 20, 19M is hereby specifically repealed.
All other ordinances Inconsistent with me provisions of this ordinance are, to the extent of such inconsistency, hereby reoea ivl
V wonderful memory of a hus-
deafh fries to break b
punished as hereinafter provided.
K:lnn III ncciMlTinuc "
I any section or provision of any.
section of fhls ordinance shall be held void, ineffeefive, or unconstlhitional,' such clause shall not affect the' the remaining sections
It time so far has oi
hereof.
of business oTVsiembry'oiMtn' to*
■O'* OOV Section VMI. WHEN EFFECTIVE nimiu-*"‘9*’ Is open fo the Introduced at a regular has access '	** '**’ *^^	toeetlng March 17, 1969,
O F Section IV. ACTS PROHIBITED
I'll live In I dear.
With happy da' Dearly loved ant wife, Edna.
A. It Shall be unlawful for any person excepf a police officer or other pea~ officer In the discharge of his duties, fire Or discharge any gun, pistol, shotgi
gurt, air rifle, air p
Ir pistol, sling shot, or
. _____ ______lent calculated to propel
or mrow any missile wllhin the Charter Township of ----------- -------- . . - .
------------ provided.
------------   g	In the foregoing clause
shall prohibit any person from dfsCharglng such -------- ‘“
necessary defense of h
of mis ordinance:
(J) Commit an assault, or an assault hattery on any person,-	‘
Announcements
4-PIECE BAND,
'er. FE 5-
hi“'?!l?rco%“dru*S' Death Notices
0. ■n'loence of any narcotic drug jb c n a«i	*
a In any Indecent, Insulting,
BINGHAM, BABY JAMES
le discharge' „,	,
_	---- ly licensed wimout wearing proper ai
g gallery of me township or targeti (7) Utter vile, —
IS under suitable regulations for tne la-------
ATTENTION-Golf Course Workers
Are you making a living wage, do you make over $3 per nr., do you have a pension plan, do you have Ilfs Insurance, do you have a paid vacation, do you have your hospitalization? If you can't ------ yes to all these questions
y of Its citizens and
e In fortune telling or pretend
... ...	--n to tell fortunes for hire, gain or reward:
.., -------- pistol, gun, shot' m AAake any Immoral exhibition oi
»r firearm or wim a sling shot,; Indecent exposure of hts or her person;
• - I, air r fle, or any other (10) Summon, as a lokeTr prank oi
ALLEN; March 19, 1969; I960!
Grand View; beloved infant son of James and Jodyi
Bingham.^Funeral service willj	calung'; /^or^service
be held Saturday, March 22,
1 tn 'of tl
call FE urn.
IN YOUR HOME, FE 40439._____
HALL FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS", church. OR 3-5202. FE 2-
at 11 a.m. 'at the Huntoonj JSs?*’'
Funeral Home. Interment inj hall for rent. _^RECE^rbi^ Perry Mount Park Cemetery.	“	........
liac, Michigan. ATT.: Monty ’
_or Cal^l_474-0441 or WO 3-M14.
ATTENTION
Opening lor Distributor lor nationally known beverage, established route, Pontiac area, must be young and agresslve, year around lull time work, call collect,
KE 7-7100, from 9-5 PM.____
BOAT PAINTINGT’AND repair, steady work. Newkirk's. 215* Cass
;e Rd.
BOY AND YOUNG Man over 16 wanted for bike and mower shop, full or Dart time, must have some small engines.
private school. Call Ml 4-3185.
" BRANCH MANAGER TRAINEE
One of the largest consumer
finance organizations in the coun-

e lor
_________________ position. High
school graduate. Mentally alert. Interested in credit work. Some experience dealing with the public, good starting salary with regular increases. Quick advancement assured for person with ability. Liberal employee benefits. This Is a career position, not lust a lob. Your employer will not be contacted without your permission. Interviews from 8:45 a.m. to 5:30
: '
tor Mr. Kuzeppa.
Bridgeport Operators EXPERIENCED
Day shift, standard benefits ex-
_____E Corp.
........Aaple	Troy
An equal opportunity employer
t Waterford; provided
address where the service called for Is "Of needed;
(II) Destroy, Injure or In any manner efece any drinking ^ntaln locate:' thfliw or deposit
IF YOU ARE HAVING financial riHfipi.Kv - Go to 10 W. Huron — Mich. We are professional
Intoxicating liquor ..	.
stuM^Ing drugs^ajl «*^' It'
of moi
inv puMic place ,-
03) Engage in any dishAZance, flghf-or quarrel In a public pla'--X •m orl (14) Collect or stand m cowos, or In his arrange, encourage, or abet the collection
. ---------- In any of persons In crowds for Illegal or
SECTION %r'"r^RF*E"rTuSr o Fr(?'5?'*Jo*.?to'’,X-^1Sf,S..'S WEAPONS — All weapons carried or;any street, alley,
(16) Loiter on any street In any park or public bblld.... himself In any public place so as to " —* ““ ^reo^ and uninterrupted j
anlmals'of any type' with’ a’weapon,|'Tr7°)'*Play'.... ______________ ...
■‘■’T streat or sidewalk or otherwise obstruct '	my street or sidewalk by
groups thereon, for any
Counselors. It will cost you nothing

»f Waterford.	..... ..
SECTION VII. HUNTING — No person obstruct .... ............ ...........- ------- m I passage of the public; ■
g or conduct
CURTIS, SAMUEL COX V; HOLIDAY MAGIC March 19,	1969;	44 5 6	distributors
Driftwood, Commerce]	NOTICE! I
„ U-	10 u 1 .. J	ASSOCIATION FORMING
Township; age 13; beloved caii 338-8972	^	12-6
son of Samuel Curtis IV and|
Shelia: beloved grandson ofi Mrs. Burt Raumsure, James Gay and Samuel Curtis III;| dear brother of Scotty C.,i Stacey C., Sandra Carrie and Betsy Curtis. Memorial service will be held Saturday,]
March 22, at 2 p.m. at the Milford Presbyterian Church.
Cremation at White Chapel Cemetery. Samuel will lie in state at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford.
Home calls by Appointment
DEBT-AID, Inc.
10 W. Huron FE 2-0181
Licensed I. Bonded ____Serving Oakland County
LOOK I
Ray Lahham, Chuck York, Ed
Hodges Barbi
1. Phone FE 4-8671.
of Waterford, Oakland Counfy, Michigan. ____
SECTION VIII. MINORS — Excapt collecting when accompanied by a person over purpose; twenty-one years of aga in a regularly (I8) EnL_,. .......
licensed shooting gallery or target range (1?) Attend, frequeni, operaie or oe an	, 1
with regulations for profecflon of persms occupanf or Inmafe of any place where 20, 1%9; 5181 TangCnt'^Road, anJ property and except in conjunction prostitution, gambling, the	Waterford Township;
or occupation bclovcd husbaud of Virginia!
LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY A-Dlet Tablets. Only 98 Cn^».
NOW OPEN MIHITESIDE Riding
Stable, 550 White
In any act of prostitution; GARRETT, JOHN 0.; March
hay rj^s^887-5464.___
STOP
YOUR HOUSE FORCLOSURE Slop the bill collector —
BORING MILL OPERATORS, FULL FRINGE BENEFITS. APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE. SUTTER PRODUCTS CO., 40y^HADLEY^ ST., HOLLY.
COOK, DINNER SHIf=T, 2 p.m. until
Roast and brol
’ atmosphere, year
Experienced fry and broiler work. No Sundays or holidays. Bedell's Restaurant Woodward and Square Lake Rd.
CITY OF PONTIAC
and 2
position. Excellent benefits, excellent opportunities lor advancement. Must have a reasonable knowledge of the principles and practices of drafting-or have knowledge of the principles and practices of land surveying.
a Jn prostitution, _________
.- -	- i.	-V-	-Jle of Intoxicating liquor, or
possession outside the curtHage of his any other Illegal or Immoral business or home within the Charter Township of occupation;
Waterford an olr gun, air rifle, *lr Pistol, (21) Solicit or accost any person for the sling siKrt or other weapon as defined purpose of Inducing fhe commission of herein. The Chief of Police or any any illegal or Immoral act; member of fhe police force of the Charter (H) Knowingly transport any
Township of Waterford shall *>•"• - -•—	----A
aothorlty and ft shall be his '
confiscate any air gun, air rifle, air the purpofo of enabling pistol, sling shot, or other weapons, as engage In gambling -- ' defined herein, fourtd In the possession of immoral act; any person under twenty-one years of (23) Keep or malnteln a gaming room,
22!’	K2?."	?.®r'."« *®il®*; "■ *".9 •»'"=9 Sr pool
*9*	9**t» ,sn*>l ho tickets, usad for gaming; or knowingly
permitted to have In his possession an elr suffer a gaming room, gaming tables, or gun, air rifle, air pistol, or sling shot|any policy or pool tickets to be kept,' when traveling between his home and any maintained, played or sold on any; shooting gallery or target range or course premises occupied or controlled by him; ' of Instruction In the use of said weapons (24). Disturb the public peace and quist as may be apprev^ ^ the Waterford by loud, boisterous, or vulgar conduct;
----Police Department; provided (25) Permit or suffer
• a place where prostitution i ~ 's practiced, encouraged, or allowed for
“.---------- ■' —abllng such person lo
r Illegal or
Clark Garrett; dear father of A. C. Monteith; dear brother, of Agnes Dornan; also survived by four grandchil-j dren and four great-grand-1 children. Funeral service willj be held Monday^- March 24,| at 1:30 p.m. at the Church of Our Saviour. Arrangements by the Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home. The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to the Church j of Our Saviour, 6655 Middle
millions of dollars for mortgages — widows, divorcee's, and people with bad credit	-
Any-Rlsk Mortgage Co.
398-7904
low — for a confidantia >araonal Intarview)
Apply: Personnel Department, Pontiac City Hall, 450 Wide Track _Drlve. E.	_
DRIVERS, WIPERS NEEDED.
149 W. Huron__
DRAFTSMAN WANTED ~ long range program, must be experienced. Jaybird Automation, 45380 West Rd., Walled Lake, _Mlch. J^4-4776.
DIE MAKER
Top rales. 58 hour week. All Irlnoei plus bonus. M 8. M Bend-Englneerlng. 1419 John R., of 15 Mile Rd.
South o
_____BOX REPLIES
C-7, CB, C-14, C-20, C-22, C-23, C-29, C-34, C-35, C-36, C-65, C-72.
Funeral Directors
hi; provided (25) Permit or sutler any pla
-	- ^ ^	.. by a person occupied or controlled by him to be .	-- - --------, ----
,i’:*a tSfd’^irrravXg* tr'-illIS	SeU Rd., Birmingham.
1 said course of Instruction, shooting (26) Obstruct, resist, hinder, or opfxise - - ■
SM'iTE- TO - ,,	5	•'0™S,_ALEX C.: March aj,|
COATS
FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS
DESIGNERS
CHECKERS
DETAILERS

nefit
THE HOME TEAM THAT GIVES YOU THE MOST FOR YOUR MONEY
capp Homes
iwniiun, KriB*i.uaA fuuK
numa, AND F^URNISH ALL FINISHING MATERIALS FOR INSIDE AND OUT AT A FIRM PRICE.
tion. Either way you SAVEl
Th
Ckarlet McCrew
Ne-Manay-Oown Plan and other way
J--------RAIL THIS COUPON tODAY--------
I Te CAPP-HOMES,	Dapl. **
I 3355 Hiawatha Ava.. Mpls., Minn. 55406 , Pleaaa sand ma more iriformatlon
29 Niagara Road. Funeral arrangements are’ pending at the Sparks-Griffinj Funeral Home. Friends may| call after 3 p.m. o n Saturday.	,	,
Huntoon
FUNERAL _______
Serving Pontiac for 50 years
79 Oakland Ave._______FE^ 2;01f
C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Kaego Harbor, PH. 682-0200.
SPARKS-GRIFFiN
FUNERAL I
E 8-9200
NEWMAN, MAX E.: March 19,j	________________
1969; Harrison, Michigan; age VoOrhpesSinle 58; beloved husband of|
Marjorie A. Newman; dear Established over 45 Years father of Mrs. Allen Coffey! PorsonoU	4-B
and James E. Luke; dear]
“I 1964 (JRADUATES OF Clarkslon
Karwas, Mrs. Lyle Saum,' -—AvdiDTARNisHMENTs"
Newman Jr.; also survived byj	tf^BllrBunding
i □ I oWn a tot. PI
i Q I don’t own a lot but I Could got ono.
-i:
four grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, March 22, at 1:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral home. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Newman will He in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.)
,FREE WIG, Wig parfias. WIgland.
FOR SALE HOLIDAY health SPA
E.
WILLIAMS, CHARLES March 19,	1969:	H
Paddock St.; age 78: beloved husband of Rosetta Williants; dear father of Mrs. Dolores Fleetwood. F.O.E.
\yill conduct
TO WHOM IT AAaT^ONCERN -contact Amy Perry, 139 V "----1, Pontiac,
WIG PARtlES. wigs by Calderon.
Lost and Found	5
No. 1230 FOUND: LITTLE FEMALE Beagle,, memorial	Hit*Co»ley Lk. Rd., with Itather
memorial	collaj% please phone, 335-9635.
service tonight, at 7:30 lost; koTTrsw terrier, male, at the	Sparks-Griffin Funeral,	fi“a'rar"‘'Vrr.*"Tf".,i'erf.n'''J:
Home.	Funeral	service will be'	*”35li^3i*.%,Tp?M.'
held Saturday, March 22, at lost: ^ ruby^ wrthstona^ m n g"
Interment in Oak Hill lost: miniature dray poodie, Cemetery, hr. Williams will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested v i s i t i n gj hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.)
portunity employer. Box C43 Pontiac.
polishers, c
D—8
Help Wanted Male	6
GENERAL SHOP LABOR
THORESON-McCOSH, Inc.
Troy, Michigan	689-4510
GOOD JOB, good pay. honest work. 338-9618.

Overtime.
CLYDE CORPORATION
1800 W. MAPLE RD._____TROY
EXPERIENCED MODERNIZATION carpenter or partner In sub-con- -trading. Good deal for righf man. 673-1129 bet. 7-9^p,m.	_
EXPERrENCeo HEATING and air conditioning mechanics and servicemen. Wages commensurate with ekperience plus outstanding fringe banaflts. AUTOMATIC HEATING CO. 332-9124. EXPERIENCED MIKELLANEOUS ipachina oparators. C r a s c a n t Machine Co., 2501 Williams Dr.,
Engineering Assistant CITY OF TROY $2.95 TO $3.80
utilize your experience in drafting, surveying or construction Inspection In rapidly growing engineering daparfment. Steady work with opportunity for advancement, axcellant benefit packagt. High School diploma required. Apply lo personnel department, 500 W. Big Beaver Rd.,
_ Troy. 689^-4900._^	_________
EXPERiENITEb SEPTIC TANK Men. Day's Sanitary Service, 2605 Dixie Hwy. _
ELECTRONICS ENG I N E'E R S Progressive, growth oriented small
essential. Interesting projects elude space and ocaangrapblc devalopmenls; also new medical and Industrial products. Araas Include work with IC's and logic circuitry; also VHF and HF aqulpmant. All benefits end ek-cellent future. Send resume In
Pontiac Press
EXPERIENCED TOOL MAKER for tool |lg end fixture work at production machine shop, good wages, fringe benefits and working conditions, plant employs 50 pqople, located 4 miles E. of Pontiac. Reply P.O. Box 4377, Auburn Heights, Michigan, 48057 or phbna 852-3400, ask for Mr. Coon.
LOSfl
Stf F'e'5^789.
■25*1. Reward.
Fawn color ---------------
ylcinify.of State and Johnson
GRILL MEN
For full or part time Good wages, hospital I tlon with pay and oi
ELIAS BROS.
BIG BOY RESTAURANT . -'elagraph 8, Huron
GREAT
Help Wanted Mole
MACHINIST
Small build shop n
nncc.nAPiicAi.LT inllincu for pipe fitting, dud work, air conditioning, hospitalliatlon and other benefits. 682-3100.
MEN FOR SPRING eWn
Help Wonted Male
RADIO-TV SALESMEN
Knowledge of music instruments also helpful. Excellent opportunity -------------- ----y Grinnall's.
Pontiac Mall.
Opportunity
in operations, meeting the salesmen for a CO. distributor
Service station _______
employe, who has had perience with station bookkeeping, en' public, to be a large major oil In Oakland Co salary and mam Send resume —
Pontiac Press Box l-/._
HAVE OPENING for; 2 SECURITY oflicere, 363-056J._
HOUSE MAN JANITORAL ex-
flrst letter
----- In town. Api^lv ™
Cieeners^379 E. Pike. motel CLERK. 60'years or oidei Saturday and Sunday nights 1
trie
posit it
in. Apply jn^person, Orchard
INSPECTORS CITY OF TROY $3.25 TO $3.65
and street
structlon Inspection. High school graduate with some experience required. Steady work with excellent benefit package. Apply to Personnel Department, 500 W. Big Beaver Rd., Troy 689-4900.
i'nspectors experienced In
floor inspection of small stampings
and production. Day and afternoon
Apply 8:30Jo^weekdays.
INSURANCE INVESTIGATOR
Fuli time and part time. Oakland County. Catl Employmen Manager, 353-4639.
JANITORS
Job Security
We are the
400 WILLIAM AAcMUNN
SOUTH LYON, MICHIGAN
__An Equal Opportunity Employer_
KAUFMAN 8. BROAD HOMES \% now taking bids on ail of its sub-
opportunity Employer. Michael Barron, 443-5760.
LIGHt bELiVERYa days, good car necessary, apply 1346 W. Wide
LICENSED REAL ESTATE SALESMEN WITH PURCHASING EXPERIENCE
Male or femalo lab assistant with some chemical t r a I n l n g . experienced In water or w8$fo. tl'eat-ment analysis desirable but not essential. Take advantage of this opportunity and become part.df a rapidly growing industry. Call J. All, at Vulcan Laboratories Inc., 334-4747.
LOT MAN
steady employment. Many benefits Including Blue Cross. Confect Bob Martin. Used cars.
Suburban Olds
860 S. Woodward _ Ml 7-5111
LUB' MAN AND MECHANIC
Progressive new car dealership, good
pay and lots of benefits, must b experienced.
OAKLAND
Chrysler - Plymouth
Then esk for Richard
Economy Cars_____________2335 Olxla
MEN WANTED, LAWN malntenBlice
furnished ...........
p.m. Bill Queen, 36)0 Oxford, OA 8-2296.
-tment. Call after 6
Must possess Initiative, be ooressive. and have a desire lor managing
business. You
advance 1 rapidly as you ..... progress o
our formal training program.
Numerous employto b a n • ■,, • Including semi-annual merit reviews and profit sharing. All replies confidential. Call or write:
SENTRY EXPECTANCE CORP. 741O^FHGHLANB-R0Afr— PONTIAC 674-2247
MAN BETEEEN ti
2 to II, 6 days a ...ui, have mechanical ability. Call days 67^350, nlgbls
salary, other Income
available for right ,_
3J38JM. Huron, In person.	_
MACHINIST-AFTERNOONS
General machine operators fo run all types of model shop equipment.
Control D a 11
Rd., Rochester. 651-88io. An a
advancement, opening for ■irwmen, repairmen and .spllcjrs. Credit for previous electrlcel Or
En^loyimnt
MACHINIST
TRAINEES
Have
EXPERIENCED BUFFERS and
■ aflarnoon. 335-
FURNITURE SALESMAN — For one of Pontiac's leading furniture stores, good salary plus commission. Call Harold Parks, 334-
Pontlac Press Box C-35. _________
GAS STATION ATTENDANT, experienced, mechanically Inclined, local ref., full or part time. Golf, Telegraph .—' •*—-
Cars and fr
I. Savoy Motel. 335-
anglnetrlng
.. . ________ ..________ Co., 317
Union St., Milford.
An Equal Etngloymenf Opportunity
.......... experience necessary.
Norwtsf Novelty Co„ 32480 Norlh-weslern_ Hwy., Farmington.
wages and
for the’right man. Apply
1, Hr-old I i., iuburn
NIGHT MANAGER
Full lima fJF Drive In restaurant. Company benefits plus bonus plan Apply In person. See Mr. Michaels. ELIAS BROS.
BIG BOY RESTANRANT _____ TeleBrepl^a._Huron _
Needed at Once! Young, Aggressive Experienced Auto Salesmen!
To fill our new car sales staff, who Intends lo earn top wages, hospitalization, profit sharing, fringe benefits Including Demo and BonusI Apply In person only, to Mr. Burmelster, GRIMALDI BUICK-OPEL, -------------
Real Estate Classes
Appikistlons are now being taken for ihstruefion classes In preparation for the real estate salesmen's examlneflon. Class will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Contact Mr. Vbnderharr at Von Realty 3401 W. Huron or phone 6M-5800.	_
STEADY WORK in IndOstrlal office lor man over 30. Early retirees considered. Send complete resume end pay Information to Ponfiac PC-33 Pontiac. _ SURFACE GRINDER, OD-ib and lathe hands. Many benefits,
SKY TOOL & GAUGE
40750 Grand River, Novi____
SHIPPING & RECEiVING
The Rochester Division of Control Data Corp. has openings for shipping clerks. In Its material distribution group. High school
OAKLANp •UNIVERSITY
stock Men, positions
atmosphere. Contact the personnel office, Walton and Squirrel Rds., Rochester, Michigan.
An Equal Opporjunify Employer
PARTS CLERK
Must b« able to work any shift, experienced preferred but not necessary. KEEGO SALES S. SERVICE, 3060 Orchard Lake, KeegoJtjrbor. 682-3400.
■ PART TIME
Shoe salesman. Salary plus comm.
Chance lo earn good e
Becker's Shoes, Pontiac Mall. 682-
05H.
required, e x p e

arting salary a. _ irogram. These posltior ur afternoon shifts. Coi S. J. Melder. Tt Division Coqtrof ~
Rochester Rd,,
Rochester, MICh. 651-8810. An e<
opportunity employer._
SKILLED MALE EIECTRONIC
GRADE SOLDERERS, PRINTED
CIRCUIT ASSEMBLY, EX-
PERIENCED ONLY,. GOOD WORKING CONDITIONS. EXC. FRINGE BENEFITS. TRANSIGN
Re-announces an open petitive examination for:
PATROLMEN
Salary $8,000 to $9,500
Applicants must be 21 to 39
. -.reptable GED scoi ...jf be 5'9" to 6'4" with 150 , 230 lbs. Have valid MIchlgar
PARTS MANAGER
Industrial distributor, experienced, must type, txc. opportunity fbr advancement. R. B. Richardson
record anil pass physical agilily lest. Excellent fringe benefits. Apply lo:
THE PERSONNEL DIV.
Oakland Counfy Court House 1200 N. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac; Michigan 48053
E RECEPTIONIST 5-6-. ^_r day. Accurate typist inexperience desireable. Apply L.
PROJECT ENGINEERS DESIGNERS-CHECKERS LAYOUT-DETAILERS CONTROL ENGINEERS ELECTRIC HYD. DETAILERS
special machine
M e r“ 11
Announces fhe following Closing Date Examination Applications must be filed no later than 5 p.m. April 4, 1969. Salary $5300 to $6)00
Radio Dispatcher
Applicants must be Oakland County resident, have passed their 21st birthday and be a high
school grai
:tures, heads, transit
etc.
TOOLMAKERS SPECIAL MACHINE BLDRS. GRINDER HANDS ALL AROUND LATHE OPERATORS TURRET LATHE OPS. MILL OPERATORS TAPE DRILL OPS.
EXPERIENCED ONLY a[_ company^ paid fr
conditions

Apply In person or write—
Fenton Machine Tool, Inc.
200 Atioy Dr. (U.S. 23 and Oweni Rd. Exit)
Fenton, MIchloan 48430 Ph. 629-220
POLICE CADET
CITY OF PONTIAC f Salary $5,451-$6,230. Heigh* 5' 8", aga 18-20 yr». High schoal graduate. Apply parsonnai dept. Hall, 450 WIdt Track Dr. €.
PATNfERS WANTED
Call 334-2444^Asl^forJt»a B^rfok. PART tTmE or full time, Clarlt over 18, Perry Pharmacy No 14. apply In person. 3417 Elizabeth
In law InforctmeAf Aftas a radio dispatcher, may be substituted for high school education on a
Excellent fringe benefits.
Apply fo:
THE PERSONNEL DIV.
Oakland County Court House
Pontiac, A
I. TELEGRAPH RD.
Phone: 338-4751 Ext. 495
TV TtCHNICIAN
For color, also application for road men, and car radio fechnlclans. oxcellant opportunity. Apply In person. Tech TV, 1416 W. Auburn, Rochester.
TimRETT LATHE
Operators and trainees, day night shift, good benefits.
lesfar, Mich. Subsidiary of
UNSKILLED
SEMI-SKILLED
plastic models,
oundings. Permlnent o
sitlon. Overtime and fringe benefits rail Mz.znzn	**
Investments c.,_ ------
______ _____ 2IM million In listings
hroughout Mich. Member of the r-
Lands. Over
service of Its kind, i______________
Michigan Business Guide. Write your own paycheck. All Inquiries sfrlclly confidential. Talk lo Ward E. Partridge or Archie Giles. 1050 W.
Huron Sf. Ph. 334-3581.______________
RETIRED MAN FOR stock and Clark work. Fingers of tha Mall, *824)411^
RELIABLE man v

it — full or
WE PAY DAILY
handlers. It___ ___
REPORT READY FOR WORK 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.
EMPLOYERS
Temporary Service, Inc.
8561 E. )0 Mila
WANTED: MEN 45 to 53 years old lor porter work. Day and evening ^Ifts. Apply after 4 p.m. Big Boy
_ Iftstaurant. 2490 Dixie Hwy.__
WANT FULL TIME man to laaim retailing, age 25 to 30. Apply WIckos Lumbar, Miracle Mila _ Shopplito^entor^o fo * dally.__
WAXERS
Exparlanced only. Part tima nights Union scale. Apply at )0 W. Long Lake Rd. Pontiac 5:30 p.m. fo *130
p.m. Mon, through Thurs. _ __
WANfio, MATURE AAAN to do maintenance work at 2 locations, must have own tr^portallon' and
WELDERS
For light gauge sheet metal fabrication, print reading desirable, shop working 58 hours, liberal amployta banaflts.
THORESON-McCOSH, Inc.
Troy.MIchlgan_
Help Wanted Male
Precision parts manufacturer .located In Walled Lake has immediate opening for people with
SALARIED POSITIONS
FOR
DETAILERS-LAYOUT MEN
On Packaging machinery. Must have working knowledge of math thru trig.
OVERTIME PROGRAM
Contact
Mr. Harry Egleston, Chief Eng. at 961-5774 or 624-4581
American Paper Bottle Co.
850 LADD RD.. WALLED LAKE
SUB.
rxua
mechanical ability, willing lo work, to learn a trade. This Is steady amploymant with a good starling rata and lull paid fringe banaflts.
Valcomotic Products
7750 W. MAPLE RD.
WALLED LAKE, MICHIGAN An Equal Opportunity Employer
MECHANIC-WELDER ~
COMBINATION
____ays, uniforms. Apply
Dlxje Hwy , Drayton Plaint.
MAN WITH MILITARY OBLIGA-
llon completed to work In ceramic manufajcturing. Job consists -* pouring molds, $100 a —'■
-	Kaego
Harbor. 682-3400.
MECHANIC, OPENING lor good all around man, good guarantee, plenty of work and fringe benellls. Ask	Werner. OL 1-9141 or
MACHINE OPERATORS””
And tralnoes, lor grinders and mills. Lynd Gear Inc., Soulh SI., Rochester, Mich., Subsidiary of _Condec.	___
~ MAN FOR WAREHOUSE
Must be good _ worker, ambUious
lob
Paper Co., 2737
Help Wanted Male
6Help Wanted Male
THE OAKLAND COUNTY MERIT SYSTEM ANNOUNCES THE FOLLOWING CLOSING DATE EXAMINATION Applications for this examination must be filed no later than 5:00 p.m. on Friday, March 28, 1969
For
WATCHMAN $5500-$5900
At the time of opiication, applicants musti
1.	Have passed their 21st birthday.
2.	Be an Oakland County resident.
3.	Have completed the 9th grade.
4.	Have a valid Michigan drivers license.
Excellent fringe benefits.
Apply to:
The Personnel Division Oakland County Court House ■ 1200 N. Telegraph Road Pontiac, Michigan 48053 Phone 338-47S1, ext. 495
—----------H^----------—--------
D-4
Htl|» >Waiit»d Malt
Verstand
ENGINEERING INC.
Designers of
'I’HK Vi)i\ riAC rUKSS. FIUDAV, MAKCJI 21, 1969
For Want Ads Dial 3344981
6 Http Wonttd Femalt 7|H#lp Wanttd Fcmdlt _ 7|Htlp Wanttd Fmalt________7iH(^Waiittd « E.
DENTAL ASSISTANT, PontlAc _______ ___________________________________________
experitncf Prtterred. Rwly Pon- REFINED LADY with typing #»-CALL MANPOWElf
Pi*” ®o* C-ll, PonllAC. I perlenc* for fronf'dtik recop- ---------------
DISHWASHER, NIGHTS, full fimt. tIonUI. privjto club — ImporUnt, . WAITRESSES Apply Blaio'i )33i w. Mapio, Jo moot pubftc—•' •	-
, I	- p.	conuiii__	„
I. All b
iDlai 'P f*** nubile well. S days, « a.m.' car day to S p.m. Attractive turrounding, i dental ASSISTANT - racapllonlsL' Pon*lecTrati
Machine Tools
1 uAUDr^uoKP	333A3M laam picture framing, mutt be
------ Pingeri of the
‘ handy and artlitic. F
9jW|i^ MfsetlHiHteas M
,2 CAR GARAGE, FOR atpraga ter
NEED A RAISE?
Opportunity knocks for ambltloui ^9{aE,ani	'^®***'
gal with office ikilit. Call IPS, 334-1 og'j*g|?"° «*“™*ora. C, DIxton.
EXPANDING SERVICES REQUIRE
Designers
-And
Detailers
DESIRING GROWTH THROUGH CONTRIBUTION
32371 DEOUINDRE
Experienced FOOD L.
’ weltrest, nights only, Forlino's steak House, bel pm h|o Sundays.
Experienced Housckeai; 31.T0.'	re*
y SEAMSTREis^WANTEb Will J Wright l/oholstering. FE 4 05S8.
SALESWOMEN. Experienced In "ecastery-, ladlei ready to wear. Full or parti lounge, j lime. High salary plus bcncllts.j .
a V a 11 e b 1111 y , must fransportatlon. A^ly today.
Howord Johnson's
Telegraph at Maple Rd.
WAITRESS WANTED. No exparlinca "for"two ----------- ------- . — ^ 1 ..... .....
Sfllti Http Malt-ftmalt 84 oEficei
Can'You Sell?!
Do you like workini
tg In a u«'
2535
"’’lll'i.
Mali, . portunity Employtf
oning, own trantPortatlon;' S^iSITtER," HDUSEJCBEPER^ ,.44. If no answer, lata aflernoon. j ”” y*»r>; EXPERIENCED “"sECREtARY for Ssiasi
, Birmingham office. Permanent------------------^ y.. i y—yvy. -
DOS tion with good pay, Blue Cross,	SALAD GIRL
profit tharing. and other fringe'
LIMOUSINE DRIVER
If to, we heva Immediate opening
----- for two real estate tales people,!
Bowl Interested/In making mdhey. Ek>| Rd.,1 perlence haiptui, but not ,nacestary Will train, plenty of leads and .	floor lime and attractive com-
8	mission schedule. For Interview,
call Mr. Taylor. OR 4-0306 Eves. -
Carol King, 334-2471, Shelling end UTILITY CAMPER FOR « ton
......-................i	“"O'*'®"
USED swIno^sETwith SLiOiT
new exciting career department and Ilk plush surroundings.
to work In Wonted Money
_____ Please call	-
IPS, 334-4»71.
31
-haring, a,,- .......
' ^neflts for loyal capabla person. 1 if;, ni.i; liwv Reply Box NO. C-34._	-
EXPERIENCED BEAUfY operaiof, * Gpinl lull lime, 425-5677.	««„^CUIT
cherge or partial. We .............
locco't.
senlngs In cated In D
Iding
— — ----------- ....------ ...Ipfur
Salary of $400 to 11000 month.
- ________________________________
. , M B L Y ;" ex- ARE YOU READY for the future? ONLY, GOOD, Call Mr. Foley, YORK REAL -.....- CONDITIONS, EXC. ESTATE, OR 4-0343.
, 0, fN"c!'?1fw'*fH"lF"^||LD^'*""*'°" “ A CAREER--------------------------^
4*,?y4?;'C',:ir*7l?4V.“ *^oSro^wr;£r':^'^lJ^^%i®:b.. 'n real estate
„ _____
tiarting wage $2.40 per hour. Ap- GENERAL' OFFICE,' typing" and' “UTk Wed. General "Mu-. k” ProgramI niy In person, Detroit Ball Bearing switchboard, Tuesday through^ *ble to * -I n .J*3_S. Saginaw SI.. Pontiac. Saturday. Call Mr. Blellas FE 2-' accuracy
WAMfFn 4”-^ OFFICE Full - time VV XiiN i J_jJ_y	Sanitary Service, 2405 Olxli
GRANNY-SITTER," 5' DAYS."
451-4454, eft. 4 p.m^
GRILL'COOK
SECRETARY FOR PRESTIGE SPOT
At Plush suburban firm, work with top brass. Call IPS, 334-4f7l.
W	...U. STENOGRAi^HER! How ^ a bout
•nished. 343-2475, » a.m. to 121 Betting In a newly formed on.	department? If you like lota of
—mbcrT"cAMCC-------------- relations and $423 a month
DIRelT SALES	to start. Call Lynn Anders, 334-
MALE OR FEMALE I	-------
time work, no age llml
...-rice's beat child carw __
development program. Wa furnish
r, 21415 W. 8 Mile,
ll°f ratyra^n*,es*«.
MILLION
Dollars baa been mads available
to	us to purchase, bhd ass-'
contracts, mortgages c homes, lots or acreage We will give you cam equity. Our appraiser Is your call at ^
674-2236	|
McCullough realty	I
rfIM40	Highland Rd. (A4-S»)	„,MLS,
36,Wanttd Rtol Estott
HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND ** COUNTY. CALL AGENT, 47^1494 or 33K952.
r your wafting
I will buy YOUR HOUSE
iNYWHERE, ANY CONDITION, 40 POINTS, NO COMMISSION,
CASHiNOW MOVE LATER Miller Bros. Reolty 333-7156
WonfsdJo£*nt_
DRAYTON PLAINS AREA, G. M. Miporvlaor end foiMly |uit 1ran«rrad. Dasiro 3-bidr00r-call collact — '
TRANSFERRED? Naad to! REALY, 44^4220.
.........h raasonabla
and speed, shorthend noli use a dictating machine, olfice, am looking lor
TRUCK MECHANICS Gas or Diesel. Liberal pay,
insurance furnished, retire-	- -h i
ment ond full benefits. See thp^ ninht °h ft^' \A/-ir°^ Mr. Coe, 8 o.m. to 4=30 p.m. ?"	r„t ^
Blue Cross and Life Insurance. Vocation and holiday pay. Apply in person only,
TED'S
BLOOMFIELD HILLS
GMC
Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485
An awel opportunjty employer VouH&''MATHrNiST wllh' lob shop experience, to maintain dies end -----------------^arls
Pleesar
someon. _______ „	____
responslblllly end make decisions, boss out of office	-* *'—
Phone 334-4454 lor i not want person sc,.v..» , work until April loth to I5lh,
SECRETARY
Due to our rapid expansion, Rochester Division of Control Corp. neodi a well-qualllled ~ -------- -----1 positlor
REAL ESTATE BROKI
talesmen, S400 to $l,i.. ......
guarenfeed plus bonus. Men and
.! uumemreo P,U5 uonus. men ana
-----.'7h«f;®v*ereV ,^le®.pe'r'S,n!i 3'® oX*
you &hOMld check vylth us. Wt wlill	thf
..... trAin »o h#in vou Ahiiiin vnnr i ^ouniy and ail through the north.
Interview. Do	license. If you 'qualify, and'^are	GOOD salespeople
to itart	accepted, we will pay you as you I 1®J*	^
learn. Call Mr. Lazenby, Laianbv l^lng, 54^-5610.__________
ReallYf	W. Walton,j ^	REAL ESTATE
BRICK CREW needs b
Mas.	______________
CARPENTER WORK and tiding of
fidentlal.
either Union Lake
for a secretarial
Drayton Plains. All Inquiries com ...	_____ mun
____________________________________ Northwestern Hwy. offiM It Tri cTeenlnu,
A Rut? Call Mr. experienced, we otter professional professRir
progr,n„ Ai— -------------
tralnei
‘^tad)^MiJs^"aer'??e?'‘'FE*'4l4lM^	WISHES TO SHARE I..,,
PhinV E. 0"S-E-H^e1e^.hI »^‘* types of music wants work I '
Pontiac » ~	----- -----
e. 441-0757 or 44
Dele Foley. YORK REAL ESTATE, Or'I training
previous experience and a high school education. Typing skill of 55 wpm, shorthand ability of at ler-‘
the ARE YOU ■*‘ Foley.
_________________
Us, h,v.	M']?Sl^.|c*'iEHUETT
WeteTford DrWe In™ Theeier, 35M-
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS desire floor Ing, polishing and windows,
■ ----------.... r.„i.,4slanal aquipment, re as.
.. Also need prices. 473-1427.______________________________
For appointment light HAULING end Construction I I ^ ,.,n clean-up; 33S-8445 eves. 332-5024. REAL ESTATE ' PAINTING,
WORKING GIRL TO share I ■ same, over 21, 343-00143.
TO SHARE a
LOTS WANTED
A BETTER CASH DEAL ............
Alt cash for homes, Pontiac and Drayton Plains area. Cash In 481 hours. Call home purchatln-departmeii^.
YORK
REAL ESTATE
E 8-7174_____OR 4-03
Divorce-Foreclosure?
Don't lose your homal We will cash out your Mortgage — all cash'
LAUINGER
674-0363
Wanted Real Estate
Real Estate
Cor
GRINDING TRAINEES
St pSStiK ‘**	® W. Huron Menufaclurer located In Troy has
"	7	Senior Stenographer
'	STEADY EMPLOYMENT	''—----------- -------
GOOD WAGES - COMPANY PAID BENEFITS Apply At
NcIplVanted I
. snormano aornty oi at leasr AirUxri DPi uu«»^i.ipsw/i
'pm Is required. Employrnent'	__ ___-.....
s an excellent salery and ^RE YOU REALLY LIVING? Or,
w Keoeodia ________ iuni evKtlna? Cali AAr Pnlev.
SALESMEN
Dale BUS BOY or girl must be It end	Due to rxpandinq p
Rd., dependable, days, closed Sun. end "NEW HOUSE SALES'
holidays. Apply In person. Bedell' ploding market in "RESIDEN-,	______ TIAL SALES" — we'need 3 lull
BLOOD DONORS . URGENTLY NEEDED
AlltRH Positive	87.50
*" RH Neg. wllh poslllve
ttork Wanted Female
36 ELDERLY COUPLE NEEDS home ~ I near Mall. Cash. Agent, 338-4951 1	1 Cn	^^4-1449.
1 to 50	1
. J. Melder, The
«Ia81 rftntPAl rtatM B
Rochester. Mich.' 45M810.
An equal opportunity employer
SALESLADIES
uriain and drapery shop, full time. *-■'— Drapery. Pontiac
lectors
loding merke lAL SALES"
time salesmen to ....._____ ______
We ere members of Multiple Listlno Service and Pontiac of Realtors. ExcollenI
eir®j';“...........	“
A-1 IRONING, 1 day Service. OR 3-' jJgOEf’TIES' AND LAND CON-9654-	I T.*?ACT._	_	I
In DAY HOUSE w^fTkT"n e"e"d WARREN STOUT, Realtor
transportation, FE 5-4251^_ 1450 N. Opdyke	FE 5-8145
HOUSEVVORK WANTED by the Urgently need lor Immediate salel
A MATURE I
IJhru^rl.,
A A W, DRAYTON PLAINS, 4355 Dixie H^. Opening toon, will	„
- -- and •'I'™*" b»'P',«i*p 1715 MAPLELAWN	TROY empiovee ' benefits, ''"cei.	.
fh^u Frl ®9 £ s’b 11,	“* Rb. lust W, of Crooks ,	Ulley-James
Zbfy.Zf'-r • *® * b.'*’' ' An Equal Opportunity Employer ^ IlOo Opdyke Rd., Poniiec. l’"5tJ!'‘'L.IS" IlSl'JSr.illli housewife who wishes to Equ»l Opporlunlly Empl
I	‘boft hours el ploesani work SECRETARY TO MANAOEl,,
WrIM pJsTotfire	P®^l.*c'	»' .'h«.«all, 482.0411.	' j:®,*rar?ilirj*"i'xp?—
givii^ complete Inlormallon. j Home Service Consultant i red. Tape-Tronics
®ill	JllVsen* ^clJl'loTn‘'cVj "m®e" r®s'
Pontiac Educational background In home sume. ------------- helpful but -- --
Capable, personable m a t u r t A-neg., B-ncg., AB-neg. women I® he.d^sm.,1 ^sleno pool^ln °-"'« m,chigAN COMMUNITY Permanent career position, good
„r»».	Jack Frushour for
*$fo '“"*'‘•"’"•1 lh••l•VI•w. 474-2245;
812 -
. 474-
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
Guaranteed Sole Free Appraisal 30 Day Listings
If we can't sell your home In 3 days — we will buy It! Stay I your house 90 days attar tha ealt.
LAUINGER
SINCE 1935
LOVELAND
LISTINGS WANTED
Wa need listings In' the Kaegg Harbor area. For quick lefvloa on * selling your home plaasa call —
Leona Loveland, Realtor
2100 Cast Lake Rd, .
________4S2-125S______
PrivXte party, near 1-75, 3
SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, OR OTHER, FOR QUI'
— *...CK, ru
CALL NOW...........
REALTOR, OR 4-0358 or EVE-’ NINGS FE 4-7005._________
TRANSFERRED COUPLE WITH $5000 down desires 3-bedroom ' home In Waterford area. Agent OR
, 1XXO 9XO.XO,.,	*
ApoiimMt^ Furnished 37
1 ROOM AND BATH, kitchen.
82 Washing St., Pontiac.
1 ROOAA, share BATH, mature . y<wn|^95^w®man, $15 .weakly.
BEDROOM APARTMENT, carpeted. 1451 Playsted, I biqck off Cooley Lk. Rd. hear Union
1 AT
CLARKSTON AREA - 3
d sell land con-
BLOOD CENTER
REAL ESTATE SALES i
Openings tor 2 salespeople, will train qualified parsons for higher earnings. VALUET REALTY, FE
consider good' typist.. .........
Press. Box C-37, with resume.
A LADY 35 or over switchboard, we
Equal Opporlunlly E...^..„.	--------
SECRETARY TO MANAGER, slereox-	BUS DRIVERS
Tape Mfg. Plant. Saeretarlal and Full or part time, m gwerel ollke experience prefer, physically III and able to .!®R®ore™/!ii’ UTrVr “'*'1 cheuffeur license. 200 N.f
IRONINGS WANTED. E x C •
work. 33S-47I0.__________
LICENSED DAY CARE. Airport Vicinity, Ref, furnished, 474-1429.	^
RECENTLY E"m"p L 6 YE D tr
SECRETARY Wishes part-time H _	______________________
TO TRADE? Thinking____
or out of my home, will pick up j SCHOOL TEACHERS need 3	• guaranteed tale? Don't give your
Bl^mfSld mil, 8sfS^^ * ®* li^room Sln6le, nea7 OCC, mooo	«w»V' call Ray to3ey. W
Bloomfield Hills. e52-?954.-- to $?5,000. Agonf. 343-2875.
TYPING WNE m MY HOME. roTTMOKOm-mAET
. ROOMS, LOWER aparlmanL S73.j)4j| ^jj'*^** «U7"Hhed, 74 Clot# St. FE
eSd^basa-* ROOMS EFFICIENCY opartmant, - up fol IM,,"’*''	«» •“»
le^30?4 ■	-----------
FE 2-8423
encad. 334-3557.
Fernjee, Royal Oak, i76-V7J.
1. 1st a
ACCOUNTING
Rochatter area firm Irxilvidual with 2 yrs. ol
hiing, Appllcei
supply complete
lery plus
Mondays,
IF YOU ARE interested In e TTPIST
requires career as an optical asslstenl — “■ working	...... ‘
TECHNICIAN
Oeklond University hos Immecllale vacancy lor a Resea Technician wllh B.S. In Chemis or Biology Is prolerred. T
position	---
benelils I ^Imospher
Squirrel Rd., Rochester,'’ MIchlgTin! An Equal Opporlunlly Employer.

excellent worklnq
CbLLECTION MANAGER FOR land!
I	contrac4* and m-----------------'
I	Knowledge ol vacani
;	Good salary and 1r\r,^
Pontiac area. Phon# E 5^10.
Caretaker
Couple preferred. Ext quired. Ni
Pontiac 1	........ .......
Send resume to Poniiec Press Box; C-20.	'
$625 UP SALES TRAINEES
Wonderul opportunities
I '
yearly plus expenses. 6uer base pay plus commission -Fe- -- -'
9 MIODLEAGED WOMAN and hus-	jAbi,,""*
band with prtvious rental exp. to P32I, 852-5375. servo as resident managers tor apt. proiect In the Utlca,'fW»J Rochester or Pontiac erea. Hus-band evil, after 2:30 p.m. We have p ...... .,,,	ih dealing With' people and '
furnished are business menegemenf oriented. ,
Cell 451-4131._______ ______
Building Servijees-Supplies 13
. - .. -------- $500 down. Outside
of city limits. Call attar 4, 335-2870.1 XVON TOWNSHIP — WILL bUv va-' ...........	"■	- il Esfaia. 451-
HAVE BUYER
h cash for your home oi
2 ROOMS AND k.._.....
FE 54777, 93 Norton.______.
2 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH, Inquire 243 Norton between S and S p.m.
2 AND 3 ROOMS, UTILITIES In-
48^24I0	4200 or
goM loci 451-3593.
ers. Try us.
attitl treaiurar ol a brokerage firm. Seno resume to. Box 547, Rochestor, Mich, 48043.	|
ASSEMBLY COUNTER and Mork-ln 1 girl. Apply In person, no, experlenco ntcestery. MAM Cleaners, 2937 Orchard Lake Rd., Kaego Harbor.
ATTRAcfiVEYOUNG I I HOUSEWIVES	!	I
lime food end cocklell i |
have the t o I I o w I
Temnor.rv uunrk *TENOS CoUPLE OVER » to manege 2s!
AME^CaIi 0?R^L I “b"	"•“WAI'W 3-1
AMtKjCAN GIRL _	|	apartment plus ulll., wages,'
otirees okay, 293-2480.	|
Vl-3?
ervice V.......
leauflful Hewa
leel ellracflve ap-
JANITRESS
need. S night*. 6 hours per n scale. Apply at lo w.
. ,-------KITCHEN HELP
'• G.*r*d.*n.*®®lln,'"	Tull lime evenlno
Gardens, sSoi Grange j,,, Dixie Hwy., 15.
Plaint.
444-7199,
TYPIST
Recanf or past experience s lypist, high school gradueto soine business school tral
M. C. MFG. CO.
(Div. Keisey-Hayes)
III Indlanwood Rd.r Lake Orio 693 B3II
Bookkeeper Wanted
With GM Experience Kor our Auto dealership.
KEEP YOUR FULL TIME . wile end mother. Full lime pev pert time work. Free 134 wardrobe. No collocling, n delivering. We trein, —	—
eblllty. See Ken Johnson at •9 AU4, Lake Orion. RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC SALES.
kABY'siTTER'wANTED my homi 5 days a week. I-5 p.m. 451-3471. BABY "Slft'ER "neIEDEO FOR small boys, 9;30 to 5:30, 5 day Keegq Harbor. 482 3879.
BABY SITTER,
BIG BOY RESTAURANT ,	Telogrepb & HuVon
LfDY TO CLEAN, Walnut Lake Rd. area, will pay top wages, 436-5755.
-	____ own LPN, FULL TIME, LPN perl lime
treniportitlon. Apply ell. 5 p.m. 12	®'*" Acres Nursing Home, 1255 W.
Motuiwk, Indian Village.	Sllverbell Rd.
•ABY Sf'TfBR-HOUSEKEEPER, my LIGHT DELIVERY, days, good car home, ictwol-oge children, 8:30 loi
5:30 p.m., 5 days. 852-2057.	Track Dr. belore noon.
BABYSITTER, 2 ■children, Monday ''''ATURE GIRL for hall days of Ihrouoh Fridey, days. 476-2577. 'XPlng end geraral ojfice work In alftr 5:30 p.m.	®ur olllce. Mall Inlormallon lo
BABY'siTfER,'etiernoons 2:30 to 5 p.m. One child. 443-4842.	MATURE WOMAN, I hour e day,
BABY sitter, crescent Lake'	P""
are*, mjllure, 5 day week. 883-8588.
BEAUTY OPERATOR "AI be rls,	.
Beauty Salon. Call 482-7324 a|t 9 make
An Equal Opportunity Employer WAITRESS WANTED tor luirtimo I employment. Apply In person only, ,1 Franks Restaurent, Orchard Lake J Rd., Keegq_HeiJ»r.
Way, 473- WE WANT axperlencad'
I sell real estate. For ...v..
KITCHEN HELP I J?;.7,*3','®"	•»
Grill Cooks ond Bus Girls woman for iNTERESTiNo"oiiice
Day and avanlng shifts. Good	K?"*® ^radlt Bureau Int,
wagas. Hospllalliatlon and olhar ^	_	_
benelils. Apply:	WOMAN WANTED TO care lor 3
ELIAS BROS.	-----
children. I.... ... __
than wages. FE 8-2024.
WAITRESSES
For day and night ihift*. Apply Ir parson. Blua Star Drlva-ln, Cor Pontiac & Qpdyka Rds.
WAITRESSES
Wonted
Director of Nursing Service
Outstanding opportunity
credited, modern, expc__
bed general hospital. Mast degree preferably in nursing ministration detirablo. but i consider qualltlad applicants w B. S. degree. Outstanding frii benefits. Starting lalery based education, background and parlanca. Contact Pontiac Gem Hospbel, Semlnola at W. Huron.
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY
---'Had mala or tamala who
caraar promollanal work
A CAREER MISS?	N\. A. Benson
Good typing and tha dasira to ikor grow with expanding firm, wins LUmoer H^^hls opportune spot. Call IPS.j
^SHARP GACwIII train In this e^t. «80^Call Angle - —
, Associates Personnel.
A CHANCE
To attain the goal of your choice -17 aim. Call IPS, 334-4971
, Railroad Has ; SJI Delivered
- One odd lot of screens
, .5HiVla-SU>PUtS-EQU«
Alwminum Wdg^ltems j Dressmaking, Tailoring__j^^Ptasloring Servico
A MANAGEMENT TRAINEE?
lari I TIrod ol routine? Want a career ^*1 with a future? Not just a lob. ..,111 Many well-known national com-i)ki ponies would Ilk# to talk to you. No txperlonco necessary. Cell IPS, _334-4971.	_ ^	_
IX- A-rcENERAL OFFICE spot, lots ol rel variety, 8310. Call Pat Cary,
9157, Assoclta*-
Pegboard per 4x8 si
8 Oallyvorden per 1
ALUMINUM SIDING, WINDOWS
-xiflng __________
Call FE 4-3177 anytinna.
ACCOUNTANT
Looking lor an axacutiva accountant position with a malor national corporation, with growth opportunltiaa and full benefits. Don't delay, act nowl Call IPS,
sniy to Steal S395 pixie t
532 Orchard Lk. Ave.
FEEL LIKE LIFE Is pass ^ by? Coll Mr. Foley, "yORK Tl --------- 0343.
J ap'ams' a ad/(mV7 ■ ■ w-n
ADJUSTER TRAINEE
HERE'S WHERE YOU GET "CUSTOMER SERVICE" “FREE DELIVERY" "RETURNS ACCEPTED"
CUSTOM TAILORING, AND altera-
A-1 PLASTERING, new work ar repair, all w^^^guaranlaad, I
Businass Service	15
PAINTING AND DECORATING,
Antenna Service
BIRCHETT ANTENNA SERVICE ____________338-3274.__________
Asphalt Paving 1-A, Auburn Heights Paving
--urti, parking I b t a Guarantead, FE 5-4983.
DRY WALL WORK
PLASTERING, NEW work or patch-Free aitlmataa. 343-5807.
« AADCO ASPHALT
Paving Co., Ilea""* *"'< Frea astlmatlon
NEW AND REMODELING" Guaranteed. 335-1419 or 335-1039.
Envestroughing
M & S GUTTER CO.
ComoletaeavMtr®°hP^aerv
®™rw* sL^ZtsliSdS, ^sSa °
Food Service Manager
'•SB With prid«? Outstanding opportunity craditad, moolrn *—“
TYPINGp DICTAflON, MAILING
es si.lt- re-p.,- comwn7' ^ ^ I
business and pleasure plus un- Dress Makino & Tnilorina 17 paralleled benefits, tome college. " **	*
Call IPS, 334j497l.
kbMiTtiNG'CLERI,, ________
$340. Cell Kathy King, 332-915?
ASPHALT PAVING
Residentlel and commercial NO lob too small. Worl^uarantead. Fra* astima / PONTIAC ASPHALT CO.
Excavating
I. Experienced. 33S-0SS5.
ending 392
baby sit. $1.00 2-4048. belore 3 p.m VIANAGEMENT 'PEOPLE NEED-
hlghesl, commission
BABY SITTER, 8:15 a.m. to .5 65 ira'ining.’no lUsfm«nl.®473-!ll3»'™* pj. Auburn Hills Tgwnhouses. 451--nurse AIDES, will train, Gian
* HETD’^Dn;Ek*nrb;Y-- 530
Noftharn High araa. 33i»>9ll. i with 3‘y—r-old, good wagai. 4M*
Harvey's
Colonial
House
Bachelor degree or higher pre-torred. Salary negotiable based on education, background and eXberl-
Conlact Pontiac General Kl': ELECTRONjC TECH TRAINEV
Seminole at W. Huron.	1 It you have some elKtrlcel or
■— CDtc rrActcc	machenicol background In school
rKtt L.LA93E9	or In the service, this compi
Men or women wanted. Earn while will train you. Cell IPS. 334-6971.
........EX-SERVICEMAN
__________PersonW.' •’	Incom* Tnx Service 191
BLUE MONDAY? i	'
Fr«<* In x xhinu iu.u nfiir. ' CALL INSURES fast tax service,
I	city. 473-0361 tor
TAX RETURNS careHiny III tak. i« prepared, guerenleed In wrill— with or without app'ts. Average tor City, Slate and Federal 88. _. Dunn i Co. 2096 Cats Lake Rd.
___ hospital. Minimum 5
food management and su- cONSULfANf-
---- experience required.^ travel agency
" '	flight" gals wllh lust a dash ,.
experience. $390. Lynn Andtri, 334-2671, Snelling and Snelling.
3RIVEWAY SPECIALISTS, FREE
ESTIMATES, FE 5-4900.________
NEED REPAIR NOW?
No welting i------
Call FE Parking Lots,
BULLDOZING - T R U C K I! reasonable, reliable. estimates. OR 3-1165.____________
PLASTER AND DRY WALL repairs. Prompt lervlce. FE 4-3715._______________
ROOFS INSTALLED. Hot tar shingles. Call L. J. Price and tha price Is fight. 332-1034.
HOT ROOF SHINGLES, 24 hotrs,
•----- pj I,
Irre asl. Repairs. R. Dutton, F
Robert Price Roofing
Booti and Accessories
_. -‘epalred. 1 vi * 336-0297 or 674-3961. CHAIN LINK and'wobd : 2 wk, service_____________
loHng Company.
I	■"	"!•
------- TOWN AND COUNTRY ROO’piNG -
338-3714' 47^933”''
Bookkeeping a
OR 3-3332
I ’■AXES. 1424 AI
Call

BEAUTY OPERATOR. . -...........
time. 50 to 40 pet. Cheie Collteurs.
424-1033.
BAR WAiTRESS FOR NIGHTS, -	-
wonderland Lounge, 8245 Regulei Richardson, Welled Lekt.	, Apply
BAGGER'fOR dry Cleaning Plant. Mljnigl,.
‘prMrem!	Opporlunlly Employer .
1253 si OFFICE-CLERICAL HIGH SCHOOL grad. Musi type, llllno. Ilohl bookwork, txcelleni fringe benelils. apply at Artco Inc. dianwood Rd. Lake Orion.
I oHIce, Walloh di., Rochesler,
BEAUTY
apply 158
end beneillt. Apply:
Harvey's Caianiol Hause
5896 Dixie Highwoy Waterford
WAITRESSES
MILLER BROS. REALTY ! ^3T136
Use your service skills to fill yi civilian needs. For Immediate oolntment call IPS, 334-4971.
FIGURE FANCY
FE 8-2297
BENJAMIN R.
BACKUS 23 years experience
13__________________331
F"R1ENDLY-L0W COST
KEYS TAX SERVICE
‘Your home or oup-offlee.
---	2428 N. PERRY
BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER
Slarcratl. I.M.P. S I I v ar 11 n 4 Flberglss A Aluminum Boat!. BBirir no c-rnMix Marc, outboard A item Dr.	i « OR STONE,
1245 S. Woodward at Adams guarantee. EM 34879.
Sand^rovaMlirt
l-A SAND,, GRAVEL, Dirt reasonable. il3AI20l or 47A2439.
FAST ACCURATE SERVICE $5 and up. No app't. nacassary ■’'*	Highland Rd
ayXanes.
BEAUTICIANS, RECENT graduates, excellant opporlunltlas, paid vaca-/ lions, and hospitallutlon, Barnard “-'r Stylists. Ml 7-3033. Ask tor
343 46U or 482-9162
OAKLAND UNIVERSITY
Manufacturer loceled In Royal Qaki |pll''334j97i.	,
has immediate openings 't? fiPMPP/ii rsrpTr'P- iw	'
trainees lo learn grinding opera-
wVg®e®?''.n*d'"'',!o®!;rnl S^IS nS>"V tS?s" “^slC*’‘Xr®?ull|___________________________________________
An Equal OpporHinIty Employer I will pay well, ooofl luvcniuii. room IS YOUR INCOME Adiiouele? CaTl lop benetlls. Cell IPS. 336-4971.
KITCHENS, MOD AAodernlud?" Fornetc
Floor Tilinn	clarkston roofing, s
^	______ plowing. 47A9297.___________
CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING,' SNOW PLOWING Carpellng.|Resldentle'
MODIFIED or------------________________________________________________
SorvIcoE
HOME IMPROVEMENT and
9l MAN AND WIFE Jan
Corpontry
ipaclalliing In retaining walla, fret aitimataa. j. H. Waltman had ’ l-PPHtcaPlng. 33S-83I4.____
COMPLETE UNDSCAPING
Licansad Nursary man, 4«^7850
perlence lo train. Apply Connolly's
Jewelers, 45 N. Sag-------- " •
?30 end 12 noon.
•inney. No phone cel
photography - AGE 2$ or ov “ career lob, no expericn ly't _nec^*iary. Mr. BernabI 335-0322.
PARTS AND COUNTER DEPARTMENT
Yoong woman lor lawn and garden '
«|7UT.aMNTED: guar.nleed »<»ge 50-55-40 per cent commission,	PART TIME
Blue Cross Insurance, 3M^70.	, sales girl. Hosiery and hand bags.
ICAUTICIAN. SALARY and com- salary plus comm. Good lob lor mission, Southfield area. LI 74237 ambitious girl Beckar's Shoes, or 354-2146.	Pontiac Mall. 442-0511.
BEAUTICIAN WANTED with POODLES FDR ALL breed groomar —	--- - *	*■ handit eiiabliih veTerinari
TED'S
BLOOMFIELD HILLS
Women
Needed
/ AsMmbltrt, packaoari t>AY and afternoon shifts
REPORT READY FOR WORK. 6 a.m. to 4 p.m.
EMPLOYERS
Temporary Service, Inc.
new facll program. '
3342471,
■ KEYPUNCH;
operations. For consldaralldn yw | S^j'67?®sn.mnr^w should have althar p r a v I o u a
------g exparlance or have had '-A* TECHNICIAN
shop course In High; [mm^latt opening axcallant company paid	"rm and phis,
altd gZl wSlat7si£!d?i
^l¥cky‘gal
.... -,w-l Opportunity Employer i Dream |nb tor somec... JOB WI'TH A tulure: Call Mr. Folay". ylhSv SiMPS 334-497?”' «-TAJE, OR 44343. '
NEEDED FULL TIME Real astata
Treejr^ming Service
^FiyMHmrty f'i^IJK ejMsip!’’
VI C^ANAUOH'S TREE Servlet/' stumpa removed frea it wa taka
grsUiS-. *"'"****■
TREE SERVICET"A G J. Flia asllmatas. 335-1981.
TREE -TRIMMING AND rtmoval, tree estimata. 425-1850 or 825.2714. TRIMMING AND 4744, or 485-3421.
willing t( Call 4764
CHILD CARE - DAYS-I lohi hous«k«^^j^— My home.
CASHIER-PART TIME
days and NIGHTS 2 deys or 2 nights e week.
All employee benelils ELIAS BROS.
BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegreph A Huron _
CURB"
WAITRESSES
pensatlon. 473-051^	REDFORD
PROGRESSIVE DENTAL "oltice In CLAWSON the Pontiac erre looking lor the CENTER LINE right denial hygienist on *	•mi«i nn.
24117 Grand River 45 S. MlW 8541 E. 10 Mile opportunltyjimpl^tr
Coroe'r^'
PART- TIME ■HELP"“wentad WInky's. Hrs. 11-2 and 5-7. Phone Mr. Ro~*-‘
full resumt to Pontiac Prase Box	___
__________________________ WANTED CASHIER, WITH”
PRESSER, SILK AND Wool, ex- Parlance In Billing, etc. Grir perienced or will train. Welker's Buick-Opel, See Ofllce manage , Cleaners, tIS $. Broadway, Like 210 Orchard Lk.
Registered i couege^Sads
TM-	"	±	Career opportunities In eccountlng,
riiarmacists 1 merketlno, engineering and data
4	I procauing. Openingt nation widt
ro^axj^rlanca nacasiary. Call IPS,
___ Ctll IPS, 334-4971
i MANAGERIAL TRAINEE ... ________
* company. Good banafits and profit
medical RECEPTIONIST-
-.... pRone. WILtTRAlK*s5Sf'
ADAMS A ADAMS	.....
...... ------ gradu
. ..... ... Pontiac Mall Shop) Center. Interviews dally 9 to 5. RELIABLiE LADY
i,, children. Live li...
ly than wages. MY SWO. _ « WAITRESSES, I Friday >' Saturday. I Seturdey only. 4 no experience necessary, i
— avining hours. SaUry i
B & B AUCTION
Dixie Hwy.	OR 2-2717
APARTMENT SIZE OR 30" gat or
CONSTRUCTION a... .......
■ ■ ~ Constr. 0S74440. FIELDSTONE WORK
Ted's Restaurent has openings tor hrs. day, 5 deys a waMresscs both day and night ■-	■■■•“ ■
> cross and me
curb waitresses both day and nil .h[«. e— ui... -ross and I...
^	,	and meals
Jure. Top wagas and tips, vace-lloni and paid holidayi. Apply In person only:
TED'S
BLOOMFIELD HILLS_
CASHIER-TYPIST"
PetVnanem challenging position for high school graduate with good grades. A|W 11 or above General office duties Including typing, tome llgures end meeting the public.' Good starting salary,, 5 day week,
, free parking, leflls Including
-------- — ...'queni Velsei.
Phone Mr. KuiOppa. 473-1221 tor Interview.
V DIAL FINANCE CO.
Dreyton Plalra
CLEANING WOMAN," I dev «nek, pwn tratp. 474-3370.
COOK
Experienced on broiler altdks and chops. 4-11 4 days, no Sundays.; . Apis^ Club Rochester, 304 Mein. I
In. Cell efier 4:30. FE 2-7'40l,
WIG
Pontiac Press ; STYLIST
Want Ads	Beouticion's License
ARE
FAMOUS FOR
"ACTION" n::;’:.
X-...	Empioyneent oHIee
jQm ' Hudson's
334-4981	PONTIAC MALL
you to sell h'sh heir wigs. PleesenI excellent working toy, 40 hour week.
_Getiarel HospIteL J3A42H‘.
RESTAURANT MANA65R
EXPERIENCED
*	.... 1 operellon.
veerly. DInIn
I Box C-26.______________
T E'a C H E R , EXPERIEN j certified plus degree, lull Urn I private school, math, Scl Chemlelry, French, Span! j elemenlery 4lh grade, InquIn
THE NEW HOT
SHOPPE CAFETERIA
OAKLAND MALL
. or F. 8 Help Wanted M. or F.
cooks, salad preparations, vegilabla preparation, dessarl preparation, calatarla counter vrark and utility work, alao tor housewives. 11-3:30 ehllt, good weoes, bail benefits. Apply Hoi e ,Ceteler/e, 498 W. 14 Mile
”'We
SOLDEf
GRADE SOLDERERS, PRINTED CIRCUIT ASSEMBLY, EX-PERIENCED ONLY, GOOD Wp«K^ING_ CONDITIONS, EXC.I
rN*c'rtfw*fJlF7H'LD"**'**'®'‘l
Ceramic Tile
CERAMIC TILE, SLATE ai work, mofter or Maallc '
UNLIMITED
EARNINGS
OUR EXTENSIVE EXPANSION PROGRAM HAS CREATED OPENINGS FOR QUALIFIED Personnel In-.
OFFICE MANAGEMENT CERTIFIED PROPERTY EXCHANGERS APPRAISERS RESIDENTIAL SALES COMMERCIAL & INVESTMENT Management or Sales Experiericf Helpful But Not jifecessary
CONTACT JACK RALPH or TOM BATEMAN .
Bateman Realty .Company
A-1 PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING
FE AW44
- QUALITY WORK ASSURED) Faint-
Ino) Papering; Y'-.........—
873-2872 Of 474.1989.____________
. RETIRED PAINTEQ wanta amall lobs. 25 yaara axpartancae. Rgga. rataa. Free aatimatas. 4254514 aft. 4 p.m.
i Trucks to Rent
Sami Trallara
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co,
125 S. WOODWARD FE 44M1	,	FE 4-1441 ’
For Wont Ads Diol 3344981'

THE POKTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 21,
37
• ^ ioJnSSS!' Al^AItTMEWTS,
57 M«di«iilc. Glorl« Awrtnwnhk
*■	iEIOHTS,
I. rtfrigariti o- tlOO dip. W LUXURY apartmant, Laka Rd.
rtiimai biciudad. fe
, BEDROOM UPP
HElOHTSp i bid room*
BRAND NEW LUXURY 1 badniotn
.................William and
tIM par
__________- I, m-stsf.
EMBASSY WEST APARTMENTS
J ROOMS AND IaTh~ walcom. «0 parwaak, wift. rtSi	*”

S LARGE ROOMS, Clean, 2 closats, .11 r.r.^. .••	,u?n. Ni
o drlnkars, FE
3 ROOMS, AND BATH -ir TaFHuron. 335-9732.
3 ROOMS, COUPLE ONLY. U
i ROOMS AND BATH, b^y
I, 525 wk„ $50 dap. FE
3 CLEAN ROOMS and bat antranoa, full clotat, v cloaa In, couple cniy. FE
S ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH, p
1. 335-2135 bat, 10 am.. .
4 ROOM! vy^conH at 073 B
Icoma, $35 wk. $100
00 dap.. Ini 33$-4(B4.
BASEMENT APARTMENT, T V private entrance, also room wll kitchen priv., 775 Scott Laka Rd. BACHELOR 3 ROOMS, carpeted.
)th, $25 sec. util. Inch, working
D—5
A|MirtiiiBiits, UnfamishiB 38
Laroe, wt^d’ 'SSdlttoned, SS.'w,'" “"'‘Si oil utilities ex elt^ic, cmtral air condition
2 Mdrcwnns, $170. Minimum 1 year
Shopplno Center, 5357 Highland Rd. Apt. 137. 5744156$, D^m' 0*1^“ **■	I •"‘I •
Enjoy A
HAWAIIAN
WEEKEND
Every Weekend Year-Round
COLONIAL
VILLAGE
East
Apartments
NEW APfRTMENTS
Flrwlace, carpeting, draperies, air conditioning, ^tove, refrigerator furnished. >lul all utilities except •i'55t''!SltV- C»'l.	* p m- ■
3503, Drayton Plaint.______
ROCHEStER A5ANOR, country II within minutes of the city. T
quality apartments f e a t u r_
swimming pool and Include carding, heat, stove and
refrigerator, plus other fee--
One child under 3 years wel 1 bedroom, $140. 2 bedroom.
Ri^ Howes,, Furnished 39
■BEDROOM. UTILITIES PAID prefer couple, TO pets, $32 wWy.
Rent Heuus, Unfurnished 40
COME SEE! COME ENJOY! 1800 SCOTT LAKE ROAD
between Dixie Highway and .Watkins Lake Road
GREAT OAKS
APARTMENTS From $160 Mo,
hiCE BACHELOR APARTMENT. 51 Summit, after 4:30 p.m.___
PRIVATE ENTRANCE
. ------- _________________
, 47 Lorraine Court,
llPFER 2
EaKE ORION. A^ern bachelor apt lT?l^?oSSf aTOrtmenIs L	^flW- ________ i2 bedroom Townhouses
All apartments Include; Carpeting throughout, kitchen
—Living room drapes —Venetian blinds -Walk In closets ■Fill ceramic bath -Hotpoint appliances Eye-level range and oven -14 cu. ft. self-del I refrigerator ■Disposal
only, I ir 5 PM,
private entrance, call
WARM. CLEAN, cozy, modern, 3 rooms for a neat couple and’ tiny baby. Everything turn. $35 a week. $100 deposit. FE 4-7253.
Apurtmui^, Unfarnirt 38
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT, Stove, refrigerater and drapes turn. $115 mo. $100 sec. dap. Ret. required Call after 5 p.m. W-103»._____
1 BEDROOM, CLOSE IN FE 40031
I BEDROOM TERRACE APART-mant, stove and refrIg., turn., $130 per month, ptus sec, dap., 334S54*.
3 ROOMS, 2ND FLOOR, BATH
—100 sq. ft. basement storage area
Swimming pool and c I u b h o u s aHl*>l^ AREA — Large
Phone 33M970
I ROOMS U N F U R NT S H E D
AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS
Accepting applications for bedroom apartments. Ust 20 nearing oemplellon. A limited
"o^S%S|!ieirc'l?,!ilS
alrcandltkmad, Ms of closet space. Sea our modal, you'll love It. ALL UTILITIES Included In rent. "CUSTOM CRAFTED APPLIANCES BY HOTTOINT." Adults only, no pets.
CLARKSTON CORNERS
ALL ELECTRIC APARTMENTS NO CHILDREN — NO PETS
______OR PHONE 525-1225 ____
BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS
Ideally altuatad In Bloomllald-Birmingham area, luxury 2 bedroom apartments available from $155 per month and up bicludlng carpeting, Hotpoint air conditioning and ap pllances, large family kllchans, swlmmlna M and large sun dack - All ulllltlas except electric. No children or pats. Located on South Blvd. (20 Mila Rd.) between Opdyke and 1-75 expressway. Open dally —" Sunday, 12 to 5 p.m. Closad Th... day. For Information; Mgr. 335-5570,
BLOOMFIELD MANOR WEST
Newly complalad building, all Hot point electric appliances, 1 and ; Mroem apartments. Modal opai.
------d^l^.«;3a-Jte„5:3IL„.acciipancy
2300' Woodrow Wilson Call UN 4-7405 or 51
Want Ads For Action
y# H ^oTwii
in welcome. 1337 CherrylawnI of W. Hopkins, 33M17I,
$300 WILL MOVE YOC Into one TO of your choice In Pontiac. A Bedroom bungalow with basemt and 2 car garage, going fer $10,1 VA or a 2 bedroom ranch, w basement and IVb car gatage gol... for $14,900 FHA. Call us at Ray
Raat Estate today for-----------------
details. 574-410). P-54, P-55.
BEDROOM IN Drayton I -lep. must hav I. 5234)985.____________________
)ROOAA,^C
FROM $103 MONTHLY Ranches, Colonials, up to 2 baths, 1-2-3 bedrooms. Brick, basamentS: Children welcome. 1337 Cher-rylawn, corner of W. Hopkins. 335-
NORTH SIDE of Pontiac, 2 badroom, basement and garage, $35 weak, $150 dep. FE 2-5935.
(ILL MOVE YOU Into one ot your choice In Pontiac. A 3 bedroom bungalow with basemani FHA or a 2 bedroom bungalow doing for $10,500 FHA or VA. i For niora Information call us at Ray Real Estate, today. 574-4101. P-4B,
Solium
ruif'^'iSsenwnt. gas
down.i A—-*	---
574-1690.
49
heat,
I, lots 0
_________ -nly $30
for owner, 330-5993
DEAR YOUNG PEOPLE
Are you tired of renting? Do you want a place to call your own? Try this home In Waterford. “ Bedrooms, semifinished full ba ment, 50x140 Tot, FHA $0 do
Suit Housbb
!nvestars Special
------wm Cape Cod, full ba^_____
needs work. $2,000 take over $2,50$
‘-slance. Vacant. Age"* --------
FE 0-5952. OR 4-*(
savings, chIH Cherrylawn, i
MOVES YOU IN rnnnro Nay, b r I C k ..	„	.. m baths, 1
From $103 monthly, tax OR 4-0353
YORK
1337
Cherry la;
335-5171.__________________________
1^ DESOTA. THIS 5 room house can be purchased with $100 down on FHA mortgage to qualified buyer. o hivirooms and bath on second Living room, dining room -h first floor; full saml-panaled tor
and kitchen i
recreation room. Gas .... __________
furnace. $13,900 with closing costs
for taxes. Insurance --------------
estlinaled at $350.
EASY ON YOUR EYES AND BUDGET
WELL KEPT 2 BEDROOM 2 story home eear Pontiac
HAGSTROM REALTOR
4900 W. HURON . OR 4-0358 MLS After 5 p.m. ? FE 4-7005
$1200 DOWN
3 bedroom, family room lake privileges, FHA. Only $17,850. I
$1300 DOWN
3 bedrooms, full basement, lakel prM^ges, plus closing costs. Only,
4 BEDROOMS 1
3 levels, large patio, garage, lake privileges. Only $27,500.	,
FLATTLEY REALTY I
520 COMMERCE RD.________353-5981
FIRST IN VALUES
RENTING
WE
ARE NOW
LAND CONTRACT Terms available on this 2 story home In Pontli There are 3 bedrooms, fireplace
RAY
tras. 524-3182.
f A COZY REMODELED HOME. NO - I agents, 2-bdrm., basmt. FE 4-4453.
FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS
ALL BR!CK DUPLEX
Large living room, dining _______
and kitchen oh first floor. 3 large bedrooms and bath on second! floor. Third floor unfinished but has good possibilities. New roof and electric up to code; 1 unit presently rented (or $140 month. 2 car block garage, -'-’-“■■ Oakland and Wide T at $27,500, terms avails
S!SL0CK & KENT, !NC.
1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg.
•	338-9295
ARE OKAY WITH US.
OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND
REAL VALUE REALTY
For !mediate Action Ca!! FE 5-3676-642-4220
large SLEEPING ROOM, Near Mall. 334-2)82._____________________
AUBURN HE!GHTS
Brick and alumlnurh ranch with basement, family room, bullt-lns, natural fireplace, 2 car attached, excellent area. Calf, 574-1499, 338-
storms and screens. Only $13,000 on Gl terms.
TOM
REAGAN
REAL ESTATE “I- Opdyke
asbestos ranch with 3
- and gas hi sr details. P-
RAY
Call Ray Today
MODEL OPEN
OR INFORIMATION CALL
651-2460
ROOM FOR LADY, hi________^.......... ....... „
1 block from General Hospital. FE garage, $15,9M, 9 2-9375 or OR 4-3704._____________I 6221, $52-5375.
SLEEPING ROOM, 2 rooms, t
NOW
LEASING
BRAND NEW-WATERFORD
Crescent Manor Apts.
Rooms with Board
r Area. 582-8152,
luxurious carpeting
wary building, bai
irlooking the t...........
I Includiss all facilities
VALLEY
PLACE
(in the Center of Rochester)
APARTMENTS
ALL
2 bedrooms with 2 baths
ONLY $188 FEATURING;
•	Central air conditioning
•	Dishwasher, sitove, rafrl
•	12 cu. ft. freezers
•	Apts, with dans
•	Apt$ with underground park-
• Directions Take Walton Blvd. (University Rd.,
OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. TO I p.m.
PHONE 651-4200
Apartments, Unfurnished 38Apartments, Unfurnished 38
IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
CHILDREN WELCOME
YOU'LL ENJOY LIFE MORE IN A BEAUTIFUL NEW APARTMENT BETWEEN 2 LOVELY LAKES. COME OUT TODAY.
•	1" and ^bedrooms	* privati: rai rnhiv #$>> dati
•	EUlly carp
•	PRi\7ArlYEVcH%ND BOATING FACILItL.
•	sun., noon-5 p.m.
JtItchon___ arrt room for MIDDLE-ai
LE-aga nr a. 3a-11i
AUBURN HEIGHTS
autiful homes near new shor rtf rs owner. UL 2-17W.
FULL BASEMENT 3 BEDROOMS (1) WATERFORD
522,900 with $1500 down.
(1) MILFORD
$21,500 with $1,300 down,
(1) UNION LAKE
Lake privileges. $2,000 down. FHA
WALLED LAKE
$1500 down. FHA or Gl.
LAUINGER
674^)319____________074-OeaO
LAKE FRONT OR PRIVILEGE
ROSS
HOMES - lW-3 bsths, 3-S bedrooms, Including lot, from
$35,900
Under ccmstructlon, 4 bedroom ColoniBl, $40,300. 50 Deys Occu-
Snd Estates, privets beach,!
Sale Houses
VACANT CAPE Natural fireplace, ' kitchen, gas heat, $1,001) assumes 5V5 mortgags. Own«n 5952. OR 4-1549
land
VAO^T. $400 DOWN
...	. Ul'* J contraci, M-'24 (o' Clalks.o,. ,<n. wen
^?*^pius '* *^®"*'*® “'■I''*-I® ’’■u i”u»®.
OqnL'474.)?98;|
VACWf“CAPE COD. 4 bedrooms, basement needs finishing, $2,000 to $2500 balance. Owner's agent, OR 4-
' 693:8371
1598. 338-5993.
GIROUX REAL ESTATE
5330 Highland
!i«3L___.___________573-0201
NICE COUNTRY SIZED kitchen 2 bedroom home In Waterfor I new carpeting In living roo I dining room, full besemer He I50'X204' lot, $15,500. FHA. I
RAY
Call Ray Today
491 Sale Houses
9:00 p.
X, large; T baaament, cent F.H.A. ---- FB I-.
OPEN
SAT. AND SUN.
1-5
.-.ANT. $40
That's til that's m_____
room ranch with full b car garage, naw fun carpeting. Owners agen 338-5952.	^
HALL
2 ACRE — Small farm locati Waterford on paved road, features 2 bedrooms, tiled carpeted living room \
MILLS
Lake Orion
WATERFORD AREA -
VACANT. $500 DOWN	I
5 rooms with connactlng bath, fullj basement and 2 car garage, diningl room, owners agent. 330-5952. OR
Webster-Curtis
Oxford Area OPEN MODEL
SAT. 8, SUN. 1-5 P.M.
■few 4 badroom tri-leval. Large living and dining rooms, lovtiy countar-top stove, built-in
-	.. .Ishwathar, snack bar.
Beautifully paneled family room, ------ ----- ,11^^ ^
^ . ....... tiled stall shower.
Laundry, basement, 2'/2 car garage. Intercom throughout. All this on our lake lot for $»,900 or on your lot for $33,400. 5 other models under construction from $32,900 on your lot. From the stop Iglht in Oxford go west 1 mile to corner of Seymour Lake Road and Spezia Drive.
-	ve.
MSIJ____________MY 2-2291
WATER AND SEWER
Iready In. See this nice edroom brick ranch. Full >» garage, 2 blocks
CLARK
"IMMEDIATE POSSESSION" .Owner leaving state, must sell this beautiful 3 bedroom brick and aluminum "colonial with full basement, nice carpeted llvlnq' room, kitchen with bulltins and lots of custom built cabinets, spacious panelled family room- with brick fireplace, 1</5 ceramic tile ...... -- ............
. Don't wait on f
terms available.
And modern .
vnship. Mortgage i
.. Very llveabla home featuring .arpated living and dining rooms, 2 full baths, many mora extras. Call for your appointmant.
USE YOUR LOT - as down
>t or wlll.bulld on our lot. LET'S TRADE
B. HALL, REALTY REALTOR 7150 Dixie Hwy.	525-4IL
----hally 9 9, Sat. 9-4
LAUINGER
_67^3]9__
WILLIS M.
BREWER
REAL ESTATE 724 Riker Bldg.
WYMAN LEWIS REALTY
____________________*74-4101 YOUNG-BILT HOMES
NEAR ST. MICHAELS	I really means better bilt
2 bedroom and bath bungalow, ll ,,,	c.
-	wiwM sfoQi Iff 334-3630 — S3*/» W» Huron SL
I®t. Also 5 bedrooms SWIMMING POOL
This large attractive west sld» home has everything to make the
kitchen built for comfor
-------nionci, ceramic tila bath
2V5 car garage, rear lanced yard privileges on Laka Oakland excellent neighborhood, terms svsilsbTe.
CLARK REAL ESTATE 352 W. HURON ST.	51
Open 9-9 M.L.S.
In association with
__William A jcennedy_
VaLU-Way
CUTE AND COZY
2 bedroom home off Baldwin. Gas heat, tile bath, large utility room, 50 X 130 ft. lot. Priced at $11,950, move In lor about $500 costs.
$600
moves you Into this sharp 5 bedroom home off Baldwin. Ge:
garage. No down payment for Gl, or FHA terms. Must be told to close estate.
K. L. TEMPLETON, Realty
2339 ORCHARD LK. RD. 582-09M
NEW HOMES
basement, attached 2 car garage alum, siding. Home In cxcellr~-erea. $354100, terms.
BRICK RANCH — 3 bedrooms, baths, liraplaca, formal dinl... room, kitchen bullt-lns, lots of
carpeting, full walk-out base^----‘
terms with Immi
Rent Storas
STORE WITH gerege. _________ _____
UniTO Lk. $1» mo. KH 4-7571, KE
Biirt Offica S|wca
47
AP PROXIMATELY
1100 SQ. FT.
Of beautiful paneled offica space for leoso. Soparato privato offica . walton-Baldwin area. Ulllltlas Included In reasonable' rant. CALL MR. TREPECK, 574-
---- 13' X 22' living room v
fireplace, family roorh w 1 doorwall, IW car garage much, much mora. P-1.
RAY
3 Bedrooms (Rancher)
FULL BASEMENT, 2 CAR GARAGE On you lot
$19,950
Financing Available P. J. Mason Construction
^73-1291
NEW MODEL HOME
Open dally 9 to 5
E. J. DUNLAP
Custom Builder
2717 Sllverstone Corner Walton 338-1190______or	330-5497
■t'''wrrn
$7,500 Is the fL..	...
come on S. Shirley street. 4 end bath up, -------------- —
ROYER
HOLLY OFFICE
HOLLY BI-LEVEL
This. 3 badroom bFlevet with brick front was built In 1954. 12 x 20'. csrpetad and wains coated. 11',Y x $' carpeted llvlnq room, sharp lIVi X 7' kitchen with lots of cupboards. lOVi X H'/i recreation room. 2 of the 3 bedrooms are carpeted, 1Vi baths, aluminum storms and screens. Vi block from the lake In the village In Holly. Completely fenced yard and 2 car parage. Only $21,900.
FURNISHED LAKE FRONT '
1 bedroom ranch with 40' of lake frontage and good beach. Knotty Pine walls throughout, 12x19' stone
attached gi
NEW RANCH
(Will Duplicate)
upstairs rsntal will more than make the payments. Economy living St It's best.
WARDEN
3434 W. Huron, Pontiac
^ IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Can be had with this brand new 3 bedroom home located In the west suburban area. Includes 1232 sq. ft. ol living area plus full ■---ment. 1 Vi baths, carps . . _ throughout. Corner lot. Fufi price Including lot $21,900, terms to — Call —
FRAME RANCH - 3 bedro kitchen built-ins, family room, heat, big 2 car garage.
Rent OtficB SpacB
2 SEPARATE OFFICES ! ''-an onto foyer. Bran naiad, carpeted. Heat, lonlng and claanlng fi ill John Slter, 57»3)M.
47
Call Ray Today
4515 DIXIE, ^200 sq. tl
air conditioned, also 2500
Dixie Hwy., for any buili	______________________
MA 5-2151.___ ______ _	_ ...BY OWNER, BRICK
AVAILABLE NOW IN ONE OF	*-----—	"
ached garage and 100' x 14 for only $27,900. P-74.
RAY
HALLMARK
REAL ESTATE 574-4123 4821 Highland R "" next to AIrwz'• ‘
HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty Cass Lake Privileges
Dally OR'4-0305'EvasrEM^ 3-7545 ONE 2 BEDROOM HOME and one badroom home located in PontiBL, close to Fisher Body. 517-5305. Call -------------attar 5 p.m.
t. White alum.
chain link (_______
I drive to IVi car
garage, naw 15 . _______________.
at rear of lot. This prororty Is In top condition. Priced at $19,500.
Everett Cummings, Realtor
2503 UNION LAKE ROAD ^ 3:3208____________________353-7181
BY OWNER, 4 badroom brick ranch, 1400 square ft. t'/s ceramic bath, dan, buHt-lns, carpeted, finished walkout basement, 2 car attached garage, large lot with shrul-Bay Subdivision, $28,500 mediate posaasslon. 35MS77.
BY OWNER, SYLVAN City, 5
HIITER
RCKHESTER AREA — excallant 5 rooms and bath, b u 111 -1 n a, basement with rac. room, 2Vi car garage. 3 lota. $20,990.
2 lots, laka
5553 or 551-4575.
Iraa parking. Phone 5S1-
OFFICE AND WORK or area, approx. 3,000 tq. fl ft. offica apace. HIgf volume area. Ideal lor I Attorney, Carpet Sales, — “ -...............'Illtits. I

BY OWNER - BLOOM F I EL 6 Orchards, 4-bedroom colonial 1</i bsths, Bl-Laval, beautifully msln-
39 ACRE commercial Comer, acrOM from Mt. Holly, 1530 ft. on Dixie, 900' on Trl^ Rd. $55,000
...........
. .-.ITALS FROM 1152 MONTHLY I 7 MINUTES TO PONTIAC, 3S MINUTES TO DETROIT
SYLVAN ON THE LAKES
on Cass Lake Rd., between Cass and Sylvan Lakes
DIRECTIONS: From Pontiac, taka Elizabeth Laka Rd. to Coss Lako Rd. ond turn Mt, or toko Orchtrd Lako Rd. to Cass Laka Rd. and turn righf. From DatroH, taka MIddIa Balt to Orchard Laka Rd., and turn laft.
BUILT BY THE SMOKLER COMPANY'
10,500 SQ. FT.
Downtown Pontiac Partitlonad offica spaca on 2nd floor with lavatorlas, sarviced by pas-sangar alavator. Low rantal. Contact Bruca Annttt parsonally, AFTER 5 P.M. CALL BRUCE J. ANNETT	582-9072
Annett Inc. Realtors
28 L Huron St.
FOR LEASE
3384)466
tq. ft. on MIcIhgan
largo parking a ofticas, or whati
LEASE OR LEASE with option t( buy 1800 tquara foot madam bldg 4550 Ellzabath Laka Rd.. Watarford. Ovarlookino Pontiac golf course. 700 square foot office, carpeting and paneling plus SO'
vacant commercial lot ad'---*
**‘'**"*'”- *
LOTS OF PARKING, A good petan-tial buslnass bldg., of lO'xSO' on Wast Huron. FE 3-7951.
SHOP, offices 6r“_________________
10545 DIxIa. - Holly Rd. 525-2545.
49
2 BEDROOM HOUSE, Parry Park Subdivlalon. Bast cash offar. agants. 5S2«1t._________________
Apartmaots, Uiifonilslied 38 Apartments, Unfarnislied 38
"A PAD THAT'S RIGHT »
OUT OF PLAYBOY!"
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
That's what ana young swingar laid whan ha first glimpsed an Oakland Vallay ApartmantI Modostly, wa agraa. Wa'va put all tha latast luxurias Into these 1 and 2 badroom aparl-monts . . . sunktn living rooms, tsrrsca dining rooms, avan
stallad air conditioninq, am sounc-conoirian mam ao aa not to Ihhibn parties. And lust to show wa'ra sarlous about tha _.	^ Oakland Vallay Club
r Apartmant raaldanit and lhair guaits.
I and gama raomi, axarclia room, launa waaMry atmeagMrjv ^^Ml^youra for
I Sunday-;) fa I P.M. Saturday-1 to « PM.
It hsa a pool, ~
A’Vv]
OAKLAND VALLEY APARTMENTS on Walton Rood betwe«n Adofns and Opdyke just east of 1-75 Phone: 335-2641
BUILT BY THB SMOKLER COMl>ANY
3 BEDROOM RANCH
WATERFORD AREA Vi Bath. Baiamant. 2 car garaga.
4-H REAL ESTATE
LAKE OAKLAND SHORES — Naw 3 badrooms, poasibit 4, BRICK RANCH, 2Vi bat hi (Inishad walk-aut basamant with
S?"«W1!SS<
Early American, walk-aut ment, (Inishad recreation room, firaplaca, bath IVi, attached garage, Excallant Watarford Location, $32,750, pay down to existing 5Vi par cant mortgage or can purchased an FHA farms.
XI.,. h.u. I ake Front Hama 0, OR 3-B191.
ward, t blocks S. of Square Lake.
W15. ^2?77.
Junal______________________
EAUTIFUL CLARKSTON Is you will find this 2 badroom with carpeting, covad ci dock, 2 car attai
gar.^ .
RAY
Call Ray Today
BACKUS
baths, formica ................
built-in range and avan. Paved efreet. Priced at 832,000 terms.
BACKUS REALTY
332-1323________________3W595
OTTAWA DR.
Brick, 4-bedroom, 2 bath room,^ dining room, danj^
tion room, game* '■ tract, or equity 1 trade. $37,500, foi
PONTIAC OFFERS THIS 4 b<
new kitchen,
room, full basement,
space In attic and p____
tor price and terms. P-10.
living room, dining —J storage Call Ray
RAY
9 NORTHERN HIGH - neat 4 3 Bedroom ranch.
Gl terms.
HE BUILD -3b with oak floors,
alum, siding. On . ___________________
model call B. C. H M T E R . REALTOR. 3792 Ellz. Laka Rd. --------------- I p.ns. 502-5427.
HOME WITH A HEARTBEATI
Hera Is ths homo you have bser dreaming abouti 3 badrooms, LIv Ing Room accented by a mural ai the walls, 80x200 lot. Term: available.
YORK
colors, paved street
------ 1700 down. Deal________
wiin Duiioar, open dally 8, Sunday 1-7 p.m. Closad Friday.
____Parsanson Bulldara, Inc. 338<W.
RANCH with full basement on your lot. $15,995, mortgage allilable. MAROTTA RLTY. 353-7001.
Id den. Almost 2 av__
Beautiful trees. $39,500. FHA
STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE
HEARTHSIDE
REALTY
SYLVAN VILLAGE IVi story older home, 2 badroomi up, separata dining room, modarr kitchen and bath, brick fireplace, largo glassed In porch, nice traes, 1 car garage, lako privllagaa. Land contract terms, substantial down payment, $80 a month at tVt par cent. Needs some work. $15,500.
2157 Orchard Lako Rd.
WEST OF TELEGRAPH 334-3593_______________334-3270
BY OWNER — 3 badroom brick ' ranch homo, oxcallent condition, blacktop road, laka prtvitagas, within walking distance to school and stores. For appt. all 353-7577. BY OWNER, Excallant Watarford iMatlon, 3 badroom, brick, full basamant, altachad 2 car garage, bullt-lns, carpet, drapes, fsnead ----------------After 5,531-0341.
IDEAL FOR HOME OR buslnass, zoned commercial. Located conveniently to 1-75	-
Tu^SSsam-^ga.
badrooms, full dining ro
attached garage, 58^7597.
garaga, built-in a, VERY DELUXE
M' X dO* FULL basamant, aluminum siding, IIS,90Q. Also Ms avllabla In Clartulon araa, $3500. Call balwaan
9 a.m,-5, 525-3575,
Want Ads For Action
Clarkston School Area 9201 Thendara Blvd.
Located 5 blocks N. of Ctarkston-Orlon Rds., 4 blocks West ol “ Eaton Rd., enter tram Alganqt , Walter's Lake prlvnagas, naw attractive tri-laval, 3 largo badrooms, [nvitliy llvlng-dl^ng-kltchan^ araa.
carpafad, idiata oc-
Homa. Lots of plans or k your aalacllon to build In ft... ....
Cash for Your Equity
HACKETT
^ 363-6703
-	QUADS - COLONIALS. PRICES RANGE FROM $45,uw
GREATER BLOOMFIELD
REAL ESTATE
—	Talagraph Rd.
In convenlai __________
Lake Rd. A custom built badroom ranch with family n
SQUARE LAKE PRIVILEGES
location , off Squai
---- built
il'- -■ ■ any i
SNYDER, KINNEY <S BENNETT
In Rochester
134 W. University (2nd floor)
_____55f-5100 OR ?■"
SYLVAN LAKE
SAM WARW)CK -custom built bric
trl-lavel, 2'/i baths..
windows, air conditioning, all city
» 'fd* »‘-opTn’
SMALL FARMS, Room for horses ■nd kids. Buy - Sell - trade with ART DANIELS REALTY, 1210 N. Milford Rd. MU 5-1557, 21177 chlgan, CR 5-9250.	_ _____
fUCKER REALTY CO.
9(B PONTIAC STATE BANK 334-1545
possession.
NOW BUILDING
3 bedroom brick front ranchers with full basemsnts. Gas heat, tile bath, large 12x19 ft.	"
dining area, beautitv. __
floors. Priced at $17,950 on FHA terms.
YOU CAN TRADE FOR ANY HOME WE HAVE FOR SALE
Val-U-Way Realty and Building Co..
FE 4-3531
OAKLAND AVE. OPEN 9 TO 9
FE 5-8183
only $19,500.
WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE: ^4-8204
E LAKt
.. Udad h(
KING-PHIPPS
tEJ
cth ng lly
OXFORD-ORION AREA
INSPECT THIS attractive . badroom ranch, featuring large .......Ing room, •—
penal I
m artists di
FISHERMAN'S
PARADISE
d 2'/i c ______________
nicely landscaped corner ........
lake privileges. Only $21,750 FHA possible.
MANITO LAKE FRONT
RANCH HOME — Plastarttf « oak floors, 2 bedrooms, possible 3rd, panalsd wa!
basement, 2 baths, a Its cl------
garage, great view of lake. Only $25,900 land contract terms.
NEAT AND CLEAN
2 BEDROOM HOME witl carpeting, basamant, gas I car garage $15,900.
heat. Newly dacoratad. Vacant, only $500 down phis costs.
AUBURN AVE.
Five bedroom two story homo. Living and dining rooms. Kitchen. Dsn. Full basamant Recreation room. Ges HA heat. Three car garage. Easy FHA terms avsilable.
SOUTH JOHNSON
•tve bedroom two story older
OPEN
A New Model Is Open For Your Inspection
n Colony Heights from 5-0 Monday through Thursday ond ?-5 Sal. —' Sun. Take Ellz. Lake Rd. '/i i wast from Williams Lake Rd Colony Htights Blvd.
WE BUILD
RANCHES, COLONIALS, TRI-LEVELS 3-4-5 BEDROOMS 1-11/2 _2'/2 BATHS
Your choice of 9 nuxlels with dislinctive alevallons. Pricta ri from $17,100 to $38,900 plus lot.
INTEREST RATE INCREASE
HAYDEN REALTY
363"6604	1 0735 Highland Rd. (M-»)
Milt west of Oxbow Lak
BRIAN
LET'S TRADE BY GEORGE
ltd have tl. this 3 I — homo lu-a Rd. on a largo W
_____	______ ____________ family
room, IVi baths, 2 car attached garage, Sato price Includes riding Fawn nr------	-•—-	------ '
Twp., largo landscaped I over-looking Susin Laka. 7 for $19,000 land contra
CROSS
Realty & Investment Co.
Wa pay cash for used homes
674-3105	MLS
Wideman
ATTENTION! PONTIAC MOTOR EMPLOYEES
You can have Immtdiate a
of frontage and 150 faet unp. Prime location. Call location and farms.
Eva. Call MR. ALTON 314-5381
Nicholie & Harger Co.
'/i W. Huron St.__________FE S-8183
ROYER
HOLLY OFFICE
Grand
Opening
ERL, SAT. 2-7
Royar-bullt Capa Cad home In bsauittui Holly Bush Shores. 3 bedrooms and a dan. 2 full baths. Formal entry. Largo living room with firaplaca. Formal dining room. Utility room on first floor. 2 car attached garage. There are many laka lots and laka prlvlla^ lots available with city water, sewer end paved streets.
....._____ _____ of lust ana ot the
many "Royer-Bullt Quality honws" taka 1-75 to tha Holly exit (E. Holly Rd.) turn Mt to Tha Village of Holly) turn right on Park St. to Holly Bush Dr. The model '
WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY. INC. PHONE: 634-8204
Holly Brfnch	Holly Plaza'
HAVE THE KEY.
aa TY. lor, uniy . TODAY. WB
PONTIAC GENERAL AREA
Largt 4 badroom home, 2 baths, carpeted living room and dining spacious kitchen with ample .....srds. Basamant, FA heat. 2 car garage. $15,500, terms.
I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR
412 W. HURON ST.	134-4525
EVE. CALL_______________335<559 .
LAZENBY
I. 1 rents lurnishtd, tha oi
WOULD YOU LIKE
a naw 3 bedroom ranch homo w tha following features?
FULL BASEMENT
On
ash (or It. A.. ..
IP. For (urthar In
ROYCE LAZENBY, Realtor
Ofwn Dally 9-8
4525 W. Walton — OR 4-0301
Sale Hoaiet
49Salc Houses
49
NORTH PONTIAC 3 BEDROOM, BASEMENT
NO DOWN PAYMENT
BRIAN
Multiple Listing Strvice 5280 DIxIa Hwy.	523-0702
Weekdays 'til 9	'—........
Sale Houses
JOHNSON
AUBURN HEIGHTS
5 room, 1 story, 2 bedroom fi homo with basamant. Family i
Call far at Eves, afttr 7, call )Mr. Braid, FE 4-1
2286.	I
JOHNSON
704 5. Telsgraph_FE 4-2533.
KELLER 1
l.l. NEWLYWED: Sharp clean 4 room bungalow, carpeted living room, basamant, gas heat, near Church and Soiools, bus. Price 1)1,250 lass (or cash. 3097 W.
LOVELY RANCH featuring 4 ba< bath, dining rt...., sertanad In patio, large 72' x ISO* tot, 'Ba first to sea by caning Ray.
"RAY
Can Ray Today
ROYER
OXFORD OFFICE
WHAT A DEAL!
Largo two-family homo, only $14,500. Close In. place In downstairs apartment. Two<ar, two-Siwr uai.u.. uun ■ miss seeing this property; Call today. Ask for 480-E. Lot's Iradt.
A PLACE TO LIVE AND A MONEY MAKER BESIDES
This beautiful oldsr home Is approvsd for 14 aut-patlants. Posslblt to rant ovtr $1,000 a month. Locstad In smelt town oast of OxIord. Many nice faaluras you are sura to en|oy. For full details call ana of the Action Paopit today. Ask lor 239-C. Wa can taka your prts-int property In trade.
THREE-FOUR BEDROOM
I’/i-sfory bungalow on ana acre In the country. Close In. Wat plaster throughout, rock firaplaca, full basamant. gas haat. Excallant prop arty far the growing family. For mora details cdll ana b( the action poopla. Priced at $22,900. Ask for 22S-E. Wa trade.
OLDER TWO FAMILY IN LAKE ORION
Comfortabla upatairs apartmant. Natling $120 a month. Roomy 1-badroom; awnar's apartmMt downstairs. CompMO wRh now kHchan, formal dining room and 15x15 living room. Gao forced air haat, spacious cornar lot. FHA farms avalltbla. Make an appointmant to tee 4S9 F. V
823 S. Lapeer Rood	<"	Oxford
PHONE: 628-2548
TED’S TRADING
WE DID IT AGAINll
WE CONFESS - WE SOLD ALL OF THESE HOMES IN THE LAST 10 DAYS
3355 Cosey Burn 701 Artdale 3585 Brookdale 6591 Ookridge 4052 Elmhurst 2372 Crescent Lk. Rd. 'A section in Lewiston 351 Meadwood
964 Berwick Lots on Letts Rd.
Lot on Deer Lake 2698 Hartline 340 Loke Street 310 Whipporwill Lot 171 Steep Hollow 4 lots — Eston Rd.
Now We Need More Homes To Sell To Accommodate Om* Many Waiting Clients
If You HaveyA Home To Sell,
PLEASE CONTACT US RIGHT AWAY
Our NEW IDEA'S In Sellihg Real Estate Help Us Sell Your Home Quicker.
Thank you
McCullough Realty, Inc.
5460-Highland Road (M-15) MLS
-T^
674-2^36
—J
D—fl
THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 21. 1969
For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981
49 {Sal* Nouset
VON
LAND CONTRACT
I Invest In this 3 f«mllv
491 Sol* Houset ^	4^ jSal* HoMiet
SMITH ’ AVON ' STRUBLE I IRWIN
incomei' Furtlsiwd with |i
I. S rooms «nit bath down. ‘ both up. Privo"
ROCKING CHAIR RANCHER PAMPER YOURSELF
SMALL FARM
Sol* Houm^
TIMES
CASS LAKE FRONT
■ooutllul custom ranch, built by Wainbargar, 3 . btdrooms landscapM, swimming pool
bedrooms In Waterford iwp. lusi waltirtg for ralireai tO anioy this summer Large lot, carpeting In all rooms, oil forced air heat. Now's the time to make caniu ••am./-... ./•/. your rtwva to this cute stap savar EARLY AMERICAN LOG
homt. $13,500 to cio“ *" •••-«-
floor I0*lt family .room, larof l?0xlS5 f1 lot with pfonty of room for a	Rochester schools.
FAMILY HOME
Within walking distance to grade Mhool and lust a short drive to downtown Pontiac. 3 bedrooms, new carpet, kitchen has plenty of (uptxiards	Plastered walls
irr.mir bath, full basement Sts car garage.
SCHRAM
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
A 3 bedroom ranch with larger living room, kitchen with dining
The Rolfe H. Smith Co.
Sheldon B. Smith, Realtor 244 S. Telegraph
333-7848
I this house? Lake
.... rooms, I
s, I'rS acres.
AVON REALTY
Immediate Possession
bedrooms, ^anilly k?tehen,'^^'era’mlc bath, hardwood floors, marbla Sills,! gas heat, Waterford Twp. only tH,»50, farmt.	,
5935 Highland Rd. (M-59) Next to Pranks Nursery
674-3175
MLS
IRWIN ^ A&G. 'OpenItouse'
J. X	, j	c,,k|rsAV 9.C
And Sons
4-BEDROOM
I'm afraid that you are too lata lor a 7 per cant mortgage, Interest rates ere going up. Now,
-	, -------- rnore then ever, Its of prime
..«.x to 3 schools - Showp by Importence to work with a appointment only.	: builder who otters rock bottom
_______ prices, e guaranteed trade plan
RETIREE SPECIAL ?5S.„*,io!*’'irnn'y!i;
nlw'*eljml?um“slldln'?"'* t'i c^r ”* “'•'^Kheduie map o^ Sran* S rTttllte	Oakland County. The gold
with attaching breeieway markers Indicate homes built In locarion.	We Will bid
your plans In 30 minutes. We have been el It lor II years, we
a/M WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD. 3	-I?'
bedrooms, 2 car garage, fenced wd, FHA terms. Wlllfams Lake
extras, situated In GIngeIvtIle area on 3.4 acres.
ORION AREA
Large 3-bedroom bungalow with attached garage, basement with 2 finished rooms, situated on lot ti'/a x&5r. Good suburban area.
ORION LAKE FRONT
a lum If
it, 117,900. F+tA term
GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ' ...... FE 3-7M3
GAYLORD
OFFERS	i
ARRO
BUYING OR SELLING CALL e^Gtli!l5'T^"’’A»i JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS .*?’rILt'';,*r3,l^^ i!f\ 5’9’i4s':'n’t.eTT7.?i"“p’E”V.,
Nw	------- -■: ■ ■
"BUD"
List With SCHRAM ond Coll the Von
ANDERSON & GILFORD Building 8< Realty
3M1 Highland Rd. (M-99) ««3-9000
GILES
MILLER
AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR
beautiful BUSH LAKE
ofSe?.TewrA^%^iiohJ?„'! NORTH SAGINAW INCOME
yiilepe of Holly, a*'-"'--
Ready to go, all Impr.
TREES AND GARDEN SPOT 3 bedrooms, with full welk-ou basement, family room a n i country site kitchen, 1400 squar " Ing area. Aluminun .. —led on Clinton Riva access to Cass Lake. Call to
. An ii siding, located
Partridge
Lotth-Acraag*
LOT 133 X J14 FT., Cranberry Lake Estates, FE 5-343S.
“IS THE BIRD TO SEE"
INCOME PROPERTY
Contemporary ranch
frontage. This Ikrge home ....	rnwrcm i
t'llIll'h'St ‘"i ?i*k"‘S*u^	''•Y	Choice
3«s, ? C£ee“. i"oJT	*rTeM;
_n arrange yoor fl-
call us now.	MEDICAL BUILDING
I	income PROPERTY
/ DRAYTON PLAINS |Thi$ meolcal building would make a
3 badrnnm r.nrh	n«. ''•''T	Invaaltnent for a high
heat ^Toe coma? ' tot ® s?i1h ''!*®^ bracket Investor who could backyard ?mced“ carDef dr^l	•"<> WUltV growth,
packyard fenced, cai^t, ^apes! p,.|e, ,, ,jno,ooj $M,doo"down.
3to ACRE PARCELS, wooded, roll - •" Clarkston, 343-4413, 363-MI I,
30' temlly car garage. ^ 000. We can
and 3 car garagt. This home Is sharp Inside and out and la offered! suburban , at only $10,950. We can arrange ?2Smwp financing so call right eway'
your financing so call right away' tor an appolnfment.	j
TRI-LEVEL
Near Oxbow Laka faaturln bedrooms, family kitchen, baths, gas heat, large fi   oa. .ur
[frx ’'WarM
?od“aT.o‘’4.*ffi!“s'."'""'’'
WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE
north of Detroit. ASK’for free catalog
BAOTOtnnws B.= .l
PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 West Huron Sf„ Pontiac 4-3581	^ _	065-8759
I 3-4413, 415-14.04
3Vi LOTS, ON THE corner of A ._ . and , Quebec, Lake Angelus Heights, total size 175x125, $1,200. Call If Interested. OR 34117.
I TEN ACRE PARCELS, wooded area .on each, Oxford Twp. area, 428-2984.________________________________
ANNETT
OFFERS
IDEAL LOCATION
Photographer, print Shop or small business. 2500 so. ft. bldg. Orchard Uka Rd. ^,500.
ZONED C-3
7 acres, over 500 ft. main road. City of I - •	- vvater
8. Sewer,
la story 9400 sq. ft. bldg.
-....F E 8-0079.
------------c Arbcc----------------- LARGE SHOPPING CENTER
3 ALKC)	Across	tha straef	from	this
Close to Clarkston, also	have,	202x230 ft. property.	Low priced
several parcels near 1-75 with	lake'	at $1175	a front foot, whan	you
privileges. Low down payment.	,	consider	how land	values	era
WEST SIDE - 2 femlly unit, 2 newl WRIGHT REALTY I	^"l. area.
hjrna^esj^2 brtrqoms ea. unit. 382 Oakland Ava.______________I CONTRACTORS
™	—	... .. yp p	retail
if.' 10 a.m.
Times Realty
5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY
This older home has had Ihs very appointment today, best of cars, Carpeted living room, paneled bedrooms, large utility NOTHING DOWN TO Gl. rnnm t „r garsge. Ilka new Almost new neat 2 bedroom home,
siding an- ----------■—	'■■■'	----- ------------------
Call tor si this one. 493-8333.
NOT NEW BUT OH SO NICE, whet many Of you have b searching for. A really good ol
close to 1-75. Full price 814,500.
Cash for your equity or land contract
3 rooms and bath up and 4 rooms and bath down, Iqwtr
front lots from 8i
I basemtnl, locaTad
a corner lOt'. C land contract wn. Call tor at
,,,u )..u living room.	w.
18x30 kitchen, 20x30 temlly room
*''5 rireplece and bar. ttromTc WEST SIDE bath, 2 ear garage plusi Oh yes, the i garbage disposal, washer and dryer Desirable br
»w.»oo	?'f”?.?.?.'
XOMMERCIAL PROPERTY
h home close East ol Ponllac, right next Ic . .. ling, spic and highway, very good potantlal; lot faaturlng 2 slit 40x184', small ont ^--
9«j FIRST TIME OFFERED
•'•0 bedrooms with full besem...
•"<1 • Ii*'' oarage, 120x122' lot th 84,000 oh yes ilment to curtains
Immadia .
Call 4934333
dryer, deep traaia, rir.n.. art Included. I. Only 117,500.
______FE 8-9493-
GAYLORD, INC.
2 W. Flint SI., Laka Orion 493-8333	FE 8-9493
7 ROOMS AND BATH h
fc- ■■-'7
room, large kRrtenI"fuH®bMml!l'"new 3 car garage. First lime edvertlsed. I
LZh	farms. 5 rooms l
living room,
Tormiii ainino tootvie v#rv nir« 0»r«pe. Juit •12.f50 foil oric*.
FE 2-0262	i
41* W. HURON. OPEN f TO 9 I
Sole Heusei
r.. -r........• both, large
kitchen with lots of cupboartTs, lull basemani, paneled recreation Uxlk’nowl ''***’	e*7*«l*-
NICHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc.
1141 W. Huron St.
FE S-1201,
ofter 6 p.m. FE 2-3370
49
49Sole Houset
t grate wllll Iff tor It out!
and clean m ranch. Ini
"Established 1930"
BET YOUR SWEET “BIPPIE"
wl'h 3 li
twM, full baivmtnt with ouUf«ndlno lot 120*157* 121.5(
"V-E-E-E-RY INTER-R-E-ESTING"
ras that Ihi price J«l «x244?“o'?k
wllh you tea iRe list of i M MO,500 Includes, In ihit aluminum sided 3 •wd loccllon lust oft M 59. with---- '	■
CHEROKEE HILLS BEAUTY
"4“***®	“1 • "I" overlooking
5?"***- Top "P'Pb eonsirucllon with oak iurtod wifh*huih“rYi*iLJi?”	"v'"0 tPof". handy WtchiS
rM?^	"oboerdt and tlelnlett steel sink. Betemeni rec-
reetlon room, two car garage and blacktop drive.
FOUR BEDROOM OFF BALDWIN
diU?"a2S ?*!»	I?" •>«•«"»«' borne. 3 bedrooms
hSiT*	Pl«ftr«d waMsf basement with oat
haat. rear paraga wllh haat and two btautltul ahaded loti.
DORRIS & SON REALTOR
2536 Dixie Hwy.	MLS	OR 4-0324
a paved tireel.
IT IS LATER THAN YOU THINK
In lust c short time th be green again, so get i where the air It fresh Move Into this 3 bedroo
the sathebew Meybee __ _____
large lots, on paved slreals. Taka' the owners equity out and take over a 5V. par cant Mortgage. Give us a call for lull details.
Claude McGruder Realtor
3710 Elliabeth Lk. Rd	*83-8730
Multiple Listing Service OPEN 9-9
OPEN	I
SATURDAY 1 TO 4	|
8619 COOLEY DRIVE	|
Vecenl brand new lake front ranch home. An original new design ol brick and Redwood exterior in a park-llke setting of big trees. Has newly carpeted living room. 3 extra iln bedrooms and walk-oul
basement w“*- -	------
area. Gat h
JACK
Frushour
REALTOR WE TRADE
EXTRA NICE »
3 BEDROOM HOME In the Elizabeth Lake Estates, large living roorn wll^tiraplace, dining
recreation room, 2 car garage, well landtcdpsKl lot with lake |rlvlleges at Rand Gate Park —
a STOUTS
Best Buys Today
I. , Many extras.
tppolnim listing toi
TREAT YOUR WIFE
TO HIS LUXURIOUS 3 BEDRROOM, bath and half home, enhanced with a spacious iluinn room, separata dining also a breakfast room.
nclosad porch, 2
—. — . .Icapli
----------- Cooley Lake Rd.
Union Lake Village, then norr mile end left on Cooley Dr mile. Your hostess.
22' recreation rpP"7 ™7e e>
I and 2 ficeplacas.
th '
t 843,50
- _______ Why nc.
present home. Priced
. . START RIGHT HERE
Grace ON THIS NORTH SIDE — 2 bedroom bungalow It lust what you've been looking tor — nice siied living room and emole kitchen with eating area. $11,'
MLS
NEW RANCH-5 ACRES
fi'i lY*.'!* PlPTlnum, large 5 room,'
I'/S bath ranch with attached 2 cart garage. Colorfully decorated,I fIrepTice and gat heel. To Include cerMtIng, gun cabinet end extras.
A tine country home wllh 5 acres!
We***:r.rVl!l;g.*'X,*Gi o?6744161	674.2245
Bank flnsnclng.	|	5730 WILLIAMS LAKE RD.
LITTLE CHARMER
Near Lotus Lake. Interior net decorated, nice paneling ai ' birch kitchen cabinets, 1 garage. Just right for a coupre or small family.
TffsiNzTarttor 1«t 019 WORID SPANISH.
ROYER
GOODRICH OFFICE Goodrich-Davison area
Sharp, clean 2 bedroom ranch home on IV. acres. This home Is In excellent condition throughout. From the newly redecoraM and remodcM kitchen to the ceramic bath. Lika.-new corpetl--Plastered walls and a kitchei ol bullMns plus 2'/ii car ga..,., • b7eaf deal at only Suinttod ‘bujir®"*"
2 bedroom, lake front nea rl—alter 5.----------------------------------------
Clarkston, I2'x30' bedroom, could <0 ACRES near Ortonvilte, 10 min. easily be divided, full basement, 2- to I.-75. $9000. 330x'1320' terms.
car oarage, nearly an acre of land Sheldon. 425-S557._________________-
"IS?'',.!®'?* I?®'' ®'** "?®P'« iO ACRES WOODED, rolling, flowing trees. 22x14 femljytTCm, large, stream, large road frontage, land •‘''"*_fjr^toca^^$27,000. $0,000 down! contract terms. Fowler Rfiy. 343-
AFTER 4 P.M. CALL MRS. EVA F. ANDERSON, 332-3759
REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. 3384)466
on land contract.
MENZIES
CEDAR ISLAND LAKE
with 24' family room and L-shaped covered balcony overlooking -scenic lagoon. Full basement « finished recreation room oper..... at lake laval, 3 car garage, paved
HAYDEN REALTY
1-4404	10735 Highland Rd. (M-59)
'/a Mila West of Oxbow Lr‘ -
Ortonville
LAKE FRONT LOT, rapidly devel-Ing secluded area, north of , Brighton, US 23 and M-59, ex-rMch^homa _to-1 pressway to Detroit, $4500, 851-3281.
'3^7045!'" ' ■
t straef. This hon
HERRINGTON HILLS-
Flrst ottering tor this attractive
•"''I-	----“■ featuring
kltehe-ir gai
- . ------------1 gas I___
on a large fenced lot, and priced at 818,500 with forms.
SPRING IS HERE-
And It's time to look forward tc spending time at tha lake. This; charming old brick colonial Is only 40 minutes from Ponllac,
>n,<	.If,..*..____ ________71
r schools.
IS miles N. W.
00x200 FT. WOODED Lot -Dunham Lake, Highland Twp.
$5,000. 485-2782.	_____
00' FRONTAGE ON CEDAR River, near MancalonC $20,0d0 on land contract or $17,000 cash. 335-7812.
COAAMERCE LAKE privileged I good view of lake. 343-2491. __ CLARKSTON AREA naa> I-100x350' lot. 12500. Wooded, rollli Sheldon. 425-5557.___________________
Baldwin, -------- ------, --------,
good perk, wonderful well water, pr^ate road. Private owner. 391-
^	-..... ________________ __________________________________.,	Excellent Building Lots
dining LAKpRONT HOME -- On Lobdell 92' Lakefrojit, Lake pakland .$13,500
®"®	h?'“'."*?'■ Fonfon- Michigan, lust Canal front. Sylvan Lake ......$4,400
rj.j Included. Lot is well 10 minutes oft tha expressway.'Cass Laka privileges, 3 lots . $1,950
landscaoad and In nira natohhn,. Large bedrooms plus large family iLeke privileges, Elliar--’" '	----
room overlooking lake. Flrepla"	------
In large living room, formal din room and convenient kitchen, ... eludes like new 14 ft. fiberglass
hood. Full orica $14,500.
Goodrich
3 bedroom ranch home plus 3Vli acres on the Goodrich Mill ~	'
This It B clean ranch wll «7PO»ln9' I'A baths, basament, 2 car garage. Located in quiet eettlno lust across from 127,900 and you
ime tha terms.
ROYER REALTY, INC.
GOODRICH
636-2211
basement, and gas haat.
CITY LOCATION-
Large 8 room
auoe* 4	—....
is: O'NEIL
I WHY NOT TRADE? 'toctudes**4 ESCAPE FROM THE :i.*"J)ci.Vn! ORDINARY
to appreciate. $14,850.
AUBURN HEIGHTS-
boat with 75 J
car garage covered
aluminum. Call for $24,000, cash or may consider Gl terms. WE trade.
VAN
1-LI 8-6217
I,Elizabeth Lk. Estates ... _________
I 10 acres. Highland Twp. .... $7,200
-i Also other nict lots available
.....;,| VON REALTY
and two MLS	3401 W. Huron
with	482-5000
LAKE FRONT HOMES.
New and Used.
J, L. Dally Co.__________EM 3-7114
FAMILY
PLANNING
IF YOUR PLANS INCLUDE COUNTRY LIVING - REMEMBER TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE.
I, fenced paved y
on highway US 131 9 North of r—
1,500 sq. ft.
’ontago wtth to the rea J, plus OtfICL ......
a parking or storage t by chain link fence.
..Mch. Approx. 1,500 sq. ft. 150 fact of highway frontage wtth railroad and airport to the rear. Two
loading docks, r'"*	----
Includes Ir— -
FLOYD E. SUNDSTROM, BROKER PHONE 775-5581 OR 775-5104 CADILLAC, MICHIGAN
WEST HURON NEAR TELEGRAPH
4,300 square foot brick taced building with 98 teat of Irontage. Has full basement with a 48x30 refrigerated storage vault. Call lor full particulars. Terms available.
Business Opportunitin 59
18 UNIT TRAILER park bordering lake, also' laundromat-sporting goods store, and mlntoturo raca track on Main St. of North Oakland County town. It would be hard to obtain a batter deal than this for only $139,000 Including stock. 25 par cant down. .WIN consider other real estate In trade.
LAKE FRONT. LAKE privileges, river frontage lots and acreage.
Farms and small farms. 343-9531, 343-4413. Fowler Realty
SILVER LAKE FRONT
0 ACRES, natural beauty In all Its glory. Giant oaks, braathtakli view and SSV of road frontage.
25c CAR WASH
city of Pontiac, water 8, sewer, ---- good net, 818,000, 810,000
ISLE OF BABBETTE
late wllh five rentel units, and mainland parking, shows
UPPER STRAITS LAKE PRIVILEGES
$13,950, Terms.
’ 10 ACRES, many i
site with youi ______ „
from the highway with a beaut
Located In e d«Ie* re^ntlal fSid frontage. **Here's*'a'rarK;h**sfyre
aom.home carefully plannei alurlng all plastarwl walls "a^d' Si^sltirro?,
c-i?p.X	r:Zng".^''F’‘lrs?"J!-?'''^-
garage. $14,900.	natural tirepi
1 glass"*
Warren Stout, Realtor
1450 N. Opdykt Rd.	FE 5-8145
''“^i^^lly '1^ 0___Multiple Listings
---------‘ villa.
. (tiraplaca too).
a Florida room all -rbacua pit. Full huge recreation room.
iaraa. Let
the Holly, Davisburg
i|' Brown

large lot wllh trees. Year-round or!
summer-home living tor ----------
$17,500.
LOWER STRAITS LAKE FRONT
Recently n exceller* -
large ..... .....................
bullt-lns. On paved road in nice area. Includes soma lu ‘ ‘ Lovtiy year around living.
MAX
bridge . _ _______ ____
good Income. Sl5,0og down.
OPDYKE RD.
158' frontage zoned ci. Includes 5 acres, frontage and good homa, potsibla tilt. $14,000 down.
down. Just north of Ortonvl
’^20 ACRES, a corner parcel, 4 miles! northwest of Oxford, over ’«*« of road and good hi|
$19,500, S4,000 down.
35 ACRES
BROOCK
horn# at ___
I__	mew carpetino
EASTHAMIj;,
Awn AU/AV u#c rn	CLARKSTON AREA
AND AWAY WE GO	Nottiing could Bptak mos« vivyuvuMyi	_ a ». «
A hot area in Waterford. 3 about faite and good llvln® than thei 4139 Orchard Lake Road bedrooms, living room w 11 h.blgnltled beauty of this custom bollt\.. ,	* AAwds.4^
carpeting, kitchen with doorwall to 3>bedroom trl-ievel located with a MA 6-4000	444^890
patio, bath with double vanity, fulpboautlful view of Walters Lake. This'--
basement, altached 2 car garage, truly spacious home Is completely northern PrODBrtV price $24,900. DON'T WAIT.	carpeted. Many, many extras juchl	^
as marble sills, sealed windows, full;	„„ ,
HEARTS AND FLOWERS	*’*?'!	^CRES
C. PANGUS, Realtors
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 430 M-15	,	Orh
CALL COLLECT 427-2815
S1-A
'WOW''
Sole Houses
49 Sale Houses
carpeted, 22' temlly privileges, paved Iralures too numeroi Hurry on this one, ci AI only 124,800.
advertising b
trying to d--------	----
Large bedrooms, family room, roomy kllctr—	-
conceivable
WHITE__LAKE; -;;Br.ndel Lek;
BUZZ BATEMAN SAYS “IT PLEASES US TO PLEASE YOU!"
*77-
N01KHERN HIGH
V’ •'•OTHING DOWN tor Ol wanling temlly
;'S76TWiu\RTNfrE*"^R'’o"SR';M"Ti '*'■
ROCHESTER AREA
setting Conlemporery ranch wllh 3 bed room. 1 K..K. |,mlly room, end basetnenl Greet tor e growlno ’	...... ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PRO-
SMALL FARM
is ACRES only 2 r
Brick Cepe Cod t
*108
SAVEIII
(.1OSING COSTS. Assume the 4'r, moriqaoe on this 3 bedroor •ull besemnni home with a country - kitchen Near I eke “ ' CALL NOWII ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAMI

OPEN SATURDAY 2-5 P.M.
WODEL." Your chc from or lakeyoriviiege lots. Local » exciting end modern lubdlvlsii
It the prei It 10 office
Take Elizabeth Lake Rd!
OXFORD-ORION RANCHERS:
...I-.	..—.—	------.	...
-. -------- perege. and r
---- of Drahner Rd. (between
SUN. 2-5 p.m. or by appointmei
dows, 2 car attached g
any o' Orion
end Oxtordl. OPEN SAT.
KEYLON RANCHER AND TRI-LEVEL: family room with ficeplace, 2 car garage, au aluminum. Loaded with extras and custom I turnishad and dtluxa all the way I OPEN SAT. or by eppt. Keylon Dr at corner of Hiller Rd. (I end Commerce Rds ).
res. Beeutltully d SUN. 2-5 p.m een Cooley Laka
COLONIAL AND MID-LEVEL:	3 end _______
tlreplece, IVs ceramic baths, custom kitchens
floors, 2W cor attached gereges, plus ell the- l_______
™„ -111 ,|nj In , RAPAPORT-BUILT HOME. Corner Voorhels Rds. OPEN saT. end SUN. 2-5 p.m
379
Pontiac S. Telegraph 338-7161;
ORION/OXFORD ,	628-4211
ROCHESTER
651-8518
UNION LAKE 3634171
"WHOOPIE"
ANOTHER NEW LISTINCI Lovely 3 JiJh* e'"s bedroom ranch home, large te-r.- ?•«", a s corner lot, paved sFraet Commerce area. Only $2,00 assume present mortgage.
feeling you gel as you step	••	•I'** * bedroom Call now, tomorrow maybe ... _
r '"r	'.IS Kin, "‘Ia*rg,"''l"Rll,;'’Toom':
, ouy rni, nom.**T' H n"5 DON'T BUY A HOUSE-«r*a'	‘^^'■'■ BUY A HOME!!
Don't think In forms of 4 walls and
'VaamSd ACREAGE AND LOTS	Sa;&l?v‘"^^rit.T^nr^
Ew,.ii...	.. . . ,®7-*'P7ice M,	excellent area of fine new homes on
• '•fO* lot tor outdoor living. Also-y 1?^..	»• this realistic sailing price
'70X.. ecra, 1 large oak trae.'o, m.Mn i> a big 2'A car attached all ipdayl No. 13-13
ALL BRICK WITH LOTS OF
NEAR MANISTIQUE, creek running through property, trout and Coho fishing, good dear hunting, easily accessible, low taxes, sacrifice. $14,900.
ELMER M. CLARK
Real Estate
363-2875
I the main oarl lOO" of sandy il contamporary
WOULD YOU BELIEVE
ANOTHER NEW LISTINOI Br home with privileges on Syh Lakf, formal dining room, ba*omtnt: Only $1,^ to astu prtstnf mortgagt.
UPPER STRAITS LAKE PRIVILEGES
3W baths.
of $28,
AVON'TWP."- Btautltul wooded lot, "®''®®® appro)(. 1.5 acras, 14,000a	$750
SPRINGFIELD TWP. Vacant land ru A DM on LaVon, prica $4,400.	,LnAKIV\
X 135't Taka a k
BRICK CABIN •
lota With
........ca 83995. B
or FE 8-35».
raTca sacked spot! BATEMAN
*spr?w*'*tor'*’'bulldto* INVESTMENT 8. COMMERCIAL CO. per acre. 821.275, S3,00(
HOW ABOUT THISI Suburban farmt. White Lake Township, roo live, have a hona, grow trees, barries, and a i tranquility. 15 par cant doWr
AL PAULY
OR yegg______________ Eves. 473-9272
APPLIANCE 'PARTS AND rapair business, stock end equipment for repairing weshsrs, dryers, refrigerators, vacuum cleanert, good locstion, bulMIng for sale or rent, reduced price for cash or
GREEN ACRES
1449 S. Lapeer Rd._____l_
INOIANWOOD SHORES —
homesites. "-----
for details.
Call todS
GRAYLING 1-10 acres, assy access, —Ideal camping and hunting aers parcels only S300
tot In rear, 81,800, Ml price, )GEMA COUNTY - 5 acres Po and hardwood trees, nter 1
home with over_______
living arse. This tvarylhlng with Its room, three tlraplaos wet bar, tun decks, carpeting, ell the b
beam callings, un .	______ ______ __________ ,
sunken bath, and many more! Branch, price 81,000 cash.	$20,500
features, shown by appointment INDEPENDENCE TWP. _ $7,850, only Full price 1105,000. Will approx. 5.88 acres of land on',nrir TUC nnnfc considec-a land contract.	LAND CONTRACT. It you are LUCK iHt UUUK
.	.	Interested In a sure Investment you against high rant anc ....
WARM SUNNY DAYS	MrctI"®S'rea	®A®
fwd fo mak* ptopia fhink abouf Treat and por
------	If you ara onb of fhesa	liia'QiQ iwVttAhU to' i auWifflad ax'-
yaV?;.'; "o7r:.r'’^'’,y*I	Bill Eostham* Realtor ----------------------------------------
Takamott'any terms. ;	$•'’<* vou____...WftlE,RJ=ORO PLAZA
be done except move yt.. Priced to sell today at
cutle. All alum.
10 money di
LAKE FRONT, LOT on Lake Orion, Ideal for boat dockage. Only $3,000. Terms.
A. J. RHODES, REALTOR
FE 8-2304	250 W. Walton, FE 5-471}
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE _ NEW 3 BEDROOM BRICK ranch, elactrif heat, finished basament with fireplace on approx. 3 acres, 828,900, additional acraage avail..
HARRISON-LEOTA AREA Cabin 5 ytars ok) with tiraplaca, completely furnished and pantltd. On 140 ft. of sandy beach. Muskegon RIvr- *—'— "'— and nice pine
directions.
C. SCHUETT
area over 1 acre.
VACANT Commercial 4 Industrial
---------- r»i„i- u,...,y Oakland
S29,:-“ .....
Ava. & Kannett R
“MMMM"
SOUNDS GOODI Live by the lake In •his year round home wllh rtOltlonel Income from properly. Union Lake eree.
SPRING
one. We can help you obtain e 5020 HIGHLAND RD. (M-50) MLS	nr\ry*s*3 vAii dctii
morlgege, find e gliding site end 674-3126	335-7900 ENOUGH ROOM? YOU BET!!
design a house to til your tot and	’	5 bedrooms, full basement, gas
your budget.	1 tor^ hwl. Newly fenced ^rd,
ELIZABETH SHORES	“	...............
tots with lake prlvllegi
close In, some furnished, e lerrns! Buy early choice.
^S2ItL°AyTJ5iT*Hc“Is*W^;yI”"
COSWAY
681-0760	!
Salt Houses
Ellrebefh Lake. Just $750
X	...	....	.	—	.
FE 2-0552
LES BROWN
REALTORS, BUILDERS,	I
APPRAISERS	1
In the Pontiac area lor over 30 ybers. Members of the Multiple Listing Service, tha Pontiac Board of Rtaltors, N.A.R.B. N 0 r t h Oakland County B u 11 d 1 r s
TED'S
Trading
lOME IN HOUGHTON LAKE Village. Lot 4k acre. Also business corner located on main highway In vlllaga with laka tronlaga. Houghton Laka. 478-3331.
intermediate lake, 2 bedroqm small cottage lor sale. Gas heat, rents tor $80 per month to teachers. Furn. Then use tor your summer Vicatlon. Price $4000, write or phone. Central Lake, 544-4204; Idris Fuller, East Jordan,
GROCERY AND PARTY STORE
rnni.v 1.1,. Drt r...	5*ut yoor ambition and Craallva
‘•“J?'-.	Imagination to worki Add a touch of
NORTHERN LAKE LOT tor salt.
NEW HOMES AVAILABLE NOW
49 Sale Houses
674-2236
UP UP AFfb AWAY
should know............
special olterlngt ol .. - .. ----------
available to you lor Immediate occupancy. Your next home cen have
sider the p

r tri-level, all p
49 I
“IT'S TRADING TIME"
WOULD YOU BELIEVE
this lour bedroom FHA-GI hortie can be bought lor $12,800 w IrhV. '	®' •.**"' 4SOO.OO. Pivments tor less than re
This eesl side home Is carpeted end has separate dining rtx
menls“ -*?ill^'thrs“on'e'’* '*'®*
FABULOUS
Cen you Imegl room enclosed
’••ring e huge foyer leading to a living - beeutltully designed wrought Iron 'with e ... -	marble llreplecel A kitchen Ihel has the latest In
living ease, a dining room lot your guests, a Florlde room tor lumTOr relaxation. Two generous sized bedrooms, a lull basement linished by e master cralismen, 2'Y baths, complelely plastered garage, end all on two wall landscaped lots. Folks the extras In ihl* home ere too numerous to mention. Call tor an eppolnt-menl todevi WE 00 TAKE HOMES IN TRADE I
LAKE PRIVILEGES CASS & ELIZABETH LAKES
Lovely ell brick rench with carpeted living room, kitchen with built-lns and rttrlgerator - furnished recreation room with w*t bar and hall bath In iht basement — two car garage. You will enloy the fireplace In the winter end the two nice porches In the summer. Extra lot can be purchased. So varV much tor only 122,500. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TODAYl
HOW TO SELL YOUR HOME PROMPTLY AT FULL MARKET VALUE
Consult an axpart with many yaarsMixptrlanca whe will appralsa your propartv at It's TRUE VALUE In today's markat — Advartlsa It In a way to attract tarloui proepKlt —	,
Sell It In e minimum time without Inconveniencing you —
Cell today and ask foG,reny, of our qualified sales people — . Emery Butler, Donne/GOOden> Bob Herrell. Pete Groenendet, Olate Howard, Dick Bryan, Leo Kempsen, Eileen Moyer, Elaine '	- or Dave Bradley.
Emery Butler
Howard. _ . Leo Bogeii,
1071 W. Huron St. After 8 p.m. Call
MLS
FE 4-0921 674.3920
- ________ ______ ranch wllh lai
corner lot, undergrour'* — system, formal dining
$33,700. L-S3
VIEW ESTATES, right off Cllnton-
..,11.	B-..,	..	.-	.-
FOX BAY
...... ... .....rams Laxe Road on to
Perry Drive, left to Fox Bay Drive,
.... . .	___open	—■ - ---	- - -
ALL FOR ONLY P.rrs.
lutitui r»' large <*,•••'1! ' nkllhg right 0 2 tuli Ferry I
i they're built 'You'li be pr
, ont. Call _________
rtprtsenfativt today.
WE DARE YOU
To call about this 3 badroL.,. -.
Itvel with a siiwlng or TV room, dining room, extra sharp kitchen.:
3W car attached garage end many	.
other extras. Located In the Walled OR '4-222}
easy to maintain. — punch to own O'Neil Realty
^___________ _______S3
CLARKSTON GARDENS
Brick 3 bedroonKraneh, IVi baths, axcallanbAFta, $22,000. fha terms. LADD'S OF PONTIAC
391-3300
FOR SALE, 35 acre farm,
*—la, othar buildings, wood .... im down. Austin Faadaa, 2732
SEE 2-5 P.M. SUNDAY
3441 HI-LURE — In b Hill Vlllaga -Univorilty, 2 y
Oakland
ct In a quality custom built • - V, acre lot.
OPEN SUNDAY
frontaga on Obcla Hlway, sides fancad, 4 bay garaga.
377 S. T , ,
338-9641
weekdays attar 5, ......-n. CALL 620-2041
BUSY SMALL cato In I orosslng over SSILOOOi beaia bp-. 40. 10,000 tor butlnese and —- xnutomani. I ease Dulld-llka. <51-
terms. Call 473-2213.
apartment INVESTORS
vallabla land tor small It, 10 unit and up. Will or Thvastor, tall a r ita.
358*5420
Exceptional
Opportunity
TO OWN AND
OPERATE YOUR OWN
PAINT
STORE
Pontiac Preu Box C-40
a commercial
SE corner Baldwin B Lake Angelus —	“. on Baldwin, comm'l.
000, $12,500 dn.
12 acres on Dixie near Taitgraph,
----  —,,l	pojjibia rtzoning to
iring.
and Dairy Bar to th Country Store ‘
Cli/b area and '- place. ■ this "dll
4% acres north si
Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466
RAY O'NEIL REALTY __________________
--PONTIAC LAKE
Sale Farms
BUSINESS SPACE
Wa have a 2 level brick building located In a good area, paneled and plastered walls, tiled floors, 2 baths, axcellent tor many kinds of business. 3,000 square feet. LET'S TRADE. L-<5.
’ HAVE-U-BEEN WAITING !
YTe
80 TO aoo ACRES
MIchlge'n. Dairy, graliv -■ Neme your farm ■ Dean's
3 UNITS - FRAME
FURNISHED, East side location, needs ssork, but priced right at tll.ooo _ with $3,000 down on land contract - over SO par cant
1 LAKE ANGELUS? Wall, wa ! one on the lake that nvon't very long so call today about 4 acre site. Our salesmen will you the particulars. L-70.	Six Family Income*' NORTH SIDE, fully furnished, showing exceltont returns, less then tIOOO down
DON'T DO IT!	on land contract. Call tar more Information.
garaga ai.. ------- ,
has such god terms won't have to —' Terms - FHA
longer. This 3 h full besement, dining’ room ■ 'hat you anymore.
CROSS
Realty & Investment Ca. VAL-U-VISION A7<.TinK ------------------------------
Is tt» Value YOU ••• In a homa by taking color photos of the InsMa and outside. You can took a .BPma over cloOaly In tha eomOort dTpur jS-iJiliT' ottica. Call now to' or lust drop ih.
MLS
lim BRICK. East sMt, t<0400.|
I.M0 down, good condition, ovar; "^•'“vai.
I Hart's tha Placal -- *-—Curios,
330-4437
raitgraph_________
HOWARD T.
KEATING
Spring;
Summer;
Fall; Winter
Approximately 25 miles from Lake
..- ------ ..g^i
carport
Saginaw (abodt 25 mil Pheasant hunting, rabbit h llshing Oh area or at Ihs Restaurant not now oparatl
----- be a good stand. On I
---- Near Vattar an
lout two ^nd I
from. 3o«|(w mocK ftiiti niun im-.i,	Micharot »mnll
"5tio^‘?Sr^m5diii!?''itJ.''*o*
?“! MoloS" **
HA6STR0M REALTOR
w. HURON	pRjdgoi Coll MUinebough
<44-1234 Area 313. Revarsa charges.

■674r2236
McCullough Realty, Inc.
5440 HIGHL>iND RD. (M-50)
74.2234 ^ MLf	na:.* ■
crsr^77.
_____	BETWEENPO nTT A C a
OwSr	‘-OTS, ACREAGE ANo| btodTMlIdllSrfSr'Sli^lL
a^fi'	'^®| MINI FARMS. TO BUY OR SELl! oftlct tacllltlM, plustmall m
------------- --------- YOUR MINI FARM, Ct^L YOUR ------------- —
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY on Main! MINI FARM SPECIALIST. ‘	,
St. in ClarksOon. Oldar building!
uZrS^*t'rr!S!''pS^^	HAYDEN REALTY 1 ---------------o^,„-
_____ chamberlain REAL ESTATE '34M404	1073$ Highland Rd. (M-SOI MILTON WEAVER"lNCrReaHor
REALTOR 444-4000	f4(i-4000l Vh Mile west of 0“'...................................
Davisburg
--------------------------Mtohlgan
LOCKE LAWN MOWER and IS con-traels. 482-4590,__________’
'‘money /MAKER" " Two wall estabtlolMd beauty shops, will grota over $104100 yearly both art to^ad'ln busy tactions, all equipment Included, together they can be purchased for 11.000. down with land contract terms available. Cell Clark Real Estate, ta-l$50, in
451-0141
the PONtlAC PRESS, FRIDAY^ MARCH 21, 1969
For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981
(TrmlTnriltn PIONEER CAMI^'ER SALES
Trallart! JuMIm, Olota Star
Campers: Swineer, Mpekihaw, Travel Qu^ Cerl^ ftarth , Covers: Sluts Marear. Merit »l W. HurOB ______________6H-C7it
QUAllTy AND OUR LOW PRICE Go Hand in Hand with Tho Now 1969 NOMAD
NOW ON DISPLAY AT^
VILLAGE
TRAILER SALES Oakland Co.'s Newost
FOR NOMAD AND COMANCHE Mto Dixie Hwy.______
NEW--t«S ROYCRAFT, ttXSO, completely fumlthad. 14 ft. Moor tfahiKc refriparalor, fully carpeted, disposal, daluxe aye-level oven and
IfM CUSTOM ew INVADER, W
ranoa. ^Mediterranean decor
. balance. Avon ment Co., 2600 Auburn Rd.. Au-burn HeloMs. 152-3444.
24M Orchard LK.
Tliy-Awto-Tmcli
REPAIR,
■OAT TRAILER 14'-1f' one ton
A40UNT, Mid balance mag ra srheals. New and used tapA^jun ET.,Craear, ol^li
AP Apian.
Goodyear Polyol______ ______
slirts. Marltat Tire Co. 26M Orchard Laka Rd. Keage.
Motorcycks
fM4 HONDA, 300 DREAM, extras.
nunuA, sou UREAm, ei 1300. Call after 4 p.m. SfUSte. IfsrHARLEY 3 WHEELER, ri engine, 33S-4370 afternoon.
IMS HONDA SUPER Hawk, makdow
COLEMAN
Tents, bi RENTAL - FINANCING
TREANOR'S
Trailer A Outdoor O
travel VkAILlteT BONANZA WEST WIND WOOD LAKE
a of delivery by your —------------- ^at
OR S4»23 f*64~TRlUMPH 6Sg CC, PE E3104 attar 4 p.m,
1244 TklUMPfi SOIL 3400 miles,
tras. tSfO. 33M4M.________
1244 TRIUMPH 300 TIOOC. Exca —------- 3W0. 447-5427.
vacation data order now.
...-. delay.
.11 slsea 13 feet thru 22 feat.
McClellan travel TRAILERS
4120 Highland Road (M42) PtenaW"
TRAILER RENTALS FOR Florida vacation. Ooedell Tratlarwt724l714.
TROTWOODS
WAG-N-MASTER 8. ACE
JOHNSON'S_^ on Elv
TRAVEL TRAILERS
SI2 E. Walton Etvd. FB ASIS3
. . S3SO0
THINK SPRINGI
1260 RaMnheod, 21 «. ..
1247 Jubilee, 12 tt. ..	... 0211
1244 Corsair. 20 tt..... .. 021t
1244	Corsair, 17 ft.........0171.
1245	Magnalla, 10 ft.......A 025
12« Cam, 12 ft..............0 025
1240 Apache Eagle....... .. 0 325
1244 Apache Eagle .. -------0 425
Ellsworth Trailer Sales
4577 Dbtta Highway
WOLVERINE TRUCK campers and aiaapers Factory outlet, repair ana parts, new and used rentals. Jacks, Intercoms, tsiesoopine burners, ' t, auxiliary gaa-
.InM
LOWRY CAMPER SALES
1325 S. Hospital Rd. Union Laka
EM 3-3681
trailIIs :::	c*JiS‘Wk% -
COVERS. Goodall Trailer Salas, 3200 S. Rpchastar Rd., 013-4550. iTEEL FRAME PICKUP olaa ^ camper I 4140 Pe
t Mid. 4
d. mim.
Mobile Homes
1 OF OURS IS JUST FOR YOUI
NEW AND USED
I to 4 bedroom plans
$3999
INCL. TAX, FURN., STORMS FOB HOWE, INDIANA WE HAVE LOW BANK RATES
COUNTRYSIDE LIVING
MEMBER OP MMHA AND MHA 1004 Oakland	334-150
Dally -til 2	- - ““
-Rd.“'a?r'a",r»o?iL .™. ™
FOR SALE 1245 130 Suiukl, call Dll
Finance Co. 473-1221.___________
HOkDA i047 305 Scrambler, Low mileaoa, vary clean. 405-3203
1-A MODERN DECOR
Early American, Maditarranaan, Richardson	LIbsrt
Colonial Mobile Homes
423-1310
« Dixis
FB M457
250 Opdyka Rd.	________
Auburn Halghts____8o,_of Waterford
2 BEDROOM MOBILB HOME,’ near Lapaar, furnished, ana child walcoma, all utlllllaa paid. 01** — month. 0100 Oacurlty d«»ill 444-4502 aft. 5:30 call 4444343.
0 BEDROCK lEKHy, 1240~
U27 down, 002.M par turn., 334-1502, DLR.
0125 par lit. Call
0x42 great LAKES. 01400. Rwl
a mp. to HWWlald. Pontiac.__
10X45 HALLAMRK, axcallsnt con-

10x50 1245, CARPETING, DRYER. -llenat,.washar, 473-77Q7.
12x60 SUN CRAFT by
Active
$4,845
TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC.
Talsgraph at Dixie Hwy-
334-6694
Open Dally 10 a.m. to 0 p.m.
—	to 4 p.m.
Open Sal Open Si
•LbJLAl®?-;..1.
I' MOBILE HOME In park tor
1252 CHAMPION 10' "X $T, pujrtty
turnishsd, air condlHonlng, -----
carpatliio. 2 bodrooms, birth,
kitchen, oil forced air heal, i__
cxc. cond. 02500. Broker. OR 441350
or FE^TO^__________•_
ACTIVE^ 1247 12X40, 04350. 334-4141,
BEST
MOBILE
HOMES
Michigan Marlette Dealer
Free delivery and sat up Within 200 miles Marietta Expandos on displays OPEN DAILY 12 NOON TILL 2 p.m.
4080 Dixie Hwy. 673-1191
DETROITER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK KROPF ,
HEATED MODELS
AT
BOB HUTCHINSON
MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS
.. open Dally 'til 0 p.m. Saturday and Sunday ‘til I
_______________^95
Swap for, Harley
Sat, after 12. 4B-2137.
M HONDA SUPER HAWK.
. , CASS LAKE DOCKS Sail, ski, picnics, family fun Trailer, boat winter storage free. Bast docks go early. Boats readyto go are used twice as much. 422-3224 for appointment DO IT YOURSELF BOAT DOCK
ALUMINUM AND WOOD. YOUR EVINRODE^EALER
Harrington Boat Works
1222 s. Telegraph______3^
1247 305 HONDA
1242 HARLEY SPRINT. MOO. 473-
NEW 1968 MODELS USED BOATS AND MOTORS
Drastic Reductions
CRUISE OUT, 4NC.
43 E. Walton	FE 2-4402
Dally 24, Closed Sundays
~l24d 350 HONDA SCRaMELER.
_______________3344217
1968 YAMAHA
305 CC, color: red) excellent
take aver low monthly paymenta. Must sail, moving out of state. Call 451-1050 after 5:30 p.m.
BRID6ESTQNE
Motorcycles, from ID cc to 350 cc. Ilf5 and up. Sates and Service,
SAILBOAT 14'
BOAT SHOWI BOAT SHOWN
, MARCH 15-23
Door Prim Free Rafreihmants
Taka advantage of the tpaclal
•cT"'?8o""c*?na'if‘^hn
exciting 1242 Sutiikl TC-120 Cat, the fherpeat frill Mke 1b hit the market, ^upp B Wtldeel Mini-Blkci from B142.25. Complete line
fojsf'&nt'sssir'”-
Show Hours 2 a.m. • 2 p.m,, 7
Motorcycle
Sale
special PRICES ON ALL MODELS
Anderson Sales 8i Sarvica
445 S. TELEGRAPH PE S-7103
PRE-SEASON SPECIAL
SUZUKI X4 SCRAMBLERS
Rag. 2744, sala 2575 while they Other cyclaa at big savings.
MG SUZUKI SALES
4427 Dixie Hwy., '
., Drayton no miles, wii
---- ---------with txtraa,
0350. Call aftar 4 p.m. Ml A1250.
LIKE NEW. 1240 Honda 3MT~ __________40M2I1________
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE'
ANDERSON 4 ASSOCIATES ___ 1044 JOStfrN, PE A353S
YAMAHA-KAW/
iASAKI-BONANZA
Citato aalacllen ef 1242 Endure
CLAYT'I CYCLE CENTER 1 mils asst 01 Lapaar on M-21 4442341. Opan avanings until 7:00
FINANCING AVAILABLE
Bicyclii
SCHWINN 3 SPEED Gold Stingray.
Baats-AccEsserias
I4W' EOAT, 50 Horsapowsr, trailer tovar, 21025. 47S4244.
14' FIBERGLAS SS electric slarl
Evinruda mof“ - " .......
M75, 343-7224
171V sea-ray FIBEROLAS boat. ^ horsapowsr Mercury motor, mo tilt trailer. MU 2-1703._______
Irallar, 2, 35 b.p.
5I72SJ3R J-FTOO.__________________
24'' RiVERiA CRUISER Panleon, 35
h4- e7«'ne. alactrle alart, Ol'lOO.

0135. 0' Hydroplane 225._
1243 GALE BUCCSSiER, 11
"■'ssroiso.'Si'iVfSis.'^
1245 BOAT, MOTOR AI46 trallaiTTO' Cmlssr lnc„ 75 h.p. Johnson alac-
Irlc
lackalt
052-5411
and many axlrss. 01200.
BOAT SHOWN BOAT SHOWN
MARCH 1S-23
BARGAINSI
1242 — 12' MIRRO CRAFT alum, lapstraka fishing boat — vinyl covered aaats — lltsllma warrant - SHOW PRICE ............0122
lapstraka runabout
vaa bottom — 71"__________
back to bacb aaats — S yr. ««ar-rsnly-wlndshlsld-skl mlrror-f I r s sxtingulshar. SHOW PRICE 0445.
1242 - II' DOLPHIN alum, pontoon raft-vInyl coversd dack-machanlcal sitsrinpvinyl lop-swlm rslls-adlustm motor mount. SHOW PRICE .	$225.
msnf, tahp ever pblrm Croveland Mobile Manor Dlxle Hwy„ Holly. Lot t.
MIDLAND TRUeR SALES
lah King.
Free Oplh_, --------- -.......—
Will trgde for moaf anything of
1242 - 14' MIRRO CRAFT alum, lapstraka otisbora runabout-back to back saata-larga span cockpH-wlndshlald - lights - 1M, 4(| h.p. Evinruda alactrle atari Motor with ganarstor-pvihbu^ thin-
extlngulshar-akl mirror-heavy A-whaafs. pS'lCE “'"ll.sys! CLASSPAR Oi Staury boats -
Geneva pontoon — Ray Grsana 4 O'Dsy Sallbostt — Evbirvda molort — Pamco 4 Roadrunner traMars. Take sdvantua of many boat show bargains. Financing 10
Show Hours 2 s.m.-f i
SawSON SALEr’Ar tTpSICO
LAKEi Phone 432-3172.
BaplE-AcctnwlBS
J^oyiy ^J^F*,** engine, must ive*TIELE
1241 OLASTRON, __________
lop, sida and aft curtains, 50 hp AAarcuiY motor. Alter $l,m FE 4-8032 aftar 5.
AT TONY'S MARINE
1242 Johnson motors, Xrsocraft GW Invadtrs, Geneva boats —*----
PAID
All Cadillacs, Buick Electra 225s, Olds 9Bs, Pontiacs and anything sharp with air conditioning.
WILSON
CRISSMAN
CADILLAC
drivss, JOHNSON MOTORS ind hosts, Spring discounts. Sun Ski Marina, on Csss Ltka,
discounts.
..... ...u. ...H. jn Csss L«n«.
Csss Ellt. Laks Rd., Pontiac. Open
Sundays, 40^4700.
We would tike to buy late model 6M Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today.
ALWAYS BUYII
Us^Jbirt^rackJPai1t_Ji02
GTO INTERIORS, DOORS for 44-
PINTER'S
ALL FAMILY
BOAT SHOW

"W" .1 nnu sun., haatch 33 ^ OPEN 42, SAT. 2-4, SUN. 11-4 Coma In and tea our largr -- ---- allboatsT
1245 FAIRLANE 2 c 12,000 ml. 217*
1244 Pontiac ai 1244 Pontiac tr
ckaplars. Evai^Inj^MarliwI'' WE TRADE-1-We FINANCE tdyka at Univbrtity Dr., Pontlae
_____^[1-75 at Univaibitv Exit)_
SKI AND ORAO^ hVDRO fl 427 Ford, extra than •alter.
XT 14' COMET, tlbsrglBsai 2454 trailer avail. 424-4277.
See the new 1969 Duo and Glasspar Boots Johnson 8> Chrysler Motors YOUNG'S MARINA
4030 Dixie on Loon Laka Drayton Plaint	OR 44MI1
Dally 2-4) Sun. - ■
New ond Used Trucks 103
Pickup, good
TERRIFIC
SAVINGS
1254 CHEVY DUMP, good tlrea run-nlng condition, ntadt battary, $50g or B«t oiler. 2315 Orion Rd. Lake
loals. Glastron boa ■a SCRAMBLER cancept In mobllllf wtak's special:
Johnson slsctrlc starting Outboard motor Total pack^ price
JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT
W Mila E. ef La^r city Llmlta
14' fe 34' THOMPSON Sea the SO* Canvas Back Camper, tleapa 5, complala Galley, 142
13 CHRYSLER MODELS Now In stock 14' to 33' "Once In a lltellms dssisl"
FULL LINE OP MERCURYS-CHRYSLERS OUTBOARD MOTORS
CLIFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION
15310 Holly Rd. Holly,
If44 Aarpxraft 40 h.p. Johnson and
~	________Marc, 1350
trsllsr
KAR'S Boats B Atetors , 423-
30 BOATS ON DISPLAY
LAKE . & SEA MARINE
S. Blvd. at Saginaw_FE 4-2507
CHEROKEE & MUSKETEER OWNERS
will accept block lima on ____________
plana lor my Yanwha 250 c.c. Call alter 4 p.m. 335-5202.
Wanted CareiTrucks 101
EXTRA Dollars Paid
FOR THAT
EXTRA Sharp Car
Espaclally Chavtilat, Camaros, Corvettes, GHOs, FIrsbIrds and 443'S.
"Check the rest, than gat the bast"
Averill's
FE 7-2272	7030 Dixie FE 4-4024
Mansfield
AUTO SALES
300
p Cadillacs, Pontiac, OMa • ks Iw out-of-state market. T
MANSFIELD AUTO SALES
M Baldwin Ava.
STOP,
HERE LAST
M&M
MOTOR SALES
Now at our new tocatioii .... —re for^wrp,
irt. Corvultet neadad. M Oakland of Vte&cl
^?;ia.VfSSom"y"g^»S?'axte°'
TOP DOLLARS FOR SHARP, L01
TOP OOLLAI MILEAGE 7--H. J. VAN WEI
IRS FOR SHARP, L S^yMoetLE^^^
‘TOP DOLLAR PAID'
GLENN'S
FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS
f n ui UiiMM c«
FE 4-7371
TIZZY
FISCHER
BUICK
544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600

^■‘4fe?4oor*^ for SOME,
‘&vi!agi.^
Auto Insurance-Murine 104
______________and auto. 335-4202.
-'51 FORD AND Mercury tenders, ..III.. ---------------''-*-1,1, all types
Foreign Curs
grilles, chroma ri
744 Pontiac body parts, parts, anginas and tram....—
H & H AUTO SALES
__________OR 3d3W________
7M , FORS GT, complete
shape. 473-3454.
CHEVROLET truck, 4100 I
.......... air, and vs......
liras, axe. condition.
brakes, good im- 423-4270.
1252 JEEP BEST OFFER ItMTfO
1252 JEEP UNIVERSAL.
1252 CMC TANDEM Dump Truck
______	33541134____________
752 FORD 1 TON STAKE, . cjrtindar, axe. 2 ply tlraa. 2125. 343-
1240 FORD M TON PICKUpI
0734, an. 4 p.m.
CHEVY SUEURI
lEAN, iwn. I
1243 HALF TON FORD, V-0, spaed, 2400, as Is. FE B4353._______
1243 JEEP STAKE, 4 sviMal drive, 7'
hydraulic lift, all . ........
transfer Casa, good condition throughout, $1025. 423Ht771
3541 ask tor Mrs. West._____________
1243 FORD pickup; 2300. 343-5221 ittar 4 p.m.
1244 CHEVY >/i ton pickup, $
Highland Rd., Pontiac.
ty, axe. I________
DODGE PICKUP
JWL Call 332472$.__________
1244 FORD 5 YARD dump truck.
Call FE bd30t.
If44 CHEVY Vt TON, radio, heater, htavy II 4 ply tires, 34JM0 mllai difion, $1035. 451-4020.
MyjE unJ Used Curs
CHEVROLET, 1223 IMPALA S
1243 CHEVY II NOVA, automatic, 4 cyllnd4r, clean Inilds and out. Call after 11:7* - - *** '*'*
1244 CHEVY WAGON. Automatic, **"1o and heater, whitewall tires. 2 dowib paynwnti $7,27. Full
'You’ll adore my new Easter outfit, Margaretha — it just cured my father’s hiccups!”
New and UteJ Care 106
1244 RIVIERA, WHITE, air aiMf full
<4 JOSLYN, FE 4-3535
' tires, good r 2. 423B044.
1245 VW. Excellent condition.
Best oHar. 343-4245
1965 VW
FLANNERY FORD
_ _ (Formerly Baattte Ford)
On Dixie Hwy. Waterford 4334)1 1245 VW BUSTLE back sedan, i
catlan) condition. 435-1232.
1966 CVW Sedan
EXTRA SHARP!
$1195
Pontiac Retail
45 Unlvarslfy Dr.	FE 3-72S
1244 VW CONVERTIBLE, AM - FM oaugai. mutt tall. 434-7345 4 p.m.
1244 VW, LIKE new.
1247 VOLVO, 123-t,
a finish.
Too Mr cant warranty,' Sms,
AUTOBAHN MOTORS
1745 5. Talagrapb___FE 2-4531
1947 VW 3 DOOR,	.....
paymants $11.23. Full pries $1425. Csil Mr. Parks credit mantgar at Ml 4-7500. New location of
Harold Turner Ford
CHEVY-OLDS CORVAIR jW
1967 BUICK Electra
$2695
... BUICK SKYLARK Automatic, radio, hea whitewall tires. $132 or .... ... car down. Call Mr. Parks credit matia^r at Ml 4-7500. New loca-
Harold Turner Ford
443-3302.
AUDETTE
PONTIAC
1250 Maple Rd.
3—Chevys; '64 wagon, ‘45 C(
KING
Tdward
k'tei'rli^^B, b^aW'i^n^;. ^Im heater, whitewall tlrea. Bala -due $312.43. Weakly paymi $3.07. 25.00 down. Call 421-0203.
1243 CADILLAC COUPE 6
LUCKY AUTO
FE 3-7054
1240 W. Wide Track
FE 4-
1244 CADILLAC SEDAN DaVllle. Full power and air condition, $32 down, payments S14.23. Full price $1225. Call Mr. Parks r—■* rnan^a^ at Ml 4-7500. New
Harold Turner Ford
3400 Maple_____________ Troy Mall
3 Milas East of Woodward
1965 CADILUC Hardtop
' -■—	Da Villa, full powa
$2095
1245 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVllla. -"*tta with black vinyl top 00 ml. S1250. 321-3444.
condition. Ml 7-3354.
CADILLAC 1240 ELDORADO, 1]

leather bucket seats, door lock, climate control, till tatescopa ttearing wheal, stereo, vinyl top, excellent condition, private owner.
1248 CADILLAC COUPE DaVlllt,
JEROME i
1248 KARMANN GHIA, 14,000 miles, ctor^rstn, radio, $1700. After 5,
1140 VW AM-FM rtdiox Clean. 433-
CADILLAC CO.
1280 Wide Track Dr. FE 3-7031 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR, wtic transmission, 283 Cubic Blua with gray primar. 0175.
'., radio, 0)750. *
0 miles.
BEFORE YOU BUY SEE
BILL GOLLING VW
From Pontiac to Blrmlnohtm __
Islt on Mapte Rd. approx. 2 miles, law on Msplalawn. 4424200. PROFESSORS NEW 1242
fastback, luggage carflar, __
extras. Just importad from Gar.,
1251 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE, V-
1250 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE,
* .tick, 175.
21500. 402-5175
KING
AUTO SALES
1244 Dodge 44 Ion pick up. Midnight blua, VO stick	-
heatar, whitewall tir... ________
condllton. Balance due 0742J4. Weakly paymenta 05.17. $5.00 down. Call 421-0102.	_____
IfM JEEP UNIVERSAL CJS. Gold
....	“ top. 4 Wheal drive.
-	_	____ liras. Extra fires.
Extra .clean. Never bean com-marclallf 31,000 actual miles. Ex-csllant condition. 442-3202.
Audette	,
Pontiac	I
Maple Rd.	Troy
ind Used Cars
1252 BUICK, 2100
1244 BUICK WILDCAT, 4 ___________
hardtop, power atearlng, brakes, auto, transmlaalon, biidiat aaats, good condition. 47S-7413 atf" *
TRANSPORTATION BUY. 1241
IN7 JEEP GLADIATOR 44 ton
whsal drive, tew mllaaga < has new rubber. Priced to • ROSE RAMBLEROEEP, Ur Lake, EM >4155,_____
Ing hlibi, radio, buckets, ilka new. Ask tor Phil Strom 424-1S75, Lloyd
1240 FORD CAMPER Ranger Special everything " ‘
S2500. 052-3
1244 BUICK Spoctel Station Wagon,
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS 1M7 JEEP 3000 Sartos, 4 wbsal drivs, -*•-
Vr rwONI. MWilVI r TlVm* *WMU
finish, 21,725. Over 75 othsr to selsct from. On U.S.
St MI5, Cterkston, MA 5-5071.
I F-100 V-0, radio and
12S2 JEEP. V-4, extras, highest bid over vt*-" aft. 4 p.m. OR 3-1305.
1242 GMC
__
'US FOR SALE, ty
CHEVY ONE TON PICKUP, 4 spaad
Only 0)125. Esty GMAC Terms.
BILL FOX CHEVROLET
TSi i. Rpchaslar Rd.___OSI-TBBO
GMC TRUCK CENTER
2:00 to 5:00, Moo.iFrI. 1:00 to 13:00 Saturday
701 Oakland Avenue 335-9731
Buicks
'65-'66-'67
Elaclra 225t and Rlvtaras ) choose from. All priced to sell.
$Qve
Bob Borst
Lincoln-Mercury Sales
150 W. Maple________Ml M280
•ofTrd
AUTO SALES
1942 Chevy Bel Air 2 pasttnger ttellon wagon. Sand gold vilth matching Intorler. V-i aulpiiwtlc, radio, heater, white wall liras. Baltnca due 2247.24, waakry paymwta 22.03. $5.00 down. Call
1242 CHEVY II, automanc, 2 door.
6-RIVIERAS
NOW IN STCXKI
1963 thru 1967s —Lorge Savings—
1225 BUICK WILDCAT,
SPECIAL OP THE WEEK
1965 BUICK Wagon
Special with automatic, only
$995
goodies, spring spsclsl at o $1722 lull prica. Just 2122 down.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD^
430 Oakisnd Ava._______FE sJlOl
1965 BUICK Electra
rtibte, full poi
$1695
many oxtr
______ ..J25 444<n57,
12M BUICK RIvtarV powor; atearlng

iBRAti buckahi varTsOGOSSai
1224 ....BjilCK. RIVIERA. ^
473-7250, after 4 p-m.
1257 CORVETTE, 350 horiapowar. 4-ipaad, many extras. 423-1430. 1257 CHEVY SEDAN
KINC^
AUTO SALES
New and UsEd Curs 106
KING
AUTO SALES
Chevy M ic Mup
124S CORVAIR 1 Interior, llba AUTO, 131 B
1245 CHEVY IMPALA 2 door sports coupe, power statrlng, V4, air conditioning, whitewalls, au‘* vlnyl roof, $1025. 3354127.
Matching vinyl k_______—
power atearlng and brakes Balance due S367.M, waakli paymenta S2.34. SS.OO down. Cat
HART
I24IL CHEVY 2 door autoi mite with rad Interior, full $3n.^tS down, $4.22'«^ly. 312 W. Montcalm St.
11:30 a.m. 33I-42M.
rian^er at Ml 4-7500. New
Harold Turner Ford
” 'If*.?.?	.	. Troy Mall
2 Mites east ef Woodward' CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE
$1395
TAYLOR
New ond Uied Cars 106 !
TtewT RONEY'S
KING
AUTO SALES
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS
19M CHEVY Bel-AIr Wagon with VO, automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, very low mileage, solid red finish, only S142S. Over 75 other cars to salact from. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston. AAA 5-5071.
1940 DODGE. S1427 money down.	_
LUCKY AUTO
ower, vinyl wakes, ex-. Call 423-
NOVA 12M. Lady ownar, A-l (
5^ Wing Laka_____________________
12M CHEVY, 2 paiianger wagon, roof rack, automatic, power steering.
1967 FORD GALAXIE 500, 2 door
$1525.
AUTOBAHN MOTORS
1745 S. Telegraph	FE 0-4531
1244 CHEVY IMPALA, hardtop, balga, >'*	'
1244 CORVETTE, 3
tr 4 p.m. 401-0040.
12M CHEVY Convartlbla, turqui
12M CORVAIR CORSA. 4 spaad. No $ down. Foil price 24M. Call Mr. Parks credit manager at Ml 4-7500. New location of
Harold Turner Ford
2400 Maple	Trm Mall
Pontiacs; '42-'67, 125 VWs and few trucks 135 Dixie Economy Cart FE 4-3131 145 IMPALA S, AUTOA4ATIC, rad and white, 4-door hardtop, 35JIOO ml. $1,000. Ownar. 423dl40.
1245 CHEVELLE 3-DOOR, dark
12M CHEVY IMPALA Convartlbla, —-------------radio, *—•“
*4%
4351.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
430 Oakland Ava.____________
---------------fERTIBLE WITH
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS
1245 CHEVY Impals 4 hardtop, VO, automatic, -•*■“1—	heater, w"'*-
1245 CHEVY IMPALA, SS. Coupe, 2-—’, Regal Rad, black vinyl top, ate power, V-s 327, automatic
exceptionally clean and hat low -----------—'-t only 2225.
CAR CO.
FE 52431
:hevy BEI ' mllaaga, o
IMPALA WAGON, L _ . fine condition, by owner, $1120. 473-
1245" BEL AIR powarglkte, I owner.
1245 BELAIRE
wegon,
• 24WL FI
w, ipring sp I prlpe, lust
After 4
4-4134.________________________
CHEVELLE, 223, stick, good
1944 CORVAIR 500 club coupe. Autometlc, ridlo end heeler. No $ down, payments 27,27. Full pries $225. Call Mr. Perks credit manmr at Ml 4-7500. New loce-
Harold Turner Ford
3400 Maple	Troy
3 Miles east of Woodwerd
1966 CHEVROLET
2*door wl This Is tf
iSlw Uue, wm mijtehlite Stertor. spring special wily. 01220 full price. Just $122 Oowa ____
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
» Oakland Ave._______ FE 5-4101
747 DODGE CHARGER^ Snort Coupt, auTomatIc, power 2l22r|ng, radio, all vinyl. Exe. eonditon, ..... 335-7172.
7 DODGE SPORT^ V-... ----------
indItlonT 2 pass. VP -- Perstmal ■n, $1500 ask for Mr. Grssn. 334-
I MONACO 500, 2 .door hardi imperature control, air < Itloning, full power „equlp(
SSdliLi'*'22S?TfuH^^ 1
wner after 5 p.m. 43341273.
ansporlatlon.
-1510
1940 FORD, good second car. 324-“’•1.
LADY'S 1243 FALCON 3 door, Ian, — 'its,^atendardj)lilft,_ MM.
E 4-0521, atter 5 p.
1262 FORD, ECONO, $350. Call after
KING
Auto sales
I FORD COUNTRY S
Idulra, 03^.
KING
1247 CAAAARO.
console, wire wheal disc.
Call 443-32L
Audette
Pontiac
1250 Msplf Rd.
RALLY Spol iraan with blSU.
sptsd. Super
1243 FORD 4 door, V4, auto. $200
1245 CORVAIR CONVERTIBLE, rad
1247 CHEVY BEL AIR Wagon, automatic, double power, I 4734702.
1247 CORVETTE. Dark groan, feat back. 1A00O ml. FE 506P.
iO h.p., Aepaad, S7f5. 207-2747.
1245 CHEVY IMPALA WAGON, fl Dtowsr, good rvbtmr, low m*
Cali 6i^m0 or Ml
HURRY Clearance Priced
1968 CORVEnE
Hart Is a car that It equipped .
all the extras posslbls and It 1s going for a vary reasonabto price of 04325.
GRIMALDI CAR CO.
280 Oakland Ava.	FE 5-2431
ACT NOW
1247 Chrysler 3 door, hardtop. ... with black vinyl top, power aquipptd plus factory air, abaolutely Ilka new,
$2695
1247 Dodge Charger, 2 door hardtop, ”* nutomallc, power steering with Interior, brand new rad lint sharp Inalda and out, only
$2195
automatic, power ttearing and brakes. Radio, heater, whitewall tires. Balance due $107.13, weakly jwymonti 21.04. 25.00 down. Call
Imperial 4 dooi power, factory air, terlor, absolutely shi .... -----'s tpaclal.
$1995
1t44 Chrysler 3 door, hardtop, t
124) CORVAIR, AUTOlWATIC 225
KING
.’onlltc, 4 door, atdan, bt maroon, extra sharp. Inside ai
$1795
a ownar trade In, extra n
1247 Plymouth Fury,
---------*-ida In,
$1695
Chryilar 3 d o o
1244 Mercury 2 door hardtop, Vt,
AUTOBAHN MOTORS
1745 S. Tilagraph
1242 CHEVY hardtop .
1243 CHEVY II Hardtop, tharp. 2550.
1243 CHEVY II 4 door, radio, hOater, standard- transmlaalon, posltraction, $350. 253-1313.
1243 CHEVY II NOVA. Good con-■	3023 Galloway Ct. “	•
at Commonwealth.
BRAND NEW
1969
CHEVY
Nova 2 Door Sedon
with aupar thrift angina factory aquipmant. ALL AND 1242 LICENSE PLATES

>7 CHEVELLE# $S 9H. 4 SPEED.
rtady for tlw road. $1f29S.
GRIMALDI CAR CO.
too Oakland Ava._______FE 5-2431
km. Extras. $1200. FE 2-
AL HANOUTE
On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411
On Dlxlw Hwy., Waterford ‘ 433-0280
2 CHEVY NOVA It, 3
heater, uuuui. GM anginaar.
many axfrat, 13402.
TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER
N. Main St.________451-4338
1245 FORD GALAXIE, 4 4oorir
1242 CHEVY IMPALA 337-V-t, i
1242 SS 324375 CHEVELLE WISH ' trade tor sports car or tsi H It otter. 4833252 from 5-7 p.i
48M144 anytime._______
1242 CHEVELLE SS. _
• JSBfcJEJLyS:^
1242 NOVA CLUB COUPE, V2
automatic. Vinyl roof, 232
- ymenla S15.^ Full price ----
II Mr. Parka credit manager at 4-7580. New locstlon of
Harold Tomer Ford
Mllta east of WoedwaS
1242 MALIBU 4 door. April matching Interior. Vt, a powar ttMrl------------■* '—■“
1242 CHf^LE SS 324-335 HP, 4-
illvar beauty 1$ sharpTniMs an^ with a bla^ vliwl Wp.
$1395
>44 Ford, pickup, r iwaap III lit rad^baaufv aharib mnti
$1395
1244 Dodge Dart, 2 dc
2100 MAPLE RD. ,
$1295
$1095
1245 Plymouth 2 passangar wagon. Ideal ter the targe family and pricsd tor only
$1095
Pontiac convartlbla, V 2
COMPLETE
$2,091.50
TAXESl	$795
\964 Ch«vy station dard tran^—• arietd for
-VAN
CAMP
Chevrolet
igon, Vt, tlan-una good —
$495
OObGE pickup, V2 angina, runs good only
$185
1^ Chpvv Corvair, runs OK, what ; toy wHb aueh low price aa this only
$185 $99
Oakland
Audette
Pontiac
1250 Mtols Rd.
1245 FORD 10 pssssngsr Squire ita-
2-door
radio — -----------
ditlon. Whits with
1965 Chrysler
, V3 au Factory blua Intar
BIRMINGHAM
CHRVSIBI-PLYWOUTH
MILOSCH
CHRVSUII-PLVMOUTH
1244 CHRYSLER IfEWPORT.^d dy.
S152S. 477 M-24, Lake Orion. MY S-
KESSLER'S
DODGE
CARS AND TRUCKS txfrud »*'""^**"'”0AE14I)2
mllet, vinyl fop, axe. condition. 23195. 3433121.____
KING
Auto Sales
SBg"
KING
AUTO SAUS
sag
1245 DODGE CORONOt convortibls.
2175. 433-3241.
, 1244 FAIRLANE 31
1964 T-BIRD
.... .jckat fMt«-vartlble top, ft
1964 FoM
mileage, bi) Ing Infarlor.
FLANNERY FORD
IFormarly Baattte Ford) Ylxla- Hwv.. Waterlord ‘	4!
KING
AUTO SALES
1240 W. Wide Track
tiaa East ef Woodward
1965 T-BIRD Hardtop
Iharp. Only
$1495
..	special 0...,
.... .... jrice, lust tit down.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
432 Osktend Avs.
latton. Vary Call 443-3Mf.
Audette
Pontiac

1962 Ford Gslaxis 588 f-passengar wagon. White with rad vinyl Interior. Vt automtflc, powar stetr-Ing and brakes. Radio, heater,
......---,1	.1—	_.l----- ,j u ,
AUTO SALES
1242 Ford Gslsxte 580. 3 door hardtop. Blua with white Interior. Radio, heater, whitewall tires. Balance dua S107.I3, weakly paymante $1.24. 25.08 down. Call
1243 FORD V3 mechanically ax-callent, body good condition, 530IL 424-5484.
1262 T-BIRD, new tires, ntw Iscqupr pslnt lob, or' -~.-i.i~. w... ... ter, 853-5722.
EXECUTIVE CARS INC.
GM FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS ALSO FACTORY CARS 31 WAGONS TO SELECT FROM Passenger, full power, air conditioning, AM-FM stereo, luggago ick, tHt whool, powor door locks, .....
rear tpeaker,
lights, light mon..„ .......
factory aquipmant. UP TO 44JKM iris’iJiii,	**	'' W'LE FACTORY WARRANTY
Ki"/*'??' fn	left. SAVE UP TO 23JI00.
GRIMALDI CAR CO. 137 S. Main, Romeo 752-2481
00 Oakland Ava.	FE 534211...............
' 12tt FALCON CONVERTIBLE, 4
1964 FALCON Convertible
Future with rad finish, white top. Automatic, axcallant oonditioni Only
$895
white Intortor. 4

Plymouthi, 1244 Chavrelala. 25 to
LUCKY AUTO
dn managar at Ml 4-7508. Now atlon of
Harold Tumor Ford
Ma^to	Troy N
1965 Falcon
3 door sedan
With 4 cyl. automatic, radio, fJra angina rad with matching Intarior!
FLANNERY FORD I
(Formerly Baattte Ford)
On Dixie Hwy. Waterterd 4333200
1245 FORD CUSTOM ________________
beautiful allvar blua Hnlih, with matching. Interior. Full factory
HARDTOP. Vt . .jdio and haator. No $ —r.- Wfrtonh M.33. Full price tm. Call Mr. Parks credit man^ at Ml 4-7502. Ntw loca-
Horold Turner Ford
3 Mllaa east of Woodward POBO 2 DOOR club couite; “"“•*	-**— 3 eyllntf-
whltov
body. Ideal
Trey
>»«„ mustang 3 door hardtop.
whitowalls.' whntl WMraT 35^ actual mllet. tell 4423322. Audette Pontiac
158 Mttfla Rd.	Troy
ifSS FORD Fab-lwte ni Bfatlan JW"' *'«' Vt, wtonSne, rSdS: haa^,	itotrlno, baaullful
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
432 Qpkland Ave.
For Want Ads Dial 334-4981
THE FONTJ AC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH 21. 1969
D—9
|(^ apid Usod Cgn 106 l^and Used Cars 106
New and Used Can
FOnO" V-l. S-DOOR. •tandtrd no rMt. ctMiw ooee conoitkin. Rom, tar cith. «4M0?s, FORD UTD 2 door hardtop, ^
far. atereo
1966 Ford
Falrlane 500 Hardtop door, wlh VO, automatic, pi •ring, rad with blaok Intarlor
FLANNERY FORD
New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars
milosch
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
es?^?'j.,':x;iarp
h!ckV'ba™rS2i»'X^'^„»^r« J5HN McAULIFFE FORD
'	FE 5-4101
’ lo6
Miw mws
1967 Olds Delta 88............................ ........$2295
4-door hardtop. Power atearing and brakai. Factory air condltlonlpg.
1967 Olds Cutlass ................... ............. $2195
tiTonl’y lolooo m'ltai.	'’»'«>'• *'“'•"’0 brakas. Vinyl
1966 Pontiac Catalina
CARNIVAL
By Dick Turner
New and Used Can
*ba extras Including
______________i‘”rtS'
1965 Boick LeSabre ......................................$1095
ll^a^Inlr'iStwior.'’'’*'"' ****^'"®	W'h
1965	Olds 88 ..........................................$1195
Ja'S?TMtlon?nr	‘'WV
1966	Buick Wildcat ....................................$1495
mifh *“**"■	•"*’ brakes. Air conditioning. Burgundy
1965	Pontiac Bonneville ........................... .$1495
Hardtop. Full power, factory air conditioning. Lika new.
1966	Cadillac Sedan DeVille ...........................$2995
Full power, factory air conditioning, vinyl top, 6-way seat.
1967	98 Holiday Hardtop ...............................$2495
Full power, air conditioning, vinyl top.
1966	Oldsmobile 98 Holiday..............................$1695
Hardtop, gold finish.
1967	Buick 225 Custom..................................$2795
Full power, factory air, vinyl lop. Lika new.
1967 Olds Toronado Deluxe ...............................$2995
Full power, air conditioning.
WBMMM mm
860 S. Woodward B'ham MI 7-5111
brakes, automatic, with console, spring Is coming, so ba a sport', oidy I15M full prica. Just SIM
'^OHN McAULIFFE FORD
6» Oakland Ave._______FE 54101
TOM RADEMACHER
GHEVY-OLDS
1M6 MUSTANO 2 door hardtop, 6 cyl. stick, radio, heater, whitewalls, white with black vinyl roof. $1225. Over 75 other ears to select from. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston. MA 5-5071,
1966 FALCON 4 door, radio and heater. No $ down, payments M.92. full price 5905. Call Mr. Parke credit manager at Ml 4-7500. New location of
Harold Turner Ford
100 Maple	Troy Mall
2 Miles east of Woodward
1966 MUSTANG Convertible
Automatic, VO, nice car
$1395
HUNTER
DODGE
BEST BUY FROM THE GOOI
960 VW, radio, heat black Int. factory air,
1963 CHEVY II, 2 c~.	-,.,
radio, heater, auto. A mileage getter at only $595.
1966	MUSTANG, radio, heater, with power, white with black $1295.
1965 CHEVROLET A/IALIBU, 2 hardtop, 0, auto., radio, heater, blue with matching int. $1195.^
1967	FORD GALAXIE 500 convertible 8-cyl. radio, heater, auto., ‘ factory air, $1795.
and tactory air. Will to appreciate, $695.
1965 FORD, 2 door hardtop, 0 cyl auto, with power, white wl'^ black vinyl top. Only $995.
1967 dodge half TON pickup, cyl. radio, heater. A one owner f only $1595.
HUNTER DODGE
, WHERE THE HUNT ENDSI 499 South Hunter Ml 7-0955_________
1964 OLDS M 4 door hardtop, air auto., double power, $950. 6M-0909. *964 OLDSMOBILE F-85 4-door —■— lutomatlc, power, radi 0 miles, $595. 682-4025.
“If you’re looking for the trading stamps, I gave them to a woman for her seat on the bus!”
New and Used Cart 106 New and Used Cart 106
1966 MUSTANG HARDTOP, with beautiful spring time yellow, wlthi black vinyl top, V8, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, tape recorder. Spring special only $1,. $N full price, lust $188 down. .
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
630 Oekland Ave._______FE 5-4101
1967 FORD SQUIRE staHm wa^.
down, payments
$16.88. Full price $2195. Cell Mr. 2t0 Orchard Lk.
We Hove Over 50
Double Checked Quality
New Cor Trodesl GRIMALDI Buick-Opel
1967 OLDS 98 Luxury Sedan. Ci with black vliwl top - — ■ ■ Power I
•taarv
TOM RADEMACHER
Ol^Dynam?f*M 4 door, with automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, heator, whitewalls, toy,	igMl femlly eer.
black cloth Interior.
Ing, brakes end win..... ... ....
ditlon. 22,000 actual miles. Warranty book. Immaculate, call 3289.
Audette Pontioc
1850 Mean Rd.____________Trey
196$ "^LDS
I-On US 10 at M15, Clarkston,
$095. Over 75 other cars from. On U' '» -•	■
MA 5-5071.________________
165 OLDS JETSTAR H, , damaged right front fender, $650. 65115596, attar 6 p.m_____________-
MERRY OLDSMOBILE
520 N. Main
ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN
1966 QLDS Luxury
(dan, full powtr, air con..„„„ ua with black vinyl top, extra larp. Only
$1995
GRIMALDI Buick-Opel
210 Orchard Lk. Rd, Fg 2-9165
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS
1966 OLDS 442 Convertible, .
automatic, power atearing, brakas radio, heater, whitewalls, maroon finish, black bucket seats. Only: $1695. Over 75 other cars to select I from. On US 10 at MIS, Clarkston,
Care lOAMow and Ihed Core 106
1963	VAtlANT, convert Ibte.
1964	PLYMOUTH 6 cyl., auto., “upe. Vary clean. Low mil
>5. FE 2-«00.
— ...	convarttblt,
...... ml. Air, all deluxe eccess.
A-I condition, tactory elllclel owner. 624-5267.__________
gray with black bucket seats. Mag wheels. Red line radial ply tires.
cVrTS!i':32e9.‘”"*-
Audette
Pontiac
1850 Maple Rd. _______Tny
THIS WEEK'S NEW CAR SPECIAL
1969 OLDS DELTA "88” $3069.00
Best Olds
New and Uted Caw 1B6 1*67 ValiaHt, 8144*. --------
KING
AUTO SALES
-Ing and
------ Heater,
Balance due MM3, weekly paymenti $4.71.
$5.00 down. Cell 601-0602._______
1965 FURY III Plymouth station
wapoiv ^bie power, 29,600 --------
call aft. 5 p.m. 60AI675.
EXECUTIVE CARS INC.
GM FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS
Also factory cars
noviliea. Catalina, Caprices, 'impale
651-3779
1968 Plymouth SataRfa
rrenfy In effect. 10 per »n, psyments monthly III price
$2295 BIRMINGHAM
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
I MAPLE RD. TROY, MICH. _____Phene 642-7000__
1968 Plymouth Fur^y I
door sedans V-0 automatic
--- - brakes. Tn‘
title. 5 10 ch
$995
New and Used Core lOSNewjfwHlied Care 106New and Uied Care m
1966 TORONADO Hardtop
White with full power, all conditioning.
$2295
%w‘<»imon of""""*'^ **	WAGONEER,
Harold Turner Ford
MUSTANGS
drive, hubs, power steering, ^.....
____	, brakes, A-1 condition, radio, extra
Trov Mall 8*1 or premium tires and -
1967 FORD WAGON, 6 p power steering, big 39( luggage rack, 4,000
$1695. 682-9730 or 674-1146.
(Pretty Ponies) ,
as low as $39 down, $39 par month.
Call Mr. Parks credit manager at Ml 4-7500. New location of
Harold Turner Ford
ioo Maple	Troy Mall
2 Miles east of Woodward_____
1944 T-BIRD LANDAU with beeulllul
Si^h'i'fe rn%'rV:';i;i.*’l!,'wV”5'nd*Sl:	GRIMALDI Buick-Opel
------------------- Spring Tonic 210 Orchard Lk. Rd.	FE 2-9145,
ull prlc---- ------------------------------------ '
... Cell 334-2212._____________________
- 119& -MERCURY MEtero, 2 door,'1050 Maple Rd.
•f'aOtemStlc, excellent condition $295.1--------------------
hO'lBuy here — Pay here. Marvel ."" Motors, 251 Oakland, FE >4079.
seat, windows. Air _____________
Tinted glass. Dark turquoise with matching Interior. Excellent con-' ditlon throughout. Call 6423289.
Audette Pontiac
$2495
special only—$1808. F lust $188 down.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
630 Oakland Ave.________FE 53101
FORD GALAXIE hardtop.
nd power, 3 EOndItlon, I
1966 FAIRLANE XL 2 door hardtop. Midnight blue with matching bucket seats. Power steering and brakes. Factory air condition. Tires
1967 Ford Custom 300
1962 MERCURY convertible. No I down paymente $2.00. Full price $369. Call Mr. Parks credit manager at Ml 6-7500. Naw
Harold Turner Ford
2600 Maple	Troy
_____2 Miles east Of Woodward___
1965 MERCURY, Breeezwey, radio, heater, double power. $1095. 693-
$1195
BIRMINGHAM
IO.V air condmon.-T.res CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
-J. Extra sharp. 424-3289. 2100 MAPLE RD. TROY, Mich.
Audette	------Phone 642-7000
1961 OLDS 90 ALL brakas, runs (»>>»•. to 3:30, 625-5621.
1967 T-BIRD LANDAU w
MILOSCH
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
r	iS?* '»« ^""1 wagon with blue In-
S1M E£Uc«?^rrlnlw‘^	torior, automatic, power steering,
power brakes, radio, whitewalls,
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD Jim. 477 aa-24. Lake Orion, my 2.
1943 OLDS 98 ....................
shape. Light green with matching Interior. Has every option ottered by Oldsmobile. 642-3209.
Audette Pontiac
630 Oakland Avo.
» Curs 106New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cars 106
HGHER TEMPERATURE
—Blit We're Not Sick!—
It's
SPRING FEVER
Our Remedy-Is Low-Price
I
'Quality Cars!
1969 PONTIAC Catalina 2 door hardtop* hydromotic, double power, vinyl trim, push button radio, custom foam seats, deluxe steering wheel,
head rests, floor mots, 855x15 whitewalls. List $3,792.57 .Now $2895-
T968 BONNEVILLE Vista Brougham, loaded, cordovo top, air conditionirtg,
and stereo............................ ... $3495
1968 PONTIAC Executive 4 door, radio, heater, hydromotic, double power,
power windows, too! Foctory oir conditioning ..... .$3095
1968 PONTIAC Bonnev'lle Vista with rodio, heater, hydromotic, power steering, brakes, cordovo top .............................. $2895
T968 PONTIAC Catalina convertible, radio, heater, hydromotic, power steering, brakes, and is sharp................................$2595
1968 PONTIAC Hardtop, coupe, with radio, hydromotic, power steering, power
brakes, EZ eye gloss, vinyl trim, factory air conditioning.$2895'
1967 PONTIAC Bonneville Vista, comes with radio* hydromotic, double power,
cordovo top, 4-woy power, factory air conditioning, 2 to choose from. .$2495 1967 PONTIAC Catalina 2 door hardtop, with radio, hydromotic, double
‘ power, cordovo top, factory air conditioning .........$2295
1967 PONTIAC Ventura 4 door, radio, heater, hydromotic, double power,
ond decor group .........................^..........$1995
1967 FIREBIRD Custom Coupe, automatic, V-8, power steering, new tires . .$1995 1967 PONTIAC Tempest LeMons 4 door hardtop, V-8, automatic, double
power and cordova top ........... —.................$1995
.1967 FORD Wagon, with V-8, outomotic, power steering, nice ... $1595
1966 CHEVELLE Allalibu Hordtop, coupe, with V-8, automatic, power steering .................................. ......^...........$1495
1966 BONNEVILLE Vista with radio, heater, hydromotic, doubi^S^wer, cordova top, 6-way seat, power steering, air conditioning. We nave (2) . .$1895 1966 PONTIAC Cotolino Wagon, with rodio, heater, hydromotic, power steering, brakes, power tailgate,	sharp......................$1695
>966 CATALINA 2-door sports Coupe, radio, heater, hydromotic and double
power ..........................................    $1395
i[966 BUICK Special Deluxe Wagon, with V-8, automatic, double power and
power tailgate......................................$1595
1966 PONTIAC Convertibles (WE HAVE 3), all ore priced to sell today.Save
Several other good, lower priced, nice cars....below $1000
1967 FORD Galexia 500 I
•	------ -igTvi. - - . .
powar stearlng.
I960 TORINO hardtop V8, autornatic, radio, heater, i staerlng, brakas, beautilul i apple red with black vinyl
Can't be told from brand ________
New Year special only $3408. Full price, lust $100 down, 50,000 miles, new car warranty.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
FE 5-4101
1960 FORD LTD hardtop,
ullds. Spring special only $251 ill price, lust $18$ down, new ci
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
630 Oakland Ava._______FE 5-411
NOTE TO THE IRISH!
$25.00 Automatic Deciuction On All Green Cars Sold This Week
HAUPT PONTIAC
Clarkston
On M-15 ot 1-75 Intersection
down, paymunts $12.62. Full price $1595. Call Mr. Partes cradit managtr at Ml 4-7500. Ntw location^
Harold Turner Ford
reedy to follew Special only — $
nnditlonli nditlon. I un. Sprii
$i?se.*
363-5731.
II Mr. Parks cradit nr__...
n. 4-7588. New location of
Harold Turner Fordf
0 Maple	Trov /V
_____2 MHo^s East ot Woodward
1967 OLDS DELMONT, hardtop, 425, power steerlnsi and brakes,
Vinyl top. Rear speaker defogger, HD, treller, towing GM engineer. $1688. Ml 6-7438
New and Used Cars
^ HAHN ^
SPECIAL PURCHASE SALE — HURRY! — HURRY! —
. Executive Driven Cars
ALL WITH N^EW CAR FACTORY WARRANTY - LOW MILEAGE!
1968 Plymouth Fury III Save $1197 2-door with turquoise finish, matching vinyl Interior, factory air conditioning. Hardtop, double power, radio, heater, special tactory equipment.	1968 Plymouth Fury III Save $1046 4 door sedan, with white finish, blue vinyl Interior, taclorv elr conditioning, Vi, double power, radio, healer, special factory equipment.	1968 Plymouth Fury III Save $1214 with light green with matching vinyl Interior, factory air conditioning, V$. power steering, autometli^ radio and heater.
1968 Rambler Rebel SovtS $987 "770" 4 door sedan, while with blue Interior, V8, power steering, radio, heater.	1968 Rambler Rebel Save $963 2 door hardtop, yallow fini^, black interior. v8 angina, powar staerlng, radio, heater, low mila-aga.	1968 Ambassador Save $1166 2 door haNtop, yellow with black fop, black Interior, 290 V8, angina, powtr eleorlng, brakas, radio, heater, new car condltlonl
Chrysler-Plymouth-Rambler-Jeep Clarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635
106 New and Usm Cars	106 New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106
1962 OLDSJTATION WAGON;
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
TRADES
OVER 25	'
'64-'45-'44's PRICED UNDER $1,000
We want to sell you a car.
1964 Rambler Classic
4 door, 6 cylinder 145 h.p. Automatic transmission. Individual seats. Honduras maroon body with matching Interior. One owner. New condition. Must be seen.
$795
1967 Ambassador 990
4 door, 8 cylinder, power steering, air condition. White body with black* vinyl Interior. Radio, heater. Individual seats. 22,808 actual miles. Full factory warranty. Brand new tires.
$1795
1967 Rambler Americon
440 Wagon. V-$, var tteanng and
lacmB rear hbis. er ttaering, power way tall data, ck. Excellant fires
3 To Choose From enow plow, 4 wh Starling from $695
AUTOBAHN MOTORS
1765 S. Telegraph
1967 JEEP WAGONAIRE s.......
wagon, power steering and brakes, —"-“emission,
$1595
Special
SPECIAL
SPECIAL
1968 Ambassador SST
2 door hardtop. A u t o m a 11 tranimlislon, V3, air conditlor Power sl««rlng and brakes, time glass, *d|ust-o tilt steering whae Black vinyl top, mist green bod) Black vinyl Intarlor, black viny reclining ssate, whitewall tlras, custom wheal covari. Full factory* warranty,
$2684
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
666 S. Woodward
MI 6-3900
New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars
Goo(d Guys Swinger Sale
NEW '69 SWINGER HARDTOPS - FULL FACTORY EQUIPMENT - 6's AND 8's PRICED FROM $2195 CHECK THESE SWINGING TRADE-INS '64 Buick...................................   $	995
S, automatic, power, radio, yrhltawalls.
'64 Plymouth................................. $	795
Fury, hardtop, $, automatic, powtr, radio, whHtwtllt.
'64 Olds..................................... $	995
Hardtop, a, automatic, powar, radio, whlttwalli.
'64 Barracuda................................ $	995
'65 Chevy .................................... $ 695
2-door, stick, radio, whitowalls.
'65 Chrysler.................................... $1295
New Yorker, hardtop, $, automatic, powtr, radio, whitowalls.
'65 Dodge 440 .................................  $1150
Wagon, I, automatic, power, radio, whltowolle.
'65 Plymouth................................    .$1195
Fury III, hardtop, S, automatic, radio, whitowalls.
'66 Buick........................................$1295
2-door, automatic, radio, whitowalls.
'66 Malibu ......................................$1395
station wagon, S, automatic, powar, radio, wnitowollt.
'67 Firebird .................................. ,$1895
Convertible, V-S, automatic, powtr, radio, whitowalls.
'67 Charger .................................... $1995
Hardtop, I, automatic, powar, radio, whitowalls.
THE WHITE HATTERS SAY "WE WON'T DODGE ANY DEAL"
■ SPARTAN DODGE
SELLS FOR LESS (Tell us if we're wrong)
855 Oakland	338-9222
—I---------------------— ------------------------r
PUTTING YQU FIRST—
Even When It Comes to Seconds!
At the "OK" sign-you can pickup a second car that just won't quit! And you'll be picking from a selection of makes and model that just v^on't quit!
1967
Chevy II
2 Door Sedan
with the famoui 6 cvl. engtm •tick shift' radig, heater oranad. finish. Only—
$1395
1967
Olds
F-85 Wagon
h VS, automatic, cower stse , brakes, radio, heater, whiti lls, sliver blue finish. Only-
$1795
1968
Chevy
Impalo Sport Coupe
with VS, automatic, bower sIl... Ing, radio, heater, premium while-walls, factory warranty. Grr“"“ —" finish.
$2395
1967
Chevy
Biscoyne Wagon
with V8, automatic, full factor) ---nont, blue mist finlah
$1695
1965
Ford
Falcon Wagon
with V8, sulomatlc.
$795
1968
Corvair
"500" Sport Coupe
lull factory equipment nut yellow finish. Only-
$1495
1968
Chevelle
Sport Coupe
with automatic, powar itaarlng, radio, heator whitowalls, platinum finish. Only-
$2395
1967
vw
2-Door
$1395
1968
Chevelle
4-Door Sedan
$1895
1966
Chevy
Caprice Sport Coupe
....	-... -^ itearin
arina
$1695
brakes, whitawalls, marina blue
1967
Chevelle
Malibu Sport Coupe
automatic, radio, heatei voile, marina blue finish
$1795
1966
Chevy
6 Passenger Wagon
with VI, a
$1695
Factory Official
1968 CHEVY Impaig Sport Coupe
$2695
1968 CHEVY Impala Custom Sport
v-8, eutomatit, powtr stoarlng, brtkio, radios hoator.
$2695
1068 CHEVY Impald Custom Sport
Coupta wHhrV-8a •utomatlCg pow«r ttMting, whir«wallsa charcoal wMh a whita vinyl top. <
$2795
Utility Units
1963 CHEVY "60" Series Stake
4 speed transmission, 2 iptad axle, dark
$1495
1966 CMC i Ton Panel
vast coast mirrora, light Mua flnish.
$995
1966 CHEVY i Ton Fleetside
Pickup with lull factory
$1395
631 Oakland at Cass FE 4-4547
D—10
Ntw «ikf Uttd €mk
THE PONTIAC FRESS^>RIDAY, MARCH 21. 1969
106 New oml Used Cart
IMS PONTIAC
iM2 PONTIAC, TRANSPORYaTION. *'®"-Cull FE *-Mi4	,	PONTIAC CATALINA,'
TmI 6RAN0 PRIX 2'door h*nltoi>. ..fr*!,"'.
WMl« with black buck*! mil. V-l PONTIAC Tampan conv jittfnmjittr. nAutiiwp R*w*ripw«	red finish with white top.
heater, eutomatic transmls 326 V-t enginf, a nice c "
I Aluminum hubs I maintained. Call 643-3289.
Audette
Pontiac
1850 Maple Rd.
1965 PONtlAC SAFARI

Audette Pontiac
-------------- Troy Doctor's'"* r’^MS^aSMVfV ”
IM! PONTIAC TEMPiST, tucallanl ...........
I r'awbler Jeep EM 3-4IS5,
1944 PONTIAC SAFARI
473-314«.
____ 1965 CATALINA 4 DOOR, with air
and and many aktras, bait otter. M5-i
I condition, new e
HART
KING
AUTO SALES
194J Pontiac Catalina hardtop Whita with brown
I	AUTO SALES
i	FE 2-8412
,1964 PONTIAC, 4 door, tu tona o.o.,	-	, -
^-------- ,, bellevino
Station! automatic, power steering and nditlon.; brakes. Console, push button radio 9,m. with revarberation. Call 643-3389.
Audette	i
Pontiac	I
1856 Maple Rd.	Troy
1945 PONTIAC WAGON po w a r
akai, Lu
cash. By owhar. 682-3564.
1965 PONTIAC CATALINA' Station' wagon, automatic, power staarig,
8497. 85 down, 88.97 weakly.
312 W, Montcalm SI.
1964 PONTIAC
iiVjr’aaraScrdJi^mor^Ty!	«'"> *>'«» "''I*'’' 'condMioJi^W-oiM.----
payments 82.08. 85.00 down. Call' JI?	TEMPEST V8 aulomatlc, 2 door,
611-0002.	;	■'*'“*5;.,_	no money down,	,
1963 PONTiAC B o N N 1VI L L E I wKIMAlDI CAR CO. T	ATTT’t^'
power, good running condillon. r®® 0»'>land Ava..	FE 5-9421 L, U'^JSs. I	U 1
_____ '944 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-DOOR. I	1,40 ^ yrark	'
1963 TEMPEST 2 60OR. V-8 ,	<'.000 miles, clean, 442-3734.	'fE 3 7054”“ or^* ^ cp , innx
aulomatlc. Radio, axcallant tires. . '	^
Dark green with green Interior 19Ai Te:AAPr<T riicTn*« *i ___
Excfllenl transportation. 8W5. Call 64232B9.
Audette
Pontiac	carpets. 642-_
1850 Mapla Rd.	Troy	Audette
MILOSCH^
IT™s.ri
... ---- •“	81095. FE 5-3514.
brakes, radio, haater, whlla’walli spinner wheel covers. Burgund malching vinyl Interior »n - 542-3289
For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981
Naw and Used Cart 106 New and Uted Cart 106;New a.id Uted Cart
AT, MIKE SAVOIE ^ rWEVY. iwe W. OliaRla. Ml 4-2733.
2 DOOR ham^. ■M r>a	bucket, seats
EXECUTIVE CARS INC.
GM FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS ALSO FACTORYJ^RS 28-2 DOOR HARDTOPS TO select FROM With va, automatic, ,ifull power power door locks, vinyl root, air —■	.	,
conditioning, AM-FM stereo, buck-i	Audette
at seats, concealed headlights,'
mbnttor system, bumper	rOntiaC
.	....	1350 Mapla Rp.
1968 TEMPEST CUSTOM 2 door. 1962 WLMBLER STICK, BOOd con-DarF blue with matctilna blue' dltlon, $160, 682-2853.	—
— — eondltloll, V-8 im2 rambler ^ERICAN, 4 *— Staarinn and ’Automatic transmission, r. n oonditlon, $275. 363-65S9.
1943 NASH CLASSIC, '
-----	——yidltlon, --------
Marvel Motors, 251
actual mil
Audetti
Pontiac _	.	..	. .. ...
1850 Maple Rd.	Trov	Cruise control, flit wheel, 1850 Maple Rd.	Troy
iiiv ouuVjliso	— Custom steering wheel, (*
® stfSrtilfSilkLV	light, group, rtilrror
rtarM	Whitewalls, wire wheel
r^5i?'or!i?nt!iirMS^^^ s';?i!i ^:c7^ry"Tar“ant*y*-^"
wm „crlflc, new car coming. M3-	'	75i-W1'
1968 PONTIAC 358 F I R E B I R D	"•<*
Convertible. V-8, power steering, j	’*
power brakes, power top, center ?!?!??**'*=■- »”*»'' steering and console, automatic. Green with!	„,rTi Ci
mjlt. top end Interior. 82,500. 482- SSSiete^iu’-Jai
Audette	I
Pontiac	____________
18W Maple Rd._______ Troy wtlomlly clean, extras, 82295. 384
condition, 8295. Buy here, pay nere, Marv'	'
Oakland, FE 8-4079.
ecor 1949 grand PrTx. Montreux grow, with white vinyl top. Tinted glass,
---- Console, / tagtory air condition.
Rally 11 wheals, power steering, brakes, and windows. 7,000 miles. Save on thk sharp car. 442-3289.
Wudette (Pontiac
rambler AMERICAN 3M alien Wagon, autometle, radio.
........ ....... special, only 87
price, no money down.	‘
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD .
630 Oakland Ave. ^________FE 5-4101
' PONTIAC 2 DObR hardtop, | * J
weV*\?eSriio‘‘°"i!owB*r	e'n'd	wish he Wouldn’t collect hunting trophies!’
heater, whitewalls.	........... .	.	--- ------------------------------------
KING ""** ***“'*	19*I'*•«*' ®*«i tw*
EXECUTIVE CARS INC.
GM FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS
ALSO FACTORY CARS	.............
GTO°,“'’u,M.m ®^s\^yTr?S'? i'^OW“MTLiW . ........ .....
Ch7y.*'les,'-*»4r'c.ml;r^s!^%^^^^^^ VT'*’
Mustangs, Cutlass 442s, with V8	-------------------
automatic, and 4 spatds, vinyl	.BONNEVILLE.	Silver	with
roof, full power, air conditioning,-,	^i*5!L j"''.!.*!®*’.;	*	•’’O'"*'
console, bumper guards, AM-FM	•♦■"'••rd. shift, 3	speed.	AM	radio,
stereo, custom	InteFtor, rillVl ™fil.
wheels, red lines, flit wheel, wood'	Extra clean. Call 642-3289.
steering wheel, OP TO 48,000	Audette
MILES FACTORY WARRANTY
'37 S^Matn, Romeo	752-9481	1850 Maple Rd.	Troy
New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106
$1495
Second St. after 5 p.m.
New ond Used Cars
GRIMALDI NBuick-Opel
210 Orchard Lk. Rd.	FE 2-9J45
106New and Used Cars 106
106
AUTO SALES
1945 Pontiac Catalina hardtop. Candy apple
V8 automatic,;
' engine, 8795. 682-8943, after
Orion, FE ^2041.
New and Used Cart
lurst linkage, 421 1943, e'*— -
106New ond Used Cars
[I sell. Best otter over 81
3-5664.
106 New and Used Cars
Get .Into the Vf Swing of Spring!
Trade up now to one of these excellent used cars.
1967 Buick Riviera Custom Full powar, factory air condition. radio, healer, vinyl root. On* owntr. Full factory warranty. $2895 Easy T#ms Arranged		1968 Buick Electro Limited Full powar, factory air condition. One ownor. Low mileaga. Burnished brown finish. Factory warranty. AM-FM stereo radio. $$ Save $$ Easy Terms Arranged
1966 Opel Kadette		1966 Buick Electro
Station Wagon		4-door ^hardtop. Full power, fac-
?nd*'h.*;,;?:- "•'"®		Sharp ona owntr new car trada^
$995		' $a995
Easy Terms Arranged		Easy Terms Arranged
1968 Riviera		1965 Skylark
2 to choose from. Power steer-fng. brakas, wlndowi, aaat Air		Convertible
conditioning. Vinyl roof.		Power steering and brakes. Radio and heater. Clean end ready.
$3895		V$, aulomallc.
Easy Terms Arranged		$995 Eosy Terms Arranged
1945 PbNTIAC LeMANS, excellent 1967 CATALINA, EXCELLENT con-condlton, best otter. FE W472. I dltlon, many extras, 81800. 423-
l'965 BONNEViLLE 2'door hardtop. J*?*'______________________    „
Burgundy with matching vinyl 1947 BONNEVILLE BROUGHAM, LI..;;—steering and brakes, low mileage, best offer, 493-1838. ii”.',."* o"i *owneT" s’ivV' c“.M	‘42-3289.	I^TpoNTIaF CA“TAL^-^WAG6tL
1-0802.	•• '■*"	Audette	PO.«r, exc. condltloh'.JlOM. Prlv!
Dratted -	PontioC	' 20:"”
OR 1050 Maple Rd.	__ Troy 1967
1966 GTO 2 DOOR hardtop. Dark P"
ml lurquols* with block vinyl lop. .
Factory air condition, power 1967	__	_	_
steering, brakej, seals, windows, radio, healer, whitewalls, double Rally wheels, rad line tiros. Ex- power, 22,000 miles. 674-1587, alter
cellent condition. Call 642-3289.	5.	_______________
Audette	’>‘7 PONfiAC LeMans' convertible,
B ..	; 8 cylinder automatic, excellent
rOntiaC	condition, low mileage, power
1850 Maple Rd.	Troy brakes and steering, bucket seats,
1944 PONTIAC 2-door hardtorilghl -*'*”• “3-»375. blue, double power, factory	—-
excellent condition, 332-7979.
1966 TEmpEST custom 2 door,' automatics 6 cyl. enginr
economIcaT? This" ** Is Uw ^ctuaj^mi. ttoubl^ monthly oayrnenls._	PONTIAC CATAUNA, 1947 2-door,
Shelton Pontiac-Buick y‘"Vl 'op- •» .power. ,»«o'ory •'r, Boches'or Rd- „	_ M':5500 ?S3!°ayo.‘'r/,y« ne^^'liny nirnWr!'
1964 BONNEVILLE 2 door hardtop, ’’t' signal gold with matching vinyl!	PO»'*r«c.
Interior. V8 eutomallc, power; <1875. 693-0759.	________
steering and brakes. 29,999 actual 1968 TEMPEST CUSTOM 2 door miles. Very clean. Call 642-3289.	, hardtop. Verdoro green with black
Audette	! Tlnyl top. v-8 engine, automatic,
Pontiac
1050 Maple Rd.

544 S. Woodward
647-5600
-. 91 Home St., Pontiac. 3
, ‘67 Firebird conv., fully equip.
'64 Pontiac 2 dr., hardtop Bonnavllle uiiih Plenty other cars end trucks. wtUno 7335 ^xle Economy Cars FE 4-2131 and '707 PONTIAC LeMANS,. _1X^
_______ _ J brakes. New
whlfewall tires. Well maintained.
' ........
____	_	Audette
1764 PONTIAC 2 DOOR CeTellne	Pnnfinr
herdlop, power steering end	roniiac
brakes, ck^, 81,IM. 451J224. IISo Maple Rd.	________Troy
I7M LEMANS, bVERHEAO'cetn'e, '748'Catalina	2-door demo .....$2375
power option, mutt sell, 673-0008 or '7*7	Catalina	2-door ........$1575'
682-5956.	® {1966 T-BIrd convertible, sharp 81595
'744 Bonneville 2-door hardtop 81395
'744 grand PRIX 8 dexir hardtop.t,9M uviidea* a-donr..............	$1095
__________________________ . ______________ 8 795
8|«9s,^,radloi^_^we^^^^	"	"	*
metallic oiut with white Interior, u,liuS*’.i;,rB'.
Y;?-^•"r'rn'd“‘'b;irk'.'?l"«	sharp
i!^^33iJSm.'^'l KEEGO PONTIAC SALES >t
j^MOO
SAVE money at mike SAVOIE KEEGO HARBOR
CHEVY, 1900 W. Maple, Ml --- -----------------
1946 CATALINA T DOOR '___________________.... .......
Gold with matching Interior. V-8 Interior. Tinted glass, automatic, power steering and steering —' brakes. Tinted windshield. Power I antenne. 26,000 actual miles. Like new. Call 442-3289.
Audette	|
Pontiac	n
1050 Maple Rd._	Troy '
1966 TEMPEST CUSTOAA 'WAGON.I V-8, auto., nice. FE 8-8025 days.
i9647:AYALrNA7c-^7t'y.rirb	CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
•'™»!t948 Firebird, 2 door, hardtop, i
Audette
Pontiac
MILOSCH
^d^^akes. 81400 Call 693-1359 o
iwith red interior, V8, automatic,
---------taring, power brakes, radio,
s. 677 M-24, Lake Orion.
New and Uiod Can lOANtw and Uted Can	106New and Uted Cart 10^ New and Used Can
AAV 2-2041.
106New and Used Core
GIANT TV AUTO SALE
WE SELL GUARANTEED CARS WITH GUARANTEED FINANCING
at
OAKLAND COUNTY'S 2 GIANT LOCATIONS SPECIALIZING IN LOW-PRICE GM CARS
« F
Don't Let a Repossession, BankruptiSy, Receivership, or New in Town Stop You—All You Need Is a Steady Job.
Us Mm
MSWIE ®W
% Mmm	S]p(!)M
THE FOLLOWING CARS GO ON SALE TODAY-
REPOSSESSION AND TRADE IN	FULL PRICE	WEEKLY PAYMENT
62 FORD	$295	$3,00
65 FORD Convertible	$895	$9.00
63 BUICK Special	$395	$4.00
63 OLDS Hordtop	,$395	$4.00
64 MONZA	$595	$6.00
64 WILDCAT Convert.	$795	$8.00
64 CHEVY 2-Door	$495	$5.00
64 CHEVY Wogon	$695	$7.00
64 CHEVY SS Convert.	$795	$8.00
62 PONTIAC Hardtop	$295	$3.00
FULL WEEKLY
REPOSSESSION AND TRADE IN	PRICE PAYMENT
64 CHEVY Wagon. V8	$495	$5.Q0
61	T-BIRD. like new	$295	$3.00
64 PONTIAC Convertible	$695	$7.00
64	FORD Station Wagon. V8. automatic $495	$5.00
65	MUSTANG.. V8. 4-speed	$895	$9.00
65	CHEVY. 2-door, automatic	$895	$9.00
62	CHEVY impala hardtop	$295	$3.00
62 FORD Fairlane	$195	$2.00
62 RAMBLER Wagon	'	$295	$3.00
66	FORD 2 Door	$795	$8.00
109 E. Blvd. S. and Auburn SEE AL EATON
3400 Elizabeth Lk. and M59 , SEE RAY CAREY
FINAL CLEARANCE Fantastic Savings
ONLY 7 NEW 6B's LEFT SORRY ONLY 6 HURRY
GIVE US A TRY BEFORE YOU BUY
OAKLAND
Chrysler-Plymouth
FE 5-9436
SWING INTO SPRING WITH A DEPENDABLE
1963 MERCURY "S-SS”
Breezeway two-door hardtop. Turquolta In color with matching all vinyl Interior. Bucket leate, V8, automate, ijower iteering and brakes, radio, heater,
1966 RAMBLER "990"
V8, automatic, power
.	---- nitlo,
one owner
1966 PONTIAC Catalina
Ywo door hardtop. Bright red In color wnti black ----- ....------------steering and brakes, v'—'
1966 CHEVELLE Malibu
Two door hardtop. All red with black Interior. "327" V8, eutamatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls. Gorgeous.
1965 THUNDERBIRD
Two door hardtop. Snow White beauty "ifn hi.rk vinyl interior. Full pr. —*--—
1966 MERCURY Monterey
Custom two door. Platinum In color with all black Interior. -V8, automatic, power steering and brakes.
1965 MERCURY Monterey
Gold In color with black Inter power steering, radio, heater.
$ 795: $1395-
$1795;
$1595!
$1495:
$1295;
$1595;
$ 995|
HILLSIDE
LINCOLN - MERCURY
1250 Oakland 333-7863
New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cars 1U6New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cars 106
-BRAND NEW-
1969 FIREBIRD
"350" Hardtop Coupe
With safety track, duol horns, deluxe seat belts, deluxe steering wheel, electric clock, power steering, head rest, mats front and rear, F70xl4 tires, turbo hydramatic, push-button radio, deluxe wheel discs., console, lamp package, an^ deluxe heavy-duty air cleaner.
$2996
-BRAND NEW-	-BRAND NEW-
1969 TEMPEST	1969 PONTIAC
Sports Coupe	Cotdlina Hardtop
With decor group, hydramatic, push-button radio, custom foam front seat, dual horns, power steering.	Coupe, with Comoro white finish, power sthhring, cordovd'thp, decor group, hydramatic, push-button radio, custom foam seat front, remote control mirror.
and custom carpeting, 775x14 whitewalls! Only—	deck lid control, disc brakes, head rests, 855x15 whitewalls.
$2659	$3256
OUTSTANDING QUALITY SELECTION
1968 PONTIAC
Catalina 4-door sedan, power steering, heavy duly power brakes. Oakland County cars, tyrbo-hydramatic, brand new whitewalls, vinyl top. Only—
$1795
1967 PONTIAC
$1495
1963 Pontiac
----loor hardtop, with radio, haater,
earing, brakes, Hydramatic, whlla-irgun^ with a whita top, vary low Only —
$895
1966 CHEVELLE
Ith power tleerlng, automatic, <-cyl.
$1095
1965 PONTIAC
hardtop, i
mlv-
$1395
sr hardtop, with hydramatic, powar steering, brakes, whitewalls, radio, heater, and Is only—
1965 PONTIAC
$895
1966 Pontiac
Vantura Convtrtibla, with power steering, brakes, Hydramatic, radio, heattr, while-walls, buckal sats, and consolt. Only -
$1795
$2295
1968 BONNEVILLE
4-p®®r hardtop, with cordova top,
a.
with blacke Intarlor. Only-
$3095
1964 PONTIAC
Starchicf 4Kloor sadan, with powei
$895
1967 Pontiac
S?'!'* Sr.i’'' 7'®®®^ hardtop, with air conditioning, many othar axl
$2595
1965 PONTIAC
I v-8, ■utomitle.
$1095
WE WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY DEAL, WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD
PpNTIAC-TEMPEST	w ,
On M-24-Lake Orion	MY 3-6266



THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MARCH ,21, 1969
D^ll
Amvw to Pi««hw.hnl»
43Moming moiature
___	45 High mountain
6Fo*——	46Medicalman
lOBajrwindow. SODroop UHifihest- 52 Flyer tanking bi^op 54 South Amerw
14 Akhun pepper	can animal
plant	58 Brief
15 Infectious reference disease	59 Melodies
16	uncooked	60 Adventure
■	61 Gustos
36	Quiet
37	Intricate mup dance
38	Of stars
40	Modern painter
41	Arista
17 Mw’s name 41 First man 19 Boat paddles 42 Interlaced 20Onthe	44Ballroom
sheltered side	dance
21 Pedal	47 London
performance	gallery
-------- „ Preposition 48 American
5	God of Islam 26 Bodies of	inventor
6	British vehicle water	49 Tree part
19 Edible grain	DOWN
22 Head covering	1 Cry loudly •
24	Seine	2 Exist
25	Exclamation	3 Fingerless
of sorrow	glove (var.) j
27 Winged insect 4 Tavern brew 23: Sllterate	------
33 Willows
8	Arab country	„_____ _____________
9	Italian folk 29 American	nurse (ab.)
dance	monogram 55 Reply (ab.)
11 Afternoon	30 Fabric .	56 Encountered
(ab.)	32 Lawyer (ab.) 57 Beast of
12	Water	^ Scottish dance . burden
WILSON
Jackie's 'Fab' Fun Center Will Cost a Billion of Jack
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK—Actors speak only one language . . . money.
“I know how actors exaggerate,” Jackie Gfleason said on the phone from Florida, “but honest to G|od, the value of the whole complex of the Jackie Gleason Nonpareil Country Club in South Florida will be In excess of one billion dollars!”
“You did say one MILLION?” we replied. 1
“I said in excess of one BILLION!” •
Jackie shouted. “The six golf courses will be In excess of $25,000,000. There’ll be tennis, swimming, bowling—the greatest sports companies will be represented by shops. We start digging ground next month . . .”
Jackie’s	“Jackie	Gleason’s	Great	One”
restaurant chain is also shooting ahead, he’s filming “Don’t Drink the Water” and going into “Let Me Count the Waves” June 1—and he’ll record two albums for Capitol in Miami and Miami Beach—“first time they’ve ever recorded down here.”
*	*	it
A local joke has it that Jackie doesn’t do any flying because if he showed up at the airport, the Cuban fans would start yelling, “Hi, Jack, Hi, Jack.”
*	★	★
And speaking	of Jackies	and	Jack,	Jackie	Mason’s attorney
leon H. Chamey said he telegraphed CBS he had been instructed by Jackie to siie for $1,000,000 for not using Jackie on the Smothers Brothers show March 9.
That’s the damages that Jackie felt he suffered when all his fans didn’t see him on the show as he’d been advertised.
The $1,000,000 demanded by Mason was not considered high by Mason’s group—they said Jackie wanted much mote, like $20,000,000. ^
THE MIDNIGHT EARL ...
Famous singer Bricktop was invited to “The Great White Hope” next week. She was singing on the second floor of Jack Jotoson’s Cafe de Champ in Chicago the night his first wife killed herself on the third floor . . . Berle Adams is believed moving wa^, way up at the proper time in MCA in Hollywood . . . Vegas Caesars Palace is building an “off Broadway” theater —and will present “Boys in the Band” in June.
Bob Shanks of the Merv Griffin brain trust describes a love affair as “a heart attack” (great title for a song) . . . Says Merv when starting his show Aug. 18 will not depend on Big Name celebrities but people who are talented and interesting.
. ★ ★ ★
REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The old-timer is a man who chases a girl and hopes he won’t catch her.”
EARL’S PEARLS: Reports claim more people quit smoking ki 1968 than in 1967. Of course, those ’68 figures include a lot •I people who quit in ’67, too.
A visiting Englishman phoned Frankie Ribando, maitre d’ at P. J. Clarke’s, for a reservation Monday. Frankie explained he couldn’t, the Britisher asked why. “It’s St. Patrick’s Day.” said FVankie. “Well,” snorted the Englishman, “you needn’t get nahsty!” and hung up . . . That’s ^arl, brother.
(Publlihira-Hill Syndiealt)

-Television Programs-
Programs fomlshod by stations jisted in this column are subject to change without notice!
R-Rerun C—Color FRIDAY NIGHT
- News,
6:00 (2) (4) (7) C Weather, Spwts (9) R - Movie: ‘"nie Gallant Hours” (1960) Story of World War H nav^ hero, Adm. William F. Halsey. Ja^es Cagney, Dennis Weaver, Richard Jaeckel
(50) R C — Flintstones (56) What’s New (62) R-Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronkite
(4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley
(7) C — News — Reynolds (50) R — McHale’sNavy (56) Legacy — A look at the legendary iconoclastic physician.
(62) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4)	(7) C - News,
Weathdr, Sports (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) Americans From Africa — “Day-by-Day Resistance and Slave Revolts”
(62) R C — Movie: “The Big Money” (1954) Ian Carmichael, Belinda Lee 7:30 (2) C - Wild Wild West — West* becomes involved in power'struggle for control of East European country when he is assigned to protect prince and his aunt.
(4) C - (Special) The First Americans — Science special tells story of first men who lived on our continent. Program follows early m a n ’.s migration from Siberia to areas in the United States and Central and South America. Hugh Downs narrates.
(7) C — Tom Jones — Cass Elliot, Spanish vocalist Massiel, George Carlin and the Dave Clark Five are guests.
(50) RC-Hazel (56) R — News In perspective 8:00 (9)RC-ISpy (50) C — Pay Cards 8:25(62) Greatest Headlines
8:30 (2) C — Gomer Pyle, USMC — Expectant mother turns to Gomer and Sgt. Carter for help when her husband is
(4) C — Name of the Ch^e — Glen Howard rushes to London where he learns that he and a number of other publishers are being sued for libel by a British race car driver. Honor Blackman and Brian Bedford star.
(7) C — (Generation Gap — Young recording star Bob Consill, 19, competes against his mother, Barbara.
(50) C — Password (56) (Special) Aid to Education: A Conflict r- Pros and cons of aid to educa-tion -are discussed. Live TV audience will participate.
(62) R C — Movie: “Jacqueline” (British, 1957) Story of little girl, who captures the hearts of all who know her. Kathleen Ryan, John Gregson, Cyril Cusack.
1:00(2) R - Movie: “Stalag 17” (1953) Group of American captives in German prisoner-of-war camp realize there is an informer in their midst when escape attempt goes awry. William Holden, Don Taylor, Robert Strauss, Peter Graves, Otto Preminger, GiiStrat-(7) C - Let’s Make A Deal
(9) C — What’s My Line?
— Radio Programs—
■ :jVlll(760) WXYZ(1270) CKLWfaOO) WWJ(950) WCARQ130) WPONQ 460) WJBKd 500) WHR-fM(94!^
. wwj/ r CKLW,
WXYZ,
’ WPON, nn»
.aSTsSSS?
•^iSIfw'^rTodav hi Rwltw WJjt evilnMs, Tim* Tr»v-wraN, Phon* Opinion »j«f-WWJ, erTOli*ilt . ^ WJR, Lwwll fhortM«, Airto-
!	N*w», Rick
WJR, World TonlgM _ 7:1f-WJR, Boiln*i* 7IM-WJR, WOfIdwId* ■7:I*-«XYZ D*v* LO(
WJR, R**ion«r R*pprt, Profll* of ■ TIgir, Choral C*v*lcadt
*w
7:S»-WJR, Sport* t;S0—WJR, News, Dimension WPON, News, Larry Dixon tilS-WJR, SunnVsId* Encore l:J*-WJR, Showcase, Cktse-
l:4S—XjR, Showcase, Minority Report
fito-WHPI, Tom Coleman CKLW, Scott Reoe"
WJR, Newt, Kaleidoscope
leiS^^jS, Newt Itili-MIJR, Pocut Encore 1I:I»-WJR, Newt ItilS-WJR,
1l!l»-WWJ. .
WJR, Mutk .... ----
lt;SO-WJBK, Nighttime WXYZ, Newt Jim Davit CKLW, Mark Richards WCAR, Newt, Wayne Phllllpi WJP. Newt, Music TUI Dawn
SATURDAY MORNINO itiS-wjRy Wake-Up wwj. Newte Parm CKLW, Charlie Van pyk*
, Sportt Final . overnight Jtic TUI Dawn
WXYZ, Newt, Dick Purtan WJBK, Newt, Marc Avery WPON, Newt, Arllone
7:to-WJR, Newt WHFI, Music
WPON. Newt, Chuck War-7t1sIvKlR , cavalcad*
WJBK, Sportt liSO-WJR, Newt lilS-WJR, Sunnytlda, Cavalcad*
»:«C-WWJ, Newt. Monl^ WHFI. Jim ZHiaer ll:W-WPON, Newt, Den Singer
WCAR, Newt. Rod Miller WXYZ, Newt, Johnny Ran-
WJdS^ Newt. Conrad CKLW; Ed Mitchell "
SATURDAY APTRRNOON liOe-WWJ, Newt WJR, Newt
IlilS-WWJ, Now, Merty Mi WJR, Farm ISiSI-WJR, Cavalcad* lito-WJR, Newt, Sportt
,’.«jg:TO*TOn,
Showcase
7;Og-WPON, Newt, 6 Purse*
WHFI, Larry Baker WJBK, Hank O'Neil WWJ, Newt, Atanltor 4:1S-WJBK, SMrtt SI4S-WJR, Showcase,
(50) R — Perry Mason (56) R — Grandmaster (Ghess — “The Great Russians, Part I” j 9:30 (7) C — Guns of Will Sonnett - WiU and Jeff find a poster about a playlet on the death of James Sonnett.
(9) C — Don Messer (56) R - NET Playhouse — “A Passage to India” 10:00 (4) C - (Special) Hollywood: Thp Selznick Years — Special program on career of late Hollywood producer David 0. Selznick, features appearances by Gregory Peck, Joan F(m-taine, Joseph Cotton, Ingrid Bergman, Katharine Hepburn, Rock Hudson, Alfred Hitchcock and others. Selznick’s work will be traced through film f o o t a ge never before seen on television. Henry Fonda is off-camera narrator.
(7) C — Judd for the Defense — Judd attacks questionable divorce practices when an unfair settlement leads to murder.
(9) The Best Damn Fid-der From Calabogie to Kaladar — Rural Ontario family struggles for survival in this one-hour National Film Board of Canada drama.
(50) C — News, Weather, Sports
19:30(50) R - Alfred Hitchcock
(62) R^ Ann Sothem 11:00(4) (7) (9) C - News, Weather, Sports (50) C — Joe Pyne (62) R — Movie: “Subway in the Sky” (1959) Hide-and-seek mystery involves Americmi soldier AWOL in Berlin. Richard Widmark.
11:20(2) C — News, Weather, Sports 11:30(4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop — Guests include Mahalia Jackson, Mickey Mantle and Eddie Fisher.
(9) News Special—Israel’s new prime minister, Gol-da Meir, is profiled. 11:50(2) R - Movie: “The Mountain Road” (1960) U.S. major and demolition team are ordered to destroy roads and bridges to slow up Japanese. James Stewart 12:00(9) R - Movie: “The Window” (1949) Uttle boy sees a murder committed while looking out his window, but no one will believe him. Arthur Kennedy,' Barbara Hale, Bobby Driscoll 12:30 (50) C - Big Time Wrestling
1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Movie: “Cockleshell Heroes” (British, 1956) BriUsh R(^ Marines attempt to . destroy concentration of German ships.
1:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:50 (2) R C — Movie: “The Orientals” (1965) Adventures in five oriental cities. Nick Kendall 3:15 (7) News 3:50 (2) C -News SATURDAY MORNING
5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C-News 6:00 (2) C — Across the Fence
0:30 (2) C - Sunrise Semester
0:55 (4) C-News 7:00 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman
(4) C —Country Living 7:15 (7) C — Rural Report 7:30 (4) C - Oopsy the Gown
(7) C-TV college 8:00 (2) C - Go G 0 Gophers
8:25 (9) Warm-Up 8:30 (2) C — Bug? Bunny— Roadrunner
(7) C — Courageous Cat (9) Toby
9:00 (4) C — Super 6 (7) C —Casper (9) C -r PinocchiO (50) R — Wells Fargo 9:30 (2) C — Wacky Races (4) C-Top Cat (7) C — Gulliver . (9) C - Wizard of Oz (50) Rocky Jones 10:00 (2) C-Archie Show (4) R C — Flintstones (7) C —Spiderman (9)R-WUUamTell (50) R — Jungle Jim 10:30 (2) C - Batman -Superman
(4) C — Banana Splits (7) C — Fantastic Voyage (9) Window On tte World (50) R - Movie: “The Feathered Serpent” (194fl)
TV Features
Tonight
AMERICANS FROM AFRICA, 7 p.m. (56)
- I
THE FIRST AMERI CAN§, 7:30 p.m. (4)
-TOM JONES, 7:30 p.m. i (7)
NAME OF THE GAME, 8:30 p.m. (4)	^
AID TO EDUCATION:
A CONFUCT, 8:30 p.m. (56)
HOLLYWOOD:	THE ^
SELZNICK YEARS, 10 p.m. (4)
NEWS SPECIAL, 11:30 p.m. (9)
Tomorrow
NATIONAL INVITATION TOURNAMENT, 2 p.m, (2)
NCAA BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT, 2 p.m.
(4)
Roland Winters 11:00 (7) C — Journey to the Center of the Earth (9) D’Iberville 11:30 (2) C — Herculoids (4) C — Underdog (7) C — Fantastic Four (9) A Place of Your Own
SATURDAY AFTERNOON
12:00 (2) C
(4)C — Storybook Squares
(7) C — George of the Jungle
(9) African Odyssey (50) R - Movie: “Wolves of the Deep” ( 1960) Massimo Girotti 12:30 (2) R C—Jonny Quest (4) C — Untamed World (7)C — American Bandstand (9) Country Calendar 1:00 (2) C - Moby Dick (4) C-At the Zoo (9) CBC Sports 1:30 (2) C —Lone Ranger (4) R C — International
—' 1 , ^---------------- -
Zone
(7) C — Happening—The Monkees are guests.
2:00 (2) C - (Special) Na-tional Invitation Tournament — Finals pit Temple against Bob Cousy’s Boston College team.
(4) C - (Special) NCAA Basketball Tournament — Doubleheader h^s North Carolirta against Drake in the consolation game, and Purdue vs. UCLA for the championship (approximately 4:15 p.m.)
(7) R — Outer Limits (9) R — Movie; “Retik, the Moon Menace” (1966) George Wallace (50) R - Movie :
‘ ‘Counterfeiters’ ’ (1 9 4 8) John Sutton, Hugh Beaumont, Doris Merrick 3:00 (7)C - Michigan Sportsman
3:30 (7) C - Pro Bowlers’ Tour
(50) R — Movie: “The Walking Dead” ( 1 9 3 6 ) Boris Karloff, Barton MacLane, Edmund Gwenn 4:00 (2) R ^ Movie: “Master Minds” (1949) Boweiy Boys (9) C — Marvel Super Heroes
(56) R — Mr. Lister’s Storytime
4:15 (56) R - Time for John
4:30 (9) C-Sklppy (56) R - Muffinland (62) R — MacKenzie’s Raiders
4:45 ( 56) Storyteller 5:00 (2) C - Jean-Claude Killy Show
(7) C - Wide World of Sports — Featured are the International Bikini-Sports Competition from Rosarito Beach, Mexico; the Grand Prix Steeplechase Motorcycle Race from Gardena, Calif.; and the International Luge Championships from Lake Placid, N. Y.
(9) R C '— Monroes —
“Gunbound”
(50)C-HyLit
(56) Brother Buzz
(62) C - Big-Time
Wrestling
5:30 (2) C - Gentle Ben (56) R - Let’s Take Pictures
A Look at TV
Selznick Salute Tonight
By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK - The “salute” is a popular and fairly easy television form, particularly if the subject is a show business figure or glamor symbol.
Ed Sullivan built some of his best received programs around ^aiUtes to Irving Berlin and Rodgers and Hammerstein and it gave him an excuse to play their most popular music'
★ ★ ★
David Woiper packed a lot of glamor and notalgia into his “Hollywood; The Golden Years,” bits and pieces from old movies tacked together a witty narration.
Another in the category comes along on NBC tonight, ‘Hollywood:	The Selznick
Years.” David 0. Selznick, a producer of some very big mov-include “Gone with the Wind,” is a natural for a salute because he was also a star-maker.
reminiscenses
In salutes, it is customary to present people—preferably celebrities—whose lives have touched the subject to build a flattering portrait.
The Selznick special will include clips from more than 20 of his movies and presumably warm reminiscences from some of the performers whose film careers he aided. Included will be Ingrid Bergman, Katharine Hepburn and Gregory Peck.
The program will be unusual in that it also will include comment from one performer — Joan Fontaine — who frankly admits little affection for the
man although he gave her start on a star’s career. 4“David had us under contract for small salaries and then leaned us to other producers for large amounts of money,” she said.
Miss Fontaine made, at the top, $1,000 a week with Selznick ■‘when I worked.” “Rebecca,*' the memorable film she made with Laurence Olivier, netted her only about $15,000.
Her sister Olivia de Haviland, who was in “Gone with the Wind” rebelled against the practice. Miss Fontaine said, and wfas suspended by the studio. I
QUALITY
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ON ALL MAKE
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Open Daily 10-9 Saturdays 10-6
gerome
” music CO.
Waterford Plaza Ph. 674-2025
DEDICATEP TO TOP QUALIH TV SERVICE
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SERVICE
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OoMdon Radio-iv	FE 4-9736
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City
ByEDBLUNDEN The Poptiac City Commission Has , received several endorsements from civic and social; organizations supportings two giant city projects — the proposed $6(K-millidn domed stadium and the $100-million plan for urban renewal.
The Pontiac site near 1-75 and M59 is in the running for a proposed stadium
„ c .	. P COLOR MAKHVEB PAGES?
Seeks Ivlore Endorsements of Its 2 Giant Projects
for the Tigers baseball and Lions football. teams.
Although other proposals come and go, Pontiac’s remains one of the most economically and geographically feasible, city Officials have pointed out.
The Pontiac site will have greater accessibility for more of the state’s residents, especially thosd in Flint and Saginaw, it has been stressed.
The Pontiac Plan for the 29-acre renewal lands south of downtowir is rapidly approaching actuajity, according to reports.
Deals for the first parts of a multiuse complex of faei^hes are expected to be announced shortlyjt
★ ★ ★
Expected to be built on the now-vacant land is a variety of businesses such as
hotels, apartments, an arena and restaurants, rising 12,14 and 20 stories.
★ # ★
The City Commission is actively seeking endorsements by any groups for both projects. The commission feels the endorsements will help it convince the Detroit teams real support exists in the community. Endorsements also will point out community willingness to back
developers In the urban renewal area, it has been stated.
The latest to support" Pontiac Plan publicly was the Bemis-Olsen Post iis of the Pontiac Amvets. Therr endorsement stated the Amvets “will do everything in our power to promote and expedite the growth and rebuilding of our city.”
Backing the stadium proposal are endorsements by two governmental
units, the Oakland Oounty Board of Supervisws and the City of Rodiester.
Rochester’s statement vows the city . “will be most happy to cooperate in any way ... to have the stadium located in your (Pontiac) community.”
Other stadium endorsements have been acknowledged from two city, UAW Locals, 596 at Fisher Body plant and 653 at Pontiac Motor Division.
PRESENTS ABM PLAN—Deputy Defensevgecretary David Packard uses charts ,as‘ he presents the Nixon administration’s antiballistic missile system plan to tbg Senate Armed Services Committee yesterday. At his side is Melvin Laird, secretary of defense, who also testified before the committee.
Senate FoesPrepare for Assault on ABM
WASHINGTON (AP) - One of the Senate’s bitterest foes of missile defense promised the White House “ample opportunity to present its case” today as opponents got their first chance for freewheeling cross-examination of administration spokesmen. .
The assurance was given by Democrat Albert Gore of Tennessee in advance of Secretary of Defense Melyin R. Laird’$ nationally televised appearance before the senator’s disarmament subcommittee.
★ ★
But Gore also hinted at the expected barrage being prepared by critics when he said that after the administration presents its case for a modified Sentinel antiballistic missile (AB!V() system, “we ll examine it.”
By appearing before the disarmament group, Larid, after two days of testimony before the friendly Armed Scwices Committee, shifted to a hotbed of Senate oppostion.
ROUGH SPOT
In fact, one of the few rough spots before the Armed Services Committee was a	fusilade	of	critical questions
yesterday from Missouri Democrat Stuart	Symington	who ended	up by
saying:
“I’m a litilc embarrassed at being the oiily gentleman here who is critical of the program.”
★	★ ★
Land’s testimony, yesterday, at what originally was to have been a closed Armed Services Committee session, was nationally televised.
Laird blended his insistence that the Nixon	system is	a	national	defense
necessity with the argument that it will not impede the arms control negotiations the President seeks.,
‘AN INCEN-nVE’
He said, in fact, that it should prove an incentive to successful negotiations.
“I believe ^this system Is no stumbling block to arms limitation talks as far as the Soviet Union is involved,” the defense secretary said.
He said such negotiations are being considered at the highest levei of government—by Nixon.
Sen. Edward W. Brooke, R-Mass.„,who said he has doubts about the system, raised the question of the ABM as a bargaining table topic.
‘NEGOTIATABLE ISSUE’
“Is it correct that the presently planned Safeguard system is a negotiable issue?” he asked.
“Yes, it is,” Larid replied. He said he hopes both offen.sive and-' defensive weapons systems will be covered by. such negotiations.
“This particular program, I believe, in no way interferes with those talks,” Larid sai^,,‘4- believe it is an incentive for us to h'ave successful talks.”
It was not clear, however, whether Larid meant the whole ABM system could be scrapped if the Russians scrapped IhiMTs.
House Prices Skyrocketing
NEW YORK (AP) - It you plan to buy a house this'spring, forget about last year’s prices and don’t laugh when the salesman tells you “this place is a steal at $40,000.”
Higher interest charges on mortgages, higher taxes and insurance and rising costs of lumber and other materials have sent house prices skyrocketing. More increases ar^ iq prospect;
★ W '	★	f. '--
“Costs have gone up 10 per cent in the last year,” said Milton Brock of MJ. Brock & Sons, Los Angeles builder.
Bernard Janis, president) of Janis Corp., of Miami, Fla., estimated the cost--of a $30,000 home has risen 20 per cent in the past year and will rise 10 per cent more to about $39,500 in the next six months.
LUMBER PRICES SOAR
"The cost of lumber rose 50 per cent in the past six mqnths,” he said. “Why? Who’s the one pushing it up? Most of our lumber comes from the big Douglas fir mills on the West Coast, and they’re selling to the government and Japan at inflated prices. W^’ve got to pay their prices to get the materials we need.”
. Advance Mortgage Corp.' of Detroit said in its ^lemiannual survey that today’s house buyer will pay, compared with a year ago, an average 10 per cent price increase, a U/fi per cent rise in interest^te and a 5 per cent increase in taxes a^ insurance.
Board Approves Restudy of Site, Replies to Blacks
The Pontiac Board of Education iast night formaily approved a three-month, reevaluation period for study o f “alternate sites and alternate plans” for planned west side high . school facilities and reported on demands made by the Black Student Union (BSU).
Vote on the three-month reeyaluation was 5-2, with board members Mrs. Elsie Mihalek and Mrs. Lucille Marshall . dissenting. Mrs. Marshall said she felt that a reappraisal wouldn’t change the situation. '•
★ *	★
The reeyaluation statement, which urges all citizens of the school district to join in good faith and unity to end the racial discord in the community, cHlls for suspension of architect’s planning for a high school on Pontiac State Hospital land.
The board also will ask that legislation to permit sale of the state-owned land to the school district be withheld until the end of the period.
RESPONDING TO BSU
Schools SupU Dr. Dana P. Whitmer and Business Manager Vernon L. Schiller responded to the BSU demand for “free bus transportation to and from school for all age groups.’’
The board authorized the administration to develop a total transportation plan for in-city students (elementary pupils who live more than one mile from school and secondary students more than I'A miles away to begin in 1969-70.
★ * *
This plan will be presented for board consideration by May 8 and progress ■reports on , its development will be presented a| each board meeting.
By a 5-2 vote, the board approved purchase of three new buses imme(^a^o)f,to help alleviate in-city transportHIorr problems. Mrs. Lucille Marshall and Mrs. Elsie Mihalek were opposed.
(Continued on Page A-10, Col. 2)
Chance of Rain, Low in 20s Seen
Sunshine, showers and gusty winds heralded the first day of spring yesterday.	^
it Hr it
Following is the U.S. Weather Bureau official forecast for the weekend:
TODAY — Mostly cloudy, windy and cooler with chance of showers, high 40 to 45. Partly cloudy and colder tonight with a low of 24 to 28.
TOMORROW — Partly sunny with little temperature change, high 40 to 45.
SUNDAY — Increasing cloudiness and warmer.
The temperature in downtown Ponti^ at 12:30 p.m. was 37.	^
Reds Step Up Fury, Blast U. S. Bases
SAIGON (IP) — The Vietcong and North Vietnamese smashed at American bases with renewed fury today, hitting them with rockets, mortars and infantry assaults that caused serious casualties and losses of aircraft, vehicles and fuel. ,
In one of the heaviest series of blows . since the opening of the spring offensive
27	nights ago, enemy rockets and mortars hit 65 allied bases and towns, and infantry assaults ripped into three of the bases.
•k:	-k A
It was the largest bumber of attacks since last Friday, when 70 bases and towns were hit.
All of the enemy infantry attacks were on American bases along the northwest approaches to Saigon, between 31 and 51 miles from the capital.
12 AMERICANS KILLED
Twelve Americans were killed and 47 wounded, while known enemy losses were 38 dead, US. spokesmen said.
Ten of the Americans were kBled and
28	wounded in onC'attack on an artillery base.
* y* *	"
Spokesmen sqld only five enemy bodies were found after an estimated 400 North Vietnamese attacked the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division’s Fire Support Base White behind a 150-round mortar barrage.
Howeverji the Americans said many blood trails and drag marks were found, indicating the enemy took a number of (Wounded and dead with them when they pulled back toward the Cambodian border at daybreak.
The attack began shortly before 3 a.m. when mortars, bazooka-type rockets and small arms hit the American camp 50 miles northwest of Saigon.
The 250 American troops called for help, hurriedly donned their gas masks as the Nwth Vietnamese fired tear ps gren{^,Y^d turned the base’s eight 105mnt!^«t55mm guns on the enem)|^ positions; Helicopter gunships fireiP*^ rockets -as one of the camp’s a guns illuminated the enemy batteries with flares.
. All the Americans killed were victims of the bombardment.
10 Moon Visits Eyed
HOUSTON, Tex. (flV-If the first manned lunar landing comes off as planned in July, a space official says, it will be followed up by a series of others for “a sum total of 10 voyages to the surface of the moon.”
Dr. Thomas 0. Paine, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, told the Air Force Association convention yesterday: w ★	★
“If we do make the first touchdowri this summer, we’ll follow that with three similar voyages, each time increasing the scientific equipment.”
Each of the first four moon landings, hesaid, would leave equipment to measure lunar surface disturbances and to reflect laser beams back to earth. OVERLAND EXPLORATION
The six later landings, he said, could be set up in areas of the most sipificant interest and could include overland exploration.
“We’re talking here really about man’s conquest of the seventh continent,” he said, noting that the moon has. about the area of North and South America.
'* IT’S THE TOOTH - Mrs. Gary A. Gough of 644 Melrose smiles at her 4-week-old daughter, Nicoll, who was born with
two front teeth. Two weeks ago she took Nicoll k and learned her teeth are fine and will continue t(
Combined MD-DO Schools Eyed
LANSING (AP) - The Michigan State Medical Society has proposed a conference to work" out a plan to enable Michigan’s three mediegj schools to offer studentsHhb option of taking medical or osteopathic degrees.
The society suggested yesterday that Gov. William Milliken ask the State Board of Education to call such a conference, to indude medical doctors ,and osteopaths.
A spokesman for the osteopaths said they would attend any such conference—"But only to ' straighten them (the MD’s) out.”
“We feel it just can’t be »done,” declari^ George Abdilla, administrative manager of the Michigan Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons
Inc,
Mllla said the proposal is contrary to
■present standards of the state association and the American 0.stcopathic A.ssociation.
“Our (national) associationjWould not accredit any schools making such a joint degree offer,” he declared.
The medical association proposal is for the University of Michigan, Wayne Stale University and the new Michigan State University Medical School to allow their students to choose either, MD or DO degrees by adding courses to meet the requirement'for a doctor of osteopathy.
Dr. Ross Taylor of Jackson, chairman of the Medical Society Council, which serves as its board of directors, made the proposal in a letter to the governor.
Taylor said the optional degree approach had the support of the governor, the three schools and the soi^ty plus the Board of Education
Citizens Committee for Health Care.
“Michigan’s medical schools,” Taylor .said, “arc the first fn the nation to indicate ■ the feasibility of providing educational opportunities for those persons interested in obtaining , the DO degree in an estabUshed university offering medical training.”
The conference, Taylor said, sHauld have complete representation from both the medical doctors'and the osteopaths. Such a conference, he said, should be. able to resolve the differences that exist between the two groups.
“In 50 years,” Taylor predicted, “it will be all one practice—one standard o( competency—I don’t care what it is called.”
The quickest way to get more doctors, Taylor said, is to'expand at the schools >'||re^dy existing.
Taylor said the medical society supports a proposal by Milliken in his budget message for financial support of expansion of medical education programs at Wayne, UM, and MSU—including planning for a four-year medical school at Michigan State.
Taylor said the solely, also contends Michigan needs tWo more medical schools and these also should offer both degrees.
AAA
Asked where these might be located, he said possibilities wou^ include any existing school with fabilitles for such training.
Taylor said the new MicUgan College of Osteopathic Medidne, under « construction at t*ontiac, also coi^ qualify whqn it had the faculties and staff, to offer complete medkal trata|||g.
PVaHJAOlWIli
'J'H1^: 1 ’()NTJAC 1*RESS, 1 HIDAV. MARCtl 21. 19fi9
Nixon^ Bunker to Huddle on Troop Withdrav/al Outlook
By JOHN M. HIUHTOWER AP Special Corretpeatfeirt WASHINGTON-President Nixon is etqjecled to seek from Ellsworth Bunker in cm^ultations starting this weekend the ambassador’s views on how soon South Vietnam may be politically and militarily strong enough to' permit the withdrawal of som^ U.S. troops.
.1. Goodpaster at San Clemente, Calif., Sunday morning.
Goodpaster. the No. 2 U.S., military man in South Vietnam, is on Ills way to lake over a.s NTO commander in Europe.
Nixon’s advisers in the talks will be Secretary^ of State William P. Rogers and presidential assistant Henry A. Kissin-
defense, Melvin R. Laird, who made a war-zone inspection last week.
The consultations will give Nixon the chance to meet his Saigon ambassador face-lo-face for the first time.
debisions on policy changes are doe t come out of these talks.
APPROPRIATE ilESPONSE .
“appropriate resptwise'’ of which the President spoke it has not been so. labeled offlciall^.
The question is ,one of several major issues believed certain to come up after Nixon and his chief foreign policy advisers meet Bunker and Gen; Andrew
ger.
N^ws Amlysis
LAIRD’S VIEWS
Nixon already has the views on U.S. troop reduction of his secretary of
Bunker reportedly also has been anxious to make a visit home for some time.
Administration officials say that no
At present, Nixon is in the position of having said that if enemy attacks on the cities of South Vietnam continued some “appropriate response’’ would be made but that any action taken would be judged primarily for its possible effect on the Paris peace talks.
The offensive has been going on for four weeks. If the recently launched U.S. counterdrive around Saigon ig the &
One question the President is expected to put to Bunker is how much pressure there is in South Vietnam for retaliation. So far, Infonnants here say, there has been no persistent pressure. And since there has not been significant pressure in the United States, this apparently has allowed the President to play out a waiting tactic in the hope that the assaults on the cities would cease.
Another and related Issue which Bunker and the President are expected to discuss is the stalemate in the Paris: peace ta|ks as seen from Saigon and the effect on the talks of the North Vi^tnam-Vietcong offensive.
NO DOMESTIC ATTACKS So far Nixon, who took office just two months ago, has escaped any widespread or concerted attacks in Congress or the country on his hahdiing of the war and the peace negotiations.
Bill on School Aid
Asks Record Outlay
LANSING (UPI»—A record $900 million in slate aid would be poured into Michigan public schools during the 1969-70 fiscal year under a bill introduced in the House yesterday.
Cosponsored by 52 representatives, it is $210 million. over Gov. William , G.. Milliken'g recommendation and $284 miliion above what the schools now collect
A major item in the bill would allot $30 million to schools in inner-city areas. Currently ghetto-area schools gel $6.3 million.
.said Detroit would get about $15 million of the money for programs for the economically deprived.
The bill also would take the ceiling off
Romney Denies Vow on Use of Rec Bonds
DETROIT (UPI) - Former Gov. George Romney today plunged into the feud over the $100 million recreation bond by denying he made any preelection promises about how the money would be q>ent.
Last November, the voters approved issuing $100 million in bonds to improve exisUli^ conservation and recreation idtlties
■ be made by liie Legislature upon recommendations by the governor," Romney wrote.
fadtities and to develop new ones.
Gov. William G. Milliken has recommended that $60 million be spent for urban recreation areas and $40 nnillion for outstate projects, t’onservationists, however, are claiming they were promised a 70-30 split in favor of forest.s and streams while Romney was governor.
Today, in a letter to the editor in the Detroit Free Press, Romney said he had made “no commitment:’’
NEW POSITION
“While I had discussed a tentative 70-30 formula breakdown in my 1968 budget message, from the beginning of the bond campaign in July and on all latcj; occasions where I spoke in favor of bond issue, I repeatedly stressed t|fat there was no commitment to a 70N' formula”
He said he had reviewed all the campaign material used in newspapers and on radio and TV and “insured that no commitment for allocation" of the bond proceeds was contained in them.
He resigned as governor last month to become secretary of Housing and Urban
“I conaiatently stated during the bond campaign that the llnal determination on the allocation of the bond proceeds would
UNFORTUNATE MATERIAL
Romney added It was “unfortunate ” that some material which was handed out by the Department of Natural Resources before the campaign began indicating a 70-.30 .split but “did not point but the tentative nature of such a formula.’’
He said he still thinks Milliken and the I.«glslature are "in the best position’’ to evaluate the needs.
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FORECAST
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allotments “for tran.sportalion, vocational allotments for trasportation, vocational education and special education costs
Rep. George Montgomery, D-Detroit, chief spoh,sor of the nVassiVe measure.
Vv\

The House Education Committee is now studying two other state aid bills. One bill foliows the governor’s recommendation of $690 million for schools and the other, a Department of Education budget, calls for $747 million.
: I



In other action, a bill outlining the line of suece.ssion to the governor’s chair was given preliminary approval with a final vote date set for next Wednesday.
At that time, it’s expected a major battle may erupt over whether the Senate president pro tempore or the ,speaker of the House should succeed behind the lieutenant governor, secretary of stale and attorney general. The bill, as approved by the Senate, provides for the president pro tempore before the speaker.
c - ,,	*
f \- ’■
AMENDMENT EXPECTED The House,, which prides itself in being equal with the Senate, is expected to amend the bill, putting the speaker before the president pro tempore.
Birmingham Area
Drug Expert Will Speak at^ Local Schools
BIRMINGHAM - Dr. Allan Y. Cohen, a consulting psychologist '^t t h e University of California, Berkeley, will speak on the perils of drug addiction and abuse at several schools in the Birmingham district next week.
Hj;s schedule includes talks at 9:55 a.m. at Groves High School and 2 p.m. at Seaholm High School, both on Thursday.	,
TO MEET AGAIN—Former President Harry S. Truman looked like this when the then vice president, Richard M. Nixon, gave him a guided tour of the U.S. Senate—Truman’s old stamping grounds—in *1953. President Nixon will drop in on the 84-year-old Truman today in Independence, Mo., on the way to a 'West Coast weekend.
Dr. Cohen will speak at Derby Junior High at 7:30 p.m. Thursday and at 3 p.m. Friday.
He will hold an inoirmal question-and-answer session at 8 p.m. Friday in the Village Pub, a local teen center at 136 Brownell.
DONATIONS
Funds to underwrite Dr. Cohen’s visit to Birmingham are being raised by donations from schools, residents and various community groups.
Dr. Cohen graduated from Harvard University in 1961 and received his Ph.D. < in clinical psychology from Harvard in 1966.
The House also passed a resolution exleifding its bill introduction deadline
untm April 16. Originally, the deadline ^Was set for March 17, but an overload of bill requests and a shortage of staff to write them up has resulted in a logjam.
Some 1.250 out of a total of 3,350 bills still remain to be written.
, In committee action, a bill designed to protect consumers from paying for unsoircited merchandise sent through the mail was reported out by the consumers and agriculture committee.
Piano Is Key to Nixon Bid for Accord With Truman
He is a former student and colleague of Drs. Timothy Deary and Richard Alpert and has engaged in extensive research with psychedelic drugs.
The measure would allow anyone who receives such goods to dispose of them in any way without obligation to the sender.
W^HINGTON (AP) - A grand piano has turned out to be the unlikely peace symbol that has ended one.. of the nation's naktiest political feuds—the split between President Nixon and Harry S. Truman.
Over the years, charges of treason, cronyism 'and political ineptness by
Nixon and threats of physical reprisals by Truman have marked relations between the two—with playing the piano thei only apparent common point of interest.
BLOOMFIELD HILLS -	The
Bloomfield Hills School District and the Bloomfield Hills chapter of the Michigan Association for Children with Learning Disabilities, Inc. will sponsor an in-— service instructional prbgratm on Wednesday at Traub Elementary &hool from 1 to 4 p.m.	\
The topic is “Teaching	a n d
Understanding of Children With Learning Disabilities.”
Parochiaid Foes 'Turned On'
Nixon moved to heal the breach; when he scheduled a stop today on his trip to Califoniia for a visit at the 84-year-old former president’s Independence, m-K home. The chief executive took along the White House piano often used by Truman as a gift.
All elementary teachers in the Bloomfield Hills public school system and teachers of St. Hugo of the Hills will participate in the program.
Speakers Include Dr.jJShn Dorsey, :ian^Dr.
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report
PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly cloudy, windy and cooler today with chance of showers, high 41 to 4$. Partly cloudy and colder tonight, low 24 to 28. Partly sunny with little temperature change Saturday, high 40 to 45. Sunday outlook: Increasing cloudiness and warmer. Winds west to northwest 20 to 28 mites per hour today hecomtng northwesterly 12 to 22 miles per hour tonight and 10 to 18 miles ^turday. Probahillties of precipitation: 20 per cent today, 10 per cent tonight and Saturday.
Porch-Light Campaign Set
As a coming Republican congressman in the years after World ^ar li who
built a political name as a Red hunter, Nixon was never close to the Democratic president.
Birmingham pediaJricianNDr. D. M Honeyman, a Detroit optometrist Francis McRae, a building principal ii the Madison Heights School District Drs. Walter J. Ambinder and Sandn Lyness from the Wayne State Universlt; Learning Abilities Laboratory and Mrs Julia Handy from the Birminghan School District.
DETROIT (UPI) - The organization mobilizing opposition to state aid to parochial schools has planned a porch-light campaign in Detroit next Wednesday to flash disgruntlement with parochiaid.
It also offering bumper stickers. PETITION DRIVE
Meanwhile Roman Catholics who
Mrs. Harriet Phillips, state chairman of Citizens to Advance Public Education (CAPE), Is asking householders to turn on their porch lights at 6:30 p.m. if they •believe we must support public, education and oppose diversion of public funds for nonpublic education.”
oppose parochiad are beginning a petitiorf drive through their own organization. Catholic for Public Education.	'	•
Mrs. Phillips said yesterday CAPE Is coordinating efforts of a dozen groups fighting parochiaid. Besides the porch-light campaign. CAPE is urging those opposing the concept to write to their legislators in Lansing to say so.
Working with CAPE are the Michigan Education AssoQiation. the Michigan Congress of ..Parents'and Teachers, the Michigan^ Asstj^iation of School Administratoci, the Metropolitan Detroit Couqcil of .Churches, the' Jewish Community Coilqcil, the American Civil Liberties Union and others.
‘TRAITOR’
'Any ties between the two came to an end in 1952 when Nixon, running as the GOP vice presidential candidate, charged the retiring president with coddling Communists in the government.
Truman-and other Democratic leaders were “traitors to the high principles in which many of the nation’s Democrats believe," Nixon charged.
U. P. Time Change Bill Is in U. S. House
Truman reacted angrily to what he considered an attack on his patriotism. He was quoted as calling Nixon an SOB
Snd once said he never wanted to li
Sise “it would just start a the awfulest thing a man
V^SHINGTON (AP) — Rep. Philip E. ^uppe, R-Mich., has introduced a bill to ' permit some communities on Michigan’s Upper Peninsula to remain in the central time zone and observe daylight saving timejwith bordering Wisconsin.
*If approved, the bill would make possible for state governments to exempt portions of their stqtes from the daylight time provisions of the Uniform Time Act.
cjan be called—a traitor. When I get started on that, I don’t want to swear, I The Michigan Federation of Teachers” want to punch someone.” has also come out against parochiaid. Their paths have seldom crossed since.
Under the act, portions of states may now observe different time zones, but each state must be uniform in its decision whether to observe daylight time.
300 Mothers Working for Millage
A task force of 300 mothers vitally concerned with their children’s educa-tiorhas been working behind the scenes to get out the vole in Wednesday’s millage election in the Waterford Township School District.
The mothers’ goal is to get at least 70 per cent of the parents to the polls.
Their campaign is being waged with telephone calls, and will continue ' into election day when voters will be asked to approve an additional 9 mills for two years for operating the schools.
The job is a formidable one since only 30 per cenl of the parents who are registered voters in the district cast ballots when the same millage proposal was defeated last December.
“We as parenU realize the complicated world we live in, we should-we face it every day.
“We fully realize what our children will face and we all agree 1,000 times over that only with the best education and our love will they be able to face up to the decisions that will have to be made,” she added.
APPEAL TO PARENTS
MOTHER OF FOUR
Depriving children of an education will not lessen the complications and demands of the world, but only deprive them of the knowledge and understanding to face it, Mrs. Hopp said.
She appealed to all parents to spend “jusf a few moments at the pdls iii insuring their children and mine of a continued good education.”
Mrs. Winston Hopp. a mother of four who helped initiate the campaign
AS Wlruuhuiu
NATIONAL WEATHER—Rain is expected tonight f/om New York through the Nfm England states while snow is exp^-ted over upstate New York and the eastern pak of the Great Lakes area. Showers are due over most of California, and parts of/Nevada Hod Arizona. It will be colder from Arkansas to the northeastern stales ” "d elsewhere.
.	_____ —- campa
two weeks ago, said she believes that if another 40 per cent of the parehts tL... out the millage proposal will pass.	, '
Mrs. Hopp, 3950 Pitt, appeared before the Waterford Township School Board last night to explain the program and to thank members “for what you have been doing for the future of our children”
“I love my children too much for them to depend on me for their education-let the fine teachers of Waterford do that,” she said.
School Board President Donald Porter hailed Mrs. Hopp and the other campaigning mothers. “If it weren’t for people like you it would be a much more difficult job,” he said.	.
Describing herself as a lypic^, middle-income mother, Mrs. Hopp said^
“W# can’t afford to do any less than our best,” said Porter, "because that is all we can pass on to the ngd generation.”

Council Mulls Problems of County Lakes
WIXOM — No ready ^answers were given to end an old and growing pi^oblem — the deterioration of Oakland County inland lakes — at a Huron River Watershed Council meeting last night.
* ★ ★
However, representatives from state agencies and Michigan State University said solutions are available, but it will be iQ> to the lake front property owners to assume greater interest and financial responsibility if they want, to preserve ‘the lakes.
Dr. Clifford Humphreys of the MSU Department of Natural Resources Development said there is no doubt that lake front property owners have been concerned over the increasing pollution and use of their lakes.
■k *	*
However, he believes the lakes’ problems of pollution, channeling by developers, weed growth, inadequate sewage facilities on lake front lots and over-usage should be attacked from a “team concept.”
COf^LEXITY OF PROBLEMS
The team concept which utilizes technicians representing several specializations such as hydrology, bacgeriology, land use, chemistry, soil teclmology, lake level control, etc., is needed, according to Humphreys because of the multiplicity and complexity of problems facing the lakes.
“Attacking just one problem such as reducing usage, dredging or pumping is not the answer for complete recovery of a lake. All of the problems have to be inventoried,” Humphreys noted. k k k
This, he said, would entail greater expense, but it is necessary if lakes are to be controlled effectively.”
Panel members were Jerome Fulton, executive secretary of, the Watershed Council; George Taack, Michigan Department of Natural Resources; Hans Haugard, vice diairman. Watershed Council; . James Smeets, Association of Michigan Lakes and Streams; and Humi^eys. They extensively debated the means. of, financing lake improvement projects.
SPECIAL ASSESSMENTS
The ways\u»d means of financing ranged from special-assessment of lake front property owners, mwe state aid and general taxation.
k k k
The panel agreed that new money, increased interest from both the public and private lake front owners, and more effective use of existing controls are the essentials in beginning a c<^ty-wide cleanup of lakes.
Brokerage Firm Reports Earnings
BIRMINGHAM - Goodbody & Co., securities brokerage firm, has reported record income from opeartions but a drop in earnings for 1968, according to Joseph Davis, manager of the firm’s Birmingham office, 115 Brown.
k	k	k
Income from operations reached $117.4 million, compared to $89.9 million in 1967. Net income was $4,096,000 in 1968 compared with $5,006,000 in 1967. k k	k
Goodbody’s total assets grew from $415.6 million to $551.3 million, while its capital funds jumped from ^5 to $56 million.
THE PONTIAC PRESS
FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1969	A—4
Supervisors Reevaluating Garbage Processing Pfan
Brandon Driver Doug Vrovesteen Checks His Bus
37 School Buses in Area in Defectivk-Brake Recall
Solid waste disposal, as outlined^ in a recent Ifrain Commission study, could cost county residents $60 million over the next 20 years.
Notification that the Southeast Oakland County Incinerator Authority does not intend to participate in the plan caused supervisors to take a closer look at alternate plans yesterday.
★ ★ ★
The $60 million would be paid by $0 Oakland County communities rather than 64 if the authority and its affected communities withdraw.
Harold I^elly of Jones and Henry Engineers of Toledo, who undertook the. study for the Drain Commission, said prices of processing garbage would go up 65 to 70 cents to a total of $12 a ton as a result of the authority’s withdrawal.
MOST FOR COLLECTION
He told supervisors that 80 per cent of the program’s cost would be devoted to collection; 20 'per cent to the cost of facilities.'
Several supervisors quizzed Kelly about the plan, some of them asking about the validity of estimated costs, some of them seeking means other than incineration to dispose of garbage.
★ ★ *
The possibility of using state land for an ash disposal site was raised by Lew Coy, R-Wixom.
A need to get approval of contracts with all local governments involved in the plan was seen by Kelly as being the main time-consuming factor of implementing the program.
Richard Ankerson of Detroit, a private
appeared before the board briefly to say tll^ his company woqld be willing to build a $20-million incinerator for the county and to operate it on a long-term basis. He said a full presentation will be made before the, public works committee of the board on April 27.
The study was also referred back to the public works committee for fqrther review.
Four area school districts have 26 school buses subject to possible brake failure included in the nationwide recall of 10,450 buses produced by Chevrolet Division and GMC Truck and Coach Division.
In addition there are five other potentially defective bpses owned by private area groups, mostly churches. k k k
All of the buses identified so far were produced by Chevrolet.^The number of GMC buSes has not yet been disclosed.
The affected school districts are Birmingham (8), Walled Lake (7), Brandon (5)~and Lapeer (6). The 1967-68 model buses are involved.
Other Chevrolet buses said to be in the
area belong to Faith Baptist Church (1), Waterford Township; Forest Hills Church (1), Farmin^on; First Baptist Church (1), Lake Orion; Stone Baptist Church (1), Pontiac; and Lapeer State Hospital (1), Lapeer.
★ * *
Announced Wednesday, the bus recall is to correct conditions for the possible malfunction involved in the hydraulic brake system.
Bruce Blomquist, assistant superintendent for finance of the Brandon school district, said if its five buses are recalled, the district would ask General Motors for replacements while the recalled buses are being serviced. He said the district has three spare buses
Farmington OKs New Pact for Garbage-Trash disposal
OES in Oxford Area Plans Chicken Dinner
OXFORD TOWNSHIP - A chicken dinner will be served Sunday from noon to 3 p.m. by members of the Thomas Chapter No. 428, Order of the Eastern Star.
k k k
The dinner, to take place at the Oakwood OES Hall, 5855 Oakwood, wiU be open to the public. Dmations will be $2 for adults, $1 for children under 12.
FARMINGTON	-	The	City Council
has approved terms of a new — and altered	— contract	for	garbage and
rubbish disposal.
Under the hew pact, which will take effect when the present contract expires in June, McCready Trucking Co. Inc. of Brighton, a private collection firm, will expand its pickups to include materials Is-
currently collected by the city only in special	monthly	pickups,	according to
City Manager John Dinan.
*	★	★
The present contract calls for McCready to make weekly pickups of household waste with a limit of six cans per residence, Dinan said, with grass clippings, dirt and similar rubbish handled by the city itself on a monthly basis.
With the new contract, Dinan said, the city will be out of the business, and the private firm will handle refuse without a residence limit.
COST OF CONTRACT
Cost of the new contract will be $37,700 for three years, including $^,000 for the added service.
“The new system will be more convenient,” Dinan commented. “People won’t have to remember the monthly pickup. Also, there^ won’t be the duplication of equipment. We anticipate
savings of about $2,000 in labor and about $1,500 in equipment use.”
★ ★ ★
Notices describing the new service will be distributed to residents in early April, he added.
In other recent business, council awarded contracts for the city’s spring tree-planting program, initiated this year.
BID ON TREE VARIETIES
Four nurseries bid on the four tree varieties — Norway maple, sugar maple, Imperior locust, and pine oak — offered in the program.
The Cole Nursery of Circleville, Ohio, had the low bids of $9.95 per tree on Norway maples and $12.75 per tree for imperial locusts. The amount of Norway maples available from the nursery was limited, however, with the result that Cottage Gardens of Lansing, the second low bidder, will supply 20 at $10.50 apiece.
Cottage Gardens was also low with a quote of $9.85 per tree for sugar maples, while Steinkopf Nursery, 2 08 15 Farmington, Farmington Township, was low bidder on pin oaks with a price of $15 per tree.
Planting will begin on the weekend of March 29-30, Dinan said, and will continue the next two weekends. The manager said he hopes to. notify customers in the areas where planting will be taking place each weekend.
that could be used in event of emergency.
James B. O’Neill, director of physical plant and transportation for the Birmingham school district, said he did not anticipate any problems as a result of the bus recall.
RECALL INDEFINITE
“We do not definitely know for sure if all eight buses will be recalled. And if they do, the recall will probably not be all at once.”
He noted the district does have extra buses which can be used in the event of breakdowns and or for the servicing of buses.
James Jessup, director of transportation for the Lapeer School District, said the district has sot been notified “in any way whatsoever” that it possess defective vehicles.
He said all buses operated by the district have passed the State Police inspection, and there has been no indication of any malfunction. Unless notification is received from GM, he said, the buses will not be withdrawn from service.
CHECKED THROUGHLY
Walled Lake Schools Supt. George Garber said this morning that the seven possibly defective buses owned by the distric^had been checked over throughly by mechanics and are back in elation.
“As soon as we read about the callback, we checked with our Chevrolet service agent,” Garber said. He said the buses had then been taken off the road temporarily for the inspection and added, “we intend to keep track and follow the situation very closely.”
ABM Hearing Monday at County Courthouse
The public will have an opportunity to state its views regarding President Nixon’s plans for an antiballistic missile system at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Oakland County Courthouse auditorium.
Supervisor Niles Olson, D - 0 r i o n Township, chairman of the County Board of Supei’visors planning, building and zoning conunittee announced yesterday that his committee will conduct the hearing.
Commissioner Tag Favored
County commissioners?
If the present County Board of Supervisors has anything to say about it, that’s the way they may be designated.
The board voted in favor of a resolution from its legislative committee yesterday urging the amendment of Senate Bill No. 12 to designate supervisors as the Board of County Commissioners.
Other legislation recommended by the board would allow the county to designate the Department of Public Works as its agent in carrying out a solid-waste disposal program.
ANTIPOLLUTION BILLS The board went on record as being in favor of present bills in the state House of Representatives to divide some $335 million of voted antipollution funds.
The bills would allow local participation in sewer programs at » per cent of cost, the remainer to come from the state and federal governments.
* ★ *
A minority report, regarding disbursement of $50 million intended for small communities, failed to win support of the board.
It was the contention of some city supervisors that most of the money is raised	in urban	areas
and that those	areas	will	not
benefit from the	grants.
Attorney Is Named as County Auditor
Service Building Construction Plans Hit Snag
District Asks 3-Mill Renewal
Holly School Election Monday
HOLLY - Voters in this school district* will be asked to approve a request for renewal of 3 mills for three years at the special school election Monday. .
Voters approved the 3-mill rate in June 1968 for only one year.
Russell Haddon, superlntef^ht of. schools. Is hoping for a turnout of at least half of the more than^,000 registered voters in the district. He is cautiously optimistic concerning the outcome of the election.
“We are only asking for a renewal but the revision (upward) in property valuation for many residents will mean a higher tax bill airway. The board is hoping that the higher valuations will not have a negative influence on the election,” Haddon said.
He added that if the miliage renewal request is defeated, the board of education is almost certain to come back to the voters, and within a very short period ottime.	"N
★
“The board, of course, wants to avert that " Situation since plans are currently being readied for a bond issue package for a junior high school building which probably will go to the voters bi June. We do not want to hit the people with two requests at once” th^4>erintendent explained.
k k k
Haddon said the miliage renewal request is a minimum need and is strictly for the day-to-day operations of the school district.
“We want to stress, however, that the
r	.
miliage renewal is a critical need and will definitely have to pass in order for the school district to function at full strength,” he said.
BUDGET GAP
The school head noted that increases in property tax valuations this year will bring in about $163,(KX) in new money for the school district.
A projected five per cent increase in student enrollment would mean that $213,000 in addition to the 3-mill renewal will be needed to run the district during the 1969-70 term, leaving a budget gap of $50,000.
*	k k k
Haddon said he expects the State Department of Education will make up the difference.
**
Plans for constniction of Oakland County’s service building hit a temporary snag yesterday. The building would house the Department of Public Works, the Drain Commission and the county’s department of facilities and operations.
The Board of Supervisors tabled a proposed resolution to transfer $314,000 out of its utilities fund. The money would have been used to start road construction and extension of utilities to the proposed service building site on Watkins Lake Road.
k k k
Plans for the building will be presented before the full board April 3 and action is expected to follow.
Contemplated at a cost of $2 million, the service building is the second major construction project considered by the boacd in the'past month. Supervisors in ,Fabruary approved leasing contracts vwhieh wjll permit construction of a $9-milllon law enforcement-jail complex.
OPPOSES TRANSFER
The funds for ffie service center were set aside from unappropriated surplus by the old board of supervisors.
Speaking against transfer of the utilities funds were Supervisors Lawrence Pernick, DGouthfleld, Lee Walker, D-Madison Heights, and William Richards, D-Rctyal Oak.
’ k k k
All three objected on the grounds that the county should have a priorities list for needed projects.
George Fulkerson, a Birmingham attorney, was unanimously named yesterday by the Board of Supervisors as a part-time member of the county board of auditors.
Fulkerson, a Democrat and former congressional candidate and prosecuting attorney, will be paid up to $7,500 a year. He will serve until Dec. 31,1971.
♦ ♦ ★
Other appointments made by the board yesterday were as follows:
Board of Health: Lew L. Coy, R-Wixom, five-year term.
Parks and Recreation: Frances Clark apd Velma Austin, three-year terms; ■wpervisor Frank Richardson, R-^terford Township, until January 1970.
Medical Examiner: Dr. Bernard Berman, three-year term.
APPOINTMENTS REAFFIRMED The board reaffirmed the following appointments:
Building Authority: Milo J. Cross, three-year term.
Board of Institutions: Maurice J. Croteau, Charles B. Edwards Jr. and Thomas H. O’Donoghue, 3-year terms.
Appointments made by Edwards, chairman of the board, and approved by the board were:
Planning (k>mmlssion: Edwin Adler and Victor Woods.
Huron River Watershed Council: Fred Houghten.
Personnel Appeals Board: James Mathews. Mrs. Mary Bawden was also named to the personnel appeals board, but declined the appointment. The vacancy was referred back to the committee on committees.
Ad hoc committee on roads: Supervisors Lee Walker, chairman, Frank Richardson, Carl O’Brien, Niles Olson, Mary Bawden, Mahlon Benson and Fred Houghten.
PER DIEM PAY OK’D ITie board also approved a $35 per diem pay for boarc^ and commissions, including the Oakland County Intermediate School Board. Funds for
r
that body, however, are to come from its own budget. Some $16,860 of additional County funds will be needed. Members were previously paid at $20 per diem.
Supervisor Lawrence Pernick, !>• Southfield, who had earlier introduced a resolution in the personal practices committee to limit supervisors’ salaries to $7,500 a year — despite service on other boards and commissions — did not get his resolution to the floor. The committee did not report it out.
k k k
Plans for a film on county operations moved a step forward as supervisors approved the use of private donations for such a purpose. Estimated cost of the film is $35,000. Donations will be sought by the local affairs committee.
Supervisor Carl O’Brien, D-Pontiac, introduced a resolution— referred to the legislative committee. — which would concur with state legislation regarding ^ conflict of interest.
RENTAL CONTRACT OK’D
It would prohibit supervisors and their business associates from accepting any fees* commissions, salaries, or other things of value from the county or from any of its departments or agencies during the supervisor’s term of office.
Meantime, supervisors had already approved 1^ the necessary two-thirds majority a rental contract for the Rochester District Court at 134 W. University, Rochester. Fred Houghten, R-Avon Township, is part owner of the building. Rent will be ^,900 a year.
★ ★ ★
The board noted the absence of vice chairman Alexander Perinoff, D • Southfield, reported to be improving after a heart attack. He is in Mount Sinai Hospital, Detroit.
A short memorial for Ralph A. Main, former supervisor,- who died Feb. 4 was conducted by the board.
Spaghetti Dinner Near
DAVISBURG - The Davisburg Jaycees will hold a spaghetti dinner tomorrow at the Davisburg Methodist Church. Serving will be from 5:30 to 8 p.rti.
Dinner Set Tomorrow
CLARKSTDN - ITie Joseph C. Bird Chapter 294, OES, will sponsor a spring smorgasbord from 5 to 7 p.m. tOmofrow at the Masonic Temple, 2 N. Main. T)ie public Is invited.
(
GEORGE FULKERSON
:''T.

48 West Huron Street
A. nifoi
FRIDAY. MARCH 21, 1969
Jouk W. FiTMUku
RkhaW U. FitMIMM Tr^ign aul nntiiM
Urge Approval of ABM
One of the stickiest issues that awaited President Nixon’s assumption of office is* that of the antibal-listic-missle (ABM	1
system originallyi^®^^"™^' proposed by Presi-| dent Johnson.
Congressional op-1 ponents of the sys-j tern Nixon advocates -(considerably reduced in extent from the Johnson concept) question* the effectiveness of it and its estimated cost of one to two billions annually.
if it contributes to the security of, the Nation.
★ ★
NIXON
Proponents, however, see ABM as an essential diplomatic bargaining weapon, apart from its protection against baliistic » missiles, for the Nixon Administration in its negotiations with the Soviet Union and Red China looking toward establishment of a worldwide state of nonaggression on the part of the Communists. As for the cost, they argue that, with a national budget of $186 billion, the cost of .\BM is relatively insignificant
The Nixon plan, however, has the merit of flexibility. There is room for modification should the U.S.-Communist diplomatic climate reflect meaningful progress toward amity.
It has been abundantly proved that (he only international influence the Communists respect is that of ^ilitary might—or the ability to combat it—despite their hypocritical protestations to the contrary.
Under present circumstances and until the day when communism sin-cerdy renounces world domination, the welfare of America rests on her ability to deal from strength in its relations with aggressor nations.
We feel that implementation of ABM would go far to beef up President Nixon’s stance in his diplomatic maneuvering with such powers, and that Capitol Hill should approve the protective system he seeks.
★ ★ ★
Voice of the People.^
Wateiiord School Vote Discussed by Readers
I don’t like a tax increase any more than anyone else, but I want my child to have a good education. I hope the Waterford voters realize what the children will be deprived of if the millage isn’t approved.
DR. ROBERT SCRIVENS
Economists tell us the ^t of Uving increased 4.7 per cent in 1968. Washington increased our taxes 10 per c«>t, the State has a new 2.6 per cent tax on our incmne, Waterford Township increased nw taxes 66 per cent for 1968 and I read in The Press that it whl be increased another 24 per coit for . 1970. With the 84 per cent announced increase and Superintendent Tatroe’s proposal, the Waterford tax collector would take over one-half of my Social Security for each year. What can rethed people but seU their retirement and live
in trailers to te able to move where the least greedy politicians nrie?
M. A. MATEN
'May Be Some Rough Weather Ahead, Mote!'
Waterford residents must realize that ours is a young and growing community. Anyone living here must know it is only a matter of time for sewer hookup, paving, etc. These thing* have nothing to do with the education of our children-no more than the 24 per cent equalization of valuation does. Let’s put our children’s education first, where it belongs.
MRS. CHARLES PAGE MRS. ELDEN HICKS DONELSON BRANCH CONCERNED PARENTS OF WATERFORD
Our sewer cost $1,180 across the front of our house and over $1,000 to bring lt.up to our house. will cost more whoi we get our water and sewer bill. Vot* “no” on March 26.
we get our water and sewer bill. Vote
MRS. E, LaBARGE
David Lawrence Says:
Indications are that, despite some little opposition there and also on the part of the public, the Congress will give the President his way.
Nixon Not Weakening on War
Levin Opposes Parochiaid
As a firm opponent to State aid to nonpublic schools (parochiaid) we commend State Sen. Sander Levin, D-Berkley, on the g public stand he re-1 cently took against I the issue.
The senator ad-1 vanced two main" reasons for his posi-i tion;
vision that calls for separation of church and state.
• The $40-mlllion esti-	LEVIN
mated cost of parochiaid would have to either come out of State aid to public schools, or the amount be raised by some form of additional taxation.
The first course would deal the public school system an economic blow it could scarcely withstand, and the second would inflict a burden on taxpayers of similar gravity.
• The concept is unconstitutional, in conflict with the pro-
The specifics were spelled out in 1961 in an opinion handed down by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black, and were given added weight by the late President John F. Kennedy when he said, “I believe in an America where the separation of church and state js absolute ... weye no church school is granted any public funds or political preference.” (92 per cent of nonpublic schools are church-oriented.)
★ ★ ★
Parochiaid proponents are fighting hard for their cause. Parochiaid bills were introduced in the State Legislature last year but failed of passage. Another bill has beentiintroduced in the new Legislature and is now before the House.
Again we say that the principles of parochiaid are ethically wrong, economically disastrous and a dire threat to the State’s public school system.
WASHINGTON-Out of the
33.000	American troops who have died since the be^nning of the Vietnam War, more than 10,000 were killed since the “peace” talks started at Paris last May, and at least!
65.000	were! wounded dur-| ing the same 10 months. LAWRENCE
Communist casualties have been heavy, too. But human life is wasted without much concern by the North Vietnamese, who are confident that the United States will withdraw from the . contest and leave the whole region open to domination by the Communists.
But what could this mean to the future of American foreign policy around the globe? Thus far, President Nixon has shown no signs of weakening from the position, previously taken by the United States.
Last Friday he told a televised news conference that, in view of the current offensive by the N o r t h ^ Vietnamese, “there is rto' prospect for a reduction of American forces in the foreseeable future.”
Air Force which can bomb all enemy bases and transportation routes, and a Navy which can blockade the port of Haiphong and prevent delivery by sea of shipments to our adversaries.
the situation in Vietnam presents d challenge which, if not dealt with realistically, could lead to a miscalculation of America’s resoluteness and cause the Communists to broaden their aggressive campaigns and inevitably bring on a third world war.
Mr. Nixon has promised an “appropriate response” to the offensives	by	the	North
Vietnamese, especially since these seem to indicate clearly there is	no	intention to
reciprocate	in	any	way for
America’s bombing halt which began last autumn.
If the President lets^ the situation drift along while American casualties steadily increase	and	the	North
Vietnamese get more and more help from the Russians and the Red Chinese, the risks to the United States wtil be multiplied.	\
BETTER JOIN?
On every continent there will be a feeling, particularly among the weak«r governments, that the United States will not be of much help to them and they had better join the Communist side.
Mr. Nixon has been hopeful that the Soviets would enter a new era of conciliation and that many world problems could be resolved by diplomatic talks and perhaps summit conferences.
But will the President be negotiating from a position of strength or weakness?
What happens in Vietnam can be a turning point in world history.	^
(Ctpyrlghf «« Publlilwr».H*l
Waterford Township proposes a 2S per cent increase in property taxes; we are paying on a sewage debt; it is rumored surtax will continue; we pay Federal, State, County and City taxes. Blue CroM, haircuts and gasoline costs increased. Now the Township wants to pass a nine-mill vote in school taxes. At Oris rate I can’t feed, clothe or groom my boy to go to school. I can vote against the school tax evan if I have no choice on the others.
MRS. D. TIKKA
Work of Press Photographer Prompts Letter
Pontiac Press Photographer Unternahrer did it again. Last week there was a fdcture of a most fantastic, fascinating, Pioasso-like load of rubbish imaginable. And going along through Bloomfield Hills yet. Next day, a beautiful study of a woman and child, portraying love, and somewhat after the manner of Renior. It is rightly said that a pictulre can say more than a thousand words.
A FAN
Applauds Pontia^ Central Basketball Team
The Pontiac Central basketball team is to be applauded for a tremendous season. Special congratulations go to Coach Ralph Grubb on his first season as head coach.
MOLLY MCINTYRE PONTIAC CENTRAL SENIOR
More Opinions on Waterford Township Tax
For many years my Waterford Township taxes have been increasing at an average rate of 17 per cent per year. Projecting this into the future, anyone living in or moving into Waterford Township and owning or buying a $16,000 home can look forward to paying approximately $127,500 in taxes in the next 25 years: How many times have wages been cut in the last year due to taxes?
WILLIAM H. WALTERS '
Bab Cansidine Says:
Reader Tells Incidents of Undelivered Mail
Time Not of the Essence at Peace Talks in Paris
Parochiaid should be defeated.
Reviewing Other Editorial Pages
reacB nopes uim tagonists, rappi The Son Diego Union
It is the misfortune of the conflict in the Middle East that the head of the Egyptian armed forces was killed in battle even as there was some faint preliminary progress at the United Nations over four-power discussions of the conflict.
Militarily, it is doubtful that the death of Gen. Abdel Moneim Riad in a Suez Canal Egyptian-Israeli duel will have much effect on the perpetual low level war in the Middle East.
g 0 n I s t s, rapprochement between Russia that cham-piona Arabs and the Unite^, States Vhlch supports Israel, ratification by the Security Council and the conciliation of President Charles de Gaulle in France.
Not even a madman would believe peace possible at this time.
match our venturing to our expanding technology.
As the initial lunar effort
draws to a close, should we srfil ■
embark on a Vigorous program of solar system exploration? Should we strive to reach our sister planets, from Venus aiid Mdi-s to Jupiter, and discover whether life exists on them as well as on Earth?
S. VIETS LACKING
This comment is evidently based on statements b y American military commanders, just published, that the South Vietnamese would hardly be able to take over the responsibility of their own defense for at least two years.
Likewise, Defense Secretary Laird says his military chiefs are convinced that U.S. troops cannot be withdrawn until Hanoi pulls all its forces out of South Vietnam.
PARIS—An American representative at the Vietnam truce talks always arrives early at the scene, the Hotel Majestic -r- which isn’t very.
The first thing he does
to
Space Exploration
The Hillsdale Daily News
Decisions about the nature and extent of postiunar space The Soviet Union has spent wptoratlon must soon be made, millions rearming the Arab The	course over the
nations after the six-day war decade or so wUl fall to the in June 1967. But the Arab na- Present Congress and the Nixon lions still are disorganized, •dmmmtration. poorly trained, economically *“le there has been con-unable to afford large scale s«lerable talk of deU^g the hostilities and afraid o f	“me of the prob-
tackling the Israelis again. lenis here on earth are re-1. solved. It would place human Israel, on the other hand IS	teclmological ad-
strong, confidmt and w,llmgj*^^„, to use its imlitary power to	*	*	*
defend its position.
Nor is it likely that the new emotions that have been
fHie otto II tot, ,lvon to spaiits m promt.	prwnWe that it is man’s destiny
*	*	*	to probe the universe in which
Now, as before, peace in the this Utile planet swims, we Middle East depends upon might as w^ get started
Arthur C. Clarke, noted scientist, believes that scientific opinion has swung to the view that life not only may but probably does , exist on other planets. This very likely is true even of Jupiter, once thought to be biologically sterile but now described in Sagan and Leonard’s "Planets” as having an environment possibly ‘‘more favorable to life than any other planet, not excepting t h e earth.” •
Clarke quotes Tslolokovsky’s words of more than half a century ago, “The earth is the cradle of the mind — but you cannot live in the cradle forever.”
But if the Hanoi government did order Us forces to go back north as a device, this doesn’t mean that the aggression could not be immediately resumed as soon as American troops have returned home.
What is being left unanswered is the larger quistion of how to deal with Russian participation in the Vietnam war through financial aid and the supply of financial aid and the> supply of arms. Under the circumstances, the natural course tot President Nixon to pursue is to find out whether the Russians intmd t o maintain their hostile role toward this country.
RENEW BOMBING?
bathroom. Hei is a student of history and remembers that' the Duke of CON8IDINE’ Wellington once practiced this tactic whenever he felt the oncoming conference would be long, tedious and probably distressing.
Ow *swiWe< Fnu ii Mlitorf ■ ■ilint»«lr	w* iw ivpiU.
crtM W Iml MOT pMW I.
c Fphs U	by
Tliis country has a powerful
Verbal Orchids
Mrs. Walter K White of 2716 Crooks; 84th birthday.
Mrs. Enma Wertman of 147 E. Howard; 84th birthday.
Mrs. Lena Eckelbar of 1699 Giddings; 86th birthday.
He is at his chair, standing, when the North Vietnamese and the Vietcong (National Liberation Front) people come in. He bows, ’They bow. Then he, along with the representatives of the Saigon goveni-ment,.who have not bowed to the enemy, sits down at the big, round greeiHilothed table.
There is a clockwise arrangement for speaking. The representative to the left of the representative who had made the final formal remarks on Thursday of the previous week then shuffles his papers and begins to talk. NO CHALLENGES
As a rule he talks, uninterrupted, for an hour and a half. Almost all of what he says is repetition. He said it, essentially, the previous Tlnirsday.
There are no challenging interruptions.
When the unmolested speaker has finished, the translators take over. There is no simultaneous interpretation, as in the United Natiozu. The whole dreary business, if
it is a speech by the North Vietnamese or the NLP fellow, is then fully repeated in French and English.
Ah, now (the men under attack in Vietnam will be pleased to learn) the translation is completed. All rise. It is time for the 20-minute toilet and sandwich break.
‘PLENTY OF TIME’
After 20 minutes (there is la meme chose-whlch then has to be "translated” into North Vietnamese and, if necessary, into South Vietnamese, which necessitates a drawl.
“They have all the time in the world,” this short, fat American said the other day, speaking of thp other side of the bleak peace table.
“They know we’re not going to clobber them, whatever they do. They know, or at least they feel, that time is on their side; that the American people will get fed up with the casualty figures —tiiey never p u b 1 i a h their own much heavier losses—and there will be a big mwe in the U. S."to get out of there. A president rises or falls on how he follows public opinion.
‘‘So we try to match them. It isn’t easy to be as relaxed as they are at the table. Tb outwait them is one thing; to satisfy demands from home that we get cracking here hr Paris is something else.”
* *
The American was asked how it was like, cyebaU to eyeball.
“These people have come to Paris with the attituda that they have won the war In Vietnam. Nothing can shake them of that opinion. ‘Ibay have come to dlctato fiie truce
We have lived at the same residence for 20 years. In October we did not receive an announcement from Pickford, Michigan. In January we failed to receive car Innironre from Howell, Michigan and an announcement from Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Others received theirs through Utica, Rochester and Pontiac post offices. Some things come a week late, but these three never have showed up. AU had correct addresses and zip codes. Servicemen are not the only ones not receiving their mail. How much else has gone astray, I don’t know.
MRS. H. LOCKHART 8848 ORRICK, UNION LAKE
Incident Raisea Question About Justice
I witnessed a divorce case in Judge Beer’s court recently and 1 can’t believe what happened. The attorney from the Friend of the Court Offioe read opening statements to the judge that his office had evidence of cWd neglect and other charges against the mother that would prove her unfit. After a few sessions in closed chambers between attorneys and the judge the divorce was granted and the children left in custody of the mother. And they call that the hall of Justice?
MRS. HAZEL GREENE
^Drivers Pay No Heed to Sound of Si^rens’
Why is it when people hear a siren they just keep on their merry way instead of slowing down, pulling over or stopping to show some courtesy?
JANET MOYSES
Question and Answer Are teachers at Waterford Township High and Mott Hi| getting paid a full day’s pay for only working nbont five honi that they are in the baOdlng? I naderitaad the entire ten<d ing and office staff chaages at noon from the Township ph sonnel to Mott personnel. ^
J. P.
REPLY
Mr. Alexander at the Waterford Board office tells us the teachers are working the same number of hours they always have: Waterford Township teachers work from J:15 to 2:30; Mott from 0:15 to 5:15.
Question and Answer I please toU me where to boy a thne<dinMaifonal
GEORGE B. LAUINGER 160 DRESDEN
REPLV
There may be others in the area, but of the stores we ‘checked at random, only Martins’ Games, 263 Pierce, Birmingham, carries them. They’re on order and shotdd be in in about a week. If we “It couM take a long time.” hear of other dealers, we’ll let you know.
X.
tAkUZ
.A
r ^
ANDREA RAE LINQLE
ADAM PENNY
MATTHEW WEBER
WENDY NICKSON
TERESA FRAZIER ^
ALAN GIBSON
'Between-Season' Parties Shorten the Wait for Spring
By SHIRLEY GRAY
There’s many a slip between spring on the calendar and real spring weather. To help while away the wait for budding trees and sweater weather, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Torgerson are having a “looking forward to spring’’ party tomorrow evening.
Some of those gathering at the couple’s Bloomfield Village home are just back in town, now that the worst is over; for example. Dr. and Mrs. John Wiant, who went on a lengthy DAC cruise.
Robert Nelson, who’ll be there with Mrs. Nelson, is bajk from skiing at Vail, Col. with his .. daughter.
The Paul Witzels who wintered some In South America, will be there.
Completing the guest list are and Mrs. David Helm, the
Giving Shower Has Hostess In a State ,
By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The EmUy Post Institvte
The following letter has been chosen as the prize-winning one for this week.
A copy of Emily Post’s Etiquette has been sent to the writer.
♦ ★ '
Dear Mrs. Post: When^ my husband’s' cousin’s engagement was announced several months ago, I asked if 1 might have a shower for her, suggesting eight to ten people plus usl She was thrilled and asked if it could be a “kitchen shower’’ as the attendants were going to have a “personal’’ shower for her and she thought the church would have a “miscellaneous shower.’’
A couple of weeks ago she handed me a list of names and addresses which • totaled 25. I explained to her that we didn’t have the finances, space, or time to prepare for so many. 1 thought she had understood, when she came last evening with an additional list of 15 names.
I told her I was unsure and repeated our previous statement. Today she was back telling me what decorations she wanted so she could use them at her rece))tion, too.	*
What shall I do? Call off the whole thing? We simply haven’t the finances . to take care of so many people and we / certainly can’t afford the decorations she has In mind. I want to be a good cousin and wish her well, but am rather up a tree. Can you iielp me down, and keep peace. — “Bridal Fatigue”
★ w *
Dear “Bridal Fatigue”: My first advice is to call the whole thing off. The , bride had no business asking you to do more than you felt you could. If you go along with her wishes, you will end, up feeling imposed-upon and resentful, and if you don’t, she will feisl you haven’t , ^ne all you could.
My second suggestion is, in order to “keep peace,” to propose to someone else in the family, or a close friend who might be in a better position to do it than you, that they give the shower instead!;.
You ,^mtght also tell the bride you would like to entotain her and her, fiance at a small luncheon or dinner at some time before the wedding, for'which you could make the plans without consulting her. It need not be a shower, but merely a celebration, with family only,
, or far^Iy and closest friends.
A final alternative would be to ask another relative or friend to give the shower with you, thereby cutting dawn on costs and dividing the work.
.:'v.
M. A. Mitchells, the Clyde Rechts, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sobel and the Lyman Wetherbys.
ORIENTAL ATMOSPHERE
Mr. and Mrs. William K. Downey will set an East Indian mood at their Birmingham home tomorrow night with incense and curried dishes.
Joining them will be Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hart, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Swanson, Dr. Richard Reilly, Mrs. Weber Sherer, Dr. and Mrs.' John Ingold and new residents, formerly of England, Mri and Mrs. William Krafter.
The Michigan Embroiderers Guild met yesterday at the Glengarry Road home of Mrs.-Kenneth T. Carlson, president.
Interior decorator Mrs. Charles DiGioia, of Birmingham, spoke informally on the use of textiles and color.
Most of the guild’s 3 0 members live in the Birmingham-BIoomfield area.
Mrs. John Abbott of Bloomfield ''Hills is secretary.
Women Demand Abortion Right
By MARY ELLEN MYflENE
OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) — Women demanding passage of a law to legalize abortion are organizing a campaign of pressure on the state legislature.
“We’re rounding up everyone we can to demonstfate, to protest, to do whatever they can to convince legislators that people are really concerned,” said Marilyn Ward, spokesman for a study group backing an abortion bill.
Bills that would allow women to have abortions at accredited hospitals under counsel from doctors have been stalled in House and Senate committees since the beginning of the legislative session . Jan. 13
Art Classes Geared for Preschoolers
Since the Pontiac Creative Arts Center opened nearly a year ago, everything has been new. One of the newest ideas just being put into practice is a 10-week series of art experiences for preschool children.
Presented in cooperation with Oakland Community College, these two-hour sessions in Operation Artstart are designed to develop ear training and eye-hand coordination.
There, are still a few places open in the course which meets Tuesday and Thursday mornings through May 29.
Among the classes scheduled are creative drama, drawing, rhythm band, oral composition, painting and songs. Others are puppetry, children’s crafts and creative dance.	’
Instructors are Joyce Cotter, Barbara Jones and Marge Gibson. A nurse-aide is ' on duty at all sessions. Midmorning snacks are provided.
Anyone wishing further information about the program may contact the PCAC or the Community Services office of Oakland Conununity College on Opdyke Road. -
An attentive group of preschoolers surround Mrs. John H. Gibson of Silverside Drive, as she conducts one Of the first sessions of Operation Artstart at Pontiac Creative Arts Center. Creative
PsnUic Prtn Photoi by Edward R. NobM
activities in drama, music, dance, arts ^^nd crafts are scheduled for the 10-week series. Registration is still open.
Arrange to See Friend D.unng Day, Says Abby
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN
DEAR ABBY: About three years ago my husband and I began a friendship i with another young couple. Perhaps wen saw too much of them, but talk of wifeswapping developed. Against m y husband’s strong veto, the other man and I began an affair Which lasted almost a year.
About seven months ago, guilt-ridden and miserable, I told my husband al). He was wonderfully forgiving, but never wanted to see this other couple again. The other man’s wife knew about us and she blamed herself, for she had pushed the idea in the first place.
* R ★
This woman and I were almost like sisters, and now the friendship has ended. We are all in our late twenties, and we did have a wonderful four-sided friendship. I can’t seem to warm up to any other couple. It is definitely all over between this other map and me, but my husband says no, he doesn’t want to see them again. Is he being fair? I think we’ve ail grown up a lot.
Am I wrong in wanting to resume opr friendship ? I give you my word, I am
not iijterested in this man, but I do love his wife. Signed,
“BLUE GRASS”
DEAR “BLUE GRASS”: Better find another couple. I can’t blame your husband. Ifijyou “love” his wife, see her in the daytime.
★ ★
DEAR ABBY: My husband rushed me to the hospital to have my baby as I started to get pains in the lower part of my back and since I never had a baby before I was told that is where the pains start.
Well, after I got to the hospital the pains tapered off and nothing happened so they finally sent me home saying it was “false labor.”
I got a bill for $43.50. Since it was false labor and nothing happened, do I have to pay this bill? •
NO BABY
DEAR NO:	Yes- (And not in
confederate money, either.)
DEAR ABBY: How does this grab you? The other day while visiting my mother-in-law, I noticed, two hand-painted plates that were ‘mine. I was shocked when I saw them and asked, “When did I give those plates to you?”
She replied, “You didn’t. I saw them down in your cellar during those three weeks you and Tom were separated. I figured they’d just get broken; so I took them.”
What would YOU have done?	,
MAD REDHEAD
DEAR MAD: I’d have told her-that now that the danger of “breakage” had subsided. I’d like to have my plates.
■k Hr '	*
For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” s6nd $1.00 to Abby in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056.
High Fashion Business
Profits Slim as Models
Pontiac Prait Phola by Roll WInlor
By BEATA LEVY
PARIS — Any husband feeling outraged at getting a $900 bill for his wife’s dress from a Paris fashion house might like to consider this surprising fact: The profit margin for the fashion house concerned is likely to be only around $40.
,* * ★
Of the selling price, rather more than 40 per cent goes to the state. The amount remaining is almost completely taken up with wages, materials and 'overhead expenses.
The 20 leading fashion houses in Paris create 100-250 models twice yearly. Taking the top end of this estimate, the total potential model output of the' whole industry could be about 10,000 models a year. Assuming an ^average $40 profit margin per model, JM total potential profits for the industry thus cothes to a little under $1 million a year — shared among 20 houses.
REMAINS IMMUNE
The industry remains immune to modernization and automation since 95 per cent of each garment is hand made. Production costs rise steadily, while demand remains at a relatively low and static level.
The haute couture world, thus might seem dodfmed. In , fact, however, the
Losing just isn’t in the cdrds for this pair of Pontiac Jaycettes.
They seem to have a few tricks of their own for a successful card	, , ,	, mu .
^rtv,md fw,kim fkowMonday. From Uft are Mn Mike Cirka of	7'^
Walnut Street^ Pontuw Township and Mrs. Jack Nicholas of Preston measured against the purchases made Street. The event, open to the public, takes place in First Federal by a limited number of rich women but Savings of Oaklarid-aUZiSO p.m. Fashidns will-also be-shown.	rather as an overall publicity budget
designed to stimulate numerous other activities.
These are now well diversified. The sale of fashion accessories, mass produced, and mass marketed generally by independent manufacturers in the couturier’s name, benefits from the designer’s reputation gained in the secluded haute couture world.
EARN ROYALTIES
Licensing agreements are concluded with manufacturers all over the world; merchandise such as shoes, ties, stockings, glasses, perfumery, lingerie and scarves, earn royalties between 7 and 12 per cent which have become an important source of income to each fashion house.
* ★ ★
Perfumery is another all-important and highly profitable sideline. Most fashion houses sell perfume and toilet water 'under their name, a separate company having often been created for the purpose.	'	•
Many houses also cater to menswear. This activity seems to be fast-growing throughout the industry and holds out the promise of a golden future.
Thus the show goes on. The publicity value of the collections said' to be created for jhe happy few; has become immense ih the conquest of new markets for a large variety of fashion-house designed articles.
’Their original function has changed -r but the one constant factor no hous6 can do without, is its designer’s talent.
Age<J Drivers Not Necessarily Less Capable
NEW YORK (UPI) - Young Hotfoot this day gets stuck behind a white-haired driver on a turnpike.
Passing, gas pedal to the floor, he snarls :
“All you old people ought to turn io your licenses.”
He’s wrong.
An “aged drivers” study by the research department of the National Safety Council ('NSC) shows that age, taken by itself, is not a good indicator of driving ability.
*	R
Dr. Thomas W. Planek, head of the research unit, found health may be a more reliable single indicator of driving ability than chronological age.
The study involved 3,500 drivers beyond age 55 and an analysis of 200,000 accidents by drivers of all ages.
Dr. Planek said safety proposals thdt would rule older drivers off the road are geared to some specific age “largely because this information is easy to get and usually beyond dispute.”
SOME RESTRICTIONS
'True. Older persons are more likely to’ have a physical condition that limits driving. But four out of every 10 persons under 45 have at least one chronic condition and one in 10 of these has some restriction on activity.
Planek and his colleagues recommended that a test of physical function be made when a person first gets a license — and again at later periodic re-examination time.
R R R
The council reported that 35 states require a re-examination for renewal either periodically after the first license or when a person has reached a specific age, ranging from 57 to 75.
SAFE’TY -nrs
Authors of the study, financed by Colonial Penn Insurance group, passed on these safety tips for older drivers:
•	Have a regular eye examination. You may not realize that your sight has become too poor t6 read road signs rapidly.
•	Restrict driving if sick. Both chronic and acute conditions may greatly alter ability to drive.
•	Don’t drive during snow or rain storms.
•	Avoid rush hour and night driving as much as possible.
•	Use familiar streets and roads. Statistics show it is hazardous for the older' person generally to drive on unfamiliar types of roads — say expressway versus town streets.
Date Is March 31
The annual cup and saucer card party of Pontiac chapter 228, Order irf the Eastern Star, will take place March 31 in First Federal Savings of Opkland, instead of next Monday, as reported in .'Thursday’s paper.
/.
■‘f
____the rONTIACJPRESS, riUPAY. MARCH 21. 1969
The following are top prices oovei^g i^les of locally grown prodiice by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday.
Fairly Active Market, Mixed
Produce
FRUITS Apple Cider, 4-o«t. case Apples, Deilciou*. Golden, bu. Apples, Golden, C.A., bu. Apples, Delicious, Rod. bu. ... Apples, Red, C.A., bu.
Apples, Jonathan, bu. .
Apples, Jonathan, C.A., bu.
Apples MUntosh, bu...........
Apples, McIntosh, CJS., bu. .. Apples, Northeep Spy. bu. , Apples, Sleele Red,) C.A., bu.
VEGRTARLBi
Beets. Topped, bu............
Cabbage, Curly, bu. .........
I, Standard Varloty, bu. .
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market was mixed <arly t^i^ay. Trading was fairly active near the opening.
The Dow Jones industrial average at 10:30 a m. was off slightly by 0.19 at 919.94. The Dow gained 8.02 points Thursday.
R *	★
Gains outnumbered losses by a bit fewer than 200 issues on j the New York Stock Exchange. Opening blocks included:
American Telephone & Telegraph, off % at 52>/4 on 12,600 shares; General Motors, unchanged at 80 on 6,500 shares; Sanders Associates, unchanged at 40% on 15,000 shares; Southwestern Public Service, off % at 12 on 20,000 shares; and Jones & Laughlin, unchanged at 30% on 20,000 shares.
Steels were mixed. Motors generally were lower. Aircrafts were higher.
Opening prices included
Middle South Utilities, off % at 21 on 72,300 shares; Great Western Financial, up % at 27 on 42,100 shares; Lionel Corp., up % at 14% on 30,000 shares; Capital Cities Broadcasting, off 1% at 62% on 24,300 shares; and RCA, unchanged at 42% on 20,500 shares.	T
The Associated Press average of 60 stocks Thursday rose 1.7 to 335.7.
Prices were mixed on American Stock Exchange.
Parsnips. Ctllo-Pak, d
The New York Stock Exchange
four Promoted at GM Truck
Area Men Reassigned in Service Department
Four Pontiac area men have been promoted in organizational changes in the truck product Service department, of GMC Truck and Coach Division, L. E, Goodwin, truck service onager, said today.	^
G. M. Vallad, 1870 War jBonnet, White Lake Township, the was promoted to the new position of product service • manager.
He is a graduate of General, Motors Institute and was responsible for the chassis proiduct service section in the truck product service activity for the past several years.
Prime Rate Hurts^ but It's Nof itlegal
NEW YORK - At suburban real estate offices and in corporate offices, they call the prime rate , the crime rate, and sometimes it seems a more accurate j description.
The prime] rate today is 7.5 per cent, meaning that is the lowest borrowing rate for a| _ bank’s best cus- CUNNIFT tomers for the-very safest pur-All other rates — for homes, automobiles, travel, boats —rise upward from this
LARGE
J. B. Large of 10478 Tamryin, Holly, was promoted to supervisor of the service training, promotion and publications section. He joined GMC in 1963 and served school instructor and a r service and parts manager in the Cincinnati zone.
Large succeeds William Hamilton, who has been tippointed supervisor of transportation.
Hamilton of 2327 Winkleman Waterford Township, has had extensive experienci truck service department during the past 12 years.
GEATER HAMILTON . Geater of 2470 W. Walton, Waterford Township, was,promoted to supervisor — fleet service. He joins the home f f i e e organization following several years as Memphis zone service and parts manager. All will report to Goodwin.
VALLAD
Rather than being a crime, however, the situation Americans see evolving each day is a crunch, a shortdge of lendable money, a shortage planned by the Federal Reserve and designed to force Americans to spend less.
This is the much-heralded fight against inflation. By making money hard to come by, it is hoped that Americans will be prevented from bidding up the price of goods. But it is far from painless, as the Nixon people had,hoped.
WITHIN THE LAW A crime? Some people think so, but in a strictly legal sense ail official rates today are with-the ‘law. But only because usury ceilings were lifted, some-‘times hastily, by state goverm ments.
With some borrowing costs now at their highest since the Civil War, many companies have withdrawn from the market. That’s one effect of the anti-inflation plan. But others, for various reasons, must continue to borrow.
★ ★
Eventually, before deflation begins, this could mean even higher prices for homeowners and others who use the goods and Services of such firms. More important, even, is the effect on potential home buyers. High rates mean at least two| lings; First, mortgage rbtes are likely to continue rising. Second, no matter what rate a party is Willing to pay for a mortgage, there’s a real chance he won’t obtain it, especially around cities.
UNLIKELY PROSPECT Her^s one reson why. If the „Here’s one reason why. If the uKlikely that a bank will wish to ' e a 1 in government - backed mortgages—federal
veterans—wh^ the ceiling on such loan^^ilw is 7.5 per cent.
Because of such rates, because of a shortaige of lendable funds and because inflation has pushed $30,000 homes into the $40,000 category in less than two years, an enormous problem now exists in the housing market
Painful pressures are thus being exerted bn inillions of Americans in the vast and growing ' middle class, people whose ambition—and sometimes only way of living gi^ace-fully—is to be a hwneowner.'* -
It is a bit different with the large Corporations, some of which are ignoring the high rates and continuing to borrow, partly on the assumption that what is high now may be higher tomorrow.
SPENDING TO RISE
A Commerce Department survey indicates that corporate spending for new plants and equipment may rise 14 per cent over last year, or double the es-imates of just a few months ago. T
With such an inflationary threat before it, the Federal Reserve might be inclined to tighten the spigot even more, reducing to a trickle the flow of funds to: banks in an attempt to parch the economy back to its senses.
Even aside from inflation, there are other factors forcing up the demand for money. The population explosion, for example. Some forecasters estimate that by the year 2000 the world population might double to six billion.
Consider what this would mean. For every additional dollar of annual output, between $3 ana $4 of investment are required for production facilities and services. The total rises into the trillions of dollars.
lation in 30 years. This will mean an enormous demhnd for capital for homes, schools, reads and water and sewer systems.
‘State and local governments, whose debts now amount to about $115 billion, versus $75 billion five years ago, are expected to require some $250 billion from capital markets between now and 1975.”
It’s tough enough to get money at any time, but with an anti-inflation battle going on, it soon may be impressible for some ^ople and businesses and governments. Many of them will think it a crime.
News in Brief
Construction materials valued at $980 were reported stolen from a new home site at Newman and Indianwood in Orion Township yesterday, according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies.
Sporting equipment valued at $300 was stolen yesterday from a warehouse at 515 Sportsmen, Rose Township, according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies. Taken were a n outboard motor, water skis and other items, deputies said.
Rummage Sale, Jimmy Day Amvet Auxiliary, 206 Auburn Ave., March 22, 8 a.m. —Adv.
Rummage Sale, St. Paul Church, 165 E. Square Lake Rd-, Bloomfield Hills, Sat., March 22, 7 a.m. to 1 p.m.	—Adv.
Rummage Sale, St. Vincent de Paul Hall, 9:00-2:00 Saturday, March 22.	—Adv.
Fish Supper, Baldwin United Methodist® Church, Friday 4-7 p.m.	—Adv.
BOND averages
BOND AVI
Change
----1 Thurs. *3.3
Prev. Day* *3.3
68-«9*8“gh
IN PERSPECTIVE Goodbody & Co., a member of the N.Y. Stock Exchange, recently put this demand for capital in perspective with this comment:
‘In the United States...there will be another 100 milion popu- LdST
School Board Chief Spurns AnotherTerm
Mutual Stock Quotations
Indust	S.1B	S.67
Incom	7.81	B.S4
Fst InGth 9.9910.95 Fst InStk 9.6210.54 Fst Multi 11.1311.3d Fst Nat	8.41	9.19
Flat Cap	9.70	..
Flat Fd	1B.00
Fla Gth -------------
8.94 9.77 S.BO 6.33
Fnd L.
Foursq 13.0414
Incom	2.55 2.79
Fraadm	9.3210.19
Fund Am 30.4011.37 Gibraltar 14.4414.44 Gan Sac 12.5312.53 Group Sac;
Aaro Sc 9.5610.35
19.29 21.08 27.69 27.69 ’ 13.56 14.66 10.05 10.99 I 5.45 5.95
Nauwrth 27.76 27.76 Naw Eng 10.6611.52 Naw Hor 27.98 27.98 Naw WId 14.48 15.83 Nawton	16.5418.08
Noraast 17.03 17.03 Oengph 9.3010.16 Omaga 8.75 8.85
100	Fd 16.31 17.83
101	Fund 10.7611.76
Hartwell 16.3017.81 Hadga 14.6015.96 H Mann 15.62 16.27 Hubsmn 10.9310.93 ISI Gth	6.11 6.68
ISI Inc	4.99 5.45
Imp Cap 10.7011.63 Imp Gth *
8.38 9.11
**-■'1 ' .>f	*1 > *	* -Ik '4
f Sycce$sfuhtnvestihg%
c Fnd 13.1*

Indepnd Ind Trend indttry
U.23 13.37
10.24 10.24 14.75 14.75 ■M... DD( 13.3* 14.*0 Invest Group;
IDS ndl 5.29 5.75 Mul 10.0011.12 Stock 21.1122.»4 Selec *.24 y.*4 Var Pay 0.4* *.20
21.35 21.35
I vest Jc^nsti
Kevjtoi., ________
Cu> Bl M.I4 21.02 ,-... .. 21.50 23.5* 10.11 11.12 *.I0 *.*4 > K2 *.0* *.*5
Sel Specs l*.8* 10.43 Side	10.** 12.01
Sigma	11.7112.17
Smith B 10.14 10.14 Sw Invest 10.0310.04 Sever Inv 15.51 17.10 StFrm Gth 5.0* 5.8*
■ Polaris ‘
Loklngt 11.0012.02 k Gth 12.3313.50
Liberty 7.57 0.30 Lite Stk 5.24 5.73 Life Inv 7.53 8.34
«dn"l*^%
Capll	12.7212.72
Manhln ’7.m’o:s1
Mata Fnd 11.71 12.00 Mau Glh . 12.2* 13.43 Mata Tr 15.*» 17.40 Matas 1.75 0.75 Mathers 13.3* 13.3* McDon	10.2411.22
MIdA Mut *.** 7.54 Moody Cp 15.4*17.**
Grwih 12.0014.03
........ 14.2215.54
FIduc	0.06 0.81
Sclen	5.22 5.80
Stein Roe Funds:
B*l	21.10 21.10
Inti	15.1815.18
Teehnol 8.53 * Temp Gt 22.00 24 Tower MR 8.50 f Tran Cp *.*7 10 TwanC 0th 5.0* 5 ynll Mul IIA712 TwanC Inc 5.45 5 Unifd 11.4412 Unitad Funds;
'ai
Vang ij Var IndPI 5.7
in
tn
Mul Trust 2.12 2.80 NEA Mul 11.41 11.54 Nat WSac 11.1012J)I . Nat ind 12J4 12.54 Nat Invest 7.0* 1.53 Net Sac Ser: nian ii.*3 )3.03
12.5013.70 0.45 *.23 14.5* 15.77 20.20 23.00 1].*3 15.32
Monroe M. Osmun, president of the Pontiac Board of Education, 'who has been on the board
years, has announced his intention not to e e k another term.
Osmun said yesterday he has no immedi--%i 01 sueid aiB before his term expires in June mi.
Osmun, 67, said he decided not to run for another term when his doctor told him he must slow down. ‘‘Besides, this IS a job for a younger man.’ Osmfln often has been put
■
OSMUN
the hot seat at board meetings. He chairs the sessions and has job of trying to control citizens who interrupt to speak jt on some issue.
Board meetings have been disrupted frequently in recent months by members of Voice of Oakland County Action League (VOCAL) and other citizens in a controversy over the location of a proposed $19-million high school.
A native of Pontiac, Osmun has been active in many civic, business and fraternal organizations, including the Downtown Pontiac Busjness Association, of which he lias been president. He also has been a member of the Oakland Schools Intermediate District Board of Education.
By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. I’m retired and would like travel. My pension, along ith dividends Irom 2 00 Standard Oil ol New Jersey and SO Maytag, takes care ol my ordinary needs. I’m about to inherit the enclosed list stocks. What shall I sell for travel money? What shall I hold and add to? — A.S.
A. Of your fine inheritance. I’d hold Anaconda, Northern Illinois Gas, AT&T and GM. Those four provide good income, and in my opinion you’d do well to build up GM and AT&T to 50 shares each as cash becomes available. When the market moves up again, the sale of R. R. Donnelly, Reliance 'fSlectric & Engineering, Regis Paper and National Propane preferred will release the capital you want for travel. I suggest that you discuss these proposed sales mth your lawyer of accountant to dkermine your tx liability.
National Propane is traded over-the-counter, transactions are limited and hence daily quotes are not published. The company is controlled by DWG Corp., through the latter’s ownership of approxiittately 9Q per cent of the common* stock. Latest quarterly earnings are disappointing, and “price action (^cult to follow
Furthermore, the conglomerates are facing possible federal investigation and a less favorable attitude by New York Stock Exchange governors toward the issue of debt securities to acquire desired companies.
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Q. Do you suggest keeping or selling a sizable holding of Nebraska i Consolidated Mills? We’re no# mostly interested in income N.H.
A. Your stock pays only 40 cents annually, so for incQme I’d recommend switching to. some lower-priced utilities now yielding around 5 per cent;-Niagara Mohawk, Pacific Power & Light, Union Electric, Washington Water Power. Dividends which have been increased at regular interval are partially exempt from, federal income tax. • Nebraska Consolidated earnings w e r c-boosted 55 per cent year-to-year' during the Srst half of fiscal 1969 ended Jan. 31 ■— the resutt of rising sales throu^out aQ divisions and iinprovint (Rations in Puerto* Rico.
(For Roger Spear’s 48-pos^ Investment Guide (recently revised and In its Ifth printing), send $1 with name and address to Roger E. I^iear, The Pontiac Press, Boif ins, Grand Centnd Station, N^w York, N.Y. 10917.).
(CuRyrWit. 1M0) ’