The Weather M. I. WMNMr lunm Fortei*l Pleasant (Otialli Fail 1) , VOL. 1*20 NO. f).’l PRESS * * * ¥ THU PONTIAC PRKSS. FRIDAY, MAY U, 1 MR Premier Calls Talks to Air Preach PARIS (AP) — Premier Georges Pompidou summoned labor and business leaders to meet with him tomorrow to seek a solution to the crushing strike wave paralyzing most of France’s economic life. More and greater turmoil threatened, Related Story, Page C-6 meanwhile, as workers,, students and farmers called a new round of demonstrations today a few hours before President Charles de Gaulle's address to the nation. * ★ ★ DeGaulle was expected to give his analysis of the 'situation and propose broad outlines for a settlement. # t f The Communist-led General Confederation of Workers, France’s biggest union, immediately accepted Pompidou’s invitation. The French Confederation of Democratic Workers also accepted, but warned that the strikes would not stop. ‘ARMED EXTREMISTS’ Students rioted In Paris yesterday for the second night in succession, and authorities feared the violence would increase. Interior Minister Christian Fouchet warned that ‘‘armed extremist!” hoped' to use the demonstrations today to set off violence which could not be controlled. The National Students Union scheduled demonstrations at four points in northeastern Paris. The Communist-dominated General Confederation of Workers announced two marches. In the 'provinces, organizations of farmers called demonstrations.io show solidarity with the workers and students—and to demand that the government protect them in coming price negotiations with the other Common Market countries. There was a strong possibility that the marching demonstrators would have Paris in an unroar by the time De Gaulle spoke on television and radio. The 77-year-old president gave no advance indication of what he would say in his first public statement on the two-week-old upheaval. Political observers believed he would call a referendum next month to endorse a program of wide reform, including greater participation of the people in the government, of the workers in running their factories, and of the students inlhi operation of their universities and high schools. » Whether this would satisfy workers demanding higher wages, earlier retirement^ job security and other bread-and butter benefits was an unanswered question. Promises from Premier Georges Pompidou of sweeping educational reforms have had no effect on the rebellious students. House Spurns Siipijff lii \ . Special Session Despite Logjam ~HAN5I N GTAP]- — Wilb sevcTaTT()n-troversial issues still on their calendars and a deadline for action looming, weary House members voted today to work next week rather than hold an unusual Saturday session. The House approved a resolution extending the deadline for passage or defeat of Senate bills—now midnight to-ilight—until next Tuesday. ir ^ ir it Senate approval is required. ' The House-passed schedule calls for lawmakers to meet next Wednesday, and again 4une 3-6, to clean up the remainder of their work. Legislators had earlier hoped to go home Wednesday and stay until June 25. Still on the calendar were bills to double Dstroit’s resident income tax, allow confiscation of a ticketed motorist’s license, permit sale of package liquor within 500 feet of schools and churches ~and authortM a referendum on $100 million worth of recreation bonds. ★ ★ w Meeting from morning until nearly midnight Thursday, as they have all week. House members approved bills Bombing Issue Climax Looms PARIS (AP) — The United States and North Vietnam are moving toward a showdown in the Paris peace talks on the issue of ending U.S. bombing of North Vietnamese territory, and there is no compromise in sight. Each government is expected to increase Us pressure on the other in the meetings ahead, with the threat of a breakdown in the talks, a weapon both are already using. U.S. officials say they believe that North Vietnam’s main aim is still to win the conflict by coordinated action on three fronts — trying to undermine the U.S.-supported government in Saigon, pressing the United States for concessions in the Paris talks, and striving for new military victories in South Vietnam. PVesident Johnson declared in Washington yesterday, however, that the United States "will not be defeated on the battlefield while the talks go on” permitting the enemy "to achieve a victory tl)at would make a mockery of the negotiations.” In Moscow,, Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko supported Hanoi's demands for an unconditional halt to U.S. bombing but, in talks with British Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart, gave I he impression he was not too pessimistic about the future of the Paris talks. regulating blocking of flood plains, establishing a State Boundary Commission and authorizing local recreation commissions to enact and enforce rules. Debated off and on without success were measures to reduce the size of the House and to give representatives four-year terms. A four-year-term resolution was defeated for the second time. ★ ★ * Backers tried to couple the four-year proposal with another measure which trim the size of the House from 110 members to 99—on the theory the Senate would swallow ‘the first part out of enthusiasm for the second. Given immediate effect on the third try was a previously passed bill setting up a State Police reserve force, designed TO provide extra manpower during rjots and other emergencies. * ' * * Some Negro lawmakers opposed the measure,—claiming—Hurt—b e cause membership in the new force would be limited to former policemen, „ f e w Negroes would qualify. Pontiac Pros* Photo by Rolf Wintor PARKING APLENTY — Creation of a parking mall downtown has boosted business and shopper interest, according to merchants on North Saginaw between Huron and Lawrence. Afternoon parkers here take up many of the spaces created by the new arrangement. Officials, Merchants Hail Downtown Parking Mall Pontiac Press Photo ‘ I f-Home Delivery Fee i J_Goes Up This Week § Beginning this week, your Pontiac Press will be sixty cents week deliv-"ered. This is“an~Ifferease Of ten cents~ over the six days and is the first advance since 1961. Newspaper costs have gone up substantially during these seven years. We do this with reluctance, but it's dictated by necessity. The Press promises to aim at an even better product. Our carriers will share in the advance. , 1 1 A BIG TURNOUT—George N. Skrubb, Oakland County Planning Commission director (left), and Donald A. Kalmbach, commission chairman, stand in front of the luncheon crowd at the "Planning for People”’conference yesterday at Oakland University. More than 500 persons attended the county affair. Conference Cites Planning Urgency By ED BLUNDEN Community planning Is no longer the province of some dreamy-eyed idealist with an office tucked away, in the courthouse. Suddenly it’s a “now thing,” with an urgency brought about by increasing pressures — burgeoning population and industry growth and riotous discontent with the status quo. _____ it ★_________★____ The need for planning was demonstrated yesterday in a conference -palloH hy thn Oakland ’ County Planning Kalmbach, in his luncheon speech, indicated the new interest in planning is an admission of "guilt.” Since The previous conference two years ago, he said, “Tragic events (the ghetto riots) -revealed—soma—people —had-^-b-a-a-n- Warming Trend Forecast for Area It looks like our cloudy skies will clear for the weekend with temperatures headed for a warming trend. The U.S. Weather Bureau reports the following official forecast: TODAY — Considerable cloudiness with periods of sunshine and a chance of turning WARM light shower^. High 62 to 67. Fair to partly cloudy and cooler tonight. Low 43 to 50. TOMORROW —Fair and pleasant. —-SUNDAY—-Fair and warmer—-------- Pontiac’s parking mall on North Saginaw between Huron and Lawrence, put into operation Monday, has already proven a great success, according to city officials and local merchants. Downtown merchants contacted for an opinion are extremely enthusiastic and most think that extending the mall north and south is desirable. City Manager Joseph A. Warren said he .is amazed' at the rapidity 'of the parking turnover. The mall is “tremen-dously successful,” he said. Director of Public Works Joseph E. Neipling said 460 cars used the mall the first day. “Apparently it is meeting the needs of the short-term parker,” he said. NO TRAFFIC PROBLEMS Neipling said there has been no prob- lems yet with rerouting of traffic around the parking mall. Earl E. Kreps, manager of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, said the mall is generating more interest in the downtown shopping. “I’d like to see it extended both north and south.” * * ★ Jack Simon, president of the Downtown Pontiac Business Association, (Continued"^ Page A-fl, Col. 1) Man Arraigned in Reds Launch Satellite overlooked or forgotten in past- planning.” Kalmbach pointed out county planning would be accelerated with the aid of an (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) Precipitation probabilities in ppr cent are: today 30, tonight 20. A mild 51 was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The thermometer resgistered 70 at 2 p.m. —Moscow rr-Tftrsoviet UrtianTrergy launched an unmanned satellite into an oblong orbit to continue space research as part of the \ Cosmos program. The specific mission of the satellite, Cosmos 221, was kept secret, as usual. A Detroit man arrested in connection with the April 30 $50,000 armed robbery of two GMTC Credit Union employes is in custody bf federal,, authorities in J25jQ()fl!hond----------------------—_ --M---- In Today's Press Stately Trees Cemetery landmarks dying in Lapeer — PAGE A-4. Viet Report Document outlines U. S, set-backs following Tet offensive— PAGE C-6. 1 Setback for Dirksen 1 1 Boost for federal antisubver- ft sive board fails — PAGE A4. § Area News A-4 I . Astrology C-12 I 1 Bridge C-12 i i Crossword Puzzle .. D-15 i I Comics C-12 1 Editorials A-6 § II Education Series C-I4 i & Farm and Garden . C-7-C-11 i r—JL~ High Sebool .. . D-l, D-2 * 1 Markets C-13 I Obituaries D-14 1 i Sports ....... .. C-l-C-5 1 .. § . Theateri “v: D4—D-l ■ 1 TV and Radio Programs . D-15 f Vietnam Vfar News A-10 1 : I- Wilson, Earl ...k. . . D-15 Ih Women’s Pages B-l-B-4 a v' V’ P ■ '■ , ./ ■ ■ f r Commission at Oakland University. An overflow crowd of more than ,500 attended, representing all facets of government and industry concerned with the problem. County planners were somewhatoverwhelmedbytheturnout. The luncheon crowd overflowed and some had to be seated outside the dining hall. The workshops held during the day played to standing-room-only. Extremely .pleased with the turnout were the two men primarily responsible for the conference, Donald A. Kalmbach. planning commission chairman, and George N. Skrubb, director. Kalmbach said: "This reflects the growing concern in the community with problems of planning.” Skrubb said: “There is almost every faction of our society represented. This shows the increasing knowledge of what planning can accomplish.^ 4TH CONFERENCE The day-long conference was held in eceperition withDivision of Continuing Education, and entitled, “Planning for People." This was the fourth, with one being held every other year since 1962. Most of the' time was spent in three two-hour workshop sessions. During each two-hour period, .three cone u r r e n t workshops offered panels on various specialized aspects of planning. €ity to Push for Stadium ★ w * ■ Arraigned yesterday was Robert Lamar Moree, 22, who was arrested by Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents in Highland Park Wednesday night. ★ ★ * U.S. Commissioner Fred Johnson set no date for a hearing on the charge — violation of the Federal Bank Robbery Statute. ---------------------------------- A stadium in Pontiac which would be the home of the Detroit Lions and the Detroit Tigers? That possibility ia being explored and Pontiac will make a pitch to be the future location for such a stadium June 10, City Manager Joseph A, WarTen last night told the Potiiad Area Planning Council board of governors. ★ *. * Warren said the city will send representatives to a meeting of the Urban League's Director Resigns Clarence E- Barnes, executive director of the Pontiac Areaf Urban League, has resigned to take a similar job in Youngstown, Ohio. The resignation becomes effective in July. ■ ★ it it . ' Barnes was named director of the area Urban League in July 1963,'i)y Charles Harris, who was Jfague president at that lime. .Barnes bas become a well-known Negro leaded and has been involved in a wide variety of community activities. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1) Metropolitan Stadium Committee, a quasiofficial body which expectedly will make recommendations on location and -construction 4>f a new sports stadium.- ■the committee was originally formed by Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh and later expanded to include representatives in several fields, including a number from Oakland County. STATE FINANCING? The committee also will expectedly CLARENCE E. BAllNES as. make a recommendation which will involve state financing of planning for the stadium. ____-______it- -it'■it■■ ---------— Construction costs would expectedly be provided by a bond issue raised by a nonprofit corporation. Cavanaghs committee was first-formed with the idea of locating the stadium in Detroit but was expanded to include consideration of possible sites in Oakland and Macomb counties. Warren said there are "many logical reasons why the stadium might be located north bf Detroit, “including the-anticipated population expansion of Oakland County.” The city manager said Pontiac and Walled Lake are areas-whieh are being considered for location of a stadium. STATE FAIRGROUNDS Gov. Romney has recomended that the state fairgrounds on Woodward and Eight. Mile be the site selected but that location has a number of drawbacks, officials said. x Warren said that it is estimated by the committee that 150 or more acres will be needed for construction. Chairman of the feasibility study and design team Much will help committee reach a decision is Briuw-Leon, dean of architecture of the University of Detroit, who with J)r. C. Don Davidson, is designing a plan for .development of Pontiac’s downtown urban renewal'land. Davidson is also -member-of the. .team. ____ • < ... ■? ■ O —Moree is accused of robbing Louis Giddings a id Richard Eldred as the two employes returned to the credit union, 939 Woodward, from the nearby Community National Bank-branch. PARKING LOT CAPER The robbery was executed in midday in the parking lot between the credit union and the bank. Police said the bandit apparently waited at a h'Js. stop in front of the lot until Giddings and Eldred made their way from the bank with the money, which was in a White canvas bag. ★ °it it ■ A witness said the gunman fled in a waiting car, which police found abandoned in a parking lot on South East Boulevard three days later. Paul Stoddard, special agent in charge of the Detroit FBI office, described the arrest of Moree as the result of the Combined efforts of FBI agents and Pontiac officers. *■ * * Detectives August Martinez and Orville Johnston are the local investigators in charge of the case. U. S. Consulate Hit QUEBEC W — An explosion rocked the U. S consulate building early today, shattering Several Windows and cracking the three-inch-thick front door of the two-story structure. f fa., Police said no one was hurt. An investigation was begun immediately. IK A—a THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1068 School Issue Is Kept off Ballot Waterford Township’s Board of Education last night decided not to place a school mlllage 'increase proposal on the June 10 ballot because most voters would not support it. .._. jS*? Results of a survey showed that 62 per cent of 2,222 returns from voters who cast ballots in the successful mlllage renewal May 6 wouldn’t support a 5.2-mlll property tax increase at this time, according to Schools Supt. Dr. Don 0. Tatroe. ★ * * The board spent considerable time discussing additional millage but made a unanimous decision not to seek It at this time. Tatroe said It is now definite that junior and senior high school students will attend school one hour less next fall because of a shortage of operating funds.___ FUTURE ISSUE “It appears that a school property tax increase will be required during the next school year to return the secondary students to a full day," Tatroe remarked. The future ballot issue probably will include a $7- to 69-million bond issue for a new junior high school, two elementary schools and some additions, the superintendent explained. He said the bond issue would not increase the present debt property tax. A new ad hoc school citizens comrnlttee will be created to study the problems and recommend a course of action during the next school year. - REJECTED IN NOVEMBER Waterford voters turned down a 7.5 mlllage increase last November and ap? proved a 15 mills for operation on May 6. School board members were considering a 5.2-mill increase this time since it was expected that additional state aid would add enough revenue to be equivalent to 7.5 mills. A new junior high school will be needed by 1971, Tatroe said. In other business, the board hired Martin Keck, principal of East Catholic High School in Detroit, as assistant principal for the new Mott High School now under construction. OPENING SET FOR SEPTEMBER The school is scheduled to be opened this September, but if the school is not ready students who would go to the school would be housed in Waterford Township High School in the afternoons until the,building is completed. Joseph B. Mullen, information specialist in the individual communications System (INDICOM) project, had his contract renewed for the second year of the three-year project. Urban League's Director Resigns (Continued From Page One) Barnes will return to Ohio where he spent almost 10 years in Urban League work Before coming to Pontiac he was in charge of a special research project for installation of neighborhood centers in Cleveland. He began working with the Urban League in Canton, bhlo, in’ 1954. While in Canton, he was also a visiting instructor at Malone College, working with city planners and serving on the county j .venile delinquency council. WEST VIRGINIAN He is a native of Fairmont, W. Va., and a graduate of West Virginia State College and West Virginia University. He has also received credits toward a doctorate degree in sociology. Barnes was recently given a special award from 10 Pontiac organizations for '“outstanding service working with community organizations for better human relations.” E, Eugene Russell, immediate past president for two terms* of the Urban League, said of Barnes’ resignation: Mr. Barnes departure will leave a great void in our city which will be difficult to -ill. His dedication ahd endless energy tobring understanding of the problems faced by the Negro in our community has been of great service to our city. it , it ★ “He has made many friends and established lines o f communication across the total community. His work with the grass-roots citizens, .the educators and the business community will never be fully or appropriately recognized.” 'Planning Need Getting Urgent' (Continued From Page One) $80,000 grant from the U.S. office of Housing and Urban Renewal (HUD)._gj CHALLENGE GIVEN A Negro minister, Rev. Robert Potts of Detroit, executive director of the Citizens Committee on Equal Opportunity, gave a AP Wirephoto WARNING TO HANOI—President Johnson yesterday warned North Vietnam against pressing its aggression despite peace negotiations and said the United States will not be defeated in the field while these talks go on. He spoke at the White House during a ceremony in which he awarded a presidential unit citation to the 26th Marine Regiment for gallantry in action in its stand against larger enemy forces at Khe Sanh. Standing with the President is Col. David E. Lownds, commander of the 26th Regiment. > 80 Families Flee Flood CIRCLEYILLE, Ohio OP) — About 80 families were evacuated from their homes here early today as streams overflowed from the heavy rains that continued in the southern half of Ohio. “If it weren’t for the dam, we’d be floating down the river,” said Sgt. Roderick List of the Circleville Police Department. Vote as You Drink' Cry Falls on Deaf Senate Ears LANSING (AP)—Despite Sen. Harvey Lodge’s exhortation that legislators should "vote as they drink, the Senate Thursday night refused to take final action on a bill permitting the sale of liquor on Sunday. Cries of “deals” and hypocrisy were heard as the measure was amended and bitterly debated for more than one-half The Weather hour before the upper chamber delayed action on the measure until today. “If the Legislature would vote as they drink,” fumed Lodge, R-Waterford Township, “we’d have Sunday liquor in a hurry.” Action on the measure was delayed after a motion to send the bill back to committee was defeated. If it had been approved, the motion would have, in effect, killed the bill for this session oLthe Legislature. CONTEST DEAL-------------—------------ Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Considerable cloudiness but periods of sunshine and still chance of light showers today with northeasterly winds 10 to 20 miles per hour. High today 62 to 67. Fair to partly cloudy and cooler tonight. Low 43 to 50. Saturday fair and pleasant. Sunday outlook: fair and wanner. Precipitation probabilities: today 30 per cent, tonight 20 per cent. Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m.: 51 At 8 a.m.: Wind Velocity 5 m.p.h. Direction: Northeast Sun sets Friday at 8:56 p.m. Sun rises Saturday at 6:04 a.m. Moon sets Friday at 6:4 p.m. Moon rises Saturday at 4:52 p.m. Downtown Temperatures -t-amrrrrr777Tr~~iTTSfi. .... ~vi 7 a.m. ...... 51 12 m............66 8 a.m. ........53 1 p.m. — 69 9 a.m......... 56 2 p.m...........70 10 a.m.........60 One Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature ................ 74 Lowest temperature .................. 46 Mean temperature ................... 60 Weather: Sunny, breezy Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date in 96 Years 67 in 1933 33 in 1925 Thursday in Pontiac (as recordad downtown) Highest temperature ............. 62 Lowest temperature ................ 52 Mean temperature . . . ..........57 Weather: Cloudy, light sprinkle Sen. James G. Fleming, R-Jackson. accused backers of the bill of making a “deal” with boosters of a bill to regulate contests and sweepstakes at gasoline stations and supermarkets. Fleming charged that proponents of Sunday Liquor had agreed to support the sweepstakes bill in exchange for Sunday liquor support. The sweepstakes bill, shelved early Thursday by the Senate, was returned to third reading calendar that night. -sense or urgency and a challenge to the planners in his talk at the opening session. “The challenge is to re-create and revitalize a sick and limping society,” Rev. Potts said. “There is well-founded apprehension in the black community ... when ‘the man’ tells us what is best for us.” ★ ★ -ft He charged the group not only to seek participation in the community but to help prepare the people to participate. Rev. Potts said the question on developing a new society has now become, “How — and how soon.” AREA STUDY The featured luncheon speaker was Edwin O. George, president of Detroit Edison Co. He said his company is independently making a study of the surrounding area, including portions of neighboring Ohio and Canada. He said this study will enable Edison to make decisions 30 years in advance. George said the study may indicate a new city the size of Detroit may have to be built in the area, “to relieve the pressure.”-------- ★ ★ ★ Pointing out that industry is more and more concerned with society, he said: “I anticipate an ever-increasing need in industry to 'tudy the impact on people and their environment. We must make commitments in planning for people.” —The conference offered more than 50 panelists in the nine workshops. The participants were experts in many fields from all over the nation. Included were a heavy sprinkling of local officials and government experts from Washington, D.C. PERSONS PRESENT Attending were persons from various government agencies, real estate firms, architects, engineers, lawyers, educators, sociologists, etc. Each speech during each panel was transcribed by a coqrt reporter. The ■county— planning— commission—is- -eon---templating publishing the material. CLIFFORD H. SMART Seeks Reelection in 60th District Clifford H. Smart, Republican state representative from the 60th District, announced today that he will seek reelection. A former school superintendent, Smart of 555 W. Walled Lake Drive, Walled Lake, was the chief architect and sponsor of the 1968-69 state school aid bill which incorporates substantial formulative changes. ■ * - * * It also provides a $60-million increase Birmingham Area Library Launches a Gift Drive BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - The Bloomfield Township Public Library has launched a special gifts campaign for major gifts to enlarge its book collection, start rental art and record collections and purchase special audiovisual equipment, art works, and supplementary landscaping for the hew building at 1000 Lone Pine. Friends of the Bloomfield Township Public Library, a volunteer citizens’ organization, has announced it will undertake the furnishing of the library’s Michigan Room, one of the campaign The newt building, with furnishings, parking lot and basic landscaping, is being paid for with proceeds from a bond Issue approved by township residents in 1966. Besides furnishing of the Michigan Room, other aims for the gift drive are microfilm reader-printers, an exhibit wall case, an auditorium display system, appliances and dishes for the kitchenette, works of art, starter record and rental print collections, outdoor sculpture and special planting groups. . _____ .# w w Mrs. Donald L. Zorn, 1391 Cedar Bend, lh State support foh local school districts throughout the state. Smart, 63, said that although the new state aid formula provides substantial improvements, additional study and changes are essential. TO STUDY PROBLEM “Property taxes can no longer provide the funds essential for quality education,” said Smart. “It is the intent of the taxation and education committees of the House to concentrate on the problem during the period between sessions. “Hopefully some major recommendations will be made to the 1969 Legislature which, if adopted, will put the financing of schools on an even sounder foundation,” he said. —— Smart was first elected to the State Legislature in 1964 after heading the Walled Lake School District for 19% years.--- Smart’s district includes jthe townships of Holly, Groveland, Brandon, 'Rose, Highland, Milford, Commerce^ Lyon and Novi in . Oakland County and the townships of Mundy, Argentine, and Fenton in Genesee. has bebh named by the library board of trustees as coordinator for the drive. Gift needs have been design-coordinated by the architect and toe library consultant. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - R. J. English, 3829 Mill Spring, has been appointed assistant district sales manager for the Ford Division’s Detroit district sales office, located in Wixom. English was formerly field operations specialist for the division general sales office. ★ ★ ★ A graduate of Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass., he holds a master’s degree in business administration from Columbia University’s graduate school of business. He has also done advanced work at the graduate business schools of Harvard University and New York University and has instructed business school classes at the University of Detroit. ; English joined Ford as a financial analyst in 1953, after service with the U.S. Air Force and work with the Rockefeller Institute's Commission on Financing Higher Education. Thursday Alptna.......63 Escanaba 62 Flint 61 G. Rapids 60 Houghton 48 Houghton Lie. 65 Jackson 59 Lansing 60 Mferauette 49 Musktgon 65 Pellston 66 Traversaa. C. 72 Albuquerqua 80 Atlanta 83 Boston 65 Chicago 54 59 44 62 53 66 44 85 58 's TamparaturtS 32 Cleveland 13 DafrolT 48 Dahvar 51 Jacksonville 37 Kansas City 57 53 43 Las Vagas 83 56 52 Los Angelas 72 56 50 Milwaukee 60 50 40 New Orleans 87 75 55 New York 67 52 flL 33 Phoenix 88 69 St* Louis 69 56 47 S» Lake City 61 43 63 S. Francisco 59 53 54 S. Sta. Maria 66 37 51 Washington 66 61 Britain, U.S. Tied to Rhodesia Plot WASHINGTON (AP) — Former Secre-tary of State Dean Acheson accused Britain and toe United States yesterday conspiring to overthrow the government of Rhodesia. And, Acheson said, the conspiracy is blessed by the United Nations. ir it it Acheson, 75, secretary of state from 1949 to 1953, is now in private law practice. He made the accusations in a speech prepared for a section of the American Bar Association. NATIONAL WEATHER — Widespread showers and rain are forecast tonight with showers in the Northwest, rain in New. England and showers in south Florida. A broad area of rain and showers will spread northeast from Texas to Indiana, it wiD be warmer in the Southeast. » fc’.SktlL “* *i. • t ‘NO HARM’ Rhodesia, he said, has done the United States no harm “and threatens no one." “This is barefaced aggression, unprovoked and unjustified by a single legal or moral principle,” he declared. Acheson attacked the U. N. Security Council’s call for economic sanctions against toe breakaway Rhodesian regime of Premier Ian Smith. He also assailed critics of the World Court’s dismissal of charges brought by Ethiopia and Liberia against South Africa for its handling Of the administration of South-West Africa under a U. N. trusteeship. 'Discrimination Not Elk Policy' “It is not the policy of the Pontiac Elks Lodge to discriminate against toe guest of any member,” Clement E. Berden, exalted ruler of the Elks Lodge 810, said in a statement released to The Press today. ___Berden said he was issuing, the state* ment to “ciarify a very grievous»situa-tion that in toe past few weeks has developed into a matter of grave concern to our lodge.” He said toe Elks club has “always been ■proud_uf.its many contributions to the community life and civic activities of our city.” A public statement concerning alleged discriminatory practices at the Elks Club was requested by the Pontiac City Commission three weeks ago when it refused to reissue a bowling alley license to the lodge. COMPLAINTjCITED The action came after a member of the city planning commission, John L. Crump Sr., complained to the city commission that he had been discriminated against at the'club. . , Crump said that after a planning commission meeting he was invited to the club bar by a member butwas denied admittance and told it was because he was a Negro. ★ ★ ★ In two subsequent City Commission meetings a move was made to reissue the license,, buf toe commission each time voted against doing sortf' Officials said they would not vote to reissue the license un£H a”public apology or statement concerning Elks policy was made. ». Hospital Talks Follow Walkout Meetings were continuing this morning at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital in the wake of an alleged wildcat strike yesterday in which an estimated 45 nurses aides walked out. Hospital officials were meeting with representatives of Local 79, Building Services Employes International Union (BSEIU), which represents the aides. . —*—★ W W ~—-——______ Hospital administrator Harry Whitlow, - who said that all employes* reported for * work today, was unable to cite specific grievances that might have caused' the walkout at 5:30 p.m. yesterday. Those who walked off the job—all on the afternoon shift — represent about three-quarters of the aides on that shift, according to Whitlow. He indicated that some nurses aides did not report on the midnight shift, but volunteers and some 'added nurses were able to take care of patients. nioi tives was held between 3:30 to 6:30 a.m. today and was reconvened shortly after 9 a.m. A union spokesman reportedly declined to make any- statement on the walkout, which hospital officials claimed was unauthorized. BLOOMFIELD HILLS — The Michigan Regimental Round Table, local Civil War club, will hold its monthly meeting tonight at 8 at toe Congregational Church of Birmingham, United Church of Christ, 1000 N. Cranbrook. Featured tonight will be a group discussion on the Battle of Chancellors, fought 105 years ago this month in Virginia. it it it The Round Table recently elected Abbott Gibney, 1688 Northlawn, and George Smith, 1882 Melbourne, both of Birmingham, as corresponding and recording secretaries, respectively. The club meets regularly on the last Friday evening of each month. This, month’s gathering has been scheduled early to avoid conflict with the Memorial Pay weekend. ’Pie publie-may attend. Three area women have been named officers of the Metropolitan Detroit American Field Service Board. Mrs. Marvin Hughes, 5565 Kingsmill, Bloomfield Township, was elected president for the new year. Mrs. Donna VanderBroek of Pontiac is first vice president, while Mrs. James E. Steele, 6753 Whysall, Bloomfield Township, is seqond vice president. BIRMINGHAM Mrs. Patricia ingham Groves, has been selected by the Michigan Cheniical Council and the Manufacturing Chemists Association as the year's second most outstanding high school chemistry teacher. Mrs. Sargeant was honored at a.recent luncheon at Hope College. Zoning Appeal Board to Review Maceday Lake Road Land-1 A 16-month fight over the proposed 50-acre Maceday Lake Road land-fill will be reviewed tomorrow by the,{Waterford Township Zoning Board of Appeals. The public session will be held in the Waterford Township High School cafeteria at 10 a.m. ' ♦ it ★ The three-member board will consider only the transcripts of testimony taken during five public hearings before the Township Planning Commission rejected the proposal. . The application to operate the land-fill had Been sdught by Donald Freeman and David Ward, partners in tbe Waterford Processing and Reclaiming Co, COURT REJECTION j ; / , t After losing their bid before the planning commission, they took tbelr case to Oakland County Circuit Court. Judge Clark J. Adams, however, ordered the case back to toe township on the basis that the company had not exhausted all local remedies. *. ■ * ■' - ——Adams placed a June 30 deadline on the appeals board in rendering a decision — * * ★ , The land-fill is planned off Maceday Lake Road near Ward's Grtfvel Pit. Property bwtolTs in the^ area have opposedthe project with^the^raument thatp the land-fill eventually would pollute nearby lakes. ’ ” „ ★ * They have disputed state" and county health officials claims that a properly operated solid waste disposal site doesn’t create hazards to public health i m 4 THE rONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1968 A—a ' Boost for Antisubversive Board fails WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen has lost another round In hit dogged bid to keep the moribund Subversive ActivU ties Control Board alive beyond this year. A desk-thumping, shouting speech In which Dirksen suggested he had backing from President Johnson and railed at Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark failed to rally enough Senate support for the Illinois Republican’s cause. Dirksen had proposed a crime control bill amendment that would allow the attorney general of each of the SO states to prosecute alleged subversive organizations before the board. But amid opponents’ complaints that the precedent-shattering approach went too far, ‘Power of Suggestion Spread Sniper Belief' HOUSTON (UPI) - Thai “pop, pop, pop" was a short circuit, not a sniper, but the Houston police were' "Jumpy" and the rumor the noises were shots spread like wildfire, a psychologist said today. Dr. ’Lucian T. Jones Jr., the psychologist, said "the power of suggestion" accounted for the fact that a short circuit -in a wire was thought to be sporadic gunfire by more than 6 0 policemen who searched eight hours for a phantom sniper.— —-------- * * * ,.....; r Police, armed with rifles and using several boats and an armored car, combed a giant industrial complex along the Houston ship channel yesterday for what they thought was an unseen gunman. The shorted wire wai discovered around daybreak make a "poping” sound similar to gunfire. RUMOR PASSED Jones said the sound was reported as rifle shots, and the rumor passed from person to person. , “The power of suggestion was In full force,” Jones said. "One picks it up from the other, and lit Just got into a big old thing. Rumors start this way and we’re ready, particularly when we’re insecure anyhow. —w W ★— “Police may not be insecure, but they’re susceptible. They’re human and as such, they’re jumpy.” The popping noise was produced by water d r i p p i n g through an opening into a conduit pipe, seeping through insulation tape and shorting out a piece of No. 8 electrical wire. The wire was used to run a conveyor belt at the Mayo Shell Co. It was installed just two weeks ago. HE ‘GOOFED’ “I just goofed,” electrician R. A. (Red) Graves said. Graves was called to silence the wir\ He said he forgot to put a plate on the outside Of the pipe which keeps the wire' inside waterproof. * ★ ★ ★ “I don’t think anybody should be embarrassed,” Houston Police Chief Herman Short said. “I think from the best I could determine It sounded like shots. The men out there thought someone was shooting at them, and they acted accordingly.” the Senate turned him down, 49 to 27. The board was the subject of widespread publicity last year with the disclosure it had not handled any business for nearly two years. Its five members each draw 128,000 a year. * * A The agency was spotlighted In mid-1967 when it was learned that the Jatent appointee was- a 29-year-old accountant, Simon F. McHugh Jr., who had married one of President Johnson’s secretaries. That development prompted inquiries into the board’s opera tions. When its inactive status was disclosed,^ cries arose in Congress for its abolition. W6N APPROVAL But Dirksen moved to pre serve it. He finally won approval of a measure providing that it continue in operation provided at least one case was brought before it by next Dec. 31. Otherwise, it would go out of business next Juhe 30. * ★ * The .agency was set up 17 years ago during the anti-Com-munist activity sparked by the late Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, R-Wis. Its original authority was to Identify subversives and subver-sive organizations and compel them to register. ? AUTHORITY REMOVED . But Supreme Court decisions have stricken most of the basic authority uof the agency. Dirksen charged that Clark was “subverting and distorting” the intent of Congress by not bringing any cases before the SACB, * JF He noted It had been five months since the Presidfnt signed the new liw providing for continuance providing the board got some business, Dirksen said he, had carried his cpmplalnt to the President personally in a 90-minute meeting last Friday night and asked Johnson to act. * * * “Why don’t you do something/’ was Johnson’s answer as quoted by Dirksen. The Republican leader said the rejected proposal was his answer to Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. SIMMS Friday and Saturday Tobacco and Candy Specials Carton Popular Cigarettes Regular, Kings, Filters $6.00 Valite for Only Listen to All tin MEMORIAL DAY Activities on Your Personal Radio from ‘SUPER SIMMS’ P.S. They'll Cost Less, Too! Com par* and you’ll it* what wa mean —the best cost* las* at Simm*. Specials for today and Saturday. Sale! 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The questioh has been answered by the Farmington City Council which declared that Salvadore will be open to regular traffic until the improvement of Farmington Road from Fight to Nine mile is completed in several months. * * * Then Salvadore will again b e restricted to surrounding residents as it has been for the past several years 11 was originally dosed upon the request of the Farmington Meadows Homeowners Association to the west of Salvadore. SAFETY FACTOR CITED The association had cited the safety of youngsters as its reason for the dosing, of Salvadore to regular traffic, explained City Manager John Dinan- The street was opened when road construction began to allow two exits for the area’s 400 families. Local objectors declared they didn’t want Salvadore open permanently. At one point in the controversy about 10 women one morning blocked the Salvadore Whitlock, intersection in protest. They were dispersed by police. In other recent action, the council has agreed to work with the Jaycees in putting in a parking lot at the Farmington Junior.High School. —.getiA 6ft-gar lot , la.hp used also as a baseball field and a skating rink is estimated to cost $4,000. The cost will be shared by the citv and the Jaycees. Helping Hand System Being Organized for School in Clarkston CLARKSTON — A Helping Hand program is being organized for Sashabaw Elementary School under the sponsorship of the school PTA. Volunteers are being sought 16 participate in the program, which consists of designating certain homes along school routes as “helping hands.” * * * The sign of a hand is placed in Use, window offering aid to those Who become ili or need adult help while going to and from school. Two or more homes are being sought for each block. Cochairmen for the project are Mrs. Gerald Smith, Mrs. Ernest Dunn and Mrs; Donald Agar. Precinct Dispute Resolved in Holly HOLLY — Voters in the June 10 election in this school district will go to the polls in the same two precincts as in the past. Reversing- an earlier- decision to consolidate the two precincts, the board of education has recinded a resolution which would have requiredthe~district’s 4,000 registered voters to cast ballots in the same precinct. ★ ★ ★ Citizens living north of Rattalee Lake •Road will continue to vote at-Mable-D. Bensett Junior High School, with those south of the road voting at Davisburg. The resolution consolidating the precincts was passed at the suggestion of Supt. of Schools Russell Haddon,' who said he felt the move would help to unite the district. ★ it it Davisburg residents had protested the split and began a petition drive seeking to have their own precinct reestablished. FAIR WORKERS—Three young Kingsbury School students work on wares which will be sold during the school fair May Bedford (left) of 26 on the grounds at 2990 Hosner, Addison Township. Kate Leslie Fillmore of Country Fair Sunday to Mark Kingsbury School Centennial ADDISON TOWNSHIP - Kingsbury School, 2990 Hosner, will rtiaHt ilk centennial with an old-time -country fair Sunday at the school. It was in 1868 that the original one-room frame school opened its doors to the neighborhood children in Addison Township. The name was retained when the late Carlton Higbie and Mrs. Higbie (now Mrs. West Gallogiy) started the present private school in 1953. McDowell of Pontiac, antique china doll heads from the collection of Mrs. Lyle Speas of Lake Orion, the Right Set featuring music for teen-agers, John Glick at his potter’s wheel, a story hour, surrey rides and a barbershop quartet. Township Sets Rules for Beach at Deer Lake Noted Alumnus Cited by Parochial Schools Chairmen of the centennial fair are Mr. and Mrs. Jack Taylor of Lake Orion. They are assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Carl Rubelman of Oxford. The fair will- feature a children’s midway, pottery and art sales, a’ Christmas booth, an auction, a flower shop, a boutique, country store, an Aunt Polly’s pantry, ice cream parlor. Tavern on the Green, bakeihop and a raffle. .... it it Entertainment will include a small Conestoga wagon drawn by ponies, an exhibit of antique paper dolls by Dorothy ORCHARD LAKE — Orchard Lake Parochial Schools have awarded an alumnus, John Cardinal Krol, 'archbishop of Philadelphia, the 1968 Fidelitas Medal. The award annually goes to an outstanding American Catholic of Polish background. The cardinal, also the vice president of the National Conference of Catholic ^Bishops,' began his studies for the priesthood at St. Mary’s Coilege here. He was ordained in 1937 after aix years at St. Mary’s Seminary in Cleveland. Clerk Howard Altman said a $5 family season permit will allow supervised swimming from June 15 to Sept. 15. The beach will be closed Mondays and Tuesdays, but will be open from 1 to 9 p.m. — or dark —* on Wednesdays, Thursday and Fridays and from Id) a.m. to 9 p.rn or dark on Saturdays. Sundays and holidays. BOAT FEES lsf Formal Meeting By TOM GRAY— BRANDON TOWNSHIP — A citizens’ group, organized for the purpose of ‘‘becoming infor med” about governmental activities or, all levels, will Fold Its first formal meeting tomorrow at 8 p.m. at the Township Hall in Orton-ville. —She—said ttie group had already sponsored two informal neighborhood gatherings, both attended by about 40 persons. CIVIC INTEREST The group is unnamed as yet, according to Mrs. Stanley J. Mersino, 4260 Sherwood, a member of its steering committee. ★ it it _Mrs. Mersino said that the group is The organization will be nonpartisan, she stressed; “We’re just going to try to see that people take- an interest in civic affairs. There are too many who haven’t. “We aren’t there to tear anybody down. We aren’t there to boot anybody out of office. What want to do is1 to learn what we can do to help the com- No fee will be charged operators of rowboats, sailboats or canoes. A $10 fee applies to* the use of motors up to 20 horsepower, with a $20 fee for larger motors. Fishing permits are available at $2 per season to residents and nonresidents, and a skin diving permit is $5 per season. Swimming hours apply to boating and diving. it it it Altman said rules formulated by the township provide that misuse of the permit will result in forfeiture of privilege. He said loaning the permit to a nonresident, abuse of property, a n d disobeying lifeguards would constitute such misuse. The loss of the permit will require another permit fee. NO PICNICKING No picnicking, food or drink or dogs wlil be acceptable^on the beach. No boats making an effort to have representatives of several governmental units on hand for the meeting, as well as a spokesman for WHAR (Why Have Awful Roads), an area organization seeking better maintenance for rural roads. Keego Mfllage Figure Is Corrected by Press mumly.” * ★ * Rising taxes have furnished the main stimulus for forming the group, Mrs. Mersino declared. One of the principal aims of the fledgling organization, she added, will be to curb the Steady growth of taxes. “Many of jis are appealing our taxes (assessments)" to the state;” she said. “We’ve already sent in the forms and we are expecting to get them back soon. We or skin divers are allowed in .the swim-mmg area. ~ ' - - —■*—- . Children under 12 must be ac- companied by their parents. No spftball or baseball will be allowed on the beach New Civic Center to Be Dedicated in Dinner-Dance Slated The dinner-dance of the Beaumont, Seven Harbors. ‘ White and Duck Lake Subdi visions Association- is tomorrow^ "from ft p.m. to ‘2‘lTmr at the American" Legion Hall, 510 W. Commerce, Milford. Proceeds will go for renovation of the group s clubhouse. KEEGO HARBOR — The operating millage for this city is 12 mills instead of 17 mills as incorrectly reported in The Pontiac Press. ^ — Other city miliage levies are 1 mill for buTOingr TT'mRrs "Tffrlhe.FaTirrirrgton ■ sewer interceptor and 2.3 mills for the city water system, making a total of 17 mills. 1 have no fire protection! no police, no paved streets and no street lights. Our taxes have tripled since 1966 and there have been no improvements.” ★ ★ ★ While recognizing a need for taxes, she -ebjeets-to -sueh sudden and drastic^m-creases: “It’s gotten to the point where people are getting forced out of their homes — it’s cheaper to rent.” 'Serious Blow/ Says City Manager Stately Lapeer Dying .LAPEfJR — The trees in liiis city’s cemetery, at least part of them, are dying, according to City Manager Arnold Whitney. \ Whitney has reported to the City Commission that the large yoniferous trees in ..tho-eemetcry-:-— m$s~£ndT Norway spruce — have fa] Will with an ailment called “cytospora canker.” A ★ The disease is roughly akin to cancer in human beings, Whitney said, adding, “It is caused by a fungus and, according to the experts, there is no cure." The city manager called the discovery of the disease a “serious blow to the city,” saying “They are large and beautiful trees and have been a fOcal point of thecemetery” Whitney said three or four of the trees had died over the winter, and a Michigan State University expert recommended by the Conservation Department had identified the disease. About seven will have to be remdve^i' in the near future, andall-wiflbeflone within five or six years, he added. ★ ★ ★ While the disease can be kept under control in some cases by trimming and feeding, this cannot be done in Lapeer’s case because of the great age and size of Jhe trees involved. Whitney said.* ★ * ★ In other recent business, the City -Comtntsston * has instructed Whitney to ask the city’s licensed garbage collectors to be present at the next meeting to answer questions about their service. Maypr Wellington E. Rowden said complaints had been received about pickup service since the closing of the city dump three weeks ago. Com rh i ssioner Or in Conner suggested that the ordinance on garbage and refuse service needs re vamping; OXFORD — Formal dedication ceremonies for the Oxford Civic Center will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at 22 W. Burdick. __The $190 OOP center, housing township and village, police and library facilities, has been U use since last fall' Three pioneer settlers and businessmen of the area—Louis Haddrill, George B. Tunstead and Fred Stevens—will be honored at the program as the "Three Old Men of a Lifetime,” according to Lee Valentine, township supervisor and program chairman. R. A. Ambrose, former superintendent Of Oxford Schools and president of the Oakland Schools. Board of Education, will make the dedication address. The buildings will remain open to the public following the ceremonies. Dedication Is Sunday for Forest Elementary Lake Orion School Board to Answer ACLU Charges on Disciplinary Practices By JEAN SAJLE LAKE ORION - A list of 10 allegations regarding school discipline will be answered by the board of education at a public meeting Monday night. The meeting haj been called for 7:30 at the Lake Orion High Schoorgymnasiurn. The list was prepared by the American Civil liberties Union (ACLU) on complaints contained in some 40 letters from irate parents. NnliM Press Photo * - -1 Metamora, Jill Feather of Rochester and Oxford are the artisans. The allegations were included in a let-, ter from Larry' A. Fiebert of the ACLU to Schools Supt. Lewis F. Mundy and copies were sent to the State Department of Education and lo Mrs. Duane H. Mawhorter, 573 E. Flint, a representative of the parents; The allegations:' • Children are paddled avith a board, at least three inches thick, 12 inches long, with ^oles drilled into it to raise welts. an accusation, cap. have (heir right to utilize bus transportation taken away. • Statements made by students to counselors in confidential Interviews may at some point be used against the student to justify a suspension or other disciplinary action. • — * ★ * • Utilization of paid student informers — for the purpose of catching smoking violators. • The revocation of the right to use a lavatory as a punishment in disciplinary cases. ★ it it • All bathrooms suffer from a gross lack of privacyr^antl arr-subject-to “raids" so as to catch*smoking violators. The- ACLU also asked for a revision of the present Student Council Handbook in regard to discipline policy. The union protested that the present policy can be widely interpreted and asked for a set of definite rules to apply in cases of detention or suspension, INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP - A supervised program of s w i m m i n g , boating and skin diving is promised this summer at Deer Lake beach on White Lake Road. Residents wjll be required to purchase a season permit for the newly fenced facility. The beach, formerly under the jurisdiction of the village of Clarkston, Has been leased by the township and will be operated through jts department of recreation. Fencing of the area has been completed. “J feel, really, that regardless of whether we want it or not, before too Jpngwe’re going, to be in the garbage business,” said Conner. 0 However, Whitney recommended a study of provisions for refuse in other communities Tjefom* changing" Th e ordinance, adopted 20 years ago. ~ * '' Dr ----- Many cities put the service out for bids, then charge" for Hie service, he said. Others have a sperial millage ter the purpose. FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP - DedL’ cation of the Forest Elementary School, 34545 Old Timber, is set for Sunday at yp.m.— The program includes addresses by Schools Supt. Roderick Smith, Board President Herbert R. Neal and Principal Weldon Peter ” A short concert Will be presented by some of the school's students. • As a form of punishment, students are locked up in a dark room or closet. • Students' personal possessions from lockers, pockets or purses are subject to search if an accusation is made against them. ir ir it • Parents and students are not informed when, and of what comments are made about them in their personal records; • Students are made to sign confessions or statements to the effect that they will voluntarily drop out of school if they commit further infraetions of a school rule. * * ★ ORIGINAL CHARGES • Students, upon nothing more than. The allegations were made originally by Fiebert at a Board of Education meeting a month ago. Some 50 people, including students, were in attendance and the hoard asked that all charges be presented in written form for investigation. Following presentation of a May 6 letter oultining the complaints, the board met in committee May 15 with a delegation of parents and ACLU representatives, A Pontiac, Press reporter was barred from that meeting. ★ ★ ★ A full accounting of the charges and investigation has been promised by school officials ter Monday night. THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY; M?VV 24, U>«8 A—i Chief Not Reappointed Wixom May Air Police Hassle WIXOM — What was Mayor Wesley E. McAtee’s reason for not reappointing D’Arcy Young as police chief? McAtee says, “the reason will be available to the public in the next few' days.” He indicated the matter may be settled at the City Council meeting Tuesday. The reappointment of the police chief is now in the hands of council. According to the city charter, the mayor has the prerogative to make appointments of department heads and administrators 30 days after his April 1 election. EXTENSION GIVEN Oil Scholarship Fund Increased $11,000 by Macamb-Comm+ttee- In this case, however, the mayor requested and received a two-week extension; McAfee had explained heneeded. more time. Council granted the extension as a . matter of courtesy, said City Attorney Gene Schnelz. Oakland University’s scholarship fund has been increased by $11,000 through the year-long efforts of the Macomb County Scholarship Committee. The group-of 67 women financed their contribution through sponsorship of the Macomb.Town Hall Series, which brings a series of noted speakers, to Mt. each year, f-* * *. , The mqst recent gift brings the committee’s total support of the university to more than $53,000 since its first contribution in 1961. Officers for the committee include Mrs. Donald "McMinn. vice* chairman. McAtee did make other administrative" appointments May 14, the last day of the two-week extension period. Young said yesterday he hasn’t been provided a specific reason for not being reappointed. He has been chief since 1964 and a member of the force since 1959. Memorial Service Set and Mrs. Raymond Dembowski, recording secretary, both of Romeo. SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP___________ A memorial service will be held at Andersonville Cemetery on Sunday at 3 p.m. by the Andersonville Cemetery Association. - -------- Pastor Wallace Duncan of Anderson- ville Community Church will be the guest speaker. Official Count Reaffirms Yes Vote for Novi Cityhood The school, which features a five-acre nature area with virgin timber, opened last October for kindergarten through^ grade six. NOVI—The village canvassing board’s official tally of Monday’s vote approving cityhood shows little change from the unofficial totals. The figures on'the cityhood proposal stand as originally reported at 694 yes to 498 no, for a total of !;192 votes on -this issue. • 8 V"'<>■•■*, „ ■ * However, the complete total of votes was 1.23L The difference’of 39 votes is -attributed to the fact that some voters only cast ballots for the charter commission and that other ballots werq marked incorrectly, explained a village spdjces- man. “ ' “A. ’ -A-----------------A j' jg Vote totals for each charter commission-candidate^ were changed by the canvassing board. The chagges are due to the counting of absentee ballots. Figures, before the board met represented only those votes cast on thc«maehinefr.------------ These changes, Ihough, didn’t alter the original list of commission members or the order of vote-getters. The official list of members with revised figures: Raymond Evans, 587; Joseph Cruip, 581; William L. Duey, 550; Denis Berry, -/>26; Russell Button, 518; William D. Brinker, 512; Edwin Presnell, 511: J. F.. Buck, 491; and David S.JHarrispn, 42fi. * * w. i The other candidates with their of-— ficial votes received are: Leo Harra-wood, 479; Laverne DeWaard, 443; James : 8. Cherfoli,'407; Mrs. Dorothy Farrah, 406; and Edward Vahlbuscb, 402. . The commission must, by law, meet within 10 days from Jast Tuesday and draft a charter within 90 days. It has two years to present the charter for a public -voter.■' v. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAT 24, 1968 a. Shoulder bag in whit* also baiga, $6 b. Contrast trim, white also beige, $6 c. Tote straw in white or also in beige, $• d. Double handler in white, also in beige, $6 e. Crocheted straw in white, also beige, $7 f. Double chain handles, white also beige, $6 g. Knitted straw bag in white, alse beige, $8 h. King handled straw, white, also beige, $7 i. Pouch bag, white, also beige, $7 |. Satchel bag in white, also in beige, $7 k. Ring handled straw, white, alse beige, $6 I. Buckle-dose bag in white, alse in beige, $7 Probably the bag to be seen in more hands this summer, the white straw carries off fashion's favorite color schemes to perfection. And probably one of the biggest white straw bag collections is in Hudson's Straw Market. THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48058 FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1968 harolp a. rnmuit Bow»«» m. VitteiMM, It Chajmu of the Board President and Publisher John W. Pirponsia sxeoutive Vloa President and Mitor H»e«Y 3. Rita Manailnf editor John A. 1UUT Secretary and Advertising Director Rich*** M Pmoiaata Traaaurar and Fin»nc* Ofllctr i A»io McCtair Circulation Manager O. Ummu Joimn Local Advarttalng Manager Placing Power Lines Poses Problem It seems there were environmental-conscious citizens back before the turn of the century. A story in Business Week tells how the overhead network of power, telegraph and telephone lines became such an eyesore in 1889 in New York City that the mayor ordered the fire department to^cut down the poles. The story didn’t say what was done to prevent disastrous disruption of vital utility services, Of course, today all of these power facilities in New York City, are underground—but it took time and heavy investment to put them there. ★ ★ ★ The New York incident of 1889 typifies a dilemma of our industrial society that is still with us on a magnified scale. Electric power is a perfect example of what has been happening. Exploding energy demands require the investment of many billions of dollars every year by the electric industry so that all of us will have power at the flick of a switch. It is manifestly impossible to conceal the physical presence of the great plants that generate power and the transmission lines that carry it to distribution centers. It is hardly feasible to cut the poles down as was done in New York City, although some attempts to legislate power lines out of sight are nearly as quixotic. ★ ★ ★ There are two kinds of power lines, and as utility authorities point out, beautification advocates fail to appreciate the difference between home distribution lines and the high-voltage, cross-country lines that carry hundreds of thousands of volts. Undergrounding distribution lines is going on all over the country, but technology has yet to discover an economic way of putting the high-voltage carriers undergrdund., ★ ★ ★ At the moment, putting long distance lines underground, as a famous architect commented is “about as probable as building an invisible bridge.” David Lawrence Says: Localized Poverty Effort Needed Voice of the People. Parent Voices Support of Area School System I write to uphold the Lake Orion shhool system. People who have written and run the teachers down are usually parents of unmannerly children. Instead of using so much energy, time and brain matter trying to run the school in accordance with their own child’s wishes or demands, why not use the energies toward something constructive? ★ ★ ★ What are these children going to turn out to be If parents show by their own action that it is not necessary to obey rules set up for all students? MRS. JAMES CUMBERWORTH 4648 INDIANWOOD, CLARKSTON ‘Attend Public Meeting to Discuss Hunting' As a taxpayer in the Clarkston area, I am deeply concerned about the possibility of losing another “God-given right.” Cer-tain individuals are endeavoring to prohibit all hunting In Independence Township. All interested parties should attend the public hearing at 7:30 p.mM May 24, at Clarkston Senior High School, v MRS. JAMES HOWENSTINE 8940 M-15, CLARKSTON Recent Incident Act of ‘Police Kindness' I commend the white police officer who went to the aid of one of my parents. This lady, who had just come home from the hospital, was desperate. She had no food or money to buy food for her four children. She called the police to take the children to the Children’s Home where she was sure they would be cared for and fed. This police officer listened to her story and gave her $5 from his own pocket for food. He also contacted authorities and the next day a food certificate was given to her. This was an act of “police kindness.” MRS. WILLIE MAE BAXTER TEACHER AT BETHUNfi SCHOOL ‘Theft From Porch Is Hard ToTSnderstand’ ‘Do-It-Yourself’ Prescription for Long Life If you are planning to live to a ripe old age, get listed in “Who's Who.” Prominent professional and business figures live distinctly longer on the average than men in the general population, according to statisticians of Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. A 12-year study of 6,329 distinguished men listed in the 1950-51 edition of “Who’s Who m America” revealed that they had a mortality rate 30-per cent below that of males in the general population. - If you can’t make it into -“Who’s Who,” think about moving west of the Mississippi, particularly to the Great Plains. A study just released by the Gov- ernment shows that in some regions, especially in the East, men between the ages of 45 gnd 64 run twice as high a risk of dying as do those living, in low-rate areas. For example, the death rate in the Scranton and Wilkes-Barre, Pa., area averages 2,100 per 10,000 population. This is nearly twice the rate for south central Nebraska, which has one of the lowest rates in the Nation. The national rate is 1,526 for every 100,000 persons* - —: * - i?--' -7— >• Jr* Until a lot more facts are in -—or as the experts say, until all the parameters are delineated—your guess as to why successful achievement Or residence in Nebraska is conducive to long life is as good as anybody else’s. LAWRENCE Citizen Values Independence Ahead of Money It is gratifying to note that rugged individualism still lives. A news release from Cedar City, Utah, reports that a Utah rancher has sent uncashed Social Security checks totaling $4,437 back to the U.S. Treasury. In a letter accompanying the checks, the rancher said, “I am in good health and aim to carry on the small livestock operation —1 have been able to put together— over the years ... I have attempted to find a worthy cause or some charity or church into which I could direct these checks. So far I have been unable to think of any place which needs this money more than the 'tJ.S. Treasury in spite of the fact our Government is mismanaging its money supplies so badly that these dollars may be wasted.” If there were more people like the Utah rancher, there would be far fewer of the political breed that seeks to stay in office by buttering up their constituency at the expense of U.S. solvency. The problems of inflation, the depreciating dollar, and the rising cost of living would be solved almost overnight. Employment'Program Succeeding By DICK SAUNDERS There are 192 ex-losers out at Ppntiac Motor Division. They’ve become winners un- -der a program called Opera-: tion Opportun-i t y launched last September by P 0 n t i a cl Motor Division! and the Pon-| tiac Area Ur-| ban League. But the biggest story out SAUNDERS there is the search for the disappearing man. ★ it # This is the guy who quits without notice. He’s a guy who literally dropped out of sight. —Why?— That’s the question bugging people like Gary Drew, a personnel staff member at Pontiac Motor assigned to the-Operation Opportunity program. . * * To date, the disappearing men number about 80. There are secrets locked in each of these men. " “We don't know where he is or why he quit,*’ Said'Drew, “We want to find out why he left the job he originally tried so hard to get.” The answers, hopefully, will help Pontiac Motor and Urban League officials improve what is already a successful program. ★ ★ ★ Operation Opportunity is a program whereby the standards for employment at Pontiac Motor have been reevaluated in an effort to hire people previously classifed as unemployable due to a poor prior employment history, arrest record or educational background. s In other words; you don’t automatically reject a job applicant because he has a police record. You hire him on the theory that his prior-police record isn't going to keep him from staisfactorily performing a job that has. to be done. V ★ * ★ The job applicants come primarily through the Urban League. Pontiac Motor has hired 361 hourly rated and salaried employes to date. Of these, 192 are still working fulltime, 123 have quit, 45 were discharged and one died. Of those who quit, 43 gave notice and a reason for leaving. The other 80 are the disappearing men. The fact that this program has plucked 192 people who weren’t contributing anything to society out of the com- munity and transformed them into productive employes is a big plus factor. More im- portant, they’re productive members of the community. Drew has high praise for the follow-up committee under the chairmanship of Mansfield Samples, a Fisher Body Plant employe. Problem employes go to the committee for help and guidance/ ★ ★ dr , “An extremely high percentage of these people have returned to their jobs and are productive employes. The committee is doing an excellent job. We couldn’t succeed without them.” But the big challenge now is to learn from the casualties of this program. The thrust is to try to understand problems of these people that hive made it hard to get and hold jdbs7~ WASHINGTON - Leaders in Congress are not exactly sure what the marchers who claim t o represent the poor of the country really want. There is the deepest sympathy with any poverty-stricken persons , but doubt prevails nevertheless as to whether the demonstrators have really come to the right"' place to seek relief. Up to now, the theory has been that it is primarily the obligation of each state to take care of the health, education and welfare of its residents and that, if it lacks sufficient funds, the federal government should supplement them. So the impression is growing here that maybe, instead of the 3,000 marchers camping in Washington, they should go to the 50 different state capitals and put their case to the governors of their respective states. * ★ ★ Then, if the money required to take care of the problem is not available, it would naturally be the function of the governors to request assistance from the national government, in which case, Congress could make the necessary appropriations. BEST SYSTEM ___Basically poverty situations are best handled by local authorities, anyway. For the states and cities each have welfare departments and a record of those who are in need of assistance. Although the f e d e r a 1 government has had an “antipoverty” program, it has been designed largely for job training of various kinds and educational aids for children. Many of the critics of these particular programs have said that the states should have initiated such projects themselves. t~____ ★ ★ ★ To place on the federal government the complete responsibility for handling the welfare of the citizens in every community would re-quire an enormous bureaucracy. It could be that the demonstration by , the Poor People’s March will have some constructive effects. GREAT SURPRISE n Blit the fact remains that the administrative tasks, if they are to be efficiently carried out, pill have to be localized. ★ ★ . * ' .. It is a matter of grept surprise that most governors of the stales, who should know what is happening in their own localities, have riot been inclined to explain comprehensively the plight of the poor to their constituents, Nor has there been any organized plan by the states 10 determine just what the federal government should "supply for. the p o v4 Try” stricken. There are many ways by which the national government can supplement the work of the states. ★ ★ ★ Until extensive programs have been worked out in each state, however, for the handling of the problems of the poor, and the requirements of each state are thoroughly investigated, Congress can hardly legislate effectively on the whole subject. Bob Considine Says: HughesSatellite Promises Help for Development NEW YORK - People places . . . Howard Hughes has not come out of his suite at the D e s e r t~ Inn, Las Vegas, since r e g i stering there about a year ago. But somebody is minding h i s store at Cul-v e r City, Calif. ,*■ ★ ★ There, at the Hughes Aircraft Co. (which incidentally does not make aircraft — the Hughes Tool Co. does that) his people have developed a new communications satellite with a capacity 25 times that of Early Bird and most of the other “switchboards” in orbit, all Hughes built. Intelsat1 IV has been built for the global communication!, explosion which is expected in the 1970s. It will be able to handle 6,000 two-way telephone calls simultaneously, or squirt 12 color TV shows down at earth at the same time___ COULD TEACH Either of its two “spotlight” beams could pinpoint any underdeveloped country ami teach its people how to read, write, farm, and take care of their aches and wounds. The satellite would weigh 2.430 pounds and require a huge Titan-lIIB to place it ill its sychronous orbit, 22,300 miles off the earth. 1 Se ■ * '+■ Then, and only then, do the Hottentots get Lucy. A beautiful French girl with the extraordinary name of Nonatienne Dupuy de la Grand-Yive, who speaks German and has been doing some public relations work of (JAL) Japan Air Lines — still with me, Mac? — Dropped by New York the other day with a startling message. The French people like us, She said, with the suggestion of a mist in her eyes. They are saddened by the sudden Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. William Ovink of Dayisburg; ' _ 55th wedding -anhiversary. Hugh Stepnltz of Romeo; 86th birthday. ——- Jesse j, Friday of Clarkston; 82nd birthday. cool of the American traveler, after all those happy and prosperous years. They want you back, preferably on Japan Air Lines, one must presume, one must. NO. 3 ON VISITOR LIST After all, the youngest (20) girl in the French Tourist Bureau pointed out, the French people are not the ones who are making the raids on Fort Knox. The French are now No. 3 on the list of tourists visiting the U.S., just behind the British and the West Germans. ★ ★ ★ France reported the largest percentage gain in travel to the U.S. for an overseas country. The 115,655 French people, who visited America amounted to an 85.2 per cent increase over 1966. France buys about twice as much from the U.S. as it Sells here; resulQHf TH 5 large trade imbalance, this beautiful mine of information assured us. For the 10-year period, 1957 through 1966, the balance of trade with France in favor of the U.S. was $2 billion. I hope the person who stole our Arizona. Barrel Cactus from our front porch is proud of himself. What is wrong with society today when you can’t evefi leave a plant outside? INGEBORG DODSON 150 DRESDEN ‘Divorced Fathers Face Many Difficulties’ In divorces, courts give wives the home, land, furniture and custody of children. Regardless of (vhether the father sees the children he must pay child support, doctor and hospital bills or he is in contempt of court. Some mothers fail to see that children attend school or are in a good environment, yet a father is expected to pay for a court appointed^ attorney to defend his son for incorrigible actions in school. Regardless of the money a child earns, the father must send a check. _’_______• ________ it # ★ Men run from their responsibilities and leave the State for these reasons. Also, if he gets behind in support he is ha mused by court or arrested and jailed, losing his job, getting further in debt and In arrears on support. In attempts to get help from the juvenile authorities in regard to child neglect and incorrigibility, a father is told there is nothing he can do as he is an interested party. ROBERT FRANK ROWLAND 845 FAIRVIEW, LAKE ORION Replies to Recent Letter on Press Picture Concerning an accused former public official’s smiling picture in The Press, Mr. Kennedy is accused, not convicted. Until he has had due process of law, I intend to give him bene, fit of the doubt. It sounds like the writer of the letter already judged this man and reached a verdict. Mr. Kennedy could be smiling because he is glad to be living under a system that allows an accused man to enter a police station with his lawyer and attempt to clear himself, and not under a system that automatically convicts a man simply because he is accused. G. A. LEAL 17 GENE „ Question and Answer What was the 1968 budget request from the Civil. Rights Commission, and how does this compare with that required to operate the entire Attorney General’s department? D. A. B. REPLY CRC budget request for 1968-69 was $3,304,-459. Appropriation for the Attorney General’s Department for July 1967 through June 190,8 was $2,152,168. T Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Expensive Errors Chicago Sun Times Between July, 1965 and. July, 1967 more than 40,000 servicemen were discharged as physically unfit. Appallingly, these were not men with battle wounds or other service-incurred disabilities, but men whose medic a I history should have barred them from induction in the first place. “■ft ★ ★ The mfen, both enlistees and draftees for all four services, were passed as healthy at one or another of the nation’s ?4 medical screening stations. And the cost to the government of the 40,000 errors was placed at $20,000,000 a year in pay, allowances, uniforms and travel. ★ The General Accounting Office, which released , the report, did not reckon the cost in time and hardship to the individuals involved, O n e must, however, believe that the cost was considerable, particularly for the draftees summoned up, enlisted, then sent home. ' \ . Patently, the nation cannot afford to countenance such sloppy, expensive practices 0s the GAO has uncovered, nor can it afford to treat its citizens with such cavalier disregard. Youth Voting? Cleveland (Ohio) Plain Dealer Youth is not doing all it can, in the sometimes friendly rivalry between youth and age. Of those Americans between 21 and 25, only 34 per cent exercise their voting rights. _________*___....(★ And less than half (48 per cent) of the whole age group 21 to 29 are even registered to vote, says a Gallup Poll survey. A ♦ dr ^ Young people have a big stake In the outcome of the coming primary elections in this country and also on Nov. 5. They are subject to military service. They heed a free and orderly society of self-governing equals if they are to realize their dreams. ....r.. Those young people who kick about “the system,” “the statps quo,” “the establishment” ought to throw their weight into the electoral balance the first chance they get. Election day will test them. Are they voting, or just talking? Last Resort Lapeer County (Mich.) Press Toys are what Children amuse themselvCs with when there is nothing left to wreck. Th* Associated Prata it «ntttl*d exclusively I* th* ui* Hr rtpubll-catlon at *tl local n*wi printed In this newspaper at well at all AP newt dispatches. , M. ' Th* Pontiac Pratt It dellv*r*d by carrltr . ■ i a wetk; where mailed In Oakland. GenmMs Uv-Ingston, Macomb, JLtDtwr and Washtenaw CountIM M It t1l.oT a' yeari elsewhere In Michigan and J!1.0,h*r Piece* In the United slat** $?6.oo a year. All mall subscriptions payable In advance. Pottage hat bean paid at th* fnd clan rat* at Pontiac. Michigan. Member *f ABC. * — - THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 24, TOflH Ford Sees Good Year for Gars DETROIT (AP),-Henry Ford II, describing the auto Industry outlook for the rest of the year as very good, predicted* Thursday that domestic new car sales could reach 9.3 million in 1968 even with the dampening effects o' a possible federal tax ini crease. "Both in this country and abroad," Ford told a stockholders meeting, "The automobile Industry shows every sign of confining to be an industry of strong' growth." Ford, chairman of the company, said despite the two-month United Auto Workers Ford later told newsmen that he thought the company would "come pretty close" to having record profits, although they would be under the record $703 million of 1965. ★ ★ ★ Asked whether prices would be increased on 1969 models, Ford said that since costs of material and labor were climbing "we expect to raise prices i; the fall,” ★ * ★ Appearing for the first time ai a Ford stockholders meeting was the company's new president, Semon Knudsen, who re union strike last fall resulted in signed as a General Motors vice substantial losses in both tHe President to Join Ford-third and fourth quarters, high . Upder stockholder question-production and sales plus higher *n&' Knudsen said he saw nd car prices have resulted in first-' *W>f|lct of interest in the fact quarter sales greater than in p18* he held sortie 50,000 shares any previous quarter °f ®M stock just before he ••Our .earnings established a1switched alle«iance:.. i.ew first-quarter record," he SELLING STOCK sail | Knudsen said that neverthe- less he was placing a "substantial portion" of his GM stock on the open market, putting some of it in a charitable trust and turning over control of the remainder to a bank trusteeship. One stockholder who appears frequently at annual meetings of many large corporations — Wilma Soss of New York—congratulated Ford on his coup in landing Knudsen. ★ —w w But Mrs. Soss warned that as a General Motors stockholder she planned to propose that GM pull a switch and hire Lee lacocca, Ford executive vice president who had been regarded as |g future prospect for the Ford presidency. ★ * ★ Commenting on his work as chairman of the National Alliance of Businessmen, Ford said the nation's business leaders have pledged to provide more than 175,000 permanent and' summer jobs for the hard-core unemployed. The alliance was established by President Johnson to place 100,000 hard-core jobless to work by the summer of 1969 and 500,000 by the summer of 1971. FORD ‘ENCOURAGED’ Ford said he was surprised and encouraged by the support the alliance had received from government agencies, community organizations, labor unions and the business community. Out of Buttons PORTLAND, Ore. 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FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1WI8 Poor Turnout Stalls Planning Council Action vear as a body to initiate action in a variety of areas such aaj-8®*^”*^ planning, federal aid and com- mun'ty action programs - is ' Authorlzed deve|opment 0f| district to implement a summer having trouble g g *sa comprehen8ive p|an outlihing! program in which youths would d0Pe' , .. . ,, steps to be taken in hiring a1 work with city police. Last night's meeting of the ^rm jor MM « Established a task force on council's board of governors # o el c a r ed a iron- law enforcement and was marked by djgeMSslon on a;.;,>|,i,nin«tnrv hiring nolicv for munity relations and another on [desirability non- ed, "if we "don't start to move hire-wllhbuthavingto listen to Ttiriter,- a_frequent delegate, | foi l. . . in six months we won’t| a "parade of proposals." who last night attended on The governors have not yet behalf of James M-» thews , heap ahlp to determine, how president of the Oakland County By BOB WISLER meeting ended. Two of those | • Demanded Tho Pnntiac Area Plannine three expressed dissatisfaction discriminatory hiring policy Council — conceived late la^jwith the action of the board.!*hejhave a planning council ('solutions. [similar policy for businesses He said that Oakland Countyiguch a study would be financed,-chapter of the NAACP. If passed as expected, the and firms in thpPontiac area, (recently had received $80,000 injbut the city and school district1 * * * Is resolutions would have: • Urged the city and school getting federal funds — on a matchinglikely could come up with! Dyer said the governing basis — for a comprehensive | $200,000 foh its development. board is being put into the j plan for its development. FUND SOURCES j position of acting as a rubber j Pontiac is the center Of .............. .........„ siamn He made this remark| how to be more effective. The governors adjourned early, without taking action on several resolutions which were scheduled to be passed. Action could not be taken, under the governors’ own bylaws, because of an insufficient turnout of members. discriminatory hiring policy the council. Policeman Pays for Man's Ticket COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. ronuac is me icmn m ..... » j stamD .. - Oakland County but its leaders . Ration money and ^ amp _ of arts. plan, he said. The 20 members present at How I oNf”' the end of the meeting agreed j" J to a suggestion by E. Eugene | comprehensive "possibilities, Doherty ,— v. had met twice with an official ! Dyer expressed dissatisfaction of the Detroit Catholic with the selection of the Pontiac Archdiocese and had b e e n State Hospital site as location of gj________ “I don’t know how long we|assured 0f |a "considerable the planned school. Monroe Russell,*president^of the Pon-!can debate the point without amount” of the $1,5 million ot|Osmun, school board president., tiac Area Chamber of Com-, Rn&’'' said Iso the diocese has pledged fori said the school board has not merce, that each member be! A comprehensive plan forjUrban programs if a solid pro-'settled definitely on the final notified by registered mail ofjoverall development has been j posal is presented to the importance of the next I discussed all year by the coun-; diocese: The bylaws call for 25 of the 32 _ ^ financially troubled'board meeting, June 13. (oil Several national planning) “it behooves us to get members, or their delegates, to father 0f seven who left El PaSo At. that time it is expected (firms have presented ideas and sond proposal in,” he said, be present before action is County Court to come up, with $5*that—G. Don Davidson, the) proposals to the council about. * taken on any resolution. * for a traffic ticket returned to! architect developing a design1 formulation of such a plan. - .'knnwledsed Npvprthplpss 20 iri 6 ni b c r s find thst stdtc Patrolman Wil* for redevelopment for Pontiac s- ^ . , . nresent voted unaniiYiously to liam C. Thiede, who gave him downtown urban renewal land,! At the list governors’meeting PAPC, like simi ar groups sue mendation of the planning favor atthe next board meetinglhe"ticket, had already paid it. twill publicly present a proposal Dr. Dana Whitmer Pontiac as the New ES-tf the ™uncl in for Thiede issued the ticket be-for 27 acres of the land. +s c h o o 1 s superintendent, pro-[is having difficulty achieving position of rubber stamping „ com-cause the man was driving with; Dr. David J. Doherty, who posed the plan on behalf of the Cohesiveness. v (school board decisions, prehensive plan for the an expired temporary permit, took over May 1 as the council’s: board of education. ( He said it is obvious somei Tucker asked to be excused coordinated development of the The fine was $20, but the judge! project director, expressed The study, he said, should in-|members are losing interest. Hejafter Price and Dyer had left Pontiac area in years ahead, [suspended $5 and Thiede paidj concern over the future of the At one point the board had 23 the rest explaining he thought (council itself JOHN BULIGA 0k ' ‘ Barbering Now At / - ’ KINGSLEY 1 NN a resolution calling development of a the site. DECISION SOON He sqid the board would reach a decision soon. Dyer implied that reaching a decision that before getting the ' recom- members or delegates present the man should use the money but three walked out before the to buy food for his children Although he said he was op- clude plans and guidelines for| said he had talked to 18 to 20 since the board could not act on the development of housing,! members and found some dif- resolutions, renewal of residential ferences in opinions of what the I * * * timistic about its future, he add-1 commercial, industrial a n d noverilors should be focusing James I Rates Pontiac .........7------------------(downtown business districts a.|i. jdiSofPlann^and UrtaS feiols! joUb "opportunity " and iBRICKS AND M0RTAR - jRenewal; recommended r . ’ J ,3 . , ,, . , £ council take necessary steps to training programs and social Many feel the governo^ a e ^, ^ ^^ *;^ services. spending too much time merely ^ mentioned that all stii^te DEVELOPMENT TIES "— discussing race relations prob-"' menuonea-tnai.au. siuaie more people than we have in a generally indicated they were, _"..u ___lems and should be The Members of the Ppntiac Metropolitan Club, Spirit 6 Would like to thank the many people who helped in any way to make our 7th Annual Children Benefit Show at Pontiac Northern High School last Sat., May 18, 1968, a success. Parking Mall Hailed as Success not sure of the effect on their ' “Such ■ s‘udy sfhould centrating on rebuild^ The | doublin« its P°^la«d" in 25 Ki,i for coordination, of private and _____“putting bricks years- 1116 county win become that downtown, (Continued from A-l, col tl said the mall is proof that the long time city is interested in the prob- Rodney Proper, manager ofbusinesses but most seemed to ricvptnnmpnt lems of merchants." Cancellation Shoes, said 'the favor extending the mall. ieach can supiwrt and enhance!and mortar together’ he said „ . * * * the other,” he said ! The three members, o r Neipling said the are technical problems in extending the mail. He said if it were extended forsaw -Oakland County Although he said it’s too early new setup is “beautiful.’ to determine if there is an in- Douglas Scott, manager of crease in business, he believes[Kresge’s, said, "I like it so far the mall should be extended but I want to see more before I north and south. say anything final.” ‘GOOD THINGS’ ENTHUSIASTIC COMMENTS Comments of the merchants j Ron Spirmer of King Briggs, doing business in the block of said, “I haven t had enough the mall were most en- 1 *me to really measure but I thusiastic, here are a few: j think it is definitely going to be A. L. Pierce, owner of Pauli’s a 8°°d thing. zt±abor-Probe north and south there would probably have to be physical alteration of the present street system in those areas. I “If the comminuty supports the idea enough then we may Shoes- ‘ ‘ T r e m e n dous Merchants in stores to the J have justification for altering Absolutely wonderful.” '1 and south of the mail the street network,” he said. Monroe Qsmun, general manager of Osmun’s Men’s Wear: “It’s—working out -v well. The people using it very happy about it.” r>i— * ★ ★ I LANSING (AP) — After pass- jlicemen, teachers and street de- Philip Sauer, owner of Griff’s a bill to provide insurance partment workers^ Grill- "I think it's fine it's in- for high risk properties, the Sen-, The measure bogged down Thursday i&m * m\sr *“**«mM heard very fine comments1 calling for fact-finding to mves-j both parUes to negotiate an about it from my customers." Public employe labor dis-j agency shop failed. Ai Shamie owner of Al’s Putes. i Agency shops would force non- DisLnrSe: Xs p”ace is! The Senate debated but did!union members: to pay sums to-really jumping. It’s a shot in not take final action on a re-jling.thf. etluiyaler,t of unio the arm. We should put the lated bill requiring compulsory|dues to the union. The Senate same parking mall in other arbitration of labor disputes in- earlier bad eliminated the downtown blocks. 'volving police or fire depart-fgency shop provision from the monfc House-passed measure. ‘^AFE DOWNTOWN’ * ★ * i The Upper chamber adjourned “It’s safe downtown for ~ before taking final action on a women. Even if there’s nobody ( The upper chamber defeated j bill requiring compulsory arbi-in the street the merchants can!by a vbte of 23-14 the measure tration for police and fire de-see out their windows." (enabling the State Labor Medi- partments. The bill provides William , Dickinson, manager (ation Board to appoint a neutral that a third party mediate the of Dickinson’s clothing store: (panel of distinguished citizens to'dsipute when parties reach a “I'm 100 per cent sold. The investigate labor disputes involv-|point where they can’t bargain turnover ls temlic. We’ve secn ing public employes such as po- ( between themselves. increasingly- Tirban and will undergo great chatige, he said. In"discussion of the plan last! alternates who left the meeting GROWTH FOR^CASTE night, members estimated it1 early were Hubert Price, an “Pontiac is in the heart ofj might be one to two years!original appointee and vice Oakland County. Growth is away |president of the Pontiac going to take place, change is! aaa Organization of Black Youth; going to take place,” he said. Doherty suggested that he | James Dyer, a delegate who “The real question is, is Pon-and the council’s administrative!has attended most of the.tiac going to be ready?” He committee screen various urban [meetings on behalf of the said the council has a good; planning firms so the governors original ^appointee, Julian A. chance o^ determining what I could decide on which firm to Cook Jr.; and Charles M.Ichange will do for Pontiac. OPEN ’-A ujids/' iimH of WoiuifiMieibt feoXufuung Furniture Plus Miscellaneous Antiques from Antique Doll Houses to An Antique Horse Carriage Door Prizes Given Weekly B & G WONDERLAND N. Soainow Pontiac <$>* 4V4x4Vz. ALL FIRST QUALITY Pontac'ii Largett Selection Ceiling Tile 12x12 PLAIN IOe ea. Suspended Ceiling Tile tf As “CUW Includes 132k JH.LI Sq. Ft. CUSS TUB Enclosures *24** & UP MAC-0-LAC FORMULA 99 niDYAL BOND $R99 9 Gal. Latex semigloss gloss enamel flal. I CALL 'Mt&reef THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1008 London's Famous Street of Has Mystique (EDITOR’S NOTE — London's encompasses 100 acres, about Harley Strtef houses the best of Britain’s physicians. But the street is mo)j[ than a geographic area. It is a state of thind.J By THOMAS A. REEDY Associated Press Writer LONDON — Harley Street has beeh rescued from peanut shells and orange peels. It can relax again, firm In Its standing as Britain's elite medical center. Its salvation was ac-eomprtished in a tiny magistrates’ court. The case involved a Harley Street doctor who attracted patients with a penchant for munching peanuts or sucking op oranges in the waiting rooms. The landlords said the debris was not befitting this area so his lease was being canceled. After testimony, the landlords relented on the guarantee that the patients would be policed by the surgeon and his staff. THE MY&IQUE— The doctor’s office in question Isn’t even in Harley Street — it's in Devonshire Place. But that is the mystique of Harley Street. It is pn area. It is a state of mind. British medicine, which lays claim to many pioneering advances. lor mankind, radiates out of what is commonly called 1,500 highly reputed surgeons and specialist^ and a few lesser lights. ; * * * Most 'of the men in Harley Street are misters. This means they are members of the Royal College of Surgeons. The minority are just "doctor,” which in Britain i s something less in prestige. It ail goes back to the days of the barber surgeons when , barhera were Jhandy with and scalpel for warts or some such thing. Then, they were called simply “mister” and the practicing medico was "doctor.” ANOMALY ESTABLISHED As surgeons came into prominence in the 10th century, they decided more or less tacitly to continue as "mister” and by now die anomaly of a mister being better than a doctor is firmly established. The rich and famous go to Harley Street in times of trouble. But often, so do the poor. ★ ★ ★ The skills of the “misters” are never denied the needy. If a general practitioner sends a patient with a medical pro-blem that can be dealt with only by a Harley Street specialist, the patient is accepted on his national health card. That subsequent treatment, he does not pay a fee. - RECOMPENSED The surgeon Is recompensed by the national health treasury. Whether one pays nothing or a fortune, Harley Street is a place of opulence. , * ★ * ★ It always was. The Harley Street area has attracted some famous residents besides doctors, them: Disraeli,.Dickens, Swift, Gladstone, Pitt, the widow of Lord Nelson, to name a few. On parallel Wlmpole Street there were the famous Barretts, Boswell, Edward Gibbon and others of equal stature. ONE WAY How does one get to Harley Street? ^ “You work and you work and you work,” ’ said one distinguished surgeon who must be nameless under the rules of thepsrofesslon.— “You must go through every possible stage of advancement and study after you become a doctor,” he said. ★ ★ ★ “You are impelled, to continue as a student, developing your associations with clinics so that by the time you are in your thirties, you can genuinely be called a consultant. Even then, your qualifications are under scouting as soon as youxapply for a surgery—the British term for a doctor’s office — in Harley Street. By this time you are almost 35 years old and unless you have a private fortune you have been scratching around rather hard to keep the wolf from the door.” The inevitable membership in the Royal College of Surgeons follows for thoAe with this kind of sense of service, ambition and talent. A CONSULTANT Then you are a Harley Street consultant. As medical facilities grow in various parts of Britain, in- cluding1 the suburbs of London, there is, some thought that Harley Street Is over the brink of its fame and can now only go slowly down. * * *, “That may be," said the surgeon "it will take a long time, though. We in Harley Street are only too pleased if patients can be treated and cured everywhere they live. But it will take men with the drive, ambition and talent which Harley Street by its very existence commands.” tASvsrfltwwM) Hwlps You Ov«r«M|| FALSE TEETH Loommm «d Worry Kulllnl powder, hoicu plotM llnnot •BJfiHLffS *miiammi. XfSI M^nwmMt'MUMd by loos* tabu at are MeentfaU WhylthSyTtmr dentl.t rafultrlf. oet FAS-rama eteli drug oou&ma. piiMsy! i menrsE£ri A Tbe THAT Since m HIGHNESS mseif ms. NOW WHAT? Now you niako the call to 334-0701 YOU CAN DEPEND that you should hava ON: made last weakl RELIABLE TRANSMISSI0R CO. 922 Oakland Avenue — Pontiac (Used Auto Parts Available) WITH USELESS JUNK CARS Highest Prices Paid - We Piek Up FE 2-0200 PONTIAC SCRAP 135 Branch Harley Street. The sector- in [means,—however—intricate—orf London’s Marylebone district!demanding the operation and Singing Lawrences Settle on Broadway NEW YORK CAP) — The singing Lawrehces — that would be Steve and his spouse Eydie Gorme — vow their -gypsy years are over,------ “We’ve all got to settle down,” says she. ★ ★ ★ “We planned this,” adds he. Instead of further travels along the long, profitable but arduous nightclub trail, the couple voice determination to do Broadway shows. With music, or without. Together if possible, or separately. The reasons? One is a show called “Golden Rainbow,” their first joint stage outing, he other, more important, is a pair of sons named David, 8, and Michael, near 6. RAISED ON ROAD “We brought | them up on the road,” explain^ Miss Gorme “Sometimes they literally slept in drawers fitted out with blankets! “I’m not complaining. We had marital balance. “He makes all the decisions. He’s been doing that for years — it just works that way.” -----------....-------* a good life and the children haven’t suffered. But I’ mtired of that. And we can’t keep taking them out of school now. This is for us. ★ * ★ j /‘Sure, we do much better on the road than we do in a Broadway show. It is just one of those things that have to be given up. i't “There are certain changes we’ve had to make — financially and in many ways — and we’ve decided to do that. It's worth It to us because of the Take this musical they are in at the Shubert Theater. The idea for it came along over a year ago and clearing the engagement calendar took con-siderable rearrangement. Lawrence was op Broadway once before, in 1964-65 with “What Makes Sammy Run?” Miss Gofme’s only previous Rialto bit was with Jerry Lewis at the Palace in ’56. They met, a wide-eyed pair of 18-yearrolds, on Steve Allen’s TV show in 1953, and wed in 1958. AMAZED AT HUSBAN D “Golden Rainbow” is her first experience in a break' Show' a' story with set dialogue — and the ebullient songstress was amazed at her husband’s transformation. “In our singing act you never new what to expect next from him,” she reports.“Here he's a lot more disciplined than I am. I need a little more time to adjust.” * * * Although they won personal raves, the production in genera] failed to enrapture critics. Disappointment has been since alleviated by sturdy box-office business., “It’s an audience show and the way people respond has been very rewarding,” h e declares. The experience has other end of our lives.” HEADLONG STYLE Miss Gorme, whose conversational style ia headlong, pauses for a breath and Lawrence approves with: “This 1s what we want." . ' I “I only do the talking here/’ his wife says to adjust the been a sharp contrast to Jlis “Sammy,” which he looks back on as a “very unhappy” episode. When it closed he proclaimed he would never again come to Broadway. “That’s apt to be true after any creative effort,” he says of yesterday’s oath. “Like having another baby,” Miss Gorme volunteers. Hold this up to your mirror-any way you look at it, we’re behind you. When we guarantee an electric water heater, we guarantee that you get all t(he hot water you need. That’s right. AM the hot watef you need. Or you get all vour money back. And you have a full year to make up your mind aboufitT S a tfs tied ? There's more. We'll install your Mthe Hoi Wrtertou Need GUARANTEED ■WON electric water heater free.. No matter where you buy. So long as it's an Edison approved model, installed on Edison lines—in any existing-residence up ]o and including a four-family flat. And more. A 50-gallon electric water heater,” tig enough” for many families, - operates Tor about $3.30 monthly in normal use. Then-for larger families, an 80-gallon heater provides plenty of hot water for about-$5.03 per month in normal use. Still more. Edison's No-Charge Repair —Service. No-charge for electrical oper— ating parts or labor. Got the picture? So, if you're not satisfied with your present water heater, why not consider a now electric one? That'll put you in a good frame of mind. EDISON ; . * A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1968 Crime-Control Bill Passed by Senate First Test Vote Next Week LBJ Aides Bowing on Cuts WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate has passed a crime-control bill that would undo controversial Supreme Court rulings that guarantee criminal suspects greater rights. The measure also would grant police new wiretapping and electronic “bugging” authority. But while the Senate passed the bill Thursday night by a 72-4 vote, it was uncertain how much of it will become law It still faces House consideration, and contains provisions strongly opposed by President The prime concern of John-identification in federal crime son, Celler and other opponents involves the proposed controls on the Supreme Court. And some opponents say constitutional questions are raised by sections authorizing police wiretapping and electronic surveillance or “bugging" of suspects. ★ * * trials. The sole test of the ad missibility of a confession would be whether it was given voluntarily. • Authorize wiretapping and electrodeeavesdropping by enforcement dfficers, acting under court orders, in the invest- igation of specified crimes. This As passed by the Senate, the iWOuld be permitted by state and bill’s chief provisions would: local police, as well as federal • Establish a two-year pro- officers, in states that pass im-gram of $400 million in federal plementing legislation, grants to improve the training • Prohibit interstate mail-or-and equipment of state and lo- der sales of handguns and their Johnson and Chairman Eman-1 cal police and for research tojover-the-counter sale to nonresi-uel Celter, D-N.Y., of the in- develop new crime' fighting'dents of a state and otherwise fluential House Judiciary Com- techniques. - tighten federal firearms con- mittee. Already, there is specu-j t * * jtrols. lation Johnson would veto such' The grants could help finance! The House last year passed a measure. the war on organized crime andjthe “safe streets" part of -----------------------------1 control the prevention of riots. I bill providing for federal grants —] • Undo Supreme Court dec!-; to strengthen local law enferee-jsions restricting the use ofjment. The Senate grafted on all confessions and police lineup the other provisions. Oregon Today I Key Sections of Measure j WASHINGTON (AP) — Here I Wiretapping and electronic | Bobby Now Focusing;are key provisions of the crime-eavesdropping — Authorizes! ■control biH passed by the Senate:those procedures by poUca.actJ Attacks on Hubert By The Associated Press Sticking to his easy-does-it strategy, Richard M. Nixon moves into Oregon today to do some unhurried campaigning for next Tuesday’s Republican presidential primary. Tuesday’s Democratic primary will be the third test be-j tween Sens. Eugene J. McCarthy and Robert F. Kennedy, but as usual there will be quirks! in the makeup bf the ballot. j ★ ★ * One of the candidates listed! on the Democratic side, for in-| stance, is President Johnson, an! avowed noncandidate. Backers of Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, who became a contender for the nomination too late to file for the Oregon race, are spending heavily to spread the word that votes for Johnson will be interpreted by political observers as support for Humphrey. Kennedy is taking the threat seriously. As he stumps the state he fires salvo after salvo at Humphrey, while his attacks on McCarthy have all but ppacpii AGAIN ON BALLOT On the Republican side, Nixon and California Gov. Ronald Reagon have on the ballot. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York hovers in the background as a write-in hopeful. Rockefeller lashed out at Kern nedy today, criticizing him for sliding back and forth from liberal to conservative positions. ★ ★ ★ “The junior senator from New York, campaigning hard for the Democratic nomination, seems able to change his rhetoric as fast as he wants to change his rtsidenceT^RockeFeTrersard' He made the charge in a speech prepared for delivery at Atlanta’s Emory, University while on a two-day swing through the South. ATTENDS PARTY McCarthy rubbed shoulders with Hollywood’s beautiful people Thursday, attending a fund-raising party at the home of actor Paul Newman, one of his supporters. Humphrey delivered his first foreign policy address of the campaign Thursday night in New York, warning that military expenses for the United States and other nations “will blow your hat off” in the next decade unless some of the chill is taken out of the cold war. ★ ★ ★ The task of statesmanship will be to slow down the arms race “and to move in common agreement toward a systematic scaling___down of the mutually oppressive burden and cost of our vast military complexes,” the vice president said,. Thursday night Confessions—Provides confessions be admitted as evidence in criminal trials even if suspect is not speedily arraigned and is not advised by police of rights to refuse to answer questions, and to have lawyer during interrogation. This would undo Supreme Court decisions on police tactics in questioning of suspects. Opposed by President Johnson. ★ ★ - k Firearms—Bans interstate mail-order .sales of pistols and revolvers but not, as President asked, such sales of rifles and shotguns. ing under court orders in probes of specified crimes. Opposed by the President. Safe Streets—This provision authorizes $400 million in federal grants to improve local police work. It was urged by Johnson —but he called for .federal- distribution of the money to local police while the Senate voted to iet states control it. Status — Bill now goes to a Senate-House conference that will try to iron out differences in , versions passed by the two chambers. Outlook—House opposition is expected. A presidential veto is i considered possible. BONNIE’S HEADSTONE STOLEN—Billie Jean Moon, sister of Bonnie Parker, dusts away dirt from the bronze headstone of Bonnie’s grave in Dallas’ Crown Hill Cemetery in this February photo. Thieves stole the marker yesterday on the 34th anniversary of the deaths of Bonnie and Clyde. The marker reads: “As the flowers are all made ’•—sweeter by the sunshine ■ an#4hc dew. so ■ tin made brighter by the lives Of folks like you i Romney Veto Is Urged I LANSING (AP)—Gov. George1 The Senate passed the bill by j Romney was left holding an j the squeaky majority of 20-9 issue a* hot as a ticking bomb after it swept through the House today — whether legislators | on an 84-7 vote. I should be required to pay'thej The measure provides that nonresident portion of Lansing’s I senators and representatives new city income tax. shall pay city income taxes only | Senate leaders wrote Romney in their cities of residence. I asking him to veto the bill after ------------ ithe chiefs were unable to keep| The Scottish Opera is intro-[ the Indians in line. iducing programs in Braille. WASHINGTON (AP) - Most of President Johnson’s top economic advisers now appear willing to accept $6 billion in spending cuts as the price for* higher taxes if that’s the best bargain they can strike. Of the top four, only Budget Bureau Director Charles S. Zwick is still firmly committed no more than $4 billion In spending cuts—a position taken by the President. ...* * ★ The first test vote on the compromise package worked out by Senate-House negotiators will come next week. Rep. James A. Burke, D-Mass., plans to offer a resolution Wednesday Instructing House negotiators to resume meeting with their Senate colleagues and to insist on spend-i ing cuts of $4 billion. ALREADY WORKED OUT The negotiators, have already , worked up a formula calling for l$6 billion in cuts—which Johnson contends is too much—and the 10 per cent income tax surcharge requested by the President. Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Park., of the House Ways and Means Committee said Thurs. day he expects the House to 4hk old worid is -tpaga ^ compromise asit-nowk. stands “when all the fanfare is over.” He thinks Burke’s motion will fail. * * * Whatever the outcome, some key voices in the administration are now ready to accept Mills’ plan just to get the surcharge,. Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler has already endorsed the compromise package. OVER-ALL BENEFIT And only this week, James S. Duesenberry, a member of the! President’s Council of Economic Advisers, said although $6 billion in spending cuts goes tool far, the over-all ■ package would benefit the nation. “A strong program of fiscal restraint—even one that goes a little too far—will do us a great without specifically endorsing the compromise. —*...........——— The other two members of the council reportedly feel much the same way. i^m ALUM. SIDINOI ADDITIONS! ALUM. AWNINOS, PATI0SI |IIR AVI IDA! PORCHES! HOUSE RAISING! 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MIAMI, Fla (AP) — It wasLevey was a victim of! midnight and Jay Uvey’s nurse Parkinson’S d I s e, a s e, a i was off duty when he fell to his mysterious malady that liivlng rpom floor and lay stiff transforms strong men and nnd trembling,^unable to rise, women into weak and quivering hi a frantic effort to lift him. vagatabies This was1 not/the his *lfe fell. too and wa^pln.firat time he had sprawled ned down by his rigid body. | helplessly on the floor, nor For two hours Jeanne Levey,would It be the last. Before he lay there* struggling, h e r died in 1964, he. broke his back screams unheard in the night,'in another fall.* -until finally she managed to1 But Langy's, ordeal was to bring hope into the lives of I.S million other afflicted persons, and to their millions of confused and desperate loved ones. In the room where Jeanne lay that night in 1959, she met a few weeks later with a group ot Influential friends* a n d organized the first National Parkinson Foundation. And in 1962 she built at Mlomi an institute. .which has become the world’s only real haven for those crippled by the disease, [developed "a strange feeling” In the first operation of itajand began to shake. Gradually, kind, Jeanne’s 'staff , oft the tremor spread and more specialists is restoring to useful land more of his body became lives hundreds who once had abandoned all hope. * * * When Betty involved. Jeanne she had a 42-member board of directors and a list of consulting physicians in the United States, Canada, England and India. The first clinic building would took him to many lC08t $350,000. When she came up Homer entered |ed doctors, but none ever diagrtos-j$|35,000 short, Jeanne went to the Washington. Through a maze of red tape, she trudged from one office to another. Everyone she contacted was genial, ^ym-pathetic, ignorant of Parkinson’s disease, and evasive. But in the office of Abraham Rlblcoff, then secretary of health, education and welfare, [Jeanne got her grant. Ribicoff [said the money would help "roll [back the darkness surrounding 'this dread disease.” ........ ... condition,” she sald.l the lnstitute, muscle rlgidlty|“Each dbetor called, it a[ and years os confinement in a ] nervous disorder and gave him young body Into a sitting posi- some pills.” tion. When she was lifted to herj g^g,, years after onset of the feet, her eyes focused on the disease, Jeanne chanced to ft001’1 'meet Dr. Lewis J. Doshay of . Today,..Bctlylooka upward|the Columbia UniversHy with a sparkle in her eyes and i Neurological Institute at a con-exclaims: .“I can see the sky]Ventionof tye American Medical again!” [Association.*He looked at her Lewis Kessler, once a [husband and told her, softly: dynamic man, was a cripple, ‘‘This is Parkinson’s disease.” drained of every, ounce of self- For 35 years, Doshay had respect. Now he walks and even dedicated himself to a lone wolf plays baseball, and htf says a attempt to solve the enigma of day at the institute “is a day of (jjg disease. But he told Jeanne: living like a human being.” [ "There is little money for In a one-woman crusade research. We need a foundation, launched after she was 70 years*somebody to start one.”' old, Jeanne Levey has awaken- For three years after her ed the world to the growing'meeting with Doshay, Jeanne meance o a disease which for 150 years was swept under the rug. -------W----★---- Many physicians have made pondered what hie had told her. With his help arid advice, she worked out physical therapy methods that kept her husband mobile years longer than he MAKING MUSCLES MOVE Patients Morris Rosenstein (black shirt) and William Matter (dark glasses) walk through a gait-trainer at the Parkinson Rehabilitation Di- AP Wirtoholo agnostic and Research Institute in Miami. Other patients ride bicycle-type exercisers as therapy. her institute a rallying point in otherwise could have expected, the first concentrated drive to j But at last he became find the cause and cure of an helpless and she took him to a affliction which the U . S J home in Miami to care for him Department of Health says is to the end. Then came the fall engulfing an ever-greater part [that launched her drive toward: of the population. [ the goal Doshay had given her. | To focus attention on her I With her own resources and[ ■junck. . r»r^girianl Johnson:^Tti^BTnQnrflhiiiThns from friends, she proclaimed an annual National organized the foundation. Then Parkinson Week. ___________ jshe went to medical men, civic It was in 1946 when Jay'leaders, giants of industry and Levey's right had first others. After months of talking/ enateiff .ALWAYS PiRST QUALITY ™ REDUCED-LAST 2 DAYS! Carol Eva ns® short sets for big and little sister! :. 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Stops moisture damage. Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 fM SHOP mi 9 PM. MON. THRU SAT. , > ItJ Mill A WOODWANO Northwoed IHepping Ctr. • TttlGNAPM ft SO. UMCI • Inemtleld Titwnihig • 12-Ml 11 ft VAN DYJCt-Tech Plate SheppingXtf. • 7-MIULA-MACK Greua Point* Wood* A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1968 N. Viet Units Forsake Normal Haunts; Big Offensive Feared OVER *2,000,000 INVENTORY OF APPLIANCES, And AIR pONERS; mmm REMOVAL! '.Olifntt vOfWW AFTER-THE-SALE SERVICE! By order of the principals Fretter'* has just ordered a drastic inventory cutback! Evfery sipgle item in our vast stock has been price slashedl Nothing is being held back. Every brand in our stores included. Choose from • Zenith • RCA Victor • Westinghouse • Admiral • Hotpoint • • Whirlpool • and many, many more. 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NO MONEY DOWN NO PAYMENTS'TIL AU0USH • Special settings for per- wm ■■ A manent press fabrics ^^m M A Porcelain finish inside - ■ S I and out ’ I S ™ a 3 fountain filtered I ^e wash cycles , V i • 354 lb. capacity • Refrigerator shelves o Magnetic jacketed deer • 3-year feed spoilage warranty • Self dean even • Lift/up surface units • Removable drip pans • No-drip cooktop COMPLETELY FROST *Jwin slide-mi erfsptrs . ePorcelois meet poo • 103-lb. capacity no-frostfreeisr «t|i-le ew«t««N* • Sliimmint ..............-•PorcelfliioB-stii.ii „ * . - .1., DA NANG, Vietnam \(AP) Elements of two North Vietnamese division* have pulled out of their normal haunts in the sensitive northern provinces, probably to reinforce enemy troops in the central highlands for a massive offensive there. In reporting this today, highly reliable sources said there was no firm evidence to support in telligence reports from U.S. field units that North Vietnam names® 85mm howitzers has committed two more divl- Heavy B52 strikes have been flown, repeatedly around Kon turn. This often is a tipoff to forthcoming operations. The B52 strikes normally are aimed it large trodp or supply conccntZa tlons, either to head off enemy offensives or before allied spoiler operations aimed at thwarting the offensive. ★ ,w ★ At the game time, North Viet Long called the biggest enemy base camp inside South Vietnam, A Shaii took on fresh importance with the recent discovery of a major enemy road construction project from the val- ley in the direction of Da Nang, the biggest allied base in the northern war Zone. In one aerial sighting, more than 1,000 construction workers of the road. Bulldozers are. believed also In use. Thick jungle and bad weather make U.S. operations against the new road almost impossible were spotted along one segment ^except ’ by bombing. Finished portions of the road are said to extend from Laos about 7.5 miles inside South Vietnam with work uiider way on an additional six miles. U.S. planes are spraying tbs. A Shau Valley and likely routes out of it with herbicides in an attempt to kill all foliage that the North Vietnamese are Using for cover during road construc-tlon. Still another road has been spotted farther south that could give the enemy trucks access, to base areas that threaten not only the vital Da Nang area but Kontum Province as well. slons, either in part or whole,-in north. ITiis indicates that for the the northern provinces. |first time the enemy was mov- * * * jing in field artillery to blast Two o-the North Vietnamese!away at south Vietnamese prov-S25th Division’s three infantryiincial headquarters and U.S. regiments have completed a rear area bases, march south from near Kt^ jjntj| artj||ery has been Sanh in the northwest to an area | use(j a|most exclusively along west of Kontum in the high- ^ demilitarized zone farther lands, a walk of about 165 m,*es>jnorth. For attacks around Hue, these sources said. the enemy has been using ipor- In addition, two regiments of Uars and relatively inaccurate the 2nd North Vietnamese Divi sion, which normally operates just south of the Marine base at Da Nang, have disappeared after beginning a swift move to the southwest, they reported. TOWARD KONTUM Such a direction would put the regiments on the infiltration trails toward the Kontum area. rockets. BACK TO A SHAU? Highly informed sources said there was “quite a bit of evi dence” that North Vietnamese have moved back into the A Shau Valley with large forces. A major allied operation swept the valley east of Da Nang and 30 miles southwest of Hue in an operation that closed out one week ago. The sources said the North Vietnamese could be again us Ing truck ’convoys in the valley to replace the vast amounts of DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — Sis-weapons, food and other war ters-in-law Mary Hayes andimaterial destroyed during the Mary Hayes went to the movies allied operation. Doing Things in Duplicate together Wednesday night. They went to the hospital together Thursday morning. At 6:24 a.m. Mary Jo Hayes had a daughter, Tia Lynn. One hour and 17 minutes later, Mary E. Hayes also gave birth to a daughter, Terry Lynn. The babies were delivered by the same doctor. ' ’ w ★ w Th young mothers, friends before they married brothers Patrick and John Hayes, froth were born on Sept. 12. ★ ★ ★ Allied troops never intended to stay in the valley and left just ahead of monsoon rains that would have made their stay highly hazardous because of the difficulties in reinforcing, resupplying and launching air strikes For some reason the allies operating on the valley floor did not attempt to destroy major segments of the road, which is a direct truck route from North Vietnam through Laos to South Vietnam. DUNHAM'S WORLD'S SAFEST BOAT BOSTON WHALER Completely unsinkoble 9 2" Squall weight 125 lb*. Sail* smartly for the experienced, yet it ideal for the novice...Particularly easy te right and gotten underway if capsized. In stock. Easy payments arranged. F.O.B. Factory. *595 ffotpoint Giant Automatic 16-LB. 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Mall 585-6300 rE 3-7051 358-2880 Opan Daily 11 to •- Sunday if ta 7 TUB-*? VERY BIST IN THE WORLD PRBtTBR’l THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1968 Braves VC Fire to Rescue Three DA NANG, Vietnam (AP) -Fire imd smoke wreathed the Special Forces camp and the Viet Cong flag whipped from the old command bunker when the radio crackled that three Americans were still down there. An old C123 twin-engine Provider lowered through the battle haze and gingerly touched down on the debris-strewn airstrip. The crew found no one but on the take off run spotted three men waving desperately. The plane was going too fast, however, and was too low on fuel for another run. ★ e ♦ Circling at 8,000 feet, a ruddy-faced, 45-year-old pilot listened to the radio. He snapped on his Intercom and told his crew: “We're going in," So began the last hazardous flight into Kham Due, a mountain-ringed Green Berets’ out* post southwest of Da Nang. Helicopters, four-ehglne Hercules turboprops and the smaller twin-engine Providers had already lifted out about 800 Americans, villagers and tribal Irregulars, No one was supposed to be left.— •k ★ e The airstrip was Uttered with craters and the debris of destroyed helicopters. All day the evacuation transports had been taking hits. Enemy gunners shot down one Hercules. Now, in the afternoon, the fire grew heavier as two North Vietnamese regiments closed in on the jungle encampment. Lt. Col. Joe Jackson, a onetime newspaper boy from Newman, Ga,, who recalls former Gov. Ellis Arnali as a customer, put the old transport plane in a near dive. ★ * ★>“ ~ It should have been a routine check flight. As commander of the 113th Air Commando Squad ron, Jackson normally doesn’t fly much. This day he had ar ranged a flight with a check pilot, Maj. William Campbell, 37, Atascadero, Calif., as his copilot. Jackson was taking a periodic flight check when his C123 was ordered over embattled Khan Due. The idea was to get down quickly to avoid antiaircraft fire and at the same time to pull up and land slowly. He had to stop on the runway without having to reverse his engines. It is nor maUy a technical point, but rev ersing the engines cuts off the auxiliary jet pods beneath the Provider's wings. Starting those pod engines would take 40 long seconds. Jackson knew they might not have 40 seconds and he wanted that extra power for the take off under fire. Jackson threaded the plane down the runway while Campbell and two crew members scanned the smoldering fortifications for the three Americans. Near the end of the airstrip, the three ran out — an Air Force of-fleer in a blue flight suit and 8 y ' two enlisted men in camouflaged fatigues. They were members of the Air Force combat control team that normally ran the control tower at the small post. How they got left be-hind, no one knew. _Kr^-"' ir ir ★ “As soon as they jumped on board, the loadmaster yelled 'on board, clear to go' and we sure went,” Jackson recalls. “We got out of there without a hole in the plane. I’ll never understand it." The official record shows that Jackson’s plana was -on-tha ground no more than 120 seconds. - “That was eternity," Jackson Vote for Vietcong' OXFORD, England (AP) Oxford University’s debating societythe Oxford Union, voted 256-1815 Thursday night for a motion “that this house would welcome the victory of the Viet-cong” in Vietnam. Two streets in Buenos Aires, Lavalle and Corrientes, have about 198 movie theaters. AP Wiriphato GRENADE GREETING - A U.S.fthlnfantry Division soldier prepares to throw a grenade into the entrance of a Vietcong bunker next to a bombed-out house on the southern edge of Saigon. In the next photo, the grenade explodes, seeding earth and rubble flying in. all directions. The bunker was part of a system of trenches and bunkers found by U S. troops in the area. Saigon Fighting Puts MPs on Front Lines SAIGON W—If it’s not street most casual about odd sniper fighting, snipers or hand grenades, it’s drunks and traffic." • “It does not get monotonous sometimes," says a young mili- tary policeman riding the dark- Keech and Blunt expected notfi- rounds. JEEP LOOKOUT On this night, cruising ginger-ally along the darkened streets, ened streets of Saigon. “But then once in a while we run into something new." ★ . ★ ★ The low-key appraisal of possibly the world’s most hazardous police beat came from smooth-cheeked, 20-year-old Spec. 4 Jimmie Keech, a volunteer from Norwalk, Calif., who has spent 16 months patrolling South Vietnam’s capital. When the war moved into South Vietnam’S "bities Jan. 31, the Army’s military policemen moved into the front lines of the war. They have been there ever since. ‘SHOT AT’ “When I got here about eight months ago there were guys rotating home that had never been shot at,” said Keech’s patrolmate, Pfc. Thomas Blunt of Los Angeles. “Not now. It’s hard to find an MP who hsn’t been shot at.” __ Blunt, a 23-year-old former telephone company lineman who ended up in the MPs for reasons mysterious to him, gives his job the same professional approach es Keech, who hopes to go into police work after leaving the. Army. ------- ' ---it-- it- . '|.y, Packing a 45-caliber pistol and an M16 carbine and wearing flak vests, they average about 72 hours a week on patrol In Saigon. When they aren’t on patrol they are on alert. It hits been this way for the 716th Military Police- ’Battalion since the Tet offensive. The battalion has one of the biggest MP beats in the U.S. Army—a sprawling city of perhaps three million people,, "nobody really knows hibw many. The streets af’e narrow and jumbled, with low overhanging balconies and countless dark hideaways ideal for sUteet fighi-ing. The MPs have grown al- ing unusual by their standards The only serious message on the radio had warned them to be on the lookout for a gray Jeep- carrying two men and two women “possibly Vietcong agents.” But the Jeep was reported in a distant precinct. Like cops everywhere, they discussed their jobs— how the rest of the GIs feel about the MPs. -----it_^ it,.. —it. After the Tet offensive, when the MPs fought outstandingly in Saigon and other cities, the average GI sharply upgraded his opinion of the MP. The MPs took sharp casualties, and they have been continuing. Early this month six MPs were wounded and one killed in a nasty ambush inside the city and there have been other , fights. A grenades missed Keech’s Jeep by only 10 feet. STILL DRUNKS “We still get some guys who think we are just out to harass them, but there aren’t many of them now,” Blunt* said. “We still get our share of drunks despite the curfew. They just seem to do more drinking in less time.’’ ‘ '' ★' One MP concern has dropped sharply—the handful of deserters who used to got a: girl and hide out in Saigon. .When the Vietcong offensive started, die deserters sought protection. “One just walked up to me on the street, when I was off duty, and surrendered,” said the somewhat bemused Keech. “I don’t think they find it too comfortable living in the back streets nowadays.” More than 10,500,000 Americans suffer from prolonged high blood pretaire and 68,000 - of these die every year. on fhewayto work. ONTARIO TOBACCO IS ONE OF CANADA'S BIGGEST CASH CROPSv CkOieE tf AVES BRING 804 A POUND, AVERAGE YIELD PER ACRE 1SNEARLY ♦VtOO-** HARVESTING CREWS MAKE SEVERAL TRIPS THROUGH THE FIELDS. PICKING TIC BOTTOM l|AV£S FIRST THEN THE TOBACCO l§ STORED IN CURING SHEDS. T"~ —— •FLUE-CURWC-ISTHE KEY TO QWUTX GIVING CANADIAN LEAF A RICH, YELLOW COLOR. CURING ■ win *MmiftcTWN. IS A DELICATE ART: A CAREFUL BALANCE V jf AT AND HUMIDITY CHECK IS MADE DURING THE* 55 DAY CURING PROCESS LEAVES ARE THEN STRIPPED f8**®**’ FROM THE STEM, BALED AND 50LPAT AUCflON. Every morning you get up, get dressed, have some breakfast. You step into the nice, fresh air. You get into your car. You start it up. And you proceed to get your engine filthy. Keep doing it and you might find yourself in trouble. With an expensive repair bill to boot. Because a filthy engine can cause a breakdown. And extra wear and tear on parts. Take dirt in your carburetor. The more there is, the more likely you’re wasting gasoline. (That's the stuff you pay us good money for.) Or dirt in the PCV valve (an anti-air-pollution device). It can cause your car to stall. Which may not seem like a big thing -unless you’ve only got 5 minutes to catch a train. Or you’re stalled at an intersection. So what are you supposed todo? Stop driving? No. Start buying Mobil Gasolines. Both Mobil Premium hndMobW Regular are Detergent Gasolines, They help clean vital parts of your engine, yi/hile you drive. And help keep them clean,; Mobil Detergent Gasoline will clean a dirty carburetor. It will unclog a clogged PCV valve. It will even clean out an oil-screen that's filthy. You really ought to feed your car some Mobil Detergent Gasoline this morning. It will probably get to work feeling better than you do. M©bil Detergent Gasoline C Mobil Oil Corpofitlon Today may be your day to win a car. With our new game. Clean Up With Mobil, we’re giving away a car every single day—q brand new Plymouth Barracuda. But if you don't wihacar today, maybe you’ll win some money instead—like our top prize of $2,500. ri^eof-$2,500, mayhe you'll win our bottom prize of 50?!. On the spot. • V - Whatever you w-w, what have you got .to lbse?Just pull into“ any participating Mobil Station and start playing. There's no need to buy anything. And even if you don't win anything-today, who knows what tomorrow may bring?* ; Clean Up With Mobil Only |km u*kj or Ivors eligible. Void whore prohibited. No purchase required Gar given son>awhor»inU.S.A Vou can also play "Clean Up with M0L11I by writing to Mobil Oil Corporation. P.0 Box b3&Ollfdt Michigan a|fl88 IM .-X . 'VX;. A—14 QNkMOR THK PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1088 THIS LUXURIOUS Scientist Recants on Space Life Link ■ ,,, v can astronomer as to what constitutes proof against the radio waves being signals from an advanced civilization.1 it if WASHINGTON (AP) British scientist Who once worried that “little green men” were sending radio messages to earth from outer space has concluded the signals come| from lifeless space objects J- One of the arguments Smith , Prof F'., Graham Smith offered as proof against any link England’s Jodrell Bank, Obser- jjejwecn pU)sars an(j extra-vatory told American scientists^erresjrja| |jfe—the fa©4 that Wednesday night he and other more than one pulsar has been radio astronomers Working detected—has previously been there have been convinced s*nce challenged by an American, Dr. last September the radio waves i pygnk ocake, director of the originate from uninhabited as_|Arceibo Observatory at Puerto tronoitiical objects, or “Pul- Rico. ear? " . I Drake has said that while it’s * * * ” h*very xml lkety”the radto waves Before that. Smith said, scien- represent signals from an intel-""1 **" ligent civilization, the fact there Is more than one known pulsar does not argue against such an admittedly long-shot possibility it it if At least two of the pulsars are estimated to be about 180 light years—more than a quadrillion miles—from the earth, Smith said. Britain’s radio astronomers __________________________he said, now believe the pulsars He said he and his colleagues,are somewhat unusualversions at Jodrell Bank had shared that of “white dwarf” stars-stars worry. j whose nuclear fires have large- Smith’s report left open a pos-lly burned out Garbage Cigarette Idea Not a Trashy Pipe Dream By DICK WEST I In America, attempts have WASHINGTON (UPI) — Ever;been made to solve the problem since Adam and Eve invented,by building ski slopes out of the apple core, man has sought garbage. In Europe, garbage is Tests Protect New Orleans HARRISON,, N.J. (AP) -Tests being conducted in an engineering research laboratory here will help to protect the low-lying city of New Orleans and its environs against flooding during heavy storms. The tests, being conducted by the pump and heat transfer division of Worthington Corp.. simulate the operation of four huge pumping stations that will be added next year to the drainage-control system in New Orleans. Each of (he actual stations,, when completed, wi)l cover a half-block area and will be equipped with a giant pump. Liberals Planning Campaign on Radio WASHINGTON (UPD — The or- 'sored. It is not scheduled to get Cannot afford to buy equal ganized liberals are getting under way until, after the 1968 dme. ready to challenge conserva- National elections to avoid any j The program, to be called tives to the kind of duel both). . . TT*An Appeal to' Reason,” was relish. The weapons wjll bei P° P® **' explained to the convention as microphones; the ammunition ”e ‘ee* sure the stations a HUeral “antidote” to a num-[words. - (would be happy to have the ^ 0f conservatively oriented ! Officials of Americans tajESZ pr0gramS Democratic Action (ADA) an- “7* Be!£.r ‘°'d. * * ★ pl‘nnin» 18 vention that plans are being . v liminary, Berger said such made to produce a regular Jocrams if stations re sP°kesmen as ADA National dio program to help spread the 8 tio * Chairman John Kenneth Gal- liberal word around the coun- J " - braith and other liberal leaders try. SPELLED OUT would be featured on the pro- * * * I The* doctrine obligates broad- gram. The program will be offered casters to present contrasting The key to production of the to stations for use in public views on public issues, even program is ADA’s new-found service time, which is not spon- though the dissenting party solvency. Berger announced at | the convention that ADA would 'not have to make a special fund [appeal to balance Its budget for the first time in years. DESPITE LOSS This, he said; was despite the loss of some labor union contributions that followed ADA’s, endorsement of Sen. Eu-gene J. McCarthy, D-Minn., for the Democratic presidential nomination. Most union leaders are supporting Vice President Hubert H, Humphrey for nomination. ADA also hopes to ^escalate its organizing activities. For this purpose a collection was [taken at the convention banquet- A number of donations of SI,000 or more were announced. - iff mi i*r ' ; # - - - * I While the, total was not made public, ADA Vice Chairman Joseph L. Rauh said the response had been good enough to assure the hiring of an organizer for the South, one of the organiza-tion's weakest areas. Now 21 years old, ADA has about 50,000 members with chapters in 17 states. The only U.S. president who did not use the pronoun "I" In his inaugural address was Theodore Roosevelt. tlxis at Cambridge University who discovered the radio waves “were seriously worried” about the “little green men" possibility “And it was not until early this year that they thought the pulsars could be interpreted as astronomical objects, rather than as evidence of extra-terrestrial life,” said Smith. POSSIBLES ARGUMENT new and better ways of getting rid of garbage. This quest has now reached the d e s p e r at ion stage, owing to the fact t h a t apple cores, hart a nap eels, peach pits, broken shoe laces, old Edsel hub-caps and other discarded material currently accumulates at the rate of 175 million tons a year in the United States alone. WEST being mixed with coal and used as fuel. In Japan, building blocks are being made of com-i pressed garbage. trbest, however; these projects are only holding actions. A finger in the dike, so to speak. Something-to stem the garbage tide until someone comes up with the ultimate disposal method. ^ That someone may be me. IDEA FILTERED J Inspiration came my way as I was reading about an experiment in New Hyde Park, N.Y., involving the use of activated chareoal to filter fumes 'from a garbage land-fill. Very Important I Activated charcoal is the Stuff / r used in certain cigarette filters. il C/,],>* J'idetd, that is apparently rl&Q /ViQy OOrV © vvhere city officials got the idea n i i .. n il . for the garbage filter. Rabbit Problem j ★ * * I Very well. The next step is so SYDNEY (AP) — A pinhead-[obvious I’m surprised nobody the VTF from England is now]thought of it before. We simply under the microscope in,shred or grind up the garbage Australia’s scientific laborato-' and make cigarettes of it. ries after being in quarantine! At the rate cigarettes are for 18 months. [consumed in this country, The VIF (Very Important smokers could burn up 175 Flea) may be the latest answer million tons of garbageinno to the rabbit problem. tone at all. * * * PROFIT SIGHTED Experts from the Com-i you see the beauty of it? The monwealth Scientific a n d disposal . problem is solved Industrial Research Organiza-without costing us anything. 1 tion hope that it, and the 5,000 why we might even be able to children it bore while under show a profit by selling our quarantine, will spread myx- garbage. . omatosis more effectively and if activated charcoal can more fatally than thOiOsquifb make a garbageTTTT^fTttr which in the last 10 years socially acceptable, it should be j helped decimate the country’s able to do the same for garbage! multimillion rabbit population, cigarettes. Week’s Toll in Viet 2nd Highest of War -■ T i ‘ ’ f The U.S. Command said the[ report raised the total American combat casualties in Vietnam since Jan 1, 1961, to [23.500 killed and 143.676 wounded, with 74,582 of the latter requiring hospitalization. ★ ★ ★ A total of 1,211 Americans are missing or captured, the report' said. I All colors available SAIGON (4) — The number of Americans repdrted killed last week was the second largest weekly toll of the Vietnam war. The U.S. Command announced yesterday that 549 Americans died in action, 13 less than tRe. record 562 killed the previous wtek. “ " ★ it it EQUIPPED WITH: • Select-Shift Merc-O-Matic Drive • Power Steeftng firV/hiter Sidewall Tires ~ • Deluxe Steering Wheel • AM Pushbutton Radio • Deluxe Wheel Covers A REMARKABLE VALUE INCLUDING ALL THESE FINE MERCURY FEATURES: • Marauder 390 cu. in. V-8 • Bright-Finish Wheel • Color-Keyed Nyloo^ Moldings, Carpeting • Bright Window — # Deep Foam-Padded Windshield Moldings Seats, Front 1 • Spacious Luggage and Rear Compartment • Chrome Finished, Die- • Walnut-Tone Cast Front Grille Instrument Panel • Courtesy Light Group • 123-inch Wheelbase FOR ABOUT •INCLUDES FREIGHT CHARGES. Price, is the average of prices determined by an independent shopping survey of 50% of all Detroit Area Mercury Dealers conducted between April 26 and May 1, 1968. Some prices were higher, some lower. See your nearest Mercury dealer for his price and terms. State taxes, license and title extra. The command said 2,282; The summary said enemy,: Americans were wounded in'casualties since Jan. 1, 1961, are action last week, 57 more than at least 350.074 killed, the week before. Of those Tu\ continuing high level of wounded last week. 1,314 re- the casualties on both sides j quired hospitalization, t h e results from a general increase command said. jin the intensity of the war and a’, South V i e t n a m p s e head-number of sharp but scattered, quarters, reported 475 govern-engagements. While there have rnept troops killed last week, been -few recent prolonged ac-."17476, wounded and 71 missing of . I1S’ there has- been a step-iip captured. The week before the-ln. genera* activity/ on both report was 675 killed, 1,999 sides, much of it centered m the wounded and 96 missing. - five northernmos^t provinces. ENEMY TOLL U.S. headquarters a 1 s 0 -The two commands said4.76&reported American mi+tt a^ yf of the enemy were killed last personnel in South Vietnam atj week. Die U.S. Command also the end of last week totaled! JCevlged its report of, enemy^30.000 ahincrease of 4,000 killed the week before, raising [since the previous week. This U from, 5,^52 to 8,186. Although, included 3.000 more Army men hot a recqrd, this’was amongjand 1,000 more Ait Force the heaviest tolls of the war. I personnel. ! A Special Limited Offer at Detroit Area Mercury Dealers! BART LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC. 3700 East Jefferson, DETROIT DAVE COOGAN, INC. 13832 Jos. Campau, DETROIT South of Six Mile Road CREST MERCURY SALES INC, 198?40 Van Dyke. DETROIT . EVANS LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC. 12955 drand River Ayeijye, DETROIT MULLIGAN LINCOLN-MERCURY, 20200 Grand River Avenue, DETROIT PARK MOTOR SALES COMPANY 18100 Woodwacri Avenue, DETROIT Oppotifo Rdlmer Park MULLIGAN of DEARBORN, INC. 21531 Michigan Avenue, DEARBORN EVANS MOTOR SALES, INC. 4688 West Jefferson, ECORSE BOB DUSSEAU, INC. 32411 Grand River, FARMINGTON STU EVANS, INC. 32000 Ford-Road,’ GARDEN CITY f, FRANK ADAM, INC. 130 Kefcheval Avenue. 7 GrOsSE POINTE FARMS... BILL FARRAH, INC.____1.1 _ 265 N. Gratiot Avenue, MT. CLEMENS WEST BROS. MOTORS. INC. 534 Forest Avenue, PLYMOUTH’ HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC. .. 1250 Oakland Ave.. PONTIAC. KAVERLEY MERCURY 420 Main Street. ROCHESTER ARNOLD LINCOLN-MERCURY COMPANY Gratiot and 12 Mile, ROSEVILLE HUTCHINSON LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC. 221 N. Main St., ROYAL OAK BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC. 1950 W. Maplcl TROY— It: SESI LINCOLN-MERCURY. INC. 950 E. Michigan Avenue, YPSILANTI m Get Lowdown on High Jinks; Tell Teen-Agers Facts o{ Life THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAV, MAY 24, 1908 B—1 Today's Woman Mrs. Ocf/e Is 'Show By JUNE ELERT In the career toss-up of a high school grad, art lost out to music and “Today's Woman” entered the University of Michigan as a music major, lifelong-interest—in-and the natural sci-was kept up, how-, and became the foundation of a later art The latter consists of searching cemeteries for interesting designs on gravestones and trapsferring them to paper through a process somewhat like the childhood amusement of putting a penny under—a-sheet oi lpaper and penciiling over the coin. Betty has a collection of crinoid heads (which is a type of sea lily) and is pleased with her fossil-finds; “They're not spectacular," she says, “but things you find yourself have importance to you.” k , ★ ★ ___A native of Flint. Betty came to this area with her husband about 28 years ago and presently resides in Franklin Village. * By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN Dear Abby: Last Saturday night my husband and I went to the movies. Upon arriving home earlier than expected, we found our daughter on the couch with I her boyfriend. They were all wrapped up in each other in a most disgusting position, -We ordered the boy out of the house and forbade our daughter ever to see him again. She flew Into an angry j rage and screamed that 4RBV when two people are "in ABBY love” anything they did was "beautiful.” She threatened to leave home if we don't let her see her boyfriend again. —What’e-a mother to-do?——STUMPED DEAR SEEN: You will find toe-nail clippers and back-scratchers in some of (he "finest" stores, too, but that doesn't mean It’s "proper” to use them in public. * * * DEAlt ABBY: How well I understand that pdor newlywed girl who wants some freedom and time to adjust before being "rushed" into pregnancy. She .is absolutely , right. We walled seven years before fiaving a baby. We traveled, got solvent, entertained, and got to know and understand each other. Then we were relaxed and ready to care for a child. backdrop?—Sincerely, A LUTHERAN PASTOR ★ ★ *■ JUNE “Exhibit Designer in Charge" has been Betty Odle’s title for a number years now at Cram-brook Institute of Science. She is the person who plans, prepares and constructs the exhibits that are on public view at the lfT5tttuter~~ 1 * * ★ The Idea for each exhibit originates usually with the curator of each separate department. Then it is up to Betty to start digging for ideas, materials, methods, ettr. to illustrate- the project in effective form. LEARNS A LOT . Each new projecl, she a capsule education. It takes a lot of pouring over the books to work up art attractive and accurate depiction of any aspect of the varied subjects called for. These have included minerology, geology, botany, zoology, ecology, archeology, anthropology, biology, etc., etc. ★ * * There are no rules or systems to gov- ern building an exhibit. Each one is different. The work consists largely of improvisation in the use of materials and methods and, she agreed, “imagination is an essential quality.” ★ ★ ★ Right now she is preparing an exhibit on birds, which is a poster type, consisting of drawings and word explanation. i She expects it will be ready for display in about six months which is the us8» span between the birth of, an. idea ana its completion. BEGAN A$ VOLUNTEER Betty started wprk at the Institute many years; ago as a volunteer at the front desk. From. that post she progressed to helping the designer, later becoming her assistant. Some familiarity with the commercial aspects of art, layout, design, etc: was helpful here. When the former designer resigned", Betty stepped into the vacancy. She says, "If I could have dreamed up a jqb that would be perfect for me, this would be it.” - -So art’s loss to music was only temporary—and music’s loss occurred when Betty left college to marry Donald R. Odle and raise two sons.________ Don’s profession of commercial artist and advertising free-lancer would, it seems to me, mesh beautifully with Betty's occupation and interests. MRS. DONALD R. ODLE An example of stone rubbing 'fttfZ'V this ’ angel head" design found in a cemetery near Charleston, S.C., and used by the Odles one year as their Christmas card. The gravestone 1 was dated 1740. DEAR STUMPED: Try to bc more understanding. Your daughter obviously doesn't know the;i difference between “loye" and a healthy, normal, adolescent physical attraction. If you do, try to explain it to her. (If you don’t, ask her to write to me and I’ll try.) you made a big mistake in ordering her boyfriend out of the house and forbidding your daughter ever to see again. You should have had a frank with both of them about the dangers of olaving with fire. The boy should have been made to feel welcome in your home, but only on your terms. (You make the “rules” as to how often he may come, how late he may $tay, etc.) If you. drive them to meeting on the sneak elsewhere you will create worse problems. ★ ★ k DEAR ABBY: I was born and raised right here in this small town, so I know nearly everyone and they know me. My problem: I get an invitation to every graduation, wedding, baby shower, tea, and lunchedn to town. Just name the occasion that calls for a gift, and I get my notice. , Abby, I am not cheap, and I don't mind sending gifts to my friends. But how about all these acquaintances? Right now I am swamped with “invitations.” I have a good name in town be a sucker to people I hardly know-What is your advice? SWAMPED DEAR SWAMPED: Every announcement and invitation is not necessarily a big broad hint for a gift. The best rule to follow is: If you would derive real pleasure out of sending a gift, send one. If you don’t feel “close” enough to send a gift, send a card. If you feel like a “sucker,” forget it. * * ★ DEAR ABBY: I have a bone to pick with you. Someone wrote and asked you if it was considered “proper” to use a toothpick in public and you said absolutely not. Well, how come they sell fancy gold toothpicks in the finest stores? SEEN THEM Furthermore, we waited until our first child was five years old before we had another baby. They are four and nine rmw. and they realty “like^eacir otber; They do many things together, but she has her friends and he has his. They do not compete as brothers and sisters who are “nearly the same age” do. Pushing one child aside for another is unfair. I cannot say enough for planned parenthood. HAPPY PARENT DEAR ABBY: I have a rather well-to-do uncle who* is irr his late, seventies how.; About 12 years ago, this uncle asked me if I would be "executor" of his will. 1 told him I would and that was the end of tne conversation. As such, I don't have the faintest idea what I am supposed to dorShould4 write andaskidjn?.____ I don't want him to get the idea that I am waiting for him to die because I'm not, but shouldn’t I know where to find his valuable papers- and so on in case of his death? I didn’t-sign anything and am wondering if he has changed him mind and asked somebody else or what. How should I go about getting this information? , UNINFORMED DEAR UNINFORMED: If you don't have a lawyer, get one, and ask him to handle it for you,' ....'.—— DEAR ABBY: A commendation is in order to the young man who didn't want to kiss his bride with an "audience" gawking on. His taste has risen above the vulgarities of an uncultured public. Occasionally we have a couple who insist. on putting on a show for their friends, and from where I stand, I can see what happens when it’s done. A church wedding is a most solemn occasion. The couple has come to God s alto? W seik HisT blessing, and their" friends have come to join in prayer for the new family and share their joy. Kneeling and with bowed heads, the couple has received the benediction of the Lord. DEAR ABBY: A letter iii your^column in which a father badgered his five-year-old son to “act like a little man,” interested me. Why must a five-year-old act like a “little man?” What’s wrong with his acting like a five-year-old child,? Which is what he is. As a psychoanalyst, I know that many of my patients' problems began when they wereproddedby impatient parents to “act like a little man” at the age of four or five. They couldn't, of course, so having failed, they felt guilty for disappointing their parents. Please. Abby, advise young parents r-—— to take heed, Childrenlviu—and sFoulcI-act like children. AN “M.D.” IN N.Y.C. When this solemnity is broken by such theatrics as a Holly wood-style kiss, the audience invariably snickers. Real cute, but if the couple wants to put on a show, why use God’s altar for a Calendar TODAY Midwestern . Baptist College, 8 p.m. Performance of “Cyrano de Bergerac.” Admission charge. i SATURDAY Michigan State University Alumni Club of Ottklpnd County, 7 p.m., Plum Hollow Couiltify Club. Annual dinner dance. Siena Heights College Alumnae Association, Oakland County chapter, 8 p.m., Farmington home of Louise E. Ward. Buffet supper and speaker. SUNDAY Skitch Henderson with Pontiac Symphony Orchestra, 3 p.m., Howard C. Baldwin Pavilion, Oakland University. Mrs. Forsyth to Head Child Study Group General Motors Executive Sets An installation of officers will highlight Tuesday’s meeting of the Child Study Group III in the Whittier Drive home of Mrs. Howard Deeter. Taking posts will be Mrs. Edward Tot¥yth~~ president; "Mrs. Fred MHIis, first vice president; Mrs. Robert Irwin, second vice president; Mrs. John Colli-son and Mrs. Walter Godsell, secretaries;* Mrs. Robert Ryeson, treasurer UNUSUAL HOBBY The pair also has similar hobbies. Both enjoy fossil hunting and stone- Talk at Federation Monday rubbing. DropSubjeet When Friends Bring It Up By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: We would like to know what to say to people who persist in making insulting remarks about persons of ■ awgtWer “Trace. Uly hus&antf and I believe in equality of the races but don’t wish to lose these friends over this matter. Judith L. ★ * * Dear Mrs. L.: I have little sympathy for anyone who makes insulting remarks about any other person on the basis of race, religion, background, etc. I would not hesitate to say that you do not feel that way and you do not wish; to listen to such statements. ( You may even say “Let’s drop the subject because we’d like to stay friends with you too.” It is not a question of politeness. It is a question of standing up for wfjat you thipk is right. SAVE CANARY Dear Mrs. Post:My sister Is to be jnarried, and I want to get her something special for her wedding. She has always said that she would like a canary. Would this be an appropriate wedding gift? — Juanita— Dear Juanita: No, *1 don’t think a canary is an appropriate wedding gift. For one thing, a weddipg gift should be something of permanent value and a canary can't last forever. . Give her the canary as a^hmtsewarm-Ing present or a birthday gift, but hot as a wedding present. Martin J. Caserio, vice president of General Motors and general manager of GMC Truck and Coach Division, will be -the guest speaker at this year’s Golden Gavel dinner of the Pontiac Area Federation of Women’s Clubs. ★ ★ ★ A native of Laurium and a graduate of the Michigan College of Mining and Technology (now Michigan Technological University), Caserio has worked for General Motors since 1937. During World War II he was a first lieutenant in the Corps of Engineers. ★ k.k He succeeded Calvin T. Werner in Fontlac several-years agou____ The Golden Gavel dinner will be helcT at the Kingsley Inn Monday at 6:30 p.m. Any member of the 50 clubs malting up i ail MARTIN J. CASERIO A 'Bowie' Party Follows Concert the Federation may attend the dinner. Reservations are to be made with Lu-lah McCully of Oneida Road, general chairman of the annual event. The engagement is announced of Geraldine McDonald Fuller to Philip Winthrop Weber. Graduates of Oakland University, their parents are the William F. Fullers of St. Clair Shores and Mr. and Mrs. Philip L. Weber of Walce Drive, West Bloomfield Township. A July 6 wedding is planned. and Mrs. Eddie O’Brien and Mrs. Robert Knight. ★ ★ ★ Assisting the hostess at this meeting Will be Mrs. O’Brien. Mr. and Mrs. George Cripps of Bloom-,, field Hills will host a German “Bowie" party, following Sunday’s final Pontiac Symphony Orchestra concert with Skitch Henderson. Guests attending the gala after the 3 p.m. event in Baldwin Pavilion include the Felix ResniOks and Skitch Henderson, providing his time schedule works out. Harvey Exhibit Opens in Detroit Others expected are Dr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Gaensbauer, the George Putnams, Dr. Leo Wasserberger, the James Rosenthals, the Douglas Harpurs and Mr. and Mrs. William* Fitzgerald. Completing thg list are Dr. and Mrs. David Morrell, the William Youngs and the Roland Nordlunds. The paintings of Detroit native James Harvey (1929-65), will be on display at the Gertrude Kasle Gallery in the Fisher Building. Detroit, from ..June 5 to July 3. Harvey drew inspiration from the Pharaonic, Coptic and Islamic art forms of ancient Egypt and the near East. The Fulbright artist’s works have been exhibited in many of the leading museums of this country. The Kasle Gallery is open Monday through Saturday, 11 a m. to 5 p.m. A chance meeting in a local sporting goods store brought these- two Child Study Group III members the opportunity tn disciiss club business. The group is planning dJuncheon and installation of officers Tuesday. From_ left are Mrs. Fred II. PontMC Pr««» Phot# Mil Its oY^fhiyaraStreet, whose son, John gets’in some batting practice, hnd Mrs. Robert 'Ryeson (if .Chippewa Road whose son Jeff stands ready to "stop one." - ■; ' B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 24. 1908 THE BETTER CAREER OPPORTUNITIES ARE IN BUSINESS Pontiac Business Institute Offers: DAY SCHOOL and EVENING CLASSES in Butinati Administration Secretarial Studies Accounting Office Machines Speedwriting Shorthand Clerical Studies Summer Term Begins June 10 ^usUie2SS^2t£{^e PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE * 1 8 W. Lawrence St. Openings for review students in S horthahd and "Typing.-— FE 3-7028 for Women s Shift Workers Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson (center ) chats with two of her guests on Thursday at luncheon given annually by the First Lady for Senate wives at the White House. At left AP Wirtpholo is Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower, wife of the former president, with Mrs. Hubert H. Humphrey, wife of the vice president at the right. Nylon Prices Not Related to Durability * Consumer TJmon- -set-dp a I higher priced 4iyionat$1.50 a4he same. Som& individual test panel to try out the new inexpensive line of nylons by a nationally advertised manufao, turer. The contestants were a pair, a 50-qent pair, and a mailorder fagand at three pairs for $1.32 plus pottage. All thne^ ntodels fared about 501 CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON NOW $095 ONLY 0 — Goo. Tuson Eteotfo Fuwium 5390 Dixie Highway 334-0981 623-0025 stockings ran as soon as they wete put on; others were still going strong after more than 300 hours of wear. w ★ ★ Average test life was IK hours, or roughly 10 days._ Conclusion: Special color, size, or quality of fit may lead you to choose higher priced nylons, but you’re not buying longer wear. If you find a color and size that satisfies in the cheaper model, you can save a considerable number of dollars in a year of runs. WASHINGTON, D. C., - Vice President Hubert^. Humphrey has okayed a liigh-fashioned, •‘H-Line’’ dress as tbs official campaign costume for, women working in his campaign. The dress—in emerald green, sapphire blue and white — was unveiled at the luncheon at which he announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for President. — DESIGNER Frankie Welch of Alexandria, Va., who designed the ‘Discover America’ silk scarf for Mrs. Lyndon Johnson's 'Discover America’ luncheon at the White House, designed the dress. It is a sleeveless shift which flares slightly toward the hemline. A shoulder to skirt edge “H” in front and,'in back is outlined in white baby rick rack braid. The designer recommends that the dress be worn with low or medium heel navy blue shoes and white opaque stockings. ★ ★ ★ Priced at $12, the dress may be ordered from the Office of Women’s Activities, United DemocratsforHamphrey, 1100 Seventeenth Stree, N . W., Washington, D. C. 20006. The dresses will be mailed after May 31. H-LINE DRESS To Remove Dog Hair You will find a wet chamois excellent for removing dog hair from upholstered furniture without damaging the fabric. END-OF-MONTH 20% to 50% OFF SALE! FLOOR SAMPLE GROUPINGS THAT MUST SELL IMMEDIATELY NO LAYAWAYS • IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • ALL SALES FINAL Marriage Plans of Two Couples Are Announced Mr. and Mrs. Emerson J. Eby of Rochester announce the engagement of their daughter, Lorraine, to Danny Ray Graham, son of the Albert Grahams of Lotus Drive. An August wedding is planned. PHYLLIS BROWN An Aug. 31 wedding is planned by Phyllis Jean Brown of South Roselawn Street and Charles Virgil Honchell. „ ★ ★ ★ Miss Brown is the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Irving Brown. Her finance, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Honchell of Pontiac Lake Road, is a student at the University of Pittsburgh. SALE! LIVING ROOM GROUPS! Reg#- $545 Green velvet, 3-cushion Sofa and contrasting Print Chair by Globe. Both reduced to ... Reg. $530 Traditionol Sofa. Nearly 100" long of sUperb comfort. 3 seat cushions, 3 loose back pillows. Plus harmonizing Ladies Swivel chair. Now only Reg. $683 Selig 96" Slouch Couch,Ladies Lounge Chair and Ottoman in gay corresponding prints. Plus Rediner Chair with solid walnut arms. All 3 for...... Reg. $680 Metropolitan High Back Sofa with solid wekwt -ffoffle.and -comfortable- Lounge- Choir—on- . swivel casters. Now only Salt was once so scarce and precious that it was used as money by the Romans. GROUP OF CHAIRS V2 OFF! Reg. $98.50 OCCASION CHAIR with strip* fabric and expound wood arms. Reg. $150.00 SWIVEL CHAIR with exposed walnut exterior....... Reg. 195.00 SWIVEL CHAIR with blue vinyl upholstery on walnut base.. Reg. 127.50 LOUNGE CHAIR low back, blue-green print.... Reg. 169.50 LOUNGE CHAIR in heavy brown and black tweed... Reg. 69.00 SELIG LADIES CHAIR in gay green and yellow print...... DESK SPECIAL! Pecan wood Desk with File Section, Typewriter Shelf, Desk Storage Section, on Casters. Reg. $1QQ50 299,95 199 49” 75” 97” 93» 84” 34” TABLES 25% !o 50% off! Special group of Occasional Tables in a variety of styles, and finishes. Some-one-of-a-kinds, floor samples and discontinued models. SAVE! BEDROOM GROUPINGS! Reg. $652.50. Founders 8:Piece Bedroom. Poster Bed, 2 matching Night Stands in Bayberry green, FrgHwqpd Chest of Drawers with Bayberry green Valet Mirror, Fruitwood Dresser and Mirror........................................'........ Reg. $359 Hitchcock antique white decorated Spindle Headboard# authentically reproduced Ondrawer Dresser, oChest and black and1 gold Turn Spindle Mirror. Now only ... * . Reg. $483 Contemporary Bedroom in walnut and rosewood. Handsomely designed Dresser and Mirror, Chest of Drawers, Matching Night Table and Headboard and Frame. ** ___Save nearly 20% $444 $249 398 $ SAVE! PINING BOOM GROUPS! I Rag. 677.50 Drexel's Declaration Dining Room In Random Walnut. 44" Round Table extends to 88". Glass Door Lighted Cabinet and Hutch. 4 Steam Bent Chairs with black vinyl seats........ Rag. $897 Bali Hai Dining Room consists of. handsome China Cabinet with Round Extension Table, 4 Chairs, in antique green. Vi off......... *499 *448 Reg. $399 Drexel's Declaration Bedroom, with Catkin Head- $^9^9£9 board, Dresser and Mirror. Save 40% .. V,................ '■ Reg. $603 Drexet's Meridian Bedroom Group. Handsprn# V Dresser-ond Mirror, Beautiful Open Headboard Bed, Chest of $ Drawers, 2 Night Tables. Fine hardware on butternut-pecan ^ woods . . .. A .'. JsVj ........... 482 FREE DELIVERY INTERIOR DECORATING SERVICE BUDGET TERMS OF COURSE OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS FURNITURE S.SACINAW ST. AT ORCHARD LAKE AVI. FES-1174 PONTIAC Car Wash with GAS 6 Gals. 10 Gats. 15 Gals. 17 Gals. 18 Gals. - 99c - 69c - 39e - 19* - lc KUHN Auto Wash 149 W. Huron St. Beta Sigs Meet to Make Plans for Coming Year Mrs. Andrew Kivilaan accepted duties as new president of Iota Nu chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, at installation ceremonies Tuesday. Mrs. James Talley opened her Crescent Lake Road home for the special event. ★ • ★ # , Others assuming new posts were . Mrs. Gerald Haney, vice president; Mrs. John Pender and Mrs. Robert L a 11 y, secretaries; and Mrs. Larry Girard, treasurer. ★ ★ ★ Te group is planning a game booth at the Paul Bunyan celebration in Union Lake on Aug. 2, 3 and 4; XI PI CHAPTER Xi Pi chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, met Tuesday in the Carl Leedy. Mrs. Robert Owen served as cohostess. PLANS Plans were made for the coming year’s program and contributions to charitable organizations. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Andrew Vittv a jcharter member who is leaving this area, was a special guest for the evening. j Bird Reversed 1 the Pigeon Drop 1 Borlange, Sweden UP! — When Inga Svensson came to her 'front door, one recent morning, ja pigeon came toddling towards her with a piece of paper in its beak. KINNEY'S j SHOES I For tHrlThoUT'amity | PONTIAC MALL I MIRACLE MILE # 9l888M88M868tt686>88#t8*8lM8l88H8BB>»tf» 4r ★ ★ The bird dropped it at her feet and left. Anna picked it up and found it was a five crown note (one U.S. dollar). ★ ★ ★ “I think the pigeon wanted to say thank you because I feed them every morning,” Anna commented. COLLECTION Bright Idea Dinnerware Detergent-Proofed by Zircon - hard Glaze. Oven-proof. Thrifty. 64 pc. set. 8 service. Reg. $62.95. Now at Special Value ^29^ OVER 100 PATTERNS AT. TERRIFIC SAVINGS DIXIE POTTERY 5281 DIXIE HIGHWAY 623-0911, mj THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1968 Student Show! to Open Soon The outstanding feature of the exhibition season at Cranbrook Academy of*-Art Galleries is, always the Student Summer ShQW Which this year opens np j May 31 and will remain up through mid-September. Students from all eight departments of Cranbrook Academy of Art will be represented in the exhibition. Most of these students will receive their Bachelor of Fine Arts, Master'Of~Fine-Arts or Master of .Architecture degree on Wednesday. LARGE All galleries, both upstairs ana downstairs,. will be used because of the size of the show. 1 There are sketches a n d models of architectural projects ; beautifully , g I a z e d ceramic pieces; design projects - including furniture and paper ornaments, and pieces from the fabric design and fabric decoration departments. Woodcuts, etchings and prints, drawings and paintings, metalsmithing objects and large and small pieces of sculpture Will round out the show. In the Young People’s Art Center Gallery there will be an exhibition of works by the students of the center who range in age from seven through 19. Cranbrook Academy of Art Wedding Vows Are Spoken by Area Couples Galleries are located on Lone Pine Road in Blopmfield Hills. Beginning May 31, Galleries hours are from 1 to 5 pm. Tuesdays through Sundays, except for major holidays. There is an admission. Little Kevin Kerby sits on the lap of Jtis mother, Mrs. Donald Kerby of Rochester Road, Avon Township, for this five generation picture. Next to them is great-great-grandmother, Mrs. Carrie. Coon of Harmon. Standing in back from left are the baby's great-grandmother, Mrs. Clifford Rumery of Imlay City and his grandmother, Mrs. Harvey Graham of Brookfield Court, Shelby Township. Missionary Group Elects Officers New officers . were elected Thursday for the Women’s Home and Foreign Missionary Society of First Baptist Church. Mrs. Roy Anderson will serve as president. Other officers are: Mesdames Marvin Compton and Verne Ernst, vice presidents; Kenneth Hetchler, Cecil Martin, Ray Knowles secretaries; Rolland Polley Jr. and Dan Hutchens, treasurer and assistant. ~ Dr. and Mrs, William McCurry Will be tendered a farewell reception June 12 as they- return to the Philippines; and on June 23 another farewell is planned for Mr. and Mrs. Richard Broach who will be returning to Quito, Ecuador. The Senior Girls’ Glee Club of Pontiac Central High School Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Charles Brown (nee Nancy Louise Fetter) left for a honeymoon 4n northern Michigan following their wedding recently In St. Benedict’s Catholic Church. ★ ★ "k The couple was attended by the bridegroom’s brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Brown Jr. . ..._£— * i Their parents are the Mark J. Fetters of Home Street and the senior John C. Browns of Preston Street. CASE-WERTZ A reception at the VFW Hall hi Dearborn followed vows spoken by Nancy Jean Wertz and Steven Russell Case recently in Atonement Lutheran Chprch, also Dearborn. ATTENDANTS. Honor attendants for1 -the evening ceremony were Mrs James R. Case and Kenneth Derbin with Timothy Moore and James Case as ushers. # ★ ★ The daughter of Mr. and Mrs Austin Wertz of Dearborn and son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth \ Gaso of Latimer Street will make their home in Detroit. Our estimate will save you money. We Have in stock a fabulous variety of brand new, exciting decorator custom measured fabrics to select from. COMPARE OUR CUSTOM DRAPERIES Mr. arid Mrs. Byron Wright of Keego Harbor announce the betrothal of their daughter, Sallie Jean, to Eric Danielson. 1He is the son of'Herbert Danielson of Woodland .Drive. and the late Mrs. Danielson. Call Mary Racine DRAPERY ANDCOIOR CONSULTANT for Sample Showings in Your Home CONVENIENT TERMS UP TO 36 MONTHS Correction Made Teens' Earnings fin the Money' Due to an error that appeared Wednesday in The Pontipc Press, the wedding story of Sandra Elizabeth Holiday and Ronald Miracle was incorrect. The newlyweds spoke vows in United Missionary Church. NEW YORK (UPI) - Raiding the kid’s piggy bank can really pay off these days, what Nebraska's 98-day archery deer season is one of the longest in the nation. SPECIAL NOW! $349 Sq. Yd. All Colors and Widths JtZITE- — 59c Carpet Tile Sq. Ft. ”CW TtWtfiA A-l CARPET & DRAPERY innn 1 * ONt BLOCK nokih ur waliun nii^kie r-70 inoT 4990 Dixie Highway drayton plains PHONE 673-1297 JL&ALIUL8 Jt-OJUL8JL8 JLAJUUUULiXRJLRJt. AJUULRJOUUULBJUUUUL&AIJUUUUUtJ with teen-age earnings. * ★ ★ The Institute of Life Insurance reports that teen-age spending in the nation has entertained at the brunch and I reached a record high of $18 husiness meeting. I billion per year. Shoppiag for a Beaity Shop?. One that will- accommodate . early morning, before work, appointments ., yean of experience and constant training sessions? RANDALL’S SHOPPE IS FOR YOU! Kurile Brown, oar newest staff member will be hippy to. meke Wed. end Kri. appointments at 8:30 A.M. Tor your convenience. Three ideas for spring handicrafts. Upper left is a linen .apron with braid scrolls on the pockets: PE 3995. A prim patriotic shell is cro<-cheted in a delicate open stitch with white mer-roviypA rnttnn: the collar is red and.blm:PC 2991: EmbroTdered place mats add country-fresh flavor to summer 'Vneals. Design is done by counted thread on linen: PE 2328. For free instructions, send h self-addressgd, stamped envelope to Needlework Editor, Dept. E-600, The ■Pontiac Press, PO Box 9, Pontiac, Mieh. 48056. traditional good food BUFFET Every Sunday 9 A.M. *til Noon in Bloomfield Hills , WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD. . ,r'i 'JBii FOLD-O-BEDS BY SERTA Till PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAV. MAY 24, 1908* ______ . Buffers Feted by Children Mr. and Mrs. Lewis R. Butler, Drive. There are five grand-of Myrtle Street, will be guests'children and one great-grand- SL.honor, at a party Saturday1 child._______ evening in the home of their | daughter and son-in-law, the John Gusmans of Wadsworth! Drive, in celebration of their j I golden wedding, annivecsary 4s* ★ ★ * The Iron Out Old Hemlino ft&Mli fflrC-CUPTHM COOPOW ^ ___VALU ABLECQUPON - SEWING MACHINE TUNE-UP HMKII-AttMOOELS ^ 5 POINTS s % I — Clean; 2 — Oil ' 1-Adjust Tension; «-Ch»ok Wiring After you let down the hem in a dress, skirt, or curtain, press! pair was married inJ^-on —he wrong side, over >| Pontiac. May 22, 1918. They also4urkish towel, and it will have a son. Lewis H. of Joyceil scarcely be noticeable. $19 S ’"It, Chock Timing / 1 HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE tS 465 ELIZABETW1AKE RD. 465 ELIZABET! gproM from Pontine Malt 135-S2II i Add another bedroom to your home. A beautiful sofa by day, a,1-comfortable bed for two at night. Available in love seat, regular or king sizes. In your choice of colors, covers and styles. Easily opened and closed, they are ready for use 24 hours a day. Come in Soon for a Demonstration Remembek*, You Always Get More For Your Money At 144 OAKLAND James A. Ebert will receive his Master of Arts degree in History during commencement exercises Sunday' at j John .CarrolLUniversUy.. in Cleveland, Ohio. The ■ son of the Arthur E. j Eberts of Harper Street, ! James will continue his studies at Georgetown I University. Plastic Holders FURNITURE Convenient Terms — 90 Days Same as Cash Open Monday and Friday INighls 1jil 9 P.M. Our Free Parking Lot, .lugl Around the Corner Along Clark Street Save those plastic toothbrush holders new toothbrushes come. in. They make ideal storage for little kitchen gadgetsr'THc & kabob holders, poultry pins. skewers, rubber bands, and the1 t;:-:-:-: like. They keep the drawer neat, and-the small items clean w:;: and easy to see and find. See Ottr Large Selection of Custom Made DRAPERIES Your Draperies Are Tailored and Installed by Our Interior Decorating Staff |fr yEfll ill Separates in Polka ♦ Dots' for the Spectator Look Jacket .... $14.00 Sizes 5 to 13. Skirt . .... $8.00 Tunic t .... $10.00 Slacks ....... ....$11.00 » f.lH | y T he Shoes Aren- Fashion's favorite .... block polka dots on white 100% cotton ottoman, a lustrous never-wilt fabric you'll love by ■ 'r'Joyce''~The' ~fitfgd ~jorket giving the.effect.of-poekamr hips, over slim skirt with black patent belt and buckle. Sleeveless tunic has mandarin collar and self pockets over hips. Fitted slacks. For Ladies • Boys • Men Forget the boat, just get the boat look. Try Seadogs on today — they're the nautical shoe at the casual price. Special, Ladies' 4 to 10 Men's 6 Vi to 12 Boys' 12Vi to 6 Miracle Mile Telegraph Road Doily 9:30 to 9 P.M. • . iWS:-: 35 I L Elizabeth Lk; Rd. 682-9581 fe&2(5 ^■m THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 24. ld«8 Independence Is Near for African A re a Open Nightly Till 9 • also SUNDAY12 to 6 p. m WASHINGTON - A bright day Is dawning in Equatorial Guinea, % where breakfast grows on trees. It gains independence later In 1868.________ Spain’s 10,831 - square -mile We called Spanish Guinea, includes Rio Muni, a segment of jungle mainland; and the islands of Fernando Poo, A n n o bon , Corisco, and Elobey, the National Geographic Society says. ★ ★ ★ Most of the islands are small — Annobon, 6.6 square miles; Corisco, 5.8; Elobey Grande, IMit Elobey Chicor 0.07 — and economically unimportant. ✓ The largest, Fernando Poo or “Nanny Po,", as it is known locally, is booming. The 779-square-mile island’s high humidity and rich volcanic soil produce some of' the world’s finest cocoa. BREAKFAST STAPLES Spanish and African plan-1 tations also specialize in other breakfast staples, such as cof- fee and bananas.___ Green mountains, pocked by craters and cloaked with forests! of ebony, mahogany, and oak, rise behind Fernando Poo’s! narrow coastal plain. More than I TO- Inehes™-of rain pour downj annually on the verdant island. ★ * ★ Three-fifths of Fernando Poo’s 61,000 population — 8 per cent Spanish, 20 per cent Bubis tribesmen, 72 per cent Nigerian migrant farmhands *— live in Santa Isabel, the attractive harbor capital. The affluent live in verandaed villas, dress formally for dinner, and send their children to college in Spain. The island’s $246 per capita income is the second highest in Africa after South Africa. WMmm PEOPLES REDUCES over 300 priceless bedrooms! eldorado 4-pc. pecan veneer group Live in luxury in a Spanish Moodl In rich warm Castilian Pecan featuring dramatic carving plus antiqued brass hardware Mediterraneo Triple Dresser, Mirror, huge Chest and twin, ifull or queen size Head-board and Frame. Reduced $391 *299 no money down $15 a month Rising Road Toll Paused in 1967 In 1962 highway deaths topped the 40,000 mark. Three years later the figure was 48,500, and! in 1966 America’s highways! were stained with the blood of [ 52.500 persons. The skyrocketing f i g u r e s paused — even dropped a bit in 1967. The year-end ottll stood at 52.500 according to the highway accident booklet released annually by The Travelers Insurance Companies. Tragedy did not stop with the deaths, but added 3.84 million persons to the 1962 injured list-. [ 4.4 million were injured in 19661 and 4.2 million in 1967 — a I reduction of some 200,000 . “The record of 1967 gives us! the first appreciable improvement in this respect that has taken place in more than a| decade,” y cording____to a Travelers spokesman. SATISFACTION ‘QUALIFIED’ “The satisfaction this gives inust be qualified, however, for it will require many more years of consistent betterment before we can claim any'genuine progress toward the conquest of a stubborn and tragic problem,” he added. Adverse weather was not an important contributing factor In - 196? nr 1967. Record last year some 80 per cent of the fatal crashes occurred on| dear days and dry roads. Thej remaining 20 per cent; occurred! in fog, rain and snowy weather. [ ★ . ★ if Excessive..speerd co^tmaes tor hold top spot in the is-trf ac-j . cident causes, with jjreckless driving and driving on thej wrong side of the road taking second and third p 1 a c e s respectively. Pedestrians were at fault in mfiny of the fatal accidents, with crossing between intersections being the top killer. Youthful drivers hold the greatest responsibility on the highway death list. Almost one third of the drivers involved in fatal accidents were under 25 years of age. Drive Organized for Jackson Poor on your mark... get set for our great quality bedroom sale Serving greater michigan Since 1893 you'll at the low prices! ... the selection! ...the . styles! ...the savings! danish velvet walnut 4-pc. group 299 $ —Decorator's delight! Authentic Danish ......Velvet-walnut styled 9-drawer 72- tnch Masterpiece Triple Dresser, Mirror, matching Chest and fwin/full size Bed. Deeply sculptured drawer pulls and leg bases for contemporary elegance. REDUCED $44. no money down $15 a month solid pine 4-pc. colonial group Be a 'pacesetter' with this Early American hew ’pine' beauty. Featuring Double Dresser, Mirror, Chest and Spindle Bed. Here's beauty on a budget ... a ^ fine bedroom in the Colonial manner. REDUCED $39 $OQQ no money down uvv/ $15 a month JACKSON (AP) - A poor people’s campaign has been! organized in Jackson,_ but instead of going to Washington,' D. Gq^wflj rergaifr-in Jackson. Organizers of the campaign say they will continue their efforts through the summer to obtain low.Income housing, jobs and job training programs. also in DETROIT PONTIAC • ANN ARBOR • FLINT # PORT HURON • JACKSON • TOLEDO / • PONTIAC Telegraph & Square Lake Roads Miracle Mile Shopping Center , A -V Ml YOUR CHOICE m^FOCAL ^tss SPORTS GLASS OR BINOCULAR H. Quality 4x.ou* ' p,* 8,®1 p,us » 4-year Protection B*ri (part* only) for furnishing" SurferlT7n*/0r any defective* Surface Heating Unit, Surface Heating Unit Switch, or Over~ Heating Unit. ■ * On Frigidairi Washers: Wa[ranfy for repair of defect without charge, plus Protection Plln (partY in fiJr1lshmg replacement foi .ny defechve part In the com SSSp. On Frigidaire Dryers: W*tr*nty for repair 0f» defect, without charge, «us 4-yeer Protection Plan Voart* n • !nVrinf!5>"ng "placement for system rConVe p,*rt of th* drive drnm^ ,nsistln? of drum Shi drive motor*’ PU‘'ay* and gj ««** UCfUHCf BACKE?tBY 6ENERAL MOTORS! HHW:i fj'J-rzTw-*** ■* ■- ____________— ^----------.— —.—.................’ ■ L b-4 ' . #1 ■' ~THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. MAY 24, 1968 1 ~ || .. | ' .... m -v - : - .53B1I1S lESfl I 1 Nc iver In History ~7‘ > 1 ”7. ***1 ~/.77-* 7’ " : 7777'... Has This Newspaper Printed as Many Pages that Cover All Important Happenings In Your Own Neighborhood Your Own City or Township Your Own Nation And the Entire World. ~ ' 7 - 4 ~ ■ \ . . . 1 This Complete Review Each Day Is a Necessity . If You Wish to Keep Abreast of These Startling and Sensational Times JF* 1 THE FOyTIAO PRESS, KRlDAY, MAY 24, 1988 f ''"unpr B-9 What Is a Briefcase? A Boy s Pocket ^rbwrf jWITOR’S NOTE - Original- boat a* ««.» , ’:V .1 ■ ’/ -—„v ;-Xr ’’ . -~T:- -/- -- —- S ,-----.......... .■ ./„• teas designed To cartonmnl^ las,-[JKtortliwui Avenue lunehbwt." should have been handled last;'-50s hardpressed by the man inBtyfwali, DkljtlcL^Maint TlLfcontainin# a ■ listing o{ Tfu week.” , J ttteMao'jacketsnd turtleneck (EDITOR'S NOTE*-OrtfUml ^j as well ”ly, it was designed to carry population fieuree f„r fe . We/oo« |Bw » e rh,T.. . But, in this last-paced age o/jsummer home e businessman, it is all things ^ to all people. A catch-all and a R_, , * „ * carry-all- A symbol and a «tdt-'drg™8es 8re P|aces for | case. A lunchbox-and something] ms' to lose on the 6:11.) -. Consider the briefcase of John dv oir» Moonv in.rchAuald’ a vlce president of By SID MOODY jthe Chase Manhattan Bank It APNeWf features Writer [is pregnant -with b usine s s To know the Inner man ask|reatdn® matfer-not of his analyst, .his blood READS IN HOPE type or whether dogi love him. I "There has been a tremen-Pry, rather, into his briefcase -jdous proliferation of reading in There, like bits of bone andjbusiness," says Archibald who pottery in an ancient cave, the spends an hour a day reading true male lies locked away ★ A A The briefcase is merely the bny's pocket grown up, business reports at home to keep up with developments in industry, foreign trade, tax decisions, in the business projected [“Madison Avenue lunchbox in [Unjustly, perhaps. The Samsonite luggage people recently surveyed 10,000 men and found only 2 per cent admitted to carrying food in their **#i 'cases. Ten per cent confessed, however, to carrying spirits from time totimp. Briefcases are jlor nourish-Mnwnt, more or less. ________ PEEPING TOMS A lawyer told the j; Survey briefcases are repositories for papers that “people wouldn’t want left around the desk for peeping toms to read after hourr, including things -that Briefcases are for guilty consciences. •* * * * Colorado stockbroker ^said he toed his briefcase for* his credit card wallet since “it’s too bulky to carry on my person.” Briefcases are for overflow. Do they signify the go-getter? Tiedemann 'Thwe may be * little Imagery. You walk out of the office and people think ‘There goes a busy man.’ ” SYMBOLS of the ’60s: “Certain guys try to mak„ an impression right out of How. to Succeed in Business Without Really Trjrtng.’ ” , Briefcases ,are symbols, <’*pending on the beholder. ______A... A_____A Briefcases are time capsules for the bygone milestones of a maifiltfe: A safari through the briefcases of two neighboring, colleagues revealed the following: . District Natal Thl, ntiia; directions from a plumber for putting water in the l.ome furnace; “a W-2 form I’ve been looking for” — this was two weeks after April 15: a picture from, a /newspaper of Noble Price ridden by Charles Battazar to victory in the first race at Laurel Race Course paying $71.10—’% don't know what that's for”; a bill/front Tri-County Floriest of Tappan N. Y., for 15 red roses — "That’s from the last baby . . .’ pause . ^L!. ,"Np,. |t’s not. That A letter reporting that a But Spofford, who with most business contact could be'wss the last anniversary, that’s of us has lived to see the .man located care of his guru at what it was"; 'and ,aj yellow In the gray flannel suit^df thclHanttfnan Temple, Kenchi, POipage tom from a phone book containing .. a T listing; liT The restaurants in Wilmington, Del. Briefcases—can—b e em- barrassment. Archibald once Jjad his pop open while walking between cirs on tne 7:22, and he had to spend the morning walking Up and $wn the tfacks retrieving Ida Broaiiworly-,' "’a‘'; A A \ -^And™brtefcasesL_jan_ _ Ae lifecavers. An ad friend once used iis to fight off two muggers outside a Manhattan jazz joint.. / In brief, a briefcase Is no mure, and no less, than the man who carries it. PERISTALSIS And B« Yoar SmOuti Best The mueeular action of four tlve lyetem, celled Peristalsis, should not slow down. If this bsppsns wests msterlsls oen bulla up In the lower trset wed you become Irrscu-ler. uncomtortebie end feel stuffed. Oerter's Pills with its unique lee* etlve formula wakes up tbs slowed down muscles of the lower dine tire tract end stimulates PertiUUi*. giving temporary relief of this Irregularity. Then you Will be your smtt-lcg best. billions of satisfied users take Oerter’s Fills. Why don’t you. 4M / jft,....... Iff. ..ft...................Ml (It 1 Engine or Transmission I Trouble ... CALL MIDAS Phone 334-4727 storehouse, a well-bred holster schools, in trade magazines ! for the fang and claw to carry [Maybe some day it will come in! its owner through the jungle ofhandy. Maybe never. The busy; live. ' {businessman.never knows. He ■ „ * * A [just reads on in hope. Come ' Wlth"^r^7MadfsrOH ATcWbald‘s brief-1 Hurry! Offer ends June 3rd. Avenue! Meet an account executive who prefers anonymity [cafe leather bought "because London,t lasts! «*svnj«mjr ■ , f --— •••www but permitted a probe of his]®?ar. ~,was a deck of cards attache case-r$90, genuine leather, Brooks Bros. BUSINESS ORIENTED in case I get stranded in an! [airport," an air sickness bag (from an airline bearing an old jgin rummy score yet to be paid! To be sure, its contents were!0*1 and a tie clip from a1 business oriented: a copy of customer “which I don’t know1 Soap and Chemical Digest, a!v ‘iat to do with ” Wall Street Journal, a TV * * * schedule. Business. i Br>efcases are for idle hours; n..t ii,„r and idle artifacts. Bu there also was a carl Tiedemann’s briefcase.1 registration for a new outboard ias I ,h? case with many, is a Pift from his wife. "I use it to [carry papers back and forth toj jthe office,'* said Tiedemann, a Wall Street broker. “I may [open it only 10 per cent of the | jtime. But I’m always Names Picked OF MINE II ■ prepared.” ; r nlirriranPCl Sometimes he packs a tie.! 1 1 lull IbUllOJ razor and clean shirt for MIAMI, Fla. IM - The first hurricane of the year, yet unspawned, was christened Abby on Thursday. She isn’t expected until after| .ops. June 1 when the hurricane sea-[ Gavin son officially begins, but the weather watchers at Miami’s hurricane center decided they SM/- LLER TIPS Briefcases are for avoiding baggage delays at airports and for paying smaller tips to bell- Spofford, president ofi the Summit-Elizabeth (N.J.)j Trust Co., doesn’t carry aj briefcase at all. “I only take! would be ready with her name i home what I can carry in my and names for her 22 sisters. [breast pocket. When I go to a A a A' reeting out of town, I let an Brenda and Candy will follow'assistant carry the junk.” Abby. ! A A A Then will come Dolly, Edna, Briefcases Indicate status, but Frances, Gladys and Hannah, not at the top. which is as far as the names; Well, there are exceptions. A| went last year as Heidi ended Fifth Avenue leather specialty! the hurricane season off thejstore has a trim' attache case in j coast of Ireland. . alligator with gold plated clasps! AAA [for $1,800. Would a man carry a Waiting if needed will be In-jsandwich and thermos in such grid, Janet, Katy, Lila, Molly, elegance? Nita, Odette and Paula. If those "We never ask what the; names are waded through, customer uses it for,” said a [ weatherman say batten down .discreet salesman who! for Roxie, Stella, Trudy, Vesta nonetheless allowed that his [ and finally Wesley. Iproduct was also known as a! NOTICE OF MEETING OF WATERFORD TOWNSHIP BOARD OF APPEALS '/** t. " l , • Notice is hereby given of a meeting of the Waterford Township Boaref of Appeals scheduled at—the cafeteria at the Waterford Township High School, for 10:00 A.M., Saturday, May 25, 1968 to conj sider the application of Waterford Processing and Reclaiming Co., for permit to operate a sanitary landfill upon the following described premises: The South Vi of the Northwest fractional 14 of the Northwest fractional 14 of Section 7, Town 3 North, Range 9 East, and also, the Southwest fractional 14 of the Northwest fractional 14 of Section 7, Town .3 North, Range. 9 East, Waterford Township, Oakland County, Michigan, being 50.70 acres more or less. Generally located North of Gale Road and West of Mbceday Lake Road, in Section 7, Waterford Township. The Board of Appeals will be limited, pursuant -to—th*—arrW of Oakland County Circuit Court, dated May 21, 1968, to the consideration of the transcripts pf proceedings held before the Township Planning Commission and no new or further testimony for evidence will be token. Waterford Towhship Board of Appeals by: Robert E. Richmond, its Secretary Published in Pontiac Press Friday, May 24/T 968 •» "* mi sen? MliwlnM. Buy4Amoctn20SverHres ...geteogflonsHiiKilne ■ ■ Tn. ftyittasPtycrN liras ...gel 30 gaums Ira*. Time is running out on the biggest tire offer of the season. So why wait? Get over to your Standard Oil Dealer. Make your very best deal with him-get our very best four-ply tires. And Standard gives you Super Premium Gasoline FREE.. You don’t need cash with your Standard Oil Credit Card—just use our new revolving charge plan. Even if you don’t have our credit card, ask for Instant Credit. But remember, the chariot turns into a pumpkin June 3rd. OMCOVm AMERICA O American OH Company, 1968 • World’* largatt distributor of Atlas tiros. Trademarks—"Atles”—"Plycron”—Reg. U.S. Pet OH., Atlas Supply Co. Ktnntrly's Standard Service 378 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan Tolophone; FE 5*5444______ AVAILABLE AT THESE PARTICIPATING STANDARD OIL DEALERS: Sager's Standard Service 6480 Safhabaw at 1-75 Clarkston, Michigan Roy Bros. Standard Station 205 N, Telegraph Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 332-5080 Roy Bros. Standard Service M-15 and Dixie Hwy. Clarkston, Michigan Telephone: 625-5731 ~ Roy Bros. Standard Service 4289 Walton at Sashabaw Drayton Plains^ Michigan Telephone: OR 3-9993 *3 Telephone: 625-4722 Slade's Standard Service M-59 at Pontiac Lake Road Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 682-9350 Smith's Standard #1 1430 Joslyn at Walton Pontiac, Michigan Telephonist 332-5776 Smith's Standard #2 4985 Baldwin at 1-75 Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 391-9729— Smith's Standard Service *3 314 Walton at Richmond Pontiac, Michigan v Telephone: 338*7436 Wegner Standard Service 500 Main Rochester, Michigan Telephone: OL 1-1901 to! I B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1068 m It's fairly obvious that Myrtla isn't exactly part-of the "Jet-set." .Quite the contrary. She still thinks the same and dresses the same as she did twenty years ago. Her diet hasn't changed much either. Her groceries include the same twenty or thirty items week after week, and year after year. She never buys any of the hundreds of new and delicious Convenience foods that are available today. Nor does she care about being able to select * * from the widest variety of well-known foods in Michigan, because her shopping list never changes. Is a Spartan Store right for Myrtle Hurd? Well, that's hard to say. But, jf everything that is No about Myrtle, is Yes about you, then a Spartan Store is right for you. If you care about being able to find those new items, if you enjoy being completely unlimited in your selections, if you like to be pampered ... then you'll be more than satisfied with a Spartan Store. After all . . . "Satisfaction" is why you shop a Spartan Store. 1 Hi Shop the store with the SPARTAN on the door.” Nabisco Grahams ... ... SUGAR HONEY MAID, 1 -LB. 37c Hydrox Cookies . . . ... SUNSHINE, 1-LB. BOX 49c Zesta Saltines . . . ... KEEBLER, 1-LB. BOX 33c Vita Boy Chips . . . Birds Eye Peas . ... FROZEN, 1O-OZ. WT. 2/45c ... 14-OZ. WT. BAG 69c Spry Shortening . . ... SPECIAL LABEL,2-LB., 10-OZ. 69c Parkay Margarine . ... (SOFT) TWO V2-LB. TUBS. LB. - 2 FOR 89c Imperial Margarine.. ... QUARTERS, 1-LB. CTN. 42c New Diet Imperial... . . MARGARINE, 1-LB. CTN. - 2 FOR 89c Birds Eye Corn . . . (CUT) FROZEN, 10-OZ. WT. 2/45c Prince Rigatoni . . ... 1-LB. PKG. 29c Soft Weve Tissue . . BATHROOM, 500's, 2-PLY, AW'xAW 2/27c Lux Regular Bars ... ... 3 BAR PACK 35c .. AEROSOL, 9Va-FL. OZ. 49c Breaded Shrimp ... ... FLYING JIB, (BITS) 1 -LB. 99c Blueberries . . . . . ... (FROZEN) REDDI MAID, 9-OZ. WT. PKG. 29c Stouffers Pot Pies . . .. CHICKEN, BEEF, TURKEY, 1 O-OZ. WT. 59c Birds Eye Awake . . . ... FROZEN ORANGE DRINK, 9-FL. OZ. 29^ Carrots ... .. . BIRDS EYE, 10-OZ. WT. 2/43c Silver Dust W/Towel. ... 2-LB. 6-OZ. BOX 79c Surf Detergent . . . .., SPECIAL-LABEL, 3-LB. 2-OZ. 64c Vim Detergent . . . ... SPECIAL LABEL, 2-LB. 6-OZ. 57c Dove Detergent .... . ... LIQUID, 1-PT. 6-OZ. 55c Lux Detergent . . . ...LIQUID, 1-PT. 6-OZ. 55c Swan Detergent . . . ... LIQUID, 1-PT. 6-OZ. 55c Detergent a. . Lifebuoy Bath Bar . . ...EACH 19c Phase III Bar Soap .. . . . REG. 2/3 7c Breeze W/Towel . . . ... 2-LB. 6-OZ. BOX 79c New Sunshine Rinso ... LIQUID, QUART 73c Coldwater All . ... DETERGENT, QUART 75c Active All . . . . . .. . ... DETERGENT, 3-LB. 2-OZ. 71 c Fluffy Allw. ... . . ... DETERGENT, 3-LB. BOX 79c Dishwasher All . . . ... DETERGENT, 2-LB. 3-OZ. 69c ... 3-LB. 7-OZ. BOX 78c HANDY ANDY * 1-PT. 12-OZ /* FINAL TOUCH - ~ 1-QT. ) -OZ. LA CHOY /BEAN SPROUTS " |f ” •* viyi #i ^§ 45*;.. IT 3 ca1nbs 4 7C ¥ ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 196g N^W ®us*n®ss| worked and weve got to find al In Detroit, Lloyd Haynes, leaders thnqpiart■ thj country better way, director of urban affairs for report succe^p in theii;. drive to Wkjld Nin-r suitvivi.” find steady jobs for, the hard** » 1 SURV*vE core unemployed. TjjT In St, Louis, J. S. McDonnell But the response to their ef-.^clP°n"e" Douglas Corp. forts to provide.summer work.Lnrri„ f was one °L J^e needy youths is lagging. jbardc°re “"employed during lor neeuy j br, b the Depression. But we /must Executives *>f some of the never again have that kindTbf a "coudtrys biggest cor^ratlpns^^^^-^ --^^,^- are g*v'n8 t"e*r . * flit. Everyone who wants to work spearhead the job-seek t n g should be trained to do campaign of the N a t i 6 n a 1 something.” Alliance of Businessmen I T, . . . _ A1U _ , , . T he heads of many companies ■“President JohnBon-laum-hedsffiaprivgrebuslnesshasrbrg the joint government-industry j stake in the nation’s social ci’usade last January under the I climate and that employment is leadership of Henry Ford II, | one of the major answers to the chairman of Ford Motor Co. civil disorders that have struck Sixty-five businessmen w e r e, many cities, appointed to carry out the pro-; ,a a a gram. I “The problem is a serious PERMANENT JOBS one,” said James W. Cook, The goals: permanent jobs for|Pr®si(?ent I1,ln°‘8 B e 1} 100 000 hard-core unemployed ^claph°ne Co and ™g*°nal hy the summer of 1969 and for NAB. ^airman “I don’t know SOOOOO by the summer of 1971; jEHM' how many hard-core temporary jobs for 200,000 poorl^f5^ ‘here are ‘" !!.^aiun this siimmpr. [Chicago. The figure you hear most is 50.000. “Private industry is corv jcerned about these people. ‘ENTHUSIASTIC’ that many companies «rplMa"y companies need help.| He added, “we have con teen-agers this summer An Associated Press survey op NAB activities in 3< major cities across the country showed are Michigan Bell Telephone Co., said 120 firms in his area contacted by NAB pledged 15,000 jobs for hard-core unemployed and 5,000 additional summer jobs for youths. Michigan Bell hopes to hire 20b to—400 pr e v i u u s 1 y unemployable persons by May 1969 after they have been trained under the Manpower Development and Training Act program. Jobs aslong-distance toll operator, directory assistance operator, a splicer’s helper and switch room helper will pay $80 to $100 a week. » . A Ar_, A The unemployed in Detroit, as well as in most large cities, are mainly Negroes. “I have held this positon with NAB only five weeks but I am excited..and amazed by the progress we have made in this short time,” said Howard Edgerton, „c hair man of California Federal Savings in Los Angeles. tremely enthusiastic about the program so we are optimistic, A. H. Sterne, president of the Trust Co. of Georgia in Atlanta, said his firm has pledged hire 40 persons. ★ ★ ★ , summer jobs from Its private sector and we have only 1,117 so far.” Milwaukee reported it was to'well on its way to meeting a goal of 1,100 jobs for hard-core unemployed but its campaign to “We’re recruiting in placesl find 3,400 summer jobs we’ve never recruited before; to youths was languishing. for the unskilled, poorly educated! numbers of people on welfare rolls. and often dispirited people of the urban slums. “The idea of the* National|:r?l,s: lf yo“ cantpu‘ thfese j*0-.... < •• .oia pie to work, instead of a-tax- Alliance of Businessmen, said £ h ’ a taKnaver » Henry Z. Carter, president of,1 y°u have a taxpayer. Avondale—Shipyards—in . Maw i H FrEIVED Pi .EDGES-----------— Orleans, “is that we get some! Cook reported that with about government help out of this!50 Chicago firms participating with a contract with the Labor in the NAB program he had witr-Negro high schools,11 he added. “We'll make some job offers this week and hopefully by time school’s out we’ll have these people coming to work for us.- —-——— “We are talking about entry-level jobs. The entry level with this company is $1.60 an hour, the minimum wage. We may employ some of these people to clean the building. If they want to and will, the difference in this and what might have gone on before is that We have an understanding with that person and with ourselves that while he’s mopping floors or doing whatever he’s doing, he’s being trained for something better It’s not a dead-end job.” SHORT OF GOAL The drive for summer jobsTn San Francisco was running far short of its goal of 7,500. “)Ve smimply must do bet-iter,” said Mayor Joseph Alioto, situation" where’^we have large I14’200 hedges for jobs bV announcing an intensive three-September. The businessmen week drive. “Oakland across we have contacted are ex-1 the bay has something like 8,000 working at training and hiring J«*ing far Pe°P‘e ?nJitacted 3’°°° employerS ln L°S its hard to find them. And^ngejes jn our efforj ^ obtain confronted with the1 In some cities, the "buddy” system has been adopted in which an experienced employe is paired with a recruit t^ counsel him not only on work practices huLRersonaI affairs. AAA “The big job is getting these folks to stay on the job,” said William S. Parry of the Akron Welding & Spring Co. of Akron, Ohio. “Some of these folks just don't know what it is to get up in the morning and go to work. We need counselors to work with them . . to stick with them.1’ ______.___" Jj____ The federal government has funds available to pay for training but many businessmen in the NAB program want to do it themselves. - 5 ?F A „ “We don’t need any more government help,” said Henry C. Hofheimer II, president of Southern Materials Co. 0 f Norfolk, Va. “Let the government leave business alone and minimize the red tape.” ' JOB-TRAINING PROGRAM - Looking over blueprints of an F8 Crusader at the Vought Aeronautics Division of LTV Aerospace Corp., Grand Prairie, Tex., are (from left) Jose Guzman, Jose A. Zuniga and Pan-taleon Torres. They are part of a group of hard-core unemployed who receive training to help them get better jobs. Department to pay us the difference between what one of these fellows costs thus and what he’s worth. Still, the indi- rect ved pledges for about 6,200 jobs out of a quota of 11,000. j Edward W. Jacobson, vice; president of Eastern Air Lines! vidual businessman has control and director of the Metropolitan over training him. This is the New York NAB committee, said [ cheapest way the government the program was producing ex-| could find to do it." cellent results. He reported' Crawford Johnson III, presi-{commitments for 11,200 adults1 dent of a bottling firm, ini jobs out of a quota of 18,500. j Birmingham, Ala., 'said he feels] But only 2,600 adult jobs out. the program will be effective, of a quota of 18,500. He said “the welfare programs] But only 2,600 pledges of jobs have done nothing but give us!for teen-agers have been, second and third generations of] received out of the area’s quota j families on welfare. I’m not;of 35,700. Jacobson said this was] saying that the people who were partly due to NAB getting] in charge of these programs {started late on the youth drive | weren’t doing their best I'm j and the fact that other agencies | just saying that, the programs {are canvassing businesses fori as they were conceived haven’t' summer jobs. -up car Outstanding value in a Compact Console! NEW ZENITH SUPER SO HANDCRAFTED COLOR TV CHASSIS Handwired with no printed circuits and no production lhortcut* for unrivaled dependability PATENTED color demodulator circuitry Extracts color from the incoming signal with peak precision for UMurp*«*d, true-to-life color hues. SUNSHINE* COLOR TV PICTURE TUiE for greater picture brightness with redder reds, brighter greens and more brilliant blues. fpe Service What We Sell STEFANSKI ELECTRONICS 1157 W. HURON FE 2-6967 1968 tkisgrn Giant 21,. rectangular MS sq. in. viewing are* COLOR TV1 HANDCRAFTED for greater reliability Sure, you knew Olds is a step-up car— to everybody but your rich uncle. But we'll bet you didn't know Olds step ups start down where most of the so-called low-priced cars are found. That's our problem. Too few people know how Features the best in Color performance modest Olds prices ore. Fact is, they start at $2512 —and we have 16 Olds models under $3000. (There are at least that many so-called low-priced cars priced over $3000.) Our point is, if you'd like to step up a little from what you're driving now— we've got an Olds for what you are willing to spend. FullZemth quality for just The COURBET • Y4514-4 Beautiful Contemporary styled compact console in grained Walnut color (Y45T4W-6); or in grained Mahogany color (Y4514R-6). Cabinet features decorative front molding and splayed legs with brass ferrules. Super Video Range tuning System. 1 ISOLDSMOBILE’S____ INGING NEW CUTLASS S. $2632* ufacturer's tu al excise tax a.. ;es, accessories igsested retell pHce for 6-eylInder Sports Coupe including mo Suggested dealer delivery end handling charge (transportation as, optional equipment, state and local taxes additional). ile dealer during his B—i» THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 24. IMS' fcho I Satellite Falls to DeathrAfter Nearly 8 Years in COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (A — Echo I, the balloon satellite that has offered a nightly show to millions around the world since its launching nearly eight years ago, fell to a fiery death last night off the West Coast of South America, the North Americarr Air --Defense Command (NORAD) said. A spokesman said NORAD, I reduced Which has been tracking Echo I| — in its dying days, had received no reports of sightings of the That was Aug. 12, 1960, when it blasted away from what was then Cape Canaveral, inflated to a 100-foot diameter and became the first visible evidence to the world of America’s budding progress in space exploration. XT th e time of its deathv the once-round balloon had been{ to less than half its original size and its misshapen| The balloon successfully;comes back to a receiver ■earth;-------%----:— Echo J leaves a legacy of scientific discovery. Included were the f j r definitive measurements aplar radiation pressure at altitude of about 1,000 miles skin Wrinkled like a prune. ireceived and bounced back It had been battered by space Lejepj,0ne conversations a n d' dust, radiation particles and . J , , . meteoroids and has lost mostlradl° anc* te e ype messa8es> of the benzoic acid and anthra- j telephone conversations and quinone inflating gas that made pictures. But the two Echo it firm and circular. |spheris have demonstrated that Nevertheless, Echo I had far much of the radio energy that the no reports or signungs or me _ ■. . _ plunge. Re estimated the time Po/fCe TO KeSCUe of decay at 7:47 p.m. EDT although computers and sensors could not verify it here until midnight. * + * Launched from Cape Kennedy Aug. 12,1960, Echo I has logged 36,000 orbits apd some one billion miles of space travel. It received and ^relayed teletype messages,1 telephone conversa- CHARGE IT a legacy of scientific discovery. The satellite was done in by the gentle sunlight that made it shine brighter than most stars. Sunlight pressure finally pushed it close enough to the earth’s at- — |MN|-----------------R _r — mosphere for gravity to takecontrol box and gave it a good. outlived even the most op-! fells upon them is scattered into timistic predictions. Because of j space and only a part of it its size, scientists originally ~~ figured it would succumb to^ atmospheric drag and reenter the atmosphere after anywhere . from a month to a year. But it in N. Y. Town OSihad been soaring around the 1 earth nearly eight years. Drivers See Rea | The satellite became a sensational favorite with people NEW HYDE PARK. N.Y.!*r°un‘1. the (AP) - The traffic light at an rflectinS of 'ts ,s^h'n’ intersection in this Long kland ;alumrnum-c0ated surface made community locked in a set posi-j1* plamly visible at night. finding which contributed better understanding of the on fects of solar flares on weather, Icommunications Interference and other matters on earth. The satellite also provided the first firm findings about the density of radiation particles at 0f such altitudes, a help in ar! {designing later spacecraft. toHELD SHAPE-------—“ s t its shape so long showed that [meteoroids were_______nuL____a.s numerous as anticipated, and demonstrated also the durability of even the thinnest materials in space. I Whenever a large solar flare erupted on the sun, the great j amount of resulting radiation; ef- The fact that the sphere held flowing through space substan- tially altered Echo I’a orbit, sometimes bv several miles. ★ ★, ★ The slight pressure of the sun's radiation — on flare-free days less than a fly's weight .gradually had pushed Echo I's orbit from a low point of 958 miles down lo 46(F fnneS, ptactng the satellite at deaths’ door. FRANK S NURSERY SALES OPEN 9 to 9 _____._..r tion Thursday, showing red onj LAUNCHED AS tions and pictures and provided all four sides, - I EXPERIMENT Motorists halted. Horns; Echo I was launched as an honked. Traffic backed up hi j experiment, to determine if a each direction. After several minutes, a po-.^e effective lice patrol car sped up. An °ffi*!munications relay station. As cer jumped out, walked up to ajsuch it was a h ho„ow prmtrnl hnv ori/i 001/0 it 21 Onnrl . ,1 .. .. ... “roi oox,.ana " a.«ooa’ space mirror, reflecting back to hold and tug it out of orbit. |hard pounding with the side of^ ^ signa,s st*king it VISIBLE EVIDENCE .. . . . , ffj The only devices aboard were . The light changed, and traffic , \ ,. . Echo s death was not as moves Angeles Airways resumed Its charter,operations in the metropolitan am& after a post-crash suspension of flights. The county, board of supervigors urged the Federal Ayiatlon Agency to ^grotufl afl of the firm's Sikorsky S61 helicopters until the cause of the crash was determjl|ed; PROBE TEAM A spokesman for an eigjit-man team of National Transpor-tation Safety Board experts, sent from Washington, D.C., to investigate the disaster, said the FAA could issue a grounding order but rarely does. The bodies of the 20 passengers and three crewmen were "found In or near the ehnrred|-wreckage in a cow pasture near a busy Intersection of Paramount, halfway on the 32rmite hop from Disneyland to the airport. WWW The dead included Mayor John R. TTainor, 46, of Red Bluff, Calif.; Dr. Arden K. Rud-dell, 43, professor of education at the University of California at Berkeley; and Morris Krom-feld, a New York investment banker from West Englewood, N.J. Nine relatives of Mrs. Jack Garner of Columbus, Ohio, also were aboard. They were nearing the end of a vacation. w w w :/■. A spokesman fbl* the FAA Investigators said 60 to 70 witnesses are being interviewed, Including about 10 police and firemen. Investigations are scheduled to continue at the site of the crash until an accurate picture of the crash and the scattering of debris is formed, —^ A rotor blade broke away from the big craf^before it fell. The possibility that this caused the crash was being studied. W' w w The wreckage is being moved to a hangar at Los Angeles In temational Airport and the craft will be reconstructed “like a giant, three-dimensional jigsaw puzzle" on a chicken-wire frame, the FAA spokesman said. PARTS RUNTED Residents of the Paramount area were being urged to turn in any pieces found at the crash site. “It sounds very melodramatic," the FAA spokesman said, “but it is very possible that What Happened Yesterday in the State Capital Sy The AiMClatod Prat* THI OOVERNOR Said hf had ptrmlttad a bill allowing Was asked by Senata leaders to veto a bill — passed by both Houses — that would exempt lawmakers from Lansing’s new city Income tax. Appointed 15 people to a newly created commission Charged with recommending means of bettlr combatting the problems of luvenlle delinquency. THE SENATE Asked the governor to veto a bill excluding legislators from paying Landing s . nonresident city income tax. ’ Sent to the governor: SB$l«, SB lilt, Demaao. Permit auto dealers to tunk abandoned motor vehicles. Passed, - x-HBSSM, Anderson. Create Insurance pool to wrfto policies on high-risk prOper- s°me dungaree-clad teen-ager will come sidling up to the ropes therp today or tomorrow with a piece of wreckage that will pro-vide the clue to the whole accident." Hold Camp-la CHARLESTON, W. Va. (AP) —Three Logan County, W. Va., welfare recipients have been camped on the statehouse lawn since Wednesday to protest benefit checks that they say are In adequate. to A So far they've recruited an other member,! turned down jobs as lumber mill workers and caused mutterings among statehouse officials. CavanaghRips Budget Votes by ' DETROIT (AP) - Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh Thursday said the refusal to raise property taxes “a strange and will; ful coalition" In the Detroit Common Council is guaranteed to produce a deficit and “an inability to meet the city's basic obligations^1— The council voted 18 straight times Tuesday to override Cavanagh vetoes of changes it previously had made in his $460 million budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1. “I am sorry the council ganged up to defeat police reorganization, low cost bousing, salary adjustments^ more policemen and other vital needs of the city to create an almost catastrophic financial situa- tion?1 Cavanagh said in a prepared statement. ★ a ★ „„ "I expected help from the elected officials of the city "but got nothing but a negative and obstructionist policy toward the accomplishment of the difficult tasks ahead. “Indeed it was a strange coalition which worked and schemed to bring about this situation,” he added, saying; " One councilman voted against the council's budget and then with characteristic consistency voted against my vetoes, to to to1 , “Another had to be publicly coached and drilled to understand that a ‘yes’ vote was 'vote upheld the vetoes. A third, unavoidably absent from budget sessions, was subjected to mid* night cram sessions, to get the council’s point of view." * ★ * Cavanagh'said: “I would say that the judgment of this negative group was less than objective, in fact, it was vindicltlve, personal and Imprudent;1' r~r XPa CHARGE IT RANK'S NURSERY SALES^®* OPEN 9to9 REStRTS GUARANTEED with SCOTTS FRANK’S X-HB3303, Go.rlingv Add thro* «pp«ali court Mgei and several circuit court fudge*. dgaa.—„_____<____„_ HB3J85, Spancar. Parmlt state Income reductions tor contributions to col selected: A House proposal to cut ttie salary grant to the widow of the late Sen. Harold Volkema. R-Holland. A. proposed amendment to require re-flectorlied license plates by 19/0. A proposed $500,000 grant to the heailh department for kidney research, cutting It to >300,000. THB HOUSE Defeated JHR L, Paara. Four-year terms for house members. Passed: SB445, Toapp. Exempt from taxation gasoline tor vehicles used In transportation of students of nonprofit private and denominational schodia and collages. X-SB960, Roiycki. Give Wake' sources Commit uxor deflnln mmlsslon regulatory poWlrt no, occupying, building or ■ plaint of atraim*. SBT369, Byker. Officially name, new Capitol complex office buildings “State B$ldW|?O.V *nd "**■*• Treasury x-fjfn? zdtjer. Permit couittlar and townships to contract tor ambulance services. ■ ■ - kX Lt.a x-SBiin, Rockwell. Parmlt. county and regional parks and recreation commissions. with county supervisor approval, to adopt rules entorcabla at misdemeanors. SBII, Zaagman. Create stale boundary commission to fudge proposed annexations, ■ J SBIll, Oiandtel. Provide for regulation and Inspection of nenroltamut cemeteries. Almost $806,000 .worth of clay om England w«ib.imported by ilna makers in the Trenton, J., area. 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May is an excellent time to seed your lawn. OPEN 7 DAYS 9 TO 9 RANK'S NURSERY SALE RD, (M-59) at AIRPORT RD. FREE PARKING fe CHARGE IT 31590 GRAND RIVER, FARMINGTON 6575 TELEGRAPH AT MAPLE 14 MILE AT CROOKS ROAD ■A. B—14 Most Delegates Uncommitted GOP Still Torn LANSING (AP) - Despite Gov. Nelson' ■ Rockefeller’s fav-arable impression, most Michigan delegates to the Republican National Convention say they are undecided about the presidential contenders. An Associated Press poll, however, indicated that Rocke feller has a slight lead over Richard M. Nixon among those candidates who say they have made up their minds. ★ ★ ★ The majority of the 46-member delegation has agreed to support GoV. George Romney as a favorite son on the' first ballot even though it is not legally binding. Romney, the deli egation’s chairman, has said he will attempt to keep the delegation uncommitted to maintain its bargaining position. Of the 39 delegates contacted Thursday-one day after Rockefeller’s appearance before the group—five said they definitely would vote for the New York governor when Romney released the delegation. Two others said they leaned to Rocke-[ feller. TWO SOLID VOTES ■ By comparison, Nixon received only two solid votes, but ’three delegates said they leaned! ; toward him. .x—__—.it. it.... Al_________' J > Several delegates expressed interest in Gov. Ronald Reagan of California, but only one said he leaned toward Reagan. No delegate said he was committed to him. TWtty-flve of the delegates 'said they were uncommitted Efforts to contact the remaining nine delegates were unsuccessful. THREATEN TO BOLT In addition, six delegates threatened to bolt the first ballot favorite son candidacy of Romney. None of the six ex-1 'pressed a preference, saying j only they wavered between Reagan and Nixon. : One delegate refused to say whether he would support Romney on the first ballot or wheth er he had decided which candidate to support. Rockefeller’s appearance before the delegation this week ;,was done in an attempt to permit the delegates to learn how the candidate stands on various campaign issues. ★ ★ ♦ The New York governor was 'die first of the top Republiean presidential candidates to appear before the body. Most delegates said after the private meeting that Rockefeller’s performance was very impressive. BEHIND CLOSED DOORS Nixon will discuss campaign isgues with the delegation behind closed'(doors June 7 in Lansing. Many uncommitted delegates said they would wait for the former vice president’s appearance ’ before deciding which candidate to support. Reagan, who has not publicly I declared his candidacy, has not been scheduled to address the! Taxpayers Panel " to Study Right to Spending Voice The Oakland County Homeowners and Taxpayers Association will sponsor a panel i discussion Tuesday to explore, the county board of supervisors’! obligations to taxpayers in the spending of public funds. The organization has long advocated that voters be given a voice where large sums of money are involved in acquiring property and the construction of major buildings. The panelists include State Sen. Robert J. Huber, R-Troy; Richard D. Kuhn, a Pontiac attorney; Monte Geralds, a Madison Heights supervisor; and James Seeterlin, county treasurer. __The program will be held in ~the supervisors' auditorium11^ the county courthouse at ,7:30 p.m. The meeting is open to the public. 7 Coast Guard Aids Stranded Auto •; COOS BAY, Ore. (AP) - Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Marino of Medford, Ore., copldn’t get their car ; going, and it took two /toast Guard ships, a tugboat and a . log puller to get them back on ’the road. , * The Marinos were driving their amphibious car bn Coos 7 Bay last week when it got stuck :«1 a mud flat. The boats pulled A Hidden Ihlft in a truck load of.fresh iweet corn caused $17S,x)00 in damage, and shock, a broken leg and five hours of suspense to a Dearborn truck -driver Thursday night. Joseph ftosdelniak, 37, was hospitalized in Detroit General a Hospital after spending five! _ J ■■ — •hhlOT In the best seat at his jown crisis, which attracted doz-ens of onlookers. t 0r ’ it He was hauling eight tons of crated, fresh sweet com from a terminal In Detroit across town to a warehouse, when a shift in the load, caused by centrifugal force, threw the tractor- ~T~: trailer against a guard-rail on atsee the debris of his cargo, 35-foot-high overpass. It hov-!piled. 15 feet high in the street ered awkwardly on the railing below. of the overpass that connects the traffic-busy Chrysler and Ford Freeways. Looking er’s seat down from the driv-in the cab which An off-duty Detroit policeman, Richard Viecelli, 37, who arrived within minutes-.-of the crash, stayed in the overturned cab, until Koscielniak’s leg was had lost its left door and the freed, five hours later, windshield, Koscielniak could’ Fireman Frank Jorden, “47, a ladder truck sergeant who; worked under the precariously-balanced truck, said the mangled undercarriage Jammed the trucker’s leg under the seat. Efforts to pull the truck from the railing were hampered by fear of disturbing the awkward balance and of severing Kosciel-nlak’e leg, Prof Gets Grant ADRIAN (AP) -r- Richard Goolian, an assistant professor attheAdrian-CftHegfrDepart* ment of Music, is one of six American music students awarded an (fight-week grant by the French government. Goolian will study this summer with | pianist Robert Casadesus and I his son .. Jean, near Paris. Building Names OK'd Guam was occupied by the i Japanese during World War II. LANSING (UPI) - At long lastraragingcgmroveray -over whom to honor in naming two new state office buildings Just west of Michigan’s capitol is Just about settled. ~f Passed in the House of Representatives Thursday, 80-13, was a Senate-approved bill that now needs only Gov. George Romney’s signature. “Upon completion," the bill says, And. Convmunist ter^by the Vichy government :Cbina Was shipping military of occupied France. - {supplies across the border to the Americans helped train Ho Vjetlriinh in Tonkin, and his guerrillas and sent them! The end of % Korean War into Tonkin from China to brought .an international confer-harass the Japanese. If the ence jn Geneva in 1954. While Americans were -Aware of Ho’s the deliberations went on, Viet-background as a conloundepflV minb Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap de-the Chinese Communist para jeered his coup de grace to the and a Communist Internatios&l French at Dien lien Phu. agent, they probably felt his wmfrgfs usefulness against the Japanese DIEM EMERGES* would outweigh t his past. The Geneva negotiations promkvc mnrnTTFN brought a cease-fire yJuly 20 PROMISES FORGOTTEN jand partition of Vietnam. A fi- With World War II ended, the nal declaration spoke of all-Viet-1 West forgot promises of self-! nam elections in 1956, but nei-determination. Gen. Charles de ther the' Arrfericans -nor South Gaulle, in power in newly liber- j Vietnamese signed it. Emperor sted France, quickly sent troops Bao Dai caned Ngo Dinh Diem to Indochina to reassert the t0 be his premier, and Diem French colonial claim. At Pots- soon reduced the emperor to a dam the United States, Russia figurehnpd and Britain decided the British; Thereafter the story of Ameri-' would occupy South Vietnam. Lan involvement developed like Ho Chi Minh had been -en-thisr trenching himself in the North, j * Ife* * but in the South the French in-1 - 1953 -Stalled Bao Dai, a Pliant em-[ p,cm backed by US. dollar Peror>.. the head of a sup- ajdj arranged a plebiscite which posedly autonomous Vietnam. 1 permitted him to throw out fhe In the South, also, the British j eunperor and proclaim a republ-systematically turned over au-jjc with himself as president, party in the North called for full killed. year 78 Americans died. 1964 Americans died in Vietnam. GLOBAL TROUBLE SPOTS mhjor population centers all over. South Vietnam. Troops were pulled back from rural areas to protect urban centers. The “revolutionary develop-!authorized a U.S. air raid on|men^>t pr0gram nf pacification , Dong Hoi in North Vietnam.—iwont down the drain.---------- In February, Vietcong in the (South hit Plelku, killing eight [Americans and wounding 126. An angered President Johnson thority to the returning French, (enraging Vietnamese intellectuals, ... ^ -tf ★ In September 1945, Ho issued a declaration of independence. He began bargaining with the French for independence and France promised if. But Ho also began to feel that the French and to move against the forces of chaos and corruption, including the armed forces o(i several religious sects. At that time there were just 300 U.S. military j advisers in South Vietnam. , j 1956 There were no elections. THej last of the French military left. ; 1 Vietnam 2 Laos 3 Thailand 4 Korea 5 India 6 Cyprus 7 Israel 8 Yemen _8 Nigeria 10 Rhodesia 11 Zambia 12 Angola 13 Port. Guinea 14 Mozambique Although the fighting in Vietnam dominates the headlines, there era wars dr rumors of wars in many other areos around ; the world. Map shows explosions where civil strife or border incidents hove erupted in sustained conflict and sput-tering bombs where the situation is a smoldering powder keg. | The war intensified. To save a deteriorating situation, American troops were authorized for 'combat. j By the end of March, U.S. troops in Vietnam totaled 27,000 and by December, 200,000. American casualties rose to 1,369 killed, 6,114 wounded. 1966 ! A series of peace probes got nowhere. At midyear, the first U.S. bombs hit the Hanoi and Haiphong areas. By August there were 300,000 U.S. troops in, Vietnam; by year’s end, 400,- More than 200,000 were iqade homeless around the nation. Gen. Tiiap, architect of the Dien Bierf Phu battle, declared that "the fiercest phase" of the war had begun. But the Communists, by American accounts, had lost 50,000 dead and huge ampunts of equipment in their major effort; if, as advertised, they expected a popular uprising to follow the attacks, the offensive failed. On March 10, U.S. and allied troops began a counteroffensive. Meanwhile, President Johnson an- Q00, U.S., casualties stood announced the U.S. commander, 5,008 killed, 30,093 wounded, jGen. William C. Westmorland, 1967 would become Army chief of Despite a declared truce for™ff. Later Gen. Creighton W. Tet, the lunar new year, 177 [Abrams, his deputy, was named clashes occurred, costing the to sumcceed Westmoreland, lives of 20 Americans and 101 enemy. In the spring, U.S; bombers began using bases in Thailand for bombing Vietnam targets. The demilitarized zone divid- &___* ★ On March 31, PresMent Johnson dramatically announced a partial halt in the bombing of North Vietnam, coupling this with his renunciation of reelec- ifig the two Vietnams became a.**011- ^Pr‘* 3, North Vietnam battleground. At midyear there |offered to talk about possible were 450,000 U.S. troops in Vietnam. In the United States, op-position to the war was rising. The year ended wjth total U.S. casualties from 1961 at 15,M2 dead, 99,305-wounded, j 1968 I As the year began, excitement had been generated by a change Jin the syntax of the Hanoi stand. Now Hanoi-was saying that an negotiations. By early April, U.S. casualties for the period since 1961 stood a 21,054 killed and 132,058 wounded. This was 16,000 more casualties than the United States sustained in all of the Korean War. Between 1954 and 1968, the cost of U.S. involvement in Vietnam rose from a rate of $1 billion annually to a rate of $30 billion or more a year. Available With.or Without Many Decorator Colors to Choose From COMPLETE OUTFIT ... Including CONVERTIBLE FEATURE TO MAKE SOFA INTO FULL SIZE DOUBLE BED IN SECONDS! . ' hot Wwi» Clfrt—» far Umm, MUwi, tH. 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COFFEE TABLE NAS CONCEALED STORAGE COMPARTMENT Idaol for storing Carving piocii, books and magazines, napkins,, arid any other oFttciof you'll want handy for infartaining guasts. Owners to Air Their Rebuttal at NFL Confab NEW YORK (AP) - Faced with a “no contract, no football" threat from their veteran players, National Football League ciubowners were to present their side of the economic picture at a news conference today. The NFL Players’ Association broke off negotiations Thursday ’ after a meeting in which the owners refused to budge on any of the players’ economic demands. Dan Shulman, the players’ lawyer, said a policy of NFL dubs pot. signing, veterans until the current negotiations are over was “in effect, a lockout. NO POSITIONS “There are trertain positions open to us," he said. “We have to go back to the membership and sak if they are ready to take action.- If they continue not signing veterans there just won’t be any football. “If they do sign veterans, then we are in the position of going back to the players and having them tell us what to do. If we get no contracts we have no choice. No football!" -h s Shulman listed some of the players’ alternatives—not showing up for training camp, showing up for camp and then leaving, not playing exhibition games, not playing regular season games. ★ ★ w A league spokesman said it was “not true that there is a c o n c e r t e d movement" not to sign veteran players. He said many veterans have already signed, including some of the 16 player representatives who met .with the owners. A player does not have to be under contract until the regular season begins but the club must notify each player by May 1 if they intend to pick up his option — that is, make him their property for another year. PLAYERS’ DEMAND The players are asking $500 a game for preseason contests, a $5 million annual payment to their pension fund and a $15,000 minimum salary. Shulman and John Gordy of the Detroit Lions, president of the players’ association, said the owners agreed to( $10,000 but added this would not cost the* clubs any money since most players now get at least $10,000. ★ ★ ★ Gordy called Thursday’s meeting “a sad day for football.” He reiterated that no strike vote had been taken and said the players' position was negotiable. “We are ready, willing and able to meet any time they make an offer on economic items,” Shulman said. “We don’t intend to stand pat." Gordy said the owners had submitted “uncertified and unaudited" financial statements that “are meaningless to us." He said the owners “admit to $600,000 (per^ekib) net profit before taxes. It seems to us this should be a great deal higher.” PCH, Skippers Favorites Prep Links Tourney Alvta 3b THWpMi IB LBrown >1 Sleberl p 4x1 0 1000 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 o 6 o o Total Ctavttan# Ctlmmia , . Stabtri (W.M) till! (LJ-1) . Sriirwior Weaver ...n p»ttin— Wright JO f II t Total 33 1 } 1 .... 0 1 #130 , ,. I 0 laO 10 I I if IP N III BB SO m t A rematch for two local rivals was Interwoven into the Pontiac Press High-School InvItatifleaLiga J8#L®f.l^jfouFr^ man teams teed off this morning at Pontiac Country Club. Among the favorites in the 17th annual edition of the tournament were Pontiac Central's Chiefs and the Skippers of Waterford, who went head-to-head in a dual match yesterday with the Skippers winning, 199-200. NO RUNAWAY With those two ready for the 18-hole actlon today, it appeared unlikely that any of the 25 teams could run away with the title. Also among the contenders for over-all honors were Walled Lake, Milford and Southfield. ★ ★ A surprise entry could be Clarkston, who made off with the Wayne-Oakland League championship yesterday at Burroughs Farms near Brighton. ★ ★ ★ ■ In winning, Clarkston (317) beat five of the teams that will be* in the tourney today — Milford (323), Bloomfield Hills Andover (327), Northville (334), West Bloomfield (357) and Holly 366)., TOP PLAYERS Along with that team battle Waterford and Pontiac Central have a couple of performers who’ll be battling eaph other for medalist honors. — *----★ 5—*— --------r--- The Skippers’ Rod Skelton picked up an eagle and three birdies en route to a one-under-par 35 yesterday, while PCH ace Gary Balliet carded an even-par 36 over the PCC course which will play at 6,305 yards, par-72 today. it ft ft They’re two of a handful picked-to-battle for the medal title, and both have a good shot at the tournament record 70 held by two players — Ron Holden (1964). of Bloomfield Hills Andover and Russ Streeter (1966) of Walled Lake. ★ ft ________ Defending champion in the tournament is Kettering, but the Captains do not appear to have the over-all depth to stay* with Waterford or Central. MAY CHALLENGE— Clarkston’s sudden rise could spell trouble. for the favorites. Three of the Wolves carded rounds in the 70s yester- day while they were taking the loop crown. Marty Brown posted a 77, Lyle Walter a 79 and Jim Navarre 79. A ★ ■ ★ Rain was forecast as the players stepped onto the tee this morning, but tjje presence of the sun and a clear sky indicated the weatherman may have missed his mark. . Bloomfield Hills Andover, winner of five Press championships, also appeared out of the running. The Barons, like Kettering, haven’t shown the balance needed for tournament competition. Pontiac Central and Waterford have, won the event once apiece. The Chiefs took the first one, back in 1952, while Waterford posted its victory in 1956. ★ ★ * Walled Lake has won twice — I960 and 1963 — and the Vikings, who finished ahead of both Central tond Waterford in the regional last week, will have to be reckoned with today. THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, MAY 24, 19tf8 fc—! Pappin Now Black Hawk "Maple Leafs Acquire Pilote UCLA Cager Is Booked LOS ANGELES W - Lucius Allen, star guard for UCLA’s national championship basketball team, was booked with four friends Thursday night on charges of possession of marijuana, police said. — TORONTO UP) — The goal-hungry Toronto Maple Leafs added more age to their already ancient but efficient defense corps Thursday by obtaining veteran all-star Pierre Pilote from the Chicago Black Hawks in a surprising National Hockey League trade. To obtain the 36-year-old Pilote, Toronto gave up right wing Jim Pappin, 28, who has played with the Leafs for parts of five seasons and was one of the stars pf their 1967 Stanley Cup vietory. LONGTIME ALL-STAR Pilote was named to the first All-Star team five times and to the second team three times in his 13 NHL seasons. He won the Norris Trophy as the best defenseman in the league in 1963, 1964 and 1965. ■ ★ . w w Pilote joins Toronto* defensemen Allan Stanley, 42, Tim Horton, 38, and Marcel Pronovost, who will be 38 next month. Goalie Johnny Bower is 43. The Leafs slumped from their Stanley Cup triumph to fifth place in the NHL’s East Division and missed the playoffs for the first time in 10 years. They allowed only 176 goals, second best in the entire league, but scored only 209, lowest in the East. ★ ★ ★ “Any time I can get my, hands on an All-Star, I'm happy," said Punch Imlacb,—Toronto’s general manager-coach, shrugging off Pilote's subpar 1967-68 campaign. TOP CALIBER “You don’t judge a player of Pilote’s caliber on the basis of one season. The fact they booed him might be a plus for me. He’s got pride. He’ll want to show a few people. ★ ★ ★ “He still got more points one goal, 36 assists than any defenseman on my team last season. He was good enough to get on the second All-Star team at mid- CardenalSpark in Tribe Threat to Tigers' Lead ANAHEIM UP) — When Jose Cardenal played for the California Angels, Manager Bill Rigney would occasionally let him take the lineup card to home plate on the theory that the honor would strike a spark in the temperamental little Cuban outfielder. Now that Cardenal is with Cleveland, after a trade last winter, Indians’ Manager Alvin Dark has gone Rigney one better. Thursday night, he let Cardenal make out the Cleveland lineup card and deliver it to home plate prior to the Indians’ 9-2 win. “Alvin is the best manager in baseball," said Cardinal after lifting his season average to .253 — 17 points higher than his 1967 average for the Angels. Cardenal said he holds no grudge against the Angels, but added: “I’m not made at Rigney. But I don’t speak to him and he doesn’t speak to me: I should still be playing here." PSYCHOLOGY HELPS Dark’s psychology and a pitching staff that has an earned run average of 2.02 are two reasons why the surprising Indians reside in second place in the American League, only a game and a half behind Detroit. CLIVILAND CALIFORNIA •b r h bl abrh Sainton 2b 4 0 2 0 Schaal 3b 5 0 0 1 Oavolltto rf 4 0 10 Fregosi ss 2 110 Maya If 2 0 0 0 Rtpoi cf 3 0 10 Harptr If 3 2 2 1 Mlnchtr 11b 3 0 10 sim» c------y~rr p Roicnwat if 4 o o o— Cardanal cf 4 2 4 1 JHall rf 4 0 10 Vidal rf 1112 Rodgori c 4 0 i 0 5 2 2 2 Knoop 2b 4-rro Biilr p--- 3 0 0 1 Brgmoier p 4 0 2 2 • Held ph Weaver p Krkpfrlcfc ph 1 0 10 Pawn p 0 0 0 b Sntriano ph 4 0 0 0 Wright p 0 0 0 0 Morton ph 10 0 0 ‘ \ m Fritz Crisler Award Winner MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) - H. O. “Fritz" Crisler, retiring Michigan athletic director, was named winner Thursday of the second James J. Corbett Memorial Award. The award, based on outstanding achievements in collegiate athletics, was announced by Mike Cleary, executive director of the sponsoring National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics. * * ★ The award is named after the late James J. Corbett, former athletic director at Louisiana State and first NACDA president. FIRST WINNER The first winner, was Bernie H. Moure, commissioner erne r i t u s of the Southeastern Conference, who died last year. ★ ★ ★ Crisler, who retires from Michigan June 30, was a winning football coach 17 years at Minnesota, Princeton and Michigan. ★ ft ★ He will receive the award from Bill Orwig, Indiana athletic director, at the NACDA’s national convention i n Cleveland, June 25. "“The change might give his glands an extra go. He knows that with ^ps his age won’t be any problem. FORGET AGE “We throw birth certificates in the waste basket. If I can get three more years out of Pilote I’ll be happy." Pappin scored 21 goals for the Leafs in 1966-67 and was the playoff scoring leader with seven goals and eight assists in 12 games. Last season, however, he went into a slump and was suspended by Imlach when he refused to report to Rochester of the . American Hockey League. *J * ,> ■* J ¥"He appeared in 58 gatnes wi(H Torot^p, scoring 13 gbals. Tommy Ivan, general manager of the Black Hawks, said the club was reluctant to trade Pilote, the team captain, but added, “We needed young forwards more than defensemen.” Tiger Defends Crown Tonight ■“V’1 , .i’,' .-''M, NEW YORK UP) — Light heavyweight champions Dick Tiger spots towering Bob Foster age, height, weight and reach but not in heart tonight when they clash in a 15-round title fight at Madison Square Garden. Foster’s physical advantages and his punching power have combined to make the 29-year-old challenger from Washington, a 12-5 favorite over the 36-year-old defender from the Republic of Bafra. The odds could go down by fight time. it ft ft The bout is scheduled for 9:30 p.m., VaEDTV It will be telecast in some areas of the nation by Sports Network. New York will be blacked out of the telecast. BIG GATE The Garden hopes for a crowd of 15,000 and a gate of $150,000 which would get both Foster and the promotion off the financial hook. Foster has taken 60 per cent of the net gate and television and guaranteed Tiger $100,000 out of his percentage. He may wind up fighting for nothing. NEW YORK (AP) — Facto and flgurot on tha ick Tiger-Bob Foster light heavyweight title fight: pate—Fpiday# M«v 24. Place-Madison Square Garden, New York. At stake—Tiger's light haavywtii Distance—15 rounds or last. Time—290 p.m.# EOT. . r» , Television—sports Network nationally# New York blacked out.-Radio—Nona. Estimated crowd—12,000.---- Estimated gate—$125,000. Ticket prices—$5# $10# $15# $20# $25. Fighters purses—Tiger guaranteed $100,000 by Foster; Foster will get 40 per cent of tho not gate. Fighters' records—Tiger# 58-15-3, 24 knockouts# never stopped; Foster# 29-4# 23 knockouts# stopped twice. Scoring—Rounds system by referee end two Judge* who will be named at fight fimo. m m i 1 0 0 0 0 ___ ** ’•*____ ________________ _____________ ___________ AP Wlrohoto NOT QUITE GOOD ENOUGH-California first sacker Don Mlncher (top) makes a flashy rolling one-handed Btop of a smash by Cleveland's Duke Sims in the seventh inning. Thursday, but the Indians’ receiver beat the toss to the Angels’ Clyde Wright (38) for an infield single lii Cleveland’s 9-2 victory. It was one of 18 hltsby the Indians In the contest.-—■ ..« ...’TT~rr~^T-:- : 5 ,rTTT'^ • $ Osuna-Ashe Duel Opens Zone Final BERKELEY, Calif. IM - Rafael Osuna of Mexico and Arthur Ashe of the United States faced each other this afternoon to open the North American Zone Davis Cup final. They are the No. i players on their respective teams and their names were drawn Thursday by San' Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto. , * * * Joaquin Loyo-Mayo of Mexico and Clark Graebner were to ‘meet in the second singles match. Cougars Home Tonight With Toronto Falcons DETROIT (AP) ‘ — The Detroit Cougars take on the Toronto Falcons tonight ii( a North American Soccer League match at Tiger Stadium. Goalie; Jim Standen, injured i n Detroit’s opener against Atlanta April 1&.7 was placed back on the active list Thursday. At Sibley’s MIRACLE MILE COOL IT... WINTHROP Black of Brown NYLON STRAW USE YOUR SECURITY OR MICHIGAN BANKARD CHARGE! You’ll never lose your “cool" in Winthrop Strawlons. They have that smart, lively fashion look that says you know what’s "in". Light ’n cool in' washable nylott straw for real smart dress, casual or business wear. MICHIGAN’S LARGEST FLORSHEIM DEALER! Chicago ..... /..... 2 Cleveland «..■___ . 3 Detroit ___. , . A T or onto Y. .TV_7 77T W L T BP 7Pt*. OF ©A shoos Bloomfield Miracle Mud Telegraph at Square Lake Read THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1268 GARY PLAYER’S GOLF CLASS; A hooded chip shot EFFORT REWARDED—This unorthodox style used by Greeley (Colo.) West’s Steve Johnston in hurdling Fort Morgan catcher Mark Beery paid off wjth a score. Johnston missed the plate with his leap but managed to scramble back before Beery could apply the tag. It all went for naught, however, as Fort Morgan won, 4-2, to earn the Northern Conference’s berth in the State AAA baseball play-, offs. C/awson's Title Bid Kayoed by Eagles Rochester Falcons Take Oakland A Track Crown Rochester’s Falcons won seven events, setting school records in three of them, in taking the Oakland A League track championship. The Falcons rolled up 73 points to nose out Clawson (70%). Bob Woodroof posted two victories for the Falcons, taking the 100 in 10.0 seconds and the 220 in 22.4 seconds_ Dave Man* ied the record-smashers for Rochester by erasing the mark in the 440 with a 50.1 clocking. Mike Simmons cradled the mile mark with a 4:36 effort, and Gary Miller, Mike Hall, Marr and Woodroof combined to set a record of 1:30.7 in the 880-yard relay. Hie other Rochester wins CEMENT MEN "Mock trick, Flat Work” AwjtoMg Now, Addition*, Porches, Garages. Must Have Modernisation Experience. BOND-BILT CONSTRUCTION CO. 13800 W. t Mile Rd. JO 4-4880 Mr. |. Metzger came in the shot put by Alex McKinnon (50-8) and the two-mile by Keith Wattles (10:05) Birmmghaffl Groves captured the Northwest Suburban title with 78 points Wednesday Livonia Franklin (45) was second Mowed by Detroll Thurston (35), North Farmington (31), Oak Park (19) and Wayne John Glenn (12). ★ it-----it— John Mann of North Farmington turned in the best leap of the season in the state by taking the high jump with 6-feet-8%-inches. Ttam Standing Rochester 73; 2. Clawson 7OV2; 3. Romeo 24V»i 4. Troy 23; 5. Utica 12; 6. Lake Orion 11; 7. Madison 10. Individual Results Pole Vault — Groesbeck (LO), Davis (M)/ Fons CT) 11-3. Shot Put — McKinnon (Roch.), Hendricks (C)r Nugent (Roch.) 50*5. Long Jump — Qualmann (T)#, Curry (C), Bruzysnk! (Rom.) 20-8. High Jump — Bruzysnkl (Rom.), Wimble (M), Miller (R) 5-10. Two Mila — Wattles (Roch.), Hare (C), Vizena (Roch.) 10:07.25 (League Record). 880 Relay — Rochester, Clawson, Romeo, 1:30.7 (League record).' ' * Mile — Simmons (Roch.), Jarrett (Rom.), Lelito (C) 4:34.6. High Hurdles Curry (C), Featherlin (C), Qualmann (T) :15.1. 880 — Lelito (C), McDaniels (Roch.), Faber (T) 2:01.6. 440 — DaW Marr (Roch.),’ Poirier (Roch.), Glllis (C) :50.l (League Record). 100 —■ Woodroof (Roch.), Helton (C), Miller (Roch.) clO.O. (League Record) Low Hurdles — Curry (C), Qualmann (T), Marini «J) :21.1. LA 22o — Woodroof (Roch.), Hetron (0), DJviney (C) 22.5. Mile Relay — Clawson, Rochester, Romeo 3:32.0. (League Record). Madison knocked Clawson out of the Oakland A League baseball title race Thursday with a 5-3 upset win and stayed tied with Rochester for third place. ★ it k The Falcons blanked troy, 7-0, behind MikeScaily’s-twe-hit hurling. Rochester and Madison are 64, Clawson slipped to 7-3 and idle Utica stayed 6-1 with two games remaining next week. The Chieftains would have to lose both outings for Clawson to regain any title hopes. ★ ★ * Bill Miller drove in all three runs with three ’singles for Clawson but rt wasTiTefiougfi lo overcome four errors in the first two innings that let in all five runs for Madison (64). The defeat dropped the Tro-■ . - , jans to 15-3 over-all. Clawson 1» Arraover Netmerr the fifth-ranked team in the county. Topple La riser It took two days but Bloomfield Hills Andover trimmed Blomfield Hills Lahser, 5-2, in the first tennis meeting between the two schools. * * ★ Hie matches began Monday but completion was delayed by rain until yesterday’s finish. ■H ANDOVER S, BH LAHSER 1 Singles Randy Whlta (L) won by default! Pate Werner (L) def. Doug Plant*. 44, >1. »-7( Fred Miller (A) def. Dave Baker, 6-1, 60; Steve McGraw (A) def. Julian Wills, 6 0, 6-1. _ Doubles . , Dave Lao-Dava Moore (A) def. Rick Roeder-Dsn Tate, 6-1, 6-2, Tom Colando-- - ■■ g (A) def. Bruce Denuvl- :h, 6-1, 6-1, end Bob Dedos-john Neely (A) def. Bruce Bammel-Kevln Trimmer, 6-2, 4-0. | Engine or Transmission | Trouble... CALL | MIDAS I E22! Phono 334*4727 — OOOOSOOOOSOOOOOOOSOOSSSSSSSMtSMSSSOQS1 Cars run better Boats run faster Power mower start easier with GUMOUT Every carburetor gets dirty and gummed-up. GUMOUT is the easy way to clean carburetors fast. Just add GUMOUT to the gas tank. Cures ROUGH IDLING, STALLING, POWER. LOSS and HARD STARTING, You’ll quickly nbtit|j the big difference. Enjoy a really smooth running engine. Buy GUMOUT at leading Auto Supply Stores, Service Stations — wherever :fine auto products are solif^/ , YMCA to Have Karate Display A karate demonstration is planned by the YMCA Karate Club for 7:30 p.m. Monday at the Pontiac YMCA. ★ ★ ★ All aspects of karate will be shown. The exhibition is open to the public with all males 16 and older eligible to attend the ensuing course in K ore a n karate. I Scores Deciding Goals ROTTERDAM OP) — Kurt Hamrin scored two goals Thursday night "to give A. C. MILWAUKEE,, gis^ _(AP) -Hamburg S. V. m the Eurapean new Milwaukee Bucks of Cup finals for Cup winners. 11ie new M1IwauKee BUCKS 01 Milwaukee Inks Guard BIG OUTBURST Rochester took a 5-0 lead in the second inning mostly on walks and Ed Talley’s two-run single. Ted Malkasian added a run in the fifth with a single and Les Littlejohn’s triple closed the scoring in the sixth. Junior Scally struck out eight for his third victory. Clyde Cushingberry rapped a single, double and home run to figure in six runs as Romeo drubbed Lake Orion, 14-5, in the other O-A contest. •k k ★ John Rogers had two triples and a double for three runs, and Brad Czajka singled three times. Romeo is now tied for fifth place with Troy at 2-4, » . Clawson ...........000 2(1 6-2 6 3 Madison ......... 14# 004 x—5 6 2 FREZZA (4-2) and Millar, MORROW (4-1) and Tremblay. -. - 800 000 Brad 2 2 --- 050 011 X— 7 7 • Humphrey; SCALLY Troy-r-r.wt,7TiTiy Rochester ...... PETERS and (3-0) end Davis. Romee ...........215 101 6-14 13 2 Lake Orion ......018 400 6-5 3 6 Johnson, Green (2nd), HANDSCHUG (4th, 2-2) end Lerchen; BAKER, Schlebel (4th) and Knapp. ~Pwiti|picPress Photo LAKER LEADER — Sophomore catcher Bill Bullock again led West Bloomfield’s hitting this season, and had a key single setting up the winning two runs in Thursday’s 2-1 win over Andover. Milford Slump in Finale The Milford Redskins shook off their late-season slump at the last minute Thursday and finished second in the topsyturvy Wayne - Oakland League diamond battle. JLoa£r& of five straight gamea after winning 10 of their first 12, the Redskins trailed, 4-2, at Brighton as they batted for the last time. They loaded the bases and Mark Giegler’s double tied the score, John Stanley’s sacrifice fly plated the go-ahead marker. ★ ★ ★ Glenn Cascaddan, Dave Dennis and Bob Glinard each added an rbi-single and Milford emerged an 8-6 victor. Clinard was the loser in relief, stopping Samardzijo Fifth Hardwick in All-Star Lead GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (AP) -Billy Hardwick, who moved to Louisville, Ky., from San Mateo, Calif., a few days before leaving home for the 27th annual National All-Star Bowling Championships, was well on the way Thursday to paying the movers’ bill. Hardwick rolled at a 226-aver age clip for the opening 16 games in the men’s division fi nals to assume a 104-point lead over Jim Stefanich of Joliet, III Ray's Rallies to Nip City Softball Rival, 4-2 Two-run bursts in the fifth -| and sixth brought Ray’s Sunoco from behind lor 48 victory the National Basketball|over J. A. Fredman last night Association signed their second veteran Thursday — Bob Warlkk, 6-foot-5 guard picked from the San Francisco Warriors in the NBA draft. in city recreation softball action. In other games, Local No. 594 downed Milburn Industry, 9-2, expansion Town & Country handed Union Lake Merchants an 8-2 setback, RENT A CAR by the Hour by the Day by the Week by the Month by the Year Any time you need a car for any purpose - from a couple of errands to do or up to a month’s vacation trip-rent a Pontiac, from a Tempest to a Bonneville, or a Buick, from a Special to an Electra, from Shelton Pontiac-Buick. All Shelton Cental cars are new 1968 models, kept in top shape and rarin* to go. And you’ll find our rentals most reasonable. See How Much Lease-By-The-Year Can Save You > A lot of car owners could save real money by leasing instead of owning their ears. It might pay you to lease-jfltd drive a brand new car every year. It depends on tile amount and type of driving you do. Stop in and talk it over. We’ll show you to your satisfaction whether a lease will save you money — or whether it won’t. shelton PONTIAC BUICK 855 Rochester Rd., Rochester [Vt Mils South of Rochottsr) 6$ 1-5500 and Ron’s Roost coasted past Hmberlanes Lounge, 12-3. HE GAME Two singles and a pair of er rors enabled Ray’s to tie Fredman 2-2 in the fifth, and the Sunoco crew put it away in the sixth with two more on a double, triple and ground out. Bill Dalton tripled in the lead run in the sixth and finished with two hits. John Fowler picked up two for Fredman. —■it-—★ • ★ ~~ I Dave Simmons, Mel Taylor, Sy Green, Earl McKee and Jim Fisk lashed out two hits apiece to pace the Local 594 victory; Jim Lucadum collected two of the losers four safeties. Chuck Nichols rapped out a double and two singles and scored twice in Town ft Country's easy victory. Ron Traylor led Union Lake with a pair of singles. A 15-hit attack by Ron’s Roost was too much for Timberlanes. Seven players collected two hits apiece for Ron’s. The winners broke open a tight game with four in the sixth and four more in the seventh. Mills Gains Share of Slowpitch Lead ! Mills Products (4-1) gained its second Walled Lake Industrial Softball League conquest in two nights Thursday Id grab a share of the “A” Division lead. Mills doftried Imperial Molded Product^, 10-9; in eight innings yesterday * after slugging Big Boy, 14-6, Y Wednesday o n homers by Clyde Witmier and Dave Crouse and a 32-hit attack. , —— -- 953 Hardwick’s (iinfall was 3,630, and he added 525 bonus points —50 points for each game won in the finals—for a 4,155 total. Stefanich has 4,051 on pinfall of 3,486 plus 575 bonus points Hie men are competing for a $15,000 top prize. There are still 32 games to go, 16 each on Friday and Saturday, In fifth place was Mike Sam-ardzija of Pontiac, Mich., 3792. MEN'S DIVISION Jim Stefanich, Joliet. III., 4051. Wayne Zahn, Atlanta, 3990. c Dave Soutar, Detroit 3905. Mike Samardzlla, Pontiac, Mich., 3792 Dick Weber, Fltarlsjent, Mo., 3731, Pat Patterson, St. Louis, 3715. Ray Bluth. Warson Woods, Mo., 3547. Nelson Burton, Jr., Olivette, Mo., 3559 Bill Allen, Orlando, Fla., 34u4. Mark Kuglltsch, Milwaukee, WIs., 3302 Dick Burke, Mlneola, N.Y., 3376 WOMEN'S DIVISION Dorothy Fothergill, Attleboro, Mass., 3110. Shirley Garms, Chicago, 2776. Millie Martorella, Rochester, N.Y. 2374. Baseball Classes for BoysTomorrow The Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department’s junior baseball program will have a training camp again tomorrow for boys 7-18 from 9 a.m. until noon. Boys through 13 should report to either the Bagley and Brush diamond or to Aaron Perry Park. The older boys will, work out at Jaycee Park. All prospects must bring their own tennis shoes and glove. In addition to working on fundamentals with qualified instructors, those candidates not already on a team will be placed with managers needing players. Titans Dumped Pontiac Catholic won four events but dropped a 7246 decision on the track to Detroit Nativity Wednesday. . Kelly Dean won the high jump (5-6), Gary Piche took the long jump .(18-1), Herb Larson took the pole vault and John Brighton with the tying runs on base in the last of the seventh. ONE GAME EDGE Hie win put Milford at 8-6 in the league and 11-7 over-all. They edged Clarkston, Bloomfield Hills Andover and Hblly by one game for the runner-up slot behind repeat titlist Northville. it it it Andover dropped a 2-1 decision to West Bloomfield, and Holly edged Clarkston. 4-2, in nine innings, to cause the three-way jamup for third place. ~ it k ■—★......— Northville ripped Clarence-ville, 10-3 to finish 12-2. Eight inhs on six hits In the fourth did the damage. Randy Pohlman had a two-run single and Barry Deal a two-run double. BACK IN FORM Mickey Elwood, recovering from arm and ankle ailments that had limited his pitching in the past month, scattered six Andover hits and forced the Barons (8-9) to leatfe tjie bases loaded in the fifth and seventh. Dick Souther’s run-scoring single in the first gave Andover a 1-0 lead, but two unearned runs in the third handed the win to the Lakers (7-8). ★ ★ ★ Run-producing singles by Tom Hayes and Jeff Caryl in the ninth, broke open a. strong pitching duel between Roy Phillips of Holly and Clarkston’s Dick Johnson. ★ ★ ★ Holly scored two in the first on a single by Chuck Swegles, Tom Roeder’s double and an error. The Wolves tied it on a hit, batsman Cary Uban’s two-bagger, Bob Paladino’s sacrifice fly and an error. k k k It was only the second earned run Phillips, a sophomore lefty, allowed in nearly 32 innings on the tnound. Holly finished 7-8 over-all. Clarkston is 8-13. lljghtMl . ...... W100U-A7* Powers. CLINARD (1st, 5-4) and Vick; RITTER, Luttermoser (7th) and Gardner. wait BiewnfMd ......fJJ JJ* J— J « J BH Andover .........10# 000 6— 1 4 3 ELWOOD (3-2) and Bullock! IRVING (61), Appleby (7th) end Parrott. Hally ......M0 000 002-4 7 1 Clarkston ...... ON 100 006- 3 4 2 PHILLIPS (3-1) and Rhoades! JOHNSON (0-5) and Ktyser. Northville Clirwcovllla SKELLY (54)) and R Ilk In. 200 100 *-10 0 1 000 003 O- 3 3 2 and ,£ayloyi OUMAN Leading Area Squads Ready for Tourney The 16 official invitations for the seventh annual Pontiac Invitational Baseball Tournament next week at Jaycee Park have been Issued end the lineup will include three first-time entrants. Heading the list are defending champion Southfield 12 - {j), Waterford 4» x 8» x W - BROWN PECAN.$7,# : 4’ x 8’ x 3/16” - VINYL HICKORY.... *5“ see us mmt Fiat’s Overseas Plan. SEDAN IN U.S.A. I Only $1688 Full Priot Delivered. 4' x 8» x V*" COTTAGE BIRCH....... .♦4MT 4» x 8' x »/4” CHERRY 18.95 ValuOj Now ♦9” 4' x 8' x»/«” - OAK........... .»87*: MANY OTHER SIZES A TYPES TO PICKFROM Also Doors, Coiling Tilo, Pro-finished --------Trim and Stain Are you a commuter? Or busy running errands about town?Then Fiat’s new850 Sedan is the car foryou.Briskl Livelyl Automatic transmission or 4-on-the-floor, allsynchromesh transmission. Room for 4 adults plus loads of luggage. Has a wonderfully efficient heating/ventllat-ing/defrosting system. Padded dash and sun visors, dual windshield washers, extra-large hydraulic brakes and many, many other safety features are standard. So Is undercoating. Where else can you get so much ear for such a low price? See and test drive It... today. 1488 BALOWIN AVE. FE 2-2843 LJUUUUUUUUUUjJLS^JUL&JLSLUJUUUUUUU Stop in today and find out why Fiat outsells Volkswagen. Com plat* parts and igrvicfl on all Imports. Good sisioetion of used cars to chooio from. Pontiac Plywood Co.J CfliiriftMl iMftfttiCu Cfr 900 OAKLAND (US 10) FE 8-9421 xlncludes pitchers batting. ----Pitching W L Warden .......... 3. 0 Cain ............ 1 0 Hiller .......... 1 0 McLain .......... 6 1 Lasher ,____ r~7 T Wten 4 4 Lolich .......... 2 2 Patterson ....... 1 l Sparma ........ 3 4 Dobson .......... 0 0 Rlbant .......... 0 1 Totals 23 14 ERA 4.00 0.47 1.64 2.41 1.75 286 3.35 3.60 2.32 t 2.79 You always can. Because Seagram’s 7 Crown always has the same great taste. Th? quality never changes, so the flavor never falls off from one bottle to the next. No matter where you buy it. That’s why it’s the perfect whiskey to count on when you’re having gupsts. , The chances are they count on it, too! *r-|T. Seagram’s 7 Crown. The Sure One. $460 $296 $1085 fl/l iM. „ i PM ¥*«Um Com Nt. Ml Cod. N». Ml Cod. Nt. 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WALLED LAKE B«tw.n W. Mo pi. g, Pontioc Trail MA 4-4551 THE iPONTIAC TRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 24. I9B8 Rookie Pro Memphis Open Lead Horse Racing Matel Park Entries of, MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) —jround three hours ahead The fans who saw B. R. Me-jMcLendon, a late starter. London sink a 20-foot eagle putt:Bob Lunn __ to share the first-round lead in,*- « McLendon the >100,000 Memphis Open Golf ; Dick MiyiV aa-aa-X iiie-jjSeet optional * Fur- Tournament figured he was n«»'v p«B«n SATURDAY ENTRliJ Horses listed to post 1 position. ; 1*1-82508; CtPlming; J Furlong* Mop Bucket Livlen* Sny Nora tie Go Go 99.32*44$ Codtt Commander Meye’f Policy 32'33—43 Midnight Melody ______Worthsbsy------ 32-34—64> Gtelona_ Ith—1*700 Claiming; 4 Furlongs: Fleet Landing . 7.40 5.20 3.40 Bold Mllargo 4.40 3.80 ISuxy M. 7.40 ttlv~9S980 Claiming; 1 1/4 Mllgt ' Prospect Street 1.00 4.10 3.40 Bee's Little Matt 7.00 5.40 Bristol Court 6.90 Twin Double: (M-M) Fold ll.S41.00 (2) Wolverine Entries v Mowry happy as a lark. But his wife,I TT WHY NOT SKI WITH THE PROFESSIONALS----- America’s No. 1 Ski-Boat Builder Correct-Craft "The Buyer* Come To Dreyer*»*\, ■ OPEN SUN. 10-6 634-8300 15210 N. Holly ffcl. Holly, Mioh. Bery Yancy ' Gay Brewer if.'Larry^ Hinson * Lou Graham Unlike any other 305©i 37 hp at 7,000 rpm takas the Raider through the S$Vi in 14 sac,. .Ind top spaed range of 105-110 mph. With its well-proven 6-speed gearbox, and low-vibration mounts and Vol-UMatk Induction, Raider will take any 350cc around! Smooth, quiet and power-ful, Raider ia built to stay that way with Suzuki Posl-Forca handling tna engine lube requirements automatically. Priced with the 250's, this bike takes the cake! The 12-month/12,000 mile Suzuki warranty is the frosting. ■HUB Suzuki makes it! so make it Suzuki! * Road test a Raider at: i "i£ * MG SUZUKI SALES 4667 Dixie Highway Drayton Plain* Across from Kossoy Electric Joan, knew better. “He didn't say anything me, but when I s'Ayr Mm *o to lM the practice tee after coming off, o«ck cr»wioru the 18th, I knew he wasn’t hap-lfteve rhu** py with his woods and long mih« B«VblTr*y irons," the pretty blonde said. tmIJU McLendon, 22, who won the 1965-66-67 Southeastern Confer-; Terry Wiicox ence golf titles, came into the jerry Abbott j Memphis Open Thursday vir-i!XGHJdto?!r to the gallery. S^S'ee'^'ih But veteran Fred Haas watched®^ *srtnlbv him last week in the Magnolia P'e*- H.n»com Classic at Hattiesburg, Miss, bom* coi« .... Jim Lunn, 23, of Sacramento, | etTroia teneec* : Calif.,, shared the first-round'tuir lead with McLendon as both $JJhHg^j*rulK came in with five-under-ar 65s: J«ob» lL OJck Rhyan the i Bobby Mltchall .. Frad Marti I Dave Elchalbergar David Jimlnaz i John Lotz 34-33--47 long* Base 33-34-47 J«ck Wild Walter King Robart Elbert a S'SIS Count BusM ftgia 4lh—83400; SfiZS Flyer Lad 4A ?iZ2|W«dge Ahead , 3^tU ;' n... Whirling Rich Thursay, Lunn finished Beat This *4395 1968 Olds "98" Luxury Sedan e Power Steering • Power Window* . • Vinyl Roof • Power Brakes • Power Seats 7 * Tinted Glass FACTORY AIR CONDITIONED Merry Oldsmobile-GMC, Inc. S28 N. Mein St., Rochester 651-9761 33- 32—471F lowing Well 34*33—641 Gladd ai-aiHS?! Claiming; 4V> Furlengi ia iBead Counter Prominence iyjjiytLQ Kid . Bult Fdrpte 3J 3v^68 Ihvelldjly w 3>—en|rmint A,it.... Claiming; 1 Mile Broad Creek Wheety „ „>Pbiort Kind Entitled tlmZZm •*B®h|emim « ! a Wise entry —K:*••»—$3400i Optional Claiming; W'"—?! longs 55*34—491 j0hnny Please Entangled 34- 3>—49: #TOh Yes Ever A*ure 35- 34—49! Champaign Music Rejected Trouble 35- 34—69 vvar Day Tinker Tom Joe Goldstrand ............ .. .. 33*34-^9 Rotwrlon Hunt Me Now 36- 33—69 4th—85000; Allowance; 4 Furlongs 34-33—*49; Cutacorner Wesley Ashcraft 34-35—69 shenan Hammer Kopf 32- 37—69 j Morocco Count Banana Joe < 36-33—69 James Shot Sulci 3 33- 36—69,wise Issue One Night Stand 34- 36—70 Dos Equis Building 33-33—70 7114 13100; Allewanee; -4 Purlenes 33-37—Z0iSir,.Roderick Harvey's Pel 35- 33—rO’EdS Rib Mr. Sunman 3335-70 Bull Thistle Weerello 33- 37—70 Prorrt Girl 33 37- 70 Ith—$12,500; Added "Ml< 38-32-4-70» dicap"; I 1/16 Milt 34- 34—701 Raa Lynn Mantaaus High 3335—70 Little thubb Noble Graph 36- 30—70 a-MIkes Nail Belle's Pocket 36- 30—70 Michigan Ruler Onlbur 35- 33—70 0-Alhambra Son 3333— 70 e-Carlin entry 37- 33—70 flB—tlMHi Handicap; 1 Mile 35.35._70 i Board Maker AlllflCoiDO, 32-38—70 Hark the Herald 34-36-70 J«V Roam 3334— 71 - TimiimDandy 36- 35— 71! 10tt»—82400; TONIGHT'S ENTRIES list—83500 Cand. Tret; 1 Milt: I Alshire’s Abba Arbor Way Lord Doyle Arrowsmith Hickory Way Tommy Dor wood iChris Dares Highland Pick rind—81000 Claiming Pacer 1 Mile.* |Jerl Lynn Duke Spangler; [Single's Rtffry Primover Tessie Rose The Count ! Meadow HOI Commander Den 3rd—83500 Cend. Trot; 1 Mile: ! Daring Dude Success Zora True Valley Jap, Kaye Fur-; Amosson's Seattle Demon Sam Good Pals Billy 4th—83500 Mich. Celt Stake Pace; 1 Mile ; Briar Lea Andy Speedy Tore Hickory Encore Rolling On Fashion Knight Jereo Lenawee Song Mister Mar Gey Ty Chief Cleo's Dream 15th—$3400 Cend. Pace; 1 Mile: Miss Lyndy Gird Danny D. Prim [Queen's Tee Pee Roger Abbe Prudy't Diamond Tommy Sig I Amer ican E-lower Painted Byrd 4th—82200 Claiming Hdp. Pace; 1 Mile: ttirtet twwnr r ~*maf^vilTtirv' Dawr*' f Lowell Dbrwood Tidal Gale . Lord McKinney Phyllis C. Scott [Crystal Spud -.Volcanic Rose Michigan Bred Hen- Cend. Pace; V Mllei c: Jim Farrier .... I Tom Shaw . . I John Schlee Peter Townsentf Big Bend Clean Issue ____Moccasin Bend Claiming; 1 Mile MUMyo Sugfmoto ........... .. . 35-36—7j I V*° ,M u ciuS,m,bto. Steve Oppermann ............ .. 36-35—71, M»c s Hobby, I0'* .W, Jeckv Cuoit 3?-39—7i ’ Brass Legend Presto Feet Gary Plavar " "t 3L3! 7J: Daisy's Zipper Jell's Rapier JaclT Fleck ................... 31^33=} Care Enough „ Rlcanita Jack Nlcklaus . ‘ !’/.! S-5-711 x-Apprentlca^ allowanc. claims. I Jim Riggins .................7 37-36—71 R andv Pelrl ....... ........... 35-36—71 Bob Erickson .................. 37-34—71 Chtcft Evan* f.......... 71 Johnny Pott .. . 3<-33-7T John Molenda .................. 33-38—71 Rey *toyd ~i':----------—-"—.--7^16.3^71 Boo Murphy ...................^J-SSir-TT [Copper Star Midnight Johnnie Lee O. Whispering Beauty I Black Majestic Speedy Creed JCraigmyle Idona's Faith 8th—84500 Preferred Pace; 1 Mile: O. C. Mego General Knox Boy Dlller Bobby Ax land i Way To Go Eddie's Jet |it!i-84Stt Preferred Troti_l-MUf s Little Dominion Spfttdy R. | Baron of Amboy El Darno 61 Dor ——-----------Dan w. Diner 10th—$3000 Claiming Hdp. Pace; 1 Mile: Candy Yates Queen of Amboy I Moon Shadow Think's Dream I Duke Doyle Lemuel - : Nevele Meadow Hazel Park- Results... J— Wolverine Results Dragon Golfers O-A Runners-Up BURKE’S THUKSOAY',3 HSULTi_________ Ind—1)604 Claiming Pact; 1 Mila: TuiiB'n.V't dbciii T5 |Janlce M. Grattan 7.60 3.60 3.60 !——>---THURSDAYS RESULTS ________'tprinlor's InK 3.00 S.80 list—63100 Mdn. Allowanca; 6V, Purlongs:,Lady Dillard S. 6.80 A. Goody 6.80 3.60 i.80 Doily Doublt: (1-3) Paid 656.80 Famous Miss 5.80 3.60 3rd—61700 Conti. Troll 1 Mil*: Mary (ova 3.30 Elbarod 6,00 3.30 3.60 3B8—ssfor ciolmtngr 1 Mila; , Scotch Dag 3.TO 3.30 Aurata Bea 6.30 3.60 3.60 Rare's Girt 3.60 INapessing 6.30 3.30 4ih—61000 Cond. Pact; 1 Mila; Val's Kismet 4.60;$andy Knox 4.30 3.80 3.30 Dally Doublt: (7-3) Paid 616-30 iGprse 3.30 3.60 ,3rd-r-S3M0.Mtfo, AilOWMCt; .4, FwilODRi: .Vidor James______■_____ North Dallas I6.N 4.60 3.60 !]th—63500 Mich. Colt Slaka Pact; 1 Mila: la-Rular in Gold 3.40 3.40 o Boy 13.00 3.60 3.30 T „..n_j!»-K*ntucky Royalty , l.aojThlnk Rich 3.60 3.40 Lflkfi Orion S linksmen pulled I a-Grlssom entry 1 Shlaway Lew 4.30 •away from.Utica yesterday, i58-jS^‘«f?.S'*'m^'«« F^T.:oo ’ nlw 6... 3.00 164, at Bald Mountain to clinchj^a**^ •' *** |;S OPPOnd nlapp in thp Oakland A 5lh—S3500 Claiming; 1 Mila: ! Perfecta: (4-3) Paid 636.40 bCLUdU place HI me VdlUdUU A Run Nurs, Run ,4.00 7.00 4 40 7tt-»)700 Cond. Trot; 1 Milt; Glnny Lou 16.00 8.60 sabot 3.40 3.40 3.60 , , , Tokido ............ 8-60: Ramona Fair 3.60 3.80 by Chuck !‘»h-****0 Claiming; tVi Furlongs; I Sulky Boy 7.00 T . , „„ , . I , Bayduc 11.40 5.80 3.30 Ith—61400 Cond. Pact; 1 Milt: Johnson s 37 (par 34), finished Nadecele S.OO 3.20 Timely Goose 3 80 3.00 3.60 with a 6-1 league mark and are|Go^ TwTn*'D.«bi.: io-si Paid 864.oo,M ^ ' 5“) i5S 11-3 nvpr-all Utiea was led hv ?!1?-61b—6A00 cond. Pact; 1 Mila; 11 O Overall. UUUI Wda leu uy lt>tr» Pine 12.40 4.00 3.80 Qr Bremdt 8.80 3.20 2.40 , w f — Starlight Express 3.00 3.40 2-80 Track Hawk , 3,40 ——. . —i-; 110th—61700 Claiming Pocd; 6k Mile: - I Bobby Freeman 7.40 5.80 5.80 Roger L. |,VjSJsLS 11.40 6.60 Good Time Minnie 8.40 Ptrfucfa: (7-4) Paid $94.40 League. The Dragons, led Whittey’s 38 and ended at 5-2. Waiting until building strike is over Not having enough storage space Protection against accidents Availability versus Time Do-(t-Yourslef at a Savings Making us happy knowing you’re happy \*a1 ~ “THE REDWOOD PEOPLE’1 Outdoor Closet •4‘x8'x8'Hl6H • PRE-CUT KIT AfiLANSJNCLUDED STURDY EXTERIOR MAH00ANY 5/1” PLYWOOD <*)I8 COMPLETE A NATURAL RESULT — is the need for^an "outdoor closet" to store the equipment required for all this fresh air activity. Without such a unit, this gear has a way of clogging up garagos and basements. You can Ovoid this needless clutter and inefficiency simply by constructing this easy, - to - build storage shed thus providing the proverbial "place for everything."___. ■ ‘. ■ i ___7~v /•;-./■ - - ASK FOR THE "UN-cfog^eA.M Lumber 4495 Dixie Hwy. HOURS-------QR 3-1211----- OPEN WEEKDAYS MON. Thni Pill. • A.M. t* ill* Mft SATURDAYS tr*e IA.M.414 PM. THURSDAY’S FIGHTS By Th# AtHKlitfd Pross MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.—Bobby Rodriguez/ 124, Minneapolis, knocked out Tommy Fix, 123’A, Shelby, Mont., 1; Aaron Eastling, 193, St. Paul, knocked out Eddie Dembry, 188’/a, Chicago, 9. "COMMAND PERFORMANCE" \1 by the Ray Conniff Singers, Jane j Morgan, Percy Faith and seven other top ||recording stars...A Regular $4.98 Value! This great Columbia Spacial Products stereo album, “Command Performance" features 10 of the top Columbia and Epic recording etara*slnglng such all* time hits as: "Georgy Girl," "King of tho Road," "MlchpU«."gnd mmyjiora._____j_______________ Stop In at any service station where Regal-Ride Shock Absorbers are sold and pick up your album. And while you're there-take a minute to have a free shock absorber test It could save your Ufa. Worn shocks ' can't keep your Ores on tho road. Regal-Ride eltock absorbers will—it*s as simple as that And you get top quality at a popular price. So stop In today. •Tlw Mkge Stanews, Andre Kostafeiwfe, Oamlta Ja Bobby j«,ry v^«. Tiw gtmhw. fournUJowle tmmnr■ IpReaalRide SHOCK AISOMERS LOAD LEVELER * 'BET YOUR "COMMAND PERFORMANCE" ALBUM FROM THESE DEALERS Distributed in This Area by: OAKLAND AUTOMOTIVE SUPPLY CORP. 1480 Wide Track Drive. West, Pontiac FAIR'S AUTOCRAFT 264 W. Montcalm . Pontiac, Michigan HUNTER b OAK STANDARD SERVICE 60S N. Hunter Birmingham, Michigan HURON GULF SERVICE Alt W. Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan JIM STAFFORD'S SIRVICB 360 N. East Blvd. Pontiac, Michigan ^ M-59 b TULL CT. SUNOCO SJERVICE ' 7460 Highland Read Pontiac, Michigan SOUTH BND OARAGK IN Dlvanlon Rocheslar, Michigan For Better Buys. Now DURING The Wheel Horse Lifers Bonus PROMOTION FREE! «180 WORTH OF WHEEL HORSE ATTACHMENTS WITH THE 10 OR 12 H.P. TRACTOR OF YOUR CHOICE Wheel Horse tractors are long on quality. So long in fact, we offer the only two (2) year Warranty in the Lawn and Garden Tractor industry. This extra year of warranty coverage is money in your pocket. No other tractor manufacturer dares to put this type of confidence in writing. j ,; n ' I Wheel Horse Tractors are built to deliver day*in day-out • Choice of nino (9) custom designed models • Choice of three (3) different transmissions • Trans-power differential offers extra safety • Total control from the driver's seat • Widest choice of mowers m available The World's Finest Tractor — at Michigan's Finest Tractor Price • Head and fail lights for added safety • Forty-two (42) attaching feels for full range of |obs • Exclusive Two (2) Year War-— ranty Save Up ta $140.00 on Other Wheel Horse Models GET A HORSE, WHEEL HORSE of Course • Budget Terms • Service After Sales KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. at 0PDYKE PONTIAC, MICH. TELEPHONE FE 4-1662 and FE4-0T34 j now a - junior at West-er n Michigan • university and the No. 1 man on the golf team there. - His latest venture on the golf course came earlier this week when KILPELAINEN straight for the sixth-ranked WTHS squad and set a school record 16th win in 24 starts. Southfield, the third-rated nine, dropped its second start in two , days and now is 12-5 Doyop of Fenton. “Pll- be UP) Parks, who has* built) Waterford meets Walled Lake with him one of these days, | numerous championship clubs, today for second place in the said Timo-as he started down erdred after the Teamsters won j Inter-Lakes League while the fairway carrying his own,the 1966 tjtje ja expected l0‘S0uthfield plays Berkley in a1 CLUTCH SINGLE clubs- start veteran right - handed j bid for the Southeast Michigan A Tw(W)ut sing|e by * * hurler Don Sackett. | championship. I Williams broke up I “Where s your caddy. some- * * * Kettering-Lapeer duel. It gave Kati.ring I one asked. i Lamphere has announced that) Also Thursday, Oxford. the victory to Harkey who held Hw?ey^(6lh^?MWak^up,(6HAR*KEYP°^i " t Warren Woods t" u:.e »nd Burn* needed in the first inning when sixth. four runs crossed the plate! * * * without the aid of f hit There Al Roya, Oak. Dondero were five errors by the Wildcats fjnjsbed wdb a wjnning season' in the wiid^outburst. when Rich Green’s double and , _ , . ‘ Jerry Campbell’s second rbi- The lone Oxford runner eame.i sjngie plated runs and broke a on an error in the fourth inning. ^ de The Wildcats end their season j k today at home against ooe tj ‘ r phere, the Central Suburban loop king. 'oro. , Oxford ; ;s 7 ooo oooo—o o J Warren Woods 400 000 x— 4 7 1 Virail LEITHEIM (1-5) and Goodfellow, v 11B11 .RICHARDSON and Sldfu. the! mm DEPARTMENT STORES W ★ h _______________JHH Also Thursday, uxtord, was . .... ■11fl(lHtf. Til carry them mysellf,". [southpaw" Walt Miller, the j held hitless by wane., wouus |the Panthers to four hits and he passed the local qualifying said Tjmo, who ,sn’t exactly league’s most valuable player'Bob Richardson and dropped a fanned 10 after taking over the KHo^am* tS ™-1 J while Royal Oak | «r,u;„n on pubyear, Ball (6th) and McKenz CHARLTON (1-0) and Campbell. for the U.S.G.A. Open dianwood Country Club. at tn‘ oozing with money. “I wanted [to carry them myself today ;(36 holes) but they (tournament [officials) wouldn’t let me.” last summer, will be on the j 4-0 verdict, while Royal v,ani Captains trailing, 8-0 mound for M. G. Both teams are Dondero finished its seaSbn at 7-expecled to have significantly) •> with a 4-2 win over Highland j i:------ ------ - revised lineups. !Park. _____ | /nflinnWODO S NEARS GREEN One new team has joined the! Waterford Kettering 5 - 9 I f lUlUffTT L/VJU o , uaonp hut fnup hnvn HrnnnpH earlier this week, won its sec- •—; f He -hauled out a 3-wood, gave ^W-Jlut fQULha ve^roppefl -Trt lwo outtasttmr the bail a mighty wallop and it out. having an e ight-te am,®' in ^ /Vleclol Honors landed iust over a bunker just'lineup. Uncle Charlie’s Pet ^aPeer’ ,’ m 'f an‘ngs. as totherS o/LnoTgeeniShop ' coached by Ben Belcher!^ Harkey blanked, the! ffrfrfhnmn l & pH a* *«■•.r *lnal 1 ' ^ ^ Doyon hit an iron to the green.! Monday night s. contest w,l*j - } The other two, like Timojpit Pass agaihst Local-653 at INSIDE THE PARK One half of the ........ 2 10 010 0— 4 I 0 ■....* * BOYLES (5-0) and Byrd; GAKEN, OPEN BOWLING DAY & NIGHT Still Some League Openings HURON BOWL 2525 Elizabeth Lk. IW. FE 5-2513 or FE 5-2525 B0WL Moonlight Doubles _ Jackpot at $400.00 Every Sat. Night, 10:30 WISTSIDE LANES FE 4-0161 111 Orchard Lake Total 36 5 10 4 Total 37 4 12 3 San Francisco .. 0 0 2 0 0 A 2 • i — 5 Atlanta .... 000110020—4 E—D.Johnson. DP—San Francisco 2 LOB—San Francisco 9, Atlanta 8. 2B— Dietz, Cline 2, Lum. 3B—H.AXARON. HR I Torre 2. SB—R.Jackson. S—Davenport. SF—Hart. Gym Demonstration GUMOUT EVEREST 2 GAL. CARB. CLEANER MOTOR OIL I Perry .... Linzy (W.2-4) . . J ! K.Johnson £ Raymond • Upshaw (L.1-4) Carrotfr--- I WP—K. Johnson. 2:58. A—15,163. P6—M*arfTnez, A gymnastics demonstration R