Fly-by-Night Mail Runs ; V-f if WASHINGTON (AP) - The government’s fly-by-night effort to speed mail deliveries with small airplanes is racking up a fatal accident rate twice as bad as that for the average pilot. Safety experts accuse the Post Office Department of a mail-must-go-through attitude that forces flying in the face ,of the storied dangers of snow, rain and the gloom of night. * * -k The Post Office Department replies its safety standards for hauling mail are By JEAN SAILE Oakland County Republicans were in a festive mood last night as a record 1,000 turned out to hear party leaders speak of the future of the state and nation. The annual Oakland County Lincoln Day Republican Club dinner at Raleigh House, Southfield, featured Gov. William Milliken as main speaker with Congressmen William Broomfield and Jack McDonald discussing national issues. ★ ★ ★ Milliken’s speech marked his 22nd day as governor. “We face the most difficult and complex problems in the field of education that we have ever known,” Milliken said. * ★ w He cited the troubled cities and noted, “I have dedicated a major portion of my effort and concern to tackling the urban crisis.” ‘HAVE MANDATE’ Legislatively, he said, it is very clear “we have been given a mandate to find ways to achieve ends we must achieve in the public interest.” He asked for cooperation from the Democratic House of Representatives in seeking compromise solutions. ’The main body of Milliken’s speech was devoted to the need of interesting youth in government and particularly in the/Republican party. “We cannot allow our young people to believe that collective action under government aegis can cure every ill known to men and nations,” he said. He stated, however, that disorder plaguing the campuses “will not be condoned in Michigan.” ‘EXCEEDED BOUNDS’ “The resort to violence and obstruction by students has exceeded the bounds of legitimate dissent,” Milliken said, and his remarks were loudly applauded. suffer than requirements for similar outfits that carry passengers. ★ ★ ★ In little more than a year, nine mail planes have gone down, killing 13 persons. WEATHER BAD In two-thirds of the crashes, the pilots were flying on instruments in bad weather. Pilots must be certified by the h'cderal Aviation Administration for instrument flying, but a top FAA official admits pilots’ experience often is spotty. ★ * * The Post Office Department started the short-haul overnight flights about a year and a half ago, awarding contracts on a low-bid basis to. private air-taxi firms to try for one-day delivery of first-class mail through more of America. * ★ ★ Nearly one of every four of the .IR firms flying overnight , mail routes already has had a fatal crash. Using the Post Office’s own totals from the beginning of the mail runs through the start of this month, a government safety expert computes the fatal accident rate at almost twice as high as for all non-airline pilots in the nation last year. * * * George S. Buchanan, assistant chief of FAA operations, said neither the propeller planes nor the pilots are prepared for such tight nighttime schedules. The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition LINCOLN DAY CELEBRANTS-Gov. William Milliken (center) confers with Congressmen William Broomfield (left), 18th District, and Jack McDonald, 19th District, before the Oakland County Lincoln Day Republican Club dinner last night at the Raleigh House, Southfield. More than 1,000 attended the dinner, setting a new record for the annual affair. County GOP Dinner Draws Record hOOO Milliken was introduced by Broomfield. R'lSth District, who began by reading a telegram from President Nixon in which the President appealed for harmony and “the moderation and patriotism of the people . . , the sober second thoughts.” A member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Broomfield charged that the nation recently “in a sense , . . had no foreign policy at all.” “We have tinkered almost casually with developing world problems, allowing them to drift into crises,” he said. “When crises finally hit, our options often were limited. We were forced into a kind of reflex response without fully understanding the cbrisequences or the direction in which we were heading.” NIXON PRAISED Broomfield praised Nixon’s initial attempts in the field of foreign policy and said it is his hope that they “will lead to a reexamination of our policies for committing American troops to combat and (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) Old Man Winter Will Stay Bitter Old Man Winter will stick around the Pontiac area tonight and tomorrow handirtg out a few snow flurries and bitter cold temperatures. Fair and cold, with a low of 7 to 12, is the forecast for tonight. Mostly sunny and continued cold, the high in the low 20s, is tomorrow's prediction. Saturday will be a little warmer, the weatherman said. Ten above zero was the low recording prior to 8 a m. in downtown Pontiac. At 2 p.m. the thermometer reading was 22. VOI., 127 — NO. 6 Soviet Peace Moves Wanted Before N-Talks WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense strategists believe the Soviet Union is anxious for talks limiting nuclear weapons because of severe economic strain from efforts to catch up with U.S. atomic striking power. That’s why American officials, although also hopeful such talks can begin, are setting as a precondition at least a start toward settling such problems as the Vietnam war and the Middle East crisis. * * ★ Pentagon authorities say Russia supplies about 80 per cent of North Vietnam’s military support. Thus, in their view, the Soviet Union could bring pressure on Hanoi toward a peace settlement. ★ ★ ★ Russia, as a major arms supplier to the Arabs, also could apply leverage for a Middle East solution, according to this reasoning. DIRECT RELATIONSHIP Defense analysts see a direct relationship between U.S. involvement in the Vietnam war and Russia's two-year drive to close the nuclear gap. While the United States was pouring $25 billion and more a year into Vietnam, U. S. analysts say, the Soviet Union was spending only about $3 billion,^ helping Hanoi. ★ ★ * Yet Russia, it is believed, is in economic trouble because it has been heavily outspending the United States on expensive strategic weapons while its total national output is only about one half that of the United States. U. S. strategists think Russia’s buildup, costly as it is, will continue, possibly until the Russians equal or outdistance the U.S. ICBM force of 1,054 missiles. ★ ★ ★ Past Democratic secretaries of defense have taken comfort in U.S. progress toward the developing multiple warheads which, they said, would assure U.S. continued superiority. PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. THI K.SI)AY. FKJIRItaHV l.‘l, lOfll) if it "k -k -64 PAGES Laird: Might Move ABMs From Cities WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird disclosed to^ay the Nixon administration review of Sentinel antiballistic missile defense plans includes possibly moving the missile sites from major population centers. Laird declined to predict the outcome of the Sentinel review. But his remarks suggest the major question facing the administration is not whether, but how, an antiballistic missile defense should be deployed. ★ ★ * “This is orte of the options being looked at, locating the Spartan missiles farther from cities,” the defense chief said. Preliminary construction work and land acquisition proceedings for the $5.5 billion antimissile system have been held up pending a Pentagon reexamination of the controversial program. I..aird’s order early this month halted construction work on a big antimissile radar site just outside Boston. * ★ * He said today consideration is being given to move that site, which could be a target for enemy offensive missiles, 25 to 30 miles north of Boston. Laird also said he now believes former Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara was correct when, in announcing the Sentinel system in late 1967, he placed major emphasis on its capability to defend against Communist Chinese missiles. The Sentinel defense now proposed could not hold up under a nuclear attack by the Soviet Union, he explained. But Laird maintained the system could defend against intercontinental ballistic missiles launched by China, now in the early stages of its nuclear missile development. ★ * ★ Laird also said the United States must continue research toward an effective defense against the more numerous, sophisticated weapons. County to Push for M59 Work The improvement of M.59 will become the priority commitment of a special committee authorized Tuesday by the County Board of Supervisors. To comprise members of both the legislative and public works committees of the board, the new group was given impetus yesterday as the public works committee met with the County Road Commission. ★ ★ * “If the ad hoc committee can squeak loud enough and long enough, we’ll get some action,” said Supervisor Harry Horton, public works committee chairman. “Political pressure is of the utmost importance.” Horton’s statement was in answer to statements by Road Commission Chairman Sol Lomerson that a shortage of funds is holding up improvements. RESPONSIBIUTY DENIED Lomerson also denied the hoad commission is responsible for the improvement of M59. “All we do is provide maintenance under contract with the State Highway Department,” Lomerson said. “I feel the road commission does have a duty to provide leadership,” said Mahlon Benson Jr., R-Water ford Township. Frank Richardson, R-Waterford Township, suggested the formation of a citizen committee on M59. “There is no doubt but what the road must be improved,” Richardson said. As proposed by George Grba, D-Pon-tiac, the Oakland County Planning Commission will be asked to develop a presehtation on how M59 affects the economics of Pontiac and Oakland County. ‘NO ALTERNATES’ “This is our only east-west highway (in northern Oakland County) and there are no alternate routes,” Grba said. “We must start a plan to bring all major roads into Pontiac. The south end of the county has major roads, but they all lead to Detroit.” To be considered along with the M59 improvement is extension of Northwestern Highway to M59 and construction of a new road southwest from Pontiac to serve the Walled Lake and Milford areas. ★ ★ ★ Grba asked that M59’s development into a five-lane highway between Airport and Williams Lake roads be given top priority. That project is now scheduled for 1970 at an estimated cost of $1.2 million. He also called for construction of a west M59 expressway. * * * The Northwestern Highway extension promised the county in 1957, according to one committee member, could (Continued on Page A-3, Col. 3) Lenten Series Planned Each weekday during.^ Lent, readers of The Press can read an inspiring story of faith in action as 40 people tell about incidents from their lives. Men and women from all walks of life express — in everyday terms — the living religion they know as a personal experience. Watch for I,enten Guideposts, starting Feb. 19. In Today's It/peer County Supervisors set annual pay at $3,800, plus $30 per diem — " PAGE A-4. Antirioi Bill S&iBte vote near on measure vetoed in ’68 by Romney — PAGEA-14. Cambodia state Department denies contacts made in attempt to resume relations — PAGE A-9. ■ Area News ..............A4 Bridge ................€-6 Croasword Puzzle D-15 Comics ............... C4 Editorials ............A-8 Food Section C-$—04 Markets ..............C.15« Obituaries B-W Sp«t8 D-1-D4 Theaters ............ C-IS ,TV and Radi* Programs D^IS I Vietnam War News A-2 Women’s Pages ,. B-l—B-S Optimistic About City's Future Pontiac Div. Chief Glad to Be Back F. James McDonald Of Pontiac Motor Division By JERRY ROBBINS Pontiac Press City Editor “I'm glad to be back in Pontiac and I say that emphatically.” Speaking is F. James McDonald, the new general manager of Pontiac Motor Division and at 46 one of the youngest General Motors’ vice presidents. “One of the reasons it’s so good to be back .'is that I got to know this organization in the 27 months I was here before and I consider it a really outstanding group.” McDonald, who has rapidly climbfed the GM ladder of success, is no stranger to many in the Pontiac area. WORKS MANAGER He served as works manager of the division from October 1965, te Feb. 1, 1968, before being promoted to director of manufacturing operations at Chevrolet Motor Division. One year to the day after leaving Pontiac he returned as general manager, replacing John Z. DeLorean who was promoted to head Chevrolet. Announcement of McDonald’s appointment And election as a vice president was made F-eb. 4. Anyone meeting Jim McDonald finds he has a ready smile and a firm handshake. He is relaxed, articulate and enthusiastic about his job, the community and General Motors. Although he’s been behind the desk of his second-floor office in the Pontiac Motor Division administration building only a few days, McDonald already is familiar with the city and many of its leading citizens. HE,;^ op-nMisTic He is also optimistic about the city’s future. There are problems, he said, but these are being brought out in the open and that’s the only way to solve them. McDonald and his family moved to the Pontiac area three years ago from Ann Arbor. Although he’s not yet involved in community affairs, it’s likely he will be before long. ★ ★ ★ “I’ve enjoyed working on community activities other places I’ve lived,” he said, “and I feel Pontiac Motor Division should be involved in the community. “Today there are social problems a corporation must help to solve,” he continued. “GM has, and still is, working in this area. GM is a good corporate citizen.” ENJOYS GOLF Away from the office McDonald enjoys most sports but especially golf (he has a 13 handicap>, water and snow skiing and flying (he has a private license for single-engine planes). A member of the Bloomfield Hills (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) SEN. PHH.IP A. HART Senator to Speak at JC Bosses Fete Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., will address the Pontiac Area Jaycees’ 46th annual bosses night banquet next Wednesday at Devon Gables, Bloomfield Township. Events are scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m. The Jaycees will present the Boss of the Year Award and a Distinguished Service award to a man between the ages of 21 and 36, not necessarily a Jaycee, who has distinguished himself in the community. A Keyman award will be presented to the Jaycee who has been most helpful in community services. Tickets at $7 each may be purchased at the door or obtained in advance from Terry Van Orman, 1165 Lynsue Lane, Waterford Township. A~2 Arrested as N. Korean Spy TilK I’OX’n AC 1*RKSS. 'nirUSDA^', FKliKUARY 13. 19H9 Building Unions Birmingham n»ws ’/?pr/ Dp/prf#on a Hnay Cod to Romney Adman Heads Fund Wye I f V# f fw Vfyi MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (AP) - AFL-CIO rirmincMAM _ Charles F. Adams. The 41.yeaf-old adman brings to his SEOUL (AP) — South Korea s Central Intelligence Agency said today the much-publicized defection of a North Korean newsman two years ago was a Com-.munist hoax. The agency ahnorinced the defector. Lee Soo-keun, had been arrested while trying to get to Cambodia to report to North Korean officials Lee. 45. was given a hero's welcome to South Korea in 1967 after he jumped Into a U S Army sedan at the Fan-munjom truce village and sped away under a hail of Communist bullets Three American military men later were decorated for helping l^e escape * * * South Korean authorities said today that Lee. former vice president of the North Korean Central News Agency. slipped out of Seoul Jan. 27 carrying a forged passport and wearing a fal.se moustache and a wig. Press reports sajd he was taken off a plane in Saigon four days later while trying to get to Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The intelligence agency said Lee had planned’ to submit a report on his mission in South Korea to the North Korean Embassy in Phnom Penh and pledge his still-unchanged loyalty to Pyongyang. RETURNED TO SEOUL It added that Lee and another Korean, Pae Kyung-ok, 29. were returned to Seoul by the South Korean Air Force. Pae was identified as the nephew of Lee s North Korean wife Lodge Tells Reds: Cant Win at Talks Officials .said North Korean Premier Kim ll-sung instructed Lee in February 1967 to stage a “dramatic defection’’ and work as an ag^nt in the South until all Korea was communized. The Pan-munjom incident occurred the next month. Lee left a wife and three children in Pyongyang. He was given an expensively furnished house and a car by the South Korean government, and government .sources estimate he had $40,000 worth of property in Seoul when he left last month, including $16,000 in a savings account. He was married last September to the former Lee KangWoI, a 35-year-old college decturcr who was educated in the United Stales. Record Crowd at GOP Fete PARIS (API - The I'niled Slates warned North Vietnam and the Vietcong today that a political settlement in Vietnam cannot be reached in an environment of violence. 2 New Battles Erupt in S. Viet SAIGON tP - With the Vietcong's lunar new year cease-fire only two days away, the U.S. Command today reported 131 North Vietnamese killed in two battles northwest of Saigon, three U.S. helicopters lost and three damaged. Allied casualties in the two actions ye.sterday were .seven dead and 15 wounded. Five of the dead and 13 of the wounded were Americans. The U.S. Command also reported •light decreases in the total number of Americans and South Vietnamese killed In action last week, and a considerable decrease in the number of Vietcong and North Vietnamese killed. The weekly casualty report said 183 Americans, 233 South Vietnamese and 2,264 of the enemy were killed in action, compared with 198 Americans, 242 .South Vietnamese and 3,190 enemy the week before. A total of 1,315 Americans were reported wounded last week, with 541 of them hospitalized. While U.S. and South Vietname.se ground sweeps continued to prevent enemy buildups for an offensive, 42 of America’s most powerful bombers, the Air Force B52s, hit the approaches to Saigon with the heaviest raids in six weeks. In 24 hours, seven waves dropped 1.250 tons of bombs on troop concentrations, base camps, bunker complexes and supply depots west, northwest, north and east of the capital. .Speaking at the fourth session of the enlarged peace talks, U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge also admonished his antagonists that “you cannot expect to achieve in these negotiations what you failed to achieve in South Vietnam” He was referring to the other side s demand for the overthrow of the Saigon government as a prerequisite for progress at the talks. ★ * ★ The atmosphere of deadlock continued without relief as South Vietnam’s representative delivered a 5,000-word statement repeating all his government’s basic positions and accusing North Vietnam and the Vietcong's, National Liberation Front of long-term aggression. The Nl.F's chief delegate, Tran Buu Kiem. reiterated the Vietcong's terms: the United States must “unconditionally” withdraw all troops and “those of satellite countries" from Vietnam and “allow the South Vietnamese people to settle their own affairs in accordance with the program of the NLF” ‘BASIC MISUNDERSTANDING’ Lodge's statement was a reply to questions pul to him by the other side last week demanding “yes or no" answers with regard to the basic claims of North Vietnam and the NLF. Lodge told them they had a fundamental misunderstanding of U.S. goals in Vietnam and Southeast Asia. * ★ ★ “The policy of the United Stales," he said, “is aimed at finding a stable and lasting peace in Vietnam and in Southeast Asia. The kind of peace we seek is one in which the South Vietnamese people will be assured of their fundamental national rights of self-determination without"'e x t e r n a 1 interference or coercion. Tcion.^ The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Variable cloudiness today with chance of a lew snow nuiTies, high 17 to 22. Fair and cold tonight, low 7 to 12. Mostly sunny Friday and continued cold, high 19 to 24. Saturday's outlook; Partly sunny and not so cold. Winds northwesterly 18 to 20 miles per hour today, diminishing to eight to 12 miles tonight, and northwesterly at five to 10 miles Friday. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: 20 today. (Continued From Page One) to a review of the great number of mutual defense treaties to which we are party throughout the world." Broomfield said neither the obligation nor the ability now exists for America to serve as the world's policeman. * - * * He said our obligation is to assist developing nations but that we “must not perpetuate agreements that hold the potential for more unilateral military involvements .such as Vietnam,” McDonald. R-19th District, who spoke briefly, struck at “runaway government spending" which he said is provoking financial inflation. “You cannot help men by doing for them what they should and could do for themselves,” said McDonald. Winners of the annual Lincoln Republican Club Essay Contest were announced They are: Anne Reynolds of the Academy of the .Sacred Heart. Bloomfield Hills; Judy Morningstar of Troy High School; and Pat Thompson of Hazel Park High School. Judge Robert Shipper of Rochester was dinner chairman and Gilbert Davis, president of the Michigan Bar As.socia-tion, was toa.stmaster. ★ ★ ★ Fre.sent at last night’s dinner, but taking no part in the program, was State Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Brennan. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) - AFL-ClO construction unions think they can get along better with the new Republican admlpistration than they did with the Democrats, but they have some reservations about Secretary George Romney of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. “I think he’s going to have to find out a lot of things for himself,” President C, J. Haggerty of the AFL-CIO Building and Construction Trades Department said’of Romney. ★ ★ ★ The building trades unions, irked at a comment komney made before a Senate committee last month, fear he doesn’t understand some union problems in training apprentices and Jurisdictional disputes arising out of new construction techniques. The AFIy-CIO uni)»ns think Romney, while governor of Michigan, developed a closer relationship with Auto Workers President Walter Reuther in Detroit and was accepting Reuther’s criticism of building trades apprenticeship training. MORE WORRISOME But even more worrisome to the construction unions is the belief that Romney, former auto industry executive, favors the industrial production of prefabricated housing units for low-cost federal public housing projects. As for relations generally under President Nixon’s administration, Haggerty said he looks for a ilttle clearer understanding of labor’s problems than we had before.” ★ ★ ★ The Johnson administration most angered the construction unions in trying to hold down wage hikes by imposing White House guidelines. BIRMINGHAM — Charles F. Adams, presMent of MacManus, John & Adams Inc., advertising agency in Bloomfield Hills, has been named chairman of the 1969 Community House fund drive. ★ ★ ★ Walter I^nison, Community House president, said that “with Adams’ support we hope to keep the Community House functioning successfully for the civic, social, educational and cultural pursuits of the community.” * * * The Community House, a nonprofit organization located at Bates and Townsend, is supported entirely by contributions from area residents. * ★ ★ In accepting the position of chairman, Adams of 6139 Dakota Circle, Bloomfield Township and a lifetime resident of the Birmingham area, said, “I can’t imagine what the community would be like without the Community House. I am delighted to do everything I can to help it prosper. ” The 41-yeaf-old adman brings to his role as chairman an in-depth involvement in a wide variety ot local community projects. ★ ★ * He is a member JM the board bf trustees at Oakland Hniversity and has s^ved on the advisory council of O^land Community College. He has also ^served as division chairman of the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Building Fund Drive. * ★ His promotion of cultural events in the area include the chairman of promotions for Meadow Brook Music Festival and the Meadow Brook'Theatre at Oakland University. ★ * - ■, * Adams is the author of th)e recently published book, “Common Sense in Advertising,” published by-McGraw-Hill, and now in its second printing. 'Egypt Aids Guerrillas' By The Associated Press Egypt has joined the group of Arab nations providing ba.ses and support for guerrilla fighters attacking Israel, the Israelis have charged at the United Nations. Israeli delegate Yosef Tekoah told the .Security Council yesterday that nine Bedouin war refugees the Israelis captured in the Sinai Desert Jan. 15-16 admitted they were sent across the Suez Canal by the Egyptian military'intelligence service. Area Crash Puts Youth in Hospital A Saginaw teen-ager is hospitalized in critical condition after his car went out of control and crashed in Pontiac Township yesterday. David L. Law, 19, was rushed hy ambulance to Pontiac General Hospital after the crash on southbound 1-75 near the M24 overpass at 10:05 a.m. A witness told Oakland County sheriff’s deputies that a car passed his car on a curve at a high rate of speed, skidded sideways on the wet road, spun around, hit a dirt mound off the road and flipped over. A deputy reported that Law’s car left no skid marks on the road and that the distance from where his car spun to where it stopped was more than 300 feet. Siberian Run for Japan TOKYO (AP) — Japan and the Soviet Union signed a civil aviation agreement today making Japan Air Lines the first foreign commercial carrier allowed to fly the Siberian route to Europe. The vast northern terrain of the Soviet Union has been closed until now to all foreign airlines for military security (Continued From Page One) Country Club, he enjoys a round on the links when time permits. He attempts to reserve Sundays for golf outings with his wife and children. McDonald also is a baseball and hockey fan. During his younger days he played left wing for a hockey team in the Central Michigan League in the Saginaw area. Does he still put on the skates? “We still skate periodically, but slower,” he said with a grin. NAME STUCK Francis James McDonald (“it's a good Irish name, you know”) was born 46 years ago in Saginaw. Since he and his father had identical names, his mother called him Jim to avoid Junior and the name stuck. He attended St. Andrew’s elementary and secondary schools in Saginaw, grad- NA'nONAL WEATHER - Showers are forecast tonight in New York, Vermont. New Hampshire and part of Maine as well as Idaho and Montana. Snow mixed with rain is expected in an area from Utah to west Texas. It will be cold from the Mississippi Valley to the Atlantic and warmer in the plains states. OU Neecis Snow for Winter Event Oakland University students are hoping for more snow to help make their w inter carnival this weekend a success. Sponsored by the Student Activities Board, an elected student body, the carnival weekend will include a Miss Oakland University pageant, a Coronation Ball and Winter Sports Day. * ★ ★ Pageant preliminary judging will be Friday night, with final judging Saturday before the ball. The winner of the student-run pageant will reign over the university’s social functions for the coming year. Included in Winter Sports Day are a coed-dogsled race, broom hockey on the lake at the university, skating relay races and a snow sculpture contest (if there’s enough snow). CHARLES ADAMS I. W. Abel Quiet Victor PITTSBURGH (AP) - I- W. Abel quietly accepted his unofficial reelection as president of tb/e United Steelworkers yesterday, then put in an eight hour day at his desk in the union’s headquarters. ★ * ★ The veteran labor leader didn’t make any public comment on his victory over Emil Narick, a union lawyer, despite receiving hundreds of congratulatory telegrams on his successful defense in Tuesday’"s election. State to Mull Pupil Vouchers LANSING (UP) - The State Board of Education has agreed to consider a voucher system of tax aid to public and nonpublic school children. ★ ★ ★ The plan, which grants a state payment to ally student who attends a school devoid of religious symbols, is proposed by board member Leroy Augenstein of East Lansing. ★ * * Initial discussion of the measure is scheduled for the boards’ Feb. 25-26 meeting. Augenstein wants the board to urge legislative adoption of the plan. ★ ★ ★ Earlier Ciov. William G. Milliken promised to study the proposal, which would replace the present method of financing education in Michj^an. EDUCATION INSURED Under the plan, each school-age child would be given a voucher for sufficient funds to insure him an adequate education. The voucher could be redeemed at schools that: * ★ ★ • Provided for proper certification of all teachers and curriculum. • Selected faculty on a nondiscrimina-tory basis. • Made religious training optional, and removed all religious symbols from the classroom. • Accepted all students no matter what their race or religion. Pontiac Div. Chief Glad to Be Back uating in 1940. McDonald then entered General Motors Institute (GMI) under the sponsorship of the then Saginaw Malleable Iron Division. McDonald, a 1944 graduate of GMI, spent his senior year in the Navy V12 program at Yale University after which he was an engineering officer in the submarine service. He served in the South Pacific aboard two subs, the Bergall and Caiman. McDonald wis discharged in 1946 with the rank of lieutenant junior grade. After leaving the Navy he returned to Saginaw Malleable Iron plant of the Central Foundry Division and served in various engineering, sales, production control and manufacturing positions. factory MANAGER He was factory manager at the Saginaw plant until his promotion to plant manager of Central Foundry Division’s Defiance, Ohio, plant in 1955. He was appointed works manager of the then Detroit Transmission Division in 1956 and general manager of its successor, Hydra-Matic Division, ip 1963. * ★ ★ In October 1965, he received his first assignment at Pontiac Motor Division. McDonald is a member of the Detroit Recess Club (a luncheon and dinner club), the Society of Automotive Engineers, the Engineering Society of Detroit and Tau Beta Pi, an honorary engineering society. THREE SONS, ONE DAUGHTER He and his wife, Betty, live at 1233 ^Vaughn, Bloomfield Hills. They have three sons and one daughter. Dennis, 21, is a senior at the University of Detroit where he is studying to be a physician. ★ ★ ★ Tim, 20, is a junior at John Carroll University in Cleveland where he has his sights on a law degree. John, 19, is a sophomore at Albion, and Marybeth, 15. is a sophomore at the Academy of Sacred Heart in Bloomfield Hills. Buy a chair from Harvey and you’ll he sitting pretty. Your Choice 79 • Spanish •^Colonial • Stratolounger • Mr, or Mrs, Quantities Limited So Hurry- Wide selection of fabrics and quality woods f HARVEY FURNITURE 4405 Highlond Rd. (M-59) eom*r Pontiac Lako Rood • 6pon Dtolly til 9 niK l*ONTlAC I’UE^ 'I'lll RS1)A^ , J'KHKUAHV 18. I!»(i9 A- 3 OEAIER ANNUAL isf OF YEAR Stfjt31AeUL41L fgMgrH 1969 FINE FURNITURE SoliihState Console Stereo witliFM/AM STEREO FM RADIO Reg. $199.95 Sale 179* SPECTACULAR VALUE IN STEREO SOUND FM/AM/STEREO FM RADIO |oT| Ptov.dis ihi limn 32 WAnS OF PEAK MUSIC fl=„alpa,. SOURD SYSTEM bX Slandard AM IM. Ate Siarao FM ^ d.:aior hght and lava 3/4' cana lipi iwaeiarj Biaad langa laiponsa ol /li 10 13.000 CPI > WHY NOT GET THE BEST • SALES • SERVICE STEFANSKI Radio & TV Open Friday Evenings 'til 9 1157 W. Huron FE 2-6967 GM Execs Conflict on Tire Story DETROIT (AP) - Chairman James M. Roche of General Motors Corp. today denied that his firm has decided to use a new type of tire and boost prices pn some 1969 GM cars. Rociie commented after GM President Edward N. Cole indicated in Houston, Tex., that the glass-belted tires would be used on some car lines and that prices, consequently, would be increased. After both top officers of the nation’s largest auto firm had made the apparently conflicting statements, a company spokesman was asked for clarification today. He said that “No decision has been reached regarding the use of these tires on General Motors passenger cars. If we do use them at some future time, any impact on prices will be determined as usual in the light of our costs.” mobile companies are testingi Estimates of the price hike] “it vvill be our objective in these tires. The testing indi-ihave run as high as $50 per 11909 to determine without equiv-cates toat the tires haA^ prom-1 car. , „ , ... pcation the extent of the manu- ise and that they will be more In other remarks Cole said the jacturer’s dedication to the costly. dealer franchise system “is thejiranchise system,” he said. , * “>-i Cole said the automobile in- “We don’t know how muchjsure economical distribution..1,33 achieved an out-more costly they will be and j and servicing of cars and Ltan^ing record of serving the what affect this will have onjtrucks. , ! needs and desires of the Ameri- prices if we do use them,”| Cole said Wednesday the' a„ public for quality high val-Roche said. ! relationship between the manu- transportation ” * * * Ifacturer and the dealers mustj The industry leader said that Cole made his remarks in be reviewed constantly to be jg ^g record “our indus-sure “we are doing the best pos- a 53 undergoing the most con-sible job of protecting the equi-Lg^ted attack in its history.” ties of the dealers the consum- ^e said the most severe criti- ers and the manufacturer.’ ^3 directed at prod- Cole addressed the closing ^g^jg^ sgpvice. session of the dealers conven- __________ tion. Houston where he is attending a meeting of the National Automobile Dealers Association. Cole said, “There is just no possible way that we can use these tires on our cars without a retail price increase. They cost us more and we cannot install them without some price relief. ‘TESTING TIRES’ ‘COST NOT DECIDED’ “We have not decided on the amount of the increase,” Cole said, “but these tires will not I have as great an effect on pres- secret that we and other auto-imay think.” Lyman W. Slack, newly in- 0/16 ExQITIdIg ia- ^ M59 Improvement Given Top Priority by County ducted president of the association, also addressed delegates AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - The and said the future of the auto-[ Summerville Exchange Club, mobile franchise system rests.part of a national organization entirely in the hands of the car]sponsoring National Crime Premanufacturers. vention Week, invited law en- Slack of Portland, Ore., said forcement officials from the the basic objectives of the as- area to lunch Wednesday. The sociation’s new administration after-lunch comments were de-would be to protect and layed slightly when the club strengthen the franchise system members had to borrow a po-for the benefit of the consumer, dium. Somebody had stolen the manufacturer and dealer, theirs. Simms, 98 K. Sa&inaw Sf. To SIMMS for the BIGGER DISCOUJSTS On Pafres A-12 and A-13 in Todays Pontiac Press . . . and you just know They’re Only at SIMMS! SIMMSiE 3-FLOORS OF BIGGER DISCOUNTS BUY! .SELL! TRADE! U.SE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! (Continued From Page One) take some of the heavy traffic joff Telegraph and M59 In the Pontiac area. Figures presented by Edward Cheyz, former White Lakej Township supervisor who appeared before the committee,! showed that traffic counts on[ the improved east M^ are less! I than on the unimproved west] All road commission members vowed cooperation in the project, but Lomerson noted, “There are many other roads in the county where improvement is just as vital.” 'Blind, Deaf Schools Hit' TRAFFIC COUNT OTED Said Benson: “Maybe we should try to kill the M59 expressway project between Auburn and Mound Roads east and get it applied on the west end where it’s needed.” The contract fpr the continuance of east M59 expressway is to be let in September at an estimated cost of $16.6 million. WANT TO SELL SNOWMOBILES, TOBOGGANS, ICE SKATES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD - - - TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. Committee members called for cooperation between Pontiac and all areas which west M59 serves. They said they would be putting pressure on Lansing and Washington to see what funds might be available for highway construction. LANSING (UPI) - The Michigan schools for the blind and deaf face serious operating problems if budget cuts recommended by Gov. William G. Milliken are approved, the State Board of Education was told yesterday. Bruce Siders, director of the School for the Deaf in Flint, and Dr. Robert ’Thompson, head of the School for the Blind Lansing, said summer programs would be eliminated as well as expansion plans. The board unanimously decided to petition the Legislature for $3.2 million for the summer classes and buildings. AAOIVTGO/VVERY I Bdays IWARP. only! New, breathtaking 8x10 LIVING \ COLOR \ portrait' Your money back if this isn't the most lifelike portrait of your child ever. Not just an old-fashioned tinted or colored picture, but “Living Color ! The complete portrait comes oIrVe—captured in amazing full color realism with Eastman Professional Ektacolor film. ' Exiro prints avoilable at reasonable prices No obligation to buy. ‘ Groups taken at 99.' per child. ' Age limit: 5 weeks to 1 2 years. ' Limit: one per child— two per family. The Pontiac Mall Now thru Saturday, Feb. 15th SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX N. Saginow OPEN TONITE lil 9 p.m; FRI. 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m, & SAT. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. ItsaiBifiRe-Seasor? lAvAwy sale.' V. now at Simms Annex you can layaway these pre-season specials fora small deposit or use your Midwest Bank Card or Instant Card. Full year guarantee against rusting. Pressure coated bonded plastic on heavy steel steel storage sheds M99 10 X1 FT. Q799 350 Cu. Ft.... U I 8 x7 FT- 285 Cu. Ft.. • solve your clutter and storage problems with these storage sheds . . . rugged heavy duty steel foundation — midwall bracing, strong tap wall channels, sturdy beam and rafter roof construction. The 8 X 7 foot unit comes with Homasote floor — neat, safe and dry protection for oil your outdoor valuables. (Not Exactly as PicturedI genuine ‘COLUMBIA’ 20-in. boys’ and girls’ PLAYBIKES Boys’ Cop|MrtoM-Girls’ Turquoise • genuine 'Columbia' ploybike with single bar frame • hi-rise handlebars • chrome fenders • Bendix brakes • full size saddle seat with reflector. Lapeer County Board Pay at $3,800, $30 Per Diem- By TOM C.RAY After a poll of individual supervisors and several hours discussion, the I.apoer County Board of Supervisors yesterday set salaries at $.1,800 annually, plus $.10 per diem. * ♦ a The final figures wwe approximately those arrived at in the poll, which was distributed to members by Chairman Paul Herpolsheimer early in the regular board meeting * * * Ttie printed questionnaire offered thrt-e possible plans, i>er diem only, straight salary only and a combination of tbe It al.so asked wbat meetings should be included in per diem pay, what mileage shcHild be allowed, and whether the chairman should receive extra pay. .SKTThE ON PER DIEM -The board eventually settled on per diem for all meetings authorized by the Ixiard with the exception of regular and special board meeting.s, meetings with governing bodies within a supervLsor’s district (township boards, village coun- cils and city commissions), and auditing committee meetings. Included in the per diem were; meetings with other boards such as the hospital and library boards), special group meetings, area and state meetings, and meetings of the equalization board, ways and means committee, salaries and negotiations committee and building committee * * * Supervisors also approved a mileage allowance of 10 cents per mile for all driving on county business, and an additional $1,000 annually for the chairman. Of the seven-man board, six chose the combination per diem-straight salary plan as at least one alternative, while one, Richard Bahls of Lapeer, suggested a straight salary of $3,600 alone. SALARY PROPOSALS Three of the six proposed base salaries of $4,000, one $3,800, one $3,600 and one $3,500, with per diem allowances ranging from $20 to $35. ★ * * Before the poll, Bahls explained his reasoning on the salary question, citing compensation for supervisors on the old board and the increased duties for new supervisors. * * ★ “A week or two ago, I checked back over the books to find out what the old board received,” the Lapeer representative said. “For ’67, the (comUned) total was $17,400, and for ’68 it was $17,092. “The average was $17,246. If you divide that by seevn, you get $2,874, or almost $3,000 — and that isn’t taking into account the regular salary paid each supervisor by his own tewnship," he added. Supervisor Harold Williams of District 2 (Burlington, Burnside, Goodland and North Branch township^ concurred, connmenting, “This county’s going to have a lot more problems in the future, and the board’s job is going to get larger, rather than smaller. * ★ * “We don’t have any idea what problems are going to arise,” Williams continued. “We may have some committees which will be more important than any of the ones we have at present.” Lapeer Supervisors' Chairman' Paul Herpolsheimer Special Avon Board Meeting to Consider '69 Library Budget AVON TOWN.SHIP - The Township Board last night scheduled a special meeting for Wednesday at 5 p m. to consider and discuss the library board budget for 1969. The library budget has recently come under fire from a citizens’ group, the Friends of the Woodward Memorial Public Library Inc., who have questioned the library board’s accounting methods. * W A Tru.slee William McCullough will chair Officials Invited to TALUS Session the special meeting at the request of Supervisor Cyril Miller, who said he will be out of the township next week. Members of the board w)!! also be participating in two other special meetings during the next two weeks. TO DISCUSS DRAIN Miller is scheduled to meet with the supervisors of neighboring Shelby and Washington townships (in Macomb County) tomorrow morning at 10 to discuss a proposed inter-county drain. ALSO, the board will meet with Oakland County road commissioners Feb. 20 at 9 a m. at the Road Commission offices to discuss “mutual problems.” Township Clerk Thelma Spencer said the meeting with the road commission is one of a series scheduled yearly by the commission with the various townships. Officials from a group of communities In eastern Oakland County have been invited to a “Ix^t TALUS Listen" meeting at 7:30 tonight at Oakland University. Scheduled for the Oakland Center building, the meeting is one in a series of discussions on TALUS (Detroit Regional Transportation and Land Use Study 1. Avon Township is host for the meeting, which is to include officials from Oakland, Shelby and Pontiac townships and the cities of Troy and Rochester Also invited are repre.sentatives of the Macomb County communities of Utica and Sterling Heights. A A * AAA Irving J Rubin, TALUS director, will The Atlas Township fire department explain the study and discuss alternative assisted the Brandon department, growth proposals, then listen f o r Firemen were at the scene for about 90-respon.ses from area officials. minutes. THE PONTIAC PRESS I'm K,SI)AY, FEHRI ARV I’L Ulfi!) keoNews Drug-Abuse Solution Urged Brandon Twp. Home Is Damaged by Blaze BRAN1X)N TOWNSHIP - A fire of undetermined origin damaged t h e residence of Mitchell Harrell, 750 Sand, last night, according to township firemen. Firemen said the blaze broke out about 6:30 p.m., and most of the damage was confined to a bedroom. There no injuries. No damage estimate has yet been made. By LOIS FRIEDLAND WE.ST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Education and an end to the double standard are the means for solving the drug abuse problem, according to Dr. Henry Wormsef, assistant professor in the college of pharmacy at Wayne State University. Wormser told parents attending a drug seminar^»l.,^st Bloomfield High School last nignMb educate themselves first about drugs generally — both the mind- * distorting types and everyday aspirin and cough syrup AAA “Instruct yourself as to what these drugs do — and how one can use these drugs safely. Then this knowledge should be translated to your youngster,” he said. “Start as soon as they understand. Explain what aspirin is.” He explained that he tells his 4-year-old child that it’s medicine and he has taught the boy to ask for one baby aspirin, explaining to the child that two will make him sick” ‘SHOULDN’T BE MYSTERIOUS’ “The medicine cabinet should not be something mysterious to the child,” he commented. Children are curious, he pointed out, suggesting that the curiosity be satisified by knowledgeable answers, teaching a respect for drugs. AAA Wormser describes drug abuse as a multifaceted problem. He defines it as a problem of ignorance — lack of knowledge of a drug’s effects on the body: a problem of semantics — all of the terms involved are colored with emotion — of communication — between students and parents — scientists and law enforcers — and a problem of living in a society where the only constant is “change” — where the future is obscure. This is an era of the pill and chemically oriented society, according to the profss.sor. He blames mass media, particularly television, for this orientation. •FORGET WILLPOWER’ He claimed, “People no longer resort to willpower or faith, they resort to chemistry.” Wormser talked of the many who take a diet pill in the morning, then vitamins, tranquilizers all day to cope with tensions at work, several martinis at lunch and then a barbiturate at night to sleep. AAA Youngsters see their parents abusing drugs in such a manner, while at the same time he is being told not to use them. “Parents must learn to level with themselves to eliminate this double standard and then leVel with the kids and ‘tell it like it is.’ They must establish a rapport where the drugs can be only discussed” he added. Apple Island Era Is Recalled ORCHARD IJ^KE - Another chapter In the history of Apple Island has been filled in by Mrs Rose Wilson, who currently lives in Detroit. .Mrs Wilson, who is 91, told of the days in the early 1900s when she lived with Miss Caroline Campbell, aunt of Colin Campbell, the island's owner until 1916. Neiioliations are currenth under way for the sale of the 38-acre island, near the center of Orchard Lake. Asking price IS $150,000 The island, which is covered with cedar trees, has grown wild in the last 20 years, but Mrs. Wilson recalls when it was well groomed. MOVED FURNITURE ON ICE In a letter, Mrs Wilson wrote “Miss Campbell told me the story of her parents moving their furniture over the ice in tbe winter. They lived in the main house which was already there. “It had four porches, a large hallway, which her mother covered with five or six oval-braided rugs made with her own hands, a large parlor with rag carpeting, horsehair-covered chairs and sofa, a fireplace with daguerreotype pictures of relatives in oval frames on the mantel, a large grand piano, and a few comfortable modern chairs to use during cool evenings. AAA “The dining room was also large with a table which was always set with dishes or plates turned upside down until mealtime. There was a large kitchen with an oil stove, and a sink with a cistern water pump.” AAA Mrs. Wilson related how a young nephew of Miss Campbell did all the heavy work including going to the mainland by boat to purchase “our ice and groceries and to gk tbe maQ.” I’asslng laws prohibiting drugs is not really dealing with the problem, Wormser said. “You could pass a law against marijuana or LSD, but who’s to say that another type of mind-distorting drug made in a basement Ij^b won’t be put on the black market soon after.” he noted, A A A He discussed legalizing the sale of niarijuana an pancakes, and other top-of- P-7 SELF-CLEAN OVEN electrically cleans itself — every corner and ridge, even the spots where you could rarely clean before. SENSI-TEMP Automatic Top Burner makes ordin-ary pots and pans cook like automatic utensils. And — it adjusts to 6 or 8-inch pans with simple button. 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Advanced 1%9 Color TV with giant 295 square inch picture for family viewing! Ideal wherever space is Umited with its compact. Contemporary design. Color intensity is subilized the way you want it with Automatic Chroma Control. Excellent all-channel reception is provided by the New Vista VHF tuner and Solid State UHF tuner. FOR THE FIRST TIME Immediate Delivery — Low Easy Payment — 90 Days Same As Cash ^COOD HOUSEKEEPING ^ of PONTiAC 51 W. HURON FE 4-1555 FREE PARKING V OPEN MON., THURS. and FRI. TILL 9;Q0 , DEBT IS REPAID -- Dave Kuncie and his halMon Jersey cow are back together after Beauty underwent surgery for a broken jaw suffered when she caught her head in the auger of a grinder-mixer last month. The Zwingle, Iowa, farmer, refusing to shoot his injured pet, drove her 170 miles to an animal surgeon - repaying the cow for saving his own life last March. Kunde was overcome by carbon monoxide while grinding corn in a shed. Beauty happened along, nosed through a partly opened door, and revived her master by licking his face. 1 , People in the News| By The Associated Tress SPRING FAR BEHIND? - Icicles form a chilly backdrop for a rather warm tableau involving a pair of swans yesterday at Chicago’s Lincoln Park Zoo as shafts of sunlight filter through trees to illuminate the scene. Perhaps it was the approach of Valentine’s Day which warmed the hearts of the feathered friends. Mexican With Knife Sticking Out of Head Lives to Tell About It MEXICO CI'TY W — “Take the knife out of my head,’’ Humberto Vazquez pleaded yesterday as ambulance attendants carried him into the emergency ward of a hospital. It all began in Cuernavaca, about 40 miles southwest of here, when Vazquez spent a nifeht consuming the local brew with his best friend. An argument followed and the friend rammed the knife through Vazquez’s head — the handle sticking out on one side and the tip on the other. Cuernavaca police, piecing together this strange tale, said Vazquez decided to seek medical attention and walked to a bus stop. A crowd gathered and stared at him. BUS DRIVER HORRIFIED Frightened, Vazquez ran to another bus stop, where he got a bus quickly. The driver was horrified at the sight of the knife piercing his passerjger’s skull, and drove to a police station. At the station Vazquez gave his story of the fight. He said the wound didn’t bother him although he knew the knife was sticking through his head. A team of four surgeons extracted the knife from Vazquez’ skull in a five-hour operation. They gave him a 50-50 chance to survive. HAND OF ENCOURAGEMENT - Policeman Michael Rafferty extends a hand of encouragement to a woman shopper stalled py a sea of slush at a midtown Manhattan intersection yesterday. The combination of ankle-deep ice, snow and dirty water is what’s left after a Sunday snowfall which left New York City covered with more than 15 inches of snow. Willie Mae Rogers—Excifed About Job Willie Mae Rogers says she is “really very excited” about her new job as President Nixon's special assistant on consumer affairs. She told a news conference yesterday she expect-s to speak for the consumer and to make the consumer more important than ever to the federal government. ★ ★ ★ Miss Rogers plans to continue as director of the Gooti Housekeeping Institute in New York, a job she has held since 1953, taking a leave. ★ ★ * Asked if she saw a conflict of interest In this, she said: “You have to accept the fact that I am basically honest. My loyalty, my whole time and efforts and truthfulness is, for the President’s benefit.” Nixons at Party for Alice Roosevelt Longworth President and Mrs. Nixon joined the guests last night at the Washington party honoring Alice Roosevelt Long-worth on her 85th birthday. Mrs. Longworth, the , ’’ daughter of President Theodore Roosevelt, has been the ; guest of every president at the White House since her father presided. She attended the Nixons’ first private dining party Jan. 29. Nixon left Mrs. Long-I worth’s home on Massachusetts I Avenue after 45 minutes to return to the White House for NIXON a dinner party. “We enjoyed talking about old times,” the President said. “She called me ‘Mr. President’ and that embarrassed me a little.” Later at the party for small group of friends, Mrs. I.«ngworth began to call him “Dick.” Actor's Leased Rolls Royce Stolen From Garage Actor David Janssen, who played “The Fugitive” on televisidn, has called on police to find another fugitive— the one who stole his leased $32,000 Rolls Royce convertible. The car, owned by a leasing firm, was taken from a garage in Beverly Hills, Calif., yesterday. Singer Barbra Streisand, Husband Separate Singer Barbra Streisand and her hus-bahd, actor Elliott Gould, said yesterday they have separated after five years of marriage. The career of Miss Streisand, 28, has skyrocketed since they met while both were appearing in a Broadway play. He has not done as well. She is now a Hollywood superstar while Gould, 30, recently withdrew from the cast of a play. “We are separating to save our marriage, not to destroy it,” they said. They have a son, Jason Emanuel, 2. NIXON THE PONTIAC PRESS « West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48058 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1969 HtKOLII A. nm»W_l» HOWA» M. 1 Fmldtot ki CbdrmkD of th* Board A«Lo MoCiTUr HAMT t. Rn> Rioh«» M. nmuAi* CIrouUtloa Maowor n. Mamhau. Jo»am Loval AdrartlalDf Ifdtiaiar Board Salaries Set After much sbul-searching, Hje Oakland County Board of Super visors has decided the sticky problem of its annual pay. We think the maximum figure of $7,500 a year is hot unreasonable. Whether the job is worth more or less will certainly be known by the time to reconsider salaries in two True, the Oakland salary decision wava compromise, with some members favoring liigher pay, and some lower. The essence of bargaining is compromise, with a give-and-take by both sides. The public expects more of this acco^ as the needs of county business proceed. Our supervisors handled the problem with more finesse than their cousins in Wayne County. Treasury grab attempts there invoked public wrath, and recall petitions are being circulated against a dozen members. Because elected officials were setting their own salaries, the pay problem probably seemed more important than it actually was. There are bigger problems facing the County, and we hope the board will work out solutions as equitable as their salaries. Hijacker’s Special Flight The airline industry, continuing to be plagued by the hijacking of many of its planes to Cuba, is missing a bet. If there are that many people wanting to get to Fiuel Castro’s paradise, why not accommodate them^ The industry could run a regular flight to Cuba once a week, with no fees attached. Would-be hijackers would iu.sl have to show their weapon upon boarding. Then all the people who don't want to sample Fidel’s hospitality might get to their destination on time, if such a thing is possible anymore. On second thought, why not announce that all passengers will be searched before takeoff? A few minutes delay at New York is better than an overnight session in Cuba. She Vetoes House Action Never underestimate the power of a woman to rock the masculine boat —and, usually, get away with it. The woman in this case is Mrs. Shirley Chisholm, newly elected congresswoman from Brooklyn’s Bedford-Stuyvesant area who politely but firmly rejected assignment to the House Agriculture Committee. She rightly reasoned that the post had no relevance to the interests of her constituents. About the only things that grow in Mrs. Chisholm’s district, one of the Nation’s most monstrous stums, are that Brooklyn tree and covertly tended marijuana patches. No matter how right her reasons, her defiance of tradition^n a tradition-encrusted institution such as the House, where freshmen are expected silently, if not always gratefully, to accept the crumbs brushed their way, amounts to heresy. cratic leadership agreed to reconsider her request for an assignment with some bearing on urban problems. The incident may not have gotten her off on the right foot with her congressional colleagues, but it should put her one leg up on a spot in the feminine hall of fame. ★ ★ ★ And without too much strain, it also may have something to say about the business that has kept Congress in the news columns during the doldrum weeks at the start of the new session and new administration — the pay raise senators and repre.sentafives are permitting themselves to be given. Nevertheless, Mrs. Chisholm not only made her point but apparently is going to get her way. The Demo- For their money, the taxpayers have the right to demand a job well done. If the treatment accorded Mrs. Chisholm is any indication of how well Congress goes about organizing its own house for serious business, it raises the question of how serious it js about the business of representative government. GOP to Bear Nixon Brand by 1970 By BRUCE BIOSSAT NEA Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON - Slowly, quietly but surely, the remaking of the Republican party under President Nixon has begun. New coordination of effort is developing between the R e p u b lican National Com-mittee and the two campaign committees of Congress which normally focus on trying to enlarge GOP membership in House and Senate. With the Republicans needing only 26 more seats in the House and eight in the Senate to take full command of Congress in 1970, the matter has high priority in the Nixon administration. as too difficult and delicate to bring, off without crushing toes at the state-local level. Voice of the People; ‘Oppose Public Funds for Kennedy MemorUiV With all due respect to Robert Kennedy, I can see no reason for Uncle Sam to spend public funds for a memorial. Certainly he is no greater American or more patriotic than Pvt. John Doe assassinated in Vietnam. ★ ★ ★ If the Kennedy family desires a memorial, they should use their own funds. DR. FORREST D. HUNT 7176 N. HOLCOMB, CLARKSTON ‘Original Design of Stamp Was Changed’ I understand a commemorative stamp is to be released « honoring the astronauts’ flight around the moon. Leonard E. Buckley, the original designer of this stamp, had “In the beginning God” shown on the stamp. However, this reading has been removed. I urge President Nixon to take the necessary steps to see that the words “In the beginning God” remain on this stamp. God has blessed our nation, so why would we let anyone eliminate His name from our country. ELLA ORVIS 264 HILL, MILFORD ‘We Pay for Mistakes of Elected Officials’ The Best Anti-Missile Missile! It is a shame that taxpayers must pay for the mistakes of our elected officials. At election time we vote for those we believe to be best qualified for office. We believe they are honest and sincere and will do their best for the people, but sometimes we have a rather rude awakening when we come across unfortunate problems such as our newly-elected Board of Supervisors. David Lawrence Says; EARLY MOVES PLANNED The President and his men believe it will be manageable in many places, though not The heart of the Nixon administration’s plan is to move early — to search out good prospects as quickly a s possible, and then to anoint them quickly but firmly so that, in most instances, they will enjoy so sUong an advantage as to discourage serious primary opposition. New York, Ohio and Pennsylvania. With legislative reapportionment due to follow the 1990 census, control o f governorships and of both houses of the state legislatures is of obvious importance to both major parties. Nixon’s success In campaigning for carefully chosen new candidates for Congress in 1966, and their success in winning re-election in 1968, are thd cornerstones which underlie the present bold concept that he should ui-tenvene strongly in 19 7 0 selections. In the N past, even s o politically-minded a group as the Kennedy cadres have looked upon such intervention The devices for anointing and for giving proper public exposure to the Nixon choices are, of course, many. They include naming some prospects to membership on a whole host of federal commissions of secondary consequence which nevertheless can give a candidate useful attention within his state. The President and his agents will not be limiting their efforts to choices for Congress. Some 36 governorships are at stake in 1970. The GOP, presently riding high in virtually all of the big states, nevertheless has some tough problems for 1970. Incumbent Governors Raymond Shafer of Pennsylvania and James Rhodes in Ohio will not be running. In Michigan, Gov. William Milliken, who replaced the resigned George Romney, has little time tMkiild strength. The saine goes in Massachusetts for John Volpe’s replacement, Gov. Francis Sargent, who has the further problem of running against a Democratic ticket strengthened by Senate Edward Kennedy in 1970. SEVEN OF LARGEST Of these, 24 are presently held by Republicans and this total includes seven of the largest-California, Florida, M a s 9 achusetts, Michigan, Th* Pmm h mMM wcIamI*^ !• )tw am raruWi-«tiM M ■« bari MM pHntaa In iMf MMBapw M «■; )• h«a bM« paia at 6) * ‘Questioii Necessity of Nixon’s Trip Abroad’ I’m sorry to hear that President Nixon*is marUng a foreign tour so soon aftm- his inauguration. Our'Nathm needs its President in Washington in these crucial times. Why is it necessary to y.S. prestige to have our newly-elected Preddoit go abroad at this time and expose himself to unnecessary danger? MARY J. DODT 98 MURPHY ‘Some Owners Don’t Care for Their Dogs’ If owners of dogs don’t care if they run loose, they don’t care for the animal. Why, then, do they bother keeping them? ^ LYNN MIELKE 8170 FOSTER, CLARKSTON ‘Support Proposed Bill Concerning Lawyers’ I commend Rep. ’Thomas G. Sharpe for Introducing the two biUs to turn over the licensing and policing of attorneys to a State board. One of the bills would help future law sdiool graduates licensed by the State to establish themselves in practice more independently, without being involved with the Bar Association. Let us have lawyers that are independent and frSo of the Bar Association and let us abolish the regulati plement their children’s incomplete ih^h sdiool education. Don’t ignore those petition-toting students. ’They are fighting for their future. COLLEEN GOODWIN Student of Kettering High School People in the middle income group in Waterford are sick of this school millage thing. We are so over-taxed that people with children are moving out. When teachers begin to ask where all the tax money goes. It’s time for citizens to wake up and put a stop to “more money’’ demands. MRS. JENNIFER LAINGE Regarding Waterford School taxes, we paid a property tax of 1340, and $260 of that was school tax. We pay $130 per month house payment and have two children In school. Our nel^bor rents an Identical home for $120 and has six children in school. He’s not paying taxes. His landlord has no chOdren but must by law pay high school taxes. Is this fair? I suggest the people of Waterford attend all meetings or we will find Mr. Tatroe and his high-priced gang have railroaded us again. MRS. JOSEPH SIMMONS More taxes will not improve the Waterford school situation. With the unsatiable hunger to hurry and get in all the experimental programs first, ^ basic steps of learning have been left behind, lliere seem to be more administrators of the special progrmns than there are students getting the benefits from such programs. A good, administrative housedean-Ing is what is needed first. E. SPEARS ‘Complainers Might Lend a Helping Hand’ To the parties who wish the City to clean sidewalks and tax the owners, did ^ou ever stop to think you might become a widow at 78 years, with a small income and a bad heart condition? ’Think it over. You might decide to lend a helping hand. MRS. T. JOHNSON Taxpayers Don’t Receive Promised Services I am an upset resident Pontiac taxpayer. I have not had my street salM or cleaned during any snowfall this winter, in si»te of promises that when we got the income tax we will get service. The situation is worse than before the income tax, which I think is illegal as no vote by the Pontiac taxpayers was allowed 1^ the City government. A CONCERNED PONTIAC RESIDENT Comment on Incident of Beating by Teacher As a citizen and taxpayer, I would like to know how the Pontiac Board of Education can justify not immediately mispetiiiing or preferably dismissing the teacher involved in the beating of a six-year-old female student. I refer to the incident that occurred at the Herrington Hills Elementary School on February 7. With aU the pubUcity given to charges of police brutality, it is time actim is taken to insure that incidents such as this do not occur again in our schools. DOflALD W. BROWN $00 Dam Opened; Water Level Is Up SAULT STE. MARIE (API-High water in Lake Superior has forced the opening of gates on the St. Mary’s River compensating dam. John Bouchard, superintendent at the Canadian locks in Sault Ste. Marie, said six of the It gates have been opened and water in the Sault Harbor hps risen three to four inches. He said water levels in Lake Superior are about one foot above will remain open until the end of this month. It is expected tifo six gates Valentine Pickup PHH.ADELPHIA (AP) - Attuned to the rignificance of Friday, the Philadelphia post office plans a special “sweettieart collection’’ of mail today. Postmaster Anthony I. Lamb^ says the special nuul pickup will h^ m-sure that Valoitines will be delivered by Friday, St. Vden-tine’s Day. FEBRUARY Nylon “Forest Glen” .. TRAFFIC-TACKLiNQ TWEED 4488 9x12* “Tread Light” Vinyl ... RUSTIC EMBOSSED BRICK Fortrel® “Shagmoor” ... WITH SINK-IN SPRINQINESS Reg. 54.99 Reg. 3.99 099 Reg. 12.99 lOV Eight glowing color blends are slow to show soil ... a great addition to any room, den to living room. Bonded cushion back. Adds a casual, natural atmosphere. Long-wearing vinyl provides walking comfort, easy care. 6 feel wide. Install above grade. Sumptuous shag in 18 solids and 9 tweeds. Tumbled texture of Fortrel® polyester yams are heat-set twisted—resists crushing. 23^ Diagonal Reg. 549.99 499«* FnU 295 iqnm inche. of pnra color tUvs Into ovon when you more nc. Dual S” speak, era. Conlemporery console. 549.99 Colonial ......499.88 AM-FM Stereo Reg. 389.99 3X9^^ n or Contemporary style. 6 s| Two-Speaker Stereo Phono Reg. 169.99 14988 Sears TV and Phonograph Dept. OpcB Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tmsdaye Wednstdiw 9 to 5>30 5-Qt. Cooker-Fiyer Use as deep ftyer i ^ ‘ •teel body, wiro basli 2-Slice Chromed Toaster Automatically mekei toast to brownneao you aoloet Remorablo crumb iray.............8.88 7-Gup Electric Percolator PoUshcd. (teaming alnmi handle. Keepa coifea hot. Small Eloctrical Appliancos ScRIS Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5r4171 AS TIIK rONTlAC IMtKSS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1969 SYMUtriM SHU ENTIRE STUCK MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Floor Sampleis — Trnde-in* — Rentnl Returns DIAMONDS - JEWELRY - LUQGAOE Ladies* and Gents’ Wallets-Famous Makes DRASTICALLY REDUCED Many, many items too numerous to mention marked down for clearance Layaicay or Eaity Payment Plan Downtown Pontiac Edwmdi fibuiu Honw ZONOLITE ATTIC TILL Thoro'i on* thing wort* than outdoor gooi*- v,,, pimpltt. Indoor gooi*pimpl*i. Zonolit* Attic Intulation it th* cure It l<**pi th* h*ot in. Pour Zonolit* right ov*r old Hull, level it oil at th* top ol th* joiitt and Uav* it. Heat bills go down, and to do gootepimplet. $120 ■ a bae CAREFREE STORM DOORS The Care-Free Muttang hoc proven to be our moit popular aluminum combination door. It out performs doors twice its cost. Adjustabla bottom rail for effective weather sealing. Complete with top storm and screen panels and bottom storm panel. Includes pneumatic closer, safety chain, and security latch. Popular siiet. Auburn Haights 101 Squirrel Rd. BAULCH Pentagon Program for 'Rejects' Boosted I By JERRY T. BAULCH Associated Press Newsfeatnres I WASHINGTON — The Pentagon bigwigs are so satisfied with" “F*roject 100,000" that the program is being stepped up. This is I the one that enables previously unqualified men to get into the I armed services. The goal of 140,000 in the first two years, ending in September, was surpassed by 677 men, half of the total volunteering through recruiting offices, the others being drafted. Plans now are to bring in another 162JKM) in the next year and a half. Clark M. Clifford said in his farewell report as secretary of defense that 96 per cent of those coming into the program are completing recruit training successfully and going on to advanced training in various fields—combat and support jobs. * ★ ★ "Although the entrance requirements were eased, performance standards were not Lowered," Clifford said, adding. "Any special assistance they may require is provided as a part of the normal training process." These men are being promoted at a satisfactory rate, about half reaching grade E4—Army cwporal or the equivalent—after years of service. READING INSTRUCTION One of the things “Project 100,000" is Involved in is providing special reading instruction, since it has been found that 4 to 5 per cent of men coming into the Army can’t read comprehensively at fifth-grade level. Continental Army Command officials say most of these men are able to reach the fifth-grade reading level within three weeks of instruction. Only about 14 per cent of those getting the instruction fail to make the grade within the six-weeks limit. ★ A ★ The remedial reading is needed, it has been discovered, not only by the uneducated but by a surprising number of high school graduates. VA Home-Loan Interest Up The jump in the interest ceiling on GI home loan guarantees from 6% per cent to 7V4 per cent at the end of January is disappointing news, but William J. Driver, head of the Veterans Administration, said it’s a must if veterans are to be able to buy homes. * ★ * Without the increase, he said, thq'25,000 veterans applying for GI loans each month—just abouVat record levels—wouldn’t find builders of new homes and sellers of existing homes willing to accept the penalties of rising discount rates. The VA home loan certificate, he said, would merely be a home "hunting license. it it it It would mean that the post-Korea and Vietnam veterans—the ones buying most homes with GI loans—would find fewer and fewer homes available to them with low down payments or no down payments. Most of these men, Eirlver says, aren’t in a position to meet the higher down payment requirement pf most conventional loans'. The higher interest ceiling won’t affect loans already in effect. Tidbits Some soldiers physically disabled, while serving in the combat zone, so severely they can’t perform the job for which they are trained are being permitted to stay on active duty. They can now apply for retraining in a job they are able to perform. A ★ ★ Whether a man gets an okay to stay on depends on many factors, including age, education, length of service, his military record and how his disability occurred. ~r A new noncombat medal was approved by President Johnson just before he left office. Called “the Meritorious Service Medal,” it will be just below the present top noncombat award, the Legion of Merit, and above the various service commendation medals. 'The prized Bronze Star remains both a combat and noncombat award. ’The National Defense ’Transportation Association has launched a national program to train and help handicapped Vietnam war veterans find jobs in the traffic and transportation industry. A national committee will work through local chapters to match up men and jobs. A SELL-OUT EVERY TIME NEW HAMMOND "T" SPINET ORGAN Now you can have theatre organ sound in a spinet organ. The Hammond "T" deluxe spinet is beautiful to see and hear. Drums, guitar^ banjo, chimes at your fingertips — and the exclusive Leslie speaker adds drama to everything you play. No wonder it's a sellout everytime advertised Many decorator furniture styles. Never needs tuning. From $1800 Wa'll bring ■ Ham-mcxid to your hom* for a NO CHARGE ( HOME TRIAL Call « today. GULBRANSON SPINET ORGAN Handsome trade-in has two keyboards, pedal keyboard— Orchestra sounds $745 LOWREY SPINET ORGAN One-of-d-kind trode-iti is in full-size with many orchestra voices. Two keyboards . $595 ESTEY CHORD ORGAN 2 manual spinet organ with 42 chord buttons . . . $269 RINNELJ-’S MUSIC ST ORBS IN The Pontioc Moll, 682-042^ — Open Evory EvoniRo to 9 27 S. Soginow, DowiHown Open Mondoy ond Friday to 9 Charge Accounts, 4-Pay Plan (90 days tome as cash) or Budget Terms i^atioml Hofnednd. Office Equipment Supply SALE 12-In. Medalist Electric Reg. 199.98 149»^ Single, Vi and repeat spacing. 4-color Easi-Load ribbon, 2 Change-a-type keys. Pica or elite type. Case. With 1 Change-a-type seL NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan 12-In. Office-Size “Constellation” Has automatic repeat apace, Easi-Load cartridge ribbon. t/iooa Take one Cbange-a-type key. Standard pica or ebte type. -tteg. IW-Vo Save! JpdkftT to gave you $20 at Sears! Sears Electric Adder Full-size... with Electric Clear Key Reg. 89.98 7997 Lists 7 columns, totals 8. Adds, subtracts and multiplies. Single and double zero keys speed operation. Totals and subtotals printed in red. Has convenient non - add key. Cover included. Sears Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 „ FEBRUARY ^ BROADIOOM SALE Get the nation's newest, most wonted carpet fibers • DuPont 501 nylons -Fortrel® polyester-Solution dyed ocrylics at prices to fit your budget. Z*” # .-*■ .s'* DuPont 501 nylon random sheared Compare at 6.95 Commercial nylon tweed hides soil Compare at 7.95 Fortrel polyester* or Acrilon acrylic 8.95-9.95 value 4.44^3 5.55;3 6.66:3 30 SO. YDS. JUST 133.30 Pill, fuzz resistant, spot cleanable, nylon pile in 6 shades. Sovel 30 SQ. YDS. JUST IS6.50 Level loop pile, tight construction, 7 shades. Resists abrasions. 30 SQ. YDS. JUST H3.S0 Solid color polyester, solution dy^ acrylic tweed, resists stains. FREE HOME SERVICE 332-0271 or 673-1275 Enjoy convenience of shopping at home. Free estimates and carpet advice with no obligation. Call between 10 o.m.-9 p.m. Hurry now| OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (Sot. 9:30-9) Drayton open Sundey Noon to 6 p.m. (Domnts^ dsta Tuet^ Wtd. at t pjnJ FEDERAL'S DOWNTOWN ANO DRAYTON PLAINS State Dept. Denies Contact With Cambodia Over Ties THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBKUARY 13, 1969 A—9 WASHINGTON (AP) - State Department officials deny there has been a message exchange or other formal contact between President Nixon and Cambodian Chief of State Prince Norodom Sihanouk about restoring diplomatic relations. Although the officials did say the question was “under study,” their reaction was in sharp disagreement with a statement earlier this week by the Cambodian foreign minister that Prince hanouk had answered a letter from Nixon on the possibility of re-establishing ties. ■* * * Cambodia broke off relations with the United States May 3, 1966, following a long period of antagonism between the two countries over the Vietnam war. The United States and its allies in South Vietnam charged that the Vietcong and North Vietnamese troops used Cambodia as a supply source and sanctuary. Cambodia complained the South Vietnamese and Americans constantly violated its borders. , These s?ime problems still plagtte relations between the two nations and would have to be resolved if diplomatic ties are restored. * * * Another formidable obstacle to friendly relations is posed by Sihanouk’s expressed desire to American troops take their weapons with them when they leave South Vietnam. Detroit Parent Starts Drug 'Truth Corps' DETROIT (AP) - Two of Joseph Duroff’s nine children told their father a month ago they believed marijuana was harmless. They also said they had been offered drugs. “I was appalled,” said Duroff, a 46-year-old mathematics teacher, who is forming what he calls the “Truth Corps.” ★ ★ With a core of 15 parents and teachers at MacKenzie High School in Detroit, where he teaches, the group plans to ask students to sign an antidrug pledge. The pledge says the students will abstain from drugs, set an example for other students and provide information on drug use to law enforcement agencies. NO PLACE TO GO He plans to circulate the petition first in Detroit public and private high schools. “I think there are many students who know what is going on and would like to do something, but they have no place to go about it,” he said. “There seems to be a great deal of drug traffic in the schools, particularly in outlying schools. All the students s cognizant of it,” he said. “I was appalled to find out how much my children know about it,” he said. Information meetings on drug use and referral of students to agencies needing help also are planned. ★ * * Duroff, whose children are aged 4 to 20, moved to Detroit after i;unning unsuccessfully for, Congress in Boston last November. In preparing for the time when a U.S. withdrawal can take place, American authorities are building the supply of weapons^^rcraft and warships available ttly South Vietnam. Tliis has vraxried Sihanouk, whose army of »,000 men is poorly equipped compared with the 800,000 men under arms in Vietnam. ★ * ★ Prince Sihanouk also has said all Americans must be withdrawn from Vietnam because this is the will of the people. IjtUeCaesais [■Beat- 696 W. HURON FE 4-0916 FAST-EFnCIENT DELIVERY SERVICE • DELICIOUS PIZZA • CHICKEN DINNERS • SHRIMP DINNERS • FISH & CHIPS • SPAGHETTI DINNERS • BUCKET OF CHICKEN VALENTIIIE MY SPEGUL 50c OFF YOUR OROER WITH THIS COUPON Band Instruments Now Available on Grinnell's CONN INSTRUMENT RENTAL PLAN If your child takes bond this term, you con RENT a Conn trumpet, cornet, Some 285.000 pupil.s may have to leave on their summer vaea-tions 55 days early this year if the nation s fourth largest city is unable to provide emergepcy funds (nr its public schools ! This warning came Wednes-ria\ from school board President Hichard.son Dilworth 'if there is no relief for the largest school district in the Male." he said, ' ll will close and hi'come completely bankrupt " Some 12..500 teachers, as Well as hundreds of nonprofe.ssional such an early close Capsule News of State Leaders »v th* Prtu THE GOVERNOR County Lincoln DflV dinntr In Southfttu THE BOARD OR EDUCATION Annovtnced eli^ctlon of Peter Oppew* ol GrAnd Repldi es chairman. THE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT SAtd It had found a concentration of d Rapids^^a^Mt^flnr MRC 7? LocKwood Arci and little hope that the Pennsyl-j vania legislature would move to permit Philadelphia to enact le-' gaily a recently invalidated} $44 5 million dollar tax package.! * * * Dilworlh is currently seeking a 12-mill increase in the real cs-j late tax, which if approved,! would provide public schools! with an immediate injection ofj $49 million. He claims such an amount would carry the city Uirough its current school year The levy was one of several the stale Supreme Court declared invalid last week because of a state law prohibiting hikes during the course of a budget period * ★ * Tlie seh(x)l board president said lawyers planned to file a petition with the high court a.sk-ing for a rehearing on its earlier decision. i DESPERATION "1 am so des(>erate I'll accept anything the administration will agree to,” he said * ★ * Dilworth warned that If legislative aid was not extended to the city’s school system, it would have no alternative but to shut down ■ House Speaker Herbert Fine-• man, D-Philadelphia, said legis- lation to support the school board’s request W(«i't be introduced before next week at the earliest He added, however, he was ■'quite confident that relief will be forthcoming. ” I Group Wonts Hippies to Try for Police Jobs BERKELEY, Calif (API - A group called the Better Berkeley Council is campaigning to get hippies to apply for 26 vacancies in the Berkeley Police Department The group is passing out leaflets asking for 'peacemen, not policemen.” ★ * * ‘‘It would be a sacrifice for many young people to join the department,” said A1 Silbowitz, the group’s chairman. “Cops have rocks thrown at them by all sides.” “We're very interested In seeing new people,” said Police Lt ,J B Crooke, a department personnel officer. * * * “But the department does have a regulation that all men must be clean shaven.” Buy a fioiipet Deaiytieil [or a Spedot Am and fioi/e ot 8e(!feii)illi-Evofui THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY ONLY LIVING ROOM CARPET 501 DuPont Nylon Scroll Magnificant Haavywaight Scroll Formal Pottarn Acrylic Pile Tip Shaor 10 Baoutiful colon Dasignad for tha Activa Living Room ymu. Cluiitt Intfalltd Taekless Ovar White 8 98 Sg. Yd. Camplata KITCHEN CARPET Nylon Pile Loop Tight Dame Construction Batter Color* Than Mott Kitchen Carpeting 8 Color* Olefin Pile Loop Long Wearing Stain Ra*i*tont 6 Practical Color* YomChim Taeklats Ovar White Rubber Pad 7‘ Sq. Yd. Camplata Family Room Carpet Nylon Pile Shag Heavyweight Shag-Solid*, Tone on Tonat DuPont Nylon Tweed Heavyweight Tona-on-Tona Durable and Long-Wearing Ym dioia Installed Taekless Over White 8 98 Sq. Yd. Completa BEDROOM CARPET Nylon Pile Plush 12 Beautiful Decorator Colors Soft qnd Luxurious Nylon Pile Loop 10 Practical Tone on Tone Perfect for Children's Bedrooms Vatiui Choice ailed klass White ar Pad 98 Taekless Over White Rubber Pad 6- Sq. Yd. Camplata REMNANTS-SAVE FROM 30 to 50% Oaseription II Desoription 3 Years OPEN TIL 9 P.M. THURS., FRI. and SAT. To Pay CONVENIENT CREDIT TOO - NO MONEY DOWN BeckwitK-Cvons FINC FLOOR COVERINO& 21 SOUTH TELEGRAPH TEL-HUROH SHOPPING CEHTEB - PONTIAC - 334-8544 Call Open Tonite *til 9 p.m.-Fri. 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.-$at 9 to 9 Weekend Discounts at SIMMS are Better Discounts-Here’s Proof You'll find th» better discounts at Simms this weekend, and every weekend. Everyday needs and gift items in every department are discount priced for your savings. Prices good Thurs., Friday and Saturday. Rights reserved to limit quantities. SUPER SELECTIONS • SUPER VALUES - SUPER SAVINGS Hake Year Baal* aHh fienaiaa Faelory ^ remington head m 4” norelco head SUNBEAM HEAD-BLADE 3»9 Sunbeam HEAD-BIADES 49» S-Cm“ HEAD BLADES 5»5 ^;:o7sCRiEN;^TrER [ Ronson SCREEN-CUTTER 2 snumms FOR swos $2.50 volue, pkg. 30 Sinulobs give promp re H | lief ol sinus or commo^lds. M- SU.ET0 PWR rt. at RwM aad 8ME! I PaiMiose Electric barber set $8,95 but I for only ' I 7-piece Wohl Papoose clip-I per sol with 000 clipper, blode I guard. #1-2 3 butch ol- I tochments, comb and oil. ^ WaMMjiisUUe Electric BARBER CLIPreRS I7»»i $32.50 but 1 cut. Cool operoHng^SundHM-Mo^ VaSELmE FCTROLEUU JELLY Me 1-lb. i- "“1, KQc 1 pefroleurrt jelly, for cuts, bruises. A me cine chest necessity. POUDENT DENTURE GLEMER $,.96 vol... 64’. Polid.", 1 29 in tablet form. Premeasured to avo.d waste. iEFiimsEFiicao^^ $, 39 value, 22-ai. Reef ontiseptic mouth wash, refreshing ond effective. « • • prnire nose drops or spw $1.00 value, 1-ox. size Privine, helps clear ^0C up stuffy heads due to colds. LIQUIFRIN CHILDS RSPIRIR -rr 59*= ' 6EL0SIL»NTaCip $1 75 value, 12.3X. Gelusil liquid ontted ■ | pleosont tasting, peppermint flavor. M. Pfugi-Mom Floor quest DE0D0R»NT “,rvoiue. I-OZ. size Quest deodoron. der mode especiolly lor tern,nine ■ ^ NIVEAS $1,50 volue. 99* Prug.-MoinFloorJ . 20-Gal. Garbage ^ms Muminum ‘Snyder’ GaitageCan Wood Stepladders 3»» Full 20-gallon capacity galvanized garbage cons approved for city use. With snug-fitting cover. I Model HT12A Regulor $5.88 oH-minum from® gorboge con , cort with „!». Holds two 20-gollon cons, not Includ^. D-Foot Siza _ , sturdy oil-wood folding -.plodders » 4 pail p'-itlorm Hoidwaro - 2nd Floor J Rival Can Opener Rivol 'Con-O.Mat' con opener ^ J ^ with 3-position wall brocket, automatic single action, re- / ■ movable cutter. Sturdy die- J cost body. 5-ttL Size Teflon Coated Presto Deep Fryer deep fry that doubtes « ° oven. 5^t. capacity, submersible for cleaning. Includes fry bosket. Portable Tree Style RBcord Stand Brass finish, heovy duty one-piece spiroled ..eel tubing. Racks odjuP verticolly ond horizontolly. 52-in. high with decorot,v. I finiol. 4-record holders, bock to bock. Hbuseworet — 2nd Floor HMi Grade Paper-OisposaMe Vaemm Cleaner Baes Disposable vacuum cleaner bags of high grade paper to fit most any make of vacuum cleaner. 2 for 1.00 12x12" Panel Covets 8 Sq. Feet Decro-Tile Panels] [99 L COLOR Waterproof Decro Tile panels hove a high look. EH-cioWy nice m k ?.-L___hr.th lolosh oreos. Pockoge ^ kitchen or both splodt orws. include, eight 12x12 ponels- Hardwara—2nd Floor SIMMSif 98 N. Saginaw St., Downtown Pontiac Hottest Propane Tetth-Hew Beraz-o-matic Jet Torch Simm* Price I Bernz^-matic jet torch is 96% faster and ^ ■ easier. For removing paint, thawing I frozen pipes, lighting fireplaces, etc. * ■■ JelJTlO. i-Inch Dr. American INDESTRO 18-Pc. Socket Set Regular $M.88 seller, full tadory guaronleed 18-pc. . chrome ploled- Comes Imovy ploiHc carry e. #80520 Mordwore-2nd Floor^ TUE PONTIAC PRt;SS. Till USDAV. FEH^lIAK^ l.>. 1009 13 Salt For Tonito, Fri. ft Sat. SIMMS OPEN IDNITE 9k4nd%>to9gDm^SI[EStoio%> Rights Rasarved to Limit Quantjtias W! HBk M DRCOil^ Look! Horo or# tho moit tromondous buys in town - all AMERICAN MADE QUALITY CLOTHING at choap import pricot - compare and you'll come to SIMMS for the BETTER DISCOUNTS ... all specials for tonite, Friday and Saturday artd v/e must reserve the right to limit quantities. Come, Bring a friend and neighbor to share in these SUPER SAVINGS. PARK FREE in Downtown. Parking Mall You get 1-hour FREE parking when you^op at Simms on all purchases except tobacco and beverages. Just have ticket stamped at time of purchase. INSTANT CREDIT AT SIMMS - Chargo It You get 30 days same as cash on purchases of $10 to $1 50 or use your MIDWEST BANK CARD. Ask about the plan for you. ANOTHER BARGAIN BLAST FROM THE HOUSE OF BARGAINS Smartly Tailored Wool and Nylon Ladies’ Winter Coat Taffeta Acetate Lining Regular $49.95. You can be in style wherever you go with this smartly tailored coat. This is a keep-out-the-cold blend of 85% wool anct 15% nylon with taffeta acetate lining. Has bound button holes and two seom pockets. Sizes 10 to 20. Main Floor V 'IS?- ^ Boys’ First Ouality Sanforized . JTough Bull Denim Jeans' American Made - ~ 100% Cotton Girl’s and Boys’ Assorted Caps Reg. $1.49 Assorted styles of girl's and boys' cops, tarns, ski hots. 100% orlons and wools.. Worth hats for cold weather. Main Floor Choice of Styles Girl’s Sox Values to $1.29 — choice of over the knee sox, fish net, ^r Orion stretch or green wool sox. Sizes 8'/j to II. Main Floor A \ Scotchgard® Treated to Resist Stains Men’s All-Weather Coats Orion Pile Zip-Out Lining Regular $29.95 — Men's all weather coot) Scotchgard treated to resist soil, water and wrinkles. 65% Dacron and 35% cotton with Orion pile zip-out lining on cotton backing, rayon sleeve lining. Machine washable. Black or tan in sizes 36 to 46. Bas«m*nt Wools - Knits - Corduroys Ladies’ Skirts $6.99 t •• Choice of A line styles, belted skirts, wide wale corduroy, wools, etc. Broken size ronge 8 to 14. Main Floor Famous CANNON or DUNDEE Brands Terrycloth Bath Towels Regidurs to 13.49 Wheat Color Permanent Press Kegulors to $4.49 Faded Blue Boys' looBh bull denln o„d s=M°d..d to P™-'"' f ,ei„|o,«d Sizes 6 to 16. No.iroo will.IXrmaSrwairand dry. ,6 to 16 in reg.or slim. Short and Long Sleeve Styles - Assorted \ Boys’ Sport Shirts Includes Permanent Press Acrilan Knits - Layered Look Paisley Prints - Turtlenecks Cotton Flannels and others Price at Simms Beautiful both towels, first quolity, of heavy terry cloth in floral prints, solids and stripes. Big 22x44-inch size in a variety of colors. Bas«m«nt Dressy and Tailored Ladies’ Blouses $4.98 I Assorted group Includes button front shirt style with roll sleeves, wash and weor cottons and others. Broken size range 8 IX Main Floor Warmly Lined Ladies’ Car Coats Were to $10.99 5“ Come, see this brand new selection of boys' sport shirts including long sleeve and short sleeve styles. Includes 100% cotton flat knit stripe racer shirt, permanent press knit shirts, permanent press Totter-soll shirt, ivy styled shirt, 100% Creslon crew neck sweat shirts, Acrilan turtleneck shirts, plaid cotton flannel, striped permanent press and others. Sizes 8 to 18. Basement Ladies' Dresses First Quality and American Made Values to $24.95 styles include corduroy bonded to foam, pile lined coots, Suedeskin coot. Mini-trench coot, Scotch plaid cor coot, etc. Broken size ronoe. Main Floor Your Choice of 3 Styles - First Quality Full Size Bedspreads Values to $10.95 ]99 Choice of Molono stripe by 'Homemaker,' 'Choteou Madrid' Spanish style in blu* or gold, or feminine tiered style with red or blue trim. Basomont Value* to $13.98 fot ladies' winter ana s g 14. you choose (”., with what his doctor calls an “indisposing illness" Byrnes, 89, had a long political career, in the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate and as governor of .South Carolina, U S Supreme Court justice and secretary of .slate from 1945 to 1947 Luchow's, Famed i NY Restaurant, j Sold to Companyi \L\V YORK (API - Lu-: iiw s the 87-year-old German rcsiauraiit on Manhattan’s 14th| Street, has been sold to l-ong-i (hamps. Inc The sale was announced Wednesday by Jan! Milcfiell owner of the dining .‘-pot since 1930, and Larry Ell-man, president of the Long-champs chain. The restaurant was opened in 1882 b\ a 26-year-old German immigrant. .August Luchow It became the center of the city’s theatrical and political iW back . when 14lh Street was Ih^hub off New York. \ 1 Regular notables through the yeare included Diamond Jim Brady, showman Florenz Zieg-feld, tenor Enrico Caruso, Victor Herbert, actress Lillian Russell and former New York Gov. Alfred E Smith * * A Ellman said he would “zealously preserve the historic tradition, the ambiance, the cuisine and the service” at Luchow’s. FREE ON/OFF 'REMOTE CONTROL AVE! COUPON SALE DATS! HERE'S DISCOUNTS ON TOP OF DISCOUNTS! CALOP TV EXTRA CASH SAVINGS lor youl Clip ih* coupont... USE THE SAME AS CASH at tha tim* of tala on all major Color TV, port- , .r., r, Tk...i-naaitinn In ni.rnlronHv law Hkcountoricoi. EXAMPLE " t»ro‘* EXTRA CASH SAVINGS lor youl Clip tho coupon* ... USE THE SAME AS CASH at tho timo of tolo on oil major Color TV, port-obU, TV, Sttroo Hi-Fi and opplionco purchmti. Tho*o coupon dUcount* or* in addition to our olroody low ditcount prico*. EXAMPLE A portobU TV prico-toggod at $79.95 cott* you $73.95 with tho $6 coupon. OH^r good till Fob. 20 only. FREE DELIVERY and FREE SERVICE in thit tmartly stylud tablu moduli ^Aomory^ ^-tot tuning centrDrUH^/VHF^ ** ' up todoy^unjoy Color TV tonighti Froo 90>doy torvico. Fro# off/on ?ay even less with coupon. /y .......... . , ..... .... ... ,.vV , . \ \ • I. tftE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUAltY 13, 1&69 _________. ^ SKI SALE 30% OFF ALL SKI JACKETS A & T ‘‘FIREBIRD” SKIS • On* *f th* fin*it Imports * Inlaid plastic top odpos • 28 pioco • • ■ -.............. A & T POLES • Top«r«d aluminum shaft, moldad grip • Laothar strap • Guarantaad plastic ring CUBCO BINDINGS a Inttallad to fit boot If Purchased Separately $58.35 NOW COMPLETE SET 39.95 HART MERCURY METAL SKI PACKAGE • A & T ALUMINUM POLES and TIES • CUBCO RELEASE TYPE BINDINGS • BINDINGS INSTALLED TO FIT BOOT • NON-WAXING POLY-TYPE BASE » FULL FACTORY WARRANTY • ONE YEAR GUARANTEE If Purchased Separately $122.90 NOW COMPLETE SET 85.00 SKI BOOTS GREATLY REOUCED PONTUC al-Huran Csnttr It S. Ttleinpli MiOdIa ■) OtT-iU Opsn aitaly til I save on softly styled long-sleeved blouses 3.77 Beautifully feminine in fresh white, this value group is trimmed with ruffles, lace, flip-ties and jabots. Easy-core Dacron® polyester/cotton. 32-38. TEL-HURON CENTER - Telegraph at Huron- the pump that fells a fashion story of its own It's In moonlight-gleaming, softly colored pastel Corfam. It's beauty without bother—comes clean with wipe of a damp cloth. And !t>:ouIdnlfebo more shapely, n h^etf^nd lady-llke I CAMERA MART SUPER SPECIALS SAWYER DELUXE REMOTE SLIDE PROJECTOR CONTROL ON SALE 197 Remote Control Forward-Reverse, and Focusing Famous BRELII Shirtwaist Checks! Prints! I Floral! Solids! f COLORS; • Black Patent • Pink Luttr* • Powder Blue Lustre • Yellow Lustre e Bone Lustre 1. Chock; Wovy own/Block. Brown, ini; Block/whitc, Corol/ | \ j 8 16. A Sensational 13.99 $1QOO Matching Handbags SHOEBOX I THE ALL-NEW BELL & HOWELL AUTOLOAD CAMERA KIT ON SALE 187 f No Monty ^7* COMPLETE WITH CASE, COLOR FILM, ^ FLASHCUBE AND BATTERIES POLARIOD 220 Color Pack LAST WEEK AT BELOW COST! 51 97 THE CAMERA WITH A RANGEFINDER uatmui MART TEL-HURON CENTER TEL-HURON CENTER 334-956T KRESGE’S Early American Pillows Reg. $1.37 mw OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 5 Cinderella’s® I fresh as springtime ELIAS BROTHERS BI6 BOY 20 S. Telegraph Across from Tel-Huron Silver Lake Rd. and Dixie Highway 7?''“ ANNOUNCIHG!! i A New Service!! Custom Made Draperies and Slipcovers, Hundreds of Samples to Choose From. Excellent Workmanship and Service. Keep warm, keep dry, and save *8 all at the same time. Res $39.95 NOW $3^90 Buy yourself one of our famous ilp-lined all-weather coats now while we have them on sale. Choose from Black, Natural, N<|yy, and Gray, in Solids, Plaids, and Checks. Sixes 34-48 Regulars, Shorts, ond Longs in basic and knee-lengths. Available at all stores Call for Appointm«nt AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 13,14,15 Io(bI( is here and what ceuld be mere fMbilne than peach or aqua 1 (65.% rayon, 35% acetate) heaped wHh lace end e Hewer. Sixes 7 to 14 I M.n. ^ TEL-HURON-FE5-9S55 Children Use Your Seourity Charse ivmTnis or MieMsan Bankard tii • r.M. since IS31 CJSMUN’S OTOnes row men « voono men Tseh nats Beeler la Wama I OaoalvanralBM'Me TeMlerso Ooalar la Nallat OHalsMylNcM’IRI THE PONTIAC PRF.SS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1P69 'a ♦ It was before dawn Tuesday when his wife, Eileen, 23, whose baby was not due for two weeks, suddenly told 26-year-old Michael, “Do .something, it's happening " O’Connor made frantic phone calls but it became too late to wait. He presided at the birth o Michael Jr, 6 pounds, 12 ounces. ‘Tve seen enough movies of what to do and so 1 did it, ’ he said. Police finally arrived and completed the job; tied the umbilical cord After mother and son were safe in the hospital. O’Connor commented, “1 didn’t have time to get nervous, but I wouldn’t| want to do it again” Bathroom Stand for Washables A new drying stand folds flat for storage and can fit into the smallest apartment bath. The dryer stand is designed for use anywhere in the home. It is made of a sturdy square steel frame and stands on scratch-proof plastic feet which help grip a floor or bathtub firmly. There are 10 plastic coated steel dowels on which to hang things. The plastic is ribbed to prevent clothes from falling off.' QUALITY ^ REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE HEARING AIDS Loanari Avoilobl* Where to Draw Line on Vulgarity? By BETTY CANARY Where does the retailer’s responsibility end;’’ a friend asked me, "and where does a parent’s responsibility begin?” was concerned about the window display of a men’s clothing store where we were both customers. She had a small son in tow and he just learning to read. The display had the usual shirts and coats and cuff links and scat- should not be handled by small children out on a Satur^y afternoon spree with the 5(k;ent allowances. , A ★ ★ Censorship -7 the mere thought df it — gives me shiver down the spine. And I believe that no resptHisible adult wants any committee nassing judgment on stores. AfiW all, we walk up to a magazine rack, we can sometimes see tered among these were items only what we want to see. To brought in for a bit of spice. one person a book can be a romantic romp while to another it presents a wallow There were nightshirts with the sheets, embroidered innuendos and gut what can a parent do to bedroom “temperature” charts one is supposed to read with a smirk and there were also bar accessories printed with crude: vulgarisms. Her son had read| these aloud and some of the' words he wanted his mother to' explain. j She showed her displeasure ln| perhaps the best way. She! bought the sweaters she wanted at another store. But, the gesture did not really solve her Wednesday's speaker at the Hills Theatre for Rochester Town Hall will be Dr. Lester Coleman of New York, on the topic “Live Your Life, Don’t Die It.” Dr. Coleman is past president of the Academy of Psychosomatic M e'd i-ctne. Lecture time is 11 a.rn. with celebrity p^blem' luncheon following at Personally, I see nothing. the Rochester Elks funny about a roll of toiletj tissue printed as money. And 1 regard such things as cocktail napkins printed with babies-in-j wombs as not clever 0 r humorous but disgusting. prevent children from being exposed to things which are not cMly in. bad taste but are. outright pornographic in nature? Should my fi*iend keep her little boy in a box? I^ould she tie a blindfold on him until he is 16? ^ I think she had the best idea with her economic boycott. To make it mwe effective aU she needs do is write a letter to the; store manager explaining why; she shopped elsewhere. ShC| might ask if his sales of; coasters printed with lewd| mottoes totaled the $60 she was^ prepared to spend there. 1 For a liot-Feverish ^eal on a new Dodge coma to Call 624-1572 Lloyd Brid^ies iraveiand Club. However, I have no objection I a store selling these items if customers want to buy them. I do think it might be better if PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL k HEARING AlO CENTER Phone 682-1113 HEARING AlO DEALER^ Richard Jerzy Will Show Art L-p, .he ,JhK ou. .. .he rriday, meting .1 the »l»e le e ^.ety of Artists m the Pont.ac|„^^ ^ Creative Arts Center. chain store that not too long ago . • * \ » . un'y su'd through mail order Jerzy is a graduate of the Art side by side with school of the Society of Arts andipigygp items, they display books Crafts. He is a winner of gnd jokes that, in my opinion, numerous prizes, including first award at the Scarab Club watercolor exhibit in 1! MIDNIGHT MADN€SS finol cleoronc* 10 to 12 p.m. hi., Feb. 14 ’50% off Open Mon. and Fri. til 9 p.m Two Medics Due to Talk He will be teaching at the PCAC when spring classes begin March 3. Registration is set for Feb 22 through March 1 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Center, | The public may attend. Bridge ge Lecture Precedes Game Beginning Tuesday the YMCA Duplicate Bridge Club will precede its regular Tuesday night limited game with a series of lectures designed to acquaint experienced players, new to duplicate play, with the challenges of duplicate bridge. Friday when the Royal Oak Township Heart Forum present a Velentine’s Day program in the gymnasium of the George Washington Carver Elementary School, Mentota Avenue, Royal Oak Township. * ♦ ★ In cooperation with t h el Michigan Heart Association andj cosponsored by several civic] organizations, the public is Invited to learn about heart, disease and the treatment and| health servies available. | Richard J Bing, M Buim ^Pontiac Mall The lecture program is under (.^airman of the Department of direction of ..Mrs. Thomas J. Medicine of Wayne Statel Hollis, a certified teacher of the University School of Medicine,! American Bridge Teachers’ will speak on the causes, effects! Association. and victims of heart attacks. i Lectures will begin af 7 p.m,I Rupert L. Edwards, M D.,i with play starting at 7:30 at the [Clinical Assistant Professor, i “Y” on University Drive. Wayne State University School] ----------------- of Medicine, will demonstrate | When you see that a hooked'an actual heart examination. | rug is beginning to show wear! A question and answer session ]around the edges (the part will conclude the 3 to 4:30 p.m. [where they usually wear first), sew 8 facing at once right over the old hem and reinforce the ledge to prolong the life of the ' rug. program. Extra Fashion Extra Value alue Extra Sizes Extra Extra Sizes Extra Fashion izes Extra Fashion Extra :tra Fashion Extra Value *8 Brightly ichomod for jotting away from it all, our DOUBLE KNIT SHIFT RUFFLED UP TWICE High-spirited flowers resort to sun country on fluid acetate jersey. A light and lovely traveler 'cause it's wrinkle-shy' Blue or rose. your special sixes 38 to 52 LANE BRYANT >r phono 683-7500. Add 35c for dolivory plui 10c for C.O.D.'s and 4% to Th« Pontiac Mall Study Country on Walking Tourl SALINA, Kan. M — Eighth grade students at South Junior] High School here will be able to walk all over the United States when school opens in the fall. Dale Brooks, the teacher, has painted a large ^ap of the United States on the floor, with the states outlined in colors. He feels it will help his students in their study of geography as they "walk around” the various states and observe their locations. ■ wnfim OIJEWMWBt Ladi«$*DriSS0$, 'f-.-' MMSar-.- • THE PONTIAC PRESS. TjiURSDAY>FEBRUARY n, 1969 B—8 ACCUTRON Cheektd FREE with our special timing equipment Je4ife£e/tA> Bloomfiald Mirada Mila MURRAY SISTERS’ BEAUTY STUDIO 57 W. Huron By Appointment Only FE Whan you bring your wortch hara, all finiahad rapair work in aubjaetad to a rigid aciantifie chack by tha Your watch “printa" ita own racord of parfonn* «nea, o "proof" of accuracy. Inaiat upon this protection on your watch luTaatinanL Lo(fc-M(yt; sJeweteAH Bloomfield Miracle Mila Mr. and Mrs. Rudy A. Schettling of Her-shey Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Rachel Anne, to Steveri James Thompson. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Thompson of Petrolia Street, West Bloomfiled Township. Summer 1970 votes are planned. A fall wedding is planned by Jean Elizabeth Nichols and Dion S. Caza. Their parents are! Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Nichols of Colrain Drive and Mr. and Mrs. Dion H. Caza of Troy. She has attended Michigan State University and her fiance is a graduate of Hillsdale College. The George J. Moores of Oxford announce the engagement o f their daughter, Claudia Ann, to Spec. 4 Charles R. Dewey, USA, Ft. Bragg, N. C. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. Dewey of Forbush Street, West Bloomfield Township. The bride-elect has attended Henry Ford Community College. The engagement is announced of Karen Sue Hartman of Liberty Street and Kenneth Lewis Bronoel. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Hartman of Oakshire Street and the Robinson Bronoels of Pioneer Street. He is a student at Lawreyice Institute of Technology. The engagement of their daughter, Glea Marie, to Clarence E. McMillion Jr. is announced by Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Herron of East Princeton Street. Miss Herron's fiance is the son of the senior Mr. and Mrs. C. E. McMil-lion of Prince, W.Va. July 12 V070S are plan-* ned. Londoner's Wife Dictates Terms to Her Valentine Mrs. Samuel Pepys oj London is the first woman on record to declare that a husband ought to be his wife’s Valentine and no one else’s. In the time of the famous 17th century diarist, Samuel Pepys, the Valentine lottery was a neighborhood custom. Everyone was included, married or single. Each woman drew a name, and then challenged the man whose name she had drawn to be her Valentine. It then was up to him present her with some sentimental gift in accordance with his means. ★ ★ ★ On St. Valentine’s Day three hundred years ago, Samuel Pepys’ name waas drawn by a flirtatious single gal named Doll Lane. This girl, whom Pepys describes, as “a bad face but good bodied girle,’’ had been bold in her admiration of him for some time. Though ladies did not usually go to the Dog Tavern to drink with men, the merry Doll Lane did. It was there she approached Pepys and challenged him to be her Valentine. Gossip somehow traveled just as fast in the centuries before electronic communications as it does today. When Pepys got home, he found his young and beautiful wife, Elizabeth waiting for him. She told him that, lottery or not, he was to be her Valentine that year and every year thereafter. She also said what she wanted herj Valentine gift to be — a ring! with "a Turky-stone set with little sparks of dyamonds.” * ★ * Though only 28, Elizabeth ‘ Pepys died of a fever in November of 1669, leaving her husband stricken with grief. Visitors to St. Olave's Church in London can see her portrayed; in white mar ble in a monument | designed by Pepys. The bust, by, John Bushnell, seems poised in a moment of life. Her head leans forward and is turned; slightly, as Pepys planned, to| look toward the-gallery where he sat on Sundays. There are about 1,070 churches in Dallas County, Tex. sale Our own Pace-setterg little heeled pump 8.97 A big ribbon bow sets off this smart fashion look in black or white patent or alabaster kid. PONTIAC MALL PONTIAC MALL Shop Mon., Thurs., Fri. & Sat. ’til 9 TEL-HVROIS Shop Mon. thru Sat. 'til 9 B—4 THE POXITAt' PRESS. TritiRSDAV. EEBRtTARY 1069 Case No. H-560 Follow Pioneer Spirit By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE I welfare ohecksl quate to clear out the ghettos CA.SE H 560 Ward Quaal Is’ And ever since Roosevelt, when people have had ambl-one of the pioneer giants in the Politicians have been, pandering tion and. enough I.Q. to plan . ... 1ii0f vallablelppp5j.rjpjion, namely, “a free! and the Wolf” by Prokofieff — at Ford Auditorium Box Office,favors.” ' In which different instruments all Hudson's, and all Grinnell’s! One trouble with America! of the orchestra represent dif- stores. ’the past generation is the fact ferent characters in the dramaj Carrington, a music teacher that most of our citizens have: — will be performed by the in the Detroit schools and a wanted handouts from Uncle! Detroit .Symphony Orchestra in'graduate of the University of Sam or local and state patron-Young People’s Concerts Feb. Michigan, has performed with 22. .several local musical groups, longer have the, Conwell Carrington, baritone,:including the Cantata Academy,individualism that who has appeared several times the Kenneth Jewell Chorale,!pioneer ancestors! with the Detroit Symphony, will and the Celeste Cole Operai‘" be the narrator. Work.shop. a ho.stile wdderness. ; i, i, 1, 1 . ! Instead, they crave .subsidiesM mill oivpn at He W8S narrator for a Detroit guaranteed minimum in- | The (omerts will be given at j-y^ph^,ny young People’s though thev merelv It a m. and i p m. Concert last year. sit on their fat fannies in front ' Valter Poole will conduct. j ---------------- -j-y. sipping beer financed Also on the program are yyj^p^ sending a package by the taxpayers, as they j Chabrier’s “Joyeuse Marche,” ,j,p ^gji y^u can be hoard their energy till night- lx>onard Bernstein’s Overture to jypg j^e string will remain tight!fall .so they can procreate more Candide,” Tchaikovsky’s Waltz auji hpij jf you dampen it wards of state relief agencies, from the ballet “Swan Lake,” before tieing up the package. [ In our large cities, we actu-and R i m s k y - K orsadov's The siring will shrink as it ally now have three genera-Introduclion and W e d d 1 n g dries, making a safer and more tions that have been on the March from “l.e Coq d'Or ” securely tied package out of it. |backs of taxpayers via free It’s easier to pin the seams of a dress when sewing or altering if you put the garment on inside dent J. Donald dR. CRANE ’poison have alwavs been ade-brutally, and decide to revolt.'out for the work. Phillip' ' ‘ ------------------------------------------- ~ SHRIMP FRY FAMILY STYLE “ALL YOU WANT" RTKAMEU SHRIMP, served with Drawn Butter, DEEP FRIED SHRIMP, with homemade Snappy sauce. Huge TOSSED SALAD. Choice of POTATOES, Hot HOMEMADE Bread. EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 5 to 10 P.M. lennc’tff Spring bouquets to little ladies Lots and lots of tiny flowers for the littlesf social charmers. Big sister's dress is empire-waist voile of Fortrel® polyester/ Avril® rayon. White with lilac flowers, sizes 7 to 12. Little sister's dress is polyester/ cotton corded voile in white/yellow with blue moire ribbon and embroidered flowers. Sizes 3 to 6k. Empire dress, $$ *6 LIKE IT... CHARGE IT! SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY ... TILL 9 P.M. 1 3 Mill * WOODWARD • TELEGRAPH A SO. LAKE Northwood Shopping Contor Bloomfiold Township S STORB SUSAN THOMAS grooves the classics —doing zingy things where you wouldn't expect it. There’s a fresh eye for line, in all sorts.of silhouettes: sophisticated wraparounds, beautifully cut shifts, swirling box-pleated skirts, easygoing shirt shifts, sparkling new approaches to sweate' dresses. There's a fresh eye for color, in oranges and pinks, citron and turquoise, scrumptious solids and great classic two-tones; in sizes 8-16. Susan Thomas is everything that's fresh and nice and fun to be seen in. See it all, in a collection priced at $26, $30 and $46, at HHS: the men's store that certainly isn't, in its Womens Fashion Shops, OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY AND W TO 5:30; MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TO 9 P.M. TELEGRAPH AND ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS ^'HE PQNTIA#^PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARV lij, 1969 Family Papers Must Be Easy to Locate If you were ^sked today to list the location of all your val-‘uables, insurance policies, birth certificates and othw important family papers, would you be able to? . Unfortunately in too many bomes, these hard-to-rep^ce documents and repords are dumped unceremoniously in drawers from which they can be misplaced' or destroyM in the event of fire. Some papers, such as wiils, are literally bur- at SIBLEY'S Miracle l|ila FINAL REDUCTIONS LAST 3 DAYS SOCIALITES RED CROSS SHOES COSBIES Disccntinued Styles Now at Groat Savinfs SI '8” VALUES TO $19.99 WOMEN’S LINED WINTER BOOTS All Brands Stiected Stylas, Resularly $12.99 to $10.99 ''Michigan's Largest Florsheim Dealer" /i Use Your Security ishoes Michigan Bankard BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 FE 8-9700 led in safe deposit boxes where they may not be reached in an emergency without involved igal procedures. ★ * ★ Experts on family finance iggest that to avoid such unnecessary diffiqulties and sometimes even heartbreak, a family audit of assets be carried out at least once a year. They suggest — and an easily kept notebook or tablet is recommended for this — that this audit include a list of all family papers and records. ★ * A Bonds and stock certificates should be listed chronologically by date of purchase, along with identification numbers, dates of maturity and other pertinent data. Ali insurance policies shoiild be recorde .‘2; H/' ..ff -fs’”'*,-' ' ... ... • ' .Vfe-15 ......-.......^........ ■■■:................................:..v. The Pontiac Mall—Northland—Tel-Twelve Moll- -Woodword and John R- ■Universol City Mall—Wonderland—Westborn—Michigan and Schoefer-^Seven Grand—New Center—Grand Rapids, Downtown and Woodland Mall THE PONTIAC Pto^S, THURSDAY, FEB11UA11>^1 a. B—r Mistaken Sen. Kuhn Leads Protests on Supervisors Salaries 1.ANS1NG (WI) - Many lawmMcers have Joined with taxpayos in singing the chorus of “irresponsibllify” to supervisors setting themselves fat salaries. IroMcally, the man sij^g the loudest is Sen. George Kuhn, R-pst Bloemfield Township, who began the whole thmg in the first place. Kuhn sponsored the bill last year to allow supervisors to set their salaries. At t^t time he fbu§ht for the right of supervisors to be paid a hving wage.” Viet Buddhist Stirring Makes Saigon Jittery SAIGON (UPI) - South Vietnam’s militant Buddhists are stirring again, and the Saigon government is visibly nervous about it. Monsk led by the venerable Thich Tri Quang are old adversaries of President Nguyen Van Thieu, and their long muted antagonism has been coming into the open lately. ★ ★ * The latest jab at the government came from Thich Thien Minh, a leading Buddhist organizer and chairman of the Buddhist Youth Association. ★ ★ ★ The 48-year-old monk told a youth gathering neither the Vietcong nor the government were acceptable to the Buddhists because the Vietcong advocated a policy of hatred while the government ‘‘saturated with corruption and social injustice.” SWIFT REACTION President T h 1 e u ’ s reaction was swift. Thjen Minh was called into the national police headquarters and warned to ‘‘stop insulting and slandering the government.” Thieu, who is a Roman Catholic, also personally issued orders to provincial authorities to arrest Buddhist monks t Catholic priests who give ii flammatory “po litical sermons.” ★ I The president is obviously! fearful of any internal! dissension which might undermine h i s government’s | bargaining position at the Paris| peace talks. Some observers think these developments foreshadow another major antlgovemment crusade on the part of the Buddhists. POPULAR APPEAL Such a campaign would probably center on Buddhist demands for an immediate cease-fire in the Vietnam war, a, position which has popular appeal but runs directly counter to the government’s Insistence that the North Vietnamese withdraw their troops from South Vietnam before there can be a cease-fire. The Buddhists tested the appeal of their peace stand in January with a procession through Saigon. ★ ★ ★ The official reason for the procession was to carry religious reijcs from one pagoda to another. But in reality it ap- Renewal Mixed MARQUETTE (JPh-A $l-mil-lion urban renewal proposal for Marquette’s downtown business district has been turned down in a special election. peared designed to kick off a new Buddist ‘‘peace” campaign. Several trucks In thi cavalcade carried signs saying ‘‘Where Buddhism is, there aiso is peace.” RELEASED DOVES In the ceremony that followed, the monks released 20 doves and clusters of balloons carrying paper doves. The monks got a warm reception along the procession route. ★ ★ ★ Thich Thien Minh tells friends he intends to continue to speak out despite the government’ warnings. Now Kuhn is ardently heading a campaign to put the lid on high pay checks. Besides spmsoring a biU that would set a maxipium of 14,000 a year on the salaries, he is author of a resolution condemning Wayne, Macomb, Genesee, and Calhoun county boards for ‘‘irresponsibility” in setting pay plans. MADE BAD MISTAKE? Why the change of heart? “The supervisors have disillusioned the whoie bunch of us. We made a bad mistake. They’ve taken advantage of the situation,” Kuhn said in an interview. Kuhn said he plans a public hearing on his bill to regulate salaries later this session. * ★ ★ “People are really mad over this thing. I want to hear what they have to say,” he said. On the other side, two bills have been introduced to limit salaries at $10,000. However, it’s doubtful they will even get out of committee since powerful House Speaker William A. Ryan is opposed to them. ‘FREAK DEVELOPMENTS’ The Detroit Democrat said at a news conference earlier this week that saiary-limiting bills were “freak developments” of the issue. He said supervisors should be allowed to set their pay because situations vary from county to county, and no statewide plan could cover all. One other house bill would let supervisors rely on the State Officers Compensation Commission for salary suggestions. ■k it it The bill, to be introduced next week by Rep. Alex Pilch, D-Dearborn, would not require boards to seek the commission’s help nor would it provide for any commission decision to be binding. ★ ★ ★ “I think the biggest problem with this whole issue is that board members just don’t know how much to give themsleves. If they had a salary commission to turn to, they would be given some guidance,” Pilch 3aid. One possible monkey wrench in Pilch’s plan however revolves around its constitutiorthlity. The copunission was authorized by voters last August to set the salaries of lawmakers, the governor, lieutenant governor and Supreme Court justices. The authorization took a constitutional amendment. Whether the amendment could be stretched to allow the commission to suggest supervisor salaries would be a question fdr the courts. ★ ★ ★ But whatever the outcome of the bills, at least Kuhn admits he’s learned a lesson. “I suppose it’s only human nature to want as mudh money as you can get,” he said. INSTANT REPLAY CRAIG TAPE RECORDER WITH FM-AM RADIO An amazing combination from Craig—cassette cartridge tape recorder with a built-in FM AM radio. Enjoy live broadcasts or recorded sounds . . . you can even record music off the air for instant replay! AC adaptor and microphone Use your charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 Q095 days same as cash) or Budget Plan 1/ Complete HrINNELL’S „ . „ , ^ Charge Accounts. 4-Pay Plan (90 days %i 27 S. Saginaw, Downtown FE 3-7168, Open Mon. & FrI. to 9-The Pontiac Mall, 682-0422- ne as cash) or Budget Tarmt Open Every Evening 'til 9 represent several companies! ... but we work for you! We’re free to choose just the right protection to fi^l yottr needs. DAirrO DHOME □HUSINESS 7 lb INIOCHER Agency, Inc. SOS Riktr BMg., Pontiac FE 4*1551 H. W. Huttsfliochor Max Kamt Jamas Huttanlochar Richard Huttanlochar Charlas F. Hoftar ... OVER 35 YEARS OF DISTINGUISHED INSURANCE ^ SERVICE . Value Showdown Match these features against what competition gives you for the same kind of money, and you’ll have a better idea why more people are buying Chevrolets again this year. Built-in ^^guard railo*’ There’s a strong steel beam built into every door of every 1969 Caprice, Impala, Bel Air, Biscayne, Kingswood Estate Wagon, Kings-wood, Townsman and Brookwood. We call it a side guard beam, and it looks like one of those guard rails you see along the freeway. That’s what it’s there for: To guard you. To strengthen the door and put a more solid weiU between you and the outside world. Not a glamorous feature. But you’ll have to admit, worthwhile. Computer-selected springs Maybe you’ll order your new Chevy equipped to the hilt. Or maybe you’ll order it with hardly anything on it. Either way, you’re going to get your full measure of our renowned ride. Because we go to the trouble of programming each car’s equipment load into an electronic computer. The computer then tells us exactly which springs to use, depending on the car’s weight and the way it’s distributed. Chevrolet, the only car in its field with computer-selected springs. Fenders inside fenders We could have skipped this. (The other cars in our field do.) But we’re as anxious as you are to keep your beautiful new Chevy looking beautiful and new. So: Up inside the regular fenders we’ve placed a second set. They do all the in-fighting. Catch ail the splashed-up rain, slush and road salt. Stop the Mcked-up stones. While your “outers” just sit there looking pretty. Astro Ventilation The other twq cars in our field give you air intakes down by the floor. So do we. We also give you two up on the instrument panel. And all four of them are adjustable so you ca^n regulate the flow of air just the way you like it. Even with all the windows closed, you’ll be comfortable inside. You get air without wind. Without noise. Astro Ventilation is standard, now, on all the big Chevrolets. Rubber-cushioned ride At all points where the body joins the frame, we use our own,exclusive kind of rubber mounts. They’re double-cushioned, so as to soak up more than the usual amount of vibration. Unless you’re in the habit of taking yovir car apart, you’ll probably never see these little wonders. But you’ll know they’re there. Just listen to the quiet. The theft-thwarter On the steering column there’s a lock. Only Chevrolet has it, in Chevrolet’s field. You turn the key and it locks three things: Your ignition. Your steering wheel. Your shift lever. When you own a car this tempting, you don’t dare take chances. Biggest standard V8 in our field Ask any car enthusiast, he’ll tell you: Chevrolet builds great engines. Especially V8s. And this year there are six great V8s available for the big Chevrolet. Standard: Om 235-hp 327-cubic-inch Turbo-Fire. Another thing: We’ve lowered the price of several of our bigger V8s along with our automatic transmissions and power disc brakes. Which makes it possible for you to buy a ’69 Chevrolet for even less money than you could last year. Show up for our Showdown. You can’t lose. Putting you first, keeps us first. Impala Sport Coupe See Olympic Geld Medalist Jean-Claude Killy, Weekly, f!BS-TV, Check your local TV litUnge. ChevroletValue Showdown THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAV, FEBRUARY 13, 1969 FIRST QliAUTY Dr. Oaks Sdys: 1 Traffic Death Is Too Many AIRTROUBLES? AUTOMATIC HUMIDIFIER Iliminol* Iroublci touted by horth, dry, bokid-oul winlor elr. Thii now Coolora* ler Humidilltr moUloni iho air, fttlor* il »l dull and impuriliof. You fool COM. fodoblo ot lower lonporoturot — lovoi you mono * ' $709$ ©) Consumers Power 2B W. Lowninc* •At4uUm^»i MIWC OFFER ‘lir OFF TUITIDAI •44*^ •ft i I jM — , Ii8rowil054 W.HUROnGISHI rUroROod and fcondod by olalo rofttlronwiiu.: { ARE YOU UNDER 30? Set up a *30,000 life insurance estate overnight . FOR LESS THAN $13.50 A MONTH For all the facts on this Allstate "10 year term" renewable policy, the men to see ore at — 4381 Highland Road M-59 At Pontiac Lak* Road PHONE 681-0400 /lllstate (EDITOR'S NOTE —^This is another in a toeekly series of articles issued by the Oakland County Medical Society. Dr. Oaks is the collective voice of the society.) What follows Is a personal letter to a family—any family, or maybe, your family; “It’s 2 a.m. I have just completed the arrangements, the sad necessary disposition of the body. The undertaker has been called. For the bereaved, sedatives have been given to dim the pain. "I am alone. There is time for reflection. Perhaps this is not the perogative of the physician, whose efficiency and detachment are calculated to give confidence. The textbooks say this is a desired quality. “But, reflection is a human quality. Emotion is human. A death—any death—is a time to ponder the imponderable. ABSTRAtmON EASIER “To turn the concrete into an abstraction—to list a large number of deaths rather than a single traffic accident — is somehow easier, ft is more acceptable to the psyche to think of 53,100 dead than a single DOA (dead on arrival). It’s easy to di.smiss the larger number. “But, to appreciate what it means in human terras, focus on a single death, a single burned body, a single disfigured face! “To awaken just once to hear; ‘Will you come to the hospital, there’s been an accident.' “Later there is the giant WHY. It never really goes away, but time does dim the pain, which at first is a physical sore. EXAM PERFUNCTORY “The examination is perfunctory — no pulse, no heart action, no blood pressure, no breathing, the body is cold, no r esponse to stimuli ... the body is dead—DOA. “There is continued efficiency: the next of kin are notified, the clergy is requested and the body is removed. Scientists Cool Ardor of Moth to a Flame “Must the accident toll continue? I don’t know. The information on how to prevept slaug^iter on the highways is available and used in some instances. Car safdty standards, seat belts, strong licensing programs, traffic law enforcement — it’s all there. “But, I wonder if the emphasis isn’t wrong. Instead of thinking 53,000 or 60,000 or 70,000, why not .think of just one. That single life that is ended. ★ AW “This might make the problem concrete, not abstract. 'ITiink for example, of saving by safe driving your son or daughter. We might all drive saner." (If you have any questions for Dr. Oaks, send a card or letter to Oakland County Medical Society, 346 Park, Birmingham, Mich. 48009.) By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) -Chances are you don’t have a burning interest in the love life of pink bollworm moths. Neith-r do I. Given the option of reading about pink boll-worm moths or seeing the mo-plcture version of ‘Candy,” 1 would not hesitate to choose the latter. But, when a major break-!through is made in man’s age-jold structure to gain the upper hand over insects, ali of us are personally involved. I trust, therefore, that you will pay [Close attention to the following chain of events: j Not long ago .some chemists I in Germany mixed up a batch !of “propylure,” which is the ; substance that makes female I pink bollworm moths attractive I to male pink bollworm moths. LOVE POTION i When exposed to propylure.a male pink bollworm moth ordinarily becomes extremely j amorous. This expalins why the chemists Were producing the stuff synthetically, j They figured that piopylure produced in the laboratory Study Leave OK'd BAY CITY (AP) - Donald J. Carlyon, president of Delta College. has been granted an administrative leave to further his education. The head of the two-yeai community college in Bay County will work toward a doctorate at the University of Michigan could be used to lure male pink bollworm moths to their destruction, thus scoring anothef point for man in his battle with the insect. It turned out, however, that the male moths failed to respond to this particular mixture. Something obviously went wrong. But what? Wqll, the answer has now been provided by Martin Jacobson of the U. S. Agricultural Research Service. TWO FORMS Jacobson has discovered thrg propylure actually exists in two forms, one of which turns a male illoth on, and the other of which dampens his ardor. The German chemists had combined the two forms, so that the come-hither effect of one was neutralized by the ho-hum effect of the other. I hardly need point out the significance of Jacobson’s finding. He has given man a mighty new weapon to use against the insect. All that man needs to do now is produce large quantities of the negative form of propylure the laboratory. Then he spreads the stuff around everywhere that male pink bollworm moths hang out. INTEREST LOST The male moths Immediately lose interest in the oppostie sex. Rather than mating with female moths, they spend their time watching football games on the television. Or something of the sort. It shouldn't take long for pink bollworm moths to become tlnct. the victims of their own indifference. Insects may develop Im-munitites to pesticides, but they can’t survive for long without romance. shop at Robert Hall forexciting ciothing vaiues forthe entire famiiyi 9:$0 9t$0 AMERICA’S LARGEST FAMUY CLOTHING CHAIN PONTIAC 200 Neitli Saginaw FREE PARKING ■OTH STORES OPEN SUNDAY NOON TO A PJA. CLARIOn^ON 64600iidaHigi^ Ji»tN.afWota3«MlHm The "NOW" watch is called LONGINES ULTRAt-CHRON Guaranteed* Accurate t6 a linute a Month! UUira-Chron, tha mo»l rovoIuSonqry davalopmnnl in watchni. All-Proo(» proinetod ogainit wotof, dusi, shock end I. Slim, ruggad cai# lit your choica of imort Stoinlass. Grool Goldi or combinations. Totally outomotic, soil-changing cotondor doto. Swoop socond hand, luminous hour morkors. Ev fino wotch should hovo! HI bs odiwlod to Ihli tolsrsoo tOk gold-miod coso and matching brocolof, FARK JEWELERS and OPTICIANS I N. SAGINAW (Corntr Piti« St) FI 4-1089 SPRING NAVY . . . plotting a sure course toward the spring season in diagonal rib polyester. Spiffed with white and snapped with ‘brass' for sizes 8 to 16. Also in caramel. ♦30 SHOP TILL MON. THRU SAT____ onnoiff THE DRESS PLACE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH & SO. LAKE RD. ANNUAL A' Of YEAR VAlulJI.-SffiUIALUlAl; Tho BARTOK • ZS06W Distinctive Conteniporery styled Cabinot in genuine oil-finished Walnut veneers end select hardwood solids Lift lid end record storage. ONLY r SPECTACULAR VALUE IN STEREO SOUND FM AM STEREO 31 WATTS Of PEAK MUSIC PU. Vi ♦♦ flr7>/f0UR-IPEAKER fooiio m«g diC.IMlijtll. ol 70 IP 13.000 cpt. ^ fjnnm WHY NOT GET THE BEST •Dtif. suggesled rsIsH price (Ridio Dili. Cs.) See Your Nearby Zenith Dealer McCollum & Dean 409 E. Maple Birmingham Milks Appliance 1493 S. Woodward Birmingham Clorkston Appliance 6 N. Main Clarkston Solley Refrigeration 3819 M-15 Clorkston All City TV 2363 Orchard Lake Rd. Pontiac Good Housekeeping Shop 51 W. Huron S». K-D TV Soles & Servieo 506 S. Saginaw Pontiac Bill Petrusha & Sons 77 S. Telegraph John Stefonski 1 1 57 W. Huron Sweet's Rodio fir TV 422 W. Huron Ponfiac Tele-Tee Service 419 Main Bill Petrusha, fir Sons 1550 Union Uko Union Uko SENSAT10NM. INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE 95 Sq. Yd. DuP0NT“501» NYLON Choose From 4 Colors K ft; THIS IS 100%... BEMlilFUL LMG-WEARK NTLOII CALL NOW FOR FREE ESTIMATES JJ8-409I SHOP AT HOME Juot coll and wo1l gladly bring oamploo right into your homo. It'o CO much oosiar to moho tho right cheieo when you foo tho carpet in tho room in which you'ro going to Buy NO MONEY DOWN With 3 YEARS TO PAY I STORE VOLUME BUYING POWER MAKES THIS AMAZING OFFER POSSIBLE! MONARK CARPfiTSIiic. f48 NORTH SAGINAW STREET IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC t Showroom opgn daily 10 to 8... Sat. 10 to 6... Clotgd Sundays THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 19R9 B—9 THUR., FRI., SAT., SUN. Big Biscounts on Building Motenais 12 " VINYL ASBESTOS TILE Box of 45 Square Feet Charge It! Box ;¥ Rugged, gcx)d looking Armstxoag vinyl asbestos floor tiles in a S wide range of attractive colors ... ready to add new life to the kitchen, family room, utility room and children’s rooms. SPECIAL! Your Choice CHERRYNUT or BUHERNUT 4’xr 2.98 4'x8' 3.66 LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON PANELING 4»x7' 4’x8» Unfinished Mahogany 2.37 2.82 Emtrald 4.96 Sandstone 4.44 4.96 Champagne Walnut 4.96 Brandy Elm 4.96 Vinyl Walnut 4.98 5.67 Vinyl Chestnut 4.98 5.67 Imperial Cherry 6.27 Cinnamon Birch 5.68 6.35 Avocado 6.96 Natural Hickory 6.96 ADJUSTABLE METAL AWHING : Discount Priced Charge It! 30'/ ^ 36" • (or doors or windows, comes with hardware. Easy to hang. ; 36”x46”....... 5.77 42”x36”.......6.43 : 48”x36"....... 7.97 60”x36”.......8.76 SMOOTHLY i SANDED Ready to Finish i FLUSH DOORS ; Discount Prices Charge It Popular Mahogany \ cneer Available in many sizes! 2’x6'8”........6.94 2'8”x6’B”.....7.47 2’4”x6’8”......6.94 3’x6’B”.......7.97 8,22 NEW OZITE CARPET TILES MADE OF VECTRA FIBER! th.ro'a a 10ft worm, qui.t til. that n.v.r n..ds Uoxin® or poliahing . . . b.cous. it". carp.t! Ozit. Cmp.t Tilos dr. 12-itich.s squor., and hov. a soft Us. In kiteh.ns, r.c-ropms, baths, nurt.n.s. Amazingly itain-r.sistant. 16 colors. Eosy to instoll. AU cdlora also ayoilabl. in broadloom widths. Double Faced Tape, Roll............ I#96 The most comfoi^ble needs just you... o Moistens the air throughout your home all winter long, o You feci more comfortable even at lower thermostat settings, o Stops dry tnroat complaints, helps protect family's health, o Saves furniture from drying out, splitting at glue joints. • Stops warping of doors, floors. • Prevents buildup of annoying static electric shwks. • Has no electric motor or electric controls. acmm Runs on air from furnace blower. HUIVIIDIFIER Install it yourself in youArced warm air furnace system in the warm air duct or furnace plenum. Package includes instructions, template, plastic tube, saddle valve. Complete! GARAGE DOOR OPERATOR 110’i " " Drive -Faced insulation ...and a stapler! Not one of tho» do-iHronmlf proje^ Aet needo on Mldneeri Paced Fiber Glaee inenliUon ... and a **“iHJ***^f^^^ into yonr home, cut heaUng and coiding Ibslli! Stop in today ao that yon can start enjoying itt"all-weatherK!onifort,”money-iavingbenefiUnowI Free Use of Heavy Duty Stapler tqr lasulation I snusUPyesu l KMART DISCOUNT PRICiS 3” Thick Reg, 3,97 2” Thick Reg, 4.97 2” Thick Reg. 7.57 3.67 4.67 6.97 ie"®.c 1*" O.C. 24'^e.C 90# SLATE ROLL ROOFING 3.30 Discount Priced Black or White Will cover 100 square feet Top grade .. . for use wherever steep roofs are called for. warehouses. frame building, etc. Easy to apply. Just roll out, nail down and rement laps with lap cement. Charge it. Building? Remodeling? Repairing? You will save mope at Kmart Lumber Dept.... and, you can Charge it Kiln Dried 2x4’* 6- ft... 44® 7- ft... 77® 8- «... 87® 2x2’* 8-ft. -lengths 44( CJiarge It! ALUMINUM COMBINATION WINDOWS Our Reg. 9.50 877 Charge It! Triple track aliiminnm .storm and screen wimlnw.s. Both storm.s and reens included. Fits all standard COMBINATION WHITE ALUMINUM 34 DOOR Kmart Discount Price [« Our Reg. 39.98 Spring loaded hinge design. Reinforced corner. Scalloped glass inserts. Wool pile weather slriji-liiiig. Decorative black liinge. Strap and handle. Early American bottom panel fits 32” and 3(i” openings. SEALDON ROOFING SHINGLES Discount Priced Charge it Self-sealing for extra weather resistance. Sealdon roofing resists winds of hurricane force. Applies like any strip shingle, no special technique needed. 235 lbs. wt. per square. Black, white and mint frost. INSTALIATIONAVAILiHLE... . . Charge It! ALUMINUM SELF-STORING COMBINATION DOORS «e». *22.45 198 I9‘ Discount Price Charge it Radio-controlled ... all safety features. Requirea no installation on car. Automatically lights garage. Triple depth aafety. Opens doors to 20-ft. wide. Easy to install. .5-year warranty. SCREW DRIVE...............................129.95 Charge It! Self-.storing, spring loaded three hinge design. Bottom vinyl sweeji, reinforced corners. Screen and glass included. 32”-36” 0|>enings only. STORM and SCREEN DOOR Kmart Regular 19.96 17" Spring loaded three hinge design heavy tubular hollow aluminum, bottom vinyl sweep, reinforced corner. Screen and glass, inserts interchangeable.; Fits 32” and 36” openings. 4 fff.'x 8 ft. PLYWOOD G.I.S. 1/4”... 5-ia 1/2”... 8.96 3/8” ... 7.66 5/8” ... 10.66 3/4” .............11.66 WOOD SHUHERS Ready to Paint or Stain Discount priced 6” Width From 88 c Charge It Easy to install yourself 7" Width......... .From .99 8" Width........ .From 1.39 9” Width..............From 1.59 10” Width........JFrom1.79 11” Width.........From 1.99 12” Width..............dProm 2.29 Available in widths froin 6”xl6” to 12”x40”. Smoothly sanded western white pine. GLEN WOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD X THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 1969 Deaths in Pontiac Area Rosan Coleman Prayers were offered this Service morning for Rosan Coleman, Taylor. 61. infant daughter of Mr, ari*d*Mrs. will be 11 i Clarence E. Taylor for Clarence E. of 602 University, I a m. Saturday at the Johnny Coleman of 1 2 7 4 Huntoon Funeral Home with Maurer, at Oak Hill Cemetery. ■ burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Arrangements were by Davis- Mr. Taylor died Tuesday. He Cobb Funeral Home had operated a stove repair Rosan was dead at birth shop at his home for many Monday. years Surviving are her parents and Surviving are two sisters, a brother and two sisters. Edith Taylor and Mrs. Nettie Willie, Vonna and Renay, all at Turner, k>th of Pontiac, and home. three brothers, including Rex of Pontiac and Wilbur of Lake’ George L. Dontorth orion i Mrs. Bessie Wilson George 1, Danforth. 64, of 949 Lakeview, Waterford Township, died yesterday in Olando. Fla. Service for Mrs. Bessie His My is at Dryer P'uneral Wil.son. 74, of 410 Bloomfield| Home, liolly. will be 1 p.m. tomorrow in! Calvarv Hill Church of Christ,’ Mrs. Ethel M. Porter with burial in Oak Hill „ , .. Cemetery by Frank Carruthers Service for Mrs Lthe M puppral Home Porter of 746 Kinney will be Tuesday. 1 30 p m^ t 0 m 0 r r 0 w at surviving is a sister, Mrs Voorhees-Siple Chapel wit h , Kobinson of Pontiac, cremation following in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Clarence Wilson Troy. Mrs Porter died ITiesday Service for Clarence Wilson of Surviving are two sisters, in-,660 Howland will be 1 p.m. I eluding Mrs. Bert Guilds of tomorrow at the Davis-Cobbj Clarkston and a brother. Fcneral Home with burial in I jOak Hill Cemetery. Clarence C. Slocum DETTROlf (AP) - U.S. auto makers Wednesday reported selling 15,117 fewer cars In the first 10 days of February than in the same period a year ago Indus^ sales total^ 171,173 cars in February’s first 10 days this year, compared with 186,-290 In 19M. Howevo*, this year’s KWay perl^ Included Just eight CLEARING THE DOORWAYS -llelmeted and nightstick-carrying police clear a doorway at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. Student protesters blocked doorways and disrupted classes on the campus yesterday. National Guard troops were alerted as dissidents promised additional activity today. At University of Wisconsin Troops Near in Campus Strife MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Na-| Fist fights broke out between blocked major campus intersec-|tional Guard troops, 900 strong, picketers and students wholtions. j moved into the Wisconsin capi-sought to enter classroom build- * ★ * Mr' wi'lson Satur H'/The city withdrew its 'The disorders started last was a retired employe of the.student dusorders erupted buses after several vehicles week when black students made Service for former Pontiac again at the University of Wis-were halted by protesters who'13 demands, including the crea- resident Clarence C Slocum, 65, Surviving are two daughters, K^n^'n. of Madison Heights will be ^nn and Sheila, both of All was quiet when guards- p.m. tomorrow at Creniunp .■ Mortuary', Grand Rapids, with burial In Fair Plain Cemetery there. Mr. Slocum died Tuesday. He was a history teacher at Bloomfield Hills Andover High School and was a member of the Bloomfield Hills. Michigan and National Education associations. Surviving is a brother. FAA fo Test Defection of Skyjackers men, ordered to active duty by Gov. Warren P. Knowles, arrived in Madison. ’The troops were camped at the Dane County Coliseum and the state armory, both within 15 minutes drive of the 33,000-student cam-' Pickpockets Busy on Detroit Buses tion of a separate black studies department. Members of several militant white campus groups, including Students for a Democratic Society, joined forces with the blacks in calling for a boycott of classes until the demands are met. of violence, threats and intimi-LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sys-^ations^^^^ terns for detecting skyjackers DETROIT (AP) -Though the IS Detroit Street Railway’s ready- * * * [fare, no-change plan seems to Knowles, who said the state!have stopped bus driver rob-would keep the university “free beries, indications are that pickpockets may be replacing gunmen. will be tested in ramps used by passengers to board aircraft, says the acting chief of the F'ed-cral Aviation Administration, David D Thomas. Speaking at the winter con- Denver Boy, 5, Has Court Date in Jaywalk Case DENVER (AP) — l‘i''e-year-,yg|,jjQp on Aerospace and Elec-old Leigh G. Barron of Denver yonic systems, Thomas said Is scheduled to appear in county best solution to court Monday on a charge of aprial hijacking is apprehending jaywalking. Patrolman Louis N. Vecchl-•relli gave the youngster a ticket Jan. 18 after he ran Into the street and was struck by a car. Police said at the time the ticket was issued to protect the driver, who was not at fault potential skyjackers or preventing their boarding. scheduled for today. About 2,000 student protesters kept harried city police and deputy sheriffs busy Wednesday with roving picket lines outside major classroom buildings. Six students were arrested. Windows of parked police buses were shattered and numerous bomb threats were received at campus facilities, officers said. No bombs were found Bus drivers say they are getting more and more reports of pickpockets working on the buses, even though police haven’t been getting a great number of calls. The discrepency, says Inspector Alex Wierzbicki of the police general service bureau, is because most people feel silly and ashamed of having their pocket picked and don’t report it. “Once in the air and threatening a stewardess with a gun,” he said, “there is little to do but comply with their wishes. He declined to say how the detection devices work, or where 'They said they decided to go or when they would be tested. | through with the court action * * ★ against the boy “to impress’ Some persons have advocated traffic safety on his mind” searching the clothes and Leigh said he is going (o tell gage of all passengers, he said, the judge he was in the wrong even to the point of having them ---- - strip and wait around in hospi- The funds spent per capita on tal robes, personal health care Increased “What we require is a practi-to 1206.31 last year compared cal methodlof search other than to $178.86 in 1964. i frisking," Thomas said. 'No Pueblo Supervision of Secrets' Destruction' Culligan Mart 1 Fully Automatic Model-Regulmly »24r INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE OF CULLIGAN’S WATER CONDITIONERS SALE PRICE NOW $ 189 00 INSTALUTION EXTRA New It the time to buy a Culligan end etoft enjoying ell the benefili ef eoft, conditioned wotei give you e written anelyeit c am0nwhocaras‘ CULLIGAN mm CONDITIONING 925 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD' 334-9944 CORONADO, Calif. (AP) - A member of the USS Pueblo’s Intelligence detail says he saw no one supervising destruction of secret material before North Koreans took over the ship. Communications Technician l.C. David L. Ritter of Menlo Park, Calif., was quoted by the i Navy Wednesday as saying he saw the intelligence unit’s commander, Lt. Stephen Harris, in the intelligence center at the time “but no one was ‘really supervising’ destruction” ★ ★ ★ Another member of the de-t a c h m e n t. Communications T*hnician l.C. James D. Lay-ton of Binghamton, N.Y., terti-fied that he saw Harris walk into the center shortly after North Koreans began firing but that Harris “had no orders, no messages to be released and . . . he never saw Lt. Harris participate in the destruction of material,’’ the Navy said. Layton’s and Ritter’s testimony was in an official Navy summary of closed sessions Tuesday before a court of inquiry. ★ ★ * The five-admiral court heard no witnesses Wednesday, ing the day reviewing the 1,700 pages of testimony so far. The court planned the same ischedule today, although there was a possibility some witnesses might be called late in the day, the Navy said. iO-Day Auto Sales Dip From ^68 Repairs on Big E Go Well; Carrier AAay Sail Shortly PEARL HARBOR (AP) -Repair work on the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier Enterprise is ahead of schedule, and she may be able to leave bV mid-March for the western Pacific, the Navy reports. The Big E was knocked out of service Jan. 14 by a series of explosions in her fantail section that left 27 dead and 85 injured. She was 70 miles southwest of Honolulu conducting training exercises at the time. “Repair work is ahead of schedule because as we got into; the job we found that the dam-1 age was fairly well localized in| the immediate area of the blasts and not as extensive as originally anticipated,’’ Capt. R. ^ Barnhart, commander of the; Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard, said today. About 700 men, assigned to 12-hour, six-day-a-week shifts, are handling the repair work.| The Navy estimates repair costs at $6.4 million. sailing ^ys and last year’s had nine. The February sales leave total sates by the four major U.S. auto firms at 817,092 for the year, an increase of 596 over last year’s total for the same peri()d. ,The industry’s giant, ^neral Motors, was the only firm reported an-,pctual sales increase over last year, though little American Motors joined it In reporting a daily sales rate increase. DAILY RA’TE UP GM sold a total of 98,443 cars over the 10 days on a daily rate of 12,305, while little AMC, reporting a drop in total sales from 5,520 to 5,100 still managed to increase its daily selling rate from 613 to 639. General Motors’ sales increase held up the industry to- tal for the fourth consecutive measuring period in 1969. Ford reported its sales in the 10 days atM3,034, compared with 54,812 a year ago while Chrysler Corp. dropped from 32,137 to 24,587. * ★ * On a daily sales rate basis, the Chrysler sales loss was from 3,571 to 3,073, white Fo«|’s fell from 6,090 to 5,379. > • , Ford spokesmen accounted for the sales drops by indicating the firm’s sales were exceptionally high during the first fe*v weeks of 1968 during recovery from^ 66-day strike. Ford truck sales continued strong, increasing from 14,651 to 15,041, while GM trucks remained the leader with sales of 18,577, a record for the period. Last year’s GM truck sales in Febniary’s first 10 days were 17,977. Business Exec From Area Is Dead at 74 A prominent Rocheste business executive, Henry A. Mitzelfeld, died today. He was 74. Service for Mitzelfeld, of 1304 N. Main will be 2 p.m. Saturday at Pixley Funeral Home, with burial In Christian Memorial Estates. ★ ★ ★ Mitzelfeld was a retired vice president of National ’Twist Drill and Tool Co. He was a member of St. Phillip’s Episcopal Church, Rochester, the Rochester Kiwanis Club, a life member of Palestine Lodge, F & AM, Detroit, and the Masonic Square Club of Na- tional Twist Drill and Tool Co. ★ ★ ★ Surviving are his wife, Mabel; four sons; Louis A., M. Jack and William A. all of Rochester, and Thomas H. of Birmingham; mjc sister, Lucy Rochester; 10 grandchildren; and two greatgrandchildren. ★ ★ * « Mitzfeld’s son, William, heads Mitzelfeld’s department store ip Rochester. One hundred forty-two thousand acres of coast redwood land in California are preserved in government parks and reserves. I Be sure tops are solid core, not hollow. Listen for a solid !• sound when you tap. Sides must be Wood, not masonite. 2 Check to see that legs are bolted on or are an integral part of the furniture. Legs that are merely screwed on • permit case to shake when drawers are closed. Open drawers and see that they are dovetailed front Sand rear. This means the wood is Interlaced .like fingers o clasped. Drawers must have a center guide for smooth operation. 4. 5 Good mirrors are plate gless and. when mounted on dresser, must be held by steel • supports. 6 If the set you choose does not have every item listed here, don’t • buy it! The Seller Bedroom People on ToUgroph Rood house of bedrooms STOHeMOUeSi MONDAY-SATURDAY » TO » • CALL 334-4SV3 EDWARD DRILLER City DeMolay toSeatOfficers ’The Pontiac chapter of the; Order of DeMolay will hold in-j stallation ceremonies at 7:30' p.m. Saturday at Roosevelt Masonic Temple, 22 State. TTie new officers are Edward Driller, 4322 Windiate, master councilor; Richard Foote, 1247 Bielby, senior councilor; and David Tilton, 2839 Kenford,| junior councilor. Alll three are! from Waterford Township. Gordon Mapley of 2448 Renfrew, Sylvan Lake, a past master councilor of the Pontiac chapter, will install the new officer# Following the installation of officers, the 1969 d e M o 1 a y Sweetheart will be crowned by Nancy Arnold, the 19 6 8 sweetheart. Latest Styles NEW BREED SUITS AND SPDRTCDATS AT CONN'S SPORTCOATS CONN’S CLOTHES 73 N, SAGINAW I4#agni ANNUAL IMagniarvosc ASTRO-SONIC STEREO It Costs No More to Own the Best! 108 N. Saginaw St. - Downtown Pontiac - FE 3-7114 Open Fri. 9:30 am to 9 pm - Sat. 9:30 am to 5:30 pm ONCE-A-YEAR... FACTORY-AUTHORIZED Bring the new world of music into your home with these superb Mognovox stereos. They hove automatic 400 record player with diamond stylus, 4 excellent speakers and trouble free solid state stereo amplifier. Au^nticolly crafted cabinets have gliding top panel for easy access to controls. Legs are detachable so that consoles fit easily on shelves. SAVE $21. 4 styles. Full Magnavox Warranty Included. Your choice SAVE $20 ON STEREO FM/AM RADIO Model $178.50 No Money Down-90 Days same as cash $13850 PARK FREE in WKCs Ldr ot Nwr of Store or 1-Hr.' in Downtown Mall Hove Tideef Stamped of Cashier's Office THE.PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FERRIJARV l.i. lor.O B—11 Finances Put U.S, at Crossroads in Space cape KENNEDY (UPI) United States is at crossroads in space, and its future path depends on the money available and how President Nix Sears INVISO .M)-UNE r.I.ASSK.S Enjoy all th* advantages of the finest bifocals WITHOUT the dividing line on your lenses. These invisible bifocals give clear comfortable vision in near and far ranges without annoying jump, blur or distortion. And you can enjoy EXTRA comfort with "Head Hugger" frames. Come in or phone for an appointment. SEARS OPTICAL SERVICES • Optical repairs • Most frames replaced while you wait • Eyes examined, glasses fitted and lenses duplicated by staff optometrists • Prescription sun glasses are also available • Oculists prescriptions filled SEARS OPTICAL DKI’ARTMENT lol IN. Sa«j;iiia\v TELEPHONE 335-4171 OPTOMETRIST: Dr. A. Sumeracki Shop till 9 Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Monday You Can Charge It at Seai> On the other hand, Mueller said in a recent speech, a slightly larger budget would enable NASA to utilizb better its capabilities and permit modest investment” to try and reduce space costs in future. SUCCESS, SAFETY FIRST Mueller said success and safety were the predominant factors in planning the programs in America’s first decade of space exploration. Cost wa only a secondary consideration. 'This was proper at the time,” he said. • ★ ★ * But things have changed now and the United States, he said, needs to develop simpler, multipurporse and perhaps reusable rockets and spacecraft for greater reliability and less cost. space station for the middle of‘L° po^gress. the Soviet Union the next decade that would "P serve as a national orbiting platform from which a wide variety of scientific and practical operations could be carried '68 Crime Up in Waterford by President John.son Waterford Township police answered 10.1 per cent more complaints in 1968 than in 1967, and only one category of offense showecf’ a rate decrease last year. Total complaints rose from 10,467 to 11,475. ★ * * Except for burglaries, which dropped from 603 in 1967 to 5421 in 668, every type of police] action increased. i * * -k Among criminal categories,! murders rose from one to two, assaults increased from 317 to! 365, larcenies went from 1,582 to! 1.627, robberies rose from 19 to 22 and auto thefts were up froml 109 to 116, 14 TO 10 Of the robberies, 14 were armed last year as compared to 10 in 1967. I Police recovered 105 stolen autos last year, up from 82 in 1967. ] * * ★ I I Fatal accidents also in-I creased, from 13 in 1967 to 19[ last year, while total traffic of-| jfenses and complaints went! 'from 1,542 to 1,627. Soyuz spacecraft to form what Ru.ssian commentators described as a giant step toward the wprld's first space station. The United States is currently * * * planning to launch a rudimen- Along with such a space sta-jjgpy space station in late 1971. tion, NASA hopes to develop a jt will consist of a rocket stage low-cost shuttle service t o modified to permit astronauts to transport men and supplies^turn its fuel tank into living and from earth to the station andyopt^ quarters for periods up to eight weeks. n,u * U* * ji FERRY SERVICE This can be accomplished^ with space budgets not muchl,^^'*' ^ASA wants to, above $4 billion,” Mueller said. 1^75 would be a The spending program now ' 8 before President Nixon and Congress includes $9 million to begin preliminary studies on such a space station. NEW ADMINISTRATION But Dr. Thomas O.. Paine, acting NASA administrator, said the budget leaves the decision on this, future space station development and other major new programs to the new administration. | “This is a very austere budget throughout,” Paine said when the budget was unveiled to newsmen last month. “If we with an economical f e service to shuttle men and materials to and from it Mueller and other NASA of ficials have recently been stressing the importance of preeminence in space for the nation’s future, and t h e permanent space station is the heart of manned spaceflight plans for the next decade. ‘‘It would be an international tragedy if America were to turn back now from its forward thrust in space at the end of this truly astonishing first decade.” jereey shift all zipped up! 10.99 Step smartly into our double knit acetate print with pretty braid trim. Black/navy. your special sizes 14V2 to 24^2 46 to 52 201» OFF! every diamond in our stock! e. 1 ct. Solitaire Reg. §1250 . .........$999 Rings, Pins and Pendants in Hundreds of Marvelous Styles > find just what you want during Sears diamond sale. Every diamond sale priced 20% off. many carat weights . . . solitaires, engagement rings, wedding rings, engagement-wedding men’s rings, pendants, pins and earrings. Use Sears convenient credit plan. »64 .o ‘999 You’n Choose from i . , ring sets, cocktail rings, men Sate $212 $188 Rejsular a. V2 Ct. Total Weight Man’s Ring.. $265 b. Vt ct. Center Stone Cocktail Ring $235 c. MK-Gold His and Her Set, 5 Diamond. Each.................J $ 37 d. 14K Gold Spray Pin.... -......$1«> $128 LIFETIME TRADE-IN. Sears allows you full cash price paid (exclusive of taxes and carrying charges) on diamond ring, pin earrings in trade for » h'fhy PH^d diamond at any lime. Tliese diamonds are whhe in color and alightly imperfect. Regulai e. 1 ct. Solitaire Ring............. S1250 f. % ct. Center Stone Engagement Ring.....................S550 g. 14K (Lold Heart Pendant............$ 80 h. Wedding Ring Set...................$360 BUY .SEARS DIAMONDS WITH CONFIDENC diamond weights are seldom idenliral. approximate ate shown. Sears gives you a Carat Weight ('.ertifieati the exact, to one-hundredth of a carat, of every Tra diamond of 1/20 carat or more. Jnrrlry rniurgm Sears offers several credit plans for your rOnvenienee $288 ;E. Because Seors Jewelry Department •’’^IS^^Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 OPEN MONDAY, THURS. & FRIDAY 'til 9 P.M. '(9^ 17-19 S. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Designers’ Choice Values Your choice for only H66-any of these groups from the award-winning Kroehler Design Center Once a year, the people at the Kroehler Design Center go through all the furniture Kroehler makes! They select what they believe to- be the most fashionable, most wonteci styles and fabrics, and best values for the year. Then they put them all together in this special, once-Or year buying opportunity. See them today! See how much you'll save on famous nationally advertised Kroehler. S/1/C/C Casa Royale 86-inch sofa, 57-inch loveseai, jn ^0O« multi-colored, contemporary matelasse. Authentic Spanish styling features loose pillow bocks, arms with wood-carved end-pieces and tinials. Also available: Cocktail table, $69.95. End table $59.95. Hexagon commode, $89.95. i/l/CiC Transitional 82-inch, loose-pillow-back sofa in custom-outline quilted contemporary print; 2 chairs in crushed velvet, featuring semi-attached pillow back and satellite casters. Also available: Cocktail table, $49.95. End table, $49.95. Hexagon commode, $79.95. 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH TERMS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET FREE PARKING Directly Across Saginaw St. from Our Store ''You Must Be Satisfied • This We Guarantee" FE 2-4231 BUY ON WARD'S Convenient Credit Plan MONTHS TO PAY - Free Delivery THE PONTIAC I^RESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1969 2 New Housing Programs Face Hurdle ^ a - WASHINGTON (AP) Congressional advocates of two new housing programs designed for low-income families are watching closely the Nixon administration's initial moves on financing them. The issue will be Joined when the House Appropriations Committee conducts hearings, prob-j ably in March, on a supplemental hill for the present financial CtiNNIK CRAWFORD Teen of Week Contributes to Community Connie Crawford, this week's Waterford Township Teen of the Week. IS shooting for a teaching! career, hut she isnt wailing for: the future to make a con-| trihulion to the community Now a Junior. Connie has maintained an A average while serving as treasurer of the student council and working as youth chairman of the township branch of the Michigan Association of retarded Children She also is active in dramat- i ics, i Connie, the daughter of Mr.| and Mrs Ray Ctawford of 3168 ^ Herbell, plans to attend Western' Michigan University it * * “1 think respect is the best: gift a person can give," .she' said. Mall Work Near in Grand Rapids GRAND RAPIDS (API --Work is .scheduled to begin: within two months on the $1(V-million North Kent Mall which will he located in northeast Grand Rapids. The shopping center,' which will cover 57 acres and employ about 2,000 people, was devel-' oped by Forbes-Cohen Corp. of Detroit. Kxpected opening dale is August 1970. Louisell Rebuff DETROIT (AP) Lawyer Joseph W. Louisell has been denied a hearing to dispute: charges by Wayne County Cir-; cult Judge Victor J Baum that his hospital tenure was a "ruse mid a pretext" in an effort to win delay of a trial of Vito C.iacalone, convicted of illegal possession of a blackjack 'Hie judge said courts must "require timely presentation of issues." DOn'T BE [RUEHT THIS summER Former President Lyndon B. .lohnson, who submitted the bill| three days before he left office, asked $100 million additional for the two programs as a part of the supplemental. George Romney, secretary of housing and urban development, will be asked to pre.sent hLs ad-1 ministration's views on the housing items, NEW FEATURES The two programs in question are the main new featured in the far-reaching 1968 Hbusing Act which cleared Congrera last ijuly. One contains the broadest j subsidies ever voted to try to I make it possible for low-income families to buy their own homes. Under it, the govern-jment would pay all of the inter-!est cost above 1 per cent in order to put monthly mortgage payments in reach of .such families. The other program applies the' same interest-subsidy principle to rental apartments for such families . The 1968 law authorized 175-million in subsidies for «ach of the programs in the current fiscal year which ends June 30. But the congressional appropriations committees allowed only $25 million each. It is thi^ cut of $50 million each which Johnson asked be restored in the supplemental. ALREADY EXHAUSTED Backers of the programs say that the home ownership plan already has proved so popular that the $25 million is exhausted. Sen. John Sparkman, D-Ala. chairman of the Sefiate housing subcommtitee who steered the However, Sparkman was critical of statements made by the new secretary that it would not be possible to attain the goals of the act for low- and middle-income families. ‘‘I have said all along these goals are difficult,” the Alabamian commented. “But they shouldn’t go shouting from the housetops that they are unrealistic and can’t be reached. First they ought to give them a real good try.” For the first time in history, the 1968 law set up specific year-by-year targets for production of government-assisted 1968 act through his branch, I housing units for the poor, told a reporter he is confident i These added up to a 6-million Romney will support the $100 total for the next decade, million. i Robert C. Weaver, Romney’s predeces^r as housing secretary, conceded that to achieve the 6-million goal would require production at a rate 10 times that of the past 10 years. irs of the two interest subsidy programs estimated they would produce 175,000 of the 300,000 goal for publicly assisted units in the current fiscal year. Congressional experts say it is clear now that the programs wiill not yield anything like 175.000 units, even if the extra $100 million sought for them is obtained. Johnson recognized this in of his last acts as president. He revised the total fiscal 1969 goal to 200,000 units and added the 100.000 cut to fiscal 1970, making a total of 500,000 for that year. milHOIlT YORK. HHtE HOUSE Ml tOHDITIONIHC C.I1 Mtoaay lor a FREE HOME SURVEY and more details on th« Best Finance Plans ever! • HY NOTWHe TIL SPRING SPARTAN AIR CONOmONING •2 Oakland Ava., Natiae FE 2-3844 DAMA6ED MERCHANDISE SALE! DAYS oONLY, Buy Iff «ze • Extra long. save big at the selection please. ON saiemer p early for best 5ERVEDI q|||1 11 mi J li'l ' X V QUILTED, BUTTON-FREE KING SIZE SLEEP SET Quilted top mattress with matching dual box springs. Compare at twice the price — anywhere. Deluxe Ortho quality and 4 DAYS Oi\LY! *118 EASY CREDIT TERMS LUXURIOUS QUILTED QUEEN SIZE SLEEP SET a truly luxurious oversize bed — full 60" X 80" at less than the price of a regular bed. Super smooth quilted cover, match- 4 DAYS ONLY! 6 FT. wid*, 7 FT. Img KING SIZE BUnON-TUFna MATTRESS ond MATCHMG BOX SPRING While they lostl 42 sq. ft. of luxurious comfort at a buy-now prl.ee! Attractive extra-duty cover, oir vents and turning handles. Giant Size at Giant Savings. 4 DAYS ONLY! EASY CREDIT TERMS Sale at ALL Ortho Stores WWW SWOT plus merchandise • FIRST C nothing down and up to 36 ®* your own truck or tfoHer and save even moral II cash7 cSdT“ °WN '.CHASGE . Bks; * ”■ "ng down and up to 3A IMHTVIfAIT-4|)AYsoi|[yi X EASY CREDIT TERMS GENUINE ORTHO MATTRESSES ARE SOLD ONLY AT ORTHO STORES! TWIN OR FULL SIZE QUILTED, BUnON-FREE MAHRESS t BOX SPRING Th* buy of a lifoliaci Fobvlevi qiMlily — MOMltonol low price. Twio or Poll tizo. 4 DAYS ONLY! *66 EASY CREDIT TERMS _________________ LUXURY KING SIZE SLEEP SET WITH 2 BOX SPRINGS Ikbly qvillod for >up*r comforll 7 ft. long and 6 fl. wido d«t»so buHon-froo mottrois and two Mnkhing dofuu box tpringil for thoio who want only Iho btif ... at a bargain prSeol Don't Wail— First cenio. First sorvodl 4 DAYS OISLY! *186 EASY CREDIT TERMS TWIN OR FULL SIZE MAHRESS & BOX SPRING pricel Heavy duty c( Fabulous . Long wearing. "When You Sleep i You're Really Sleeping!" in 'Ortho' mattress, 4 DAYS ONLY! EASY CREDIT TERMS NAiiMu nu M xoi SLUrms' OPEN DAILY 10-9 - SAT. 10-6 -^UN. 12-6 (LIVERNOiS & GRAND RIVER CLOSED SUNDAY) NO CASH DOWN - UP TO 24 MONTHS TO PAY - MICHIGAN BANKARD ft SECURIH CHARGE n i . ■ 2211 South Telegraph, Pontiac ■ I ■ ^ J MISS CUVIROL Look at These Super Sale Prices Stock up NOW and SAVE Reg. 1.75 Clairol 4 ilH SILK’N SILVER I Reg. 2.25 Clairol 4 39 NICE ’N EASY I Reg. 1.75 Clairol 409 LOVING CARE I Reg. 2.25 Miss Clairol 439 SHAMPOO f.l.a 1 Reg. 1.75 Clairol 409 TONERS I Reg. 1.50 Miss Clairol O A C CREME Formula o9 Reg. 2.25 Clairol 439 BORN BLOND I Reg. 1.75 Lady Clairol ULTRA BLUE liiMrtHi'mBlile- ENTIRE STOCK At PRAYTOH mm STORE QtM.Y See Our Big Dieplay of VALINYINE CHOCOLAYES 95° lo ^10 DEDIf EDCC BMmlowaPaiUng Mall - Jml ■ BMIK ■ I1CK Have TIelwt Itewged wHb PgwilMsat PRESCRIPTION THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARV 13. 1909 B—13 AIUgs Clear Cong Bastion for South Viet Take-Over landing zone bayonet,I The job ahead is tough. Amer-I Officials appointed by the Vietnam (AP) - Treading giMical Division officers say vir-|gon government have moved time to flee the peninsula after arming scores of mines and booby traps. But officers of the American gerly across terrain laced with tually all of the area’s 12,000!;„.„ m mines and booby traps, allied people-including 4,000 to 6,OOol out u. ,.,r troops have cleared a path forjadults — were either Vietcong!^®‘“*®®® remam division’s 198th Light Infantry the South Vietnamese ^govern-or Vietcong sympathizers. |them when they are taken back j,ased here, say they. It v)yll be two months, per-^heir homes. do not believe the operation was ment to take control of c ®^“'‘‘ihaps, before the 12,000 peoplejSECURITY SETUP diest strongholds. j evacuated from the peninsula to This, U.S. officers say, is the a government “chic”—com- Regional and popular force result of the monthlong com-bined holding and interaogation'}j!^^^^ ITS Armv Marine and ia «,;ii blned U.S. Army, Marine »»« Mnter-10 mte away South Vietnamese army cordon allowed to return to tjjeiri*‘5®.s“PP®*!^ ® operatiMi in the Batangan Pen- homes, insula. They say this area ypritral r-nacf aftpri VILLAGES DAMAGED compromised. NO fit. VIETS FOUND No North Vietnamese troops or advisers were found in the sweep. While no timetable was present for the operation, it moved slowly than expected—the primary reason being the great numbers of mines and booby traps, which caused most of the allied casualties in the absence of serious armed opposition. U.S. officers counted more than 40 troops killed and more than 180 wounded. ★ A scout dog, after helping to clear a jungle trail, sat down had no choice,” said a U.S. offi-| Some U S. officiais believe nearby and triggered a mine ‘We couldn’t even leavelihese figures might have been'jhaf killed one American and the kids or the old men behind [higher had not a reported ad-j^gynded several others. Seven they’d have been out settingjvance leak of information on the [Marines were killed by a prebooby traps all over the place.”,operation given Vietcong troops: j^ature blast that occurred ps they were clearing a mine field with explosives of their own. In one incident, a defector, described by U.S. officers as one of the most important in the operation, explored a tunnel and [bunker complex for American troops and set off a booby trap as he emerged, killing himself and a couple of others, ★ * ★ Some of the bunkers found dated to World War II, when the of the peninsula, Landing Zone Minuteman, will furnish securi- Vietnam’s central coast, afteri i‘y- 20 years of tight control by ®^ses they have no Allied officers claim more Communist leadership, is ready ^omes to return to. Bomb!than 700 Vietcong were "elimi-for the Saigon government to strikes and artillery fire dam-jnated” from the peninsula, try to establish and maintain a ^8ed many of the villages. [They count 204 Vietcong killed, political presence of its own. ! Residents were forced to 104 prisoners, 32 defectors, 261 ----------------- abandon their livestock and bth-] Vietcong political infrastruc- er possessions that they, could,ture members, and 140 Viet-not carry. Icong “suspects” to be classified ★ ★ * [ultimately as infrastructure or ‘The area was so heavily;^”*®"®^®'^ Vietcong- controlled that we U.S. Reports 79 Pet. of Population Is 'Secure' RESTORATION REVIVAL Continues in Pontiac Two Great Sarvicoj Dally Come Receive Your Miracle 13 Ferry St., Pontiac, Michigan SAIGON (fl — A Stepped-up pacification drive has brought! relative security from the Viet-| cong to about 1.5 million more South Vietnamese in three months, a U.S. report showed yesterday. I The accelerated pacification | program was conducted in November, December and January. As of the end of January, ,79.2 per cent of South Vietnam’s 17,326,700 persons were said to [be living in areas generally considered out of reach of the Vietcong or North Vietnamese. This was an increase of about 9.4 per [Japanese occupied and fortified cent during the three-month pe-;the peninsula. Others, some ■■iod. , three and.four levels deep, were more recent. Many were so well ;’""liew for J J Brand Neu, i —____________________ concealed that they were found only on the second or third sweep through an area—and some undoubtedly have not yet been found. Whirlpool SUPREME FRONT-LOADING PORTABLE DISHWASHER Full-time self-cleaning filter • 2 full-size revolving spray arms • Double-wall construction • Porcelain-enamel tub • Dual detergent dispensers • Silverware tasket . Faucet usage while dishwasher is operating . Stabilizer front panel t Bull extension racks • Maple work-top. SWEET’S RADIO & APPLIANCE 30 DAYS SAME AS CASH 422 West Huron . , ,fE4;56TT Open Monday and Friday Evenings til 9 r.M. :. Talvalola, Troy and A Robert R. Zynda, Detroit a The statistics come from the U.S.-conducted hamlet - evaluation system which uses a complex formula to judge security of South Vietnam’s population. The report said 9.4 per cent of[ _____________________ the population lives in areas ^contested by government and I IrPIlCPC enemy forces and 11.4 per cent iMClIllCiyC LILv/IIjw I remain in portions of the country where the enemy holds sway. * SYSTEM MAUGNED The hamlet evaluation system has been much maligned as not[ being a true reflection of gov-l emment and enemy strength. It[ has been charged that somell American advisers in the coun-i tryside, under pressure from[ Saigon to look good, have a tendency to arbitrarily upgrade security evaluation in certain areas. [ U.S. officials in charge of the, program do not claim it pro-| duces exact results. But they[ say it is the best method known | for at least tagging a trend of how the war is going. i ■k * -k Cheating, they say, is hazard-, ous because of the number of! detailed questions asked of the| American advisers in ^e field. [ The American evalption isj more conservative than that of the South Vietnamese. President Ngqj'en Van Thieu said Feb. 6 that “The government controls 89 per cent of the population throughout the country.” His figure was based on reports from South Vietnamese prov-jince chiefs, an aide said. ★ * * I The Vietcong claims it con-itrols about 10 million people. HURRY! SALE PRICES END FEBRUARY 19THM FLUORESCENT GRID LIGHT Fits flush to your ceiling for a unique "sky light" effect. Takes 2-40 watt lamps. Here’s an ideal way to remodel or recondition any ceiling. 2' X 4' panels are easily and economically installed. Provides beauty and sound conditioning. PEBBLE PANELS Rag. $1.16 93‘ RUBEROID VINYL ASBESTOS FLOOR TILE Easiest of all floors to install and maintain. In many patterns. 12"X12" ic LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLIES CENTER 4101 E.Baldw/in Rd., Near the corner of Holly and Baldwin Roads Bloomfield Miracle Mile 2215 S. Telegraph Rd. Open Daily 9-6 - Friday 9-J SALE! MEN'S SUITS Formerly $80 Formerly $90 Formerly $100 NOW NOW NOW *64 *72 *80 Monarch's rogolar fin* audlity clothing at groatly reduced prices for quick clearance. No Charge for Alterations! ENTIRE STOCK OF MEN'S SPORT COATS also substantially reduced! All Major Credit Cards Honored BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. KAY'S Annual . . MID-WINTER FURNITURE and BEDDING SALE OUR IWICE-A-YEAR SAVINGS SPREE SPECIAL PURCHASES REDUCED FROM STOCK FLOOR SAMPLE CLEARANCES We can't possibly show you all the amazing values now available during our annual MID-WINTER SALEI Please come in at yOur earliest convenience. We'll promise you unusual savings on any furniture in stock. Special orders slightly higher. ON SUCH FAMOUS NAMES AS: Johnson/Carper - Lane - Strato Lounger Bassett Stanley-American of Martinsville SERTA and POSTURE FAMOUS MAKE BEDDING Were Now Smooth Top Mattress '59 ’33 Foam Mattress M9 ’29 Extra Firm 10 Yr. Guai '69 ’36 Extra Firm 15 Yr, Guai '79 ’44 THIS IS JUST A SMALL SAMPLE OF THE MANY, MANY VALUES AVAILABLE TO THE SHARP FURNITURE BUYER! NO MONEY DOWN - INSTANT CREDIT It’s Easy to Say “Charge It” at Kay’s REG. NOW DANISH MODERN Sofa & Chair ’399 ’249 FRENCH & ITALIAN PROVINCIAL ’369 ’229 2-Pc. Living Rooms 4 Pc. MODERN WALNUT Bedroom Set ’399 ’269 4 Pc. CONTEMPORARY Bedroom Set ’695 ’469 Out They Go Maple Bunk Beds '39 Odd Chests . . . . '29 ■Record Cabinets '12 Mirrors and Pictures '19 Open Daily 9:30 til 9:00 ... Tuesday and Wednesday until 6 P.M. KAY FURNITURE . . 37 S. GLENWOOD . . K-MART SHOPPING CENTER I H—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 196® .Go diseoimt popping ■ S■l•b•(|in•Thunchly.F•b.13M10AM.End•Saturday,F•b.15■t10PM. DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES The Spring thing: Orion sweaters in bright colors, compare at 4.97 9 AM, Until 11 p.M. Weekdays 10 A.M. Until 8 P.M. Sundays THE I’ONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY i:i. 19«9 B—15 See how ^oa’ll save Dramatic print or solid luggage in 5 sizoS/ match a set at big discount Travel in style with this fashion- HHB able luggage! Paisley prints, florals, and solid colors to K choose from, in 5 sizes. All have K sturdy steel frame’afid plywood K bottoms for durability, soft-side W construction of vinyl-backed linen, full zipper plus outside zippered pocket. Zippers and handles are guaranteed. Come choose a complete set at great savings now at Yankee! Reg. 4.97 18" size......3.97 Reg. 5.97 21" size......4.97 15 and 16' Reg. 4.97 19" size......3.97 reg. 3.97 \ DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES B—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THUKSDAY, FEBRUARY la. 1960 Pay Raise for Congress Evolved From Postal Rates Dispute WASHmCTON (AP) - In the mmetimes wondrous ways d Congress, the |12,500 pay raise which went to members last week evolved from a over postal rates for seed catalogs and othpr third-class nudi. The two matters may se«n remote, but they became locked together In a bil(ilc between Uie House and Senate in the cloring days of the 19«7 congressional session. It * * In the end, the House won agreement for establishment of machinery under which congressional pay could be rais«l ev«y four pars without requiring members to do anything but sit back and look surprised. The pay-rai.se saga developed this way: Many members wanted -raise, particularly the younger ones with growing families and no outside sources of income. FEARED CONSEQUENCES But representatives, up for election every two years, were skitUsh about the poUUcal consequences of voting directly for an increa.se in their own salaries. it * * The House had been Inteigued for some time by a prt^Aj^ under which an outside comnus-aion would recommaid levels for congressional and other up- (AdvertiMm««it 1 FAT OVERWEIGHT Available to you without a doctor’ prescription, our product called OdrineK. You must lose ugly fat or your money bacir. Odrinex is a tiny tablet end easily swallowed. Get rid of eiwess fet and live longer. Odrinex costs $3.00 end e new. Urge economy tiie for $5 CX). Both are sold with this guarantee: If not tehtfied for any reason. Just return the package to your dti^ist and get your full money heck. No questions esked. Odrinex is sold with this guarantee by: SIMMS CUT RATI DRUG STORf _9I N. SAGINAW—MAIL OR-DIRS FILUD. Look for Country Squire'* George Washington Birthday SALE! Bloomfield Miracle Mile per-edielim aalRries in govern- that approach, the ^sident would, on the basts of otmunission's proposals, salary reewnmendations to ConpiBSR. would take e^itt autmnattciuy without diract vote munbers. Cbn- would retain the option of vetobig the salary (H’oposals. &i April of 1W7, President Lyndon B. Jidituon sent Oort-| gress a menage asking that pay of civil service employes be raised and postal rates be increased. PROPOSAL REJECTED The Mouse used that legislation as a vehicle for its salary-commission p{an. The Senate turned down the munission proposal out of hand. At the same time, it w to Increase rates for third-class mail to levels higher than those set in the House bill ★ A' ♦ The basis for comprcunlse was obvious. Senators who partici- Nun-Doctor's Clinic Sees Biafra Starvation at Worst AMAMBAA^ Biafra Some pf the mothers who come Si$ter MacArten’s clinic in the bush of Biafra are so dazed and weak that they forget the names of their own babies. Grown men sometimes are incoherent, the nun-doctor says. Once a week she travels to this village by dirt trail to administer to the ailing. * ★ ★ ‘The malnutrition affect their intellects,” .said Sister MacArten, a Holy Rosary nun from Ireland. “And then there are the shell-shocked soldiers, coming out of the bush screaming at the top of their lungs. We help them all as best we can." Sister MacArten’s o n c e -1 week hospital is a tiny thatched but just seven miles from Owerri. where Biafrans and Nigerians have been battling for more than four months. The population is swollen b y refugees. Even the natives of the area are badly off. said the sister, because the place was never much of a fanning zone. MANY TURNED AWAY There are feeding centers In the area, but a vMt to one at Sister MacArten's home base of Amimo, four miles away showed that many persons had to be turned away. At an outpatient clinic in back ot the feeding center, about 100 persons waited for treatment, most of them women and babies suffering from some stage of malnutrition. A * * The nun spotted a woman crying softly next to a child of abmit 10 years. Ibe boy's lips were white. His ey,es bulged. His head roll^ and his sticMike arms buckled when he tried to lean on them. "He’s dying, he looks like he’s dying,” the sister cried. She spoke sharply to the woman; "Have you not seen a doctor all this time? When did the child eat last? Is he baptized? Go inside immediately.” ★ * The woman, who that day had come to the center from the bush for the first time, picked up the boy. He clutched her neck feebly, his face thrust up the sky, as she carried him Lung cancer is the leading cause of deaths by cancer among males, and the rate is mm-e than 14 times above what was 35 years ago. iMnw in the Senate-House conference reported the House unyielding on the sal- ary commission proposal Agreeing to it was the oidy way they could obtain House support for What they considered proper levels for third-class mall rates, the Senators said. As a result, the final bUi contained the commission machinery and it was promptly put into operation. The outside commission made its salary recommendations late last year and they were in the new federal budget sulHnitted in January. Maiorily members in boBi .DUses h^ed off efforts to invoke the veto. Resolutions to reject the increases never were allowed out of House committees. One got to the Senate floor but was wicked down, 47 to 34. * ★ ★ The result is the |12,SOO an- nual iacreaso in congrefrioihil pay, to $42,51^ 8 year, thht took effect last Friday. And the story is a conflnutng one. The commission legislation provides that the whole procedure starts up again, gritoout further action by Congress, in 1972. 108 N. SAGINAW - Downtown Pontiac - FE 3-7114 OPEN FRI. 9:30 a.m. to-9 p.m. - SAt 9:30 o.m. to 5:30 i Tt's TOPS for TEENS! WHITE FURNITURE In WKCS LOWER LEVEL FURNITURE DEPT- Snow White with elegant floral decorated pulls . . . practical because it's topped with Westinghouse Micarta - it resists mars, spilled soft drinks and cosmetics - just wipe 'em away. Come in and boy the practical furniture for your teen-age girl at WKC — and SAVE! $59.95 SINGLE DRESSER Base only - $/T095 Sove $6 now.... O O $113.95 DOUBLE DRESSER With Mirror — Save $11.40....... lUZ $19.95 DESK CHAIR Motches desk "795 Save $2.00......... ' / $83.95 SINGLE DRESSER With Mirror — $~7 C55 Save $8.40....... / ^ $84.95 CANOPY BED Twin Size - - PARK FREE In WKCS Lot At Rear of Store or 1-Hr. in Downtown Parking Mall — Have Ticket Stomped in Cashiers .Office. Save $8.50 . NO MONEY DOWN - 90 Days Same As Cash — Take^ up to 3-Years to Payl^ THIS IS THE MOST IHCREDIBLE CARPET SALE WE HAVE EVER HELD! 2ND WEEK! AT “MRPET CENTEH" 3127 W. HUBON AmiricQ’s Most Glamorous FOLDING AltimiRiiffl AWNINGS Frem <24** STATIONARY AWNINGS Hoisi sum CHOOSE FROM HUNDREDS OF Efl!% S1YLES BRICED TO SAVE YOU gil LAST CHANCE fOR WINTER DISCOUNTS • Get more enjoyment of your home The exclusive FUNROOM rtlUriai ciclBtiv* iBtt wHk cJw-ityliC tnart 0*lf Sm Cm- Suntura rOKCH AWNINGS »56 BUY NOW-NOTHING DOWN! PAY LATER! Come in- or Coll Us...Let Us Show You Why Guaranteed ALUMINUM SIDING and TRIM ROOFING OFtM lUMBAV f Aluminum Miracle Finifh i.*” " f WINDOWSandDOOR BUT l-t F.M. I Other iiOT. Cf 9q5 mtioows . , for your homi'i protection t,ui^ , , for your own protection ui^ib , . . it’s ..... ..................... i—i 76400 W. Eiltit Milt M. IX Mil* Mint of Teltfriph Phone ri 5-9452 DO W. Eiltit Mil Mil* WostofTelei IPeioskey I Toletfe J47M2isil4NS ^ NO MONEY DOWN! TAKE 3 YEARS TO PAY! HOUSANDS OF 1968 COLORS ft STYLES • ODD ROLLS • ROLL-ENDS DISCONTINUED ITEMft • AND IRREGUURS AT SPECTACULAil SAVINGS! that must ha cleared out at once — _ lest sals in our price-cutting history, rsnthing is in stock for INSTANT INSTALLATION! Shop today while! color selections srs eomplsts in svtry styls-greup. Moss will nsvsr bo lower than now - at CARPET CENTER! mHYCOKHt YOU CM HAMl...[Ya¥ STYIE & UXTUK PtiMp* IM l)M*t hMa nylM pit* carpattiig ww pwomraO — now Hi o^ivo-aiiim* pika, II colon. FMSTOUAUTYI 4,77 IIUQQEO HtrLW 3.941!: ssas-"-*.-"” 6.24% So thick «nd hoovy. yoidl bo Ion. Iw price:.f«0% kpNo,nesrQUAinnri 5.48 it 7.24.1: NYLON AXMlNSTEIt faiVtoOBOriMorid^lM 4.68% CARPET CENTER 3127 WiST HURON ROAD ONE MILE WEST OF mEOMPH Can*tComeIn? SHOP AT Home SERVIGE! Sq you won^ mi*, eut en the bargain, during thi* groat Worabouta Sole, a courfeoue oalewnah wiil gtodly brir^ a CARLOAD of ratnpie. right to your CAUt MSoSSOS THE PONXIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13, i960 Round Steak Sirloin QQ Steak '.X il II USOA CHOICE IrtO T-Bone or Club Steak I'm. USDA CHOICE »|tAK 59s SHORT RIBS OF BEEF 49S It ■VAIAtfi Fra»hlyllic«d,SkinnadandOminad AlAAm lAST 79S BEEFLIViR 49S Holly FARMS tPLIT 99s CHICKEM BREAST 59S SPARTAH Thick or Thin ' MF > roast 99s SLICED BACON 69* LEAH REEF 0ROUHO CHUNK it 79s GROUND BEEF 79S ,Goffee-sate L U.S. No. 1 WINESAP wm 1 APPLES ““ 39® ' U.S. No. 1 MICHIGAN POTATOES CALIFORNIA^EL | 20 LB. ORANGES BAG H Q rM'i 1 G. ONIONS « RADISHES I CUKES lll^ CARROTS I ^ Ant. Mb. U-n. Flavor* wt. Can 24b. Box tRRAJWRTTRS . KHAFTS MACAIIONI and CHIEti _ DINNIR '*sr- 51*1 CAT LIFE *Bf- 12* Tint HOME _ ^ LUNCH BAOS £ 19* PAPER RLATRS 69* PAPER MAIO RAINROW ^ COLD CUPS 69* WATCR CONDITIOHER 69* FLAVOR HOUSE ^ TOASTED PEANUTS *^39* c—2 THE PONTIAC PRES&. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1969 Area Cook Shares Her Bake-Off Recipe for Strogonoff By JANET ODELL | Separate biscuits and cut in shortening, salt and egg to FMd Editor, The PoBtiac Press half crosswise, making 20 half softened yeast. Gradually add Everyone can't win, but we’re [circles. Stand on top of flour to form soft dough, disappointed that Lenorejcasserole with cut sides down.jbeating well. Cover. Let rise In Bechtel of Lake Sherwood didn't [slipping some onions between [warm place until light and bring home one of the prizes each one. i doubled. i from the Pillsbury Bake-Off this[ Pour topping over cpsserole week. So’s she, of course. and bake .10 minutes at 375 But she did ha\'e fun at the dcgrees Makes 6 servings, event and has the satisfaction of Topping knowing that she made it to the; cup dairy sour cream finals. Now she can chime in! i egg when her motlwr, her sister and I i teaspoon celery seed her niece all “tell it like it[ ri teaspoon salt was.” [ Beat together until smooth. And now we can give 5**^* wrNNFR.S Mrs. Bechtel's recipe for an m f m , v, easy and delicious wain dish. |, We thought it might also be , .___fun for you to have some of the r 8TACK-A-R01XSTll0GAN0I'F|^([^pj. winning recipes frbm Mrs. | By Mrs. Jack Bechtel | Bechtel’s family. ? 1 pound ground beef i ★ ★ ♦ 1 can i4 oz.) miMhrooms, |{pp j,jgpg submitted a main drained Bechtels eat and 1 CRii (3^ oz.) french often, onions [ 1 can condensed cream of BEEF BURGER BAR-B-QUK mushroom soup [ By Karen Curtis, Winslow, Ind. 1 package dry yeast •i Cup cold water Cup condensed onion soup, strained (reserve rest of ^ Hambaricr FHIing 2 pounds ground beef 5 bankfruters 1 can condensed onloh soupl plus reserved onion soup 1 cup catsup 1 teaspoon prepared mustard V« Teaspoon pepper Vs Teaspoon chili powder Brown beef in large skillet, fat. ^ ■ M cup dairy sour cream j lean (PVi oz.t Pillsburyj Hungry Jack biscuits I Brown beef in skillet and^ drain fat. Bring undiluted soup to boil and stir in sour cream. ♦ ★ ★ Grease a 2‘i or 3-quart casserole. Put in alternate layers of beef, mushrooms, onions and soup mixture, making three layers of each. Keep out ^ cup onions for top. m) ,2 tablespoons sugar 2 table spoons shortening, melted ^ Teaspoon salt 1 unbeaten egg 2 to 2’i cups flour Soften yeast in warm water. , , . , i a ^ n r- r-- Add strained soup, sugar, Mrs. J, BBchfel With Her Sfack-A-Roll Strogapoff floured finger. Form a Drain off I frankfurters into V4 ^ 1 n c h diagonal slices and add with rest of ingredients; Simmer, uncovered while dough rises. Turn into 12x8 baking dish. Stir down dough. Drop by tablespoons onto meat mixture. Sprinkle with celery seed. Let rise in warm place until light, about 15 minutes. ' Bake at 375 degrees for 15 to 20 minutes, until deep golden brown. Serves 8 to 8. Her mother’s lemon pie is yummy sounding. LEMON ALOHA PIE By Mrs. James Vinyard, BoonvUle, Ind. 1 cup Hour 1-3 cup butter or margarine 1-3 cup sugar 1-3 cup plus 1 tablespoon lemon, juice . ( 8-oz. package cream cheese , 1 package two-layer size pineapple frosting mix In mixer bowl, combine flour, butter, 2 tablespoons sugar and 1 tablespoon lemon juice. Mix . at low speed of mixer just until dough forms. Press onto bottom and sides of 9-inch pie pan with \vell- flute. Bake at 375 degrees for 12 15 minutes. Cool. MAKE FIUUNG Combine cream cheese, re* laining sugar and 1-3 cup lemon juice; blend until smooth, {h'epare frosting mix according to package directions. Fold into cream cheese mixture. Spoon into baked pastry phell. If desired, garnish with a ring of coconut and cherries. Chill several hours. Her sister goes in for special dessert bread recipes. APRICROWN DESSERT BREAD By Mrs. Clayton Curtis, CRAB-STUFFED CHICKEN - Invite guests to a dinner party and delight them with an unusual main dish; Crab-Stuffed Chicken Rolls, artfully sauced with soup. You can work your “magic saucery" in minutes by adding milk, chopp^ parsley, and crushed tarragon. Surround the chicken rolls with tiny canned carrots and broccoli, lightly laced with lemon juice. Crab Stuffing Is Filling for Chicken Breasts Many hostesses prefer to Hat side of knife. Combine crab, entertain at small, informal bread cubes, celery, and lemon juice; place Vi cup mixture dinner parties rather than large gatherings. There is more opportunity for talk and an exchange of ideas. You may want to have two dinner parties on succeeding days while the house Is spic and span. Use the same menu and party decorations and dovetail the food preparation tasks. For this type of entertaining, feature a festive main dish; one that is a little unusual. Our Chicken Rolls, for example, combine three interesting'foods In a new way: best-liked chicken, exotic crab, and double-rich, double-thick c ndensed cream of c h 1 c k e soup. Ask your butcher to bone the chicken breasts for you unless you have a sharp boning knife and a dexterous hand. The remaining preparation is easy. Many seasonings are already combined in the soup so that all you need to add is milk, chopped parsley, and a bit of crush^ tairagon. Arrange" meat and vegetables In the same dish for easy serving (pour extra sauce from the chicken into a separate heated bowli. ____ CRAB-STUFFED CHICKEN ROLLS 3 whole chicken breasts (about 2'^ pounds!, split, boned, and skinned 1 can (8 ounces) crab meat, drained and flaked Vi cup small bread cubes Vi cup thinly sliced celery V» teaspoon lemon juice 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 can (lO'i ounces) condensed cream of chicken soup Vi cup milk 2 tablespoons chopped parsley Generous dash crushed tar- Banana Sticks Cut large size bananas half. Insert wooden sucker Stick into each half, then dip banana into chocolate or butterscotch ice cream sauce and, roO in chopped walnuts. i near center of each breast. Roll up; tuck in ends and fasten with skewers or toothpicks. Yogurt Gains Status as Interesting Food Once Its adherents touted day when the ratings bomb. It’s yogurt as an almost magical I yogurt all day long. foodstuff that could prolong life, correct overweight, tighten laggard stomach muscles restore thinning hair, even make planned parenthood necessity for men of 103. It was a staple Item for radio comedians, with perhaps the best gag the one about the 97-year-old yogurt-eating woamn who died — in childbirth. And a California counterman has what he claims is a surefire method for checking the emotional status of the secretaries who frequent his place. “When a girl who’s been While faddists no longer claim that it has life-giving properties, it retains its status as a refreshing, easily digestible, low-calorie snack that Three Fruits Mix in Spicy Relish A homemade reli^ always perks up a meal! [ Cranberry Relish j 1 medium orange [ 1 large firm pear | cup sugar V4 cup light corn syrup V4 teaspoon ground ginger 1 stick (2 inch) cinnamon | 2 cups (about V4 pound) [ cranberries ★ ★ * Peel orange,' removing all white membrane, seed and cut into small pieces (about V5 inch). Peel, core and cut pear into small pieces. * ★ ★ In a 2-quart saucepan mix the sugar and com syrup. Bring to a boil over medium heat; add orange, pear, ginger and cinnamon. Reduce heat and boil gently for 30 minutes. Add cranberries and boil about 5 minutes or until cranberry skins pop open. Remove cinnamon. Cool. heavy on sandwiches switches to yogurt, I know she’s In love," he declares. How come? It tastes good, for one reason. Once avilalbe only ‘straight,’’ yogurt has been glamorized by manufacturers in such ways as including various fruit flavors, at the bottom of refrigerator the carton, making it a kind of ‘ainer; cover; store in refrlg-reverse sundae. Of some 20 Makes about IV4 pints, least one cut above being just flavors now available, strawber-another food. | ry, cherry, peach and blueberry Along New Y(M-k’s Madison 1 lead the list. Avenue, for example, there are] Whatever the reasons for its In skillet, brown chicken in those who see yogurt as an, popularity, it seems clear that butter: add remaining in-;emotional barometer of sorts. If yogurt’s twin bacterial culture gredients. Cover; cook over low'a TV show has scored good is firmly entrenched in our heat 30 minutes. Spoon' sauce | ratings, says one restaurateur, I culture, nourishing both those over chicken now and then, ad agency executives indulge in [who consume and those who Makes 6 servings hot pastrami sandwiches. On a [manufacture it. EASY-DO FONDUE - After a day on the slopes, famished snow birds will find a hot cheese fondue a thawing and satisfying dish. Gravy Mix Is Part of Easy Fondue Dip Few activities sharpen appetites as much as invigorating winter sports. Skiing or sledding down snowy slopes or skimming over the ice is a heady experience but it’s sure to be followed by a huge hunger; for good, hot food. * ★ ★ Easy-Do Fondue Is an easy version of this favorite cheese dish that can be prepared in a chafing dish or fondue pot so it’s possible to make In even primitive ski shacks. ★ ★ * Only three ingredients are need^ — shredded cheese, water ^nd an envelope of au jus gravy mix which imparts delicate beefy flavor. When the mixture is hot and bubbly, serve with crusty bread and let everyone dip In. EASY-DO FONDUE 7 to 8 cups coarsely shredded! natural Swiss cheese (about 2 pounds) 1 envelope (% oz.) Au Jus gravy mix 1% cups water Crusty French or Italian bread ★ ♦ ★ Toss shr^ded cheese thoroughly wUh 2 tablesptms of the Au Jus gravy mix directly from the envelope. Combine remaining gravy mix with Sater in cheese fondue pot lafing dish. Heat to boiling over direct flame. * -k -k Add shredded cheese, about cup at , a time, to the Imiling liquid. Stir constantly after each adhUtion until cheese melts and, mixture returns to boil. Continue unUT mixture is thoroughly blended, and thick enough to doft bread easily when dipped. . \ I ♦ * I Serve with a b^ket of bite-1 size pieces of crusty bread. i 1 package hot roll mix % Cup warm apricot nectar or orange juipe 2 tablespoiHis sugar 2 eggs % cup butter or marganne. % Cup currants or raisins 1 jar (10 ozl) apricot preserves or orangemarmalade % cup apricot nectar 0 \ orange Juice 1 to 2 teaspoons rum flavoring Dissolve yeast from hot roll mix and sugar in % cup apricot nectar. Add eggs, butter, currants and flour mixture. Beat until smooth, about 1 minute. Turn into generously greased Bundt pan or 10-inch tube pan. Let rise until double in sice, 30 to 45 minutes. * , .* ★ '■ Bake at 350 degreiw lor 3540 minutes, until golden'brown. Do not remove from pM«. With wooden pick, generously iderce top. v Set aside % cup preserves. Combine remaining preserves with 2 tablespoons nectar; reserve f(lr glaze. Combine reserved V» cup preserves with remaining nectar and rum flavorbtg; pour over top of bread. Let stand In pan 15 minutes. ,, Invert onto serving plate. Drizzle with glaze mixture. Serve warm or cool. WE FUniN FOOD PRICES " City Side Carnation Evap. Milk UVz-oz. CampbeN’s Pork & Beans 1-Lb. "f $1 00 Can I for | 4-Fisherjnan Ocean Perch BISOUICK 39* Box 2-lb., 8-oz. 1-Lb. Pkg. 39‘ HAWAIIAN RED PUNCH Idaho Crinkly Cut FRENCH FRIES •.“ 69* 1-Qt., 14-Oz. Can 29< ARMOUR CORN BEEF 49c AJAX CLEANSER 10< 14-Oz. Can 12-Oz. Can USDA CHOICE T-BONE STEAK CUBE STEAK STEAK... TopQuoCt^ pAmhiee PUFFS Facial Tissue Assorted Colors 22' Shedd’s SSI,an DRESsme 39' —CITY SIDE- STARKIST TUNA FISH 6V2-01. Can jmMi ^ " •Limit Three with Coupon "4 ■■ J Sun. Hrs. 10-9 A Open 9 hM. to 9 P.M. CITY M, SUPER SIDE/1\ MARKET 338-0377/^ \1716 Joslyn 3 Blocks North of Walton Blvd. THE PONTIAC PEESS, THTJBSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1969 C—8 PEARrRASPBERRY SPARKLJE—Fruit to start the mfeal is always welcome. This attractive combination of canned pears and frozen raspberries. is enhanced with carbonated beverage or light wine. Try this treat sometime also fw a Ughtr Ignore Green Skin Oranges tinged with green or bronze-colored marks are often passed by in preference to those that are orapge. But consumers take note: color is not always a reliable index for internal eating quality, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Quality oranges are firm and heavy for their size with finely textured skin. ★ ★ ♦ Organes are harvested complete maturity. A greenish cast .or green spots do not mean that the orange is inunature. Late in the season re-greening often occurs befcwe an old crop is picked. This results as nature supplies chlorphyll to a new crop of toit developing on the trees, ADD COLOR To satisfy consumer demands for orange colored growers artificially color the fruit. In such cases, the orange will bear the words “color added.” ★ ★ Oranges from Florida and Texas often are russeted. This tan, brown or blackish mottling or specking over the skin. Again, it has no effect on eating quality. * ★ ★ Buying oranges by the bag is generally less expensive than hand selecting each one. This holds true when the quantity can be refrigerated and eaten before spoilage begins. ★ ★ ★ Oranges are valued nutri-ti(Hially as a source of vitamin C. One orange ot. one-half cup orange juice provides t h necessary amount of vitamin C needed each day for good health. Combine Fruits for First Course Oiilled and sparkling, this canned pear and ra^berry cocktail awakes the appbtite. A light refreshing fruit combination, sharpened with a tang of lime is just the thing to serve before a hearty meal. Bartlett pear halves are lightly tinted ' raspberry syrup and carbonated beverage or light wine is added before serving to give zing to the fruits. Pears canned at their tasty best, are universally accepted as the staple among canned fruits. Popular with all ages, canned pears ace frequently the first fruit given to babies and to persons on special diets. Though most often served chilled in their own syrup, the uses of canned pes limitless. Juicy and mild in flavor they combine amiably With meats, pastries, dairy products and other fruits Versatile canned pears prove to be a real hostess helper. PEAR-RASPBERRY SPARKLE 1 (1-lb.) can Bartlett pea halves 1 (10-oz.) package froze raspberries Carbonated beverage or ligl wine Fresh lime Drain pears, reserving syrup. Drain raspberries, reserving 14 cup 'syrup. Combine syrups, heat to simmer. Pour hot syrup over pear halves and chill. Drain pears when lightly tinted. Place one pear half and several thawed raspberries in each serving dish. Just before serving add small amount of chilled beverage to each dish. Serve with slice of lime and crisp crackers. Oatmeal Cookies Are Special OATMEIAL JUMBLES — The chewiness of rolled oats, coconut and raisins, the tangy flavor of orange and the crunchiness of nutmeats make this cookie something to talk about. Cookies are for sharing. They’re passed between friends, regions, generations and countries. With each exchange, the basic recipe is varied, which can sometimes mean an improvement. Cookies provide the baker with ^ chance to dividualistic and inventive because new recipes ere as abundant as stockmarket tips. Everyone loves cookie: They’re small, easy to eat and handy to grab on the run. Small children, growing youngsters and not so small grownups relish the idea of cookies and milk most any time. ★ ★ These Oatmeal Jumbles are special, for they combine the tastes of rolled oats, orange, nuts, raisins and coconut in a way. Oatmeal Jumbles are more moist, chewier and better than most! They’re a welcome change from the usual cookie recipe. OATMEAL JUMBLES % cup butter or margarine 1 cup firmly packed brown sugar 2 eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 teaspoon grated orange peel 1 cup sifted all-purpose flour Mi teaspoon baking powder Vi cup milk 1V4 cups rolled oats (quick or old fashioned, uncooked) 1 cup chopped nutmeats Com and Bacon Good With ^gs Glaze Cookies Brush homemade or bakery ugar cookies with light com syrup; sprinkle with colored sugar and shake off excess. Let dry. “Paint” com symp designs with a fine brush; sprinkle with sugar. Here’s just the right dish for a threesome. Scrambled Eggs With Corn and Bacon 6 slices bacdn 1 can (814 ounces) creamsMe com y« teaspoon salt 5 large eggs, slightly beaten ★ ★ * In a 10-inch skillet over low heat, cook bacon, turning as y, until crisp. Remove bacon to brown paper to drain; cut in about 1-inch crosswise pieces. ★ ★ ★ Pour off bacon fat from skillet; return 2 tablespoons of the fat to the skillet; add c«nf{ and salt; heat until very hot. ’Turn heat low; pour in eggs. As eggs set, with a large kitchen spoon draw them away from bottom at sides and center; avoid constant stirring. Do this until eggs are just moist on top; remove at ohce from heat and turn over top of eggs to set. Sprinkle with bacon. Makes 3 generous servings. Top With Cheese Here’s a vegetable for the cheese lover in your family. Cook a small chopped onion in some butter and add a can of tomatoes, a sprinkle of sugar and some toasted bread cubes. When you’re ready to serve top with crumbled Roquefort or blue cheese. Tastes wonderful. 1 cup raisins 1 cup flaked m shredded coconut Heat oven to slow (32S degrees. Beat butter until creamy. Gradually add sugar, beating until fluffy. Blend in . vanilla and orange Sift toge^er flour and baking powder. Add to creamed mixture; blend well. Blend in milk. Stir in rolled oats, nutmeats, raisins and coconut. Drop by teaspoonfuls onto ungreased cookie sheets. Bake preheated oven 12 to 15 minutes or until lightly browned. Sehago Wider Ke®P*f 50 / i m "•iS}* 'fc. [ONIONS"^-’ 10-^ ORANGES'^690 ItOMAWk . 777 . . FRESH CELLO 29' gRAPEFRmT’^E»>.79C Ired radish . . POTATOES 1 CABBAGE CELLO PKG. FLORIDA SWEET 2-15^ ji9! Michigan FRESH SOLID lb. TO* 10‘ Ca\i< JInuof |rlVmuO HICKORY SMOKED HO IHAMBURGER, FRESH ,b.C4c SROUND 90 IHOT dogs Or. 1 skinless . 3">n” SAUSAGE ^ 49' PORK ROAST LEAN ..... -39' BACONS!^ 4 lb. $100 iBOLOGNA OR. 1 CHUNK .,. -35' (BEEF ROAST ^ - Farm Fresh ISi^'A’ Small Doz. 608 W. HURON STREET J^EAR WEBSTER SCHOOL SUPER MARKET Open Weekly 9-9-Fri., Sat. 9-9 tojKStf cSl HnlHUITHIMIS YOUR CHOICE Buy Now and Save! | MILD DURE SLICED BACON ■giTr SPARERIBS SHORT RIBS 39< Pork Chops • blade I-1 ■■ • LOIN SORTING I LARGE ^ 78 Noifh Saginaw DOWNTOWN PONTIAC OPEN . FRIDAY EVENING TIL 7 P.M. 4348 Dixie Highway DRAYTON PUINS Wednesday 9:00 A.M. to 6:30 P.M. Thurs. Thru Saturday 9 A.M. to.O P.M. Sundays 0 A.M. to 6 P.M. CLOSED MONDAYS AND TUESDAYS Quality Meat Since 1931 122D North Perry AT MADISON DPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. SUNDAYS 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. TIIK l’(»NTIAC I’RKSS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13^ 1069 > you’ll "UWE" SHOmilG FEUCE! nUFT FAMOUS MIRACLE WHIP Sliced or Halves DEL MONTE PEACHES irs im ;44* mm \.X30EX./ FLOUR ' 1-Lb., 14-01. Gan ORANGE or GRAPE DRINK 25| HUDSON FARMS MUSHROOMS 5 *1"^ Regular or Drip HILLS BROS. COFFEE HONEY BRUNCH COMBO - Honey in the hot cocoa and the fragrant cornmeal muffins adds extra glamour to foods de- Honey Has Sweet Role in Cocoa and Muffins signed for morning eating. Honey has a delicate flavor that can’t be duplicated. CAL-OEST TOMATOES Packed by Rolled Sandwiches Have Date Centers' Whether served for a “Just plain breakfast" or for a fancier brunch, this Honey Brunch Cocoa is a drink that’s not only good for you, but tastes delicious, too. This fragrant cocoa Is a real tempter as its 3 t a b 1 e s p o o n s shortening, whole pitted dates. Multiply rich aroma wafts through the' melted this recipe to fit your needs, house. It should bring the! sift flour once; measure, add] Remove the crust from the family on the run. baking powder and salt, and siftibread. Flatten the bread with a cup cornmeal Vl cup prepared, diced apple 1 egg, well beaten Mi cup milk Vl cup honey Looking for a neat little treat to have on hand for a friendly I get-together? Here’s a simple hors d’oeiivres idea. All you need per person is one j si ice of dark bread, one table-I spoon cream cheese and three rolling pin and spread it with cream cheese. Across the small end of the bread, arrange the 3 dates, end to end. Roll the bread, jelly roll fashion, with the dates in the center. I Wrap in plastic wrap or wax FOOD BUYS MICHIGAN RUSSET POTATOES umIimMIbS Fresh CountFjL Style This one-in-a-million breakfast again. Add cornmeal. Wash, bevprage is a rich and luscious!pare, and dice apple. Combine mixture of cocoa, milk and egg, milk, honey, and shorten-honey, spiced with sweet and ing. Add all at once to flour-pungent cinnamon sticks. The [cornmeal mixture, stirring only sticks can also serve double enough to dampen all Rour. duty as stirrers, which should'p'old (n apple. be of special interest to the * ' * * and refrigerate for 2-3 youngsteric ^ ^ well-greased 2-inch hours. Cut ipto 4-6 slices and you p.Tr.'c'i- broil^ bacon and glasses ofj frosty orange juice. This is easy to fix as a breakfast; and it would be fine as a brunch menu, too. HONEY BRUNCH COCOA 1 quart milk 2 sticks cinnamon ’ 4 cup cocoa teaspoon salt ' 4 cup honey Additional cinnamon sticks for swizzling, if desired. Scald milk with cinnamon sticks. Mix cocoa and salt; blend in cup hot milk until smooth. Add to scalded milk and stir in honey. Continue heating; mix with rotary beater before serving. Makes 5 servings. HONEY CORN MUFFINS cup sifted flour 1'4 teaspoons baking powder '4 teaspoon salt Want Pink Eggs?^ Beet Juke Is \ Pickle Liquid The juice saved from canned beets makes fine pickled eggs. Pickled Eggs Juice from a 1-pound can of sliced or julienne beets 1 cup cider vinegar cup firmly packed light brown sugar fi whole cloves 1 stick cinnamon 6 hard-cooked shelled eggs Into a 1-quart saucepan pour the beet juice; add the remaining ingredients except the eggs. Slowly bring to a boil, stirring a few times; boil gently for 10 minuites. Remove the cloves and cinnamon. Put the eggs in a 1-quart jar pour the hot spiced mixture over them. Press a wad of transparent plastic wrap over the eggs to keep them submerged. Cover arid refrigerate overnight for mild-flavor light-color for 2 to 4 nights for spicy-flavor dark-color eggs. Makes 3 to 6 servings. * * *' Some eaters may want to sprinkle salt on their eggs. The texture of the egg white changes when it stands in the Juice mixture for several days, becoming slightly “rubbery” — as pickled eggs are suppos^ to be. PALMOLIVE LIQUID DETERGENT SALAOA TEA BAGS........... DOGGIE DINNER DOG FOOD ... Ovon Fresh ROYAL GOLD DREAD t-lb., 12-Oz. Can 22‘Y i' 3 0 lb. 0 Jar 88*' \ Lb. "lif IVz-lb. aff Can 44* 1-Pint, 6-oz. Piastii .44* 100-ct. Pkg. T8‘y 16Vk^tz. Waight Can 7*// Assorted Decorator C 1 Mb., ! 4.ez. Loaf i 28|[ DEiSI Leon, Country Style Our Own Homemade Armour Star ■ SPARERIBS Pork SAUSAGE StoadNCaal - 58* ’38* '.ii:68* 1 Fresh Fresh SLICED Fresh PORK 1 naRNKS Side Pork LIVER 1 “ 38* “58* “■aflfeg Roll ■Pack I OPQ IRETAILER'' ^ WONDER BREAD 5 $100 Loaves | Grade A MILK YJ 2 o'ir. 89' KMFT Afresh ORANWi JUICE ViGallsn Jug Vine Ripenad TOMATOES ib. 39' mions....3"^25' APPLES McIntosh Spies Grcenlings $12 Jonathan ^ | -. _ . , Winter Bananas ■ '/^Bushel NOW Rent U-Haul Trucks and Trailers Local or One-Way Gat the Oast far Lau at Corner of Clarktton and Sathabaw Roads to Mila Nartli af Sathabaw Exit Open Daily, Excapt Monday, 10:00 to 1:00 Saaltest mtF’alUlF .01. 39< Pillsbury BISCUITS e-ox. Tube 8: FELICE lean CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS LOIN CUT RIB CUT BIRDS EVE Fresh Frozen 895 995 lO-Ox. Weight Pkg. 14 C Your Choieo Lean RIB END PORKROASTai a LOIN END PORK ROAST lib. CHEF CHOICE 28< RICH'S COFFEE Rl Pint 1 D< C^tn. I Qi GALIFORNIASUNKIST ORANOlSf 111 SIZE DOz. 59* 1116 W. HURON ST. Salt Datas: THE I^ONTIAC TREgS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13, 1009 C—!i OPEN SUNDAY 9 till 91 5ES s 22« littarve th> Wight to Limit Quantities All our specials are go€id 7 days a week Prices start today. Febniarv 13 SUPERMARKET 1249 BALDWIN AVE. ^ JUST ONE BLOCK OFF COLUMBIA AYE. f ^YME HOME Of . . . W , A a a a a a a (1, /At Seta’s Marke Michigan BiET SUGAR with Coupon and Any Purchase COUPON MUST BE REDEEMED BY 2 19-69 29 d Any Pun EDEEMED BY 1 mmmmmm Young Steer BEEF LIVER 39 YOUR CHOICE SEFA’S EVERYDAY LOW PRICES Birds Eye SQUUH Sehaatar’sBraad MaBDoeaM’s T Nik .f. eoitar’s SIraiRad Baby Food .. Ore-Idea lastairt Potato Flakes . fioMoa Quality Butter ■ 12-oz. Pkg, 39* SIVa-lb. 99* 2V2-Gal. 09* ■ AVi-oz. Jar 8* . 13-oz. Pkf. 39* . Mb. 09* 10-oz.' Pkgs. Del Mente Sweet Peas ...........s-i it., i oz. ^1.00 Del Mente Corn . Sterfire Luncheon Meat .. . . 5 Mb. 1-oz. ^laOO 3 12-oz. Cans MjBB Queen Mary 39* 3/*1A0 THK PUX I’IAC iaiKSS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1969 Bridge Tricks From Jacobys 11 Bluegrass Parks |j LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -I There are 68 parks with about 7.50O aggregate acres of public parkland in the Louisville i-i metropolitan area. ROBIN MALONE NORTH ♦ QJiQ ♦ A K 8 f. n WEST EAST AK97 6 32 A85 WAK82 VQ94 ♦ Q2 ♦K93 4b2 AQ 10954 SOUTH (Dj Neither vvilnemble West North East South 3 e DHo Pa.ss Pb.ss Opening lead —¥ K By OSWALD AND JAMES JACXIBY The New Jersey Bridge * * * I^iague has a monthly publica- South could have ruffed iij tion called “The Declarer” dummy and gone down two but which prints some very good South tried to make the con-bridge articles. One by Dick fracL^iMuiff»^tn^ Budd, entitled “The Last Dropi ' " ' ' ' of Blood,” is the basis of today’s article. | Q~The bidding has been; This hand does not really be-i long in a publication entitled “Ihe Declarer’ unless you want to see a declarer hitting his head against a stone wall. The game was match point duplicate and the bidding spirited to say the least. North’ three diamond call was quite enterprising and East’s double a real gamble. East might well have tried three hearts but he was out for a top score and he Bure got one. Ihe defense started briskly East signaled with the nine of and led his last club. \Vest ruf- ing heavily over the lyOrld’s inhearts and West continued with fed and led a spade. East was dustfial cities may/W spread-thc ace and eight. East was in extra careful not to ruff but ing into a nebuloqB^veil virtually with the queen and led back the declarer was down to trumps encircling the planet with eight of spades and had to, whereupon East possible effects on the earth’s * * * still made his king of diamonds w e a t h e r , a meteorologist South went right up with the for down three. Ibelieves. / ace, led a club to dummy's king ^ --------------/----- and finessed his 10 of diamonds. THE BETTER RALP West took his queen and cashed the king of spades for down one. Then he looked around for new worlds to conquer or, specifically, for another trick. He could see that plus 100 for down one would not be a good I score. Finally he hit on the winning defense. He led his fourth heart.This play gave declarer a iruff and a discard but South knew that declarer had nothing worth discarding. West North East South 1 dk Pass 1 ♦ Pass 1 V Pass 1 * Pa.ss 2 A ‘ Pa.ss 3 Pass You, Soutli, hold: ? AAK«5 ¥K764 432 4|bA98 What do you do now? A—Bid (our spadca. No guarantee goci with this bid but we hate to slop one trick below game and we do have two kings and very good trumps, TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of responding one diamond, partner rc.sponds one heart. What do you do Answer Tomorrow •y SYDNIY OMARR "Tha wiM I Ailretogy peinn mm way. .......... ARIES (March 21-Aprll l»): Accent witht*, dealran lamlly harmony asiantlal. Don't Ptrr-“ —' LJ3TSA LUCK, I'M AFRAIP THAT MERaV STANPING ON A ROCK DOESN'T CHANGE THE RACT THAT YOORE SHORT FOR ME 1 fA by Tom Ryan DONALD Dl Utv L.. Perkins, Unkm Lake. WHHam R. Rsdtke, Sturgli. Tsrew I. Christy, Blrmfn^si Wl«lsmt,e. Derby, --------- and Pmtricit A. Britt, ^ PICTUPE OP 'vOU IN 1 PHAPMACy SCHOOL ? A I DIDN'T KNOW . VOU / \ TC>OK PHAP/WACV ! ^ . VES . ^PIWST LOVE '1 ALWAVS WAJNTED TO~^ BECOVtE A PWAPAAACIST, 1 A,»sjr^ LJA\ycr ✓ AAV OWN l^UNKeO DPUGSTOPE/^qUT-? By Walt Disney I PLUNKEO AAIL.K , SHAKES, BAMAISA SPLITS AND TUNA ) SANDWICHES.' THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 19R9 e—7 LUXURIOUS NYLON CARPET AT SPECIAL SAVINGS! SAVE *4 SQ. YD. SAVE SQ. YD. Random Sheared Nylon 100 per cent continuous filament nylon pile exceeds Du Font's 501" standards. Beautiful tri-level random sheared design in six decorator-perfect colors. Heavy-duty and extra long wearing. Made by a new process which insures uniform height. 5 99 RICH OAK LEAF NYLON Sp. YD. 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Size: 6'x3'x|l/2'. 10-shelf tandem. 18x72x72-in.. Reg. 19.99..................15.99 8 REG. 7.99 Durable "golden pineapple" finish, walnut finish steel posts. Self-level floor guards. The shelves adjust at P/j-ii'* SIZE: 4'x10"x2' JUST SAY CHARGE IT! rU •out on \ MOM) VV THIU [lUDW 10:00 A.M. TO <):()() |».M. ^ VIA K!)\^ 0;.iO V.M. K) 0 V \f SIM)A\ 12 NOON TO 3 P.M. e 6H2-10K> THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUAHY 18, 1909 C—9 /VIOIVTOO/VVERY WARD OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. TO 0 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 AM. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY NOON TO 5 P.M. 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Brighten up your kitchen now! ^ 20 OFF OPEN MONDAY THRU FRID VY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M, SATURDAY 9:50 A.M. JO 9 i».\l SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 6H2-I9i0 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 13. umo C—11 r 10 «.m. to 9 ».in. Sot. 9:30 ajn. f 9 p.m. L AYAW SAIE SALE ENDS SUNDAY OF TILLERS and MOWERS! REG. 115.44 SPIN FILTER...99.44 POOL MAINTENANCE KIT ....... .34.99 WOODEN POOL LADDER .......19.99 Enjoy every summer day with a big pool in your own backyard! Features a rugged steel frame, walls. Fill it just once and use it all season! Drains with a standard hose. See our fine selection . . . pools for every need and budget! Pontiac Mall open monoay vmv Friday lOiOO A.M. TO 9:00 F.IM. . SATURDAY 9;S0 A.M, TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO S P.M. * 6R2.4940 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 18, 1960 V AAONTGOAAERY THE TURNPIKE TIRE SAVE *5 ON THE TIRE BUILT FOR HIGH-SPEED DRIVING BLACKWALl TUBELESS SIZES REG. PRICE EACH SALE PRICE ONLY PLUS F.E.T. EACH BLACKWALL TUBELESS SIZES REG. PRICE EACH SALE PRICE ONLY PLUS F.E.T. EACH ’With trade-in tir, Conquer turnpike "jitters" with HST! It has more traction, greater stability. Gives you confidence on those long, high-speed drives. Strong 4-ply nylon cord body. Resists impact damage, heat build-up, flex fatigue— a dependable partner on the endless turnpike! With lifetime quality, road hazard guarantee and 36 mo. treadwear guarantee. Automotive Centers open DAILY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M., SUNDAY NOON TO 5 P.M. s iu: t:M)s sinsDAY 6.50-13 tubeless blackwoll plus 1.79 federal exise tax OPEN MONOAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 RM. SATURDAY 9;SO A,M, TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO S P.M. ♦ 682-4940 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, C—13 Four 'Emperors' Dominate Life on Okinawa NAHA. Okinawa (AP) — The •ich and powerful of Okinawa are called the “shl-tenno,“ or four emperors. TTie gratitude and good will of military men from the United States put them where they are today. A land often ravaged by typhoons, Okinawa was sent reeling in 1945 by a human storm more appaliing than any created by nature. The last desperate battle of World War II left 250,000 Okinawan and 10,000 American corpses on the wastwi land. When this had subsided, the American victor stood indeci- sively for four years andd the ruins, uncertain what to do with so poor a prize. * ★ ★ 1949, another typhoon— from the sea—worked more havoc, with $80 million damage. This, and the emergence of communism on the Chhiese mainland, prodded the United States out of its reverie. Okinawa became a U.S. military base from which, it was hoped, com- munism could be contained in der his Ryuhokwal—Ryukyus Asia. I Phoenix AssociaUon. URNFn TO KRiii’iuo*! Kokuba s Kokuwa-kai—Peace URNED TO FWEITOS Association-is Many of the island’s leadCTS more extensive: construction, had been killed or had fled. Theiyenegr^ cement, movie theaters, HURON Starts FRI. THIS IS THE TRUE STORY OF THE SELP-CONFESSEDI BOSTON STRANGLER. BOSTON STRANGLER tony Curtis Henry Fonda George Kennedy Kamaichl’s Taisenkwal — Large Fan Association—controls construction, department stores, the distriWlon of imported movies, fertilizer, real estate, NAHA port transporta-ti, 21 Allison a will be done. UTTLE EXPANSION One senior economist says: “Many proposals could have been put forward five years ago, when we didn’t have politi-cal pressures. We have concen- were tied up by the sugar industry which is subsidized by the Japanese government,” he said. Some $21 million has gone into sugar loans in the past five years, he added. Sugar—the biggest Okinawan crop—shouldn’t and couldn’t exist without the big Japanese subsidy, other Americans say. PATERNALISM Another senior American government adviser who deplores tie four-emperors setup says it is a form of patemalim which chokes off competition in favor of family-type corporations and discourages the foreign investor. The most encouraging investment has been that of American oil companies. Gulf’s stake already is high. Bidding is on for a 10-year military contract to supply fuel oil for the power needs of the bases, as well as a three-year contract for all other oil and gas needs. ★ it The winner will have to build a refinery on Okinawa, which will require roads leading to it. The U.S. civil administration hopes the $100-mUlion investment which results will give the Okinawan economy The departure of Unger, whose two-year administration djtrated on the infrastructure:!brought Okhiawa closer to rev-V roads, power, water systems, jersion, was marked by a mili-^Ipouring tremendous amounts tary review at Hamby Airfield. into them, but very little into industrial expansion, or secondary industry.” He blames the four emperors A^scsrtinf' *"'* ‘’"’"•|for having no long-range _ ’ 'Roger A.' ch^l^nwn, »o Albert, j cites the sugar cane industry as gom«io”'Regin.; Cep.' and an example of classlc inefficlen-' Loretta Young, Ml Thomas J. Lafnear, 6 Falrgrova and Stephen and Linda F. Warttien, S3 Thorpe. Keith A. Brown, Leamington, Can. a Margaret C. Pierce, Walled Lake. Larry D. Rag^ale, 4S3 S. Edith a Carol J. God^Itn, MS Draper. ‘Most of the financial re-“ I sources which were available '• for long-term development loans In the background, moored to the dock, loomed a U.S. power ship which long has helped supply base and Okinawan electric needs. To the north, a harWnger of things to come, rose the steel skeleton of a new 170,009-kilowatt power plant being built at a cost of $19 millicm by Japan’s Mitsui Co. AlfOOUIAUIlUl ^ __________ THBCEABCOItOF THKUaHTHmo^DE ATONY RICHARDSON HIM »ANAVB(ON-‘COLORI7D.Um UMMdSrtiltl /ZSaKEECO Open 6i45> Feature 1 and 9i20 nnnnnnrY The Exciting, Enchanting PARTY Restaurant Book Your Spring And Summer Parties, Proms And Weddings, And Bowling Banquets Now! Glow Dancing — Now Every Friday And Saturday To The Psychedelic Rhythms Of Berg & Joy In The Waitoma Grotto Lounge HAWAIIAN GARDENS The ExcitinK Party Restaurant 4501 Grange Hall Rood — Holly, Michigan 48442 RESERVATIONS: 634-8231 ' Sealab 3 Will Teach Navy Lot About War in the Deep! LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) To landlubbers, some ‘aspects of Sealab 3 may sound like horseplay—but when the experiment is over the Navy will know a lot more about how to wage war 100 fathoms deep, among other study also will show what colors sion of lights and machinery on are best for deep-water camou-the ocean floor, flage. I He would not talk about future PRIMARY GOAL mammals „ , , . „ but some possible applications t ^lare obviour A school of por- year-old New York^ m diarge' time-fused high of a team tot wiU train two ^ a porpoises and two sea lions dur-CTowded harbor by pingers The project calls for fiveir r—»— teams of eight or nine men to two-month stay ^j. spend 12 da% each in a 57-by- “’e bottom, says the primary , ^ 12-foot habitat on the ocean gers could be trained to floor off nearby San Clemente "messages and tools. Island. 1 “These mammals are Intelli- * * * I gent and very inquisitive,” he ’Their work tasks will include said in an interview. “We ex-romping with porpoises and sea pect to have our hands full chas- messen- gers could be trained to home in on the distinctive underwater sounds of certain types of ships or submarines This is where a full catalog of marine noises would come in --------- tiUUlUC IlUAOCO VTUUlU wiiic: Its eavesdropping on noisy mg away the wild ones that: say no two ships OPB YEU ROmil SUNDAY LIQUOR Only at MOREY’S ; v GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB VI WILL YOU SEE LIVE LOBSTERS at Sensible Prices Wed. Noonday Buffet Luncheon, Thurs. Buffet Dinner SALAD TABLE INDESCRIBABLE SEAFOODS AAARCH OF DIMES DINNER SING-ALONG PIANO BAR You'll Sing, You'll See MOREY’S 13 GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB fish, building a shelter not much abound in these waters and bigger than a child’s playhouse, keeping them from interfering and a game of hide-and-seek, j with the ones we’re trying to using objects painted in Easter-j train.” egg colors. I porpoises and sea lions. This ail sounds innocent already domesticated.in shallow enough, but: j seawater pens at Point Mugu, Poipoises and sea lions Calif., will be taught first to de-illy can be trained to de- liver objects from the surface to divers on the bottom and even to the Sealab itself. Later, they learn to find a diver some distance away by homing In on a “pinger”—an inaudible, low-frequency radio beeper he can sound in case of trouble or when he wants to send the mammalj back to the Sealab for a tool. j sound exactly alike and that sea mammals, who can hear sounds that do not register on human ears, would have no trouble picking out the noise ture” of an enemy vessel. The countermeasure would be to equip vessels with sonar recordings that would confuse the mammals’ delicate ears. assembly of a “repair and stoi^ I age station” on the ocean floor. 1 This structure, 10 feet high and I 10 feet in diameter, will be I made of 24-inch sections of sted I pipe, each weighing several | hundred pounds. ★ ★ ★ The sections will be lifted by a hook attached to a tank of variable buoyancy and shoved into f place one atop the other by a team of divers headed by Lt. ’ Cmdr. J. E. McDole, 40, a veter-underwater construction man. ★ * ★ After a steel dome is placed atop the cylindrical tank, the water inside will be forced out with pressurized air, leaving watertight structure which could be fitted with lights and : workbench. • stroy ships, submarines, underwater missile pods and oil well drilling sites. • Soniferous noise-making marine creatures often mimic the pounding of engines and the ! hissing of torpedoes. Only by detecting and filtering out this un-Iderwater “static” can a subma-jrine skipper know what’s really I going on in his not-so-silent world. i been conditioned to wear ____ _________ • The shelter which Sealab 3 nesses with a pouch for mes- we’re not sure ® larger scale could house aquanauts plan to build is de-Usages and tools, and to respond^ comes from.” :nuclei missiles,^^ready to be signed of sections of steel pipe, set one atop the other. A larger Bomholdt said both types of ^ jj ^ Wiliam Bunton, 35 San Diego, Calif., civilian diving supervisor for Sealab 3 who will be in charge of the noise identification project, says, “It’s far from a silent world down there.” Tve heard whistles, grunts. - - , I.. u m p i n g, pounding and underwater messengers fj®ve!g^j.gg^jjjjjg_gjjj^g ^ g^ ggj.y spine. In FAR FROM THE MADDENING CROWD (Birr NOT TOO FAR.) Close to every Boborbao business and ofTice, the Kingsley Inn Hotel has more than 170 Inxunous gnest rooms, as well as conference rooms, and private dining rooms for meetings, banquets, conventions for groups from 10 to 400. As a part of the Kingsley Inn Restaurant, the Hotel continues the tradition of service and luxury that have been known as the Kingsley keynote for more than 30 years. The Kingsley Inn, where your pleasure is onr business. The Kingsley Inn Hotel 'Woodward at Long Lake Road Bloomfield Hills MI 4-1400 ^ '3 JO 4.5144 . J YOU MUST BE 18 - PROOF IS REQUIRED OPEN 9:45 A.M. CONTINUOUS ALL DAY 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC OPEN 9:45 A.M. Show at 10:00 A.M. Continuous-334-4436 Aquanauts won’t be able to take off their masks in this first version of a sea hut, however. McDole says It will be pressurized with air, not their oxygen-helium breatlUng mbdure. A breath of fresh air would be toxic because it cixitains nitrogen, a gas that causes a crippling sometimes fatal du divers call the bends. In the future, such structures version of toe same construction could serve as a missile-launching silo. • Multicolored objects to be strewn outside the habitat will help determine what hues of paint should be used on tools ■that might be lost. The same to signals from at least 300 ...... launched from their sea-floor yards away. The trick now is to| UIFFICULT TASK silos in much the same way Po- see if they function as well in One^of the toughest tasks for laris missiles are fired from greater depths and in the confu-l Sealab 3 aquanauts will be toe| submarines. JUST A REMINDER For all the boys and girls who are 12 years or under . . . don't forget to come to.the RED BARN and fill out your BIRTHDAY CARD so that on YOUR DAY you will receive FREE ... OUR RED BARN BIRTHDAY GIFT TO YOuT 1 - A DELICIOUS RED BARN HAMBURGER 2-A BAG OF HOT CRISPY FRENCH FRIES • 3 - A MILK SHAKE (your favorite flavor) NO PURCHASE NECESSARY RED BRRH AAA e 4 M 4 44s Elizabeth Lake Road Uv4e'*9 141 Across From the Mall — PLUS 2nd BIO HIT— . THE SCENES ^ In IN THIS FILM Color ARE REAL-TOO REAL FOR THE IMMATURE! inondo xreud0 g WORLD OP FREUD) «91t( jntll tKabern STYLE SHOW EVERY FRIDAY During Luncheon 12:30 to 1:30 Featuring the LATEST FASHIONS FOR WINTER OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 623-0060 Yonr Host Mr. Ken Wright 5838 Dixie Highway Waterford, Michigan WANT TO SELL SNOWMOBILES, TOBOGGANS, ICE SKATES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD---TO PLACE YOURS. CALL 332-8181. C—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 196» 5'.' ''^' > ' >;' ,*- ^ Pictured are Shirley Huret, Pontiac; Mrs. Francis Poulin, Lake Orion; Mrs. Merna Oakley, Bloomfield, Michigan People Who Read The Pontiac Press Every Evening Have More To Talk About The Next Day LADIES IN THE KNOW exercise their inquiring sense wherever they get together ... ever searching for what's new in products and services to benefit their families or themselves. The Pontiac Press is their newspaper where fine shops and stores advertise daily presenting up-to-the' minute style and top quality for the thrifty buyers along with fashion news and popular recipes. When you're searching for the best buys for your money, you too will know why the Pontiac Area has been called Oakland County's "value center" and The Pontiac Press tells you why. THE PWriAC PRESS For Home Ddivery Dial 332-8181 THE POJCTIAC PKESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, C—15 The following are top prices covering sales o|t locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Market Inches to Downside Interest Conflict for Lockwood? Apples, Northern Spy. bu. Apples, Steele Red, C.A., bu. VBGBTABtSS Beets, Topped, bu.......... Cabbage, Curly, bu......... Cabbage, Red. bu.......... Cabbage, Standard Verlaty, bu Carrots, toopecr, bu...... new YORK (AP) stock market inched to the downside early this afternoon after a wobbly morning. Trading was moderately active. Losses outnumbCTed gains by about 25 issues on the New York Stock Exchange, going into the afternoon after wiping out a small plurality of gains that existed in the morning. The certain, virtually trendless sessions v^ch have prevailed duf^ ing the past four weeks while the market has been edging to the upside. UNDERCURRENT I Horseradish/ p ». bag The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up 1.18 at 950.27. It was another one of the un- Brokers said selective pur- major news developments to give the market a positive shove one way or another, a potentially inflationary factor was a reported move by the U.S. Treasury to obtain what would, in ef- of blue chips by institutional investors formed the undercurrent for the lackluster market. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was off .2 at 360.7 with industrials up .4, rails off .7 and utilities unchanged. While Wall Street still awaited dect, be an $80 billion increase Psrsnlps, W bu. ...................... Parsnips, C*llo-Pak, dz............... Potatoes, 20-lb. bag ................. Potatoes, 50-lb. bag ................. Radishes, Black, Vb bu.......... ... Radishes, Red, Hothouse, dz. bch. Rhubarb, Hothouse, 5-lb. box ......... Rhubarb, Hothouse, dz. bch ........... in the National debt limit. Prices were generally higher on the American Stock Exchange. Data Processing paced the Ust on activity as it advanced more than 3. Asamera Oil was close behind it in volume and slumped more than a point. Squash/ Hubbard, Turnips, ------- LE Celary, “ The New York Stock Exchange State Senator-CPA Firm Link Queried LANSING (AP)-House Democrats raised the specter of a senator’s possible conflict of interest Wednesday as they shelved for one week a measure to speed some multimillion-dol-lar utility rate increases. Rep. James Del Rio, D-De-troit, said he wanted time to ask Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley whether there is a connection between “a certain senator” certain audit firm” which could end up with a $300,-000 state contract. The senator, it was learned, was Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, R-St. Louis, and the firm was Yeo & Veo Sion, said Yeo & Yeo is one of “eight or 10” firms which could get the $300,000 job if the House approves it. “- LOCKWOOD SELLS Lockwood, who is a CPA, [said he had sold his own ac-j?'" livj hunting firm to Yeo & Yeo - '*2 when he became a legisiator in 1962 and receives compensation which does not depend on the amount of business the Saginaw firm does. Lockwood added he is not a member of the firm. “I hope they (the House Dem-ocrats) do carry through with this,” Lockwood said. “Then I’ll get some good publicity.” He added he is the only legislator who files annual financial I ’ - jj'statements , with the governor and the secretary of state. Lawmakers are not required to bare their financial affairs. U'OLI'nES PETITION Petitions have come from Michigan Consolidated Gas Co. Consumers Power Co. and other state-regulated utilities. The commission must approve the requested rate increases before they can become effective. Rep. James Farnsworth, R-Plainwell, urged prompt action on the Senate-approved resolution, saying the commission’s own staff is too small to handle the big auditing chore. “For many weeks now the public service commission has been stymied,” he said. Broker Turndowns Irk Small Investors NEW YORK-Some brokers are still refusing to accept the business of small investors despite an almost universally accepted belief that the freedom! to own is basic American right. For practical purposes, most people cannot! acquire stock except through! a broker. In re-| fusing this business, therefore, brokers assume a tremendous power and obligation. “We cannot withhold or ration our services on a discriminatory basis, or trouble will ensue." CUNNIFF Among the latest to argue against the practice is the National Association of Investment Clubs, which represents some 11,000 investing groups throughout the county. the days of oligarchy when the right to own was the right of the rich? Haack reminded his listeners —the big Insurers, the mutual and pension funds, trusts, dowments and foundations which now owp more than 30 per cent of all securities, that: “Ours is a national and international market which must serve all investors —the large and the small, the modest and the affluent, the round-lot and the odd-lot.” DEAL WITH THREAT But even Haack’s remarks, although more pertinent than those of most, securities officials, deal primarily with the threat to the structure of tlsp market through loss of liquidity rather than with the philosophical issue. -ru MATO I„ One of the philosophical issues The NAIC commented in its, j described this way by the innthlv tnapawne: “No matter_______ monthly magazine; how small the “No matter ----- iNAIC; "... can we, at the e prwent ’’“’^jwhim of an overburdened busi-°!!.iH.=Tnessman, be forced to return to Certified Public Accountants of i«ent on the _ Saginaw. ifeel it is critical. It is as critical Tom Hancock, deputy direc-jas if the people of New York, tor of the utilities section of the were denied the right to vote] State Fublic Service Commis- • - - because there were not ’The question, says the NAIC, “goes to the crucial philosophical fabric of our society and whether the basic fre«)oms of this democracy include the freedom to own." Among other possible conse- uences of refusing smidl orders; Even more institutionalizing of the market at a time when, according to Manuel Cohen, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the market cannot adequately handle the big block business of institutions. • A dry-up of the pool of liquidity, the millions of small orders that permit the matching of buy and sell orders. • Retardation of the small growth companies, often traded over the counter and often the type of company whose stock is purchased by small individuals and investment clubs. enough voting machines. IMPORTANT PRINCIPLE The paper jam, which isn’t completely the fault of the bro-. kers, may be the reason for turning down small business. AiMriTTF't; — 1-‘»" dord.- much greater importance. Some of the orders arbitrarily being refused would have been considered large a few years ago. But as the big mutual and pension funds and other institutions grow in power, their orders grow, also. Relatively, other orders shrink. Will SirhanChange Plea? Opening Statements Due nian and his attorneys can answer: Will he now plead guilty to assassinating Robert F. Kennedy. Consider this story from the NAIC editorial: “The investment club member was bitter, and rightfully so. His club broker had turned down a $3,000 purchase for an over-the-counter stock. This was a broker who had served the club for than 15 years, and he was dealing with a club which had a portfolio valued over $100,000.” Some members of the securities industry haven’t remained silent as the practice develops. Robert Haack, N.Y. Stock Exchange president, has brought up the matter at least twice in recent speeches. TALK TO CONFAB Speaking to the Institutional Investor Conference here a few weeks ago, Haack commented: DETROIT (UPI) *-American Detroiters American uaroiiere n <■ v c charged New Detroit Inc.- . 11 • i 4U fVCUliC _ _ aiming all its programs at Biltmore Hotel will city’s Negro population, and.^^ tf,e ignoring the Spanish-speakuigLj..gj pemsai of news- community. i papers and television will be “The New Detroit committee | monitored, made a great mistake, said Jessee M. Soriano, field coordinator for a f e d e r language program. Mutual Stock Quotations Fst InGth 10.49 Fla Gth 9.3210.18 Fnd,Lf 6.04 6.60 Founders 9.3610.23 Foursq 13.61 14.87 Franklin Group: Com Stk 7.48 8.20 We have become the forgotr Americans, and we no longer will be content with leftovers," said Tomas Chavez, of Pontiac, a spokesman for the Latin- American community “We don’t want all the turkey. But how about a drumstick?” ChaVez and other La tin-American leaders met with Robert W. Spenepr, vice president of New Detroit, which was formed to rebuild the city after the riot of July, 1967. Chavez said public school pupils of Mexican and Puerto Rican descent have the highest dropout rate of any minority group in the Detroit school system, and less than 35 per cent of these pupils graduate from high school. OmeoA VM ?.5« TOO fd Unavall Ona WmS 15.28 15.91 O'Nell 22.37 23.80 T ir.55 1273 13.23 13.23 1 Ind 23.11 23.80 Sr Indstry InsBk Stk t Inv CoAm 1i Irtv Guld It... .. . Inv tndic 15.93 15.93 s Bos 13.95 15.25 invest Grour IDS ndl AAut 1 Stock : StFrm Gth 6.57 6 % B1 20.66 21.56 Stein Roe Bal Cus S3 Cus $4 Polaris Lexingt 11.4012.46 Lex Rsch 17.36 18.97 Liberty 8.39 9.17 Life Stk 5.76 6.32 Stock 15.56 Sup moth 8.19 Syncr Gth 13.07 TMR Ap g30.18 Teachrs 12.51 Techvst 9.17 TechncI 8.26 Technol 9.08 Temp Gt 22.06 Tower M-R 9.28 n Cap I Caplt 13.56 Mut 16.09 Manhtn 8.35 Mass Fnd 13.46 Mass Tr 16.62 18.16 Value Line Funds: Vandrbt 10.3811.34 Nat Ind 13.46 Latins Blast New Detroit Committee Latin- hav The question with its possible risks of life and death occupied Sirhan and his defenders for more than an hour Wednesday —a Lincoln’s Birthday holiday break between Tuesday’s final selection of alternate jurors and today’s opening statements by attorneys. The jury, eight men and four women and the six alternates, Even as the jurors assembled, reports circulated widely that the 24-year-old Sirhan had given in to pressures to change his plea from innocent with the understanding that the prosecution, in turn, would help him get life imprisonment. But other reports had him clinging stubbornly to the Innocent plea in order that his side of the story get the widest circulation. News in Brief A console color television set valued at $500 was reported missing yesterday after a break-in at the home of Charles Gaddy, 58, of 235 Going, according to Pontiac police. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP) — The eaih Ion of th# TrM»ury Ftbruary 10, omparwl to fob. 8, 1958 (In dollart): Bolonco .,174,053,849.73 7,714,528,259.61 39,271,920,454.80 iwtii fiscal year 124,392,397417.24 110,421437,441.17 X-340,399,182424.7» 344,742,078,082.42 10,344,945,919.71 11,803,359,594.97 X-Includes 437,907,408.10 dabt not tub-leef to statutory limit. Pa- of f ay-Ralt nod Racord abla RBGULAR Suctessfuhfnyesfthgl^ By ROGER E. SPEAR Q — We are in our and are thinkmg of retiring in two years. Our holdings are: Anadite, Associated Oil & Gas, Fuji Photo, General Refractories and U.S. Industries. We have $18,000 in savings and own our own home. Can you make suggestiohs so that we can get $3,500 annual income? — E. D. A — Your savings and investments have a value of $50,000 which, with safety, will produce only $2,500 to $3,000 annual income. In order to build your capital in the next few years you will have to rethink youf investment policy. Your holdings, with the exception of U.S. Industries, are simply too speculative for you. USI has just revised upward its estimate of 1968 results to $2.15 a share. A growth rate of 15 per cent has been projected for the current year. The $29,000 of capital realized from the sale of the remaining The following list is comprised 0 f intermediate-term growth stocks: Alcan Aluminum, Gen. Foods, Goodyear Tire, Josten’s, Inc., Northern Indiana Public Service and Texaco. Equal-dollar amounts in these companies should help you realize the early retirement you envision. four issues should be reinvested Q — We are retired and own 1,012 Borg-Wamer but need more income. Our broker has suggested selling 800 of these shares and buying 5M Tenneco 7s of 1988, 150 American Tobacco, 200 Cons. Natural Gas, 300 Northeast Utilities and 70 Standard Oil of New Jersey. Should we go along with this? - A. L. A — Unless taxes are prohibitive I would sell all the Borg-Wamer and buy lOM Tenneco and equal-dollar amounts of your broker’s suggested stocks, all of which are income holdings. This in solid growth issues. It may, however, take you more than two years to attain the capital necessary to generate your re-quireit income. would give you about $1,950 an- nually, $685 more than you new receive hnd $150 more than if you retain 212 shares of Borg-Warner. . ' (Copyright, 1969) C—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1969 # CONSUMERS POWER FEBRUARY DOWNTOWN SHOWROOM ONLY 28 WEST LAWRENCE STREET Just in time for your Spring; cioaning, a groat savings opportunity on new wasinrs, dryers, gas ranges, disii-wasiiers, refrigerators and gas incinerators - FRiDAY, February 14 and SATURDAY, February 15 - ALL 1968 HAAA1LTON AND FRIGIDA1RE WASHERS AND DRYERS . . . ROPER AND AAAGiC CHEF GAS RANGES ... DISHWASHERS . . . REFRIGERATORS! FRIMY Old SATURDAY FEBRUARY 14 and 15 ONLY! fRWAY 9 AM to 5 PMl SATUKDAY 9 AM to I Roper and Magic Chef GAS RANGES All new 1968 models in Coppertone, Avocado and white ... All with the newest features, including "The Burner with the Brain" and program cooking. 15 of these beautiful ranges are double oven Chateau and Charm eye-level ranges. Many floor samples, some in original crates, all priced to go with extra trade-in allowance for your old range during this sale. Hamilton and Frigidaire WASHERS AND DRYERS Floor samples, some slightly marred, many in original crates, but, every washer and dryer is brand new and guaranteed. Available in white, Coppertone and Avocado. All have the newest features and you get extra allowance for your old washer or dryer! FRIGIDAIRE AND GIBSON REFRIGERATORS Available in colors to match the range of your choice. No Need to Freeze ... BUY A CALCIRATOR BAS INCINERATOR and end your cold walks to the garbage and trash can. Caldnator burns garbage and trash indoors WITHOUT SMOKE OR ODOR. SCHOOL RANOIS Also a good selection of school plan ranges with features such as burner with a brain, automatic cook and keep to make your cooking easier. These are all selling at big savings. OPEN DAILY 9 AR to 5 P.M. SATURDAY 9 A.M. to 1 P.NL Consumers Power DOWNTOWN SHOWROOAA 28 West Lawrence St. Telephone 333-7812 RECEIVES ELECTRIC SHOCK - Clive Rush (center), wirwhoio new head coach of the Boston Patriots breaks away from a left is Williams Sullivan, president of the Patriots. Rush microphone from which he received an ei^ric ^ock during a received the shock when he wrapped his hand afound the hews conference in Boston Wednesday. Rush was introducing microphone stand. It took Rush about five seconds to free the team’s new general manager, George Sauer Sr. (right). At himself from the stand. THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1969 D—1 spom PNH Visits Walled Lake Waterford Facing Top Test Waterford’s chances of winning the Inter-Lakes League cage crown will receive a thorough testing Friday night io a triple-header on the WTHS court. Following a 11:30 p.m. reserve contest, the Skippers (5-2 in the leape) wili entertain Farmington’s point-minded Falcmis (4-3). Both teams have won their last three starts. ★ ★ ★ The third game is a renewal of the Oakland Community College rivalry between the Highland Lakes and Auburn Hills campus quintets. Auburn Hills (11-11) has the winningest record of all the OCC teams. ★ ★ ★ ’I'he Highlanders are only 7-13 but have given several strong performances lately and tomorrow’s rematch should be much closer than the 106-78 first-game win for the Nikes. BEST SHOWING “We played probably our best game of the season down there,” WaterfcH-d mentor Bob Taylor said early in the week, and he is expecting the Skippers to bounce back from a so-so winning effort against Kettering Tuesday with a strong showing against Farmington. WTHS was a 73-69 winner on the Falcons’ court. Hut they have since achieved their best pace of the campaign and tomorrow’s meeting should be a high-scoring duel. * ★ ★ Pontiac Northern’s skidding defending champions now share second place with Hie Township team and have lost three of their last four starts over-all. Thiey will visit Walled Lake where the Vikings are struggling with a 2-11 record ahd a five-game Iq^s string. ★ ★ ★ ’The other I-L contest has winless Southfield Lathrup visiting pacesetting EJvonia Stevenson »who is on a seven-game victory march after winning only two of its first eight outings. CHIEFS HOME In Saginaw Valley Conference play, Pontiac Central will be host to Bay City Handy as the Chiefs resolve themselves to a scrap with Saginaw Arthur Hill for second place " behind streaking Flint Central. » It will be the next-to-last home game for PCH who saw its nine-game win skein snapped last week at Saginaw. * ★ ★ Midland is at Arthur Hill who currently shares second place with PCH, both having 7-2 records. The two will clash at Saginaw in the last regular season game for both Central and SAH * * * ★ Last night, Detroit Country Day let its reserves play most of the way in a 94-28 victory over Detroit St. Casimir. Leading the scoring attack were sophomores Mike Page (13), Dave Brodie (12), John Rzepka (12) and Carl Glass (12). ST. CASIMIR (») FG FT1 Lemmon ..... 6 0>1 COUNTRY DAY (N) Craig Glas C. Glass Detroit CMnfij^ Day Country Day 60. St. Casimir 20. Local Sprinter Holds Records Bumpy Track May Lead to 'Games' Edward Sidney Wright, Jr., is running a bumpy track against a cold headwind these days in his quest to become the fastest sprinter in the brief history of the Deaf Olympics. Ed is a 6-foof, 175-pound Fisher Body Plant body shop worker who last summer set the world marks for a deaf athlete in the 2(X)-meter, 100-meter and 100-yard dashes. ★ ★ * In the process he qualified for this year’s International Games for the Deaf Aug. 9-16 at Belgrade, Yugoslavia. The 24-year-old graduate of the Florida School for the Deaf in St. Augustine ran the 200 in :21.9, and later won the 100-meters in 11 seconds against a strong wind at the Berkeley (Calif.) tryouts. OTHER RACES In addition, he broke the records in the “100” with :09.4 (yards) and :10.7 (meters) in other appearances. But' his dreams of running in the “Yugo 69 Deaf Olympics” — where he would be a strong favorite (barring injury or illness) to win the gold medals in both dashes plus anchor a strong U.S. 400-meter relay team — depend upon one very important factor: money. It costs $1,800 to send each rnember of the U.S.A. team to Belgrade for the competition. This money must be committed by April 1. VOLUNTEERS Unlike the U.S. Olympic Committee which oversees the fund raising for that team, the sponsoring U.S. organization for the deaf athletes is strictly volunteer ----------------- . . ALEX DELVECCHIO Shooting for Milestone Red Wing in Spotlight ' Now It is Alex Delvecchio’s turn’ for the spotlight. Delvecchio, the “forgotten” man on what is fast becoming the most productive scoring line in National Hockey League history, has been overshadowed ail season by the goal-scoring feats of left winger Frank Mahovlich and the great right winger Gordie Howe. ★ ★ ■ ★ With Howe continually adiieving new milei^nes fw goals and points, and Mahovlich leading the NHL with 36 goals and zeroing in on the magic 50-goal level, the veteran center hasn’t had much attention. But tonight when the Detroit Red Wings entertain the Montreal Canadiens at Olynqpia Stadhun Delvecchio will need just «ie assist or -2, Col. 2) Nightmare Over for Maple Leafs, but Not Hawks By the Associated Press The nightmare is over for the Toronto Maple Leafs but it just won’t end for the Chicago Black Hawks. The Leafs thumped Minnesota 7-1 Wednesday night ending one frustrating National Hockey% League streak, while Chicago blew a two-goal lead and had to settle for a 3-3 tie against Philadelphia, extending another one. * ★ ★ In other NHL action, St. Louis blanked Pittsburgh 2-0 and Oakland edged New York 3-2. Bob Pulford and Dave, Keon scored two goals apiece and defenseman Pierre Pilote picked up three assists as Toronto walloped the North Stars. The victory ^ ended a string of five winless games against West Division opposition for the East Division Leafs. (Continued on Page D-2, Col. 6) Pontlu Press Photo SIDNEY WRIGHT JR. help and pursues a local financial support policy for each athlete. Wright’s" communications handicap plus the fact that he settled in Pontiac less than 18 months ago limit his ability to develop a fund-raising campaign for himself, but members of his family are making inquiries. Meanwhile, the likeable young man continues to train himself — he doesn’t have a coach — at the YMCA and on the track at Wisner Field when conditions permit. He also plays recreation basketball with Local 596 in the city men’s league. He and his wife Sandra reside with friends at 327 Wesson. If he receives the support, Wright will join several other Pontiac residents who achieved fame in track. Hayes Jones was an Olympic gold medalist in the hurdles at Tokyo in 1964. Deaf sprinter Abram Powell was a finalist in the 1965 Deaf Olympics 400-meter race. In 1968, Bill Tipton was the national high school hurdles champion. The 1965 International Games for the Deaf were held in Washington, D.C., and the New Bethel Baptist Church spearheaded the drive to raise the $500 needed to send Powell. Both Tipton and Jones, too, benefitted from local fund raising projects when they had to travel' long distances. Pioneers Down Albion, 99-89 ALBION — Oakland University posted its. second victory ever over an MIAA basketball rival by avenging an earlier loss with a 99-89 triumph Wednesday night at Albion. John Eley showed the way with 23 points and 20 rebounds for the Pioneers who upped their record OU victory total to 8 in 17 starts. Eley didn’t play in the season-opener when Albion registered a 101-97 double overtime victory at Oakland. He joined the Pioneers in January and there has been an upswing in the Pioneer fortunes with the addition of the 6.- f o o t - 5 sophomore’s rebounding and scoring talents. ★ * ★ Last night the visitors commanded a 46-31 rebounding edge and made 40 of 86 field goal tries compared to Albion’s 35 of 73. Eley hit 10 of 19 shots among his 23 points. Glenn Beier had his best scoring night, making 13 points, and clamped a tight defensive effort on high-scoring Mike Wilson of Albion (via B’armington High School). Ed Holloman also helped in limiting Wilson to 14 points. He hit 33 in the previous meeting. ★ ★ ★ Harry Turney scored 22 and grabbed 10 rebounds to pace the Britons (6-10). Bloomfield Hills’ Dave Robillard contributed 21 points on 8 of 16 from the field. ''OAKLAND (9f) ALBION (N) FO FT TP FG FT El/v' 10 3-4 23 Robillard e 5-0 Rannev 7 1-1 15 Stephern 2 2-4 Tebo 4 1-1 9 Turney 10 2-2 Holloman 4 0-0 I Wilson 4 «-l KroouleckI 2 2-2 i Mason 5 2-2 Beier 4 5-5 13 Horner 2 0-1 Lint 1 0-0 2 Georgeff 1 O-O BREAK AWAY m AUDETTE PONTIAC "YOUR FAMOUS DETROIT AREA POHTIAC DEAIER” 1969 CATALINA Playtr Delvecchio Mahovlich . OP e A P PM 55 29 44 73 34 81 19 46 65 8 55 36 17 53 23 Stemkowskl ^acGregor 55 14 24 38 69 55 19 18 37 29 50 10 22 32,14 issr S3 10 12 23 IS L9CI«rc .. . 54 3 9 13 59 41 1 7 8 42 31 2 2 4 44 Monteitb . Ex-WIngs IS O' 3 '3 6 TOTALS 55 174 233 457 533 GoblN Edward. Sawchuk OOAIwKClPINO RBCORDS _ _ _ Op ^GaElifSa Ava 21 im 40 0 3 2.05 ...10 541 22 0 0 2.44 Total. S$ 3300 147 3 3 2.71 Detroiter Bob Strampe 14th in Pro Keg Open KANSAS CITY Wi — Detroit bowler Bob Strampe, after ranking second at one point, fell to 14th place late Wednesday in the $60,000 Professional Bowlers Association Ebonite Open. Strampe posted 2,678 points after the second round. Tourney leader through the round was Bob Cooper of Houston, Tex., with 2,876 points. Canadien Wing Ailing MONTREAL UP) — The Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey L^gue announced Wednesday that left winger Gilles Tremblay entered a hospital for treatment of acute bronchitis. 2-DOOR HARDTOP • Hydramatic Trans. • Power Steering HIGHEST TRUE-IH PRICES • Deluxe Sta»rinf Wheel • Custom Pnal Trim Plates 8.65x15 Tires •g AjI Safety Features • V-S tngiiHi, 350 cu. In. • Tvfbo Hj^ramatic Trane. '69 TEMPEST 2-DR. ^2678 '69 FIREBIRD 2-DR. HARDTOP • AUTO. • DEL. STEERING TRANSMISSION WHEEL • SPECIAL PAINT • DELUXE WHEEL • CONSOLE COVERS. ^2787 / CHECK THE EQUIPMEHT, V THEH CHECK OUR PRICE! CREDIT OK’D BY PHONE - USE YOUR PRESENT CAR AS YOUR DOWN PAYMENT OPEN n-IL 9 P.M. MONDAY & THURSDAY ALL DAY SATURDAY Audette Pontiac, Inc. 1850 MAPLE RD., TROY, MICHIOAN (ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT) 642-8600. JO 6-1380 - For Used Cars 642-3289 OPEN TTIL 9 P.'M. Mon, and Thurs. Just follow Ihi map to Ihe Troy Motor Mall. 3 Miles E. of Woodward D—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18> 1969 Rochester Awaits Clash With Troy ‘They overpower most of their opponents, but they can’t do it to us since we’re also very strong, ■’ a cMifident coach Wayne Case observed yesterday J as the Rochester Falcons prepared for their trip to Troy' Friday. ' This is the big night in the Oakland A league basketball race; Once-beaten Rochester (10-11 will invade Troy (8-3) while runner-up l.J»ke Orion (5>-2) will be at rough Romeo (7-4). Both Orion and Troy have to win or the title chase will be all over Rochester closes 11 s league campaign against seventh and eighth-place Utica and Avondale and upsets byj either would be the surprise of| the season. i Thus the Falcons are on the approcah glide to their first 0-A league basketball throne seat and a win tomorrow at Troy would virtually clinch t h e crown. Sports Calendar Hloh SchopI Bnktiball SRIDAY -----Bnkt______ _____ _t Ponttac C----- Flint Southwpittrn ct SmImw Flint Northwe»t»rn «t FUnf C«ntr»l Mldlpno at Saginaw Arthur Hill Flint Northern at Bay City Central Pontiac Northern at WalM Lake Farmington at Waterford Township Lathrpp at Livonia Stevenson Brighton at West Bloomllald |eaholm at ^ at New Balt. Anchor Bay ......Jnd* at "^llsemphlt Birch Run at North Branch Yale at Brown City Harbor Baach at Imlav City t Bishop Gallagher “If we’re tough we'll win,” Case comments. “We also think nobody can catch us; we don’t have to depend upon anyone | else. They have to beat us to catch us. “Troy is very, very rugged on the boards, a strong 1 rebounding team,” he admits.! But the Rochester coach has loads of confidence in the Falcons. B ★ ★ “We’ve got Gary Sovey, Craig Campbell and Fred Harrison all averaging 13-15 points a game.” But more important to him is the fact the team is averaging Kentucky's Rupp After 800th Win AT1.ANTA niPIt - Kentucky’s Adolph Rupp doesn’t agree that his 800th basketball victory stake Saturday when his 4th-ranked Wildcats visit the University of Florida. ★ ★ ♦ The “Baron of the Blue-grass,” now in his 39th season as cage coach at Kentucky, contends he reached that plateau more than two weeks ago and that an unexpected victory over Florida would be his 80iuh R R * That’s because Rupp insists on counting five victories in 1966 in Israel which Southeastern Conference saysj were exhibitions—and thus not kosher. ■ [double figures from each position. “Another five players are hitting about five points game,” Case notes. “When somebody isn’t doing the job, someone else can fill in and produce for us. “Sovey is quite a good ball handler. He is hitting about 13 points a game, too, while only shooting 5 or 6 times.” BEST NIGHT The impressive senior guard | had his top point' output of the campaign (17) when the^ Falcons ended Troy’s seven-game unbeaten streak with a| 51-49 decision in their first ^ meeting. | Rochester now is the streaking team. It will be going for a school-record 11th straight triumph when it takes the court Friday. Romeo lost to Orion by a 78-52 count in their first encounter. However, the Bulldogs have only suffered a three-point loss to Rochester In their last four starts and figure to give Orion a tougher time. But the Dragons, too, are moving along. They’ve taken their last three outings and have only a five-point defeat by| Rochester marring their record' II in nine games now. I BIG CHANCE ^ Friday could be a big night for Avondale coach Phil Kahler 0 who has only a nonleague con-BACK IN ACTION - Mike „ „ . . u I j record during his first season &al^, who quarterbacked the Yellow Jackets. Rochester to a share of the Oakland A League football One of Avon s 12 de eats was championship last fall, is f ^-52 setback at Utica. The, playing a big role at present twice-yictorious Ch eftalns willi in the Falcons’ bid for the Avondale for the rematch basketball title. Scallv was tomorrow and the home team is injured late in the grid cam-paign and sat out the early part of the cage season, but the 0-A schedule is Madison It B'ham Br, Rica South Lyon at Chalua Cotlaga Baskatbalt Auburn Mill* CC at Highland Laki (WTHS BYth) High tcliool Swimming Saaholm at Royal Oak Kimball Grovai at BloomfMli) Hills Lahfsr Hartl Park at SouNtflaM Lathrup Pontiac Cantral at City Handy Hlgli idtMTfiHkalbaH tHan at Waterford Our Also or he returned in mid-January tomorrow , and has given the Falcons Clawson with the home quintet^ depth at the guUrd position. , a «lge in the I battle for fifth place. Duquesne's AD choice Surprises PITTSBURGH (UPI) - An athletic director at times must be an adroit dlplomat and there may come a day when Clair Brown will have td exercise his fullest skUls if Red Manning is to stay on as baseketball coadi at Duquesne University-Brown, 44, who has been the sports information director at his alma mater, Wednesday was appointed to succeed Lou “Doc” Skender who retires as athletic director in June after 15 years in that post. ★ ★ ■ ★ Manning, who was not in- formed of Brown’s promotion until an hour after a press conference, expressed disillusionment. “I’m surprised and shocked,” | said the 40-year-old coach who has piloted the Dukes to a 15-2 record and a nationally ranked status. The Dukes have six more games to play and are No. 15 in the UPI poU. ★ ★ ★ Manning was Informed that the Rev. James F. McNamara, director of student affairs and a member of the school’s athletic committee, thought the dual posts of athletic director and head basketball coach would be “too much for one man.” I “Brown was the unanimous I choice of a search committee,” [Father McNamara said. “He! has rapport with the team, the coaches and the officials of rival schools.” Manning appeared surprised when told of McNamara’s statement. St. Louis Goalie Gains 7lh Shutout Ref Ejects Haywood in Titans' 92-90 Win ColltflB BiaHttball ■■ It Western oien''o*k»''’cC* eV OrcKert"Ridge U. of Detroit et Xevler Nortbem Illinois et Western WIchlgen Centrel Mlchlgen el Illinois Stole Illinois at Michigan State Michigan at Iowa High School Wrestling Inier-Lekes League Meet et Walled Lk. Weyna-Oakland League Meet at North- Southaaslern Michigan League el South-field Oakland A League at Rochester Northwest Suburban League et Thurston (Continued From Page D-1) Detroit coach Bob Caliban said he didn’t know if he would discipline Haywood, saying. I’ll certainly have to talk to him.” Mentioned as an All-American candidate this year, Haywood was ejected with 16:55 left lo play after Strauther said the Detroiter took a swing at Toledo player Larry Smith. Chiefs, Titans in Ski Match Pontiac Central and Pontiac Cathalic warmed up for their Mot lOUrnOrnGnt first athletic confrofltatlon with three victories yesterday on the ski slopes at Mt. Holly. The Titans swept past Center Une, 116.0-145.4, in the boys’ races, and 116.8-130,0 for the girls. PCH SPUTS Central’s Phyllis McMillen (;31.6) and Bruce Clark (:22.6) were the individual winners Lures 17 Nations BUENOS AIRES (AP) Seventeen nations have agreed lo participate in world freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestling tournament to be held In the resort city of Mar del Plata March 3-10. The naUons are W e * t a^st WlcaTutThTchid^^^^^ Germany, Finland, ’The Unit^ 3 Rumania Bulgaria, Iran, South, ^oeds won, 97.7-101.2, Korea, Mongolia, C a n a d a ,i cheiftains’ boys' Austria Ja^n, Russia, Sweden, I j,i3„ked Pontiac who didn’t The UnU^ Arab Republic, Mexico, Cuba and Panama. ,, I , j Central and the Titans are Coach Dies in Mishap scheduled to clash next Wednesday in a league meet at Mt. Holly. It will be the first meeting (tf the two schools. i PONTIAC CtNTRAL fT.f. UTICA 1(1.1 '! s Mark to 22-1 » DETROIT (fl - ’Trailing 57-56 with six minutes left, Michigan Lutheran scored six straight points to overrun Detroit College, 87-71, in a basketball game Wednesday night. Michigan Lutheran, which led 42-41 at the half, won its 14th straight and is now 22-1 for the season. Detroit College has a 12-' 10 mark. (CiHitinuedTmn Page D-1) Pulford, Murray Oliver and Keon shot Twonto into a 34) lead before the game was 10 minutes old and the Maple Leafs had an easy time after that.' ’The victory pulled the 111111-place Leafs three points ahead of last place Chicago, winless streak was stretched to ei^t games. The Flyers rallied on third-period goals ^ Forbes Kennedy and Dick Cheiry to gain the tie, their 15th of the seasm. The record for ties in a season is 23 set by Montreal in 1962-63. ★ -A * Pit Martin of Chicago and Philadelphia’s Jean Guy Gen-, dron traded early goals before Bobby Hull and Pat Stapleton moved the Black Hawks front. Then Kennedy scored with less than nine minutes to play and Cherry tied it with 3:36 left in the game. A 4 * * Glenn Hall recorded h i seventh shutout of the season as St. Louis blanked Pittsburgh and widened its lead hi the race for the Vezina Trophy, awarded to the goalies on the team with the, fewest number of goals allowed. LEADING NETMINDERS Hall and Jacques Plante have permitted 115 goals—21 less than the next lowest figure I which belongs to New York. Camille Henry’s power play! goal in the second period and' Frank St. Marseille’s third-period tally provided Hall with all the offense he needed. The veteran Blues’ goalie kicked out 32 Pittsburgh shots. Oakland’s success over l^ew York marked the first time the Seals ever have defeated the Rangers over a span of two seasons. Oakland had bowed to the New Yorkers four times last year and tive times during the current campaign. First period goals by Mike Laughton and Francois! Lacombe gave the Seals a 24)|Oakland in front 2-1 in tiie third lead befwe Rod Gilbert scored period and Donnie Marshall for the Rangers late in the se- wound up the New Y(m* scor-cond period. Gerry Ehman put|ing.___________________ . Drive a IHtle- (only a f«w minuto* from your homo to Shelton) save a let (that short drive to Shelton con save you big mon#y on a now Pontiac, Buick or Opol). Shelton PONTIAC - BUICK - OPEL Vi Mllg South of Downtown Rochester 855 Rochester Road, Rochester 651 -5500 WHITEWALL SNOW TIRES Tubeless 2f.r$g022 6.50x13 - 7.00x13 7.35x14 - 7.75x14 8.25x14 - 8.55x14 nut 48 • tie Fed. and Statt Salat Tax FREE MOUNTING NO TRADE-IN BED SAFETY STUDS AVAILABLE New Snow Tires as low as $ 1095 I i.toxuiii HOURS: MON., SAT. 8 A.M.-6 P.M. TIRE SERVICE CO. 190 W. 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THL RSDAY> FEBRUAR Y 13. lOfiO D—3 Hayes Jones Comments Ryun Ponders Olympic Tffft' NEW YORK (NEA) - Four months have passed since Jim ^un, pale and exhausted, ,#ished second. Like the ^opard in Heminway’s >Kilimanjaro,” the world’s Wstest miler had cUmbed too ^ Records will recall that Ryun |Bnished 20 yards behind ^enya’s Kipchoge Keino in the ^968 Olympic Games’ 1,500-i^pieter run. * ^ Records will not recall, >Jtowever, the dazed Ryun as he 'IWalked slowly out of the sodium and found a bench. Aione, he placed his right hand over his chest while his face contorted in pain. it hurts,” he said to a -t, -k -k J;" ftveryone knew Mexico City ^as 7,349 feet high; they knew[ r-Keino came conditioned for high ^Ititude running because Kenya ^8 high altitude country; and ^Bley knew Jim Ryun comes ^om Kansas where mountains as scarce as barracuda. ::i>EGREE OF PRIDE :** still, Jim Ryun was the ;«orld’s fastest miler and a ijoonsiderable degree of jJSmerican pride ran with him. ^“You’re a champion in America sjMly if you’re No. 1,” says ex-lOlympic hurdler Hayes Jones. ^f!That’s the problem with the way they treat athletes here. Second or third? Pffft.” ★ ★ * On this day, Ryun and American pride went pfft. “He must feel like a failure,” said Jones, who knows the feeling. “He’s wondering if people are staring at him, wondering if they’re thinking that he’s the guy who let America down.” Ryun didn’t act like a failure. Having dropped out of Kansas University' for a semester order to compete in the Olympics, Jim went back to his job as a photographer for a Topeka newspaper and in late Januarary married a girl who had asked for his autograph. ★ ★ * If anyone on the Lawrence campus felt Ryun had America down, it didn’t show. If Ryun himself had any scars, they didn’t show, either. ★ ★ ★ “The thing that disturbed me more than anything about the race was that they’d let it be held at an altitude of 7,500 feet,” he said, “that disturbed me.” TWO PERCENT “I couldn’t have run any faster than I did. A doctor there, using t i m e t a b 1 estimated that the best an athlete could do at that altitude would be within three per cent of his best effort. I was within two per cent of my best effort. “The people who understand his appreciate the circumstances. Those t h a don’t, well. I’m sorry . . .” End of bitterness, end of race. ★ ★ ★ What lies in front of Jim Ryun now are several rows of uncertainty. He will graduate, he says, next June. A business major, Ryun doesn’t yet know what business he’ll enter. 1 just wait and see what comes up,” he said. There are, of course, hints of a professional track tour — and Ryun is the biggest box-office draw in the sport. “I’m not sure that’s going to be a success,” he say Anyway, I’d like to sit back and look at it first before I think about giving away my amateur standing.” Does this mean the Olympics again in 1972? “I really don’t know,” Ryun said, depends on what happens between now and then.” TIRE SALE Salerno Offered Job SYRACUSE, N. Y. (AP) Salerno, the umpire who was fired last season by the American League, has been offered a job in the Class AAA Interna tional Baseball League. If You Are Going To Buy A New Car, Why Not Buy One From The Chevrolet Dealer That Gives You... 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Pontiao Northern’s ^Immers School Ice Hockey Tournament Bloomfield Hills Andover will "'(»n four events but they will see action next week in the clash with at-large e ii t r y‘''’didn’t match the depth of Aquinas at 9 p.m. after Ecorse Ferndale’s squad last night and meets Catholic Central In the dropped a 62-39 decision. 7:311 pm. opening game at Junior Jim Black gave Trenton Monday. Northern its first win in the 20(1- Andover has a 1-11-1 record in yard freestyle in 25.3 seconds the second division west stand- and Virgil Vick led the way in ings Ecor.se is 19-4 and leads the diving, the league, while Detroit CC is Northern’s other win came in last in first division west play the 400-yard freestyle where^ with a 4 10 recfrd. Steve Smith, Jay Pritchard, * * * Kurt Bemman Dennis Vallad Tlie winner of the Aquinas-icombined for a 4;01.9 clocking. Andover contest will tangle withi Detroit Benedictine, the first division west leader (15-11, p m. Ihursday at Livonia for.tF^’ ■" “ th( right to play the Ecor.se-Catholic Central survivor in thelt.^i (Fj.' b'Jiham COLLiai aAlKaTBALL RISULTI R**t Norfolk Slat* 107, Gramblino VI Tamol* 70. Pann Slat* M f. Georo* Washington SO NBA Standings II (PN), Rlc« (I regional semifinals at lia, : 100 Buliarlly WurtJ (F), Kuni (F), TAKES 1 THE LIFTING! outJ of! driftinqI ALL OVER- PONTIAC ll'a ns aacrst. An Arisnt Sns-Thro powar — s woy of putting Old Mon Wintsr in hli plocs. All Arlsni Sns-Thns hsv* 4 lotwonl apssdi, pewsr isvsfts, dltttlsnsl dltchorg* chuts. Th* EasmStoit 4 hp, 5 hp, 6 hp and 7 hp angina* or* wintariaod tor dapandabi* gat-up-ond-go parfoimanc*. NEWI LOCK-OUT OIF-FERENTIAU Standani an Modtli ltM-« and IIM-i. Why don't you, too, got o lift out of lifo with o now 1969 Arisna Sno-Thro. 4 H.P. Pricod at Only Only $229.95 iWWWA/W LOCAL RIVALS , ,p“, (f i •55.°. Hie opposite west bracket’s ihl** mm','Nagia tFVT eliminations won’t begin atj,F'*|“y5',^"’r'''iPN) V'at*" IJvoniii until next when Cranbrook (1-7-1), ing Ihe second division west’s|li:oi.v.' ' top .socrer in Norm l/crchen,i collides with IMroil County j I lav (4-8-2). 'riiey will cla.sh at 4 pm.i for the right to meet Ann Arbor Pioneer (9-6-1) of the first division on .Saturday. That survivor then advances to the semifinals against Ihe Trenton-Ann Arbor Huron Wednesday r (F), Boston t13, Detroit It Los Angeles 109, Seattle I Only games scheduled. Todey's 0am Detroit at Chicago Only game scheduled. Friday's Oa» Phoenix at Defrelt San Francisco at Ph"-San Diego at Los Ai Boston at Atlanta Canned Salmon Held for Test Pesticide Showing Up in Lake Coho ABA Standings < ranhrook’s roster also lioastsi Pnh Mosher who Is third in the; Icaciie scoring, three points' hchinii teammale Lerchen.,. . . , Cnunlrv Dav's Mike Smith and ‘’V .Scoll Merritt are one and two poinls, respectively, ' Mosher Buss Ives of Cranbrook is lied LANSING (AP) -The controversial chemical dicldrin, some- e h i n d showing up in Coho sal- n taken from Lake Michigan. Tlie department confirmed ’Tuesday it has ordered 146 cases of canned salmon withheld from the market for further ' _ after one can showed a dieldrln level slightly higher than federal standards allow. with Merritt for seventh place. I Hie west regional finale will I be Feh. 27 at Trenton with the I winner and loser advancing to j(he tournament title game and icnnsolntion contest against the east regional finalists March 1 at Olvmpia Stadium. “We don’t think there s any Once-bcalen Benedictine and '’*'8' danger," said Dr. George once-licd St. CTair S h o r e s Whitehead, deputy director of l.akrview are favored to reachltlie department, "but in terms the championship game based! on the re^(>rd<^ in 16 league^® were darned .starts this winter. sure there isn’t. ^ __________________ I The salmon was canned by ' Big Effort Not Enough!?'*"'-'”'''-?'.'’'-'"-??; KING BROS. PONTIAC Rd. at OPDYKE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Phont! FE 4-1162 and FE 4-0714 Rapids, Mich. Whitehead said more tests would be made on tlie 146 suspected cases. GRAND RAPIDS -- Korly points by Bill Oates wasn’t pan „{ the new quite enough to get Northwood t fish showed a dieldrln lev-institute over the h u m p p, 0.32 parts per million, add-Wednesday night, and t h e jn„ the tolerance level set bv the Northmen dropped a_ 96-88 y g jr^d and Drug Administra- decision to Davenport College. 2V2 car oarage FE. 8-9584 fion is 0 30 ppm. ROU'nNE CHECK Whitehead said the controversial ftesiicidc was discovered during a routine check of the' processing plant. ! Dieldrin, a chlorinated hydro-; carbon used against such pests as Japanese beetles, was fea-| lured in a controversy last year I when a New York group called iEnvironmental Defense Fund, I Inc., sued the Agriculture De-aJJ partment to prevent its use in: a Berrien County spraying pro]-1 "** ect. The department won its case and continued the program. The fund recently withdrew a federal court appeal. McAuliffe’s MID-WINTER SALE!! on '68 DEMOS and '69 NEW CARS SAVE UP TO *1,000 ON OUR SPECIALLY EQUIPPED ’68 DEMOS We Have Galaxies and XL’s Available RADIO-HEATER POWER STEERINQ AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION Substantial SAVINGS on our 1969 Models ne REXseiuBLE ePFEn WILL BE TURNED DaWN Don’t Buy Without Seeing Us First! John McAuliffe Ford FE MIDI 630 Oakland Ava. **Your Hometown Ford Dealer^^ [>n 130, Los Angwies 1 game. Scheduled. ^ ^Joday't Oamai Indiana at Denver in 17, Centra 127, Wak* Forei ,^'ifl'ou'r,',a"n'*" Grand Vallay SO L Northwood In^t. i ‘f AO7 Valpara Youngstown St. 70, Gannon a; St. Fran. Pa. 114, Steubenvilli Aohland 46, Wootttr 32 Clavaland St. 97, Walsh 7^ “ Mich. 93, III. St. 93 III. 95, WIt-Mllwauk ester S3, Minn.-Dulu namtine 81, Gustavue Adolphus St. Mary's, Minn. 68, Ai Southwest Austin Coll. 73, Northwo NHL Standings Los Angeles . Philadelphia Victory Puts Spencer Atop Rec League Spencer Floor Covering camcj back from a nine-point deficit late in the first half and went to a 77-74 victory over, Glenn’s Motor Sales last night! in a showdown for the lead in Waterford Township’s Class A; Continental Basketball League. I In the second game. Sam' Allen’s (3-6) raced to a 41-29; lead at halftime and posted an easy 79-66 win over Booth Homes (0-9). With Glenn’s ahead 31-22 late in the first half, Spencer caught fire and scored 12 points in a row for a 34-31 halftime lead and held off the automen in the closing half to run their record to 8-1. Glenn’s is 7-2. Earl Hook, who scored seven points in the final two minutes of play, wound up with 31 points to pace the Spencer attack and Bill Waun added 22. Ron Waters pitched in 25 for Glenn’s. Booker Hurner’s 19 points triggered the Sam Allen victory. Larry Hughes notched 26 for Booth Homes. Wftfntsday't Rttulft Phlladtiphia 3, ChU St. Louis 2, Plttsh" Oakland 3, New 'iF/' *' Today'i Gamai Montreal at Detroit We Now More a Large Selection of Late Model, One Owner Cadillacs Available. Come in now While the Inventory Is High. JEROME Cadillac Sales 675 S. Saginaw, Pontiac 333-7021 Today'i Oamai • icheduled. Friday's Gam* Kalamazoo Rolls Past Hope, 89-70 KALAMAZOO (AP)-Kalama-j zoo jumped to a 9-0 lead andj breezed to an 89-70 basketball i win Wednesday night over Hope in a Michigan Intercollegiate! Athletic Association game. | Kalamazoo, which had a 42-36 j midway margin, is now 5-2 in !MIAA and 11-7 over-all. Hope has an 8-9 season’s mark and is 3-5 in the MIAA. j Dan Shinabarger had 19 point I for Hope. UNITED TIRE SERVICE WHITEWALLS! FULL 4 PLY! 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Woodward Phono MU 2-4139 30 DAYS SAME AS CASH In Northwest Loop Title Time for Raiders A long-awaited moment is| In the Southeastern Michigan a game of the top spot if it gets within rehch of North Fartn- League, pacesetting Royal Oak by Berkley and has help from ington’s Raiders Friday night. I Kimball may tumble back into Southfield. “We know if we win it’s a^a three-way tie if it falls at ★ * * c^mpionship,” coach D i c k Southfield. Ferndale could join: Kimball, who has THE rONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1909 UARNetAce in Uphill Battle El Shafei Turns Back Yanks' Cliff Richey Wilson said Wednesday, can do it ourselves.” The Raiders, “Wejthe Blue Jays and ROK if it can .shared the top spot all season, jhandle visiting Birmingham I is 5-2 but has road games at the|Seaholm. jsouthfield and Ferndale (bq^ 4- Hazel Park could move within'3) left on its schedule. SIGHTS TARGET — Cocaptain backliner Jay Hazelroth and his North Farmington teammates have a league championship for their target tomorrow night when they take their 7-0 Northwest Suburban record to Oak Park where the runner-up Redskins have one final chance to stop the Raiders’ express. A key man on the NFHS fast break, Hazelroth has been in double figures for six of the last seven games. Horse Racing Northwest Suburban AA race,, will journey to runner-up Oak Park’s court where t h e Redskins (5-2 have to win if they are to stop the NFHS title march. ★ ★ ★ “We’re taking it like any other ball game, we expect to win,” Wilson acknowledged. BEST RECORDS North Farmington shared the basketball championship in the league’s first two seasons, tying Detroit ’Thurston with a 7-1 mark in 1963-64 and matching Birmingham Groves’ 8-2 the following campaign. Since then the Raiders’ best mark has been their 8-2 runner-up log last winter. Losers of two nonleague games, they have won their last five starts and are 10-2 over-all. The school’s best record was a 12-4 in the 1964-65 season and tournament. * ★ ★ “Our secret this year has beqn a very good team effort,” the veteran coach noted, ‘"rhe players work together and no one hogs the play. “All five of our big men rebound well. Joel Comstock, our 6-foot-7 center, gets the ball out real well. Cocaptains Jay Hazelroth and John Thomas move the ball on the fastbreak. “Jay is the better shooter,” Wilson added, “and Thomas had 11 assists last week against ’Thurston.” ; - BIG VICTORY North Farmington whipped Oak Park, 81-65, in their first meeting. But Wilson admits the Redskins are quicker than most of the NFHS rivals and have a standout guard in high junior Larry Sherman. ★ ★ ★ Also in the Northwest circuit | tomorrow night, Birminghani b Groves will entertain Westland fi John Glenn in a battle for 5 fourth place, while Livonia J Franklin hopes to gain on Oak j Park with a successful trip to c Thurston. Bengals to Meet Browns in New Stadium Opener CLEVELAND (AP) - Paul; Brown will face his old 70M < 31 WEST MONTCALM, PONTIAC, MICH. ' MAD«UUimirMIMIIMTRl,tlHIIP«WMaWINeVM.TmU HAGCERTY LUMBER & SUPPLY CO. 1:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.-Fri. Nito to 9 p.ni.-Sat. 7:30 a.m. to 6:oo p.m. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1969 State Skiing f: Outlook By The Associated l*ress Ski conditions Ihrougli X>i;t Michigan ranged from verv good to excellent at midweek as th^ slate s resorts awaited the weekend invasion of skiers. Base snow was as deep as 40 Inches in some places and several Up^er Peninsula ski areas reported 'pew snow ranging up to 23 inches. j Here are ake ski conditions retried by toilrist associations ' Huskies Make Ski Debut in Regional Meet Pontiac Northern will make its debut in competitive skiing Saturday morning at Mt. Holly when the diird annual Southeast Michigan State High School Regional Races will be staged. * * PNH has had a ski ciub but never has competed in. the an-nuai prep ieague. This year there wiil be a girls’ team and a boys team representing the Huskies in the state championships. ★ ★ ★ State sanctioned ski competition is iimited to three regionai championships. The annual slope slalom and giant slalom races are the only state approved athletics in which boys and girls vie side-by-side. This has a literal application since dual adjoining courses HOPKS TO HKPKAT April Welch of West Bloomfield will be trying to repeal her 1968 feat of winning medals in , . _ both the girls' slalom and giant slalom events and possibly be set up. The girls will run lead the iwwerfuL l.akers to their first girls’ Stale Regional course and the boys the Championship trophy Saturday at Ml Holly. two groups will The two slalom times for each ciAtestant will be totaled, and then each will run a giant slalom course once. Top four boys’ times from each school and the best three girls’ times will be combined. * * * However, different skiers may be entered in the giant slalom then race in the slalom to arrive at the team’s over-all total time. * ★ ★ There will be a trophy for the best boys’ team and also a trophy for the top girls’ score. Wesk Bloomfield’s boys have won both of the first two regional titles. Waterford Township 1 inter dethroned Bloomfield Snowmobiles o\ Mancelona Weekend Races Receive Boost imm SAU!!! **'Tfmber Tm, Tr«v»r.» City; 2b ju >2„ Players Meet Owners Today NEW YORK aiPD - Representatives of the Major l.eaguej Players Association and league clu^wners were scheduled to meet again today in an eltori to resolve their differences over the players’ pension fund. John Gaherin, spokesman for the owners, said a meeting Wednesday “hit a snag’’ and announced that the negotiators will try again at 3:30 p.m. today. TTie players have threatened to refuse to report to spring! training and to strike during the season if the differences are not resolved. Gaherin and Sandy Haddin, an American League attorney, represented the owners while the players were represented by Marvin Miller, executive director of the Players’ Association, and Richard Moss, an attorney. The Midwest Snowmobile Championship Races Friday. Saturday s.and Sunday a t ‘ Bellaire and Mancelona are| anticipating a large turnout I after the successful Interna-1 ' tional SOO-Mile Race last 'V i weekend at Sault Ste. Marie. Kettering Tops Lahser Skiers Waterford Kettering’s Steve Rockey and Dave Perkins built a sufficient lead for the Captains that the Bloomfield l..ah.ser’s skiers couldn’t overcome them despite taking five of the first eight places Wednesday afternoon. * * * Rockey and Perkins placed one-two, almost two seconds faster than Lahser’s best, Brad Mattson, as WKHS upped its record to 4-1-1. BHL is 1-5. ! Kettering’s girls swept the next five places after Judy King of the Knights took first place. Both squads are 2-4. KETTERINa U.7, BH LAHSER *7.4 ----- ■ ■ y King (I.......... KETTERINO 104.5, BH LAHSER 110.4 BOYS: 1. St4V# Rockov (K), :20.8; 2.; 3«vt Perkin* (K), :22 Ij 3. Bred Mellson L). :24.7; 4. KIrt Lellhauser CL). :25.0; . Hank Longa (K), :2S.3; 6. Tom Graddls Colorado Nips Duluth DULUTH, Minn. (4V-Colorado College held on to seventh place In the Western Collegiate Hock-| ey Association by downing the University of Minnesota-Duluth i 3-2 Wednesday. Alma Win Led by Vandermeer ADRIAN (AP)- Alma roared 0 a 5(k23 halftime lead and pulverized Adrian, 91-55, in a Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MIAA) game Wednesday night. * A * Alma boosted its conference record to 6-2 for the season, j A1 Vandermeer had 17 points' for Alma and John Okenka ledj Adrian with 11. ! Although some of the leading contenders may have a hectic] lime repairing their machines! in time — less than one third of the qualifiers finished in the “500” — the two communities’ Chambers of Commerce and the Mancelona Snowmobile Club are confident of a busy weekend! of activity. * ★ ★ Registration of the contestants will run from 10 a.m. until 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Bellaire Community Hall. Safaris are slated from both towns at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Yukon King Safaris are scheduled at 6 p.m. from the Mancelona Sports Equipment Shop. 'There also will be a 2 p.m. treasure hunt in the parking lot at Schuss Mountain Ski Resort. STREET PARADE Bellaire’s streets will be open' to snowmobiles 7-9 p.m. when a parade is planned. Saturday’s schedule includes a round trip cross country race at 9 a m. from Bellaire to Mancelona, a jumping team exhibition at 10 a.m., a moonlight cruise and a victory banquet. Oval Races will begin at 9 a m, Sunday on the new three-j quarter mile Midwest TYack in Mancelona, plus the awards] ceremony at the high school i gymnasium that afternoon. [ A * ★ I There Is a $10,000 guaranteed] prize fund, free gas will be; given the competitors and entertainment will be provided. The second annual Midwest Snowmobile championships are sanctioned by the U. S. Snowmobile Association. LOCAL MEN 1110 entry list will include several Pontiac area drivers John and Henry Manuel, Bruce and Tom Clifton, Jim Wohlfeil and Herb Lawson. 'The Manuels drove one of the 15 machines that finished the “500” race at The Soo. Both of the Cliftons’ Artic-Cats were among the casualties, as was one of the Manuels’ Sno Sports. AAA Wohlfeil captured the 18-mile Qass A cross country race,last Saturday at the Marquette Grand Prix races driving an Artic-Cat representing Panther of Pontiac. Lawson placed fourth, only 1:30 behind the winner, in the Class D cross country competition. AAA Two Northern Michigan University coeds in their party also fared well. Cheryl Jackson won the ladies’ six-mile Powder Puff race and Randi Hunter was second in the one-mile Class C oval race for women. Both piloted Artlc-Cats. Nub's Nob Plans Weekend of Fun It’s party time at Nub’s Nob near Harbor Springs this weekend. The popular ski resort will celebrate its 10th birthday with appropriate festivities that will include fun races, free birthday cake and professional skiing competition. AAA Musical entertainment will be provided Saturday and Sunday afternoon and evenings. A free lesson in parallel skiing planned Saturday. BOOT SALE MEN'S and BOYS' INSULATED BOOTS Full Lace $Q Mgk Waterproof Net Lined Reg. $4.98 FLEECE LINED INSULATED BOOTS ^ Men's and Boys' 9-Eyol_«t ^4l wO Woterproof Net Lined Reg. $5.98 to $6.98 FLEECE LINED MEN’S BOOTS $R QO Reg. $6.98 & $7.98 llailU MEN’S FELT-LINED BOOT All Rubber Insulated With Removable Felt Liner SIZES 7 to 12 Rmg. $10.66 ^8.66 JOE’S ^'SURPLUS 19 N. Saginaw - IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Shop Mon., Thurs., 'til 8:30; Fri. 'til 9 Tues., Wed., Sat. 'til 6 P.M. FE 2-0022 Irving didn’t. Or so he thought. Nextthlng/i« knew, his next-door neighbor put up a fancy one designed by Whitehall Metal Studios. Beautiful. Aluminum. Care-free.fAndnot tooexpensive) Nowirvingissutking. Calling his neighbors snobs. But Irving Is only human. The Blintzorderisgoingth rough the Whitehall Metal Studios plant now.The $7.50 model. Naturally. See Our Complete Assortment of Name Plates Hills Andover ’ as the coeds’ champion. AAA WBHS’ Lakers have a good chance in both clashes this season. Kettering, Rochester, Andover and Waterford are potential challengers to both Laker units. NONLEAGUE ’TEAMS In addition to PNH, other snleague members who will enter teams are Caro (boys and girls) and East Lansing (boys only). WTHS’ A1 Cuthrell is the regional chairman. Individual medals will be presented the top ten finishers in the two classes, as well as to the members of the winning teams. The first run Is scheduled for 9 a.m. and the competition is] expected to last until midafternoon. More than 225 skiers are scheduled to compete for the 20 boys’ teams and 17 girls’ squads entered. A A A The highly regarded individual skiers include Gary Willis of Rochester; Scott McLean of Bloomfield Hills; Kim Woodruff, Dan Hartman and Rick Stanker of West Bloomfield; Jim Nye of Waterford; Harry Drake of Mott; Steve Rockey of Kettering; and Pontiac Central’s Bruce Clark among the boys. AAA 'The leading girts, probably will include Cherie Luther and Wendy Willis of Rochester; West Bloomfield’s April Welch, Cindy Oldenburg and Pauli Cunningham; Waterford’s Debbie Morris; Andover’s Barb Goode; Kettering’s Nancy Stopphrt; and Lahser’s Judy King. Eastern Michigan Thumps Hillsdale YPSILANTI UPl-Earl Higgin$ scored 33 points and Ken McIntosh and Harvey Marlatt each had 22 to give Eastern Michigan a 126-90 basketball victory over Hillsdale Wednesday. EMU built up a 64-36 halftime bulge to boost its season record to 17-7. Jeff Culp scored 28 for Hillsdale which has a 6-15 mark. I PRE-SEASON AIR CONDITIONER Air condition your car for summer...and save! RIVERSIDE® SPECIAL Economy pricing with features you've been looking for . . . like moveable 2-way louvers that circulate air evenly throughout your car. And modem, slim design, for lots of leg room. See it nowl 239 00 THE DELUXE^ Cools instantly! Removes moisture, pollen, dust — keeps you refreshed, clothes wrinkle-free. With 3-speed blowers, 4-woy louvers and spe- dll" AHA ciol constant temper- ^ aUW oture controll Buy fcwlr youTS now — save! installed *5 off! New pistol-grip timing light! S«t your car's timing for top p«rformanc«l Shock resistant, trigger - switch light shines bright enough for use in direct sun! 24 99 4-trock portable hi-fi tope player Now you con hove the convenience of cortridged music with you onywherel Unit con be powered either by batteries or cor lighter, oniic THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 19fi9 Milliken Hits College Strife LANSING (AP) -j- Declaring that demonstrators'are “going too far" when they disrupt activities on college campuses, Gov. William Milliken Wednesday repeated a vow to send in the State Police if university authorities ask for help. “I am very wary about outside Interference in the internal affafn and functioning of education institutions,” Milliken told the Michigan Association of Broadcasters. “But when there has been a breakdown and when the established authority within the institutions requests assistance from us, we will respond — through .. . • „ , , the State* Police or whatever« university are inter- other iheans are available toT u ministrative buildings are taken over by students, when these deeply, in the principle of dissent, in the rigM of individuals to express themselves' and to communicate their disagreement with positions which may be taken by the so-called ‘establishment,’ ” he told the broadcasters. “The right of dissent is fundamental and it has long been recognized in this state and nation. * * -k “But when dissenters seek as their objective to stop the orderly functioning of educational institutions, for example, they are going too far. “When the educational func- British Ford Faces Female Labor Strife LONDON (AP) ~ Trouble j Dagenham plant are backing the over women rocked Ford of Bri- protesting women. At a meeting tain today. The ladies will bej Wedne.sday night they declared happy to get equal pay with the equal conditions .clause unmen—but not equal hours of fair to women with families and work. I told union leaders to renegotiate The dispute over where equal-1 the contract, ity should end brought threats! * ★ * of a strike to the motor compa- otherwise, they said, the com-ny s 21 plants. pany could face a strike begin- * * * jning Feb. 24. Equal pay—a breakthrough in ------------------ British industry—was part of a new contract reached between| LEARNING YOUNG — Libraries, like the one in Fort Wayne, Ind., are places of learning. One can find out how to First the young lad shares his book (left). Then comes a act in many social situations, like a children’s story hour. protective arm. Finally, an avid hug. Milliken first announced the promise of such aid at a news conference earlier this week. “I believe, and I believe very Check Sought on Supervisors orderly processes are interfered with, and when the institutions themselves call for assistance from the outside, then I can assure those' institutions under those conditions that we will respond,” Milliken said. Wayne Auditors Ask Spending Veto Power Assault Charge Faces Man, 47 the company and automotive! ' unions early this week. Grumbling began immediately! • over a condition that women I ' must work the same overtime and night shifts that men do. ‘WON’T WORK NIGHTS’ T won't work nights, and Deputy State Treasurer" Lloyd to Explain OK of Bond Excess A Waterford Township man who reportedly threatened to shoot three police officers one acting as a process server Borman Arrives in Italy Change Urged will do it,” said Rose Boland, a review the Michigan Municipal —to Meet Leaders, Pope for Hospital ROME (AP) — American as- his family will be received in DETROIT (AP) — The key to tronaut Frank Borman arrived audience in the Pope’s apart- survival for Detroit General in Rome today to meet Italy’s ment and the spiritual ruler of;„ , , , , have to live at Ford’s,” | George H. leaders, tell Pope Paul VI about the Roman Catholic Church can ", . said Lilian O’Callaghan, another chairman of shop steward at Ford's Dagen- Finance Commission’s records ham plant near London. to determine whv Oakland “Lots of men don't work at County was authorized to sell night, and they get equal pay [bonds through its building just the same.” authority and impose taxes The key to ★ ★ ★ ! above the 15 mills to meet its ”” ' ■ doesn’t, obligations. Williams, the county com- “Surely equal ‘VERY CONCERNED’ ‘v'wv enneern^”*a^ut'^dei^^ facing arraignment today his trip around the moon and|satisfy his curiosity firsthand ® shop steward. “My husband mitt^e of the Oakland County „y* awui , man,s most spectacular poration, a special committee would make me give up the job Homeowners and Taxpayers opments on campuses inrougn-^ * * * Vatican’s telescope. venh.re intn f ' .................................----- ....... - ------- venture into the sky. i Some Michigan State Univer- Township police said James Col. Bormam his wife and two sity students Lve been demon-A. Sammons, 47, of 3 7 1 0 sons flew to Rome from Berlin straUng recently, with few ind- Rutherford aimed a revolver atjfor the seventh stop of their Eu-« dents, to protest the firing of a the three and warned them heTopean tour nsvcholoffv nrofessor i would shoot when he became Pope Paul, who prayed for the ^ psycnoiogy protessor^ a’success of Borman’s Apollo 8 x/rin,on c.ia injunction. crew as they circled the moon! rai„i„g ^grd at Rome’s Milliken said he believed that| arraignment today last Christmas, planned ............... . . . . DETROIT (UPI) — Sparked,“the resort to violence and ob- . . ... After the audience, Borman will tour the Pontifical observatory at Castel Gandolfo, the Pope’s summer residence in the Alban Hills outside Rome. DETROIT (UPI) — Sparked,“the resort to violence and ob-jj^j Waterford Township District precedented program for the carrying the Borman par-by the controversy the Wayne struction by students has gotten!^ourt. Apollo commander. County Board of Supervisors out of hand in too many parts of ★ * * , All the cardinals in Rome will. ' , . reports. lif I have to work nights.” A.ssociation, quoted a recent stirred up in setting salaries for the 26 members, the three-member Board of Auditors is seeking the power to veto any spending and budget decision made by the board. * The three auditors made the request for the veto power to our country. It must not be allowed to happen in Michigan. “We must show that violence and disorder are not the means by which causes can be effectively furthered, and objectives achieved, in this state,” he said. * ★ ★ “We have universities for the the supervisors as a means of Purposes of education, providing a system of checks ed. ‘ They are not supposed to and balances in the county!be exercises in political democ-govemment. If the request Is racy.” not granted, the auditors said, — they will go to the Legislature to gain the power. The supervisors, after lengthy debate which saw their salaries waver between a high of $12,500 plus $40 per meeting to a $4^ limit, voted Tuesday to pay themselves $10,000 per year, the highest of any board in the state. The paper was served by Sgt. Herbert C. Cooley of the Pontiac Police Department. Cooley, also a township trustee, was working in a nonpolice capacity, officers said. AT THE SCENE At the scene as peace officers were Sgt. Raymond Wilhelm ,u 4V, A- on I The rain did not dampen the ga^er with the daplc^mats ^ credited to the Vatican and members of the PontiteM P ^ Academy of Sciences to hear an address by Borman at the Vati»-r ^ ® can Saturday morning. GREETED BY ENVOY PAPAL AUDIENCE Borman and his wife were 4f. V.- u Dnn».oo on^ gTeetcd by the American am- After his speech, Borman and|g^^^^^^^ - . ihls wife, and representatives of and Patrolman Joe Henson of government. From the township department, ac- • cording to police MOP'S 2 Die, 9 Injured os-Fire Sweeps NY Tenement Investigators said Sammons pulled a 38-caliber revolver | from under a pillow and pointed it first at Cooley, then Uie oth-|” while making verbal ’< threats. NEW YORK (AP) - ’Two persons died and nine more were {injured in a predawn fire that Their actions have sparked a swept through a crowded east recall movement which 1 s Harlem tenement today, police seeking the removal of the supervisors who supported the full-time pay for what their critics claim is only a part-time said. More than a dozen others were rescued by aerial ladder. Thirty-six families — more than 100 persons—were driven job. The vote on the salary was to the street by the fast-spread-16-10. ing flames in the six-story build- TWO-THIRDS MAJORITY ing on East 124th Street. Under the proposal, a two- thirds majority — 18 votes would be needed to override any veto by the auditors. “It would assure essential balance and check in Wayne County government between the legislative and executive branches, and would serve as a useful stopgap until adequate controls have been embodied in a home-rule charter,” the auditors’ letter to the board said. ■k * * “It will also, we believe, restore public confidence in fiscal policy making in Wayne County government,” they ded. . What the auditors are asking for is. the authority to have a voice in how the annual $142-million county budget is spent. Richard A. Austin, vie chairman of the auditors, said the board was seeking authority only to veto county budget items, and not to veto appointments of policy-making decisions of the supervisors. $3 tAoney Order From 1922 Is Finolly Coshed HASTINGS, Minn. (AP) — A $3 money order dated June 23, 1922, was cashed Wednesday by Dick Dobrick, business manager at Hastings State Hospital. Dobrick said the money order was discovered when hospital employes were looking through dusty files of former patients. Police said the fire started in chair. 'Two men tried to toss the burning chair out the window but it stuck and set fire to the window frame. The dead were tentatively identified as Altagracia Garcia, 25, and Rafael Tavare, 27. The patient to whom the money order was sent is now dead as is his wife, but finding the heir was easy. The couple’s daughter, now 57 and unmarried, is a patient at the ho^tal, and the money order was cashed on her behalf. , the airport the party drove to I City Hall. There Mayor Rinaldo But Mayor Jerome P. Gava- Most of the objectors feared attorney general s opinion nagh, while praising the unani- disruption of family life, with which casts doubt on current mous decision of the committee, husbands and wives on different county practices for he pay-would not actually endorse the'shifts, seeing each other only on ment of the courthouse east turnover. weekends. >'ing- ^ ^ ^ * ★ ★ 1.600 EMPLOYED | . Tile opinion states. The The committee, headed by Ford employ.s 1.600 women in contracts (with Wayne State University presi- a total labor force of nearly Building Authority) further dent William R. Keast, made 47,000. At present they are paid depends upon the setting of two other major proposals 02 per cent of male rates but annual rental payments iq Wednesday for saving the hos- are not obliged to work at night. |^nch a sum as can be budgeted pital—spend some $3 million The protests disappointed or-thg county within Its this year to rejuvenate and re- ganizations which have been j allowable millage within the 15-model the existing hospital and campaigning for more than 80 niill limitation.” begin plans for a new $70-mil- years to get women on the same lion, 700-bed hospital to be com- pay scales as men. pleted in five to seven years. The hospital for several months has faced loss of accred- s itation and being closed. equality and privilege,” said anthoritv leases Marie Patterson of the Trans-'assessments. The county port and General Workers building authority leases space Cavanagh said he subscribed Union. 'he county and payments o “Women should try to understand that they cannot live Oakland County’s current budget calls for a levy, approved last year by the suoervisors, of .112 mills outside the limitation payment of building and drain Ire Went to Pieces Cooley was able to grab the suspect and Wilhelm wrestled the gun away, police said. Detroit Ployfield in Freewoy Route DETROIT ((PI —About a third of the 35-acre Arthur W. O’Shea Playfield on Detroit’s west side would become part of the proposed 14-lane Jeffries Freeway under present proposals, Detroit Common Council found out Wednesday. - * * * Highway and park officials were called into the council meeting to discuss the proposed route. Earl J. LaQair of Pontiac may have overracted yesterday. Oakland County Sheriff’! Deputy Gary K. Sheldon said he ticketed LaClair, 54, of 33 E. Chicago, when he saw La(^air disregard a traffic signal at Dixie and Silver Lake Road in ! Waterford Township yesterday. ★ ★ ★ Sheldon said LaClair yelled obscene language at him when his car was stopped. n Santini presented Borman with a statue of the symbol of Rome, the mother wolf suckling Romulus and Remus. * * ■* Borman gave the mayor a color photo taken from Apollo 8 of a section of the earth including Italy. Alumni Group Protests Over WSU Paper DETROIT (AP) - A group of in principle to the proposed organization, but said “many contractual relationships as well as policy and legal questions need to be resolved before this can be accomplished.” Without accreditation, the hospital would lose its staff from Wayne State’s medical school and all trainees and interns. I That would necessitate a shutdown. ’■! More than 2.000 i I the .'eases i ----oft the bonds. used in paying Real Estate Agent From County Slain “I would appreciate your checking into this and keeping me appraised of why the Municipal Finance Commission would authorize the saie of bonds in view of this opinion.” Williams wrote in a letter to Anderson. I DETROIT (AP) - A 24-ve ^ r I factoH' worker was in police mI \0fc FirO In \nlf custody todav in the investiga-Ul JCIi MIC lU JCII tion of the fatal shooting of lyoong real estate agent and ! critical wounding of another! {Wednesday. i i Police said witnesses reported Tight skirts, sweaters, shorts the shooting at a real estate and slacks are out and dresses During Reveille Dress Code Set at School POTTSVILLE, Pa. (AP) SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) And wheV’LaClair was hand-wavne’State University" alumni An Army private awaiting office centered over an argu-must be no shorter than two ed the ticket, the deputy con-; presented a resolution to the medical discharge d o u s e d ment over home repairs. inches above the knee, tinned, he tore it to shreds and board of governors today de-himself with lighter fluid during * * threw the pieces on the street. ......... ~ LaClair now has to face s tering charge, too. He was freed from county jail on $50 bond. His wife drove home. manHintr to know what is being a reveille formation, struck a! Burnett Dyer of Detroit was. Something new in women’s fa-Hnno nhniit allpppd antisemitic{match and stood “at perfect'arrested on a street near the of-shions? No. A dress code set up and black-racist statements in attention” yesterday while hisjfice, police said. No charges by the school board for girls at-fl?e schll ~ were filed Wednesday. tending St. Clair Area High Uie school newspaper, me bouin ^ ^ ^ * ! Ray Bernard. 22. of Oak!School. Heavy makeup also was k * * I Other GIs in the formation Pfrk'f«‘heroMhree and a 1968 W The action, of the used their field i-kets to ^ , group which IS responsible for|smother the which ■ J soliciting contributions o thelenveloped Pvt. John W D. ^ dungarees, university, followed a statement I Brown, West Point, M i s s ttcht trousers T-shirts motorev- by Wavne State President Wil- Hospital officials at the Presidio IN CRITICAL CONDITION l^le bS o^sandSZ^rd h^^^ liam R. Keast, accusing the|said there was no evidence of! Daniel Sklover, 30. of Detroit,! touch the eyebrows newspaper of printing J'meanjserious bums. was reported in critical condi-|oj. reach shirt collars. and spiteful tacks.” ‘THE BIG BUNNY"* — Playboy bunny Marty holds a specially prepared model of a DC9 that is being built for Playboy editor-publisher Hugh Hefner at a cost of $5 million. The plane 'will be 15 feet longer than AP Wirepholc the standard model and will carry 50 persons rather than the normal 115. The bottom diagram shows the interior design. The plane will be painted blade. Playboy's Hefner to Get $5-Million Jet bathroom with step-down ceramic shower. The latter two items are to be part of Heftier’s master bedroom, reachable at the rear of the craft by private staircase opening from the plane’s belly. A swinging electric wall will formally called, will be able tojeerned alumni.” said specially designed interior in-separate his room from a VIP carry 50 persons, compared Petok. a former president of the f h e Legislature corporating shaped and sculpted conference room and the rest of with the 115 on a regular DC9. Itjwavne State Alumni Association CHICAGO (AP) — The newest addition to the empire of Playboy publisher Hugh Hefner is a $S-million custon:k4)uilt jetliner featuring master bedroom with elliptical bed, living room and all the comforts of home. These comforts will include a without interior appointments, ted at $4.5 million. Furnishings may come to another half milliom It is scheduled for completion later in the year. propaganda at- jtion at a Detroit hospital. Sklo-j a 1 diver is a partner in the firm with! Presidio authorities ^............-.........., ^ . , ... , J ... Brown turned himself in at the Leo G. Donigan, who is Bern- Development of a spray that Keast met Wednesday with 21 as absent!hard’s father-in-law. will coax citrus trees to harvest the editor of the paper to dis- .jn^jt^out leave from Ft. Benning,! Detective Sgt. John Loch said themselves has been forecast, cuss complaints. where he was in basic witnesses told them Dyer re-The tree would drop its fruit as The resolution said In part: jjg ^3^^ pgrtedly complained about the it ripened or cause it to loosen “We, individuallv as alumni andjgj Army psychiatrists and was home he had purchased from so that a slight effort could collectivelv as directors of Rlc^vyaRing a medical discharge. I the company. dislodge it. Wayne State Fund, are deeplv concerned about the posture of the university-sponsored student newspaper.” 'COULD AFFECT COOPERATION’ The resolution said resentment against the paper by alumni and friends “could seriously affect tht level of their cooperation and active participation in helping the university achieved its manv goals, including finnacial assistance to needy students as well as other important university achieve its many goals, Including financial assistance to needy students as well as other important university programs that relv heavily upon private support.” The alumni protest reached a peak following an article in the Jan. 20 issue which stated that Jewish students had no place at the university and should go to suburban colleges, making room for more blacks, Mexlcan-Amer-icans and southern whites. “I’m constantly getting calls “The Big Bunny,” as it is In-jand adverse reaction from con- Saml officially adopted serpentine as,wall surfaces of plastics and!the interior. the state rock in 1965. foams, a hi-fi video wall, and! Cost of the Douglas DC9-30,ll5. also will have facilities to sleepj and a former editor of the pub- lication. SEALAB READIED - With its support ship in the background, the Navy’s Sealab III (right) is towed into position yesterday near- San Clemente Island off the coast of southern California. It will be lowered to the a 60-day experiment. ocean bottom tomorrow or Saturday for the start Monday .of another underwater research project. An eight-man team of aquanauts will enter the lab Monday to begin THE PONTJAC PRF.SS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1&69 Detroit Firms IMUlikens Might Move Deny Fraud Info Mansion Next Week DETROIT (APi - The prcsi LANSING (API - Gov, and City, estimated the state will dent of Union Credit Services Mrs William Milliken could find have to spend $25,000 to $50,000 lm*f and two other conipanies a spacious executive residence ion furnishings in addition to the Wednesday denied federal awaiting them by early next $250,000 being collected from charges that the firms defraud ■ week. j private sources, ed customers of more than $li The ?^gi,slature gave final ap- Trailer said water and Utili-million b>’ false advertising proval Wednesday to acceptance!ties for the mansion would cosl claims. the Unsing home for use as! about $1,700 a year and noted Ralph Barden, who.se other a governor's re.sidence. It’s a,two servants now living in the firms are Barden Investment gift from wealthy trucking exec | Sober home are paid $6,000 Co and Barden Advertising Ca, utive Howard Sober, who values year, said the charges were inaccu- it at $440,000 ★ ★ ★ late and resulted because he * * w ' Warren Goemaere, fired several employes two R.§f Warren, said future governors, years ago for trying to take j^ouis. Senate majority leader, over his companies^ complet- * * * , .led within 48 hours and the home He commented after he and a Millikens within business associate. J'>hn Me ^,,3, Connel, were arraigned before| Democrats, who last U S District Judge rtamoni^ppj, Rpg] gp. Keith on 51 charges of fraud, ip^gyg, ,j,g The two men stood mute and wodnesdav -although some still pleas of innocent were entered automatically Tliey were re-hased on $.5,000 bond each. ‘DIDN'T LIVE UP’ The credit company is accused by the federal government of . not living up to advertising promises to clients of reducing their loan payments by consolidating all their monthly loans. when preparing their budget recommendations, should include maintenance costs as a separate item, rather than concealing them in some larger ex-' penditure. "We hope we don’t have any Chinese bookkeepin g in the] maintenance of Oils mansion," ...jplained they didn't how much upkeep of Ihe rcsi- CLEAR TITI,E dence would cosl the slate. | Before accepting the Sober of-lOsT OF FURNISHINGS f**'’, House Democrats insisted Hep, J. Robert IVaxler, D-Bav :;” |''‘:>”ding a provision that; ■ the building and property musti SIDEWALK STAND-Tuffie, a 3-year-old female elephant, seems to be having her own way as she balks at entering a van after doing promotional work in a Ghicago hotel today. Tuffie attracted quite a crowd during her one-hour holdout as she turned up her trunk at apples, candy, peanuts, earpulling pnd prodding. Ike's Son Due to Be Named Belgian Envoy Problem Seen in Vote Reform Griffin Tells of Need for Some Compromise U.S. Sen. WASHINGTON (AP) - John S. D. Eisenhower, son of the for-, mer president, is expected to bei . nam6d ambassador to Belgium.] JACKSON (AP) There was no immediate word Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., sgid „.i when the nomination, report- Wednesday night compromises edly in the works for a month, I are needed if Congress is to re-would be announced. [form the method of electing a But there was speculation it; president, would be on or before President | At the Lincoln Day Dinner And Baffle of Sexes Rages Nixon’s arrival in the Belgian capital of Brussels, first stop on the five-nation European tour he begins Feb. 23. ★ * * The 46-year-old Eisenhower, a retired Army colonel who has just written a book about World War II action in Belgium, was vacationing in the Bahamas and was not immediately available for comment. The Brussels post is now occu- sponsored by Jackson County Republicans, Griffin said Congress wants to enact Electoral College reform, but if lawmakers try to go too far, they could end up with nothing. ★ ★ ★ He said while the proposed direct election of a president by total national vote “might seem to be ideal, some compromises will be necessary if'we are to gain enough votes to change the Auto Makers Called Hard carry a clear title and that the .slate must receive unencum-jbered possession. The Senate accepted the [House amendment after hearing! Elephant Makes Her Stand I pied by Ridgway B. Knight, a'Constitution.” I career diplomat. Although it is a constitutional amendment the city that serves as head-requires support of tWo-thirds of i quarters for NATO and the Eu- both houses of Congress, and ropean Common Market, the t: United States has separate-and ^ completely independent—am- bassadors in those kej|i spots. CHICAGO — Tuffie lived'would use her trunk against get tough. At the door of the SERVED FATHER Barden said Ihe company was ^Hnrrl Lockwood that it wouldlup to her name Wednesday — your back,” retorted a woman|trailer she stopped, backed offi jf confirmed, Eisenhower will ti not involved with "debt consoli- I ICJIKJ not interfere with the transac-jand the battle of the sexes rag-in the crowd of over 100 and resisted every effort to gjgp first official gov-p dation" as charged. He said it tion. ed about her on a crowded Loop'onlookers. , | gether into it. lernment post since serving his ti works on a "debt management" Qp ★ sidewalk. ! All week Tuffie has done her! “She’s like every 01her,fgtj,er as a White House mill-f( principle, in which clients pay ^ jj, ,^0 understanding of “You know any time you got promotional duties at the female; she’ll hold out till she tary assistant from 1958 to 1961.1 fees for financial advice and do the Sobers - that they are giv- a worrian she ain’t gonna doifninois Building Products Showlgets what she wants" predicted ^rmy awarded him the Le- not pay interest on loans. HOUSTON lUPl) - 'The inp it outright with no strings right nowhow,” opined a'jn the Sherman House, ihen!a male onlooker. jgian gf Merit for "illustrious p * * * future of the a u t 0 m 0 b i 1 e attached” I,ockwoo And Tuffie did hold out. 'service” in that job. jtoral College, but retaining the My business is being unfairlv franchise ,system .rests in the Meanwhile, a Milliken aide 3-year-old female e 1 e p h a n t the hotel’s Clark Street door! For more than an hour she Eisenhower went on indefinite electoral vote has a better ...................... ■ ‘---- ■ - ■ dew a 1 kandinto her straw-filled trailer, j turned up her trunk at apples,',ggyg without pay after his fath-chance of being adopted as a chocolate candy, peanuts, ca- g^ ,g{, the White House to helplcongressional amendment, jolery, ear-pulling, the prodding jhe older .Eisenhower edit hisj “This method would remedy “I ju.st wish that old girl But Tuesday Tuffie decided to of sticks and the pushing of memoires. **”' three-fourths of the states. OPPOSmON EYED “If just 13 states fail to ratify any proposed amendment, congressional efforts would go down the drain. The smaller, less-populated states are not about to support a resolution providing for a direct, popular election,” he said. He said the compromise approach of abolishing the Elec- Her Swelling Was More Than Toolh damaged by the pre-trial publi- hands nf the car manufaclurers, said Ihe governor, who is cur- made a stubborn s city." he said. the new president of the Na- icnilv living in an East l.ansing stand - ------ • — lional Automobile Dealers apartment, could move into the As.sociation said ye.slerday in home at .'^hort notice Cwi/\lliti/i \A/ar session of the ★ ★ ★ 3W6llinQ VYuS dealers 52nd annual convention. "'Fh” governoe's position has * * * been that he would move in at Lyman W. Slack of Portland,[the earliest appropriate time,” Ore., said the manufacturers!the aide said, adding: 'Were eating away at the! "They haven’t started pack-NASHVIITF Tenn liP _ dealers’ earnings through war-> ing yet.” J ’ r'l V ranties, lower profit margins on Mrs. Mildred Clark, 42. d ^.^nipacts and the installation of been bothered by an absces,se(^ acces.sories at the factory, tooth and shp said she though* * * * ’ the abscess was causing her ^ Chevrolet dealer, inbody to swell. dicated the manufacturers had Ox’er the weekend she began experiencing some Her husband. Fid, w to the hospital Sunday i HOLDS OUT But Tuesday Tuffie decided to of sticks and the pushing of ----------------------- boards and shoulders. | “Good show,” cheered a; female fan as the two-ton {he New York elephant — with two keepers ■ - .. j— pulling her by the ears toward the trailer — buckled her hind legs and sat down firmly on the sidewalk. .some iinacccplablc regulations were pains. ' them was in the compact car TB Sanaforium af Kalamazoo Will Be Closed FI 11A Fighter Jet Lost; Hunt On in Nevada, Utah the most serious defects that are so glaringly apparent in the In 1963 he resigned his com- present system,” he said. NELLIS AFB, Nev. aiPIl - Nev., I a solo training publishing house Doubleday, Inc., as a senior editor. He also served for a time as executive vice president of the Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge, ‘JUST LIKE YOU’ Pa., only a few miles from his A man m the crowd turned *" ,gavfng*^hg^ Army Ei- candidate who got 55 per cent of his female companion and Since leaving tne ^my, j^i Griffin said he favored the proportional system proposal, which would automatically divide each state’s electoral vote on the ratio of the popular vote within a state. In other words, a presidential mission »hn„ it disappeamd. Ils'JIJ,, ta Re.;the vole in one slate would «t seheduied route was from he-ei* t“e y" 'in one”'yS'pnbUcan polities. In be »* ““ -------i. „ Ichairman of the Pennsylvania votes. over Ely, Nev., in the northeast- stubborn streaks.” 'HuI. Uh - o.me the reply.lRepnbllcan Primary 2 An Air Force FlllA fighter-; bomber disappeared on a night 1 training mission yesterday, triggering a massive air search lield, KAl.AMAiIOO ,AP, .. Plans Se™e7n'i' i!!:'li'Ti'i;avr;i.H;;;;yy^rbi:'S'Cnmmlttee and be spjr. bneRy, Bv Monday mornind l h e COMPACT DI.SCOUNT I Ji’chb!™"T\lbercuS'''%^^^ K-mlliion swing-wing Wendover. UUh, and back to|'*p“'” ,j||e„ NatiS'convmtioJ In Miami. Clnrks were .be n,r»,s of ibeir! were „ld fbnt we h-d in I ™ercul^^^^ „„ ,,, calienR., Nev. a "ie a"ey. awa“ RECENT BOOK babv STia.quim'”Ka'^'rl«ir'' m 7omperrri«wl™‘wm w g '““jtura'at?p.m. foTowlng'a “raln-l * * * ^'liTya!!' ,'”b P™Pon?f*"PPinli"? cV!na»ra Jto hnrihn^HkPniin^ Allen said the structurer^^"’ * * + foot level and a total overcast I keeper whispered in her ear no ^hich took place aroilnd the bas mm.in«.'r.mp,el :i’d7':„r i!" s*duW "S«icb and re.ue -ilPbts ------- iBeWan mwn. .1 Bastogne ' . ^ . Warranty work has cx-u.. on Air Force helicopters and other . . ■ . .JT bt j A ffades fo Courf panded steadily over the last ' • ^ UtTwUh%TsibiV si, yearn- he said, -R has ,,,, ,,|FmA was nverdue,- said an substituted for retail customer , = , ■ , i„stifv Air Force spokesman in a brief .. * . j r mu- u u, work to an increasinglv larger Parlv tnriav ,dispatched from Nellis when l^e , aircraft failed to return. Thei retraced the ------ ,,y au.-,cm, uui .. c v, u c i... y iiiilitarv controversies carried'—.. * I \/\#l|-n lU 11VII nomination, said the Nixon ^:ir^is7pd^g^7i™“.^'P'•^ . ''Tb;'ib;d7acili,v may be' iwn piiots. The ! SALT LAKE CTTV ,AP,-Air ™ Sirai'^r"',„e,ie.p.ersi.,„edtheseamb'S“isrp';va'i';,r:r^^^ charges are not .signed. and trucks to leet eas^e and11 CRASHES aif* additional aircraft were causes some rain and snow, says * * * ■ ■ ,r“e“p.'L,'’:ld':..re ."ud “ - - ^ ihe Pii.A planes;S'’‘BrL;r,„‘-r„t„st''‘'.“^ » Schools fo Take • Affacks fo Courf DETROIT ( AID - Norman the facilitv is too low to justify,Air Force spokesman D Sr head of the Detroit 7''*^ larger,^33^^33^ ^ present release early today. Board o Education, said i^^ree. Yet, in many mstances,!^^^, r^g The FlllA, the object ot,_^ xidn sdav the Si systemand 106 mental pa-congressional bickering- and .ypccc nP,AKP,.niinn nfbut f r e q u e n 11 y . . .. : military controversies, carried: School Tax Nixed WILLOW RUN (AP) -The Willow Run School District has tax for schools which would have continued an expiring 11-mill levy and have added an additional 7.5 for an 18.5-mill total. The vote was 1,025 against St. Vith. Eisenhower served in !the European theater. He was in and 457 for the tax. School of-Korea and when Dwight Eisen-jficials tentatively decided to call jhower was elected president in! another referendum for April 22. 11952. j ^ The Philadelphia Inquirer,] Dirty Air Tied :1oPreCipitatiOn:*“rS‘!L'E;! Death Notices In the past, he said, the school lo7‘rgSnmenls“llelaid"'i5 The oldest song known to man hav7 cVastedTince^th; be^n- rh^hnni ’ Archie M^Kahan, chief of thepresident Nixon’s ----A uhpre .......................rh=a„„f -- Ivac ninp nf »hp flicrhl tPKt nmarnm «----- ----------««-- has n(rt pressed issues "here production is is "Chadouf.” which has been ning of the flight test program the victims refused to press ^3^31 immemorial by^in January 1967. charges. ________ „.gs expected to rise to 25 per irrigation workers on Nile water The aircraft, home based at _ sPECiM. ELECTION ccnt by 1973. mills in Egypt. ■ SpBCiBl The plane is equipped with Nellis. 15 miles from Las Vegas. instruments capable __________ ________________^|0f precision night and all- weather flying. One of the features is the TFR, or terrain following radar, which guides the FlllA when it is on automatic controls. The TFR keeps the aircraft at the same altitude above the ground, whether it is flying over mountains or valleys, and only minor pilot adjustments normally are required. Three Boys Rescue Deer Bureau of Reclamation’s Office of Atmospheric Water Resources at Denver, said studies indicate some pollutants rising out of factory smokestacks and auto tailpipes serve the same purpose as silver iodide in clouds— they increase precipitation. fundamental to the precipitation process is the Columbia University, presence in the atmosphere of , ice nuclei—tiny particles of dust and combustion by-products which have the capacity to convert water vapor into ice crystals. He said tests conducted by flying over a Kennecott Copper Corp. smelter smokestack, west of Salt Lake City indicated very-high concentration of ice nuclei—about 500 per quart of! EAST DETROIT (UPI) — A alF I man alleged by police to be the No. 1 marijuana distributor in daughter, Julie, last December. Eisenhower’s father remains at the Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington where he has been recovering from a series of p q R T E R , ETHEL M.; February 10, 1969; 1274 Maurer; beloved infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Coleman; dear sister of Willie, Vonna and Renay Coleman. Graveside service was held today at 11 a m. at the Oak Hill Cemetery. Arrangements by the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. heart attacks. Young Eisenhower is a 1944 graduate of West Point and holds a masters degree from Police Claim Breakup of 'Pot' Network 3«KI»nd County he demolition l storeoe tank located north of the lend County Sanatorium on the V Service Center, Pontiec, Michigan, ns and Specifications will be avail-at Ihe office of the Oakland County raph Road, Pont! , Michigan, A WAVE OF MUD, ROCKS - A huge earth slide covers one side of the Pomona Freeway just east of Los Angeles. A car (center) rode the crest broadside as the mass of mud and rocks smashed through the chain link center divider yesterday. The driver, trapped temporarily, was pulled out by other motorists. The hillside was loosened by the winter’s heavy rains. le Oakland County in Cantma# a pretty effective I If L/Gep OnOVv cloud-seeding count,’‘ he said. He said a study of man-made DULUTH, Minn. (AP) — .pollutaBtar-which he terms “in-Three boys were tramping advertant weather modification” through the heavy snows near -shows it rains more now than Duluth Wednesday when they jit used to in polluted industrial spotted a young deer bogged areas of the East, down in the drifts. j Kahan made his remarks at * * * a news conference in connection They were unable to free the [with a water -conference spon-I one-year-old buck weighing! sored by the League of Women about 150 pounds. So Brian Me-, Voters. i |sedahl, 10, went to get help; j while his brother, Mike, and! 'Kirk Kusnierek, both 11, at-! tempted to comfort the deer. ' Macomb County was charged yesterday with possession of marijuana and carrying concealed weapons. Police from three Detroit suburbs halted Joseph Edward Firth of Harrison Township, on the Edsel Ford Expressway when he drove into East Detroit late Tuesday. Offibers confiscated a suitcase containing $25,000 to $30,000 worth Women Invade j marijuana, $l,0( two guns. in cash and : AAud Slic(e Shoves Car Across Freeway ■ — I proposal. Checks shall be mada| LOS ANGELES (AP) — A;wave of rocks and mud.” the the canyon, and a home and'away. ® •ktand County Board wait nt wtii/l snHieA aipaUaa.ai Iiyiappc aF SDOthcr CrUnfll)l0Clj Kirk’s father arrived with a snowmobile and a toboggan, and I the deer was hauled to the Kus-za Hotel’s Oak Room, for 61 inierek home about one mileiydars a bastiwi of masculinity during luncheon, was invaded Bond and Labor and M in the amount of 100 pt tract. Tha cost of the by ttw acetpted biddai E.S.T. Thursday- February 27, 1 tha •tricas of the Oakland County fiM EMintaring Oivision, 1200 N h Road, Pontiac- Michigan, at rain-loosened wall of mud snd|50.year-old salesman added. ipieces of another crumbledi "The deer would have died by Pwiormanw rocks shoved a car broadside Meanwhile 17 families fled homes built on Hill-1 morning had the boys not dis- I oX con" across the center divider fence. . ’ ^ . washimrton' Terraces were imperiled by .covered the animal,” said Kus- wiii hJ pSid and left the Pomona Freeway|g horseshoe-shaoed slash inch-iniprok it annoarpH PnmnWpio ij I L U The arrest came after more Male otrOngnOia than three months of _ . [surveillance, Frazer Police NEW YORK (AP) - ’The Pla- willard Weiss said. He contended the arrest put fantastic crimp” in the blocked today east of Los An- and Laurel Canyon areas of Los ing wider by the hour. horseshoe-shaped slash inch- nierek. It appeared completely exhausted, he said. Wednesday by a phalanx of females. Five of the women, members of the National Organization for _______ Women (NOW), managed to get at geles. Angeles after unstable ground Fissures as wide as 20 feet * * ★ seats at a table but were ig- “It was like riding the crest of gave way and sent bathrooms gaped across streets and in The deer was covered with nored by waiters and left with-' a wave.” said the uninjured and playrooms tumbling into a earth still soggy from January’s,blankets in the garage and giv-'out eating. plane Tuesday, they followed driver. Edward R. Jennings of canyon. pounding rains. A dozen persems'en plenty of cedar boughs and! But the ladies promised that him. Officers said five police i Fullerton. | ♦ ★ * were killed in southern Califor-[raw potatoes to eat, while game the battle wasn’t over, “We con-lears surrounded Firth when he ! * * ★ I Larry Urrutia watched the nia mud slides during thatiwardens decide what will bejsider this to be separate but drove across the Macomb I ‘ "... All I could ^ee was a bathroom of his home go down storm. 'done. lunequal,” said one. 1 County line. narcotics business in Macomb County. Detroit, Frazer and Sterling Heights police posted Airport Monday night. When Firth and his wife arrived by February 11, 1969 ; 746 Kinney Road; dear sister of Mrs. Bert (Eleanor) Guilds, Mrs. Dorothy Aluzas and Walter Eddy. Funeral service will be held Friday, February 14, at 1:30 p.m. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Pastor E. Clay Polk officiating. Cremation at Wlute Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Porter will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) TAYLOR, CLARENCE E.; February 11, 1969 ; 602 University; age 64; dear brother of Mrs. Nettie Turner, Edith, Rex, Richard and Wilbur Taylor. Funeral service will be held Saturday, February 15, at II a.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Taylor will lie in state at the funeral home. WILSON, BESSIE; February 11, 1969 ; 410 Bloomfield Avenue; age 74; beloved wife of Ira Wilson; dear sister of Mrs. Leola Robinson. Funeral service will be held Friday, February 14, at 1 p.m. at the Calvary Hill Church of Christ, 388 Nebraska St. with Rev. E. T. Clark officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Wilson will lie in state at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 p.m. tonight. WILSON, CLARENCE; February 8, 1969 ; 560 Howland; K 1. K ^^ther of Shirley Ann watch at Detroit s Metropohtan and Sheila Wilson. Funeral service will be- held Friday, February 14, at 1 p.m. at* the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. WUson will lie in state at the funeral home after 3:30 p.m. today. For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1.I. J9H9 D--9 NOW A DIREa LINE FOR PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AOS DIAL 334-4981 We Repeat DIAL 334-4981 FOR FASTER SERVICE Dial 334-4981 LOST — WHITS GELDING, vlclnllv “■ Mapl( ind HililMd. ttelp Wawtod Moltr, _________6 WEN NEEDED FOR Imrtiwllate openings with local vending com-pony. Good pay and tflhge benefits. Paid Blue Cross and ■ ■*-insuance. Hrs..7 to 3:30 Mon.-CalT^WI 7-3050 for appointment. FULL AND PART TIWE man fOf order verifiers, top earnings. Apply 3513 ElUabatti Lake Rd. Rm. II. FULL AND PART TIME SERVICE STATH Xv ■ T«0 N___ RJLL tlME Clerk 3 MEN STEADY WORK $200 PER MONTH le to iwork 3-4 hours per _ I. Married, 21-34, call tonight «-7.30, 47441520. 2 WEN PART-TIME ATTENTION Y'S ROAST BEEFS needs g ambitious men to work from .m. to 2 p.m., Mondays-Fridoy. Bob Click, 335-5675 between » ,UTO BODY COLLISION man, be first class and reliable..... dealer benefits. Matthew Hargreaves Chevrolet. FE ...... See Bob Harleton. ATTENTION YOUNG MEN 16'26 'iternatlonal corporation is now Y FI? ' can start work Immediately, will pay you $12t.5o per week ■‘•ke Trail worklniTcandlticns7'fringe^ A. L. ^amman^ Co., Bloomfield Our rnalntonanca lultants for ______ ________ capable man for Inspactior sales In exclusive Detroll territory. Preferably some college. We train you. Excellent potential for ambitious solf-startor. Send ------- ■ minimum --------- ___________ - PeraonnC Sanitation Instltuta, P. GOOD JOB, good p GASOLINE MEN Responsible and hard working mi needed to work In gas stations, t d 5385 Highland, 8 Cord of Thonks THE FAMILY OF LENA Dodson heertfelt thaMks and appreciation of messages of kindness, cards i' sympathies and floral offerini received from friends a n neighbors, special thanks to Davl Cobb Funeral Home, Newmi THE FAMILY OF F Announcemejits 3 'AVON CALLING" FOR SERVICE JN YOUR HOMJE^. FE 4-0«». FOR YOUR VALENTINE SHOP AT Hudson's _________Pontiac Mall____ Assistant Department Managers re,*.'i; We have opportunities for gressive young men with experience to train for mi ment positions enabling the fill future openings for met dise daphrrtment managers Ir volume department. Send con '"“'pERSONNe’l DEPT. 2ND FLOOR IF YOU ARE HAVING finoncli. difficulty — GO to 10 W. Huron — Pontiac, Mich. We ere professional Counselors. It will cost you nothing to see what we can do. Montgomery Ward ^ Pontiac Mall Auto Mechanic OPEN FROM i EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. JRNDALE 2320 Hilton R REDFORO 26H7 Grand Rivt CLAWSON 65 S. Ma CENTER LINE 8561 E. 10 Ml STATION. EXPERIE ■ Ive-wey, tune-ups, and I Pontiac Salas, Clarkston. BARBER WANTED, replace 7 BUS BOY WANTED FOR part time employment. Awh' LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY » A-Dlet Tablets. Only 98 cn OSTEOPATH, Chiropractor: BAKERY SALESWOMAN, full time, no eves, or Sundays, good —" Anderson Bakery, 124 W. 14 ddKT*e)fiIm Bridgeport Mill Operator NORTHWEST GAGE 8, g ENGINEERING INC. n 24200 NOVI RD.____________NOVJ i?i Bridgeport Operators EXPERIENCED I' Day shift, standard benefits, l.t cellent working conditions. 1 CLYDE CORP. ........... _ . ijov ■ area,* top pay, FE 2-8700 | HELP WANTED a Day at a Time Work FREE JOBS GAS STATION ATTENDANT, ( perienced, mechanically Inclln Benton Corp., 2870 Industrial P HARDINGE^ CHUCKER,^^own^ ton *Corp.r287^'’industrl^^^^ INSPECTOR ternoon shift of progressive Troy rm, requires mechanical In-actor, minimum experience with sndard Inspections required. Ap-y In person at Benton Corp. 2870 dustrlTl r - ------ NEED Part-Time Work? RESTAURANT MANAGEMENT TQF BtNEFITS. You Will find top Income p ' Grantsi Opgarlunltlet t 5 A.M. TO 10 A.M, Also full tim# schedules In Shic ng and RKeivIng Dept, from: 9 A.M. TO Si30 P.M. PERSONnIl DEPT. 2ND FLOOR Montgomery Ward An equal opportunity employer PONTIAC MALL service Industrlaa. And you en|oy . broad benefit program at Grants Including a liberal ratiremi ' gram, stop_ purchase ........... ...... J4tr RETIRED CARPENTER, part ti -------"T, Black at 334.2925. NEW BRANCH Pitney-Bowes An equal opportunity employer Needed Immediately! Man to fill our Sales staff, to Tempests, end "GOODWILL" Used CarsI Fringe benefits. Right man can earn from SiO.OOO 10 $17,000 per year. See Ken Johnson, at Russ 115,000 and more pai restaurant management been greatnri Grants n pay plan. Contact George Bodick at 332-8101. BEST OLDSMOBILE INC. 550 Qekland Ave._______FE 24101 WE WANT 2 EXPERIENCED G STOCK BOY TED'S _ BLOOMFIELDJHILLS_______ SURFACE GRINDER. NORTHWEST Geupe a. Engineering Co., RESTAURANT MANAGER We ere currently looking lor men between the apes of 22 ei._ 45, with a high school education or better, who wish an axcellet' opportunity to advance within Ih Held. Burger King, the Nation i Wide, lest service food chain, will' give you complete and thorough training. Wh otter excellenC sel-arles end many benefits, and we are expanding so radiply, that a men can be certain that his talents will be recognized and rewarded quickly emf equitably. If you arq Interested, please call Mr. Chappell at 3324)713 or 357-">'»> to arrange for an Interview Intment. You can rest assured your application will bo con-tlol. I program, plus profit shoring. Call Mr. Wyatt, 483-J880 bet. J.2-1 ^ or_4-^PM.____ SERVICE MANAGER for «n oggr«s$ive Go<^ working condition, Salesmen PLUMBING HEATING APPLIANCES FURNITURE TIRES SUPERINTENDENT Carpenter Foreman Experienced In Industrial Pontiac area for largo Industrial builder. Call Maynard Gauthier. CunnInghem-LImp Company 487-0734 SPOTTER TnFCLEANER ________m8p^9-70e0.____ SHIPPTNG-RECEiViNG, ‘ Ipful. Apply at Bani 70 Industrial Row, 1 TIRE MOUNTERS EXPERIENCED In mounting and balancing car anc* truck tires. Excaliant hours, benefits, pay. Apply at 45 Oakland ____EXPERIENCED GRAVEL TRAIN DRIVER ALSO TANDUM DUMP DRIVER, Aror« record, call CO 4 JANITOR-PORTER able. Best working condition: liberal benefits. Apply In person. JACOBSON'S 334 W. MAPLE BIRMINGHAM LABORERS, N O EXPERIENCE Necessary. C02 MIg welders, experience necessary, education no barrier. Requirements Include good work performance end rellablll*-•»c. benefits provided. Steady employment. . Good s BOX REPLIES C3, C6, C8, Cll, C12, Cl8, C21, C28, C34, C46, C47, Funeral Directors 4 AN WITH collection must be sales mlnde-s assistant managei ipportunity to learn th business In Pontiac I. Call 334-2700. Harol STANDARD Birr only any morning Including ! Regiscope of Michigan, 187 Woodward, Room 2 11, Bic . Paid vacation, holidays, i Apply G 8. W Engineering. Inc. 2501 Williams Dr, Pontiac. LATHE AND MILL Operators and Trainee Excellent opportunity ^ for ompio Troy. Scheduled for operation A — WE --------- ■ appi 4 Tlremen, DetrcHt. eke application apply to: THE PERSONNEL DIV. Oakland County Court Housa 1200 No. Telegraph Rd. ___ __Pontiac, AAtch., 48053 OUTBOARD MECHANIC and rlgget "■ * -ude dealer, steady worli 8. Sea - - - DRAYTON PLAINS 474-0441 CLERK FOR MOTEL, Middle-aged wSo‘‘|rch°rd**Lhike ^Rd^^’Kee'iil - GODTTaRDT F-U^NERAL HOMEi_PI^f«'j:?^-_'»^^ ' ?«»<'. 0^c.(!?'?'.-'-»ke Rd.. Keego .---OL, CARPENTERS, UNION, FINDING Department ol Personals ______ .. PURSE Deionging to Alethea Leonard “ taming personal oaoers and a of glasses, pleat the Circolatlon L_,_ Pontiac Press. Reward.____ AVOID g'arnishments Get out of gebt with our pie Debt consultants 814 Pontiac State Bank Build! FE 8-0333 _____state Licensed—Bonded HOLIDAY HEALTH CLUB, payments, 11 mos. pi Keego Harbor, PH. 6S2-0200. DONELSON-JOHNS ____FUNERAL HOME__ Huntoon Thoughtful Servlet VoorheesSiple structlon Co., 674-2888. motorcycle ^dealers, Triumph*^or BSA. L benefits. Apply 1645 Drill Press Operator Experience not necessary. NORTHWEST GAGE 8. ENGINEERING INC. 24200, NOVI RD. DESIGNERS CHECKERS DETAILERS SPECIAL MACHINE-AUTOMATION Opportunity f 0 r advance "* fringe benefits. Overtime. S DRIVERS, WIPERS. Pontiac, (Downstairs) DESIGNERS SPECIAL-MACHINE hour week, benefits, and vai PROGRESSIVE WELDER 8. MACHINE CO. 715 'OAKLAND AVE. PONTI, TRUE FACTS ON Waterford Schc Bonds. Reed Spak. WIG PARTIES. Wigs Sat. by Mike Calderon. Experimental Sheet Metal FABRICATION AND SOME LAYOUT Bridgeport Mill Oprs. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER FOR AEROSPACE WORK Benefits Include: Life Insurance. Blue Cross, Liberal vacations, pension plan and advanr-- MCGREGORY MANUFACTURING CORP. 2785 MAPLE ------- TROY, > 4-3540 'Clrculat&'ii*Dep7rtment'of*t — Press. Reward. FOUND: SMALL 24 and Silver B OPERATOR ELECTRICAL ---------------- Township of Weterford, lourney-man electrician's card required. Apply at 4775 Highland Rd. Pon-tiac,^MIchigen. Coi ‘ ' - " LOST: ALASKAN HUSKY, black and: gray, male, vicinity of Airport. 473-7718. Reward, EXPERIENCED PARTS man •H olary open, also need Apply Frenchy's 5475 Auburn Rd., Pontiac Service, LOST — English Pointer pi .... "-own or liver spoti ID. Ana. to 'Duke!" Brewster and Walton area. Rawarel. 451-3482. ___ LOST: LARGE SHAGGY LIGHT ---- dog. Bushy;-4all curved Gentle. Feb. 1. Wets Reward. 682-5827.___________ LOST: A MAN'S WATCH, engraving on back, tost Sat. Night, vie. of S. aad E. Blvd., reward for return. FE 5-3041. EXPERIENCED trailer n— knowledge .....— uniforms. 4555 Dixie H' EXPERIENCED GAS station tandant. full time. Airport AAi Service, 577$ Highland Rd., P EXPERIENCED REAL. ’ LOST - ual wage. Sheldon 6-4a-j»/.________________ FULL TIME COUNTER CONTROI^ . Management Opportunities PACKER FOODS DUE TO OUR UNPRESIDENTED GROWTH AND R A P I D EXPANSION WE ARE SEEKING the following positions; Store Managers Assistant Store Mgrs. THIS IS AN OPPORTUNITY TO JOIN A GROWING DYNAMIC ORGANIZATION WITH generous FiyNGE BENEFITS, TOP SALARY AND ADVANCEMENT POTENTIAL FOR A CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW CALL MR. JAMES LAPORTE 542-4607 PACKER FOODS An Equal Opportunity Employer /MANAGER WANTED FOR CAR wash, soma mechanical abl"*" necessary. Good pay, g o benefits, Write Pontiac Press B 5. Saginaw, Pontiac. Poultry Market, Needed at Once I Young, Aggressive Auto Salesmen! Oakland County. Merit System Vnnounces the following closing late examlnalioi). Applications for Deputy Dog Warden Annual lalary rang* $7300 1 $8200 Some experience In handlln Pattern Makers Wanted raftwood Engineering Co.p Walli ------- a— m^L. Lake. Prototype PRODUCTION WORKERS press or punch press, ce preferred. Steady > Meat Market, 701 Orel Apply OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth experienced preferred but not necessary. KEEGO SALES 8 SERViCEy 3080 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego Harbor. 662-3iQ0. PROJECT ENGINEERS DESIGNER-CHECKERS LAYOUT-DETAILERS Experienced In special machim design of fixtures, heeds, trenilei niectianlsms, tooling, etc. prefer TOOLMAKERS SPECIAL MACHINE BLDRS. GRINDER HANDS ALL AROUND LATHE OPERATORS TURRET LATHE OPS. MILL OPERATORS TAPE DRILL OPS. EXPERIENCED ONLY .Ibaral company paid f r 1 n g i benefits, excellent working con dltlons and wages with overtime. Apply In person or write — Fenton Machine Tool, Inc. !00 Alloy Dr. (U.S. 23 and Owen Rd. Exit) Fenton, Michigan 48430 Ph. 427-2204 Development, KIrksite Moulders, and trainee for above. Apply ' Husite Engineering Co., 272 M nesota, Troy, Mich. office. Commercial and ...............ge --------- lal cstat- ..................... strictly .... fidential. Talk to Ward E. Partridge, ........... - Pontiac. Ph. 334- Apply PERSONNEL DEPT. 2ND FLOOR Montgomery Ward An equal opportunity employer PONTIAC MALL OAKLAND COUNTY Employment Opportunities IMMEDIATE OPENINGS •robate Court Clerk (3 vacancies* 55400 - 54000. Requires that applicants have, at the time of application: t - Passed their 21st birthday, but not have passed their O'— birthday. 2 — Successfully completed i d^^replles ti “ItYEOt R~ UTICA AREA _____________731-0100 afternoons, s. 444-7774. TURRET LATHE Day work for exparlencad or alors. Steady ^emplo|'menl w ACME MANUFACTURING CO. 100 E. 7 Mila Rd. .. Fernd... I Mile W. of 1-75_____544-1550 Technical TIRED OF Lay-Offs? able to offer you all the work you can handle. Big pay checks plui Blue Cross, vecstlon and holiday E'. All the things that make i worth having. Ask for Bll •land at 210 Orchard Laka Avo. WELDING SHCTp HELPERS. 4555 DIxlo Hwy.___ Wanted ADULT CARRIER r Somarsot Apartmant Complex. Troy Contact Mr. Hudson :irculatlon Dept. sultantt, experience gref^rradp ex* cellent wage*, 673-0074 or $74-2312. FULL OR PART TIME, EVENINGS, cabinet making^ wa will tra Beauty-Rite Cab I nets a 7: Highland Rd. (M-59 Plaza) Williams Lake Rd. YOUNG MEN Are you tired of factories end n enough money? We have challenging opportunity for you tho advertising field. It you are 1 necessary. For those who quality, we will train at company expanse. For appointment, call Mr. Cc — -377-3107 (Royal Oak)_________ Help Wanted Female FULL AND 1 PART T A/sllress. Apply RIker Fountain, (V, Huron,_belween ^4 pjn._____ A MATURE WO/MAN TO (30 typing - ■ clerical work. Write Post of-box 45, Pontiac, giving :etlo« family status, lol> I experience. ir Wig ATTENTIONI LIVE IN MATURE -- sekeeper, child car, attorney le, top SBlary, 851-3372. ATTENTION GIRLSI FASHlOk ASSISTANT MANAGER Modarato to botfer SpaclaHTy stort. at Pontiac Mall, axcallant fulura, llbard banaflti, talary com--------------------- FULL TIME Lady for packaging and assambl-Ing In dry ciaaning plant, will train. Apply In parson, Gresham Claanars, m Oakland Ava. bus E K E E P E R , MATURB WOAAANa live In or out In • motherless home. 473-7474.____ . ____ - ____I completi ________ ________ ... training you will bo qualified credited college of law on a part-service end maintain our buslnt time basis, during evenings'equipment which Includes a compli working toward the Bachelor oflllne of computers. Men with i .------ -------------------- I----------.... military technic a part-venlngs'i d Michigan operator's classrooi ACCOUNTING CLERKS FULL TIME CASH OFFICE CLERKS FULL TIME AND PART ' CREDIT BOOKKEEPER FULL TIME expeHanced HOUSEWIVES Exciting New Port-Time Opportunity Supervising Newspaper Boys WE HAVE OPENINGS IN Keego Harbor Rochester Huron Gordens Union Lake Highland Milford Holly REQUIREMENTS! Good Car, Good Disposition and Free Afternoons IF INTERESTEDi Send Resume toi BOX C-17 THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 W. Huron St. Pontiac 48056 HOUUSEKE'EPER for MOtHlRl f time. 682-7475. venlences. Commarclal area, I child welcome. Live In. 343-5728. HOSTESS WANTED. APPLY In person. Groat Dana Rostaurant, 31444 Northwestorn Hwy., S51-055. HOUSEKEEPER, TO LIVE IN, n —.led Lake area, o.»- fMMEDIATE OPENING F O R secretary In Drayton Plains area with general office axn. Call 473-1220, for appt. KITCHEN HELP, I celersted training progrsr I time of appileati a Bachelor's Deg vilh s malor ?n ec-|Cornplele sucessfuMv complt.™ effective Immediately ai nting principles and application a^pllcants^muit be a includini)' 'c&curnentotlon, coding testing,^ ^ de-buggln^ and ^ im Ida I (2 Vacancies*) ! of application, ap- ^1, 2375 W. Grand I LIpperl, 542 NCR ASSEMBLY, COUNTER. Mi girl. Apply In person M I Cleaners, 2727 Orchard Lake Keego Harbor. el opportunity employer TV TECHNICIAN Sweet's Radio and Ap- HrMeTs“ new office In Po openings lor 4 positions. Must I greduate. Above a f this examination the lest five years performing sub - professions! onglneerlnf work including the preperatloi of property descriptions or sur veying and drafting. Note; It Is desirable that eopH - f56e00-$7600) - (I il diploma for the p construction prelects, noiniendhce Laborer (5 vacancic 55700-54900 WANTED MANAGER and essister manager, attendance day and nigh shift. Kayo Service Stations, Ox ford and Pontiac, an equal or portunity employer, rapid ac vencement. Contact Mr. Ro Gardner 473-7047 or 338-7707. ir chauffeur's license. .. excellent physicOI performance of hMvy physical laundry In evening. Celt 451- In-opersta 551-7002. Farm, 1755 Ray Rd., (5xford. 428- MANAGER TRAINEE For sales work. Lift Insurance, -------- benefits, exc. M>- niry. JOHN RD. LUMBER 7940 Cooley Lk. Rd., I MAINTENANCE M FIRST CLASS - UTIO Reward. OR 4-! bondable. I FOR RETURN of large ind gray female tiger cat. s to "Lollipop." Vic. of S. Adame and Squirrel Rd. Ing lines Feb. 10 P.M. Apply In person, 12 noon » w.„.. Walker Cue, Club, 1442 ' Telegraph, Bloomfield Tpwnshlp. FULL TIME CLERK, retail stc good working conditions, fri benefits. A. L. Damitun Compa Bloomfield Plaza, Telegraph Maple Rd. 424-3010. NEEDED AT ONCE, mechanica, lube men, service write-up mai Man tor janitor service. Working conditions good. Pays good, end fringe benefits. 451-7000. AsT counts. Field assistance. National advertising. Non-conflict line OK. Reply to Pontiac Press Box C-14, contact! the: PERSONNEL DIVISION Ookland County Courthouse 1200 N. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac, Michigan 48053 or Phone 338-4751, Ext. 495 SALESMAN MANAGER .TRAINEE Real Estote Classes Applications are now being ------ for Instruction classes In prepare-tlon for the real estate salesmen's examination. Class will be from 7 to 7 p.m. Contact Vonderharr at Von Realty 3401 Huron or phone 482.5800. PART TIME, DAY AND AFTERNOON SHIFTS. C RITTENTON HOSPITAL, ROCHESTER. SEE MR. SPURLOCK, HOUSEKEEPING DEPT. related Items In vasslng.*Thls posftion offers ---- plus commltsipn, company car, fringe bonoflfi.r-^.......... opportunity tor * manager, no er Apply Singer C phone OKMaso. Co., Pontiac A PERIENCED, own tools. Id Blue Cross. Apply Benton Corp., 2070 WANTED NOW men, 21-40, part or full fir >hone 474-1421, 5-7. - GUARANTEE) SALARY WANTED SALESMAN We are looking for a salesmi who intends to make 815,000 . year. An experienced salesman who Is willing “ -- — to Increase qualify for tt progressive GM'”doa1ership. Many fringe t»neflts, _ Inc ju" PERSONNEL DEPT. 2ND FLOOR Montgomery Ward ACCURATE TYPIST General office work. Good portunity tor tho right pars like people, c ref. Call 482-( to Mirada _____________ ____iph. LADIES FOR TELEPHONE WORk --- 51.40 per hour. Apply h Lake Rd., Room 18 LADy“F0R companion for elderly - In exchange for board, room wages, no smoking or drink-444-8708 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. BABYSITTER. FE 2-7573 AFTER 5 BABY SITTER II .............Y HOME 5-day week. 473-87)0. ■ SITTER WANTED, 2 chll- tely call ■ White. BABY SITTER WANTED J f’s*'woekry,'"M2-°407. BABY SITTER FOR 1 child, 7 to 4, islonal evenings, Waterford _____I. 330-8045, ask for Judy.__________ BABY SITTER In my home, own •-ansporfstlon, weekdays II a.m. BABYSITTER, FROM 2 p.m. t( ' 'night, $25 to 830, own tra bitoro 2 p.m., FE 5-7314. moving to Clarkston-Sashabaw Rd. nsportatlon necessary. It Davis Cleaners. 447-3007. MEDICAL OFFICE assistant for ‘'ontlac eroa physician. Send lallficatlons end experience to intlac Press Box C-i, Pontiac. No Sundays, 45M131. MEDICAL SECRETARY ExperTenced and transcription. Type 45 wpm., Hrs. 4 P.m.-I2:30 a.m. starting salary commonsursta with training and exparltnce. Excellent fringe benefits. Apply at personnel department, P o n 11 a e General HospItsL Seminole at W. BARMAID^^AND ,WAIT^EM,^_^^_ Call Wonderland BEAUTY OPERATOR 580 puaramaad, plus commission 1 Andre’ Beauty Salon 11 North Saginaw 5-7257 SAID, over 25, experience 1, 4 or 5 days a week, 338- NURSE AIDES, EXPERIENCED or BEELINE FASHIONS BEAUTICIAN 50-55-40 per c Philip's of Pontiac Bonnie Jeant OFFICE CLERK Full time, knowledge of filing a simple bookkeeping. Apply In person, Gresham Cleanars, 405 Oakland Ave._________________ PRODUCTION RECORDING AND General Office. Must be good at figures. Aptitude and eblllty more Important, f— ---------- “— BOOKKEEPING, GENERAL offh Apply GrInnelT's, Pontiac Mall. NG LADIES, al Birmingham, i cleaning store. COLLEGE STUDENT, COOK, DOBSKI'S, ' . Rochester Rd. WE NEED: EXPERIENCED MACHINE WE OFFER: STEADY WORK PLUS OVERTIME NEW FACILITIES EXCELLENT WAGES AND FRINGE BENEFITS Apply At: DIAMOND AUTOMATION, INC. 23400 HAGGERTY RD. Farmington Ve are Interviewing every day Including Saturday. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY CLEANING HELP, 2 days a CLEANING WO/WAN needed. Apply Cpjemblere College, ^7W Big WANTED: MEN 45 to 55 yeors old for porter work. Day and evening shifts. Apply after 4 p.m. Big Boy Restaurant. 2470 DIxlo Hwy. dopartment. SECOND COOK Full time position hospital dieter- -“ minimum ot 2 rvais perlence required. We offer an excellent salary and new fringe benefit program, which Includes: paid Blue Cross and tree life in- ,n Equal Opportunity Employer WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS Gas or Diesel. Liberal pay, insurance furnished, retirement and full benefits. See Mr. Coe, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday. CMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 equal opportunity employer OR WAITRESS, or bot lire and experienced. Apply on. The Birch R o o 4. Saginaw it Pike CLEANING WOMAN Must have own car, top pay for weekends?''Nursing Home. EM DENTAL ASSISTANT FOR full —1 time work In N. E. Pont.— 1. Good pay and botwfIts. Soma desirable. Call 334-4353.___ DAY BAR/MAID-WAITRESSES,, ■- parsm after 4 p.m. s» », 130 So. Telegraph. DENTAL ASSISTANT, experience preferre, but not requlred._^ 19-30 Ml' t°i^.°3ia-»B7~.___________ DEPENDABLE, ATTRACTIVE high ------ graduate, light typing, good bonde. FE BEAUTICIAN, 5-4474. E R lENCED diately, over 20 years Boston, Pontiac, Close to 5-7711. EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, me.. — goe typist and some ^shorthend^ r?3erred? pleaSnf, *meern ditto I home In Pon- profit sharing. Press, Box C-2. Personnel Consultant $5,000 up Prestige Birmingham office. Base rate Incentive plan. Call Mrs. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 880 S. Woodward B'hj- PUBLIC CONTACT I train. Like to associate « others? Light typing a office helpful, but no, ■, ....... Phone Mr. Steininger, 334-2475. This Intomatlonal firm nees you RELIABLE WOMAN FOR RESTAURANT WORK. AMBITIOUS. SALESWOMAN, « vertlsing gai for paper. Call 424-1201. SALES-CREDIT clerk, some poox-keeping experience prelerr«l. Apply Spiegel Catslog Shopping Center. 37 S. GItnwood, Pontlic. SECRETARY Due to our rapid expansion. The Rochester Division ot Cattrel Date Corp. needs a well-oualltled person for a secretarial position. , ^ The person we select must have previous experience end e high school education. Typing skill « 55 wpm., shorthand ability of at least 80 wpm. Is required. Employment otters an excellent salary end In Blrmlnghem 447-3337. ELDERLY LADY TO babysit. In, more for homo than we Milford. 485^14.________________ EXPERIENCED B R E A K F A _ , waitress, exc. vrorking conditions, top wages, Hc^italizstion, apply Harvey's Colonial House, 5874 Dixie Hwy., Waterford. Wilkins Restaurant, Orchard Lake. EXPERIENCED SECRETARY ----Il office work. NORTHWEST GAGE „.JD ENGINEERING INC. 24200 NOVI RD. N( SALFSLADIFS For better s mrk. Exper' PEGGYS-BLOOMFIELD FASHION PONTIAC MALL X>-io SEEKING HOUSEKEEPER -----mlon to Bv* In om) cor r ooiwlo. Ablllly to ( I. dniroblo Iwl ! WORK AT I SANDERS 7 Help WoRtEd M. or F. I FULL TIME CUSTODIAN, I hovo rctoroncn, opply SI E loctric Co.. 175 S. Sogmow. 11 Sain '^Itncltr'd ^HE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1969 11 For Wont Adi Dial 3344981 > Mali-FtmolE |.A dli^ Mcountt poyoblo, nocciwiY. Coll porownor tOY ilnO»| „a IS TOUR INCOME Adoquofot ' Mr ItnUv. VCtRiT OPAI ECT REAL ESTATE. Foloy. I^lce, Commorelol ind rttldontlol. 200 mlllloni In llotlnao Ntroughou' your oniM Mycboci ri Jorgoi ^rool, oototi ..—ntlol. PortrUgo, with Mlchlgon^i lorgoi rool oototo offlcot. Air Inquirtoo otriclly * *- Word salesmIn to sell TOYS ; , J BLOOMFIELD SMOPPINO CENTER . AS9A T»learjinh at AAanla . .. ,jles position with U tirm. Ofloring drow whilo trolning In compony tchool. tl to 115,000 firil yoor. Coll GIFTS. No d SO, dir cent c plies ond hosToss qins. UDeroi in-conliwo progromt. Froo trolning Write, giving phono n u m b o r, "Sondro Portleo," 720J E. S Mile, Detrolt^MIcygo^ 08212. fYPfST ■■ ' STENOS JOB WITH A loturo.'CoH TORK REAL ESTATE,_ OPENING FOR Tax Totu r'n ?repsrotlon, percontogo ovallobN. E 0 9033 _ I oovoroo PHYSICAL THERAPIST for luil _____________RAY REAL ESTATE timo portnonenl position os ChloliWE WANT Physical Tharaptst. E x c a I I a n t tall rtal alartlng aalary, assured Increases, formation generous fringe benallts including Work Wantad Mala M I S C ELLANEOUS FURNITURE repairt In the henria. STd-tlSO. YOUNG MARRIED MAN wouL ........ to learn on the lob finlah carpentry and ramodtiing, hard worker, - willing to learn. If you can me phone FE 2-3804, ask for or Carol. I^ntad ChiMran ta leord 2t DAY CARE, Llcdnatd homa. Femola 12 ' IRONINGS WANTED. E x 042-3055 ____ 025 S^Adami TYPIST TYPIST Profitable temporary i Rocttasttr ai^». .wge CALL MA^OWER _ WAITRESS fO WOllc'Trlfl Saturday nights, in restaurj TYPIST Wanted M. or F. ^DY to s. Call Mr. Foley, 'i 'I ESTATE, OR 4-03S3. ' APPLICATION NOW being accepted, ...........“'lira.' woodgralnlng. 082-9332. MATURE LADY with.. ---------- .. children. Aftamoont-avaa. Light .-------_ H,f,rancat. FB 24034. Would you like to sell wallpaper and paint? TYPiNG, DfCTAfibN, MAILING, _mlmeograt^ing, notary. FE 3-4117. WANtlO; WASHINGS and ironings. Would you like to sell wollpaper and paint? House. Call belora 4:30 p m. 5839 after 4:30 p.m. 332-0434. WAITRESS. Neal, 5 days, no Sun-R*rs^"°°" "" * **’'* ■ ENCORE RESTAURANT _^Mirocle Mjle Shopping Waitresses Jack's Drive Inn, 23 w. Monicolm, Pontiac. Wanted“EXPERiENCEb Ileever, and folder, tor cabinet typo unit. Apply at Mitchell Cleaners, 2207 Orchard Lake Rd., corner of Mld-_ dUbell, Pontiac. FE 0-9571., WATERFORD TOWNSHIP SCHOOLS Appllcatlont are now being taken tor tchool bus drivers at nil Sylvertin, tor further Informellon, WAITRESSES ; Mitieffid' Rochester 5} ARE YOU 313 Main Rutr'CalP/ Foley. YORK REAL ESTATE, OR Help Mole-FeRiole 8*A REAL ESTATE EXPLOSION' T, Rswieigh Co., Box Wllllemston, Mich. 48895 oi 517^055 2389. _ ARE YOU REALLY LIVING ■ (Itling? Cell " maintenance, new Royal Oak apartment building, part tin-- — children or pals, apartment t jpnillas. 357-4080._ BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED Ul RH Posllh .k.*.r"tl,Tor WANTED EXPERIENCED SALESMEN FOR EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY IN THE REAL ESTATE PROPiSSSION. THE PERSONS APPLYING MUST HAVE PROOF that THEY MADE AT LEAST '“' ANY GIVEN IN ANY FIELD. lA M I S S I O N S . L FRINGE CALL 074-3105 C FOR M R . I FOR A P- 510,000 our quallllcatlons. I this exciting field _______ ____________________ "mmu STOUT,"rTaLTOR j employment Agencies - bookkeeper, top not. 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. .... FE 5-8105 ,475, „n p„ 332-915 AMBITIOUS PERSON who likes In- Associates Personnel. CLERICAL: want a good lob? Pos people. Experience Is not offers full benefits, and a 24 FT. SWIAAMINO pool « 1 PIECE m HOUSEFUL. Fi 8-7032___________ HTGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good lurnllurq and appllanoaa. Or what havt you? B 8. B AUCTION 5089 DIxIa Hrfv. , 01 VILL BUY OR SeLl Tyler't Auction, WANtED A DRAG LINE A4 to t'A 0&5^* after* 4 Foiaonabla. Work Wanted Couples 12 A T( Ing, . - - FE 2-8034. 1 SET (4) CORVETTE Hub cap or 15 Inch Mag or Chroma Wheali vPhont FE 2-S»l. wanYed Building SarvIcut-SuppliaMS A. BENSON COMPANY 30K WHAT WE FOUND WHEN we TOOK INVENTORY "OUR FIND, YOUR GAIN." Medicine Cabinet. Reg. $44, nov Apinrt^s, Fu^^^ Hobms. UnfurBlsjwdJO BEDROOMS, GAS heat, large lot, I east aide. 547-7— by owner, 100x150' shaded to., on Watkins, convenient 073-0355. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, private c trance, iitllltias furnished, 300 I Saginaw. ______________________ W ROOMS, UPPER, AL couple only. GlngallvHle, ROOMS AND BATH, small baby welcome, 835 wk. 8100 dap., -. —' 338-4M4. CLARKSTON CORNERS ALL ELECTRIC APARTMENTS NO CHILDREN — NO PETS IDS WASHINGTON W. complete. FE ^315, a Wnntad to Rent 32 : 4 ROOM unfurnishad apart-)t, widow. Phone 332-7955. young EXECUTIVE DESIRES 2 c Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Share Living Quarters lady DESIRES TO share her * 5 ” SINGLE GIRL WISHES to share ti necessary If you are Interested In learning the wallpaper business. Full or part lima. For Intarvlew call 338 8988 betwaan 10.2 p.m. _Wall P^par Center, 1028 W. Huron, Can You Sell? Il^so.^wa have Immediate opening nights. OUR GIRLS AVERAGE OVER 1125 I. 2820 f MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER r-EK wic. m Pontiac FE 4-9947 I 1342 Wide Track Dr., w.. arson, THE EGG ANOl Mon., FrI, 9-4 Woodward. Royal Oak.I Tues., Wed , Thurs. 10-5 13 Mile Rds. lEXPEHIENCEb BREAKFAST cook, Rcondll Ions, top wages, m, —■ • ------- Basketball Backboards only . THE EGG AND I, 17455 Teleoraphl Hosoltalliairon annl Orand River | Si.l'& teSf WAITRESSES. POSSIBLY BOTH] Waterford. SHIFTS* ovar 31.. Nn SunHav* FF I arr>r>i ~ W«MAirPOR'Ttoosowork, LICENSED REAL ESTATE SALESMEN WITH PURCHASING EXPERIENCE 334-2^71, Snelling end Snelling._ EX-SERVICEMAN Wondering where to go? We , . . specinliie In placing eK-s«rvlcemen|CWd lot itorm ig In career opportunitiei In all fields ■ 33«47Lj, lot moldings to, ling tile 13x13 schod graduate you'can Type 50 Combination Doors, 30x^8 wprn, this tost growing corporation’ established lirm. Right boss, 8390. Lynn Anderi Snelling and_felling. _ GENERAL OFFICE 1 MILLION us to purchase and assi contracts, mortgages i homes, lots or acreage We will give you cash equip'. Our appraiser Is 'outrigh}! 'S^vaC; EFFICIENCY 2-ROOM, all ' furnished, good condition, fi deposit, rent $23.50 a weak. to 0 p.m. call 334-3005 ATTRACTIVE FURNISHED ROOMS men, Pontiac area, 512 OR 3-5539 or EM 3-2565. GENTLEMAN, CLEAN, sleapli room, private home. 84 Poplar. Lake Rd., Oxford. 528- d neighborhood. FE BEDROOM, CLARKSTON. refrigerator, air conditioning, overlookin* ‘ " 625-1775. BEDROOMS — CARPETED -'-■-s front — Clarks'an. Adults onlv . ... ---------------^ 5-2576. INDUSfRiAr SALESMAN $ 3.65 Foloy, YORK REAL 38-63i6. WANTED PART-TIME electrlcsl * ap'pltenras'* *sl” terga department store. Hours-Frl. 6 to to p.m.. Set. 1 to 5 p m. Selery ' per hour. Pleas# write to Ponll Press Box C-3 giving nams, S( WOMAN FOR INTERESTING o jwork. Pontiac Credit Bureau. N. Perry St.________ ___ WOOL LESSER Experienced, good working ditions, paid holweys and vecal transportation necessary, J. Davis Cleaner, 647-3009. by? Call ..... ESTATE, OR 4-0363. . FREE CLASSES | you" kiBrn°"we have'll' ol'l«sT'’200 salespeople who can't be wrong. Cell today. MILLER BROS. REALTY _ 333-7156 _ INTERIOR DECORAfORS SEARS IN PONTIAC Hat the opportunity you ere seeking. Exc, salary, paid car expense, profit sharing, many more benefits. Apply In person. Seers In Ills Page, 334-2471. Snelllr pVbLIC RELATIONS TRAINEE TOO OLD FOR BIO EARNINGS? Extensive public contact, 812,000,'^" right In maKIng . VALUE? REALTY, I President, Texas RefIneri Mahogany Prefinishod Paneling only....................t HERE'S WHERE YOU GET "CUSTOMER SERVICE" "FREE DELIVERY" o' “RETUJRI^ ACCEPTED" i Business Service 15 joRY WALL, INSTALLED, new 674-2236 McCullough realty .20 5460 Highland Rd. (M-591 M Job. Call IPS 334-4971. PERSONNEL consultant TO $7200 PER YEAR FEE PAID Bookkeepping & Taxes 16 1 to 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS. FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACT. WARREN STOUT, Reoltor 1450 N. Opdyke FE 5-8165 Urgently REAL ESTATE EXPERIENCE OR WILL TRAIN — FREE CLASSES. We need help at our UNION LAKE ofllct - 8800 Com-marce Rd. Also at our olflca at 33000 NORTHWESTERN HWY. near Orchard Lake Rd., good pay. C. SCHUETT LI 7-6560 imdings. Pie S 334 4971. SERVICEMAN TRAINEE It you have some electrical i mechanical aptitude school Iralnlt or service background, this co porelion will train you. Coll IF 334-4971.________________ ■ SALES REPRESENfATIVE TRAINEE growing '^nat°ona'I'’'^"f'irrrr'"t iTi manufactures nationally advertlsi products. Excellent future, i benefits. Call IPS 334-49__ SECRETARY Good typing and shorthand, plus plaaslng apper--* ... —"■■■ you lor thli g i34-497l. 2-4 FAMILY INCOME i N NEED OF AN accou Franklin A. Hollis at 3 complete accounting ......I accountant. Call ... Hollis, at 334-2745 afot accounting " Dresimaking & Tailoring 17 ALTERATIONS ALL K KN desses, leatiwr coot^^etc. I s great job. l Aniworing Sorvico ANSWERING SERVICE ^oiomont JVatorproofing A-1 BASEMENT waterproofing, masonry painting. Bonti and Accenorie^ BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Starcreft, I.M.P. S I I v e r 1 I n i Fiberglass S, aIu'"'"""’ ■'"•i Merc, outboard A tl S. Woodward lA CARPENTRY - and r» tree estlmetes. MA 5-4262. A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERToIT^ CARPENTRY AND CEMENT work, tree, estimates. 852-5252.__ HOME REPAIR, PANELING, pein-tlng, roofing, gutter. FE 4-5170._ . SNYDER( floor LAYING, *'"‘1 end flnlihing. FT * Floorj^lllng 1 FLOOR COVE 1. lormlaca, tile. I. Perry. 338-6120. Do All My Own WorkI Will Insulate Your Home For Less Carpeting TALBOTT LUMBER Glait service, wood or aluminum. W.U"d* Home Repair ALL KINDS OF HOME REPAIR. Free est]miitei,_call ^835. /lOblRNIZATION OF ALL TYPf end cement wdrk. 625-^IS.___ Moving, Storage BLOCK AND CEMETIt « SNYDER BROS. MOVING C OSCAR SCHMIDT CEMENT FLOORS. Residential and; commercial, new and repair, for! work that cannot be excelled. Bert: COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL GUARANTEED. _ Cemmlc Tile CERAMIC TILI J&B PAINTING COMPANY, Inttrlbi .......... I and exterior, also paper hanging, SLATE end merbleLM »M. contractor. Call V QUALITY WORK ASSURED Pain PresHnnking, Tniloring ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT _ plastering, _ tere-[ patching, free estimates. 363---- [PLASTER AND DRY WALL n BETTY JO'S dressmeklim, lions end weddings. 674-3766 ALTERATIONS Plastering Service NEW WORK TRAINEES Unlimited potential tor hl^h portunity to learn 'office mi men! and procedures of i companies. IPS 334-4971._ YOUNG TYPIST or EM 3-3516. INTERLAKE SAND AND GRAVEL CO. iTwrclal end residential. ty'33*'0066°^*?8665.°3'3M ^ AA JERRY SNOW PLOWING, hour service. 338-8427 orJ8M518. CLARKSTON ROOFING. 5 N 0 vv ..r . ~ plowing. 673-9297._________Work Wanted Mole SNOWPLOWING - LOTS AND Instructions-Schools 10 REGISTER NOW 6-WEEK TYPING COURSE Day or Evtning classes Licensed by Mich. State Board of Education MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Hallmark Income Tax FAST ACCURATE SERVICE 55 and up. No app'f. neces.'- ' 674-4123 4821 HIghli Airway Lar DRIVES SNOWPLOWING, COMMERCfAL and residential. 334-6259. Suspended Ceilings Tree Trimming Service ■1 TREE SERVICE BY B S L. Free *llm^. FE 5-4^, 674-3510. -t TREE SERVICE, slumps trucking ) LIGHT MOVING, TRASH hauled . CARPENTER NEEDS WORK, ittens, dornies.^ 5 id ing,*’roofing, rec- II to wall Inch Srick *r stone splace. 4 foot wide brick chimney. 9 Ben Franklin Unit. Not $2100 or do but only $795. Bill Dew, FE t- a specialty. 682-5137. I CARPENTER ROUGH and llnlsh. CARPENTER WORK, all Income Tax Sorvico 1 CALL INSURES F tarad, guai or without . City. 673-0341 for ■~REtirRNS' BACKUS A BETTER CASH DEAL All cash for homes, Pontiac and Drayton Plains area. Cash In " department. YORK REAL ESTATE ■E 8-7176___0^4^3 A SYNDICATE Having unlimited funds to invesf in the Real Estate field has employed ■us as their agent to acquire residential home. Commercial property, lane tontracts acreage, etc. May wt suggest that before you list your property you contact Von Realty for a cash sale. ’■‘— syndicate wants property noi you have to nmva fast or di like prospects going through 3 BATH. Inquire al AND BATHr" 49 better hurry ON THIS ONE! Excellent Bl-Itvel ranch recreation room, $160 dep. $200 required. 8S1-0625. ~~ REWwTH OPTION SNYDER, i|KINNEY& BENNETT .[ ROCHESTER 134 W. UNIVERSITY ' (Second floor) ___651^^00 or 334-3100 _ Y OWNER - 3-bedroom extra lot. LADY, SHARE homo, nice. 338-3639._____________ PRIVATE ROOMS with breakfast I am^«4-33£_atter_7___________ BY OWNER, LARGE 5^ bwlroo!" 'ike front home, 3 full bath, 2—Vi Bths, 2 family rooms, full base-lent with recreation room, beach 5 om 2692 W. Long Lake Rd. SLEEPING ROOM FOR LAI close to Mali, private enirai 332-4051.. .............„ SLEEPING ROOM for young rr BY OWNER — 1------------------- ■■ :arpetlng, near Mall. Waterford ichools. Knotty pine Interior. Lend WORKING LADY, --'■■lieges, Welerl_ . . Call 623-0815 alter Waterford, oil Dixie k large PRIVATE ROOM, nV Wes'sWe. SiSiflemei ROOM AND BOARD, F I Office Space Builders AttentionII te need a "builder" to sel nder the same root with us — OK- w a model to show? ARCH-CRAFT REALTY e HOMES 'builders" use. 4615 DI 674-3800 CLEAN 6-ROOM lx CLARKSTON RANCHER, bedrooms, basement, attached 1 car garage, landscaped, Anchi fenced, scenic view of vlllag 3 OFFICE SPACES, FIEAT, light _______________________ J_____4540 Dixie, OR 3-1355. CLARKSTON SCHOOL DISTRICT, 300-1000 SO. FT. ADJOINING busy ........... ........ ......... " ■ property, ' ---- --- .-- ROOMS AND BATH, i ^ly, man^ager, apt. 3, “ROCXMS,”' .. - BEDROOMS, clean, v.iiiuici. welcome. FE_4-6957.____ ROOM APARTMENT. Stove and refrigerator turn. Private entrance. No children. MY 2-3573.____ BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS’ APARTMENTS Ideajly sUuated jn Bloomfield- AVAILABLE NOW Plenty of tree pari 651-5553 or 651-4576. SEPARATE OFFICES Mohawk Dr. Quiat dignity w oe yours when you move Into tt spacious chalet type h o m i boasting large tr— Paneled, carpeted. Heat, air .___________________________— dilloning and cleaning furnished. CLARKSTON AREA -Call John Slier, 674-3136. ( bi-level, garage, « UNION LAKE AREA — dandy lorgi ' bearoom apartments available from $145 per month Including caroeting, Hotpoint air conditioning and appliances, large family kitchens, swimming pool and large 4"" deck — All utilities except electric. No children. Located on South Blvd. (20 Mile Rd.) between Opdyke and 1-75 expressway. Open dally and Sunday, 12 to 6 p.m. Closed Thursday. For Information; Mgr. 335-5670, ^9^4643. EMBASSY WEST •"<' *-b«KJ™om, $150 end $170. Mrs. Schultz. 674-0569, 1 to 8 p.m. only. parking lot. 363-3208 or 363-7153. FRANKS REALTY. Rent Business Property 47-A 2 MODERN BUILDINGSz parking 10645 Dixie Hwy.f 625-2546. 30r000 SQa FT. IN FLINT, heavy storage and mfg., 15 ton crane. Also 2500 sq. ft. on 4539 Dixie, Oood for any kind ot business. Rent or lease. Immediate possession. MA 5-2161. BUILDING 30x50* on West Huron, lots ot parking. FE 3-7968. AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS good location, 4479 Dixie Hwy3 corner of Frembes. Office or> warehouse. 674-4166. I room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, t'/5 baths, basement, gas heat. ^O'xlOO" lot. S1500 down FHA. $135 per month. 682-7579.__________________ CLOSE TO STORES and sch(»ls. CLARKSTON AREA — 3 h 5,"i593«' FRIENDLY — LOW COST KEYS TAX SERVICE Your home or our office INDIVIDUAL TAXES, reasonabK Convoiescent-Nursing 21 Moving and Trucking BIG TRUCK GOING SOUTH. Pdnting ond DMoruting 23 Troniportntion P«nses and driving, must hav« Apartments, Unfuri HAUlTnG and RUBBISH. 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 IGHT TRUCTCINO, REASONABLE RAX«^339J2te._____________ LIGHT HAULING end odd lobs. LIGHT HAULING AND moving. Reasonable. 6S^7518. LIGHT HAULING. BASEMENTS garages cleaned. 674-1242._____ Li6hT and HEAVY “tRUCKlNIJ, rubbish, fill dirt, grading and g^el and tronttend loading. FE 3- Piumbing & Heating ^ Eovestroughlng M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED Complete eovestroughlng service. Free est. 673-6M6, 6ft-5662 PLUMBING AND HEATING Service and Repair, 334-7981. Restaurants BIG BOY DRIVE-IN, DIXIE AT Silver Lake - Telegraph at Huron. Electrical Services Roeflng Truck Rentoi________ Trucks to Rent i-Ton Pickups 1'/5-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS i AND EQUIPMENT ! Semi Trailers I Pontioc Farm and | Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD E 4-0461 FE 4-1443 __Open Dally Including Sunday_ TV Soles and Service COLOR TV SPECIALISTS SERVING OAKLAND-MACOMB NORTH EAST AREA REPAIRED IN YOUR HOME A60BILE RADIO CONTROLEO TRUCKS COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL ANTENNAS INSTALLED. EAST PONTIAC-ROCHESTER ROMEO ’ knd The Greater Tri-County Area i 752-9796 remodeling. 24 h Excavating Bsckhoe. Basements. 674-2639. I ROBERT PRICE — Roofliq _____Free estlmetes, 334-1024 WOMACK ROOFING CO. n Estimates FB "A PAD THAT'S RIGHT OUT OF PLAYBOY!" IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY That's what one young swinger said when he first glimpsed an Oakland Valley ApartmentI Modestly, we agree. We've put all the latest luxuries Into these 1 and 2 bedroom epert-menta . . . sunken living rooms, terrace dining rooms, even private balconies. We've carpeted them, draped them. Installed air conditioning, and sound-condition them so as not to inhibit parties. And lust to show we're serious about the Playboy bit, we've built the greet new Oakland Veliev Club for Oakland Valley Apartment residents and their guests. It has a pool, card and game rooms, exercise room, sauna baths, and a very free-wheeling atmosphere. All yours for as little as 1177 a month. P.S.-BunnIet Welcome. lodels OMn Dally end Sunday-1 to 8 P./W. $aturdey-l to i P.N Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Wuii Ciconers I cleaned. Reas. Satisfaction Weil Driiiing " WELL DRILLING, Chmy^ . fsinsrienM ^■'tiuMi MMiuam OMVww OP w OAKLAND VALLEY APARTMENTS on Walton Rood between Adams and Opdyke just east of 1-75 Phone: 335-2641 BUILT BY THE SMOKLER COMPANY C-A-S-H condition. For fast service ci 333-7156 Miller Bros. REALTY Divorce-Foreclosure lon't give your home away Get our^^ral»l closing. REAL VALUE LAUINGER Enjoy A HAWAIIAN WEEKEND Every Weekend Year-Round POOLSIDE COLONIAL- VILLAGE East Apartments Enloy hoated Swimming pool and Saunas COME SEE! COME ENJOY! 1800 SCOTT LAKE ROAD between Dixie Highway and Watkins Lake Road children welcome. 1 Hopkins, 335-6171, Garden Court Apartments — apts., .... tl- . __ apts., . . from 8165 7-t bedroom apts. 7-2 bedroom apts.......... INCLUDING carpeting DRAPES ... ----.—tor, elr conditioning, ■bage disposal, hot water heat. '/2 Blocks from Pontiac Motors 191-195 W. KENNETT ROAD Thinking of Selling? t our appraisal first-guaranteed[pE " LAUINGER REALTY since 1935 I ^51^- 674-0319 673-1168 1531 Wmiarns ------ I HAV& A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT. 674-1698 or 33S-6952. PRIVATE PARTY WANTS to buy 2 -- 3-famlly Income. FE 5-0303. Want to sell? We are In urgent need of good residential homes In the Clarkst— area, Waterford and White La Two. We will be glad to talk you with no obligation. Please a OR 4-0306. J. A. Toylor Agency, Inc. 7732 Highland Rd. (M-59) DAILY OR 4-0306 EVES EM 3-7546 SPOT CASH . ... YOUR EQUITY, OR OTHEI^ FOR QUICK A FA, FHA. _____EK, POR wuicK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 441358 OR EVE-NINGS. FE 4.7005. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY CHILDREN WELCOME YOU'LL ENJOY LIFE MORE IN A BEAUTIFUL NEW APARTMENT BETWEEN 2 LOVELY LAKES. COME OUT TODAY. • t- and MEDROOMS • PRIVATE BALCONY or PATIO e FULLY CARPETED • ALL APPLIANCES INCLUDED • EXTRA STORAGE SPACE • PRIVATE PARKING • PRIVATE BEACH AND BOATING F—" T. and SUN., NOON-8 P.M :, 35 MINUTES TO DETROIT IN.-FRI., 4-7 P.M. PHONE 682-W31 or 357-4300 Right on Cess Lake Rd. t OPEN FOR INSPECTION: SAT. am t RENTALS FROMllS2 MONTHLY t 7 MINUTES TO PONTIAC, 35 MINI MON.-FRI., 4-7 P.M. PHOh Right on Cess I SYLVAN ON THE LAKES on Cass Lake Rd., between Cass ond Sylvan Lakes DIRECTIONS; From Pohtlec, take Elliabelh Lake Rd, to Cess Lake Rd. and turn lelt, or take Orchard Lake Rd. to Cass Lake Rd. and turn right. From Detroit, taka Middle Bell to Orchard Lake Rd., and turn left. BUILT BY THE SMOKLER COMPANY WANTED LOTS ACREAGE HOUSES In the Clarkston area Clarkston Real Estate transferred COUPLE WITH S5000 down desires 3-bcdroom home In Wetarford arae. Agent OR Apartments, Furnished 37 2-ROOM AND BATH basement apt. Nice! Pvt. entrance. 1 adult, no NOW LEASING BRAND NEW-WATERFORD Crescent Manor Apts. throughout, private b a c I o n I plenty of closet space, gr floor, laundry factlifies In i building, beautiful g r o u overlooking the Clinton R Rental Indues all facilities ei electricity. No pets allowed. CUSTOM CRAFTED APPLIANCES QUICK CASH FOR YOUR ______________ Equity or land contract. Call Clark Real Estate. 682-885. VALLEY PLACE APARTMENTS 2-BEDROOMS — 2 baths $188 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY eparete Bldgs, tor families wit Children OPEN DAILY to a.m. to 8 p.m. ________Phone: 651-4200 Rent Houses, Furnished 39 . ..r Sashabaw Rd. and Feb. 15-June 15. 548-5112. ROOMS AND BATH, 2 _____________ SI50 per mo. S1S0 security dep. Adults preferred. FE 4-2778. PROXIMATELY 1,00 divided into large re< and 3 offices. Formerly Pontiac. 6736555. Solo Houses 49 1 - AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY. Nice home al 2927 Glonbrook, Keego. City sewer, lake privileges, fenced yard, 110,950, $1250 down. Look It over, then cell OR 43567. . Cash For Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 basement, gas heal, 3 b , full dining room, lots , FHA approved. Only t Ljmw^r 33^020.^ i'/i ACRES, Clarkston a is furnace. 363-7677. MENZIES DRAYTON PLAINS Sparkling clean aluminum covered 3 bedroom bungalow in excellent area. Has large 21x12 carpeted livln^^^room, formal dining room, room, gas heat, enclosed 9x22 rear porch. A well maintained home for'$19,900 with terms. WARDEN REALTY Eva Howard ONLY $8,500, 5 bedroom, living room, dining room, kitchen, 2 full baths. Glassed front porch. Base- ' . ment with gas heat. Close to schools, ri stores and transportation. FHA n I terms. 0 EAST SIDE. No Stairs to climb. 8 J ^p^ment, _$VM S-70(n'."Atter“5''p'm?’M7 > FRANK MAROTTj 8. ASSOCIATES 3 DeSOTA. This_^half ot 7-family --------- .nd bath living room, din-kitchen on first ,,w,. rwii uaacinent Is semipan-eled, has gas hot air furnace and laundry tubs. Can be purchased ‘ $14,500 on FHA mortgage — " A PEEK IS ALL YOU NEED BUT TAKE A OTOD LOOK at this comtorteble 2 bedroom ranch near. Waterford Drive In. It Is completly carpeted, living room with fireplace, basement family room, attached garage, fenced yard. $23,900. A House for All Season ENJOY WINTER AND SUM- Pontlac Lake. W ot BALDWIN road -level, brick and landscaped. 1 acre_____ down. Sheldon, 625-5557. BY OWNER, 3-BEDROOM rapeh, large kitchen with b u 111 -1 h s, ceramic tile bath, basement, lake privileges, large lot, carpeting drapes, very good c o n d I tl BY OWNER - 3 bedroom home I kston area, carpeting an ses.. 625-1544. Call eft. 5:30 p.m ROOM EFFICIENCY \ basement! --------* -*-■m end quiet, —.... f‘ flee Motors. 2 AND 3 ROOMS « 3 ROOMS. West side. DARLING LITTLE HOUSE, ret. and deposit required. UL 2-1657. ! ELIZABETH LAKE area. Attractive newly fum. 4 rooms. Adulti. Sec dep. 6S2-8375. UN 4-7821. RENTAL SERVICE . . -----Js, reliable tenants watting ART DANIELS REALTY, 22117 Michigan, CR 4-9250. 1230 " MOBILE HOME iOxSS, i bedrooms, irfcbig — I ROOMS, SHARE bath, utilities, $25 Wetertord Twp. OR 3-1 _________ ^ week, deposit required. 674- j BEDROOM HOUSE, carpeted llv- ’"74.__________________________________ Ing room, dining room, fireolace. [ ROOMS AND BATH, child I full basement, 3W acres, 2 carj welcome, $30. wkly, with S75 dep. gerage. $175. Located at 6695. M-! -* ---win Ave. Cell 59, —------------------------------- «»—«— »■—- 338-4054. I. Feb. 24. 638-2270. LOOKING-SELLINGBUYING-TELL IT TO 260.000 People With A Pontiac Press WANT AD Phone 334-4981 FIRST IN VALUES RENTING _ m Mg -^ $10 Deposit 3-BEDRDOM- WITH APPLIi GAS HE LARGE DININ ILL ACCEPT ALL / .^'RDM ANY WORK OR DIVORCEES. REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 6424220 Gl SPECIAL lake P^Tlege'.'si7,900°'''' 3 BEDROOMS Full basement with lower Stri Lake privileges, $14,800. 25 | HIITER ifle, fenced lot. 811,500. Gl TERMS — on this 5 rooms and th, basement ,new gas furnace, I x 303 ft. lot. $12,990, terms. K, WE BUILD - now Is the le to get startarf on *hi« ? Jroom rancher « I tasaimn^ all iIeR, “ REAL?fOR7' ke Rd. 882-8080, after im. tiding. 815,390 HOUSE que 3-— featuring I basamant, electric RAY HAROLD R. FRANKS, Reolty CASH TALKS Commercial on Cooley Lake Rd. with 2 bedroom moAm homa and garage In rear of propeite. Good location. Opposite Post Ofnee and Food Town Market. $15,000 full price. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3208_______________383-7181 HALLMARK REAL ESTATE 674-4133 4821 Highland Rd. (M-59) next to Airway Lanes THE PONTIAC PJiESS, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY i;i, i9r>9 49 Sale Houses lOHNSON^^ D—11 ROYER RAY SCHRAM EAST S LAKE FRONT HOMES ROSS HOMES Open For Your YOUNG-BILT HOMES LAZENBY WEST SIDE 3 bedroom with full basemei car garagff. Has carpeted I K.^L. TEMPLETON, Redty^^ ceramic baths, full basement, tached garage. »33,»00. KING-PHIPPS AGENCY >7 SO, LAPEER RD. 628-2545 OfgLY $380 DOWN " ■■ * brick ranches ill s, **2 baths,- llreplace and parqi fireplaces In the II ” BRObCK JACK Frushour REALTOR WE TRADE SILVER LAKE ’ rooms, ranch brick, 3 bedrooms and family room, large------- kitchen, with bullt-Tns breakfast nook, newly di large picture window It.......... room with fireplace, 2VSi car heated garage, wall to wall carpeting, ' riving room and dining room, ai^ui boat and tractor Included. Approx. 1 acre lot with lake privileges. 30 hJL'””pS”ed ^ SILENCE IS GOLDEN ----- .. appointment. 3 ^^droom ranch with, basement, 2Vj car attached garage, swimming pool with loads of extras. THAT IS JUST THE BEGINNING. This I s situated on 10 rolling acres with INDIAN VILLAGE JOHNSON M S. TELEGRAPH_ FE 4-3 NORTH OF PONTIAC h complete fencei price i! IRWIN CROSS Reolty & Investment Co. 6713105'“''“"’mLS BRICK, 4 BEDROOM COLONIAL: This lovely home is k the city's west side. J .... _ up. bath down. Livlno room with fireplace, large ^family din^ family* rrom.^'^^eei NEAR OAKLAND UNIVERSITY : Road between YOU'LL NEVER REGRET - day you finally decldf look at this beautlluf well bi BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN^K.JRWIN & SONS RENT BEATER N0.2 CLARKSTON FHA-GI SPECIAL ' MA 6-4000_444-4890 „SAL,JROyer J91-3300 ! One of The cleanest ^tSSr^ ...h^tencelnrea HEARTHSIDE REALTY HAMMOND LAKE FRONT 9 room brick bi-level, custom built, 6 years old, large farm kitchen, all built-lns, 1 double and 1 single etc., closets galore, lovely area of nice homes. $58,900. SYLVAN VILLAGE MLS 674-4161 674-22 45 730 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. 'miller IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Sharp 2 bedroom home ' basement and garage, kitchen and dining ares finished hardwood floors. large kitchen and dinir AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR J ROCHESTER AREA H^ME, ^$200 !d. 5 rooms an&'bath plus lo unfinished attic. 100'xl70' ■riooking golf course. Ji WEST SIDE near Vl/ebster Sch< d lust $12,950. Full price. 6 root d bath. Scraoned porch, lull ba— snt, 2 car garage. Don't waill This rgain buy won't last I ' VACANT NORTH SIDE, " AVON GAYLORD ANNETT OFFERS ms. ASTHAM S. full bath on lake Bill Eastham, Realtor WATERFORD PLAZA ..viO HIGHLAND RD. (AA-59)MLS '674-3126 335-7900 ARRO s: r^r^': T HARLEY LEVELY 332-7725 WE WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 TIMES HALL "SS’iJM’K«Sr IRWIN 1071 W. Huron St After 8 p.m. Coll FE 4-0921 335-6514 ROYER Svs WE BUILD-TRADE $75m wir«!w PHONF. MR.0UR payments of $75 a month. Lauinger NORTH PONTIAC WATERFORD STOUTS O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? 969 SPECIAL PHONE: 628-2548 REALTY, INC. fivfa WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE: 634-8204 '"RHODES"" ..i GILES h«'ML-*o^n''"oa.tret2 ACRES STRUBLE WE TRADE FOR THE LARGE FAMILY Best Buys TocJay , WEST SIDE- CUT L SHINN OXFORD I MilFORO / ■1 COSWAY 681-0760 HOW ABOUT THIS ONE? Times Realty TED'S Trading 674-2236 WARREN STOUT, REALTOR Brown ssa=-"i-g VON REALTY 5219 RAY O'NEIL REALTY icome AL PAULY CLARKSTON SMALL FARM soilb , NEW MODELS MIO-LEVELS t to Meet Your Personal Needs gssSSm fm ORION/OXFORD PONTIAC 628-4211 338-7161 YESTERDAY THREE ORTONVILLE ZERO DOWN TO Gl DORRIS & SON REALTOR 2536 Dixie Hwy. MLS OR 4-0: BRIAN FE 5-8183 CLARKSTON CUTIE “ ptsgf ?droom^faX rZm. laC llw COMMERCIAL CORNER j , LES BROWN KEATING BEAUTIFUL LAKE BRAEMAR D^12 V Jl'HE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY |8, 1969 For Wont Ads Dial 3344981«J* aSi-B STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE ; TRAURRM.r piamt .... ............S-:::ROYERimaps= Waterfront Home ^ — o"<:’5 REAL ESTATE V 8-2515 MY 2-2291 TIMES M-mmiM “'vV™ Times Realty “S”S;,*r> ki-5“ =i ;:x- Sol. fono. 56 »■'• ‘""" ‘ ianc contracts prr pnn Aron •*“.. *■*" "i=iSrS ~« ' w'nnlod C . .». RHODES"'" ■ :==s sr~ --- - — .-■-»- “ "BUD' TM ,T COMMERCIAL LOCATION high".chooiironed COMMERCIAL | i-sOAiNO "T; , BUSY PAVED HIGHWAY ' commS’-J/t? I'oTn co NICHOLIE-HUDSi , ^ONEY .. ...3,30-- oMer 6 p... FE 2-3370 j ^ COMAA L.INCOME PROP ! CA$H IN AT BRIAN INC. cTo'^r^yTc?'’*^ GE Coosol. color TV. =., „s, „ - - ‘.“Si".'!':;. ' SSlslFiSS— 267 FURNITURE j r„ .no 2 »«droom Em. **"*** NEW LEFT IN LAY-A-WAY ilfii-T3=P®iCSs5 “iJs^ l«-2£ s r=c.s »*?? young 6,2 2 300 north SIDE I'T hT mS*y. ‘I® ^ Bnck .lor. truMOino. 2.3"> M '>■ j an°S inT^^n., 673-,756 Afjer 6 p^m.' colonial .o(a and matching chair, AntiqUOl 65-A LAWN AND GARDEN s;fd-rl-oirirn^. r. centurv American and 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR £Si slilHk' si!sss:“-- ?50,^*2r‘S?r ’;rn? * w !»■ *,dii''o<^^'tidt°« Ti't PditridcjG tor M.SOO, $500 dowh“ "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" S’,=«2 ~ “ s, 3 ROOMS fer Want Ads Dial 3344981 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 1969 jPy__________n golden RBTIIIEVER pup Vdnr rwuppilMP. «2MM. DlGl' NEVeR TOLD whidi PoodjP It fBther. GarpMut Brown poodip pup«, na papora. 85»-34*7 great* DANE PUPS, (trad by~i of Amtrica'i leadinp champio Mayan Dana Drummar Boy ouf Maj^art Dana Lor-L-I, $250. ( GOLDEN RETRIEVER poppleiT^C Champion sired. $ woaka, 65l-l2«5 '“6.......PU^rp, $5 EACH^ PART COLLIE and part Gar Shaphard pupplaa, $I0. 682-7345. P6KE-A-P00S ( P E K I N G fb ■= -POODLE) pupplaa, adorable non shedding, bundlaa of |oy. 651-5747/ POODLE PUPPIES, English Import, — ------ will hoh D—13 Tnwtl TrailErs ____ Check our deal on — SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC caVp^Hs^* SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 21 ft. on display at - Jacobson Troiler Sales wo Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5111 EVERYffilNFroORT” travel trailer WoMleHMiwi »9 INI RICHARDSON, 12'x55', FRONT I. 313-9324. POODLE, FEMALE, AKC, JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS 517 E. Walton Blvd. Wo^ Cun-Tnickt 101 EXtRA Dollars Paid EXTRT'*Sharp Car hack the ratt, man gat the bait" at Averill's FE BP871 2020 Dixie FE 4-61W sarvica $25. 62B-4673.'_____ ! PUPPIES, toy terrier and chihuahua' mixed. We^t at full growth 3-4 lbs. $15 each 338-2659. REASONABLE, PARt ■sheltle^ups and part cocker pups. 852-4151. REGISTERED MINI-TOY POODLE 2 brown, 1 beige. Pedlgried brown new AoKh. ^?n.l« fojL3N.djE,e-l99l ______ REGISTERED APRICOT TOY POODLES, Toy Fox Terriers, and Chihuahua puppies, also stud IF YOU WAIT TIL MARCH, YOU'LL Apache Camping^ olv-Boat f Apache models that steep s. FE 2- APACHE SCHNAUZERS ^ R E , 8 EVAN'S EQUIPMENT . _______________________ 625 1711 or 625-2516 ClarksK SHEPHERD BEAGLE PUPS, 673-1 WED. & FRIt_-r.OPENjriLL^ P^ sE“fS'’TS^ESE-nHTfE^^^ I lifetime MOTOR HOMES wks. old. FE y9859. 33 selt contained, full power, « ------------------ ' —•‘■■als, stereo, etc., sp< STOP PAYING RENT! START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT SEE THE ALL NEW DETROITER AMERICAN KROPF BUY WHERE SERVICE IS BEST BUY WHERE SAVINGS ARE GREATEST HEATED MODELS AT Bob Hutchinson's Mobile Home Sales Open Daily 'tll 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 'III 5 DRAYTON PLAINS )) OR 31202 CARNIVAL Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 / Sharp Cadlllact. Pontiac, Olda and Buicks for out-oFitata marktt. Top dollar AUTO SALES STOP HERE LAST M&M ' 1150 Oakland at Viaduct 4??' PUPPIES, AKC I U622._ SHELTIES (TOY COLLIE), SIBERIAN HUSKY f VORKSHIR^ PUP, AKC. $100; also stud service. 693-3851 after 4 p.m. Pet ^ppli^Service 79-A STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. Highland Rd. (M-59 ) 682-9440 OAKLAND CAMPER I. Corvettes na ---Oakland .. . 338-9261 "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CAPa ^ 952 W. Huron 51. Arrv no FE_^737,_______fe aotf Auto i^msoriet___91 TOP $“PATD WE PLAYER^D .paakar., fmIaH Codillocs, Buick Electro ^j225s. Olds 98s, Pontiacs and 92l°nything sharp with oir con- Rent Trailer Space NEW LOTS, ....... ....... school children. 33S«01S5. Tires-Auto-Truck la campers. I oers. Partsl REPAIR, MOUNT, ar Sportcraft Mfq. 4160 Foie _y^teMor^ 62^0650^^___ PANELED PfckUP CAMPER, Motor Scooters DELUXE RUPP V/2 h Auction Sales ANTIQUE AUCTION PIONEER CAMPER SALES Trailers; Jubnee, Globa Star Barth Campers: Swinger, Mackinaw, Travel Queen, Caribou, Barth MiTROTWOODS ’’hl't® JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS "He’d make a great politician. No matter how much money he gets his hands on, it isn't enough!” New and Used Trucks 103{New and Used Cars glass, brass, pew SILVER STAR - 5 Clyde ‘ Rd. Exit) FEBRUARY SPECIAL Motorcycles 95 YAWUHA,^1?5 CC, $200 | AA^lcnrSf^^L,““amao 546-0686. B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY .....7:00 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY ...7:00 PM. EVERY SUNDAY .....2:00 P.M. WE BUY - SELL - TRADE Retail 7 Days Weekly CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 5089 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2711 BLUEBIRD BSA VICTOR, 441. excellei dition. Call Bill, 682-S394, 1966 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, e: “?nt condition, $975. 36S-0980. t, $79-0714. TRAVEL TRAILERS BONANZA WEST WIND^ WOOD^LAKE s behind oi TYLER^SAUCTJON______ "SATURDAY FEBRUARY 1! George Dorris Farm — 3 Dixie Hwy., ]a Oakhlll Rd. a N Consignment ^Stan Pe''kin», Ai TYLER'S WCTION^ ;; McClellan travel TRAILERS I 4820 Highland Road (M-59) ________Phone 674-3163_____ TRAILERS-CAMPERS- COVERS, I Goodell Trailer Sales, 3200 S. Rochester Rd., 852-4550. iditioning. h WILSON CRISSMAN CADILUC 13» N._WMdward_Ml 4-1930 We w 0 u I d like to buy late model GM Cars or will nc cept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 Motorcycle Sale Junk Can-Trucks Only $3200. Call Carl HarrI 1573, Lloyd Bridges Dodge._ CHEVY EL~CAA^NO, 1966, *^5 ton ! Ford Econ-O-Lines ;1966 Club wagon......... 11967 PlckHJp ’ L .. i > 10A7 6 Pass. Bus . 1 SHUMAN FORD SALES CAR BUYERS joh¥¥ca'uuff'e 'ford ' lyM-IHjbllPcfHEv^ ' ‘¥Fn° mcaulIffe'’ford ----1 radio, healer, very little rust. 391* 830 J^kland Ave._Fg 5-4101 -A--_______________________ h’86 CHEVY BISCAYNE, 396-360 106|1961 CHEVROLET IN GOOD •" i dltion, new battery and starter Installed. 673-9532, i ____ P nn. _ _ _ I hardtop, V-8 auto. $1475. 68^7802, 1961 CHEVY STATION WAGON, ‘ at; $|'250. FE 4-8; 1967 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-door nside, 625-5137, 6272 )2 "CORVAiR," good shi ZaJl aftei^7 p^m. 338-3448, ;2 CHEVY 4 DR." ■ . If you've ever thought of i962 corvair 2 dook” 3 JUNK CARS - trucks, tp special PRICES ON all models'ALWAYS BUYING Jl Anderson Sales & Service 1 1645 5. TELEGRAPH PE 3-7102|*- GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 SALES TIPSICO LAKE. PI Used Auto-Truck Parts 1 SET OF CRAGAR GT. Fo^ 260 ^or M9 V8, “2^1 ^""Gfa's""FOR Livestock t VERY GENTLE kidt _sale.J«2-2055. ap>alo6sa AAARE, 7 831 Boati-Accessories I' CE EquI, 97 „ 6 Uaed Travel Trailers and Camp- 'n ers MUST GO-al Yaar-and Prlce- |;i Holly Travel Coach Inc. >!| 15210 Holly, Holly ___I^E^7 '■! WOLVERINE PUP camper', in' t SALE. Doubla D-C| n Farm. 625-3550. 1 WOLVERINE TRUCK camperi * _ ' ------ "actory outlet, repair and and used rentals. Jack' telescoping bumper ROAN COLORED RIDING horse, 5'/j years, gelding, reasonable. 391-2642. SHETLAND PONY STALLION, gen-tile, $^._»l22500. TRADE REOIStEREb Quarter Meats _ W * A-1 MEAT CUTTING, Fraeiar PARTS. F E 5-6908 CHEVYENGiNf. CENTURY INBOARD, 135 hp. p ylinder, grey marine engine •quipment Includes Ski tow-bar set ot skis, fire extinguisher anc canvass cover. Heavy duty trailer equipped ^ with p?"'* 6 >t. SANGER RJ. Hydro“wltTrop without trailer. No engine. 693-8787. 9' DORSET CABIN CRUISER, ) ' 1030 after 6 FE 5-6908 1962 PONTIAC, ALL for parts. 1962 _MB|xu P'y ,_U L2-OT2. 1963 PO'NTIAC engine, body. ALUMINUM CRUISER HURST LINKAGE FOR Muslar ed, crane hydraulic cam, heads, Holman 8. Moody hp LOWRY CAMPER SALES HosplMI Rd^^^^ union 1 EACH IN STOCK 12 X 60 Early American Front Living room Expando ORDER FROM FACTORY 12 X 44 Academy Cadp' 12 X 60 with Expando COUNTRYSIDE LIVING 1084 Ojkland_________ 334-1509 BOAT, MOTOR AND TRAILER, $250. 674-1933.__________________ GLASSPAR^ '•vjNew and Used Trucks avvl't lEEP Sales-Service 1 Over 23 Used Jeeps 1 In stock — Ready to go. HAHN JEEP 1 New ond Used Ready For | Immediate Delivery GRIMALDI { IMPORTED CARS 900 Oakland Avenue j _____fL^9i21 ! ^HOOL BUS, 49 passenger, tires 1 bSdy n^s wo'rki call ?7^464. *”'i Auto Insurance-Marine 1041 jbuying a itrading up to a Newer Used Car ... i’ DON'T MISS ■ t395 The double page spread on i pages F-8 and F-9 in this , section; listing the quality, cars of 17 of the Pontiac area's dependable Franchised car dealers. A Great Opportunity : 19M“BUrck“ELECTRA’225," 4 door |LU^ I FE 4 1006_ or " FE 3-7854 Grimaldi , BUICK-OPEL , 11995. guaranTcaa. BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755_S._RcKhesf€r_Rd^ 652-7000 1967 automatic, fln« ]967~cbWBrjETyBCC6^^ I 350 H P., i-tD«ed. 7i.fiOO ml., $3450 r CHEVY SS. 327-'30C FOO or bast offar. 682-74 I CORVETTE - 1961 arformanca angina, zar ngine, $1750. 334-l«80. 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Mile) between Coolldge and Crooks. ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW I 68M2587335-29U: Sovoie Chevrolet ’ New and Used Cars 106 New o.id Used Car* 106 , 4 DOOR SEDAN, 283, tic, good condition. 334-5948. CHEVY EL CAMINO. V 8, stom, auto., $1,675. Good con- $495 BIRMINGHAM $37951 Trailers. Take M-59 to W. Hickory Ridge r.u. Rd.. left and toll DAWSON'S SALES LAKE. Phone 629-2179. Is, ^Dolphin p Highland, righ V IS THE TIME < w?t?i"snow blade, I to the highest " Auto Insurance! ,.uckj Anderson i r'PoFd'dump*^®^^ Joslyn FE 4-35351 price, quality and a; Farm Produce POTATOES — 335 V\ Farm Equipment HOMELITE CHAINSAWS an< Snowmobiles In stock, also In sulated coveralls and jackets. Nev Idea and John Deere parts galore Davis Machinery Co. NA 7-3292. TntERNATIONAL (C) new snov blade and wind breaker, gooi shape. 627-3941. _____ salTon McCulloch chain saws MODEL MAC NO. 15 WITH IS' 1-A Early American Modern Decor Mobile Homei :---FINANCING E-Z TERMS 86 RICHARDSON " MONARCH delta OXFORD II Rd. p^rk Space-immediately available 87 Colonial Mobile Homes FE 2-1657 ,, I. 25 Opdyke Rd., , , 5430 Dix -■-urn Heights « '*'«terfo HARRINGTON * BOAT WORKS 1899 S. Telegraph_____332-8033 Foreign Car* ce^Orion; ' ' :t Board of Educatior 10x55' HOUSETRAILER. NEW 1968 ■ MODELS USED BOATS AND MOTORS . Drastic Reductions S4 FORD PICKUP. $ AUTOBAHN MOTORS 1765_Telegraph_______ 1959 Ford 6 CYLINDER 10x50' RICHARDSON'S. sr pavmi IMMEDL KING BROS. FE 4-1662 FE 4-0734 52'^ Pontiac Rd. Qt Opdyke r equity a 685-2758. 24" & 36" Pickup Covers Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Dixie Hwy.____________625-4400 ..j3 holiday RAMBLER, 21'. contained. Ilka new, cost $3900, sell for $1995, Includes equalizer hitch, brand-new awning and TV aerial; 1965 Ford 1 ton pickup, 1965 6-sleeper camper, has m o s t everything, cost $5800 has 7,000 actual miles, sell for $3800. Pontiac Lake Mole), 8230 Highland Rd. (M-59) Pontiac Michigan. OR 3-7700. 1967 APACHE MESA, $900. 634-8937. 5 6AANOR 12x56, ,alnut paneling, i rnishad, i 966 'ATLAS MOBILE HOME, 12x60, with stove, relrigarator dryer and skirting,^ " afl%r®6 p,m. Any time 634-3339 Holly or 6 ed. Call ), 3 9EDROOM5. CLOSE OUT All USED TRAILERS : Royct-aftj 2. bedrooms, nJc^all^rM^^^^ $1900 I alron»»rtiton -• Warner Trailer Seles, 3091 Huron (plan to loin one of Wi Byam's exciting caravans). CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANY BUDGET STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. *771 Highland (M-59 ) 683-1 1, $5900. f'^Vemon, $4300, Oxford Trailer Sales (88 5. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion MY 3-0731 Nylon carpeting os TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. 334-6694 Open Daily 10 a.m. to I p.m. Open Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.r °‘’*"otner’t!!tii'’'by‘ Apt*.’’'"’ PINTER'S MARINE SALES DEALER FOR THOMPSON Flberglas and wood STARCRAFT-MFG Inboard-outboard; sailboats BOSTON WHALER Coma In and sea JOHNSON BOATS-MOTORS WEERES PONTOONS Steel and alum. — Waterbikes STOP IN NOW (IOakland Univ. ExitT 1966 Aaro-cratt 41 trailer 1967 Sllverllne, I-1961 Sllverllne, KAR'S Boats A Motors or 3538 Genes Dr. PontI DODGE UTILITY, condition. 332-5824 after 6 S3 Vj ton GMC, V-6, ut 1963 CHEVY, STAKE, 1 REN'AULT, Good condition, JI150. 75 Claris FE 2-J779. 1963 VW Station Wagon Deluxe, sun root model. I passenger. AM FM radio. $895 Bill Golling VW Inc. (From Pontiac to Birmingham, turn left on Maple Rd. approx. : miles, left on Maplelawn.)______ 945 VW7SUN ROO'f, very good con ditlon, $750. 673-3339.__________ 693-8,117._________________________ 66 VW BUG, Blue. 595 Willard I Phone 651-8658, Rochester._________ 966''VW BUS, LOW mireage, cellent condition, radio, gas heal carpet. $1,195. 626-6015. CHEVY Vi TON, pickup, fleet $895. AUTOBAHN MOTORS T765 Telegraph_________FE 8-4531 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 1964 CHEVY, 1 V PICKUP, side le boxes, $595. 673-5173. WAGON, ply tires, cartop carrier, mechanically good, $700. Call 363- 1968 OPEL STATION WAGON. 1---- and heater. $39 down, payments *10.65. Full price $1295. Call Parks, credit manager at 6 I clean and priced 1 COMPLETE DUNE BUGGY, many - -ras. 4703 Hatchary Rd., Drayton 1965 Ford Vi Ton P 1966 Deep V. ________________b e a r d , autboa Tandem trailer, many extras. 2 TROJAN CRUISERS TONY'S MARINE FOR JOHNSON MOTORS ------ . Sylvan L Waotud Cart-Track* 101 Desperately Wanted 1966s through 1969 Chtvallts. Camaros, Corvat GTOi, Firebirds and 442s. Must Averill's FE 2-9870 ZOZO Dl»l« FE 4-6896 ___________iw~^ra. 2^ "Dixie. TOP DOLLARS FOR SHARP, LOW MILEAGE AUTOMOBILES. Handy ^an in'ti porctrased w New and^U*ed Car* 106 MONEY AT mike SAVOIE LUCKY AUTO 966 CHEVROLET FLEETSIDE pickup, 8 ft, box, 7500 GV" Rating, power steering, pow brakes, postractlon, 10.00-16.5 tin raidio, gauges, expanding camp bumper. A-1 condition. $1450. CHEVY V4 TON custom sport truck, auto, V-l, /heavy du— springs. West coast mirrors a step up bumper, $3,000. 628-4413. MANSFIELD 1967 Wildcat Buicke doubla powtr, tinted glass, air conditioned. CALL SALESMAN, L.C. WILLIAMS. 1104 Baldwin Ave. ' "mansfje air, viny? fop^* CALL L°*C^! WILLIAMS, SALESMAN. Many more to choose from. 1968 BUICK Electro 225 Custom ictory^^equlpment, black v oof, end e teal mist finish ^ ' $3695 Matthews- Hargreaves 631 Oakland Ave. 4-4547 OVER 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Mile) between Coolldge and Crooks. ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW _ Mike Savoie Chevrolet 14 CORVETTE, 2 TOPS 337, speed. 625-^l_aMeUi:30._ )5 CHEVY SS, go^ condition, ti )ver payment^M^7$8^ 15 CORVAIR MONZA, automa’ runs good. M50. FE 8-8440^_ OVER 1000 USED C6HS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Mile) between ONE‘^STOP* SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet BRAND NEW 69's AT BELOW 68 PRICES! '69 Dart Swinger '69 Coronet 2-door steering, vinyl top, whltewalle, v -AND MANY MORE-Check These New Car Trades '65 Polara ^ '68 Opel station wa(ion, low mileaga, like new, fully eqi '66 Rombler power, radio, whitewall* '65 Ford '67 Chevy Impale, 2-door, hardtop, V-8, automatic, powi '65 Pontiac Cetalina, 4-door, hardtop, VB, automatic, i $1050 I1S9S $!?r4 . $ 895 . 'Yi'ws '67 Plymouth Berrecule, 2-door, herdtop, V-., SPARTAN DODGE SELLS FOR LESS (Tell Us If We're Wrong) 855 Oakland Pontiac FE 8-9222 New and U*ed Car* 106 New and Used Car* 106 New and Used Car* 106 m CHEVY-OLDS A REAL VALENTINE'S DAY GIFT! 1968 CHEVY CAPRICE . 1968 CHEVY Impala t coupe, V-8, double p COMPANY OWNED DEMOSTRATORS Save $1000 Save $1059 , automatic, plui 1968 CHEVY Impala cusjorn^^^coupe,^ 3-way powt Save $1200 lydramatlc, vinyl 1968 OLDS Convertible .. Save $1150 automatic, doubla power, red finish, black top. $1795 1968 PONTIAC .. $2495 Catalina 2door hardtop, auto- 1965 BUICK Skylark convartlble. $1195 whitawalli, light 1966 CHEVY p\':.r rlX"' 1966 CHEVELLE Malibu wagon, V-t 1964 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury 383 V-8, radio, whitawalls, rad 1965 RAMBLER .. $1595 automatic. .. $995 automatic. $795 On US-IO at M15 Clarkston MA 5-5071 New and Used Cor* 106 New and Used Car* 106 New and Used Car* 106 New and Used Car* 106 )le, good c 335-&30. STANDARD AUTO of Waterford 681-0004 963 BUICK convartlbla, $499 Daalar________________ 1945 BUICK SPECIAL 338-933* ________r. No $ $5.93. Full priet S95. Call Mr. Parks, err— lanager at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 444 S. Woodward Birmingham MANSFIELD 1946 Buick Electra 225, 4-doar hardtop, full twwer with air, vinyl top, real tharpi CALL L.C. WILLIAMS, SALESMAN. Many mora to choota from. 1104 Baldwin Ava, REPOSSESSIONS $5 DOWN EVEN IF YOU HAVE BEEN GARNISHED - BANKRUPT - DIVORCED REPOSSESSED - JUST TURNED 21 $5 DOWN '62 Ford 4-dr. V-8, auto . $146.16 Weakly Payments $2.06 '62 Olds F-85 conv. V-8 auto. . Balance Out ,. $121.12 weekly Paymanta $1.84 '62 Olds 88 2-dr. hardtop . $309.44 $2.87 '61 Dodge 9-pass. sta. wagon . .. $136.07 $1.89 '64 Valiant 2-dr. 4-speed ..$391.63 $3.01 '64 Renault Dalphine 4-dr. ... ...$326.21 $3.08 '64 Mgreury Parklane 2-dr. H.T. ..$482.02 $4.07 '65 GMC Pickup Truck ...SAVE plates with any purchase. Free 1969 License 681-0802 KING AUTO SALES 3275 West Huron PONTIAC, MICH. 48054 Corner of M-59 and Elizabeth Lake Rd. Free 1969 License plates with any purchase. 681-0802 D~U THE l*ONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13. I For Wont Ads Dial 3344981 Mw and Utad Cart 1061N«w and Uttd Can “1969 I ^ 1000. ?i?EXI '-“?■= ™sv" $2011.50 ’'TmZlT v.„..r;.rr.v,'„„., ch,,si„.pVou,h VAN iiiii:: P AMP I o/iivir pSts-ieVav I ^A;^0R ^^MILOSCH■lKLVRrs«17"li'£^^^ ,S&’SSSS'iS!5iaiii;r^ K;;,* A"1Vt:;'„s s? john ucAuuffE ford , r™.t»vr..”;i7,, 'K' “"JETSTs"”'''‘»vs’’s "j| turner ford |«»,»-v"""": •:• - -:»' Melton MP^£'"' IM.™ . . .buicr-opee I "“villaTe raVbIer I -E^KrSE'S; $1995 .'BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH GO! HAUPT PONTIAC 1967 PONTIAC ■ g;.si"fiss' -=ss MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH , -- -- - -wpcr, door, ^QB BORbT 7aa 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL CH».H MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH MILOSCH ............ I. PO»cr 2,00 MAPLE RD^ TROY, MICH. 3H MANSFIELD i;2%l?rC2 FE 5 590 *“* $1895 Matthews- Harcrreaves BIRMINGHAM .tor power CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 0H.r,.,o..MAPLE^R. $545 rBIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH =FM«&H;H3lilLrr: ws:«»sG*orR: Wp= MERRY oTdVmO DEAL MERRY oTdSMOBILE ROCHESTER,' MICHIGAN BPocL-B «w-,pud enow Tiro. on. SubUrbOn OlclS 1968 98 Holiday 1966 TEMPEST $1195 LUCKY AUTO 1968 PONTIAC —SP CAR CO. IBi CCNCERNED Keego Har^r 6B2-3J00 ABOUT STATUS . .. ' MANSFIELD Drive a New 1968 Chrysler or Plymouth FE 5-5900 ^''* FE B-8825 1000 USED CARS AT TROY ; 'o MOTOR MALE ; orifSrrA’r Oakland Bob Borst '' Lincoln-Mercury Chrysler - Plymouth Bill Coiling VW 724 Oakland FE 5-9436 Mike Savoie Chevrolet FLANNERY FORD 1962 and 1963 PONTIAC M down. aJ MOTORS AUDETTE PONTIAC I962JIONNEVILLE 6 dr. ' I ”r'oo^rTu; ■V900 Oakland _ _ FE 5-9A21 I0:i966 LE MANS 2 DOOR HARDTOP. A d.r BOdan, VO, eplo.allr, MANSFIELD Zy Sb ^maRTMPEST station “waUn'R ■‘'fc= 1000 USED CARS AT TROY ^C-WlFLiANls.-..^G..r.'.^lO Suburban Olds"'““ stoT sSromNO ai MANSFIELD I 1964 Bonneville Convertible, doubi 1967 Buick 225 Custom Se.'':hi?. “vl?thC."d“TnV.r?oT^ ^run prTc;i “"Vln^oo.; rs'S"””' “s ■= harold turner ford , M 1969 LeMans Sports Coupe bock up lites Bl, dual horns ot belts, all 1969 $2738 1969 PONTIAC Graml Prix $3765 1969 FIREBIRD SPECIAL BRAND NEW $2562 OUTSTANDING QUALITY SELECTION 1966 PONTIAC $1195 196i Ford ton pickup, Prira nice 1000 I USED CARS AT SSttir"-"" " TROY c»., .n. MOTOR MALL n.,> ; Birminghom ; Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst S185 Lincoln-Mercury Oakland '=""'"9 vw ^JhnNl.r.PI,n,ou,h^^^J Mik.S=.. THESE CARS CAN STAND UP TO OL' MAN WINTER. Come In Today And Make Your Choice. tf 1968 Buick Riviera $3595 Easy Terms Arranged 1967 Buick Electro $2795 Easy Terms Arranged 1966 Opel Kodette 1967 Cadillac Convertible Station Wagon Rpalsnarp. Ona • owner. Radio and $995 H?s Easy Terms Arranged Easy Terms Arranged 1968 Opel Luxury Sedan 1968 Oldsmobile 98 Beaumul^red t.nlBn, low ntlleage. $1645 SSyfE^SSS On. owner, Easy Terms Arranged Easy Yms Arranged mSSMM MS(SK 544 S. Woodward 647-5600 1963 LINCOLN $898 1967 Mustanc? 2-Door Hardtop $1995 1968 Pontiac $3195 $1595 1968 PONTIAC $1798 1968 Bonneville $3495 1963 LINCOLN Hardtop ...$895 1965 TEMPEST WAGON $1295 1963 PONTIAC WAGON $595 1966 PLYMOUTH . . . $1295 1967 TEMPEST LeMans $1595 1963 FORD Convertible ...... ..$395 1966 P0NTIAC oaded with equipment, Mke new tire* $1695 1965 TEMPEST $1291 1965 Pontiac $1395 WE WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY DEAL, WE WILL NOT BE PONTIAC-TEMPEST Cn M-24-Lake Crion MY 3-6266 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1969 Bible Tale ; AjP»OSS 33 Portion 1 Wifo Boaz 35 Accost ; 5 “— 38 Spanish priest Testament 39 Educate • — of the 41PeerGynt’a Apostles mother 12 Wild ox of 42Uths Celebes 46 Depot fab.) 13 Fish eggs 47 Asterisk 14 Apostle to the 49 Bullfight cheer GenUles 50 Husband of 15 Bind, as with Gudrun 5 Mountain a belt (myth.) - - 16 Sea eagle 51 Song for oi 17 Domestic sjaye 52 Mountain pass TLow WhiU 34pkttemof 8 Primate perfection ------ 28 Droop ^omb. form) 33 Spiritual 6 Desolate 18 Summer (Fr.) 53 Stagger 19 Modifies in 54 Formerly color 55 New Zealand 21 Cravat parrot 22 Twilled fabric 56 Makes 24 Choose 26PortaU 28 Fur filaments 29 (jiolf teacher 30SuiUble 31 Second son of Nosdt 9 Condiment container 10 Belted coats f'tczen rain tcu 19 Banks of turf 40 Fastens with 20 Oceanic brads labors 43Doorfastenin| 23 Burrowing 44 Tropical plant 36 Church festival 37 Namer 38 Antiquated Wed a Young Man of 22? Not Really, Says Julie Harris By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — “It would never happen to me,” Julie Harris said with unusual determination in her thin, frail voice. It would never happen that she, now in her mid-40s, would marry a lad of 22, as she does in the play, “Forty Carats,” which is causing explosions of. laughter at the Morosco Theatre. There haven’t ^ been so many domestic-type laughs around Broadway since “Barefoot in the Park” and^f^j “Mary, Mary.” “I used to say to Abe” — Abe Burrows, the director — “that it was an impossible Idea,” she said. She sat in her dressing room in a turqwdse ' dressing gown, holding her toy poodle Bridget"' on hn- lap. ‘ WILSON "It’s perfectly all right for an older man to marry a young girl because he can start a second life, he c have a second family. “But,, when a woman gets past 40, she can’t have a family again, and a young man of 22 would want to have a family.” ★ ★ ★ “How about Sybil Burton?” the reporter asked. “She married Jordan Christopher and had a child.” “Yes, she did.” Julie nodded gravely, “but would she be able to have 5 or 6?” ' “Would she want 5 or 6?” Anyway, Julie marries Peter Latham, played by Marco St. John, and the matinee ladies just love her for it. ’The matinee ladies get such rapport with the cast that sometimes they talk back to the cast. One day actor Murray Hamilton was saying od stage, “My first wife couldn’t have children — I’ll take as many as I can get.” A woman in the audience yelled out, “How about 6?” Miss Harris, who recently divorced Manning Gmian (her second divorce), doesn’t discuss It, but she did say that one reason she wouldn’t marry a young man of 22 is that when the woman is 60, the husband will be 40.” But in the play by Jay Allen, the boy argues that one shouldn’t Lve for the past or future, but for the now. “Human beings procrastinate,, or they’re fearful of other people’s opinions or apeparances, and life rushes by and nothing happens.” Julie Harris’ had her finger on her lips thoughtfully, ★ ★ ★ The title of “Forty Carats” refers to a woman at the age of 40 not being old but being at her best, like a diamond of 40 carats. THE WEEKEND WINDUP . . . Joey Adams got a letter from LBJ saying his “Encyclopedia of Humor” will be in the Johnson library . . . because of its boldness, “Futz” will be advertised as “the first foreign film made in the U.S.” The King of Hiailand, a saxophone buff, will sit in with Lionel Hampton’s band at a benefit in Bangkok ,.. Carroll Baker describe her new hair color as “Snow Wheat." TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: An airline pilot was asked if he spoke a foreign language. “Sure,” he said “— high school French and hijack Spanish.” WISH I’D SAID THAT: Credit cards have changed our habits. In the old days, only millionaires could live like millionaires. Joan Rivers tells of her J-year-old nephew: “He’s brilliant. Already he’s written a novel, using 3,000 alphabet blocks.” . . . Ihat’s earl, brother. Publlilwra-Hall Syndlcif# -Television Programs- Pregrams fumishad by stations listed in this column ore subject to change without noticel Chonnels: 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS- •TV, 62-WXON-TV [t — Rerun C — Color THURSDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — Movie: “Hercules Against the Sons of the Sun” (1963) Hercules leads soldiers against the King of the Incas. Mark Forrest. Anna Marie Pace (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Friendly Giant (62) R - Sea Hunt 6:15 (56) Mr. Lister’s Storytime 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley. Brinkley (7) C - News - Reynolds (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) R - What’s New (62) C — Country Carnival 7:00 (2) C - Truth or Con sequences—Host Bob Barker and his crew begin five-day visit to Detroit. (4) (7) C — News , Weather, Sports (50) R — I Love Lucy — Lucy is pressed into service as a maid to help her neighbors impress a guest. (56) R — Choice (62) RC - Movie: “Montana" (1950) Sheep rancher tries to move his herds into cattle country. Errol Flynn, Alexis Smith 7:30 (2) C—The Queen and I—First officer has damaging evidence against Duffy, who is doing his best to get rid of it. (4) C — Daniel Boone — Guest Jimmy Dean plays Josh Clements who becomes the reluctant opponent of a professional boxer when the slave he inherited refuses to fight. (7) C—'The Flying Nun-Sister Bertrille, on leave from the convent, runs into old boyfriend (Dwayne Hickman). (50) R C— Hazel — In an attempt to get rid of an unwanted house guest, Hazel decorates the Baxter home with ragweed, (56) Ivory Tower — Architecture in Detroit is discussed. 8:00 (2) C—Jonathan Winters—Guests are Tom and Dick Smothers, Marvin Gaye, the Mickie Finn Show and Paul Lynde. (7) C - That Girl -Anne Marie takes a pie in the face on a show and finds it humiliating, as does her father. (9) C - I Spy -Investigating crashes of allied flights over Greece, Kelly and Scott encounter trouble from the father of a beautiful peasant girl. (50) C — Pay Cards (56) NET Playhouse — A quartet of dramas by John Hopkins tells the same incidents in a family from different point? of . view. This play tells it frewn the daughter’s viewpoint. 8:25 (62) Greatest Headlines 8:30 (4) C- Ironside — A retired movie star and her maid disappear, and Ironside sees possibilities of kidnaping and murder. (7) C - Bewitched -Samantha’s cousin Serena decides Darrin’s mother is a “cat” and gives her the shape to go with the TV Features TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES, 7 p.m. (2) DANIEL BOONE, 7:30 | p.m. (4) THE FLYING NUN, 7:30 p.m. (7) JONATHAN WINTERS, 8 p.m. (2) " NET PLAYHOUSE, 8 p.m. (56) WHAT’S IT ALL ABOUT, WORLD?^9p.m. (7) DEAN MAR-nN, 10 p.m. | (4) takes a man away from her twin sister, using a false pregnancy claim. Bette Davis, Karl Malden, Peter Lawford (7) C- What’s It All About, World? — Guests are Mario Thomas and Carl Reiner. Maureen Arthur joins show on a regular basis. • (9) C — What’s My Line? (50) R — Perry Mason 9:30 (4) C — Dragnet — Friday and Gannon uncover an auto-theft ring when they catch a boy fleeing from a stolen car. (9) Telescope (56) Washington Week 10:00 (4) C — Dean Martin — Guests are Phil Silvers, Gail Martin, Gina Lollo-brigida. Norm Crosby and Milbum Stone. (7) R — Untouchables ( 9 ) Horse Race — Windsor (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) Free Play 10:30 ( 50) R - Alfred Hitchcock — The affairs of a household seem to revolve around mushrooms growing in th|^ cellar. (62) R — Star Performance — Dick Powell plays a man who needs money to reopen his restaurant. 1 1 :00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (50) RC - Movie: “Contest Girl” (British, 1965) Inside story of the beauty-contest racket features beauty queens from all over the world. Janette Scott, Ian Hendry, Edmund Purdum (62) R C — Movie: (50) C — Password — Arlene Francis and Skitch Henderson guest. (62) R — Movie: “Caged” (19W) A young innocent girl Is sent to a state women’s prison. Eleanor' Parker, Hope Emerson, Jan Sterling :90 (2) R - Movie: “Dead Ringer” (1964) A sister — Radio Programs- “About Face” ( 1 9 5 2 ) Antics of three cadets, aided by girls, turn a military academy upside-down. Gordon MacRae, Phyllis Kirk 11:30 (2) R - Movie: “Horror Chamber of Dr. Faustus” (French, 1962) Doctor procures young girls for skin-grafting operations on injured face of his daughter. Alida Vain (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R — Movie: “Secret Venture” (British, 1955) Secret formula is stolen from a scientist who is kidnaped. Kent Taylor, Jane Hylton 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Texan (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:30 (2) R - Movie: “Shadow on the Wall” (1950) A child is sole witness to a murder for which her father has been convicted. Ann Sothem, Zachary Scott (7) News 3:00 (2) R - Naked City 4 : 0 0 ( 2 ) C - Npws, Weather - 4:05 (2) TV Chapel FRIDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:50 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) Sunrise Semester 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Classroom 6:45 (7) C - Bat Fink 7:00 (4) C-Today (7) C — Morning Show 7:30 (2) C — News, Weather, Sports 7:55 (9) Warm-Up 8:00 (2) C - Captain Kangaroo (56) Americans From Africa 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R - Movie: “The Clock” (1945) Judy Garland, Robert Walker (9) R C— Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) R C — The Beverly Hillbillies (4) C— Steve Allen (9) C — Bozo the Clown (56) Rhyme Time 9:10 (56) U.S. Geography 9:30 (2) R-Dick Van Dyke 9:35 ( 56) Sounds to Say 9:50 ( 56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (2) R C-The Lucy Show (4) Snap Judgment (9) Ontario Schools 10:10 (56) R - Children’s Hour 10:25 (4) C- News (56) R — Art Lesson 10:30 (2) C-Mike Douglas-Frank Sinatra Jr. 1 s cohost. (4) C — Concentration -A Junior Editors Quiz About- BEAN SPROUTS WJR(760) WX)f2(l 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(9S0) WCAR(1130) WPON(l 460) WJBK(1500) WHFI-fM(94.71 New> WWJ, Nawt, Snorfi CKLW, Tom Shannon la Opinion wni-i, uon OOHO Sporti S:1»-WWJ, Today In Ravlaw, WJltTaualnatt Baromatar S:4»-WXYZ. Dial Dava Dllaa vyjR, !;mo Traveler *.45-WJR, ------- ------- 7:tB-WWJ, Newf. SporULIne WJBK, NdWt, Tom Dean «..« Sporta WPON, Pot Anpolion WJR, RMtonir R a port Choral Cavalcade $ 0t-WJR, Newi, Dimension l;1S—WJR, Sunnytida Encora (;3»—WJR, Showcase, Close- *:0»-WHFI, Tom Coleman CKLW, Scott Reoen WJR, News, Kaleldoscopo 1S:0e—WJR, News l:S»-WJR, AAusIc Till Di WWJ, OverniBht 2i0#-wXYZ, News, Jim I CKLW, Mark Richards WCAR, News, Wayna Phillips WJBK, NliRmima WWJ, News WXYZ, Nows, Dick Purtan CKLW, Charlie Van Dyke WJBK, News, Marc Avery WCAR, News, Bill Daliell WPON, News, Arizona Weston t:SS-WPON, News, John Irons i:M-WWJ, Morris Carlson 7:W-WHFI, Gary Puioca WPON, Naws, Chock Warren B:1S-WJR, Sunnyslde, Music Jtall t S:»-WJR, ^uslc Hall t:«»-WJR, Nawt WHFI, Uncle Jay WCAR, Naws. jIm Da CKLW, Frank Brodla K^bT’iii WXYZ, News, Johnny Randall llsM-WJR. News, Kalaldi scope WHFI, Jim Zinser FRIDAY AFTERNOON 11:tA-WJR, News, Farm WWJ, Newstima WCAR, Naws, Rod Mills WPON, News. Music CKLW, Jim Edwards IlilS-WJR, Focus ni»-WWJ, Marty McNeeley ItOS-WJR, News, At Homs l:IS-WJR, Singer ' WHf^ Bill Lynch WJR, News, Mike Shi l:it^uk,*Nnn,^lSMi Newstima S;15-^TON, Lum 'n' Al S:N-WPON, Don Singer (7) C — Anniversary Game / 10:40 (56) Interlude 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (4) C — Personality (7)C — Galloping Gourmet (9) Canadian Schools (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:20 (56) Misterogers’ Neighborhood 11:25 (9) C Morgan's Merry-Go-Round 11:30 (4) C~Holly wood Squares (7) R — Bachelor Father (9) Take Thirty (50) C — Kimba 11:50 ( 56) R - Memo to Teachers FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) R —Bewitched (9) Bonnie Prudden (50) C-Alvin 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow C — News, Weather, A Look at TV* Benny fo Be 39 Again By CVNYHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK - By midafternoon 'Thursday, the world’s youngest 39-year-old violinist had been so busy answering telephone calls and being interviewed by relays of journalists that he was still in pajamas and dressing gown. 'The debris of a late breakfast still occupied a table in the living room of his hotel suite. Jack Benny, born in Waukegan, 111., on Feb. 14, 1894, will be celebrating his 39th birthday —again—on Friday. The birthday is a milestone, but since Jack has an NBC special coming up next Monday, it seemed less important than making sure Benny fans would tune in. “When you do a few specials as I do—like one a year,” plained Jack, with his own brand of earnest, blue-eyed salesmanship,” You’ve got to: make sure that they—the audience—remember when you are on. It’s different, of course, when you have a weekly or even a monthly show.” \ Sports M) C - Funny You Should Ask (9) R — Real McCoys (50) R — Movie : “Daughters Courageous” (1939) John Garfield, Jeffrey Lynn, Claude Rains, Fay Bainter 12:45 (56) R — Spanish Lesson 12:55 (4) C-News 1:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C—Match Game (7) C—Dream House (9) R — Movie: “Tom, Dick and Har^” (1941) Burgess Meredith, Ginger Rogers 1:05 ( 56) R - Rhyme -Dme 1:20 (56) R—U.S. Geography 1:25 (2) C-News (4) C — Carol Duvall 1:30 (2) C — As the World Turns (4) C—Hidden Faces (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal 1:45 ( 56) R-Sounds to Say 2:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game 2:25 ( 56) R — Interlude 2:30(2) C-Guiding Light (4) C—Doctors (7) C—Dating Game ' (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 2:40 (56) R — Spanish Lesson 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C —Another World (7) C — General Hospital (50) R —Topper (56) R - Chicago Roundtable 3:30 (2) C — Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C — One life to Live (9) Bozo’s Big Top (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Pottery 4:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show (4) C — Donald O’Connor (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Tom Shannon (56) Continental Comment 4:25 (2) C-News 4:30 (2) C —Merv Griffin (7) R C—Movie: “Muscle Beach Party” ( 1 9 6 4 ) Frankie Avalon, Annette Funicello V50) R — Little Rascals (56) What’s New (62) C —Bugs Bunny 5:00 (9) R C — Batman (50) R —Munsters (56) TV Kindergarten (62) R —Robin Hood 5:30 (4) C-Georp Pierrot — “South of Lisbon” (9) R C—Gilligan’s Island (50) RC —Superman (56) Misterogers (62) R — Leave It to WASHINGTON UP) - Twenty-two servicemen killed in action the Vietnam was have been named in the latest Defense Department casualty list. The list includes six men from the Midwest. Killed in action: ARMY Michigan—Spue. 4 John R. Roblti, Barklay. MISSOURI-Spoc. 4 Donnit R. Whicker, Camdenton; Pfc. Charles E. Inlow, Van- W^I^SCONSIN-PIc. Dale W, Changed from missing to dead—hostile: ARMY MICHIOAN--$8t JtmM atroll. Missing as a result of hostile action: ^ ARMY ^ ^ [ibert E. Beaumont, Spec. 4 Lee jrnor, Pfc. Arthur A. Callljter. Died not as a result of hostile action: ARMY 25 Americans Killed in Viet The comedian, after 75 years mostly spent in show business, still frets about his appearances on television as much as a kid with his first booking. WHY NOT? What are you doing in all those gasoline conunercials?” was a question asked by several interviewers. ‘When it comes that way I know they are after something,” said Benny with utter seriousness. “I just ask them why they don’t ask me what Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby, Bob Hope and I are doing in all tho.se commercials. I’ll tell you this: It was a fabulous offer and the company was interested in a lot of things. I wouldn’t have touched them unless the company had been interested in sponsoring my special. Besides, I love doing them—they relate to me and they make people laugh. So’’” * * A Benny looks like a man in his )s. He works, he estimates, about six months out of the year —TV shows, charity concerts, club dates and even an occasional tour. The rest of the time he spends playing what he calls dreadful golf” in Los Angeles ir Palm Springs. His wife, Mary, accompanies her husband on his many trips only when he expects to be away from home for a prolonged period. They moved into an apartment several years ago but “Mary felt cooped up,” and they expect to move back into a . Beverly Hills house again soon, they also have a home in Palm Springs. His health is excellent. Jack will fly back to Los Angeles today for a small birthday gathering at home, followed on Saturday by a bash thrown by thff Academy of Television Arts and Sciences—not for his birthday but for his 20th anniversary in TV. Woman Is Killed in 1-196 Mishap DOUGLAS (AP)-Emily Dek-er, 58, Grand Rapids, was killed Wednesday when she was crushed by the car in which she had been riding as a passenger, State Police said. The victim’s daughter, Mary Hollebeek, 22, also of Grand Rapids, lost control of the car on slippery pavement and Mrs. Dekker was thrown onto the road, police said. The accident occurred on 1-196 one mile north j of Douglas in Allegan County. PLUMBING DISCOUNTS : 3-Piece BATH SET iTOlUTS 19”! FiREPUCEIIU LofS Question: How can bean sprouts be grown? ★ ★ ★ Answer: Many of us have enjoyed the drisp little bean sprouts served by Chinese restaurants in their chow mein and chop suey. The simple little bean sprout is acquiring a great reputation these days because of its nutritional value, including proteins and vitamin D. Bean sprouts should be eaten three or four days after starting the sprouting process, when they are about 2 inches long. Mung beans are most generally used, but alfalfa seeds and other grains may be sprouted and used for food. To sprout mung bt^s, place six tablespoons of them in a wide mouth quart jar, ffll with one half water, cover with nylon screen and soak overnight. Next morning, pour water ee Soo-keun. had been arrested while trying to get to Cambodia to report to North Korean officials. Lee, 4,'i. was given a hero's welcome to South Korea in 1967 after he junnied into a U S. Army sedan at the Pan-munjom truce village and sped away under a hail of Communist bullets Three American military men later were decorated for helping l^e escape. ★ * * South Korean authorities said today that Lee, former vice president of the North Korean Central News Agency, slipped out of Seoul Jan. 27 carrying a forged passport and wearing a false moustache and a wig. Press reports said he was taken off a plane in Saigon four days later while trying to gel to Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The intelligence agency said l>ee had planned to submit a report on his mission in South Korea to the North Korean Embassy In Phnom Penh and pledge his still-unchanged loyalty to Pyongyang RPTTURNED TO SEOUL It added that Lee and another Korean, Pae Kyung-ok, 29. were returned to Seoul by the South Korean Air Force. I'ae was identified as the nephew of Lee's North Korean wife Lodge Tells Reds: Can't Win at Talks PARIS (AP) — The United States ■warned North Vietnam and the Vietcong today that a political settlement in Vietnam cannot be reached in an environment of violence. 2 New Battles Erupt in S. Viet SAIGON - With the Vietcong's lunar new year cease-fire only two days away, the U.S. Command today reported 131 NoiTh Vietnamese killed in two battles northwest of Saigon, three U.S. helicopters lost and three damaged. Allied casualties in the two actions yesterday were seven dead and 15 wounded. Five of the dead and 13 of the wounded were Americans. The U.S. Command also reported slight decreases in the total number of Americans and South Vietnamese killed In action last week, and a considerable decrease in the number of Vietcong and North Vietnamese killed. The weekly casualty report said 183 Americans, 233 South Vietnamese and 2.264 of the enemy were killed in action, compared with 1% Americans, 24'2 South Vietnamese and 3,190 enemy the week before. A total of 1,315 American-s were reported wounded last week, with 541 of them hospitalized. While U.S. and South Vietnamese ground sweeps continued lo prevent enemy buildups for an offensive, 42 of America's most powerful bombers, the Air Force B52s, hit the approaches to Saigon with the heaviest raids in six weeks. In 24 hours, seven waves dropped 1,250 tons of bombs on troop concentrations, base camps, bunker complexes and supply depots west, northwest, north and east of the capital. Speaking at the fourth session of the enlarged peace talks, U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Ixidge also admonished his antagonists that "you cannot expect to achieve in these negotiations what you failed to achieve in South Vietnam." He was referring to the other side’s demand for the overthrow of the Saigon government as a prerequisite for progress at the talks. * ★ * The atmosphere of deadlock continued without relief as South Vietnam's representative delivered a 5,000-word statement repeating all his government's basic positions and accusing North Vietnam and the Vietcong's National Liberation Front of long-term aggression. * * * The NLF's chief delegate, Tran Buu Kiem, reiterated the Vietcong’s terms; the United States must “unconditional!;^" withdraw all troops and "those of satellite countries" from Vietnam and "allow the South Vietnamese people to settle their own affairs in accordance with the program of the NLF." •BASIC MISUNDERSTANDING' Ixidge’s statement was a reply to questions pul to him by the other side last week demanding "yes or no" answers with regard to the basic claims of North Vietnam and the NLF. Lodge told them they had a fundamental misunderstanding of U.S. goals in Vietnam and Southeast Asia. * * ★ "The policy of the United States," he said, "is aimed at finding a stable and lasting peace in Vietnam and in Southeast Asia. The kind of peace we seek is one in which the South Vietnamese people will be assured of their fundamental national rights of self-hout external in- Officials said North Korean Premier Kim Il-sung instructed Lee in February 1967 to stage a "dramatic defection" and work as an agent in the South until all Korea was communized. The Pan-munjom incident occurred the next month. Lee left a wife and three children in Pyongyang. He was given an expensively furnished house and a car by the South Korean government, and government sources estimate he had $40,000 worth of property in Seoul when he left last month, including $16,000 in a savings account. He was married last September to the former Lee KangWol, a 35-year-old college lecturer who was educated in the United States. Record Crowd at GOP Fete (Continued h'rom Page One) to a review of the great number of mutual defense treaties to which we are party throughout the world." Broomfield said neither the obligation nor the ability now exists for America to serve as the world's policeman. * ★ * He said our obligation is to assist developing nations but that we "must not (lerpetuate agreements that hold the potential for more unilateral military involvements such as Vietnam." McDonald, R-19th District, who spoke briefly, struck at "runaway government spending” which he said is provoking financial inflation. "You cannot help men by doing for them what they should and could do for themselves, " said McDonald. Winners oi the annual Lincoln Republican Club Essay Contest were announced They are: Anne Reynolds of the Academy of the Saored Heart, Bloomfield Hills: Judy Morningstar of Troy High School: and Pat Thompson of Haz«l Park High School. Judge Robert Shipper of Rochester was dinner chairman and Gilbert Davis, president of the Michigan Bar Association, was toastmaster. ■* ★ ★ Present at last night’s dinner, but taking no part in the program, was State Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Brennan. The Weather “ ■ < . . ■** ' ^ ss- ,v\ Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PON’nAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness today with chance of a few anow flurries, high 17 to 22. Fair and cold tonight, low 7 to 12. Mostly sunny Friday and continued cold, high 19 to V 18 to 20 miles per hour today, diminishing to eight to 12 miles V at five to 10 ................... 'Egypt Aids Guerrillas' By The Associated Press Egypt has joined the group of Arab nations providing bases and support for guerrilla fighters attacking Israel, the Israelis have charged at the United Nations. Israeli delegate Yosef Tekoah told the Security Council yesterday that nine Bedouin war refugees the Israelis captured in the Sinai Desert Jan. 15-16 admitted they were sent across the Suez Canal by the Egyptian military intelligence service. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) - AFI^CIO construction unions think they can get along better with the new Republican administration than they did with the Democrats, but they have some reservations about ^cretary George Romney of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. "1 think he’s going to have to find out a lot of things for himself,” President C. J. Haggerty of the AFL-CIO Building and Construction Trades Department said of Romney. * * * The building trades unions, irked at a comment Romney made before a Senate committee last month, fear he doesn’t understand some union problems in training apprentices and jurisdictional disputes arising out of new construction techniques. # * ★ The AFL-CIO unions think Romney, while governor of Michigan, developed a closer relationship with Auto Workers President Walter Reulher in Detroit and was accepting Reuther’s criticism of building trades apprenticeship training. MORE WORRISOME But even more worrisome to the construction unions is the belief that Romney, former auto industry executive, favors the industrial production of prefabriacted housing units for low-cost federal public housing projects. As for relations generally under President Nixon’s administration, Haggerty said he looks for a ilttle clearer understanding of labor’s problems than we had before. ” ★ * * The Johnson administration most angered the construction unions in trying lo hold down wage hikes by imposing While House guidelines. Area Crash Puts Youth in Hospital A Saginaw teen-ager is hospitalized in critical condition after his car went out of control and crashed in Pontiac Township yesterday. David L. Law, 19, was rushed by ambulance to Pontiac General Hospital after the crash on southbound 1-75 near the M24 overpass at 10:05 a.m. ★ * ★ A witness told Oakland County sheriff’s deputies that a car passed his car on a curve at a high rate of speed, skidded sideways on the wet road, spun around, hit a dirt mound off the road and flipped over. A deputy reported that Law’s car left no skid marks on the road and that the distance from where his car spun to where it stopped was more than 300 feet. Siberian Run for Japan TOKYO (AP) — Japan and the Soviet Union signed a civil aviation agreement today making Japan Air Lines the first foreign commercial carrier allowed to fly the Siberian route to Europe. The vast northern terrain of the Soviet Union has been closed until now to all foreign airlines for military security reasons. BIRMINGHAM - Charles F. Ad«ims, president of MacManus, John & Adams Inc., advertising agency in Bloomfield Hills, has been named chairman of the 1969 Community House fund drive. Walter Denison, Community House president, said that "with Adams’ support we hope to keep the Community House functioning successfully for the civic, social, educational and cultural pursuits of the community.’,’ it . it it The Community House, a nonprofit organization located at Bates and Townsend, is supported entirely by contributions from area residents. In accepting the position of chairman, Adams of 6139 Dakota Circle, Bloomfield Township and a lifetime resident of the Birmingham area, said, “I can’t imagine what the community would be like without the Community House. I am delighted to do everything I can to help it prosper” VARIETY OF ACTIVITIES The 41-year-old adman brings to his role as chairman an in-depth in- volvement In a wide variety of local community projects. He is a member of the board of trustees at Oakland University and has served on the advisory council of Oakland Communnty College. He has also served as division chairman of the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Building Fund Drive. , ★ ■4r •*- His promotion of cultural events *in the area include the chairman of promotions for Meadow Brook Music Festival and the Meadow Brook Theater^,4t Oakland University. Adams is the author of the recently published book, “Common Sense in Advertising,” published by McGraw-Hill, and now in its second printing. CHARLES ADAMS I. W. Abel Quiet Victor PITTSBURGH (AP) - I. W. Abel quietly accepted his unofficial reelection as president of the United Steelworkers yesterday, then put in an eight hour day at his desk in the union’s headquarters. The veteran labor leader didn’t make any public comment on his victory over Emil Narick, a union lawyer, despite receiving hundreds of congratulatory telegrams on his successful defense in Tuesday’s election. Central School Site Best- Dems The Oakland County Democratic executive committee has gone on record in support of a central city site for Pontiac’s proposed super high school. In a resolution unanimously adopted Tuesday night by the committee, the Pontiac School Board was asked to reconsider its choice of a site on the grounds of Pontiac State Hospital. About 60 of the 96-member committee were present. ■k * * The action came after a lengthy discussion which involved members of the commute. School Board member Lucille Marshall, and representatives of the Voice of Oakland County Action League (VOCAL). ★ ★ -A In making the decision, the committee took into account transportation and other problems relating to the hospital site, according to county Democratic Chairman George Got^gasian. HELP FOR DOWNTOWN “Committee members felt that locating the school at a central site would” place it closer to the student body and help rejuvenate the downtown area,” he said. , ★ ★ A The committee also heard Michigan Civil Rights Commission Chairman Julian Cook detail the commission’s findings of its recent study of Pontiac. AAA Democratic members of the County Board of Supervisors at the meeting in Royal Oak pledged to help carry out the recommendations in the report which deal with county government. Pontiac Div. Chief Glad to Be Back New York, Vermont, e and part of Maine as wel an area from UUh to v D is et^ted in an area froi piVau|p.U«A.,3nUcand (Continued From Page One) Country Club, he enjoys a round on the links when time permits. He attempts to reserve Sundays for golf outings with his wife and children. AAA McDonald also is a baseball and hockey fan. During his yolfnger days he played left wing for a hockey team in the Central Michigan League in the Saginaw area. Does he still put on the skates? "We still skate periodically, but slower, ” he said with a grin. NAME STUCK Francis James McDonald ("it’s a good Irish name, you know") was born 46 vears ago in Saginaw. Since he and his father had identical names, his mother called him Jim to avoid Junior and the name stuck. He attended St, Andrew's elementary and secondary schools in Saginaw, grad- OU Needs Snov/ for Winter Event Oakland University students are hoping for more snow to help make their winter carnival this weekend a success, Sponsored by the Student Activites Board, an elected student body, the carnival weekend will include a Miss Oakland University pageant, a Coronation Ball and Winter Sports Day. AAA Pageant preliminary judging will be Friday night, with final judging Saturday before the ball. The winner of the student-run pageant will reign over the university’s social functions for the coming year. Included in Winter Sports Day are a coed-dogsled race, broom hockey on the lake at the university, skating relay races and a snow scupture contest (if (fere's enough snow ). /•; I dating in 1940. McDonald then entered General Motors Institute (GMI) under the sponsorship of the then Saginaw Malleable Iron Division. McDonald, a 1944 graduate of GMI, spent his senior year in the Navy V12 program at Yale University after which he was an engineering officer in the submarine service. He served in the South Pacific aboard two subs, the Bergall and Caiman. McDonald was discharged in 1946 with the rank of lieutenant junior grade. After leaving the Navy he returned to Saginaw Malleable Iron plant of the Central Foundry Division and served in various engineering, sales, production control and manufacturing positions. FACTORY MANAGER He was factory manager at the Saginaw plant until his promotion to plant manager of Central Foundry Division's Defiance, Ohio, plant in 1955. He was appointed works manager of the then Detroit Transmission Division in 1956 and general manager of Us successor, Hydra-Matic Division, in 1963. AAA In October 1965, h^ received his first assignment at Pontiac Motor Division. McDonald is a member of the Detroit Recess Club (a luncheon and dinner club), the Society of Automotive Engineers, the Engineering Society of Detroit and Tau Beta Pi, an honorary engineering society. THREE SONS, ONE DAUGHTER He and his wife, Betty, live at 1233 Vaughn, Bloomfield Hills. ’They have three sons and one daughter. Dennis, 21, is a senior at the University of Detroit where he is studying to be a physician. j A. A A Tim, 20, is a junior at John Carroll University in Qeveland where he has his sights on a law degree. John, 19, is a sophomore at Albion, and Marybeth, 15, is a sophomore at the Academy of Sacred Heart in Bloomfield Hills. J Buy a chair from Harvey and youH be sitting pretty. Your Choice Spanish Colonial Stratolounger Mr. or Mrs. Quantities Limited So Hurry- Wide selection of fabrics and quality- woods HARVEY FURNITURE 4405 Hialiland Rd. (M-59) corntr Pontioc Lake Rood • Op*n Doily til 9 -----------r ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. 'mCRSl)A\ . FKHHl ARN IM.j A—n ANNUAL 1S’ OF YEAR VMIJE ■ PECTACULM fimirn 1969 FINE FURNITURE Solfd-6tate Consule Stereo with FM/AM STEREO FM RADIO R.9. $199.95 53|g *'179® ^ SPECTACULAR VALUE IN STEREO SOUND ^ FM AM/STEREO FM RADIO ^=;r;'E 32 WATTS OF PEAK MUSIC ®isi 10' 'J/*/" FOUR-SPEAKER SOUND system leaiiiie. mo 9^ oval wooters AFC- Stereo FM >n-^ dicaiodigm opeiaiing lempeta «r70 10 So'tT WHY NOT GET THE BEST Tire to Hike GM Auto Prices! HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)—Prices we cannot install them without of certain lines of General Mo-isome price relief, tors cars will rise this year be-| “We have not decided on the cause of a new tire, the firm’s amount of the increase, but president, Edward N. Cole, said these tires will not have as today. great an effect on present car In Houston for a meeting of . prices as some people may the National Automobile Deal-jthink.” ers Association, Cole confirmed,^50 a CAR? speculation that 1969 car prices Estimates of the price hike —on some GM lines—would ^ |,ayg run as high as $50 per increased because of a shift to^^^. new glass-belted tires as stand-, remarks Cole said the ard equipment. idealer franchise system “is the ★ * * best system yet devised to in- There is just no possible way sure economical distribution that we can use these tires on and servicing of cars our cars without a retail price trucks.” increase,” Cole said in an inter- E. N.Cole said Wednesday the view. “They cost us more and relationship between the manu- facturer and the dealers must needs and desires of the Ameri-reviewed constantly to be can public for quality, high val-J sure “we are doing the best possible job of protecting the equities of the dealers, the consumers and the manufacturer. ue and transportation.” CONCERTED ATTACK’ The industry leader said that I • SALES • SERVICE STEFANSKI Radio & TV Open Friday Evenings Til 9 1157 W. Huron FE 2-6967 WANT TO SELL SNOWMOBILES, TOBOGGANS, ICE SKATES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD - - - TO| PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. M59 Improvement Given Top Priority by County (Continued From Page One) Auburn and Mound Roads east , , . , and get it applied on the west take some of the heavy traffic gge what funds off Telegraph and M59 in the available for highway Pontiac area. construction., Figures presented by Edward * * ★ iCheyz, former White Lake^ commission Township supervisor who ap-1 cooperation in peared before the committee, j Lome r son ’showed that traffic counts o" ^gted, “There are many other the improved east M59 are ‘^ss county where im- than on the unimproved west provement is just as vital.” M59. ___!__________ TRAFFIC COUNT CITED Said Benson; * “Maybe should try to kill the M51 pressway project between! end where it’s needed.” Thej contract for the continuance of east M59 expressway is to be let lANSING (UPI) — The in September at an estimated [^jgfijgap schools for the blind cost (rf $16.6 million. land deaf face serious operating * * * problems if budget cuts recom- Committee members called ^lended by Gov. William G. for cooperation between Pontiac,^jjjjken are approved, the State land all areas which west M59 g^ard of Education was told serves. They said they would be yesterday, putting pressure on Lansing and Bruce Siders, director of the School for the Deaf in Flint, and One Exomple Dr. Robert Thompson, head of ~ ! the School for the Blind in AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — Thel Lansing, said summer pro-Summerville Exchange Club,; grams would be eliminated as part of a national organization! well as expansion plans, sponsoring National Crime Pre-1 The board unanimously vention Week, invited law en-jdecided to petition the forcement officials from the Legislature for $3.2 million for area to lunch Wednesday. The after-lunch comments were delayed slightly when the club members had to borrow a po- „ , ., ... , • despite this record “our indus- | Cole address^ the closing | session of the dealers conven-1 „ ji He said the most sev^e criti-i | FUTURE OF SYSTEM cism is being directed at prod-; Lyman W. Slack, newly in- uct quality and dealer service, j ducted president of the associa- * * * tion, also addressed delegates '[-[ip industry “must be willing I and said the future of the auto- to accept constructive criti-| I mobile franchise system rests pism” from any .source because I entirely in the hands of the car “pew viewpoints can help our manufacturers. industry do an even better job,” Slack of Portland, Ore., said he said, the basic objectives of the as-1 Cole expressed concern over I sociation’s new administration]what he called “unwarranted I would be to protect and criticism directed at our indus- I strengthen the franchise system try—criticism which carries the I for the benefit of the consumer, implication that we as an indus- I the manufacturer and dealer, try are purposely shortchanging' A A * the public.” It will be our objective in * * * 1969 to determine without equi- "The growth record of our invocation the extent of the manu-dustry and the current high facturer’s dedication to the level of sales are convincing franchise system,” he said. proof that our industry is doing Cole said the automobile in-a highly effective job of serving dustry “has achieved an out-j the transportation needs of this standing record of serving the nation,” Cole said. To SIMMS for the BIGGER DISCOUNTS On Pafies A-12 and A-l^i in Todays Pontiac Press . . . and you just know TheyWe Only at SIMMS I SIMMS.?*. 3-FLOORS OF BIGGER DISCOUNTS BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! 'Blind, Deaf Schools Hit' summer buildings. The skin temperatures dium. Somebody had stolen humans vary between 87 and 95 theirs. i degrees. /WOlVTGOrtrtERY 61 QCiyS WARD I only! New, breathtaking 8x10 LIVING COLOR The Pontioc Mall Now thru Saturday, Feb. 15th SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX M4 N. Soginow Sj_ OPEN TONITE 'til 9 p.m FRI. 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. & SAT. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. V. I-b'sffi Ra-Season lAYAWf^y SAkC/ now at Simms Annex you can layaway these pre-season specials for a small deposit or use your Midwest Bank Cord or Instant Card. Full year guarantee against rusting. Pressure coated bonded plastic on heavy steel steel storage sheds M99 10x7 FT. QT99 350 Cu. Ft.... W I 8x7 FT. 285 Gu. Ft.. • solve your clutter and storage problems with these storage sheds . . . rugged heavy duty steel foundation — midwall bracing, strong top wall channels, sturdy beam and rafter roof construction. The 8 X 7 foot unit comes with Homasote floor-neat, safe and dry protection for all your outdoor valuables. genuine ‘COLUMBIA’ 20-in. boys’ and girls’ PLAYBIKES Boys’ CoiHMrtoao-Gii1s’ Tun|uoise 30*« • genuine 'Columbia' plqybike with single^ bar frame • hi-rise handlebars • chrome fenders • Bendix brakes • full size saddle seat with reflector. _ CHARGE IT NOW! 'Itislant Credit ol Simms — use our 30 day, some os cosh plan on $10 to $150 purchase or use your MIDWEST BANK CARD. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. FEBRUAR^^ 13. 1969 Rosan Coleman Clarence E. Taylor Prayei's wore oflerod this Servioo lor (larence fc.. morning for Hasan Coleman. Taylor. (i4. of 602 University, infant daughter of Mr and Mrs.j will be 11 a m, Saturday at the Johnny tJoleman of 1 2 7 4 Huntoon Funeral Home . wifli Maurer, at Oak HiH Cemetery.| burial in Oak *jUll'Cemetery. Arrangements were by Davis ] Mj, Z^isTbr died Tuesday. He Cobb Funeral Home. had o|H'raled a slove repair Rosan was dead . at birth shop at bis home for many Monday. years Surviving are her parents and Surviving are two sisters, a brother and two sisters.i k;klith Taylor and Mrs. Nettie Willie, \onna and Henay. all atiTurner, both of Uontiac, andj home. I three brothers, including Rex ofi Pontiac and Wilbur of Lake] George L. Danforth Orion Mrs. Bessie Wilson (Teorge 1. Danforth. 64. of 949 Uakeview. Waterford Township, died yesterday in Orlando. Fla. .Service lor Mr His Ixidy is at Dryer Funeral Wilson. 74 Home, liolly. will be I p.m. tomorrow in Calvarv Hill Church of Christ. Mrs. Ethel M. Porter with burial in Oak Hill .... Cemeterv by Frank Carruthers .Vrvice for Mrs bJhe M Porter of 746 Kinney will be Mrs. Wilson died Tuesday. 1,10 pm. tomorrow at ^surviving is a sister, Mrs \'oorhees-Siple Chapel with , ,{„ij,nson of Pontiac (remation following in White Chapel Memorial Cemelfry. Clarence Wilson lYoy. Mrs. Porter died lAiesday. Service for Clarence Wilson ol Surviving are two sisters, in- .IGO Howland will be I p.m. i-luding Mrs. Bert Guilds of tomorrow at the Davis-Cobb ( DETROIT (AP) - U.S. auto lakers Wednesday reported selling 15,117 fewer cars in the first 10 days of February than in the same period a year aga Industry sales total^ 171,173 cars in February’s first 10 days this year, compared with 186,-in 1968. However, this year’i 10-day period included just eight CUKAIUNt; THE IMKHIWAYS — blocked doorways and disrupted classes on of 410 Bloomfieldi Hclmctcd and nightstick-carrying police the campus yesterday. National Guard dear a doorway at tlie University of troops were alerted as dissidents promised Wiscon.sin in Madison Student protesters additional activity today. At University of Wisconsin Clarkston and a brother. Clarence C. Slocum Service for former Pontiac resident Clarence C Slocum, 65, of Madi.son Heights will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at C r e s I o n Mortuary, Grand Rapids, with burial in Fair Plain Cemeterv there. Mr. Slocum died Tuesday. He was a history teacher Bloomfield Hills Andover High School and was a member of the Bloomfield Hills, Michigan and National E d u c a associations Surviving is a brother. Kuneral Home with burial in Oak Hill (Y-metery Mr. Wilson died .Saturday. Htr I was a retired employe of the former W'ilson P’oundry Corp. Surviving arc two daughters, Shirley Ann and Sheila, both of Pontiac. Troops Near in Campus Strife MADISON, Wis. (AF) — Na-| Fist fights broke out between blocked major campus intersec- tional Guard troops, 900 strong,Ipicketers and students who moved into the Wi.sconsin capi-| sought to enter classroom build-tal late Wednesday night, ready;ings. The city withdrew its Denver Boy, 5, Has Court Date in Jaywalk Cose FAA to Test Defection of Skyjackers I LOS ANGELES (AP) - Systems for detecting skyjackers will be tested in ramps used by passengers to board aircraft, says the acting chief of the Federal Aviation Administration, David D Thomas. DENVER (AP) — Five-year-old l.eigh G. Barron of Denver IS scheduled to appear in county court Monday on a charge of jaywalking. Patrolman Louis N. Vecchi-arelli gave the youngster a ticket Jan. 18 after he ran into the street and was struck by a car. Police said at the time the ticket was issued to protect the driver, who was not at fault. * * * They said they decided to go through with the court action against the boy “to impress traffic safety on his mind.” Leigh said he is going to tell the judge he was in the wrong. Ttie funds spent per capita on personal health care increased! to $206.31 last year compared to $178.86 in 1964. Speaking at the winter convention (111 Aerospace and Electronic .Systems, Thomas said Wednesday the best solution to aerial hijacking is apprehending potential skyjackers or preventing their boarding. ★ * * “Once in the air and threatening a stewardess with a gun,’’ he said, “there is little to do but comply with their wishes. He declined to say how the detection devices work, or where or Wlien they would be tested. ★ * ★ Some persons have advocated searching the clothes and gage of all passengers, he said, even to the point of having them strip and wait around in hospital robes. What we require is a practi cal method of search other than frisking, ” Thomas said. student disorders erupted again at the University of Wisconsin. All was quiet when guardsmen, ordered to active duty by Gov. Warren P. Knowles, arrived in Madison. The troops were camped at thelDane County Coliseum and the state armory, both within 15 minutes drive of Ihc 33,000-student campus. * ★ * Knowles, who said the state would keep the university “free of violence, threats and intimidations,” had a news conference scheduled for today About 2,000 student protesters kept harried city police and deputy sheriffs bu.sy Wednesday with roving picket lines outside major classroom buildings. Six tudents were arrested W'indows of parked police buses were shattered and numerous bomb threats were received at campus facilities, officers said. No bombs were found. buses after several vehicles were halted by protesters who INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE OF CULLIGAN’S WATER CONDITIONERS SALE PRICE NOW Pickpockets Busy on Detroit Buses tions. * * The disorders started last week when black students made 13 demands, including the creation of a separate black studies department. Members of sever-militant white campus groups, including Students for a Democratic Society, joined forces with the blacks in calling for a boycott of classes until the demands are met. DETROIT (AP) -Though the Detroit Street Railway’s ready-fare, no-change plan seeiys to have stopped bus driver robberies, indications are that pickpockets may be replacing gunmen. * * *• Bus drivers say they are getting more and more reports of pickpockets working on the buses, even though police haven’t been getting a great number of calls. The discrepency, says Inspector Alex Wierzbicki of the police general service bureau, is because most people feel silly and ashamed of having their pocket picked and don’t report it. 'No Pueblo Supervision of Secrets' Destruction' $ 189 00 Culligan Mark 1 Fully Automatic Model Regularly ^249“° INSTALLATION EXTRA I *to(t. * condo.on.d wot.r • througSoul your horn. W. will youi household wot.I and halp wou t.I.cl fh. mod.l which is .oclly right lor your ip.ci(ic s.ds. (vary sol. mod.l is bockwl by our s.rvic. ond by th. famous Cull.gon Guoront..' CULUGAM WATER CONDITIONING 925 mCNARD UKE ROAD 334-9944 ^ __________Y_________ CORONADO. Calif. (AP) - A member of the USS Pueblo’s intelligence detail says he saw no one supervising destructiori of secret material before North Koreans took over the ship. Communications Technician l.C David L. Ritter of Menlo Park, Calif., was quoted by the Navy Wednesday as saying he saw the intelligence unit’s commander, Lt. Stephen Harris, in the intelligence center at the time “but no one was ‘really supervising’ destruction” * ★ Another member of the de-t a c h m e n t. Communications Technician l.C. James D. Lay-ton of Binghamton, N.Y., teeti-fied that he saw Harris walk Business Exec From Area Is Dead of 74 10-Day Auto Sales Dip From '68 Repairs on Big E Go Well; Carrier hAay Soil Shortly PEARL HARBOR (AP) -Repair work on the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier Enterprise is ahead of schedule, and she may be able to leave by mid-March for the western Pacific, the Navy reports. The Big E was knocked out of service Jan. 14 by a series of explosions in her fantail section that left 27 dead and 85 injured. She was 70 miles southwest of Honolulu conducting training exercises at the time. “Repair work is ahead of schedule because as we got into the job we found that the damage was fairly well localized in the immediate area of the blasts and not as extensive as ori ginally anticipated,” Capt. R Barnhart, commander of the Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard, said today. About 700 men, assigned to 12-hour, six-day-a-week shifts, are handling the repair work. The Navy estimates repair costs at $6.4 million. selling days and last year’s had nine. The February sales leave total sales by the four major U.S. auto firms at 817,092 for the year, an increase of 596 over last’year’s total for the same period. The industry’s giant, General Motors, was the only firm reported an actual sales increase over last year, though little American Motors joined it in reporting a daily sales rate increase. DAILY RATE UP GM sold a total of 98,443 cars over the 10 days on a daily rate of 12,305, while little AMC, reporting a drop in total sales from 5,520 to 5,109 still managed to increase its daily selling rate from 613 to 639. General Motors’ sales crease held up the industry to- into the center shortly after North Koreans began firing but that Harris “had no orders, no messages to be released and ... he never saw Lt. Harris participate in the destruction of material,” the Navy said. Layton’s and Ritter’s testimony was in an official Navy summary of closed sessions Tuesday before a court of inquiry. * ★ The five-admiral court heard no witnesses Wednesday, spending the day reviewing the 1,700 pages of testimony so far. The court planned the same schedule today, although there was a possibility some witnesses might be called late in the day, the Navy said. prominent Roche business executive, Henry A. Mitzelfeld, died today. He was 74 Service for Mitzelfeld, of N. Main will be 2 p.m. Saturday at Pixley FYineral Home, with burial in Christian Memorial Estates. •k -k * \ Mitzelfeld was a retired vice president of National Twist Drill and Tool Co. He was a member of St. Phillip’s Episcopal Church, Rochester, the Rochester Kiwanis Club, a life member of Palestine Lodge, F & AM, Detroit, and the Masonic Square Club of National Twist Drill and Tool Co. * * * Surviving art his wife, Mabel; four sons: Louis A., M. Jack and William A. all of Rochester, and Thomas H. of Birmingham; one sister, Lucy Rochester; 1C grandchildren; and two greatgrandchildren. ★ ★ ★ Mitzfeld’s son, William, heads Mitzelfeld’s department store in Rochester. One hundred forty-two thousand acres of coast redwood land in California are preserved in government parks and reserves. tal for the fourth consecutive measuring period in 1969. Ford reported its sales In the 10 days at 43,034, compared with 54,812 a year ago while Chrysler Corp. dropped from 32,137 to 24,587. * * -* On a daily sales rate basis, the Chrysler sales loss was from 3,571 to 3,073, while Ford’s fell from 6,090 to 5,379. Ford spokesmen accounted for the sales drops by indicating the firm’s sales were exceptionally high during the first few weeks of 1968 during recovery from a 66-day strike. Ford truck sales continued strong, increasing from 14,631 to 15,041, while GM trucks remained the leader with sales of 18,577, a record for the period. Last year’s GM truck sales in February’s first 10 days were 17,977. 2C)ieck to see ttiat legs are bolted on or are an integral pan of ttie furniture. Legs that are merely screwed on • permit case to s)iake when drawers are closed. 3 Open drawers and see that they are dovetailed front and rear. This means the wood is interlaced like fingers • clasped. Drawers must have a center guide for smooth operation. 5. supports. 6 If the set you choose does not have every item listed here, don't • buy it! T(|* Bafitr Btdroom Pcopfa on T»l»graph Rood house of bedrooms EDWARD DRILLER City DeMolay toSeatOfficers The Pontiac chapter of the Order of DeMolay will hold installation ceremonies at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at Roosevelt Masonic Temple, 22 State. ' The new officers are Edward Driller, 4322 Windiate, master councilor; Richard Foote, 1247 Bielby, senior councilor; and David Tilton, 2839 Kenford, junior councilor. Alll three are from Waterford Township. Gordon Mapley of 2448 Renfrew, Sylvan Lake, a past master councilor of the Pontiac chapter, will install the new officers. Following the installation of officers, the 1969 d e M o 1 a y Sweetheart will be crowned by Nancy Arnold, the 19 6 8 sweetheart. Latest Styles NEW BREED SUITS AND SPORTCOATS AT CONN'S SPORTCOATS *29.95 CONN’S CLOTHES 13 N. SAGINAW ksaiss! 108 N. Saginaw St. — Downtown Pontiac — FE 3-7114 Open Fri. 9:30 am to 9 pm - Sot. 9:30 am to 5:30 pm ONCE-A-YEAR ... FAaORY-AUTHORIZED ANNUAL SALE IS/lagno'vox. ASTRO-SONIC STEREO It Costs No More to Own the Best! Bring the new world of mosic into your home with these superb Mognovox stereos. They hove automatic 400 record player with diamond stylus, 4 excellent speakers and trouble free solid state stereo amplifier. Authentically crafted cabinets hove gliding top panel for easy access to controls. Legs ore detachable so that consoles fit easily on shelves. SAVE $21. 4 styles. Full Mognovox Warranty Included. Your choice SAVE $20 ON STEREO FM/AM RADIO Model $178.50 No Money Down-90 Days same os cosh $13850 PARK FREE in WKCs Lot at Rear of Store or 1>Hr.‘in Downtown Mall Have Ticket Stamped at Cashier's Office THE PONTMAC PRESS. THURSDAY, EERRUARV l.j, ll)«9 Finances Put U,S. at Crossroads in Space CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The United States i crossroads in sp^ce, and its future path depends on the money avaiiable and how President Nixon and Congress want to spend it. The National Aeronautics andi Space Administration’s budget for the pext fiscal year, totaling nearly $3.9 billion, has been described by space agency officials as being at the “break poipt.’’ “Below that level, it would no longer be possible for us to continue to hold together our hard-won capabilities and utilize them effectively in critical programs," said Dr. George E. Mueller, association NASA ad- \ oiir KCiLASSKS ran look i'asliionahle and be hi:ai) hu(;(;kks. too Sea 1*8 INVISO NO-I.IM; GI ASSKS Enjoy all th« advantages of the finest bifocals WITHOUT the dividing line on your lenses. These invisible bifocals give c^ar comfortable vision in near and far ranges without annoying jump, blur or distortion. And you can enjoy EXTRA comfort with "Head Hugger" frames. Come in or phone for an appointment. SEARS OPTICAL SERVICES • Optical repairs • Most frames replaced while you wait • Eyes examined, glasses fitted and lenses dupli cated by staff optometrists • Prescription sun glasses are also available • Oculists prescriptions filled SEARS OPTICAl> DEPARTMENT 151 !N. Saginaw TELEPHONK 555-4J7I OPTOMETRIST: Dr. A. Sumeracki Shop till 9 Thiirsdav, Friday. Saliirday and Monday You Can Charjje ll at ,Srar.*> ministrator in charge of manned, spaceflight. ' * ★ w On the other hand, Muejler said in a recent speech, a slightly larger budget would enable NASA to utilize better its capabilities and permit ‘modest investm»nr” to try and reduce space . sts in the future. SUCXJESS, SAFETY FIRST Mueller said success safety were the predominant factors in planning the programs in America’s first decade of space exploration. Cost w* only a secondary consideration. This was proper at the time,” he said. ★ w ★ But things have changed now and the United States, he said, needs to develop simpler, multipurporse and perhaps reusable rockets and spacecraft for greater reliability and less '68 Criine Up in Waterford Waterford Township police answered 10.1 per cent more complaints in 1968 than in 1967, and only one category of offense showed a rate decrease last year. Total complaints rose from 10,467 to 11,475. * ★ ★ Except for burglaries, which dropped from 603 in 1967 to 542 in 1968, every type of police action increased. * * * Among criminal categories, murders rose from one to two, assaults increased from 317 to 365, larcenies went from 1,582 to ,627, robberies rose from 19 to i22 and auto thefts were up from 1109 to 116. 114 TO 10 I Of the robberies, 14 were I armed last year as compared to 10 in 1967. ] Police recovered 105 stolen autos last year, up from 82 in 11967. ★ ★ ★ Fatal accidents also creased, from 13 in 1967 to 19 last year, while total traffic offenses and complaints went from 1,542 to 1,627. “We are in the position now of really needing to spend money to save money” PERMANENT STATION What NASA wants to get working on is a permanent space station for the middle of the next decade that would serve as a national orbiting platform from which a wide variety of scientific and practical operations could be carried out. * * * Along with such a space sta-| tion, NASA hopes to develop a low-cost shuttle service t ol transport men and supplies from earth to the station and back. * * * This can be accomplished with space budgets not much above $4 billion,’’ Mueller said. The spending program now before President Nixon and Congress includes $9 million to begin preliminary studies on such a space station. NEW ADMINISTRATION But Dr. Thomas 0. Paine, acting NASA administrator, said the budget leaves the decision on this, ■ future space station development and other major'new programs t6 the new administration. ‘This is a very austere budget throughout,” Paine said when the budget was unveiled newsmen last month. “If we had the additional money, we would move ahead far more rapidly into the space station.” | ★ ★ ★ Shortly after the budget was presented by President Johnson | to Congress, the Soviet Union i hooked up the two manned Soyuz spacecraft to form what Russian commentators described as a giant step toward the world’s first space station. The United States is currently planning to launch a rudimentary space station in late 1971. It will consist of a rocket stage modified to permit astronauts to turn its fuel tank into living and work quarters for periods up to eight weeks. FERRY SERVICE The station NASA wants to develop by 1975 would be a larger, permanent assembly with an economical ferry service to shuttle men and materials to and from it Mueller and other NASA officials have recently been stressing the importance of preeminence in space for the! nation’s future, and the permanent space station is the heart of manned spaceflight j plans for the next decade. i ♦ * * it would be an international tragedy if America were to turn back now from its forward thrust in space at the end of this truly astonishing first decade.” jersey shift all zipped up! 10.99 Step smartly into our double knit acetate print with pretty braid trim. Black/navy. your special sises 14Vito241A 46 to 52 201o OFF! every diamond in our stock! 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Wedding Ring Set................$360 BLY SEARS DIAMONDS WITIF CONFIDENCE. Because diamond weights are seldom idenlieal. approximate earat weights are shown. .Sears gives you a Carat Weight (^ertifirate whirh states the exaet, to one-hundredth of a carat, of every Tradition renter diamond of 1/20 earat or more. Jemlry mlarfril ,lum druil. $999 $440 $ 64 $288 Sears offers several credit plans for your convenience Sears Jewelry Deportment SearsIDowntown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 OPEN MONDAY, THURS. & FRIDAY 'til 9 P.M. Division of Thomos Jewolry Co., Inc. ’em OufpUuu/ (3k 17-19 S. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Designers’ Choice WLues Your choice for only H66—any of these groups from the award-winning Kroehler Design Center Once a year, the people at the Kroehler Design Center go through oil the furniture Kroehler mokes! They select what they believe to- be the most fashionable, most wonted styles and fabrics, and best values for the year. 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Hexagon commode, $79.95. 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH TERMS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET "You Must Be Satisfied • This We Guarantee" FE 2-4231 BUY ON VYARD'S Convenient Credit Plan MONTHS TO PAY - Free Delivery ■] IIK rCWTIACLI^y^’SS*- ’niritSDAV, I'KBUUARV l:t. lllliO MARKETS The following arc top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Itctroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Market Trade Fairly Active Clay Shaw Jury Goins Hold a Narrow Margin Hears Postman Produce VEOETASLCS Berlv Topped, bu. Cebbege, Curly, bu. t abbage, Red bu Cabbage, Stenderd Varielv, bu kel early today. Advances had a plurality of 40 ” “ or 50 issues over declines. 5, sol * * « <75j The Dow Jones industrial av-, 4.75 erage took a slight loss at .25 at NEW YOHK (AIM - Gains[ Du Pont and IBM gained a trolcum, Santa Fe Industries, had a narrow margin over loss- point or better. Down about am.s. Steel, Reichhold Chemicals es in a fairly active stock mar- ^ere Chrysler, Fircstonel ^ Western '■ml Textron. t . . . j It looked like another of the * * * linany trendless sessions which Big Three auto stocks and have characterized recent most of the major steelmakers were down slightly. Among early volume leaders, Michlc-Goss-Dexter was unchanged while fractional gains were made by Morse Shoe, City Stores, Allied Chemical and Brunswick. Active and fractionally lower were Occidental Fe- United Aircraft rose a couple J»:of ixiints. Gains and losses of fractions 4.S0I10 around a point were scattered CM j through the list. He Recalls Delivering Letters to 'Bertrand weeks on Wall Street. One inflationary factor was a reported move by the U.S. Treasury to obtain what would, in effect, be an $80-billion increase in the national debt limit. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks Wednesday rose .f to 360.9. The New Yofk Stock Exchange NEW ORLEANS (AF) — A postman’s recollection of delivering “Clem Bertrand’’ letters had him in the spotlight today at Clay Shaw’s trial. James Hardiman, who walks a route in the French Quarter, testified Wednesday he delivered such letters to a temporary forwarding address given for Shaw in 1966. ■w * * “I don’t know how many there were but I handled enough of them to recognize the name when it broke out in the news,’’ the graying mailman said. Clem Bertrand is the alias the prosecution contends Shaw used in 1963 while conspiring with Lee Harvey Oswald, David W. Ferric and others to murder President John F. Kennedy. Ferrie and Oswald are dead. RETURN ADDRESS “Did you note any return address?” asked Asst. Dist. Atty. James L. Alcock, who is handling prosecution of the Criminal District Court case for Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison. We hardly ever note return addresses,” said Hardiman. Unless they give a letter back to us.” Q—“Did any of the Clem Bertrand letters you delivered to 1414 Dauphine come back to you? -“I don’t recall getting any of them back. Q—“Was the name handwritten or typed?” “It was handwriting. Very nice, very easy to read. No difficulty.” Q—“Did you ever deliver any other Clem Bertrand or Clay Shaw mail to 1414 except during this period?” -“I don’t recall any except those this other carrier (on Shaw’s postal route) forwarded on to me.” Hardiman was the 20th witless called by the prosecution. The forwarding address was that of Jefferson Biddison, one of Shaw’s friends. The postman’s testimony capped a long, routine session. irckjmumm Irk Small Investors NEW YORK —Some brokers are still refusing to accept the business of small investors despite an almost universally accepted belief that the freedom] to own is basic American right. For practical! purposes, most people cannot acquire stock except through! a broker. In re-| fusing this busi-ness, therefore, brokers assume a tremendous power and obligation. ' Among the latest to argue against the practice is the National Association of Investment Clubs, which represents some 11,000 investing groups throughout the country. The NAIC commented in its monthly magazine: “No matter how small the present infring-ment on the right to own, we feel it is critical. It is as critical ‘We cannot withhold or'ration our services on a discriminatory basis, or trouble will en ★ ★ ★ Haack reminded his listeners —the big insurers, the mutual and pension funds, trusts, endowments and foundations which now own more than 30 per cent of all securities, that: “Ours is a national and international market which must serve all investors —the large and the small, the modest and the affluent, the round-lot and the odd-lot.” DEAL WITH THREAT But even Haack’s remarks, although more pertinent than those of most securities officials, deal primarily with the threat to the structure of the market through loss of liquidity rather than with the philosophical issue. One of the philosophical issues is described this way by the NAIC: “... can we, at the whim of an overburdened businessman, be forced to return to as if the people of New York were denied the right to vote ... because there were not enough voting machines.” IMPORTANT PRINCIPLE The paper jam, which isn’t completely the fault of the bro-| kers, may be the reason fori turning down small business. ^ AMririirQ ^api BU. « principle iuvnived, Z Snees rbreuSow of "to!"’' the days of oligarchy when the right to own was the right of the rich? * ★ * The question, says the NAIC, “goes to the crucial philosophical fabric of our society and whether the basic freedoms of this democracy include the freedom to own.” Among other possible consequences of refusing small orders: Even more institutionalizing of the market at a time when, according to Manuel Cohen, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the market cannot adequately handle the big block business of institutions. A dry-up of the pool of liquidity, the millions of small orders that permit the matching of buy and sell orders. Retardation of the small growth companies, often traded over the counter and often the type of company whose stock is purchased by small individuals and investment clubs. Will Sirhan Change Plea? Opening Statements Due much greater importance. Some of the orders arbitrarily being refused would have been considered large a few years ago. But as the big mutual and pension funds and other institutions grow in power, their orders grow, also. Relatively, other orders shrink. ★ ★ * Consider this story from the NAIC editorial: “The investment club member was bitter, and rightfully so. His club broker had turned down a $3,000 purchase for an over-the-counter stock. This was a broker who had served the club for more than 15 years, and he was dealing with a club which had a portfolio valued over $100,000.” Some members of the securities industry haven’t remained silent as the practice develops. Robert Haack, N.Y. Stock Exchange president, has brought up the matter at least twice in recent speeches. TALK TO CONFAB Speaking to the Institutional Investor Conference here a few weeks ago, Haack commented: DETROIT (UPI) - Latin-American Detroiters have charged New) Detroit Inc., with aiming all its programs at the city’s Negro population, and ignoring the Spanish-speaking n. . . •*( sharply monitored. The New Detroit committee^ * * * made a great mistake,” said M. Soriano, field coordinator for a f e d e r language program. Mutual Stock Quotations Fid Cap Fund ________ Trnd 28.85 31.36 Progrm: 8.71 9.53 Fid Fund 18.66 20.17 ^.-4 28 85 31.3' Progrm uynm r Indust InGth 10.49 11.50 DNTC Util Incom Fund Ar Gen Sec Stk 7.48 8.20 15.11 16.65 7.91 8.67 2.71 2.97 11.65 12.73 13.23 13.23 Aero Sc 10.24 11.20 Com St 1.522 1 6.64 FuJ Ad 10.05 10.99 Grth Ind 23.11 23.80 Gryphon 21.39 23.38 Guardn 29.16 29.16 H&C Lev 14.95 16.16 Ham Gth 10.27 11.22 Ham hda 5.82 6.36 6.64 7.26 5.81 6.35 8.66 9.46 6.54 7.15 10.51 11.49 11.98 13.09 30.26 30.26 1 11.19 12.10 30.42 30.42 I 15.22 16.63 17.67 19.25 17.83 17.83 10.13 11.07 9.46 9.56 iS 16.98 16.98 22.37 23.80 I 9.10 9.95 9.86 9.86 22.88 22.88 16.01 17.55 rpiyrirn 11.10 12.13 Pilot 9.22 10.08 Pine St 12.89 12.89 Pioneer 15.61 17.06 Plan Inv 14.46 15.80 Price TR 25.05 25.05 Pro 10.80 11.49 Providnt 6.61 7.22 Pa Mut Phlla. Hedge IP Cap ip Gth c Fnd 19.41 21.21 16.23 37.74 16.51 17.20 12.80 12.80 6.79 7.42 5.29 5.78 Unavail 4.41 15.75 Putnam Equit Inc FdB Ind^Trend 15.’43 16.’86 ' Indstry 7.57 8.05 InsBk Stk 6.89 7.53 Inv CoAm 16.33 17.85 Inv Guid 10.71 10.71 inv Indic 15.93 V5.93 Inves Bos 13.95 15.25 IDS n 5.81 6.32 Stock 22.29 24.23 Select 9.4110.11 Var Pay 9.23 10.03 Inv resh 6.22 6.80 IStei 26.05 26.86 Ivet 16.71 18.26 Ivy 30.85 30.65 Johnstn 22.55 22.55 Keystone Funds: Cus B1 20.66 21.56 Cos B2 21.97 23.97 Cus 84 10.5611.53 Cus K1 9.57 10.45 Cus K2 6.63 7.24 Cus SI 23.04 25.13 Cus S2 12.76 13.92 Cus S3 9.40 10.27 Cus S4 7.26 7.93 Polaris 6.26 6.85 16.16 17.66 12^94 14'.14 Incom 9.94 10.86 Invest 7.73 8.46 Vista 13.55 14.81 Rep Tech 6.71 7.33 Revere 16.8818.45 RosenthI 11.02 12.05 Schuster 18.55 20.27 Scudder Funds: Int Inv Unavail Sped 43.64 43.64 Bal 16.88 16.88 Com St 12.13 12.13 Sec Div 15.93 17.23 Sec Equit 4.62 5.05 Inw 9.28 10.14 11.45 12.39 19.58 21.40 11.82 12.92 51 13.78 16 10.66 Latins Blast New Detroit Committee nian and his attorneys can answer: Will he now plead guilty to assassinating Robert F. Kennedy. The question with its possible risks of life and death occupied Sirhan and his defenders for more than an hour Wednesday —a Lincoln’s Birthday holiday break between Tuesday’s final selection of alternate jurors and today’s opening statements by attorneys. ★ ★ ★ The jury, eight men and four women and the six alternates, was locked up for the first time Wednesday night. Part of a floor in the Biltmore Hotel will be their home the rest of the trial and their perusal of newspapers and television will be We have become the forgotten Americans, and we no longer will be content with leftovers,” said Tomas Chavez, of Pontiac, a spokesman for the Latin- American community We don’t want alt the turkey. But how about a drumstick?” Chavez and other Latin-American leaders met with Robert W. Spencer, vice president of New Detroit, which was formed to rebuild the city after the riot of July, 1967. Chavez said public school pupils of Mexican and Puerto Rican descent have the highest dropout rate of any minority group in the Detroit school system, and less than 35 per cent of these pupils graduate from high school. News in Brief A console color television set valued at $500 was reported missing yesterday after a break-in at the home of Charles Gaddy, 58, of 235 Going, according to Pontiac police. Even as the jurors assembled, reports circulated widely that the 24-year-old Sirhan had given in to pressures to change his plea from innocent with the understanding that the prosecution, in turn, would help him get life imprisonment. * ★ ★ But other reports had him clinging stubbornly to the innocent plea in order that his side of the story get the widest circulation. Trade Deficit Cut in Britain LONDON (AP) — Britain’s foreign trade deficit dropped to ■ million in January, $108 million less than the deficit in December, the Board of Trade an-cember, the Board of Trade announced today. The deficit was the lowest since the pound was devalued in November 1967. It appeared to support predictions by government leaders that Britain would turn the corner and balance its— foreign trade books in 1969. It was the lowest monthly def- Successful flnvestfiig Knickb .... Knlck Gth 13.27 14.53 Lexingt 11.40 12.46 LftX R$ch 17.36 18.97 Liberty 8.39 9.17 Life Stk 5.78 6.32 Sel SpecS19.58 21.4 Side 11.82 12.9. Sigma 12.61 13.78 Smith B 10.86 10.66 Sw Invest 10.56 11.42 Sever Inv 16.4017.96 StFrm Gth 6.57 6.57 Tower MR 9.28 10.15 Tran Cap 11.16 12.13 TwenC Gth 5.66 6.19 TwenC Inc 5.78 6.32 Unlf Mut 12.44 13.60 Unifd 12.34 13.49 United Funds; 8.45 9.23 15.93 17.41 9.42 10.3( -»rev. Day 64.1 86.2 79.0 90.2 79.2 week Ago 64.1 ’ /tdonth Ago 64.0 Year Ago 65.7 1968-69 Hig..____ . . ... ______ .. . 1968-69 Low 63.8 85.7 78.3 88 0 78.4 GettyOII .72e 1967 High 73.0 95.6 84.9 92,5 89.4 Gillette 1.20 1967 Low 64.6 86.1 78.0 89,1 78.4lGlen Aldcn .2 GTelEI ,,.l Gen TIr, 86.3 78.7 89.8 79.0 Gertesco 87.4 79.8 89.3 B1.2iGa ih 66.3 91.0 81.4 90.2 82.3 Ger 15.43 16.87 15.50 16.85 16.07 16.07 11.82 12.97 11.25 12.16 Equit Gth 20.58 22.55 •-.... 18.11 19.17 20.72 txpior 28.68 30.51 Fairfd 15.52 16.96 Frm BMu 13.27 13.27 Fed Grth 15.91 17.39 MidA Mut 7.49 8.18 AAoody Cp 18J8 19.98 moody's ^ 16.0717.56 Mortons Funds: Grwth 14.44 15.82 Incom 5.10 5.59 Nat Ind 13.4613.46 15.93 i; 9.42 It... 8.01 8.75 »e Funds: t 10.64 11.66 h Mu 15.2416.66 11 i The following list is comprised 0 f intermediate-term growth stocks: Alcan Aluminum, Gen. Foods, Goodyear Tire, Josten’s, Inc., Northern Indiana Public Service and Texaco. Equal-dollar amounts in these companies should help you realize the early retirement you envision. * ★ ★ Q — We are retired and own 1,012 Borg-Wamer but need more income. Our broker has selling 800 of these shares and buying 5M Tenneco 7s of 1988, 150 American Tobacco, 200 Cons. Natural Gas, 300 Northeast Utilities and 70 Standard Oil of New Jersey. Should we go alcmg with this? -A. L. Unless taxes are prohibitive I would sell all the Borg-Wamer and buy lOM Tenneco and equal-dollar amounts of your broker’s suggested stocks, all of urtiich are good income holdings. Thu would give you about $1,950 annually, $685 more than you new receive and $130 more than if By ROGER E. SPEAR Q —.We are m our mid-40s and are thinking of retiring in two years. Our holdings are: Anadite, Associated Oil & Gas, Fuji Photo, General Refractories and U.S. Industries. We have $18,000 in savings and own our own home. Can you make suggestions so that we can get $3,500 annual income? — E. D. — Your savings and investments have a value of $50,000 which, with safety, will produce only $2,500 to $3,000 annual income. In order to build your capital in the next few years you will have to rethink your investment policy. Your holdings^ with the exception of U.S. Industries, are simply too speculative for you. USI has just revised upward its estimate of 1968 results to $2.15 a share. A growth rate of 15 per cent has been projected for the current year. The $29,000 of capital realized from the sale of the remaining four issues should be reinvested in solid growth issues. It may, however, take you more than two years to attain the capital I you retain 212 shares of Borg-necessa^ to generate your re-Warner, quired income. | (Copyright, 1969) THE POXTIAC PRESS. IIIT RSDAV. FEBH^AR^' l.i. UMin Detroit Firms iMillikens Might Move I Deny Fraud Into Mansion Next Week DETROIT (AP) - The presi-denl (/f Union Credit Services Inc. and two other companies Wednesday denied federal charges that the firms defraud-en customers of more than $1 niiliion by false advertising claims. Ralph Barden, wliose other firms are Barden Investment Co. and Barden Advertising Ca, said the charges were inaccu-lale and resulted because he fired several employes two years ago for trying to take over his companies. LANSING (AP) - Gov. and Mrs. William Milliken could find a spacious executive residence awaiting them by. early next week. The I.«gislature gave final ap>-proval Wednesday to acceptanc^e of the Lansing home for use as a governor’s residence. It’s a gift from wealthy trucking executive Howard Sober, who values it at $440,000. He commented after he and a business associate, John Mc-Connel, were arraigned before II.S. District Judge Damon Keith on 51 charges of fraud. The two men stood mute and pleas of innocent were entered automatically. They were released on $5,000 bond each. DIDN’T LIVE UP’ 'Die credit company is accused' by the federal government of' not living up to advertising promises to clients of reducing their loan payments by consolidating all their monthly loans. City, estimated t|fle state will have to 9pend $25,000 to 450,000 on furnishings in addition to the $250,000 being collected from private sources. Traxler said water and utilities for the mansion would cost about $1,700 a year and noted two servants now living in the Sober home are paid $6,000 a year. Sen. Emil Lockwood, R-St. Louis, Senate majority leader, said the deal could be completed within 48 hours and the home ready for the Millikens within three days after that. House Democrats, who last week declined to vote final approval of the gift, did Wednesday—although some still complained they didn’t know how much upkeep of the residence would cost the state. COST OF FURNISHINGS Rep. J. Robert Traxler, D-Bay Rep. Warren Goemaere, D-Warren, said future governors, when preparing their budget recommendations, should elude maintenance costs as a separate item, rather than concealing them in some larger expenditure. I “We hope we don’t Itave any; Chinese bookkeepin g in the maintenance of this mansion,’’| Goemaere said. CLEAR "nTLE Before accepting the Sober offer, House Democrats insisted on including a provision that tlie building and property must carry a clear title and that the .slate must receive unencumbered possession. The Senate accepted the; House amendment after hearing] Ike's Son Due'Pi-oblem Seen to Be Named Belgian Envoy in Vote Reform Griffin Tells of N©ed for Some Compromise JACKSON ( U.S. Sen SIDEWALK STAND—Tuifie, a ,1-ycar-old female elephant, seem.s lo be having her own way as she balks at entering a van after doing promotional work m a Chicago hotel today. Tuliic attracted quite a crowd (luring her onc-hour holdout as she turned up her trunk at apples, candy, peanuts, carpulling and prodding. j WASllINC.'rON lAPi - John S. I). Eisenhower, son of the for mer president, is expected to be named ambassador to Belgium.' There was no immediate word Robert P Griffin, R Mich., said Ion when the nomination, report- Wednesday night compromises ledly in the works for a month, are needed if Congress is to re-would be announced. form the method of electing a But there was speculation it president, vvould be on or before President At the Lincoln Day Dinner Nixon's arrival in the Belgian sponsored by .Jackson County jcapital of Brussels, first stop on Republican.s, Griffin said Con-I the tive-nation European tour he gross wants to enact Electoral ibegins Feb 23. College reform, but if lawmak- * * * ers try to go too far, they could The 46-year-old Ei.senhower, a end up with nothing retired Army colonel who haS| ★ * * just written a book about World up said while the proposed di-War If action in Belgium, wasirect election of a president by vacationing in the Bahamas and total national vote 'might seem was not immediately available to be ideal, some compromises lor comment. will be necessary if we are to The Brussels post is now occu- gain enough votes to change the pied by Hidgway B Knight, a Constitution ' career diplomat Although it isj A constitutional amendment the city that serves as head- requires support of two-thirds of quarters for NATO and the Flu- both houses of (Congress, and ropean Common Market, the three-fourths of tlie states ; Unitc'd States has separate—and oppQxppjON EYED Auto Makers ............... ’ I House amendment after hearing] CHICAGO 'Ti - Tuffie lived would use her trunk against get tougli At the door of the SERVED FATHER gressional efforts would go down Barden said the company was lf>'um Lockwood that it wouldjup to her name Wednesday — your back.” retorted a woman trailer she stopped, backed offi jf conlirmed, Eisenhower will the drain The smaller, les.s- not involved with “debt consoli- I lUl U interfere with the transac-and the battle of the sexes rag- in the crowd ol over 100 and resisted every effort to^^j.p j^to his first official gov-'populated states are not about dation" as charged. He said it . ^ ition. ;ed about her on a crowded Loop Onlookers gethcr into it. |ernment post since serving his to support a resolution providing works on a “debt management’’ fNn FrODGn/^Pr^! * * -* sidewalk. All week Tuffie has done her “She's like every o t h e rja White House mill- for a direct, popular election,’’ principle, in which clients pay “This is the understanding of “You know any time you got promotional duties at the female: .she’ll hold out till she (yry assistant from 1958 to 1961.jhe said. fees for financial advice and do; the Sobers — that they are giv- a woman she ain't gonna do minois Building Products Show gets what she wants” predictedArmy awarded him the Le-| He said the compromise ap- not pay interest on loans. ' HOUSTON (UPI) - The,inp it outright with no .strings right nowhow,’’ opined a i„ the Sherman House, then a male onlooker. jglon of Merit for “illustrious proach of abolishing the Elec- * * * future of the a u t o m o b i 1 eiattached.” Lockwood said. Sherman House doorman as the cJodUy followed her keeper out And Tutlie did hold out. j service” in that job. toral College, but retaining the “My business is being unfairly franchise system rests in the! Meanwhile, a Milliken aide 3-year-old female c 1 e p h a n t jpe hotel's Clark Street door ★ * * | gjjjenhower went on indefinite;electoral vote has a better damaged by the pre-trial publi-;hands of the car manufacturers, said the governor, who is cur-lmade a stubborn sidewalk jpjo her straw-filled trailer. she jggyp without pay after his fath-'chance of being adopted as city.” he said. 'the new president of the Na- rentiv living in an East Lansing'stand.' ..... .............. And Bottle of Sexes Rages Elephant MakesHer Stand More Than Tooth |the new president of the Na--rentlv living in an East Lansing stand. ---------------- tional Automobile D e a 1 e r s 'apartment, could move into the i Association said yesterday in home at short notice. -I just y r ||> \A/->r business session of the' * * * ----- n6r jW6llinQ WaS 'dealers 52nd annual convention. ’'The governor's position has ^ ★ been that he would move in at I Lyman W. Slack of Portland,)the earliest appropriate time. Ore., said the manufacturers the aide said, adding: jwere eating away at the' ‘ They haven’t started pack-dealers’ earnings through war- ing yet” NASHVILLE, Tenn. '/P -- papjjgs lower profit margins on' ---------------- Mrs. Mildred Clark, 42, pP been bothered by an abscesse^^j,^j^,.jgg SanotoriUm tooth and she said she thought] * ★ the abscess was causing herj slack, a Chevrolet dealer, in*’ Kn In mO 700 body to swell. jdicated the manufacturers had Over the weekend she unacceptable regulations experiencing some severe pains, Her husband Ed, 48, took her compact car to the hospRal Sunda.w KALAMAZOO (API - Plans; t h e COMPACT DISCOUNT , The $6-million HOLDS OUT wish that old girl turned up her trunk at apples,1^,, [gfj white House to help'congressional amendment, chocolate candy, peanuts, ca-Jj|^g yi^ipp Eisenhower edit his “This method would remedy But Tuesday Tuffie decided to jolery, ear-pulling, the proddinglpppp-iQjpps the most serious defects that '-------- — pf yppj (i,g pushing of * * * are so glaringly apparent in the boards and shoulders. j p, 19,53 pp resigned his com-present system,” he said. “Good show,” cheered a|^jj;sion to join the New York] ■* * -* female fan as the two-ton'publishing house Doubleday,] Griffin said he favored the elephant - with two keepers jng 35 g senior editor. He also [Proportional system proposal, pulling her by the cars toward gppvgd for a time as executive-which would automatically di-the trailer — buckled her hind vigp president of the Freedoms vide each state’s electoral vote legs and sat down firmly on the Foundation at Valley Forge,!»" ratio of the popular vote sidewalk. Ipy only a few miles’from his]within a slate, •JUST LIKE YOU’ i home in Phoenixville. ] In other words a presidentla NELLIS AFB, Nev. (IIPH - Ncv., was on a solo training in the crowd turned to' Since leaving the Army Ei-riandidate who got 55 per cent of An Air Force FlllA fighter-[ mission when it di.sappeared_. Its companion a n d'senhower has been active in Re-'^he^vote ‘none ^state^ j FlllA Fighter Jet Lost; Hunt On in Nevada, Utah Will Be Closed bomber disappeared on a night scheduled route was from here training mission yesterday, over Ely, Ncv,, in the northeast . . . , r ,1 A . II dLUii lUiil IIIYC yUL triggering a massive air search ern part ol the state, over Ih^ stubborn streaks. c^rnrn^nmd “He^. honey. she!P«bUcan politi^. acts just like you in one of your Pennsylvania ____ he was P*^*' state’s elec- Republican Primary Campaign Monday morning Lake, then on , swing-wing Wendover, Utah. Clarks Iha parenls of Iheirj "We «ere told that we had P "’ first child, a 5-p.und.^Mur,ce!accepl, lower discount 1,00*0/^^^^^^ baby girl, Laquita Kay Clark. Schools to Take “I’d have flattened you by now'last summer at the Republican if I had one of those feet.” | National Convention in Miami. | _The * * '* -RECENT BOOK Willow Run School District has accepi a lower uiscuum lyi oiue. - Michigan since 1954 f""”‘ * Finally, Tuffie was taken] His recent book, “The Bitter]voted down a proposed operating to compete pricewise with the-turn at 7 p.m. following a traim wpajbpg tjie area was pool']around lo a side alley, awayjwpods,” was about the Battle of;tax for .schools which would imports,’ Slack said. SinCej jy^jpbjgan budget director‘"f ixevaaa anu „.j||, broken clouds at the 5,000-]fi'om the crowd and coaxed intoutie Bulge during World War II have continued an expiring 11- then, the cars have grown ^gid the structure^^’■ * * * foot lo'o' and a total ovcrca.st;her van. which took place around the mill levy and have added an ad- standard size, but the discount f.mripH in the 1969-1970 * * * . ---------1----------- . _ ......., ... , has remained compact, - ^ scheduled for ' Search and rescue flights by , ^ . “Warranty work has ex- 3^ ^Air Force helicopters and other Attacks to Court ;panded steaddy over he last * * I aircraft began minutes after the ,3 , six years,’ he sai(^. It has FlllA was overdue, said an IIFTROIT (API - Norman^^'^fT " f"desman in a briel^j ^be J i Ld 0 the Detroit r'’*' . continued operation. At present aircraft failed to return. The Drachler, head of the Uet The FlllA, the ob,ect of . ^p^bers retraced the Board ol Eflucaiion, sai -the profit opportunity is not on-- congressional bickering and Wednesday the school systern-jy absent, but frequently P . he said military controversies, carried intends t(i^ press prosecution oU by a loss. , 3-bp'oon-bed facilitv mav be fwo pilots. The names were persons disrupting activities or * * * Jd toThe clmv for use as a withh pending notification of SEARCH INTENSIFIED attackmg personne or s u ^ also attacked t h e {ggjjity, Alleninext of kin. Helicopters joined the search the future, even mougri^gj^^jggjgi.g|,g ggfhng ears charges are not signed. and trucks to fleet, lease and rental companies and state and laid. 11 CRASHES from 7,000 to 10,000 feet. Snow Whatever promises . heriggigfan towns of Bastogne andiditional 7.5 for an 18.5-mill to-showers were reported in the keeper whispered in her ear no (fg vith. Eisenhower served initai. The vote was 1,0‘25 against else heard. ^be European theater. He was in and 457 for the tax. School of- ! Korea and when Dwight Eisen- ficials tentatively decided to call hower was elected president in'another referendum for April 22. 1952. i The Philadelphia Inquirer.! which first reported the expect-; ed nomination, said the Nixon' Ueam INOUCeb ! administration had been ^ touch with Pennsylvania Repub-i' lican leaders about it for sever-SALT LAKE CITY (API-Air! al weeks. planned flight route last night and today. Dirty Air Tied to Precipitation!’ and additional aircraft wer brought here from Luke Air by factories In the past, he said, the schoolgovernments. He said 15' The oldest .song known to man have crashed since the begin-^bg hunt at dawi/ has not pressed issues where] ^be production is is “Chadouf.” which has been'ning of the flight test program it,,. TAfneoH tn nrpsS” . , . ... _ . i .i_ _____ .:___ n____:__________u.. ioc7 Eleven of the FlllA planes injppsiv^"^ automobiles probably! Eisenhower’: --------force Base._ Anz., to mtensuy .sovsi married President son. David,, causes some rain and snow, says! married President Nixon’s; ^............ _ ________ _______ ___ ^ _ , , , a cloud-seeding specialist. [daughter, Julie, last December. the victims refused to press;^bis way now W thelotal sung since time immemorial by]in January 196“7. i ^-be nlane is" eaumned with Archie M. Kahan. chief of the, Eisenhower's father remains ----- [was expected to rise to 25 peri irrigation workers on Nile water] The aircraft, home based iLtrnmpnfs eanahlei^^'''^^^ Reclamation’s Officejat the Walter Reed Army Hospi-1 charges. mills in Egypt. classified instruments capable ,, ,,, . , ,, f at Denver, said studies indicate!been recovering from a series of p q R T E R , weather tlying._ One of the fea-of [ heart-attacks. ; factory smokestacks and auto] Young Eisenhower is a 1944 tailpipes serve the same pur-;graduate of West Point and pose as silver iodide in clouds— holds a masters degree from] they increase precipitation. [Columbia University. ‘ | COLEMAN, ROSAN; February 10, 1969: 1274 Maurer; beloved infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Coleman: dear sister of Willie, Vonna and Renay Coleman. Graveside service was held today at 11 a m. at the Oak Hill Cemetery. Arrangements by the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. tures is the TF'R, or terrain following radar, which guides the FlllA when it is on automatic controls. The TFR keeps the aircraft at the same altitude above the ground, whether it is flying over mountains or valleys, and only Kahan said a fundamental to the precipitation process is the[ presence in the atmosphere of minor pilot adjustments normal-'nuclei—tiny particles of dust ly are required. '- ■ Three Boys Rescue Deer I in Deep Snow and combustion by-products which have the capacity to convert water vapor into ice crystals. , He said tests conducted by ! flying over a Kennecott Copper [Corp. smelter smokestack west :of Salt Lake City indicated Police Claim Breakup of 'Pot' Network' ETHEL M.; February 11, 1969 ; 746 Kinney Road; dear sister of Mrs. Bert (Eleanor) Guilds, Mrs. Dorothy Aluzas and Walter Eddy. Funeral service will be held Friday, February 14, at 1:30 p.m. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Pastor E, Clay Polk officiating. Cremation at White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Porter will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) ProDOsed City of Rochester Hills February 13, J7, 1<>« advertisement for bids Sealed proposals will be received the Oakland County Board of Audil for the demolition of the 50,000-Ba »,nk located north of inty Sanatorium on _______center, Pontiac, Michit Plans and Specifications vyill ^_avajl- ^ij DULUTH, Minn. (AP) „ ^ -I Three boys were tramping / ^^is is a pret y effective through the heavy snows near^>°“d-see^ Negro (>a.st and future, is developing hei-e in con nection with the permanent me monal to Ih'. Martin 1-uther King ,Ir . slain civil rights leader One, a program already under way at the Atlanta University ('enter, is on the academic level and deals direr tly with graduate scholars. « « « Ttie other, in the planning stage, is the Instiliile tor Afro American Studies, a proposal for the Martin l.iither King ,!r. Me monal Center. We hoiie to bring together those, who consider themselves radicals, militants, pari of the status quo, scholars, activists, artists and even illiterates, so they can all cross aclivale each other, " said Or Vincent Harding, director of the library proj eel of the nu'morial LKAKN FHOM II.I.ITKHATK Illiterate Negroes will be invited to the institute, Harding said, because "W'e ho[)e to learn from lliem W'e are certain many of our elderly people are carrying around in them moreigetting new emphasis, and de-| history than anyone can imag- grees will now be offered forj ine. them. j "This will be part of our orall The institute at the King Me-hislory project where we canjmorial Center, however, neither gam from many of those mar- expects nor desires to be a de-veloiis old people who've never gree-granting institute, Harding learned to write but have much said, although it hopes to attract of our history in their hearts." 1 scholars, and teaching will be a * i, significant aspect. At the Atlanta University Cen-i-pwo SITES j lei, a complex of six predomi-| memorial center will be !d7Sv^eXbliS^'';-entrfo;^^ African and Afro-American [be King's tomb at Freedom Ex-stuilies. Dr, liichard l»ng, re- hibition Hall, to be built at his cently appointed to head thelrestored birthplace, and a chap-program, said the studies are el in the Ebenezer Baptist church, where King shared the pulpit with his father. ★ ★ * The Institute for Afro-American Studies, the Institute for Nonviolent Social Change, a library and archives and museum of Afro-American life and culture will be located on a site near Atlanta University. * ★ * A study is under way to determine the financial needs for the entire memorial center. First [estimates are between 20 million I and $30 million for the first five years. This includes capital and 'endowment funds. Harding said most of this i documenting the Afro-American would have to come from pri- movement. The pa^rs of Dr. 1 J lu King will be the focal point, vate sources. He noted the „ Hquo ,/(Promises to donate files have growing demand for teachers inip^me from many people active Afro-American studies, and suggested they could be trained best at Negro institutions, like the proposed institute. Some funds for the center should come from northern colleges and universities "which are now demanding instant experts” in of policy goal for leaders in the black community.” Harding sees the institute as a great attraction fpr young scholars. in the civil rights movement. i, -k * j ‘ We’ll be offering research . . , _ for what they want to do in “We hope to try to deve op a jjigck-oriented institutions,” he whole set of black policy stud- more than ies, to do a very serious and un- ,, romantic analysis of conditions of black people in America to- day—economically, politically and socially, Harding said, the field, he said MAJOR GOAL i ★ * ★ The major goal of the library! 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