Thm W»athBr U* WMflMr •erew ftneui Colder (■Mans M Pift I) ■V ‘‘-sy" ' \ ‘ PONTIAC PR VOL. 124 — NO. 282 NECOLOR ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICKIGANi TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 -38 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL N. Viefnam Rej^ts British Peace Plan TOKYO WP)—North Vietnam today rejected the British proposal for peace talks with the United States and South Vietnam, declaring the British purpose w a s to force the Vietnamese people to “accept the insolent terms put by the U.S. imperialists.” Both the United States and South Vietnam gave a favorable response to British Foreign Secretary George Brown’s proposal last U.S. Downs/ MIGsinN.Viet Phantoms Win Big Against Reds' Elite SAIGON (AP) - “We out-flew, outshot and outfought them,” a U.S. Air Force wing commander said today after he and his mep brought down seven Communist MIGs in the biggest air battle of the Vietnamese war. ★ ★ ★ The supersonic dogfights yesterday over the Red River delta northwest of Hanoi pitted Picture, Page A-2 America’s F4C Phantoms against the best planes in the Communist air force, and the Phantoms were decisive victors. The Air Force said not one of its planes was lost. The wing commander is Col. Robin Olds, 44, of Washington, D.C., a star West Point tackle in 1941-42, a World War II ace with 24Mi kills, the husband of former movie star Ella Raines and the father of two daughters. It was his first' aerial combat in Vietnam aild he scored one of the day’s first kills. His flight accounted for three" MIGs, and a flight led by Capt. John B. Stone, 29, of Coffeeville, Miss., knocked down three more. The seventh Communist jet was shot down by a third flight in Olds’ wing. ★ ★ ★ Lt. Gen. William W. Momyer, commander of the 7th Air Force, said the spectacular showing by his airmen was “the first pure fighter sweep of. the war.” He told a news conference at Saigon’s Tan Son Nhut air base that the MIGs have been severely harassing U.S. fighter-bombers “and we were intent to engage and destroy the enemy fighters.” t Flash DALX.AS (AP) — Jack Ruby died today of cancer, radio station KRLD said. In Toda/s Press' Oakland University Institution marks 10th anniversary — PAGES B-6. B-7. Bombing Casualties U. S. newsman used North Vietnam figures in stories — PAGE C-12. Vietcong Haven U. S. unable to dislodge Reds from Boi Loi woods - PAGE B-4. Area News ......i.A-4 Astrology .........B-8 Bridge ...........B-8 Crossword Puzzle ... C-11 Comics ...........B-8 Editmials.........A-10 Markets ...........C-5 Obituaries ..’.....C-6 Sports ........C-1—C4 Tax Series.......C-12 neatm .............B-9 TV-Radio Programs Oil Wilson, Earl . ...Oil Women’s Pages B-1—B-3 Woman Held in City Bar Owner Death A Detroit woman arrested at her home late yesterday was scheduled to be arraigned in Pontiac today in connection with the pistol slaying of a city bar owner. Mrs. Margaret Overton, 39, a divorcee and former Pontiac resident, Detroit police after local investigators had broadcast a description of the woman and her car. She was sought following the shooting early Sunday of David B. Foster, 38, owner of Foster’s Bar at 335 Wesson. Foster was dead on arrival about 3:30 a.m. at Pontiac General Hospital. Police said he had been shot once in the chest with a 22caliber handgun. ★ it -k Detective Dallas J. / Flesher said tests would bte run on. a slug removed frm the victim’s body to detemiine if the bullet was fired from a gun found by police in the suspect’s home. LEFT APARTMENT Witnesses said they saw Mrs. Overton flee Foster’s apartment residende at 379 S. Paddock after an' argument between the two. Foster’s body, slumped at the bottom of a stairway, was fdfind by another tenant. U.S. Road toll week that , they join North Vietnam in peace talks on British soil. , North Vietnam’s official newspaper Nhan Dan reiterated Communist terms for peace today and rapped Britain for suggesting a conference. “Hypocritical words cannot cover up , the foul contents of the proposal by the British Labor government,” it said. “This proposal is mily rehashing 0 fthe deceitful, shopworn clamor of the U.S. imperialists about ‘unconditional discussions,’ ‘cessation of hostilities,’ ‘deeiicalation by both sides,’ etc. “It is'the U.S. imperialist aggressors who have started the war in Vietnam. If this war is to be ended at all, the United States must stop its aggression and withdraw its troops from Vietnam. This glaring truth has been known to the whole world people, but has never been mentioned by the British Labor government. ★ ★ ★ “Such a foul act on the part of the British government completely runs counter to the responsibility of Britain as a co-chairman of the 1954 deneva Conference on Vietnam,” it said. OTHER COCHAIRMAN TTie Soviet Union, tiie other conference cochairman, denounced the British appeal earlier. Pravda, the Soviet Communist party newspaper, suggested today that the British took the initiative because Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s government found itself “under an exceedingly strong pressure of public opinion demanding its disasso-ciation from the U. S. aggression in Vietnam.” Brown has denied making the proposal to head off pressure by Labor members of Patliament for Britain to split with the United States on Vietnam. TALKS POSSIBLE? “Can the authors of this ‘initiative’ think that any talks are possible while bombs and shells continue to explode in Vietnam’s peaceful towns and villages?” Pravda asked. From Record 446 Holiday Fatolities Are Below Estimates Safety Experts Made By The Associated I»ress The nation’s traffic-death toll during tlie extended New Year weekend dropped sharply from last yedr’s record and was below estimates made by safety experts. During the 78-hour holiday period, from 6 p.m., (loca time) Friday to midnight, 446 persons lost their lives in traffic accidents. The total compared to 564 traffic fatalities during last year’s three-day New Year weekend, the record high for any year-end holiday. The National Safety Council, which had estimated that motor vehicle accidents would result in between 460 and 540 deaths, said motorists were driving more safely and the toll “proves that improvement is possible. ’ ’ “Drivers appear to be doing a better and safe job than would be expected on the basis of past performance,” a council spckes-man said. WEATHER NO FACTOR He said that although there was some snow and rain in scattered areas, weather conditims \ had little to do with the final toll. TTie council had expressed hope that the death toll would be only slightly above that of a three-day, nonholiday wetiend. KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) ~ A band of hegvily anhed Latin exiles and American adventurers was arrested in the Florida Keys last night, apparently squelching a vest-pocket invasion of Haiti. ^ However, one of the invasion organizers said today that a boatload of commandos got away. Rolando Masferrer, a former Cuban senator who hoped the invasion might eventually lead to the overthrow of Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro, said 50 men were aboard the ship. “It’s in international waters,” said Masferrer, who had tried and failed to launch a Haitian invasion in November. “Nothing can be done about it.” Masferrer, arrested with dozens of other uniformed com- mandos at a beachfront home in the middle of the Florida Keys, said the ship was to have rendezvoused with two other boatloads of invaders on a Haitian shore this week. OUST DICTATOR Joining forces with rebels inside Haiti, the commandos expected to oust Haitian dictator Francos Duvalier within a week, Masferrer said. Father Jean Baptiste Georges, former education minister under Duvalier, was to be made president. Thirty days later, Mj^sferrer said, he would have an army strong enough to invade Cuba, striking across the narrow Windward Passage that separates Haiti and Cuba. But U.S. customs agents surrounded the beachfront home— at Cocoa Plum Beach on a remote section of Key Vaca north of Marathon last night and broke up the plans. itflRESTS MADE Twenty-one Cuban and Haitian exiles—from Miami and New York—were arrested and carried to Key West. Father Georges was among them. Customs agents said 79 wer» arrested and carriM to Miami in two chartered buses. The jail in Miami said it booked only 52. The war party—dressed in a motley collection of , U.S. Army fatigues, camouflage uniforms and hunting gear—had been in the Keys five days getting ready for the invasion. A truck loaded with 1,000 pounds of dynamite was found on the highway Sunday, and two ACKNOWLEDGE APPLAUSE - Michigan’s Republican Gov. George Romney hplds wife Lenore’s hand aloft as thby acknowledge applause of the audience at inaugural ceremonies yesterday AP Wiriplwto in Lansing. Romney had just taken a second oath of office for his third term. Michigan’s Lt. Gov. William Milliken applauds at left. Traffic Deaths Take ^ Second Holiday Car Safety: Big Rift Exists 10akland County motorists have chalked up a second straight major holiday weekend without a traffic dea&, according to unofficial reports from local police agencies. No fatalities were reported in the three-day New Year’s weekend which ended last night. The Christmas holiday a week earlier was similarly unmarked by death. Oakland County Sheriff Frank W. Irons credited drivers and pedestrians with “a fine safety effort.'” Irons also%ited Auto C 1 u b of Michigan officials for their publicity campaign aimed at drinking drivers. DETROIT (AP)—The nation’s first highway safety boss and the auto industry face a major task this'month in reconciling differences in their views on how cars could be made safer. U.S. auto makers, together with foreign car companies, appeared unanimous in their belief ^at they could not meet inuned-iately the first 23 safety standards proposed by the federal government. General Motors, giant of the industry witii more than 50 per cent of U.S. car production and sales, was the latest to raise questions about some of the standards. Dr. William Haddon Jr., administrator of the National Safety Agency and the National Traffic Safety Act, first outlined his 23 point program last Nov. Related Story, Page A-2 29 and gave auto companies until Jan. 3 to comment on it. His suggested program included almost every part of the car, from windshields to tires, as he took aim on his goal of cutting the nation’s traffic death toll of nearly 50,000 a year. Auto companies took him at his word and deluged him with voluminous reports and technical data supporting their belief that some of his suggestions were inadvisable or premature. The thinking of the auto makers differed somewhat, but in general, they suggested to Dr. Haddon that three of the big obstacles were time, money and lack of sufficient test data. All four U.S. firms, tor example, reportedly toisk issue with the suggestion that the front parking lights of future autos ^oiild be 20 inches above the ground, instead of 17 as most of them have it now. Will A. Scott, director of automotive safety for Ford Motor Co., said in an interview that such a change would mean scrapping much of the work that has been done already on 1968 Ford bumper areas, quarter panels and grilles. Otoer firms agreed. On Johnson members of the group were arrested. SHIP GOT AWAY Masferrer said the army was to embark in three ships. He indicated the first ship slipped away from shore possibly only hours before the raid. Fifteen men were about to board a 55-foot shrimp boat when the agents broke in. The remainder of the group was to take off later, he said, although he did not indicate when. There was much shouting in Spanish when the war party was forced to leave the concrete-block house. The men finally lined up in a military formation and started marching down the narrow paved road in the darkness toward Marathon, apparently a protest against their arrest. British to Sell Plant to Cuba; U.S. Unhappy LONDON (AP) - The British government is reported ready to guarantee thp sale of a $28-mil-lion fertilizer plant to Cuba despite pressure from Washington. Official sources said U. S. authorities had asked London to stop the sale by refusing Fidel Castro’s government the five-year credit it needs for the deal. Bnt the sale is expected to go though despite hints that it might lessen American snp^ port for economic sanctions against Ifoitain’s rebellious colony, Rhodesia. A Foreign Office spokesman said: “The government’s policy on trade with Cuba is to allow it to proceed normally, free of government interference, except as concerns the export of strategic goods.” Asked about the attitude of the U. S. government to the deal, the spdtesman said: “The Americans have , from time to time reminded us of their attitude toward trade by Western countries with Cuba — and specifically toward the granting of government-insured credits for such trade.” The United States made a similar, unsuccessful attempt to stop tile sale of British buses to Cuba three years ago. Much bad feeling was generated by that deal. Flurries Predicted to End by Tonight Snow flurries predicted for today are expected to end late this afternoon with skies clearing tonight. Temperatures will slide to a low of 17 to 22 during the night and rise into the high 20s tomorrow. Thursday’s outIo(^ is increasing cloudiness and cold. Morning west to northwesterly winds at 8 to 18 miles per hour will continue late this afternoon and tonight. Twenty-six was the low reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The mercury had moved to 31 by 1 p.m. GOP Slates Viet 'Assault' WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressional Republicans are preparing a broadside of questions and recommendations on Vietnam to be fired at President Johnson soon after (Congress reconvenes. The House Republicans are putting their ammunition into a “position paper” now being drafted with a target date of Jan. 16. Rep. Melvin A. Laird, chairman of the House Republican Conference, said its purpose is to dispel what Laird sees as dangerous'confusion over U.S. Pontiac Proto Photo CRUEL MOTHER? — Mrs. (3iarles Toby, 2384 St. Joseph, West Bloomfield Township, is not burning her daughters’ favorite dolls, but highly in-flanunable toys which could do them harm. I'he dolls, made in Poland and imported from Britain, were sold at several storts in the metropolitan area. The fire hazards, should be destroyed or returned to the place they were purchased. “Not only the goals in Vietnam, but in Southeast Asia,” said Laird in an interview. “We are moving into a similar situation in Thailand.” The fallout from the position paper will provide more tinder for an expected crackling congressional debate — on bombing, troops and peace efforts — as soon as Congress reopens its doors Jan. 10. ISSUES CLOUDED But Laird argued that neither Congress nor the public can intelligently ar^e the issues without knowing U.S. objectives. And these, he said, had been left muddied by changing administration proiibuncements. * ★ ★ Laird said these objectives as expressed by administration officials have varied from the aim to protect the independence and freedom of South Vietnam to the desire for negotiations to caljs for total vichfry. THE W)ln:iAC ERESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3. 1967 ecrions oy in 1966 Set SAIGON, South Vietnam ^AP) — U.S. officials'announced today that a record 20,242 Viet-' cong defected In 1966 wiUi the biggest surge coining in the final two months of the year. A U.S. spokesman said the 1966 total was nearly double the 11,124 who left the Communist ranks during 1965 and was the highest number in the four years since South Vietnam began the Chieu Hoi — Open Arms — program to win over Viet-cong adherents. In combat developments, only minor ground skirmishes were reported. In the air there were more bombing strikes against Vietnam and a tiiird in the demilitarized zone. In announcing the Vietcong defections, the U.S. spokesman said December was a record month with 2,516 Communist adherents rallying to the South Vietnamese side, topping the previous monthly high of 2,505 in November. 4-YEAR TOTAL The total for the four years of the Chieu Hoi program is more than 48,000, the spokesman said. Despite the claim of 20,242 defections in 1966, the strength of Communist forces in South Vietnam has remained through- North Vietnam, two raids by,out the year at about 280,000 B52 heavy bombers in South'men by U.S. official estimates Huge Wave Puts Vessel on the Blink NEW YORK (AP) - An abnormal seawave in the stormy Atlantic battered the forward bulkhead of the bridge of the Liberian-registered oil tanker Failaika late Monday night and destroyed or put out of service all of the vessel’s navigational equipment. A Coast Guard spokesman said there appeared to be no immediate danger to the ship or its crew of about 43 men, although only its steering gear and magnetic steering compass were in use. ★ ★ ★ The only injury reported was a broken arm suffered by the tanker’s master, Aless Andrini. The Coast Guard spokesman said the magnetic compass is subject to a variety of mistakes and is not as reliable as the electrically operated gyro compass which was put out of commission in the very heavy sea and winds about 600 miles east of New York. ★ ★ ★ The 766-foot, 29,230-tanker, built in Quincy, Mass., by the ^Bethlehem Steel Corp., in 1952, was reported proceeding under its own power. Houghton Fire Razes Building HOUGHTON (AP) --A three-story building in the 200 block of downtown Houghton’s Sheldon Avenue was destroyed by fire today. Except for a first - floor bakery and a second - floor apartment, the building was unoccupied. No one was injured in the blaze, discovered about 2:15 a,m.'Firemen from Houghton and four neighboring municipal fire departments fought the blaze in freezing temperatures. Wife of Powell May Lose Job Committee Member Expects Ouster OK WASHINGTON (AP) - The chairman of the House AdminiS' tration Committee said today he hopes it will accept a subcommittee recommendation that the estranged wife of Rep. Adam Clayton Powell be removed from the congressional payroll. In expressing the hope. Rep. Omar Burlesbn, D-Tex., declined to predict what action the committee would take at today’s meeting. However, a Republican mem' ber of the subcommittee that looked into expenditures by Powell’s education and labor committee said he expects the Administration Committee to direct the House cleric to remove Mrs. Powell from a $20,-500-a-year job on her husband’s staff. “1 would be awfully surprised if she is still on the payroll tonight,” Rep. William L. Dickinson of Alabama said in an inter view. Mrs. Powell, a $6,000-a-year clerk at the time she married the controversial Harlem congressman seven years ago, failed three times to answer a subcommittee subpoena to appear at its inquiry. She lives in Puerto Rico, and the subcommittee has recommended that the full committee dismiss her for violation of a law that congressional aides work either in Washington or in their employer’s district. ’ ★ ★ ★ Last summer, she was reported to have complained she was not receiving her congressional paychecks. It was disclosed they had been deposited in Powell’s account with the House sergeant at arms. More recent checks have been sent to her in Puerto Rico. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy with some light snow or snow flurries today. High 29 to 34. Clearing and turning colder later tonight. Low 17 to 22. Wednesday, mostly fair but cold. Thursday’s outlook: Increasing cloudiness and cold. West to northwest winds 8 to 18 miles this afternoon and tonight. ^ Ibe ^onimunists have filled their ranks through recruitment and infiltration from North Vietp nam. it ir it Desertions from the South Vietnamese armed forces during 1965 totaled 113,000 and for the first half of 1966 reached at 67,000. But allied officials contend the desertions in the last half of 1966 will show a decline because of new stiff penalties and improvement in pay and conditions of service. A South Vietnamese spokesman reported that a Vietcong force of about 35 men crossed into South Vietnam from Cambodia today and abducted 15 Vietnamese civilians from a border hamlet. BEFORE DAYBREAK The spokesman said the Vietcong. entered the community of Go Dau Ha, in Tay Ninh Prov ince, just before daybreak, kidnap^ the Vietnamese from an open-air market and withdrew across the Cambodian border. Over the weekend, the Cambodian government charged that U.S. and South Vietnamese helicopters and light planes carrying ground titwps attacked the village of Ba Thu just inside Cambodia, killed three or four persons and abducted 12. The U.S. command denied any knowledge of such an incident. Vietnamese headquarters also reported a Vietcong attack on an outpost 48 miles south-south-west of ^Saigon in which a squad of miliUamen took heavy casualties. it it it Yard made a series of night swoops on Londcxi homes, and today police said they m^ be on the trail of those w)ier stole the eight old mastM’s worth $7-millicfli from the Dulwich College Gallery. The authorities admitted. In the air war, the long-range B52 bombers struck Monday night at a Conununist headquarters area in Quang lln, one of the northern coastal provinces of South Vietnam. Viet Objector COLUMBUS, Ga. (UPI) - A Ft. Benning soldier who renounced the war in Vietnam said today he faces a court-martial for refusing to wear a unifprm. it it it Spec. 4 J. Harry Miur, 21, of Goldsboro, N.C., said the court-martial possibility arose when he refus^ a direct order to put on a uniform after the Army had declined his application for a discharge on grounds that he is a conscientious objector. Miur, in a telephone conversation with U^ted Press International, also said h e faces charges of violating a restriction. “I am violating a restriction now,” Miur said. it it it Miur said his position against all wars in general and the Vietnam war in particular came about gradually while he was in Officers Candidate School in Virginia. He said he wrote a collection of poems denouncing war and shortly thereafter was assigned to Ft. Benning. FAMED PAINTING GUARDED — Two special guards flank “The Nativity,” famous painting by Flemish artist Paul Rubens which is on loan to the Londcm auction house of Christie’s and is on exhibit today as part of their bicentenary Mlebratibn. Special guards were provided in the wake of what may have been the greatest art theft of all time last Friday. ' Police May Be on LONDON (AP) - Scotland Tax Increase With Options Is Proposed WASHINGTON (UPI) - One of the President’s former economic advisers today offered the administration a tax increase proposal that could keep open the options President Johnson favors. Walter W. Heller, former Chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, proposed a kind of tax on taxes to te effective July 1 when the economic growth threatened to turn into a recession, Heller said, the tax increase could be withheld and its further deflationary impact avoided. the amount of taxes paid by individuals or corporations. |n November, he recommended a surtax of about 5 per cent. This means that if an individual paid $100 in taxes, the surtax would require him to pay an additional $5 This approach could also have appeal to Congress, Heller said for while the economic case for an increase is weakening, “The political case seems to grow stronger.” Forseeing huge budgetary deficits for 1967 and 1968, Heller said the additional revenue from a tax increase might well be accepted in Congress as the price of a guns and butter program. however, they had received no infqrmation on where the paintings are now. it it it Three Rembrandts, three Rubens and two other works by Gerard Dou and Adam Elsheim-er were stolen Friday night. Thirty persons have volunteered information which police say may help them. The night visits were made by Detective Supt. Charles Hewett and Detective Chief Inspector Kenneth Oxford after they had been given information by a woman and several men. NO INSURANCE Dulwich College, which did hot carry any insurance on its valuable collection, said a reward would be offered today. But a spokesman for the college said it was “in a very tight position financially.” The college is forbidden to sell any of its paintings, which are worth millions. ■* ■*•■* The gailery may reopen to the public in a day or two, but stricter security arrangements are to be made. A spokesman said: “This was our first theft and we want to make sure that it is the last.” it it it The police have been hampered by a large number of hoax ransom calls and letters. Birmingham Area News Normal School Sessions Due BIRMINGHAM — Covington and Berkshirejunior high school pupfia are sftoisduled to return to a ' noftnal' achod schedule when the second semester starts ■ ■■ The ihajor academic portion of the new Covington School is expected to be ready for occupancy on that date. Pnpils from both schools have been on double sessions at Berkshire since the beglfr-1^ of schod last September. The administration area, classrooms, science roonjs, mul-ti-instrucfiplial areas . and library, the <- amphitheater, j |itt rooms and hOmemaking section are to be ready by Jan. 30. it it it Music rooms and industrial arts sections are to be ready about Feb. 15 with the remain- 2 Big Events to Be Marked by OU Tonight Oakland University tonight will mark two important events — one historical and the other brand new. Causing the double celebration is the coincidence that the university was founded exactly 10 years before the premiere of the John Fernald Company of the Meadow Brook Theatre. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson announced on Jan. 3, 1956 that they would give their 1,-406acre estate and a $2-mil-lion endowment to found a university. The anniversary of the announcement will be celebrated at a pretheater dinner party given by Chancellor Dur-ward B. Varner and Mrs. Varner at Vandenberg Hall on cam- der of the bulkling|4 jiicluding the cafpt^, gympasium and swimiAng pool 4i^hduled f o r cunpletiiHi aboiii A^rll 1. TO AUTHORIZE coNSPUjqnpN The boand tonight is sctied-uled to authorize construction of a central administration building on a portion of the Baldwin School i^operty and to provide for the demolition of the present Hill Building. pus. The increase he (woposed is a surtax or a levy against .^he general belief seems to be that the thief or thieves hoped obtain ransom for the paintings. However, the fact that the paintings were not insured lessens the chance of ransom. Ford Tells U.S. 5 Standards Can't Be Met Tpdty l|i Ponliic Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. 2« I a.m.: Wind Velocity I m.| Direction: Northwest Sun sets Tuesday at S:I4 p.m. Sun rises Wednesday at 8:02 a.m. Moon sets Tuesday at 12:25 p.m. Moon rises Wednesday at 1:2» a.m. 6 a.m. 7 a.m. 8 a.m. Downtown Temperatures 10 a.t 28 One Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature ............ Weather: Mostly sunny Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date in 04 Years 59 in 1950 -15 in 1879 Monday In Pontiac (as raeorded downtown) Highest temperature .............. 32 Lowest temperature ...............97 Mean temperature................ 29.5 Weather: Partly sunny Monday's Temperature Chart Alpena Escanaba Gr. Rapids Houghton Lansing Marquette f.Suskegon Pension Traverse C. Albuquerque Atlanta Bismarck Boston Chicago Cincinnati Denver Detroit 33 26 Duluth 32 25 Fort Worth 58 31 37 32 Jacksonville 68 55 24 21 Kansas City 43 22 33 28 Los Angeles 69 52 26 24 Miami Beach 79 73 37 31 Milwaukee 32 23 32 27 New Orleans 55 45 31 27 New York 44 33 35 8 Omaha 33 10 45 43 Phoeni* 60 28 30 6 St. Louis . 52 31 42 28 Salt Lake C. 33 16 37 30 S. Francisco 61 48 42 24 S. S. Marie 29 27 31 12 Seattle 46 44 33 24 Washington 45 34 Dora From U.S. WrArHM lUMAU Judges Eyes Jurisdiction for Teen in Triple Slaying DETROIT (UPI)-Ford Motor Co. told th-e federal government today its 1968 model cars could not mjet five of the government’s proposed safety standards. Ford was the second big auto maker to complain that some of the standards were impossible to meet. General Motors Corp., the industry leader, told the government Saturday it could not meet five of the standards. NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain is predicted for the East Coast tonight from Pennsylvania to north Florida with showers along the central Gulf Coast. There will be snow flurries in the Northwest and over the upper Great Lakes. It will be warmer along the East Coast anti colder elsewhere. ORANGE, Tex. (AP) - A judge may decide today if 14-year-old Ronnie Lee Ozio, accused of three New Year’s Day killings, should be declared a juvenile delinquent. Two witnesses told authorities the 5-foot, 100-pound youth riddled his father, grandmother and stepmother-to-be with bullets from a 22-caliber rifle. One of the witneses was stabbed in the back with a butcher knife. it it it Under Texas law, young Ozio could not be tried on a murder charge until his 17th birthday. Dist. Atty. Roy S. Wingate said he would file a motion asking that young Ozio be'adjudged delinquent. He then could be" confined in a state reformatory, the usual procedure in such a case. VICTIMS Victims were John A- Ozio, 39, father of Ronnie; Victoria Ozio, 77, the grandmother,, and Bobby Mayberry, 35, of Foreman, Ark. Mrs. Mayberry, a divorcee, and Ozio were engaged to be married. .They were killed in the it it it The premiere performance of Bertolt Brecht’s “The Caucasian Chalk Circle” will be followed by a gala reception in Meadow Brook Hall. Invited to the dinner were members of the Michigan State University Board of Trustees, the Oakland University Foundation, the Chancellor’s Club and the policy committee of the Meatiow Brook Theatre and a few special guests. City Shooting Charge Due AP WiripiMto CRASH AREA? - A remote Baja California beach near La Paz, Mexico, is the area where six bodies were spotted by air searchers yesterday. The victims are believed to have been aboard a twin-engine jet which disappeared Dec. 20 with 10 Californians, aboard. Air Search Narrows as 6 Bodies Seen Pontiac police said today they will seek a charge of attempted murder against a man jailed Saturday after the shooting of a city woman. Randolph Hammond, 58, of 430 Irwto was identified by Mrs Luther Henderson, 39, of 55 Cottage as the man who shot her in the stomach, according to investigators. Detective Dallas J. Flesher said police are still undecided as to the role played in the shooting by a companion of Hammond’s, Gerald D. Williams, 27, of 263'/^ Franklin Road. WUliams is also in custody. Mrs. Henderson is listed serious condition in the inten- HAMILTON AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP)-The wide-spreati search for a missing plane with 10 Californians aboard narrowed today as a Mexican Coast Guard cutter set out for a remote Baja California I beach where' six bodies were spotted by air searchers. it * * Aboard the cutter leaving La Paz, Mexico, were a U.S. Air Force pararescue team and George Millbom, a friend of San Francisco businessman Richard Y. Dakin. it it -it Dakin, seven members of his family and a crew of two were aboard a twin-engine jet which disappeared Dec. 20 after taking off from San Diego. it it it The Western Aerospace Reserve and Recovery Center at Hamilton Air Force Base said six bodies and pieces of plane wreckage were sighted Monday by a civilian aircraft and two U.S. Air Force planes. IDENTITY NOT CERTAIN A spokesman at Hamilton said a plane may have clashed at sea and then been washed ashore, but it still was not known whether the wreckage The City Commission tonight will take up the nfiatter of a safer school crossing* for children at Pembroke School. It was delayed last week pending a report from the American Automobile Association. * * * ,. In response to a request from a resident two weeks ago that the Eton Park skating rink be closed to nonresidents, Darrell C. Mlddlewood, superintendent of the Forestry and Parks Department is recommending that the present arrangement not be changed. He said use of the rink normally dr(^ after the (^ristmas holidays and “that restrictions or rate increases would not be in the best intm'ests of the city.” Crisis Entraps British Queen Cousin's Divorce Plans Reveal Royal Scandal LONDON (AP) - Queen Elizabeth II was caught up in a crisis of conscience today over her first cousin’s desire to marry “the mother of his illegitimate son after his wife divorces him. An announcement yesterday by attorneys for the Earl of Hare-wood, 43, and 18th in line of succession to the throne, came as a bombshell to the British public and uncovered one of the best-kept royal secrets. The statement said Hare-wood’s Austrian-born countess is suing him for divorce on grounds of adultery with Patricia Tuckweil, a dark-haired Ansiralian divorcee who once wwked as his secretwy. The attorneys said the earl would not defend his wife’s suit, that “he and Miss Tuckweil would wish to marry if and when they are legally free to do so,’’ and that Miss Tuckweil had a son by him in July 1964. it it it That put the queen in a predicament. sive care unit at Pontiac General Hospital. it it it She was found shortly before midnight Frfday, lying near the and bodies were from the Dakin plane. it it it The Mexican cutter was scheduled to go to an almost inaccessible beach about 25 front door of her home. Policeimiles north of La Paz. A ground said Hammond was a former I party failed to reach the rugged suitor of Mrs. Henderson. |area Monday. NEED PERMISSION Under the Royal Marriages Act of 1772, all members of the royal family descended from King George II must have the monarch’s permission to marry. it it it And the Church of England of which the queen is temporal head and “Defender of the Faith” — is opposed to the remarriage of anyone whose partner is still living, the key factor in Princess Margaret’s decision in 1955 not to marry Group Capt. Peter Townsend. Sources close to the court believe church leaders may advise the queen against consenting to her cousin’s remarriage. Ozio unit of an apartment house. Investigators would not discuss a possible motive. Relatives told them Ozio and Mrs Mayberry first planned to wed before (Christmas but put the nuptials off. it it it These sources expressed doubt, however, that the impending marriage had inspired resentment. Ronnie had returned Saturday from a two-week visit with the Mayberrys at Foreman. Two children of Mrs. Mayberry survived the killings. HIT BY KNIFE One is Craig Mayberry, 16, in serious condition at a Beaumont hospital. He said Ronnie plunged a 10-inch knife blade into his back when he tried to stop the slaughter. Debi Mayberry, 14, was unharmed. She saiti she was sleeping with her mother when Mrs. Mayberry awakened and got out of bed. Debi said young Ozio But the two big firms agreed on only three standards as allegedly impossible to meet, including one specifying how a car should ]Mt>tect its occupants from injury in case of a wreck. “We believe that some of the provisions of these proposed standards are arbitrary, unreasonable or impracticable,” Will Scott, Ford automotive safety director, said in a letter to Dr. William Haddon Jr., administrator of the National Traffic Safety Agency which Congress established to administer the new law giving the government power tb establish mandatory safety standards for cars. ♦ ,* Ford said “the grpat majority” of its 1968 models could conform to 10 of the 23 standards Haddon proposed. it it it It said Ford cars could meet seven other proposed standards if the government would accept changes in “detailed specifications or the test procedures that we believe will in no substantial way diminish the safe- shot Mrs. Mayberry twice andity contributions of the pro-then shot h’is grandmother. Iposals.” Gulf of Tonkin WHERE YANKS SCORED - A U.S. spokesman claimed seven Communist MIGs were shot down yesterday by American ' Ae WliWhMt planes in the biggest air battle thus far in the war. The battle took plara in ti»e Red River area. r./ I k j TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 19^7 By JEAN SAILE OMON 'TOWNSHIP - Whenever you eat chicken soup, you may be savoring some of the fruit of the labors of Orion Toumsbip’s suporvisor. ★ ★ ★ Though his main interest is civic re^xtnsibility, 58-year-old Jeople who had failed to exercise their rights in the last election and in the previous presidential election. ★ ♦ ★ “Those cards belong to teachers, to well-educated businessmen, and to people have no b u s i n e s s nor excuse for not voting.” he said. NOT WORKING “I suppose the answer lies in education of the young, but it doesn’t seem to be working,” said tiie usually calm and accepting Lessiter. “It I’eally isn’t asking much,” he said, “even if tiiey have to wait in line, to devote a littie time every two years to the safeguarding of the country through voting.” Lessiter’s day begins about 7 a. m. with breakfast and farm chores. A man comes in to take care of the flock at about 9 a.m. and Lessiter shows up at the township office at 9:30 a. m. ★ ★ ★ A typical day will see everything from zoning inquiries, complaints on old cars, garbage and junk to an emergency when the fuses blow in the Judah Lake Water System. A GOOD DAY It’s a good day when everybody goes home satisfied,” said Lessiter. The supervisor is married and is the father of two children. His wife is nearly as active in the community as he is. A son, Fraik, 27, is managing editor of a farm magazine in Milwaukee andadaughtsr, Janet, is a 20-year-old junim* at Michigan State University 7 Eye Council if Rochester OKs Cityhood ROCHESTER — Seven men -all but one of them having been a councilman — will seek and presumably win council positions should the village vote in favor of cityhood Jan. 24. There will be seven positions open, on the new council, and Clerk Maxine Ross reports that seven men met the deadline Friday for filing nominating positions. ■k -k -k Voters, besides deciding for or against a city charter, will be asked to give a vote of confidence to 'Thomas B. Case, secretary of the Charter Commission; James C. Hill, chairman of the commission; former councilman Harold Milton; and current council members John Boe-beritz, Samuel Howlet, Burdette Lewis, and Roy Rewold. All but Case are or have been members of the council at some time. Library Millage May Be Put on Troy Balldt for April 3 By the Associated Press Twenty-five persons, including five teen-agers in an automobile and train smashup, died in Michigan traffic over the New Year’s weekend holidays. The toll was three fewer tiian over a similar 78-hour Christmas holiday span a week ear lier, and eight fewer than in the similarly long weekend that started 1966. The five teen-agers, all of Three Rivers, were killed New Year’s Eve when their car was smashed by a train at a double track crossing near Kalamazoo They were en route to tobogganing runs. One survived long enough to say they saw one train and estimated they had plenty of time to clear the crossing. But they didn’t see an 80-mile-an-hour second train approaching on the other tracks. RECORD BROKEN With 15 of the weekend’s deaths coming before New Year’s Day, they boosted the Ortonville Election to Be No Contest ORTONVILLE - There wUl be no contest here for tiie March 13 election as incumbents all filing as Republicans were the only ones to meet yesterday’s nominating petition deadline. The ballot will read Charles F. Sherman for president; La-Veme Borst for clerk; Wilmer G. Kiibourn for treasurer; and Ray Long for assessor. Seeking to continue as trustees are J(9in K. Teare, Milton A. Hitchcock and Donald A. Bams. Class Finishes Traffic Survey in Dryden Twp. i DRYDEN TOWNSHIP - The Dryden High School senior government class recently completed a traffic engineering survey of Dryden Township in Lapeer County, The purpose was to discover, analyze, and find solutions for traffle problems. Hazards such as unmarked intersections, obstructed vision, siii^ry pavements and one-lane bridges were discussed. The class made 27 recommendations and sent them to the Lapeer County Road Commission, the Dryden Township Board, and Horace Bennett, duef engineer for the Road Commission, who came to Dryden to discuss the eAgineerii^ of county roads with the government classes. 1966 Michigan highway toll to 2,243, which broke a 2^-year-old record. The previous one-year record of 2,175 was set in 1937, when there were only 1.4 million cars on the state’s roads, compared with more than 4 million today. The Associated Press began its New Year’s weekend tabula tion at 6 p.m. and ended it at midnight Monday. MDs, Police Split on Cause of Teen Death OAK PARK (AP)-Police and doctors who performed an autopsy disagreed today on what caused the death of a 14-year-old Oak Park boy who was found dead in the snow near his home Sunday. Doctors at William Beaumont Hospital said an autq>sy shows Kenneth J. Biel Jr. died of car-b 2nd Swimming Pool Vote Set for Feb. 25 in Milford Toboggan Death FRANKENMUTH (AP)- Patrick Ladrig, 4, Saginaw, was killed Monday when the toboggan he was riding struck a tree in Frankenmuth. MILFORD - Huron Valley School District voters will be given a second opportunity Feb. 25 to approve construction of a swimming pool at Milford High School. k k k The new proposal will be identical to the $650,000 bond issue for a pool which was turned down by voters 1,357 to 1,173 last June. School officials said that because the question failed by such a small margin last time they feel they owe it to those who voted for it “to give it a second chance.” “This is a real need for the students,” said Schools Supt. Dr Truman Owens. k k k Dr. Owens indicated prior to the vote in June that if the issue failed, it would have to be resubmitted “because it is a nec essity.” NOT INCREASE TAXES Officials stress that the pro posal will not increase taxes Approval of an $8,313,000 bond issue last June raised the bond- ing tax rate to 7 mills which permits the district to borrow money for additional building from the State School Bond Loan Fund. If the pool is approved, it will probably be incorporated into plans for a proposed addition to the high school. The $1,161,000 addition was part of the $8,313,000 bond issue. A completion date, in the event of a favorable vote, has been tentatively set for September, 1968. k k k ' The entire community will benefit by the pool, according to officials. The YMCA, the YWCA, the Red Cross and other , community groups will be involved in the planning in order to make it “a real community effort.” OUTSIDE GROUPS It would be available for use by outside groups after school and in the evenings. k k k The vote is being held on a Saturday “because rhore people will be home to vote,” acc(^-ling to a spokesman. l^7Ibnls offer SelectShift Cruise-0-]Vbtic~. fiillv automatic and fully manual You can’t get flexibility like that on or CKNSOiiKi) fna €Ki\soRi:n Put Ford’s SelectShift Cruise-O-Matic on “D” and you have the finest automatic transmission in the industry. Or yoli can select the gear for every road or driving condition you meet and it will stay there until ^ change it. Other car makers may claim their automatic transmissions arc manual, too. But see how much manual control they give you when you want to hold in second. On slow comers they’ll drop back into low ... automatically. On wet or slippery surfaces you can’t start in second without going throu^ low. Get the full, uncensored story on two-way shifts from your Ford Dealer. It’s an eye-opener. SelectShift is just one of the better ideas Ford offers ... like a Convenience Control Panel, Comfort-Stream Ventilation and the two-way wagon Magic Doorgate ... on the strongest, quietest Fords in history. You’re ahead in a Ford Quieter because it’s stronger...stronger because it’s better built! FORD BIGGER SAVINGS NOW AT YOUR FORD DEALER’S 4th ANNUAL WHITE SALE! c »*(i ' '' ', * ' ' '• ’ A—II ^,5—----------------------- THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUABY 8, 1967 s a By DAVE BURGIN ' | The problem is with chsrm. time tiieyVe concerned nbont Newspaper ^terprise Assn. So far as tourism is omcern^, room. . ! NASSAU, BAHAMAS - (NEa|J*«* « smaU island mthout «| ^ — There is concern in the Carib-, ‘ ’ land,” said an AmericanBom bean that some of the better-known tourist Edens may end up like San Juan, Puerto Rico — too big, too slick and too American. i On New Provldmice, where estate salesman foid de-Nassan, the capital id the Ba> veloper, “th«i I think sometimes hamas, is located^ residents hate to see Nassau and are largely dependent on the ^ine of the out islands turned tourist dollar but at the same into one big hotel.” ★ ★ * More than a year ago President Johnson’s administration irk^ islanders with the bill that and things are getting bade to boran.’* “Acnally, when th^ talk “boom” ib Nassau, ttey'taflk about a bdom witiibi a emtaia crowd — a yi)ang tfaromd* middle-age swinghig crowd. Prices in most restaurants and most hotels are reasonable for what is (dfered. l^ps are load ed with bargains. The swingingest clubs — such GROWING PAINS — The boom in the Bahamian capital of Nassau continues. But with any boom, especially in the area of tourism, come problems — namely, traffic, commercialism and, since Nassau is on an island, space. reduced the duty-free allowance of American tourists from $166 to $100 retail Value. BALANCE OF PAYMENTS Also, duty-free Uquw allowance for each American was reduced from (Hie gallrni to one quart. Purpose of the law, of course, mis to help offset the U.S. balance of payments deficit. But the law was aimed mostly at Europe, not the Caribbean. The law has since evoked mixed reactions. It has slowed any proofs tiiat would turn Nassau and other popular islands into “one big hotel” but at the same time many livelihoods were on the line. ★ ★ ★ Nassau is a haven for shoppers ^ everything from china-ware to clothing to knickknacks imported from Mother England. Purchases had to fall off, but not as drastically as expected, Bahamians sdy. AMERICANS ADJUST “Now,” said the real estate man, “Americans have made as Charley CharlQr’s and tiie Lemon TVee — are simple and guardedly uncommercial. SPORirS PARADISE lliey do not begin to roD until the wee hours because tourists spend the early part of the evening at dinner, in the &ie casbio, the Bahamian Club, ih* watching a show in one of the hotels. Nassau is a paradise for water sports, really untapped relative to other iWpects of tourism. Equipment is readily available and at reasoniable prices. Most important. New Providence and Nassau still have what they fear losing — charm. It is, to Americans a combbia-tion of English custom and native vitality and the exotic feeling of simply being on a friendly, sun-splattered island. UNSPOILED BY MONEY Nassau so far is unspoiled by big money (even many natives discourage big tippers) and super plush facilities. Still, it is fffobably inevitable that Nasseau and other islands SANTA FE, New Mexico W— Maurice Trimmer, press aide to Gov. Jack Campbell, reports that a letter has been received addressed to “Lew Wallace, governor of New Mexico.” Lew Wallace, the author ofi in the Carribean will some dayj“Ben Hur,” was territorial gov-, the adjustment — completely | become “one big hotel.” emor of New Mexico from 1878 forgot about the law, in fact —I Now Bahamians seem to be to 1881. (c^ng hard net to let tlii&gi grow too last. In promotion, it is a tricky matter of seOing diarm and at the same time maintain- V V T Blind as a Bat? You're Batty! By Science Service WASHINGTON - It is hardly accurate to describe someone who on^ picks at his food as “eating like a bird,” since birds voraciously spend almost all of their waking hours in search ol something to eat. “Quiet as a fish” became virtually meaningless with the discovery by oceanografBers that undersea creatures actually make a wide variety of surprising noises. Now another cliche has bitten the dust. Bats, heretofore occu-pyii^ the pinnacle of the peak of Creatures that one could be described as “blind as,” can see after all! Just a Liffle y Out qf Date BUYING A NEW CAR? Know Who Has The Lowest Financing Rates Of Any Financial Institution In This Area? PONTIAC STATE BANK PER *100 A YEAR Up to 36 months to repay... We also finance used cars and trucks. fight birth defects/) MARCH OF DIMES Pontiac State Bank MAIN OFFICE SAGINAW at LAWRENCE-OPEN 9 AM. DAILY Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Where Deposits Are Now Insured to $15,000 By F.D.l.C* |< 1 . The silkiest, the smoothest, the longest . tubbing'of presbge'’^^»i^. shirtmokers odd the linogic of nnWle^i^^ '• V Spreod or sno^tob collars: |»noypy is BWs AMERICA S LARGEST CLOTHIER k.l! i1 PAJAMAS Colorama Cotton Broadcloths Reduced from $3,98 3 for *10“ Neat patterns-smart enough for lounging as well as dreaming ! Generously proportioned for plenty of toss-n-turn comfort! Coat style; drawstring trousers.'A,B,C.D. • 79^ Boxer Shorts White, pastel, patterned Cotton Broaddotiis • 790 Briefs • 790 Undershirts Nylon-reinforced Combed Cotton Knit 12 CONVENIENT OFFICES Bond's The Pontiac MoU , >■ .r#* THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 l€SOL¥S mnk IS To eat more of nature's natural whole grain foods SUGAR FREE FOODS NATURAL HEALTH FOODS 8 Mt. Clemens St. . ; FE 4-4601 ! An October wedding is planned by Linda Margaret Arno, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theophilus Arno of McKinley Drive, and Allen E. Seyfferth, son of the Walter H. Seyfferths of Center Line. She is attending Oakland Community College. The engagement of Ruth Naomi Damon to Phillip Edwards Parks is announced by her parents, the Robert L. Damons of Clover-lawn Street, Pontiac Township. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Marion E. Parks of Tull Road. June vows are planned by Betty Lou Payne, doughty of the Francis Paynes of West Rutgers Street, and Lance Cpl. Gordon Lester Jr., son of Mrs. Marcella Lester of East Boulevard North. He is stationed with the U.S. Marine Corps at Beauford, S.C. 2I3TM33 OMIW32 shteY mN nuaomuuuo ttnsQ bflB ilotBioS •omeQ • MiqmoZioon • •nl-«bDiT • 3MIH0AM aMIW32 ffloitaraMiaAo 231230 0HIW32 molt flIAHO aHIW32 fflOlt oAsaisaaet O80jl molt 23HIH0AM 2MI-3aAflT molt 9 lit' .hi vHoM d lit' .to2 ,.b*W .20M MIHKHR JHTM33 OKIWiZ lltM Mitne eatwANS PIANOG < SALE DETROIT 5510 Woodward Avonuo TR 3-6800 Free Parking DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 119 North Saginaw FE 4-4721 Op«n Monday and Friday Evoningt 'til 9 P.M. BIRMINGHAM 115 S. Woodward-MI 7-1177 9:30 A.M. to 5 P.M. Doily Opon Friday Evoningt tTQRE HOURS: liNA.lkla6iNP.llll. NOW THERE’S LOCATIONS il€ HOUR 'mma/fi SMRT SEmCE REPAIIiW ALTEMTIN SERVICE .Dry Cleaning Special TUES., WED., and THURS., JAN. 2nd-3id-4th These Specials Good at Miracle Mile Store Only SLACKS, TROUSERS SWEATERS, PLAIN SKIRTS 2:-98« IPENIN6 SPECMl Good at New Waterford Location Only 3397 Elizabeth Lake Road ^ HAVE ONE GARMENT CLEANED AT REGULAR PRICE, LIKE GARMENT CLEANED FOR 1‘! 3 DAYS ONLY-TUES., WED., and THURS., JANUARY 2nd-3rd-4th New Location DIAL 332-D8U4 AND DIAL 332-1U22 3397 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD in 'Liz Laka Shopping Carter BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILl Telag^h at Square Lk. Rd. THE >6nTIAC press, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1^67 Beginnings of OU A PASTURE NO MORE — Only seven years elapsed between the taking of the aerial photograph above in 1959 and the one below last fall. Taken from nearly identical angles, the two pictures indicate the “boomtown” growth paUern of the campus on the southeast comer of Walton and Squirrel roads. When the Tirst students were welcomed to OU in 1959, they attended classes in North and South Foundation halls, newly erected on a parcel of property which had pre- viously been pasture land. A portion of Oakland Center had been completed when the above picture was taken. Now there are 18 structures on the campus, along with parking lots and a lake. Which Led to University ByPATMcCARTY Durward B. Varner was several hours late in getting home for dinner Dec. 17, 1956. His wife, who had been entertaining pests without assistance, “was less Qian pleased when I got home at 9 Varner recalls. hose who wanted to put their fingerprints on new and emerging educational enterprize.” The faculty is considered the key to OU’s groMdng reputation as an outstanding educational institatim. Of the present 175, three fourths have earned doctordl degrees — a percentage which OU officials bdieve may be tiie highest of any public university. On the faculty aro 18 who hold Phi Beta Kappa keys Twenty-four have won postdoc toral fellowships, including 15 Fulbright and three Woodrow Wilson scholars. The average age of the faculty members is in the mid-30s. Among them, they have published 22 books during their OU tenure. Another 30 books are in preparation and more than Too faculty research projects are in process. Yet the emphasis is on their relationship to students — on conferring as often as possible on a one-to-one basis. MAJESTIC MEADOW BROOK—’Die massive structure built in the late 1920s as a country home for Mr. and Mrs. Alfred G. WilSon is part of the estate the couple gave to create an institution of higher education in Oakland County. It stands as an eh>queht symbol of their generosity. Architect William E. Kapp, recalled later that he “nearly fell Pontiac Press Photo over” when Mrs. Wilson told him about the kind of home she wanted. He knew there was nothing like it in the United States, he said. No monetary limit ever was placed on the building of Meadow Brook Hall, under construction for three years. 'Rah-Rah' Absence Not Mourned at OU by Growth in First Decade Yell no “rah-rahs” for Oakland University. Still that cheer — for it tails flatly on OU ears. You will look in vain for collegiate traditions on the young campus and they are mourned not. “The culture here is not a collegiate culture,” Assistant i Provost Frederick Obear says NnUm Rres* RhoM COLLABORATION — jSenior Randall Nor-dyke (right), 321 N. GIeiriiiq;st, Birmingham, gets together with economics-business instructor John Hurd to discuss the youth’s term paper. The young faculty, with an aver- age age In the mid-30s, has been characterized by a genuine interest in students and willingness to spend time with them cm a one-to-one basis. The faculty has grown from 22 in 1959 to 175 this year. without apology. “Our students are not rah-rah.” Look at them, They have no school song. No Kissing Rock. No mascot. And they have stoutly refused to organize a student government. LAKE IS CALM “They do not throw someone into the lake on May 10 just because it’s May 10,” Obear commented. Almost without exception, OU is tradition-free. There are several factors which could account for this attitude. ★ ★ ★ For the last couple of decades, traditions have been dying on campuses throughout the United States. DOORS OPENED Opening its doors to studnets just eight years ago, OU had no traditions to kill. There also has been a shift in emphasis in the aspirations of students. Rather than being an extension of their childhood, college to these modern young people serves specifically as a training ground for the professions they will enter. They are preoccupied with their vocational goals and under academic premre. COLLEGE ENTRANTS In a sense, teen-agers entering college today are older than their'parents were at the same a«e. ^ They also are more socially aware — more concerned with the wm'ld’s problems, Obear maintained. ' “This attitude almost tends to solemnity,” he ventured, “There is not very much rah-rah hilarity.” 4 The tremi away from the col legiate traditions began in this country when GIs returned to campuses after World War II. ^ Remarking on this, Obear noted the average age of OU faculty members is in the mid 30s and that Uiey received their college educations in the postwar era. Oakland University does have one tradition and -a couple of other events that have potential. ★ ★ ★ These were outlined by Mrs. Norman E. McNeil, a secretary in the dean of students office, who has been at OU since it opened. BIG EVENT The weekend-long celebration of Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson’s birthday is “The big event” (ki campus each year, Mrs. McNeil commented. It started in 1962 when students organized a surprise luncheon to honor the university’s first lady on her Oct. 19 birthday. ITie celebration now has been expanded to include a concert or play, usually a building groundbreaking or dedicatiim and a formal dance. ★ ★ w There also is a Snow Carnival in February, Mrs. McNeil said, UP THE LADDER Miss Oakland University is selected at this time and, for the last two years, has gone on to the Miss Michigan contest. The c arnival includes a snow sculpture contest. “Traditionally, tljere’s no snow,” Crowddr interjected. ★ ★ ★ With no football games, OU has no homecoming. But, in 1961 and 1965, alumni reniaionB wen held dnrtoR the hfunnMr M^ow Brook Music Foetivnl.' ' “1 drm’t know what happened last summer,” Obear said. JOURNAUSHC i‘We labored (or five years to get a yearbook out,” he said “Then it was moK of a journalistic umiertaklng than a convmi-tional yearbook.” While OU students don’t get excited about rah-rah sitafi, they do get enthused when the need aurises. The following remarks arei by Dr. John A. Hannah, presi-j dent of Michigan State University: ‘To look back over the 10 years since the establishment of Oakland University is a gratifying experience for anyone wiio had anything to do with bringing this unique institution into being. “We laid what we considered then to be bold and ambitious plans, but now we see that we were much less daring than we believed, for achievements have fhr exceeded those early expectations. “For example, community support has been much greater and sustained than was anticipated, and that support has made possible the resounding success of the qnnual Meadow Brook Music Festival, a cultural achievement not even anticipated 10 years ago. ★ * * This has now been buttressed by the establishment of the res ident theater company, which Give them a Vietnam village seems destined to have a com- to collect food and supplies for — or an appropriation bill to back — and they’ll give you a campus full of gung-ho students. “But it’s got to have meaning,” Obear said. “Ask them to serve on a committee for a lecture-concert series and you’re mudh more apt to get support than when you ask them to decorate a hall for a dance.” parable cultural influence on tiie community, the state and the Middle West. PHYSICAL PLANT “The physical plant has been developed within the decade far beyond original expectations, thanks to the generous support of the state, philanthropic foundations and public-spirited private citizens. “Buildings do not make a university, but good universities ilitist have good facilities, and those at Oakland rank with the best. “The educational philorophy, developed after pain staking thought and extensive consultation, has proved to be viable and w e 11-suited to the needs of both students and so-HANNAH ciety. “The strong undergraduate program is proving to be an' adequate foundation for a modest program of graduate stuclies, and research. “Oakland University has succeeded in develing an individuality and prestigb of its own while enjoying the benefits of its affiliation with Michigan State University, and this, too, must be counted as 'a remarkable achievement. “Oakland was fortnnate in its rdationsUp to Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson and her late husband. “It was fortunate in that thosb who were selected to provide leadership in the early years when men of vision, courage, and a great deal of energy, the very qualities a new educational venture demands if it is to succeed.” PENSIVE STUDENT - An opportunity to meditate withmit interruption is (H'ovided in a chemistry professor's bffice-lalioratory to Detrcdt sophomore James Limberg, one of 3,140 Oakland University students. The university’s Science Building soon will be joined by the IB-million Dodge HaU of Engineering on; the campus complex wfakb now Includes 18 Imildings. Construction is almost continuous at OU, which expects s 20,MO-* student enrollment by 1979. ’ Mi THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 \V'> Yictpry Satisfying'—Boilermaker Coqch\ ■'■A Purdue Triumphs as USC Fails in Point PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -Purdue and Southern California, undistinguished throughout the season, remained consistent to the end, p 1 a y i n g an undistinguished 60 minutes before 101,-455 in the Rose Bowl. Purdue won, 14-13 but USC provided the dramatics Monday, scoring with 2:28 remaining and going for a two-point conversion, only to miss and lose the gamble. Purdue Coach Jack Mollen- kopf, whose Boilermakers were making their first start in the Rose Bowl, said: “This was my most satisfying victory.” But at the same time, Mol-lenkopf conceded; “We have moved the ball better.” Purdue, with star quarterback Bob Griese failing to baffle the rugged USC defense, compiled only 244 yards in total offense. Griese hit for 10 of 18 passes and 139 yards, but four completions came on a first-quarter jdrive stopped on the USC five-jwith an 8-2 record, including losses to the two outstanding teams it faced — Notre Dpme yard line. TWO MARCHES Griese later directed Purdue touchdown marches of 57 and 37 yards, and fullback Perry Williams plunged across from the one and two yard lines. Sai^ Griese: “It was a great wii^ great thing for the team, but I don’t think I played a particularly good game.” Purdue c a m e to Pasadena and Michigan State. (■ ★ ★ Michigan State dominated an abnormally weak Big Ten, but the Spartans were here a year ago and Big Ten teams are ineligible to repeat in the Rose Bowl. Southern California lost three of its last four regular season games, climaxing the year with a 51-0 humiliation by Notre Dame. The Trojans’ 14-7 loss to UCLA ca^t a shadow on t h e i r bid, granted because USC had one more Pacific-8 Conference win than the Bruins. ^ TWO FAILURES TTie Trojan defense contained Griese and the Purdue running game for the most part, but ^e offense, despite 323 total yar^, failed on two critical occasions within sight of the goal line. f USC scored on halfback Don McCall’s one-yard run and quarterback Troy Winslow’s 19-yard pass to flanker Rod Sherman in the final minutes. Said USC Coach John McKay “I told my team I was proud of them, r tiiink we play^ about as well as we can play.” But McKay conceded; “I can’t lay I’m satisfied. We were playing to win.” With Purdue’s margin 14-13, McKay called a pass for the de- ciding tWo-point attempt. Wins-tof agreement; “Johnny Mc- low/olled to his right and tlwew toward halfback Jim Lawrence in the end zone. But 'Purdue back George Catavolos cut in front of the receive and picked off the crucial throw. McKay has no second thoughts; “I talked to the kids for three or four weeks about beating Purdue. I couldn’t make a decision not to try when the time came.” MoUenkopf added a final note Kay had to go fw it. I’d have done the same thing. There’s no choice.” V FmAin USC n 18 lOS 149 139 174 12-17 t 0 4-38 3-34 1 2 10 16 Alabama, Florida Impressive First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Pdsses Passes Intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost Yards penaliied Purdue . • ............0 7 7 0-M Southern Calif.........0 7 0 4-U Pur—Williams 1 run (Griese kick) USC-McCall 1 run (Roosovlch kick) Pur-Williams 2 run' (Griese kick) USC—Sherman 19 pass from Winslow (pass fal ed) \ Attendahce 1014SS, Crimson Tide Rips Nebraska in Sugar Bowl Cornhuskers, Again, Unable to Contain End Ray Perkins NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Nebraska is going to have nightmares for a long lime about Alabama’s All-American end Ray Perkins. The superb Alabama athlete — Bear Bryant calls him a “superstar” — spoiled not one but two bowl trips for coach Bob Devaney and his Cornhuskers. * * * Perkins’ last game as an amateur came Monday in the 33rd Sugar Bowl Classic. Bryant’s tiny Crimson Tide, outweighed 25-35 pounds per man, uncorked an awesome offense and a devastating defense to crush Nebraska 34-7. - • Only twice in his 10 years as a college coach did teams j ,_ever score more points on a De-j vaney club. * j A year ago, in Miami s Orange Bowl, tjie 6-1, 188-pound Perkins snare(l nine passes for 195 yards as Alabama whipped Nebraska 39-28. Devaney and his Big Red wanted revenge in the Sugar Bowl match this year. “Perkins hurt us more than anyone else,” said Devaney aft er the crushing defeat. long pa^ On ’Bama’s first play after receiving the kickoff, Perkins hauled in an aerial from Kenny (Snake) Stabler that covered 45 yards. It put the third ranked Red Elephants on the Nebraska 27 and seven plays later Alabama had its first touchdown. “We felt like we wanted t() test them deep right away,” said Stabler, a left handed junior quarterback. “So I sent Ray down the left side on what we call a go route. “He just ran under control for about 10 yards, faked inside and took off. I just laid the ball up. there.” / A * ■ Devaney said it was no surprise because he had warned his players to expect the bomb on the first play and had 6-fool-l Kay Carstens, a 190-pounder, RUNNING ON AIR - Alabama's Frank Centerbury (28) appears to be running in midair as he dives over the Nebraska line for an early lead in the Sugar Bowl game yesterday in New Orleans. Alabama’s Byrd Williams (61) is in the foreground. Alabama led 24-0 at halftime and won 34-7. League Play Begins Big 10 Tuneups End CHIAGO liPl — In a reassessment of the Big Ten basketball title struggle, which opens in full force Saturday, coach Ralph Miller’s well-balanced Iowa Hawkeyes must rank high on the list of contenders. With victories over a pair of strong Missouri Valley Conference foes—Wichita and Cincinnati — last week, Iowa has emerged from the tune-up schedule with a 7-2 record, tops in the Big,Ten. AAA Marks of 6-2 are held by Illinois, Purdue and Ohio Stale. Two heavy pre-season choices, Michigan State and Northwestern, slipped to 5-3 and 4r4, respectively. In all, Big Ten teams have compiled a 52-30 record against outside opposition. They had a 10-12 showing in tournaments last week that involved eight conference clubs. THIRD PLACE in the Quaker City tourney, and Northwestern in the New York Festival. The Wildcats defeated St. John’s 62-60 then lost to Providence and Rhode Island. The conference title chase officially started two weeks ago with Illinois downing Wisconsin 87-74. It hy,s full stride Saturday. In afternoon games, Michigan State (5-2 over-all) is at Illinois (6-2), Northwestern (4-4) at Michigan (6-4), Wisconsin (4-5) at Purdue (6-2) and Ohio State (6-2) at Minnesota (4-5) on television. Indiana (6-3) invades Iowa (7-2) Saturday night. In a pair of non-league contests, Loyola is at Minnesota tonight and Marquette at Wis consin Wednesday. Black Hawkp Continue L1-2 Scoring Pace Illinois, winner of three of covering Perkins man-for-man.;four starts since three key men Castens is our fastest defen-i were suspended in the universi- NEW YORK (AP) cago Black Hawks and New York Rangers, who share first place in the National Hockey League, also dominate the indi- The Chi- seventh in scoring while Marshall and Geoffrion are tied for eighth. Boston’s Pit Martin completes the top ten. Charlie Hodge of Montreal a vidual scoring race as the NHL | leads the goaltenders with season near its midway mark. !per-game yield of 2.13 in 19 ap-Linemates Stan Mikita and^P^3*'3f'ces. New York’s Ed Uen Wharram of Chicago con-jCiacomin, who has appeared in tinue to run 1-2 in the scoring 14 more games than Hodge, has sive back ” said Devaney “He tv’s athletic aid scandal, cap-iderby, according to weekly NHL a 2.22 goals-against record and let Perkiris get a step (in himitured third place in the UCLA-Hgurp released l<’day,^while aj^hares the^^sjiuto^ and Stabler happened to throw aidominated Los Angeles meet. ' ' " " ' ■* - perfect pass.” jindiana took third at Portland. At the*^ awards dinner several These were the best tourney hours later, Carl Selmer, a De- showings for the Big Ten, vaney assistant, had this to say; * -k * when offered condolences on the Among those taking the big-it - was - a - tough game to gest lumps were MSU, dumped lose theme; by Villaniftia and Bowling Green “Tough hell. It was easy to,----------------—------------ lose that one. They beat us on the first play and there was nothing we could do. I don't like to say it, but we were whipped from the very start.” SIGNED PACT After the Sugar Bowl Perkins — told once by doctors he would never plav again after a head m,cu\;hic t- ,iim. injury as a-freshman - signed a contract to play with the Bal- fobby Proctor, defensive back-timore Colts of the National "''d coach at Mississippi State Football League. *«'■ three seasons, was , Perkins, redshirted his sopho- "^™(^ to the Vanderbilt Uni^ more year because of the head football coaching staff injury, was drafted by the Colts and the American League Bos- , B'" who recently am (Coi*.u«l m Page C-l. Col. I),^^ "J PrS.1^„at?.2|''!!!_“i «*" Aiitumi Ntbr«k»^j- \Yynne, Ark,, is joining his staff. ir ir ir Coaching Aide Is Selected at Vanderbilt quartet of Rangers — Rod Gil-1 Detroit’s Roger Crozier at four bert, Phil Goyette, Don Mar-1 apiece, shall and Bernie Geoffrion are among the top ten point-makers, Mikita, who centers the Hawks’ explosive Scooter Line, leads the pack with 49 points in 30 games — a pace that could iwipe out the record of 97 points !set last season by teammate |Bobby Hull. Die Czech-born playmaker has 16 goals and a league-lead-1 ing 33 assists. He set the assist! [mark of 59 in 1964-65 and ap-j I pears certain to break it in hisj remaining 40 games. Wharram, Mikita’s right wing on the Scooter combination, has | scored 18 goals and set up 15 for a total of 33 points, two more than Gilbert, Goyette and Mon-, (real's Bobby Rosseau, whqi share third place. Norm Ullman and Gordie i Gator IV Wins Big at Miami I MlifiMI, Fla. (AP) - Coachj iRay Graves says Florida’s foot-i I ball team finally has proven itj I belongs in the big time, and thei I Gators have a young halfback I who should be able to keep them there, for the next couple of years. The Gators have had only one losing season in seven years under Graves, but they never have won a Southeastern Conference title and until Monday night never had won in a big bowl except at the'Gator Bowl. j AAA 1 “A lot of people wondered if Florida was a big enough team for this kind of a bowl game, and I think we showed we are,” Graves said after the Gators whipped Georgia Tech 27-12 in the Orange Bowl. The victory gave Florida an 9- 2 record for the season, and although the Gators lose Heisman Trophy winner Steve Spurrier, they have a youngster who may be able to take his place. SOPH STAR Halfback-Larry Smith led the Gators’ past Tech when Spurrier’s passing arm faltered, and the 215-pound speedster is only a sophomore. Smith rushed for a record 187 yards and raced 94 yards for th winning touchdown on the longest run from scrimmage in Orange Bowl history. A A A “Smith has been a good run-.ner for us all year,” Graves .said after the victory. “About 15 times he has been within one shoe of going all the way, and this time he finally did it. “That run couldn’t have come at a better time,” added Graves, who said that Spurrier had a sore arm and had missed practice because of distractions brought on by his Heisman award. “Steve is still a great ball player, and he put that ball in the end zone for us just before the half when we really needed to get on that scoreboard,’ Graves said. DRIVES FOR TD - Southern Cal’s Don McCall (36) digs in to take handoff from quarterback Troy Winslow for a second quarter touchdown in the Rose Bowl against AP WIrephoto Purdue. The score tied the game at 7-7 but Purdue came back in the second half to lead 14-7 and then win 14-13. Princeton on Target SCORING PLUNGE Trailing 6-0, Spurrier sent the Gators on a 66-yard drive capped by Graham McKeel’s one-yard scoring plunge which tied the score, and Wayne Bar-field kicked the point to put the Gators in front to stay. Smith contributed his record touchdown dash in the third (Continued on Page €-2, Col. 2) Top-Rated '5s Hold Positions in AP Poll By the Associated Press The top two teams in college basketball — UCLA and Louisville — held onto their positions by winning tournaments while three other teams — Providence, Kansas and Bradley — climbed into the Top Ten by doing the same thing. The latest Associated Press poll — based on games through Saturday night and announced today — shows Providence in seventh place. Kansas in ninth and Bradley tied for 10th with another addition to the select group Mississippi State. it it ir They replace St. John’s, N.Y., and Vanderbilt, which each lost once last week, and Michigan State, which lost twice. UCLA received 38 of the 39 first-place votes cast by a national panel of sports writers and broadcasters. The Bruins extended their record to 8-0 with three victories in the Los Angeles Classic. THREE WINS Louisville won three games in the Quaker City tournament for an 11-0 mark while North Caro lina, which received the other vote for first, remained third with two non-tournament triumphs for a 9-0 record. First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes Passes Intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized 157 279 15-26 4-35 22-38 1 5-39 NML Standings ! Pace said he hopes to com-0 plete his coaching staff in a few Have Chicago ^34, Clays. New York - Other aides named a r I George Bernhardt , who cameipe'roo It r I .t . . 13- Boston / IT / here from the University of Kan- Monday's Results ' , , ■ • A i ' No^iames scheduled (pass from Churchich | S3s Where he waS an assistant. Today's Games ""li^PerkTns 45 pass from Stabler'(Da J and Vandy holdovers Bob Pat- ®^"^*’waSnt»day'» Gamai “ Atl'^Jnce 62,000. 6 - terson, Bob Cope and Don Riley. K Yo'rk'’ai'^Toron?o Alabama ............... 17 7 3 Nebraska ............... 0 0 0 Ala~Keltey 1 run (Davis kick) Ala^Stabler 9 run .(Davis kick) Ala-FG Davis 30 Ala—Trimble 6 run (Davis kick) Ala—FG Davis W L T Pis. OF GA 18 8 4 40 108 74 17 11 6 40 101 80 14 10 7 35 85 87 14 13 3 21 77 73 10 19 3 23 88 1 07 21 81 110 FIRST SCORE — Georgia Tech scored (ii’st in (he Orange Bowl when wingback Craig Baynham (25) took a 10-yard pass from Kim King. Florida defender is Harry AP Wirephoto McCall (38). The Gators however led 7-6 at halftime and won the gam^ in Miami last night, 27-12. Providence, 8-2, vaulted from nowhere to seventh on the strength of its second consecutive Holiday Festival championship in New York, and Bradley, 9-2, moved into a tie for 10th by capturing the Sugar Bowl title. Kansas, which was in the Top Ten two weeks ago, climbed back in by increasing its record to 9-2 with three victories in the Big Eight tournament. Mississippi State extended its unbeaten streak to eight with a victory over Georgia Saturday. Two other members of the Top Ten won tournaments and advanced one spot each. New* Mexico, 9-1, moved into fourth place after winning its own Lobo Invitational, and Houston, 11-1, won the Arkansas State tourney and stepped up into fifth. Texas Western, 8-2, suffered a 59-54 loss to little Southern Illinois in the Sun Carnival and dropped from fourth to sixth while Cincinnati slid from seventh to eighth after losing its first game, after eight victories, to Iowa 78-69. The Top Ten» with first place votes in parentheses, season records and total nr.®? * 10-9-e-7.6-S-4-3-M basis: 1. UCLA (38) 8-0 .............. •mm 2. Louisville 11-0 339 3. North Carolina (1) 9-0 . . 309 4. New Mexico 9-1 jh 5. Houston IM . i6f 6. Texas Western 8-2 . 10£ 7. Providence 8-2 9-; 8. Cincinnati 8-1 . . 9; 9. Kansas 9-2 . 51 10. Bradley 9*2 44 Mississippi State 8-0 , 44 cally. Boston College, Creighton, Dayton. Florida, Getxgia Tech, Harvard, Illinois, 1?'^®' State, Montana State, . Loyola. Princeton, Rhode Island, St. John'A, N.Y., Seattle, Southern Methodist, Syrafcuse, Utah, Utah State. Vahderbllt, Western Kentucky, West Virginia. —TtW--------------- Cricket Stirs Calcutta Riot CALCUTTA. India ^ The West Indies and India, prevented from playing their second cricket test match Sunday because of rioting crowds, will resume play today, the Bengal Cricket Association said Monday. ,' The decision came after of-Jficials inspected Eden Gardens Stadium where violence erupted [when thousands of people, including ticket holders, were not permitted to enter the park already jammed with an estimated 100,000. The Indian team posted its first victory over a West Indies squad for the first time in 18 years last Wednesday and is ready to try for a second straight triumph. Tigers Whip 3rd Rated 5 Ivy League Quintet Wins, 91-81 By the Associated Press The fastest guns in the East belong to Princeton and Coach Bill Van Breda Kolff has them firing on target. The Tigers shot an amazing 65.5 per cent Monday night and knocked off third-ranked North Carolina 91-81 at Chapel Hill. “This is a better team than the one Bill Bradley led to the NCAA finals two years ago,” said Van Breda Kolff. “We have better balance than that team. Our kids like to shoot. They can shoot with anybody.” Princeton showed it could do that against the Tar Heels, who had won nine straight without a loss. The Tigers canned 35 of 55 shots from the floor and even North Carolina’s 50 per cent average wasn’t enough to keep up. John Haarlow led the amazing accuracy show, hitting on 11 of 13 shots and finishing with 24 points. Joe Heiser added 19 and Chris Thomforde had 17. * A A Two other members of the Associated Press Top Ten won impressively while another was beaten. A. A A Houston, ranked fifth, walloped Tennessee Tech 95-69 and New Mexico, fourth in the ratings, drubbed Denver 65-43. Mississippi State, which made its debut in the poll by tying Bradley for No. 10, was beaten by Florida 63-54. Larry Miller led North Carolina with 31 points but the Tar Heels missed the rebounding strength of 6-foot-ll sophomore RuSty .Clark, who played only nine minutes because of intestinal flu. Elvin Hayes poured in 26 points and grabbed a dozen rebounds, leading Houston to its romp over Tennessee Tech. The Cougars, who won their 10th straight and 12th in 13 starts, led by as many as 33 points and breezed to the victory. STINGY LOBOS New Mexico’s aggressive defense limited Denver to 17 points in the second half and Um Lobos ran their record to 10-1. Ben Monroe led the winners with 18 points and Mel Daniels added 16. Previously unbeaten Mississippi State, which had won eight (Contihued on Page C-3, Col. 6) "ft" THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 Stv^ike Gets t ' s*.-^5 tn'"' Past 0/ Test 14 'T. t* VJ Pontiac Prou Photo SPARKS ATTACK - One of the big reasons for St. Michael’s 6-0 record this season is 6-5 center Bill French, who has averaged 20.1 points a game along with giving the Mikemen good control of the backboards. " ^OPUiUW - SNO-CAPS 4 FULL PLY 2 » ? " TnkolOM N-Montk RoM Hiurt Iwarmfto U FREE yUNTINO ^ 1:28c I 2„*ir •Ecehanfc-WhittwaNitl Jl Mart RatraaEFa8.TtxMta.ll OPEN DAILY M, SAT. 8-6 I UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1001 Baldwin Ave. a Min. From Downtown Pontiac Next Best Heat to Sunshine WATERFORD Fuel & Supply OR 3-1229 3943 Airport Rd. at Waterford Depot Vi Mile North of Waterford Drive-In The Mikemen pf 3t. Michael had a ball ui the old year, ^ now they’re hoping to keep it rolling in Die New Year. Before time caught up with 1966, the Mikemen reeled off Six straight victories on the basketball court, bringlQg the activities to a halt just before Christmas with a nip-and-tuck nod over Waterford Our Lady that left the Shamrocks alone in first place in the Macomb Parochial League. The ^Mikemen, who shared the Macomb titte widi WOLL and St. Frederick last year, have shown a lot of poise under pressure, the kind of presr sure that comes when a team wins twice in double overtime. St. Michael opened the season with a double overtime victory over St. Frederick, and th Rams will be trying to gain a measure of revenge when the two square off this evening on the Pontiac Northern High School floor. The reserve teams open the action at 6:30 p.m. * ★ w Unless they meet in tourna- ,ment play, this is expected to be the final basketball meeting between the Shamrocks and Rams since the two schools will merge as Catholic Central next fall. GOOD COMEBACK Coach Jim Niebauer and the Shamrocks came from behind to wiri the first meeting of the season between the two, 57-56. ★ W ★ The Shamrocks other overtime decision was a 59-57 defeat they pinned on WOLL- A key perfol^er in the Shamrocks’ 641 ci^mpaign has been Bill French, a 6-5 center who is scoring at a 20.1 pace. With guards Butch Finnegan (5-9) and Greg Glynn (5-8) directing the attack arid shooting well from the outside, the de fenses have had to piill out to stop that twosome and it has given French a little breathing room near the bucket. Along with his playiri^king, Glynn is scoring at a M.Tpace. ‘MUST’ WIN St. Frederick must have victory to remain in the R^a-comb race. The Rams are ^-2 in loop play and 5-2 over-all. \ The Rams have speed ancl, usually, good shooting. Their inability to shoot over a zone forced them to take a 60-50 setback against WOLL early in December, but after that defeat, the team peeled off three straight wins before retiring for the holidays. Clinic Slated for Baseball Flint Hosts Event January 21 It will be “June in January’’ come Jan. 21 as Flint hosts an experimental statewide Baseball Coaches’ Clinic at Ballenger Field House. Purpose of the workshop is “to improve coaching techniques as well as the quality of baseball played in Michigan.” Some 200 coaches from across the state are expected to attend. Eligible are college, high school and junior high coaches and assistants. Instructors will include veteran baseball coaches mdhibers of Detroit Tigers’ fielder star. The clinic will be staged under the joint auspices of the Mott Program, Flint Community Junior College and the Industrial Mutual Association. Deadline for registration is Jan. 14. Registration fee is $3. Application should be addressed to the community services department at the college, 14101 E. Court, Flint. Center Gary Roediger (6-2), forward Sam Brady (6p2) and Sard J. C. Batd (^1) supply i pundi for the Rams. Bard’s the playmaker and he’s averaging 15.5 points a game. ★ ★ a- Brady, along with Roediger, gives the Rams a good rebounding effort and he is currently moving along at a 13.7 scoring pace. In a couple other Macomb games this evening, WOLL (4-1), holding down second place, is expected to take its fifth loop victory at Richmond St. Augustine, while Marine City Holy Cross (3-2) will entertain Detroit St. Rose (1-5). Aussie Netfer Refuses Offer PERTH, Australia (UPI) M^aret Smith of Australia, twice winner of the Wimbledon tennis crown, Monday turned down an offer to coach youngsters in the United States. The 24-year-old Miss Smith said she was not interested in the job offered her two months ago, because it meant that she would have to turn professional. She recently announced her retirement from major competition. Mexican Racer Captures Prix Pontiac Press Photo KEY TASK — Center Gary Roediger of St. Frederick will have the task of holding down St. Michael’s high-scoring pivotman Bill French when the two meet this evening at Kennedy Junior High School. JOHANNESBURG, Soudi Africa (AP) — Pedro Rodriguez avoided problems Uiat forced out his chief competitors and three former world champions, and held on to win the South African Grand Prbc Monday. The steady driving Mexican, in his CoopeT Maserati, thus lacked up nine points in the world thampionship standings in the first event of the 1967 racing season. * ★ ★ Rodriguez was one of only eight of the 18 Formula One starters to finish the 80-lap, 203.5-mile race on the Kyalami circuit. His time was two hour's, five minutes 45.9 seconds, an average speed of 97.095 miles per hour. ★ ★ ★ John Love of Rhodesia, who relinquished the lead with seven laps remaining because of a fuel stop in his Coventry Climax, finished 26.4 seconds behind. John Surtees of England was third in a Honda. FLUID LEAK Denny Hulme of New Zealand was fourth in his Repco Brabham after leading into the 60th lap before forced to stop for a brake fluid leak. Defending world champion Jack Brabham of Australia finished sixth in his Repco Brabham after i^tian trouble put him in the pits in the 41st lap when he trailed only Hulme. ★ . ★ ★ Two other' former champions, Gr^am Hill of England and] Californian Dan Gurney, drlv-^ Jim Clark of Scotland, both|ing an American Eagle, left in failed to last 22 laps because of | the 44th lap with a broken sus-mechanical trouble. ipension. Action on Courts Rec Cage Schedule Begins lonight Does Your Car Need Help? Seat Covers ■ ■ ■ . . from »19®* Convertible Tops. .fr.m®79®® SEE Bill Kelley’s SEAT COVER 156 Oakland A*anua, Oemar Kinnay 3 Oloekt Wait of Montcalm Talaohena ft 2r6135 Opan Daily 6 a.m. to 6 f.n-. The action takes on added meaning this week in men’s recreation basketball. The Pontiac Parks and Recreation and the Waterford Township Recreation department’s programs have featured only rehearsals until now. Tonight the city’s National League begins its regular schedule with a twinbill at UnooInJIIS. Local 653 meets The Packers at 7 p.m. and the Unbeatables play the Amigos’ Club at 8:30 p.m. Tomorrow, the All Stars will tackle Acker Constructimi (7 p.m.) and Auburn Hills will challenge McDonald’s Drive-In Ot 8:30 p.m. GSCHEDULE e city’s American League wii) commence with a double-heado' Thursday at Kennedy JHS,\ while' the International Lea^e plays two at Madison and a\ single game at Pontiac Northed (along with an NL tilt) that nigm. The te^wnship’s regular action wiU start tomorrow night at Mason JHS. As last year, there will be triple-headers each night. The Class A quintets will play Wednesdays at Mason, the Class B’s Thursdays at Mason and the ‘C” squads Mondays at Pierce JHS except for next week’s lid-lifters at WTHS. Second Round Play for Club Champions PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Jeff Alpert, Woodbridge, Conn., was in the lead today at the start of the second round of the 54-hole Champion of Club Champions Golf Tournament at Breackers Golf Club. ★ ★ ★ 1 Alpert carded a three-under-par 67 Monday. w ★ ★ Tied with 68s were Hank Bud-ney, Berlin, Conn., Leroy Hinson, Douglas, Ga., and Kevin Butler, Palm Beach. Tomorrow, Spencer Floor Covering, the defending township champion, will meet Drayton Drugs at 6:55 p.m., Day’s Sanitary will play Genesee Welding at 8:20 and Powell’s Trucking will clash with Bob’s quintet at 9:40. ★ ★ ★ This week’s men’s recreation schedule also includes: MEN' RECREATION BASKETBALL Thursday KENNEDY JHS — Oxford Merchants vs. Perry Drugs, 7 p.m.; Amigo Celts vs. Booth Homes, 8:30 p.m. MADISON JHS — Coutacos Insurance vs. Local 596, 7 p.m.; Country Chef vs. Orchard Lanes, 8:30 p.m. NORTHERN HS — Town & Country Lounge vs. Lee's Lawn & Garden, J p.m.; Unbeatables vs. Highland Lakes 8:30 p.m. MASON JHS — Star Generators vs Dixie Square Deal Garage, 6:55 p.m.; Lakeland Pharmacy vs. Howe's Lanes, 0:20 p.m.; Struble Realty vs. O'Neill ' Realty. 9:40 p.m. Braves Deal Infielder ATLANTA (UPI) - The Atlanta Braves, Saturday, traded veteran third baseman Eddie Mathews and pitcher Arnie Um-bach to the Houston Astros for outfielder Dave Nicholson and pitcher Bob Bruce. Offer Made to Lease Porcupine Ski Area WAKEFIELD (UPD-The operator of the Indianhead Mountain Ski Resort near here has offered to lease the Porcupine Mountain Ski Area from the state conservation department, in the latest development in the controversy over state ownership of the Porcupine facility. Jack English, Indianhead resort operator, said Monday, “I am ready to begin immolate negotiations with the Conservation Department” for leasing the facility. ★ ★ ★ In a telegram to Glenn Gregg, deputy director of recreation for the department, English shid negotiations for leasing the ski area “should commence as quickly as possible to insure ample time to make additions for facilities for next season.” Earlier English had charged the state should sell the facility because it presented unfair competition to private operators. Gregg replied in a letter to English Saturday, however, that the state did not want to sell the area because it “would create a private operation which wauld cause difficult problems not only for the park itself but for the owners of the private skiing facility.” ★ ★ * Gregg said several people had previously investigated leasing the area but had decided against it. Beauty, Comfort, Dependability, Luxury, SmoothnasB, Economy! Wouldn't You Roally Rather Own A Buick? OLIVER BUICK 210 Orchard Lk. Ave. at Wmt. FE 2-9101 Open Mon., Tues. & Thur>. Nighti Soviet Trio OSLO, Norway (UPI) -Eduard Matusevich led a trio of Russian ice skaters to a sweep of the top three places Monday in an international race at Oslo’s Bislet Stadium. Matusevich won the 1,500 meter race in a time of two minutes, 5.6 seconds and missed the world mark by three-tenths df a second. Valery Chagin and Valery Kaplan, both of Russia, were second and third. 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He also devotes time to the leadership of the Eldorados, a local music group. A swingin' deal On one of Al Honoute's fine new or used cars is waiting for you when you stop by and see Bob at the Hanoute dealership. Al Hanoutf's Chevrolet-Buick, Inc. 209 N. Park Blvd., Lake Orion MY 2-2411 HEAVY-DUn NEW TREAD 6.00x13-6.50x13 6.50x15-6.T0x15 T.50X14- 8.00x14 8.50x14 2|$2222j FULL ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE Plus lux tind retreadaUe easing TUBE or TUBELESS WHITEWALLS $1 EXTRA 12 MONTH TERMS 30 DAY CHARGE NEW WHEELS 50%0FFS 1.50x14 6.10x16 WHITEWALLS $1 EXTRA RUCK 511.11 WHITE $12.56 8.00x14 WHEEL ALIGIVA1E\T • Scientifically measured and correct caster and camber • Correct toe-in and toe-out (the f hief cause of tire wear) $095 Most Cart BRAKE LIIVIIVGS Bast grade, high ^ qualify lining. 1,OQO ^ mil* adjustment free. A* low at $1.25 a week. 1 year — 20,000 mil* guarantee. s A F E T Y Forth* SMOOTHEST RIDE You'vMEvar Had, LET US TRUE BAUNCE and TRACTIONIZE YOURTIRE^ ^ WITH OUR KIMSWAY TIRiCpNOmONIR 30 DAY CHARGE 12 MONTH TERMS ^B.F.Goodrich^ 1 WE HONOR ALL APPROVED MAJOR CREDIT CARDS | MOTOR MART 123 Eait Montcalm SAFETY ■ BENTER i FI MMlS THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1967 MARKETS The'following are top prices covering sales of locally ^own produce by growers and sold by th^m in wholesale package lots Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce FRUITS Apples, Delicious, bu............. 4.00 Apples, Delicious, Red, bu. ...... 4.so Apples, McIntosh, bu..............3.25 Apples, Jonathan, bu............. 3.50 Apples, Northern Spy, bu...........4.00 Apples, Cider, 4^1................ 2.75 VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu................ S2.00 Cabbage, Curly, bu................ 2.50 Cabbage, kad, bu................. 3.00 Cabbage, Standard, bu............. 2.75 Carrots, Cello Pk., 2 dz.......... 1.70 Carrots, topped, bu............... 2.00 Celery, Root, dz................... IJO Horseradish, pk. bsk.............. 4.00 Leeks, dz. bch.................... 2.50 Onions, dry, 50-lb. bag .......... 2.75 Parsley, root .................... 2JHI Parsnips, V4 bu. ................. 2.00 Parsnips, Cello Pak................2.00 Potatoes, 50 lbs.................. 1.75 Potatoes, 20 lbs.....................75 Radishes, black. Vs bu.............2.00 Squash, Acorn, bu................. 1.25 Squash, Buttercup, bu............. 1.25 Squash, Butternut, bu............. 1.25 Squash, Delicious; bu..............1.25 Squash, Hubbard, bu............ 1.25 Turnips. Topped .................. 2.50 GREENS Cabbage, bu...................... 2.00 LETTUCE AND GREENS Celery Cabbage, dz................ 1.75 Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—Prices paid per pound for No. 1 live poultry: roasters heavy type 24-25; broilers and fryers 3-4 lbs. Whites ia'/3-19. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP)—Egg prices per dozen by first receivers (Including U.S.); Whites Grade A jumbo 45-47; extra large 42-45; large 40-43; medium 35Vj-37; small 30-31; Browns Grade A jumbo 4,-42; extra large 35V2-34; small 30. CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange — Butter steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 65%; 92 A 45%; 90 B 64%; 89 C 42'/j; cars 90 B 54V3; 89 C 64. Eggs steady to firm; wholesale buying prices unchanged to I'/j higher; 70 percent or better Grade A Whites 39V3; mixed 3eVj; mediums 34Vj; standards 36; checks 33V2. Livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) — Hogs 6,000; most 1-2 200-220 lb butchers 21JO-22.00; mixed 1-3 350-400 lb sows 15.75-16.25; 400-500 lbs 14.75-15.75. Cattle 6,000; prime 1,150-1,350 lb slaughter steers 25.25-25.50; high choice and prime 1,150-1,375 lbs 24.50-25.25; high choice and prime 950-1,150 lbs 24.50-25.25; high choice and prime 900-1,0505 lb slaughter heifers 24.00-24.25.5 Sheep 200; few lots choice and prime 90-110 lb lambs 23.00-23.50; choice 80-110 lbs 22.00-23.00; good and choice 21.00-22.00; cull to good wooled slaughter ewes 137 2 m V/t 53 1% IV3 1% -L Vs 26 28% 27% 28% + % 10 9% 9V3 9% + % 51 5% 511-14 5%—3-16 51 2 1-16 American Stock Exch. NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP) - American Stock Exchange selected noon prices: Sales Net (hds.) High Lew Last Chg. AerojetG ,50a 5 31'"3 31 V« 31% — % AiaxMag .lOe 4 I8V3 18 I8V3 -H % ArkLGas 1.50 2 39% 39% 39% — % Asamera Oil 38 3% 3 3-16 3%-H-16 AssdOil 8< G -— - AtlasCorp wt Barnes Eng BrazilLtPw. 1 Campbl Chib Can So Pet Cdn Javelin Cinerama Ctrywide RIt Creole 2.60a Data Cont EquItyCp .05r Fargo Oils Felmont Oil Flying Tiger Gen Plywd It Giant Yel .60 Goldfield Gt Bas Pet Gulf Am Cp HoernerW .82 Hycon Mfg Imper Oil 2a Isram Corp Kaiser Ind Mackey Air I McCrory wt Mead John .48 MichSug .lOe Moivbden NewPark Mn Pancoast Pet RIC Group 35 IV1 1 1 Scurry Rain Sbd W Airlin Signal OIIA I Sperry R wt Statham Inst 106 5% 5V3 5% 41 3 3 3 113 1% 1% 1% TS 33% 33% 33% -29 7% 7% 7% -+- % 26 3% 3Vi 3% 34 2 9-16 2Vj 2% 3 7% 7% 7% 35 46% 45% 46% -f- % Decline May Be Ended Market Up in Active Trading NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market advanced in active trading early today. The rise came after four days of decline in the final trading week of 1^. U.S. Steel advanced 1% to 38t4 on an opening block of 10,000 shares. A ★ A American Telephone lost % at 54% on 9,500 shares. American Motors added % at 6% on 3,000 shares. IBM declined 1% at 370. Standard Oil (New Jersey) gained % at 63% on 1,400 shares. Anaconda advanced % to 80%. DECLINES American Can declined % to 47% on 1,000 shares. General Electric rose 2 to 90% on 5,500 shares. It was chosen with Boeing to devek^ the supersonic transit. Bwing did not immediately^: Fwd rose 1 to 39% on 10,000 shares. On Friday the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks de dined .9 to 291.2. Prices were generally higher on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) - New York Stock Exchange selected morning prices: —A— Sain N*t (hds,) High Low List Chg Abbott Lsb 1 ABC Con .80 AbCk Cp 1.60 ACF Ind 2.20 AdMillls .40b Address 1.40 Admiral .50 Air Raduc 3 AlcanAlum 1 Allag Cp .20e AllegLud 2.20 Allied C 1.90b AlliedStr 1.32 Allis Chat 1 Alcoa 1.60 Amerada 3 AmAIrlin 1.50 Am Bosch .60 AmBdest 1.60 Am Can 2.20 AmCrySug 1 AmCyan 1.25 AmElP 1.44b A Enka 1.30a AmHome 1.80 Am Hosp .50 AmInvCo 1.10 Am MFd .90 Am Motors Am Photoepy Am Smelt 3a Am Std 1 Am T8.T 2.20 Am Tob 1.80 AMP Inc .60 Ampex Corp Amphenol .70 Anaconda 5e Anken Chem ArmcoSt 3 Armour 1.60 Ashland Oil 1 AssdDG 1.40 Atchison 1,60 All Rich 2.80 Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1.20 Avnel .50b Avon Pd 1.20 45% 45% 45% 2 17% 14% ITiA -1- V4 T 28% 28% 28% -I- % 5 38% 38Vt 38% — % 3 15% 15% 15V» 33 52% 51% 52'/4 -1-2% 47 31 Vk 30% 31 -1-1% 8 65% 64% 65% 43 28% 27% 28 + % 1 7% 7% P/t 3 57% 57% 57% 47 34V4 34V< 34'/4 -l-l'A 3 23 22% 23 + Vj 21 22% 22% 22% -t- % 9 78% 78% 78% 5 77 77 77 + 'k 19 70 69% 70 3 20Vi 20% 20% -I- % 6 85 84% 85 -I- Vs 13 47% 47Vs 47% + % 4 14% 14% 14% -I- V4 22 30% 30% 30% -I- % 5 39 39 39 37 165 200 8% 8% 8'/4 151 7 5-16 71-16 7 3-14-1-1-14 22 178 82 6% 6% 6% 3 18% 18% 18Vs • 13 14% 14>/4 14% + % 2 53 52% 53 1% — % 9% + % 197 1 9% 9% 9% 7 3% 3 3 — % 32 24% 23% 23% 13 4 3% 4 -t- % 46 63% 61% 62% -1-1 45 4% 4% 4% — 53 13-16 92 19% 18% 46 25% 25V4 25% -I- % 23 27% 26% 27 ' -I- % 10 9% 9% -t- 12 13 13 13 + ■% 54’A 54'A 54’A + 'A 31 30'A 31 +1 25% 25'A 25'A + 'A 41'A 41'A 41'A - 'A xIO I 46 46 16+4 16% 16>A + 'A 16+4 16% 16% + 'A 2 73'A 73 73 — 'A 7 30'A 30'A 30'A + 'A 10 14% 14% 14% + 'A 131 39% 39'A 39% +1'A 32 20% 20'A 20'A + 'A 17 38% 38 38 — % 25 25% 25'A 25% + 'A —G— 2 22% 22 22% + % 1 19’A 19% 19’A + 'A 20'A 19% 19+4 15 18 18 18 'A 47 13 48% 48'A 48'A + % 76 91% 90'A 91'A +2% 16 71% 71 71% .. 4 59 58% 59 -7 'A 37 63% 63 63% -i-l% ,3 5% 5% 5% + 'A 5 30'A 30'A 30'A — 'A 45'A 44’A 45'A ..... 33'A 33 33’A + % 41% 41'A 41'A + +4 24% 24% 24>A + 'A 53 53 53 - 'A 42 41% 42 + 'A 9'A 9’A 9’A + 'A 61'A 61'A 61'A + 'A 42'A 41’A 4t’A + % 46'/, 49 49 — % 19% 19 19% + % Occident .BOb OhIoEdls 1.20 OlinMath 1.80 Otis Elev 2 Outb Mar .80 OwensI II 1.35 OxtrdPap .80 PacG El 1.30 Pac Ltg 1.50 Pac Petrol PacTBiT 1.20 Pan Am .60 Panh EP 1.60 ParkeDav la PennDIxie .60 Penney 1.60a Pa PwLt 1.48 Pa RR 2.40a Pennzoil 1.40 PepsiCo 1.60 PfIzerC 1.20a Phelp D 3.40a Phila El 1.48 Phil Rdg 1.20 PhllMorr 1.40 PhlllPet 2.20a pitneyB 1.20 PItPlato 2.60 Pitts steel Polaroid .40 Procter G 2 Pubikind .34t Pullman 2.80 RCA .80b RalsIonP 1.20 Rayonier 1.40 Raytheon .80 Reading Co Reich Ch .40 RepubStI 2.50 Revlon 1.30 Rexall .30b Reyn Met .90 Reyn Tob 2 RheemM 1.20 Roan Sal .9Be Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola .72 RoyDut 1.79e RyderSys .60 Safeway 1.10 StJosLd 2.80 SL SanFran 2 SfRegP 1.40b Sanders .30 Schenley 1.40 Schering 1 Schick SCM Cp .40b Scott Paper I Seab AL 1.80 SearIGO 1.30 Sears Roe la Seeburg .60 Servel Sharon Sll 1 Shell on 1.90 ShellTra .B7e SherwnWm 2 Sinclair 2.40 SIngerCo 2.20 SmfthK 1.80a SoPRSug .15g 25 42’A 42% 42+4 — 'A 6 28% 28'A 28% + % 7 58’A 58Vi 58’A + 'A xIO 38'A 38'A 38'A + % 14 16+4 16'A 16+4 + 'A 6 54'A 54 Sg'A + 'A 11 17+4 17% 17% + 'A —P— 7 35'A 35% 35'A - 'A 10 27'A 27% 27+k 12 10% 10'A 10% + % 2 22'A 22'A 22'A ... 34 56 55'A 55'A +1 19 35 35 35 + 'A X19 27 26+4 26’A + 'A 2 11'A 11% 11'A + % 11 55 54'A 54+4 + % 9 33% 33% 33% 8 53'A 53'A 53'A + 'A 3 78'A 78 78 — 'A 8 73'A 72 73 +1'A 62 6B’A 68'A 68% 13 66'A 66 66'A — 'A 6 31'A 31'A 31'A 12 41 40% 41 18 34+4 34 34% + 'A 13 49’A 49% 49’A + 'A 5 48 47’A 48 6 54% 54 54 8 9+4 9'A 9% + % 107 162'A 160 162'A +3+4 SouNGas 1.30 SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.80 Spartan Ind Sperry Rand SquareD .60a Staley 1.35 StdBrand 1.30 Sid Kolls .50 StonCal 2.50b StOIIInd 1.70 StOIINJ 3.30e StdOilOh 2.40 St Packaging StanWar 1.50 StauffCh 1.60 SterlDrug .90 StevenJP 2.25 Studebak .25e Sun Oil lb Sunray 1.40a Swift Co 2 Tampa El .60 Teledyne Inc Tenneco 1.20 Texaco 2.60a TexETrn 1.05 Tex G Sul .40 Texasinst .60 TexP Ld .35e Textron 1.20 Thiokol .35e Tidewat on Tim RB 1.80a TransWAir 1 T ransamer 1 Transitron Tri Cont ,92e TwnCen 1.20b UMC Ind .60 Un Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.20 UnOCal 1.20a Un Pac 1.80a UnTank 2.30 UnitAIrLin 1 UnItAIre 1.60 UnitCorp .40e Un Fruit 75e UGasCp 1.70 Unit MM 1.20 US Borax la USGypsm 3a US Ind .70 US Lines 2b US Rub 1.20 US Smell lb US Steel 2.40 Unit Whelan UnivOPd 1.40 Upjohn 1.60 Vanad 1.40a Varlan Asso Vendo Co .50 VaEIPw 1.28 WarnPic .50a WarnLamb 1 WashWat 1.16 Westn AirL 1 WnBanc 1.10 WnUnTel 1.40 WestgEI 1.40 Weyerhr 1.40 Whirl Cp 1.60 White M 1.80 Wilson Co 2 winnDix 1.44 Woolworth 1 Worthing 1.20 Sales Net (hds.) High Low Last Chg. SouCalE 1.25 4 38'A 3B'A 38'A — Vi South Co 1.02 10 28% 28'A 28% — 'A ■ * 23 33 33 33 — 'A 12 28% 28'A 28'A + 'A 14 42’A 42 42% + % 39 16% 16'A 16% + 'A 160 30'A 29’A 29’A + 'A 23 19'A 19 19% + 'A 8 36+4 36 36'A + 'A 6 34'A 34'A 34'A — % 31 18’A 18'A 16% + % 23 60% 60'A 60' 100 48’A 48 48’A + 'A 86 63’A 63'A 63’A + % 2 68'A 68'A 68'A — 'A 31 9'A 9'A 9'A + 'A 2 57+4 57+4 57% + 'A 1 38'A 38'A 3B'A ... 3 39’A 39+4 39’A + % 8 41 40'A 40+4 + % 9 37% 37'A 37% + 'A 3 50'A 50'A 50'A . 11 27'A 27'A 27’A + 'A 39 46% 44% 46% +2'A —T— 2 29'A 29'A 29'A + Va 22 87'A 86'A 86% +I'A 74 21'A 21 21 .. 49 20’A 70+4 20’A — ’A 21 20'A 20'A 20'A . 49 107'A 106'A 106% + % 42 102’A 102'A 102% +2'A 1 14'A 14'A 14'A + % 11 51’A 51'A 51'A — 'A 92 18% 18 18 + % 10 73% 72+4 72+4 — % 14 34'A 34 34'A + % 22 74% 74'A 74% +1 50 29'A 29'A 29% +1 33 13'A 13 13 + % 99 23'A 22’A 23'A + 'A 17 35'A 34'A 35 + 'A —u— 14 14'A 14 14'A + % 81 50'A 49'A 49'A +2'A 12 26% 26 26% + % 55 51'A 50'A 50'A 10 37% 37'A 37'A 8 57'A 56'A 56'A — 'A 45 61% 61 61% + % 133 79% 79'A 79'A 60 9 8’A 8’A — 'A 19 27% 26’A 27'A + % 32 49 48% 49 + 'A 9 23 23 23 + 'A 6 24 24 24 + ’A 9 57 56+4 57 + % 14 15'A 14’A 15'A + ’A 4 30’A 30 30’A + +k 8 38% 38% 38% 43 47'A 46% 47 +1+4 196 38'A 38 38+s +1'A 18 12'A 12 12'A + ‘ 10 65% 65% 65% x38 67'A 65'A 65+4 — —V— 10 33'A 33'A 33'A + 51 30% 30'A 30% 13 25+4 24% 25'A +1'A 4 48 47’A 47’A —w— x4 17 17 17 + % 12 3 8B'A 37’A 37’A — 'A 13 21’A 21% 21% + 'A 66 45 44'A 45 + % 40 31 30% 30% + 'A 37 38 37'A 37’A +1% 67 49 47% 48 -L % 2 34'A 34'A 34'A -I- 'A 5 32+4 32+4 32% + 'A 7 41'A 41% 41% — 'A 18 61 60'A 60'A — 'A 3 31'A 31 31 + 'A 30 19’A 19% 19’A + 'A 16 33'A 33 33 —X—Y—Z— Xerox Corp 1 85 2(»,, 199'A 203 +5’/j YngstSht 1.80 45 27'A 27 27'A -f ZenithRad la 72 49 48 48'A +7 Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1967 Sales figures are unotlicial. Unless otherwise noted, rates of dividends in the foregoing table are annual disbursements bas^ on the last quarterly or semi-annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not designated as regular are Identified In the following footnotes. ^ , . a—Also extra or extras, b—Annual rate plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend, d—Declared or paid In 1965 plus stock dividend. e-Declared or paid so far this year, f—Payable in stock during 1965, estimated cash value on ex-dlvl-dend or ex-distribuflon date, g—Paid last year, h—Declared or paid after stock dividend or spilt up. k—Declared or paid this year, an accumulative issue with dividends In arrears, n—New Issue. P—Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no attion taken at last dividend meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1966 plus stock dividend, t—Paid in stock during 1966, estimated cash value on ex.divldend or ex-dlstribution date, z—Sales In full. ^ cld—Called, x—Ex dividend, y—Ex divl-dend and sales In full. x*dls—Ex distribution. xr—Ex rights. xw-Wlthout war-rants, ww—With warrants, wd—When distributed. wl—When Issued, nd—Next day delivery. , ut av.. v|—In bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganii^ under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such com-anles. fn—Foreign Issue subject to In- S. Viet Outline Two-Thirds Approve Draft of Constitution SAIGON, South Vietnam (AP) — South Vietnam’s constituent Assembly approved today an outline for the nation’s new constitution. The official Vietnam P^ess reported two-thirds of the Assembly’s members haVe endorsed a pledge to defend the draft constitution agaist any tampering. Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s military regime has the right to amend the final draft of the Assembly, which was elected in September, but the government could be overruled by a two thirds vote of the Assembly. The pledge reported by Vietnam Press was seen as a warning by the deputies to the regime to avoid any drastic changes. Assemblymen approved an outline submitted by its drafting committee consisting of nine chapters covering fundamental rights and duties of citizens legislative, executive and judi cial powers, constitutional amendments and political parties and opposition. PREVIOUSLY APPROVED The Assembly previously approved in principle a form of government with a president and vice president elected by universal adult suffrage. The president is to appoint a pre mier and cabinet which may be turned out individually or as a body by vote in the National Assembly. The proposed government borrows heavily from Korean and French examples. By Life Insurance Tnsfitufe Toll VI CUNNIFF Youths Freed by Judge Are Recharged By John cunniff AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP) - The belief that inflation is more damaging to the life insurance industry than to others “is a mental exercise rather than real,” the head of the Institute of Life Insurance said recency. Blake Newton Jr., president of the association, discounted this widely held belief. Viewed in all its forms and effects, he said, inflation is bad for every- le — not just for insurance. Many people aren’t convinced. They have found badly eroded the cash value of the policies they purchased many years ago. Their emotions include despair, disappointment and anger. Do they have the right to feel bitter? Or should they be happy that, at le$st, they have had financial protection for their families over the years. ‘BUNDLE OF RIGHTS’ Newton believes that when a person buys a straight life policy he buys “a bundle of rights,” chief of which is protection. Protection, alone, should be the prime consideration, he feels. The savings aspect is an added feature. The fact is, however, that thousands of individuals have heard life insurance salesmen emphasize the savings aspect. Many of these people purchased what they felt was a mixture of savings and protection. ★ * ★ “I think that when you substitute one type of investment for another you run risks,” Newton said. To seek an accumulation of savings from a straight life policy is, Newton states, an incorrect approach to the exmeept Savings should be sought, instead, in a savings account. ANOTHER MATTER With endowment policies jt is ahother matter. These policies are purchased to protect for a certain period and after that to pay a cash return. People who hold these policies, Newton concedes, have found hopes and values eroded. “I think what has caused us [some trouble was the creation of the impression that all money should go into life insurance. It shouldn’t be so. People customarily invest in land, life insurance, savings and equities.” ■k k k The same erosion has occurred, of course, to any fixed dollar investment, including bonds and savings. “The only safe approach to the subject of inflation is to say that everyone is hurt,” Newton said. What of those people who forsook protection and, instead, in-vested in equities such as stocks? Haven’t they seen their mcmey keep pace, at least, with inflation? ‘SUPERFICIAL IMPRESSION’ “It is a superficial impression that fixed dollars erode faster than equity investments. A great deal of damage is done by the philosophy that equity beats inflation,” he said. “The inflationary psychology (that inflation can be good) is an illusion. Our responsibility is to educate the public about the danger of inflation, some of the things that bring it about, and try to tell them to beware of die illusion.” He continued; “We have a re- I sponsibility to ring the alarm So pwple will react to things inflationaty. I don’t think any other business has spent more time and effort in educating people to the danger.” As Newton views it, then, inflation is indeed a danger and a great concern to the industry. SOME DISFAVOR The fact is that insurance companies, themselves, sometimes look more favorably on equity investments and perhapis with some disfavor on fixed investments. Not always, but as economic times dictate. In summarizing 1966, the institute reported holdings of U.S. government bonds totaled about $4.7 billion, down somewhat from 1965.” In 1965 the industry owned $5,064 billion of these fixed investments. In 1964 the total had been close to $5.6 billion. panies. fn—Foreign issu ferest equalization tax. 27 73 72 26 43V} 43 —R— 58 43'A 43 72 -1 6 + 'A 43'/j + % 43'A + % 46 — % 72 35 33’A 34'A +1 35 53'/’ S2’A 53'A + 'A 14 13% 13 13% +1 8 12'A 12 12 32 40% 40'A 40'A +1% 60 46’/» 46 46 — % x12 26'A 25’A 26 + % 28 51'A 50% 51 + 'A 78 35% 34'A 35% +1'A 6 24 24 24 + 'A 102 7'/’ 7'A 7% + 'A 31 23’/« 23 23% +1’/* 6 22'A 22 22 + 'A 45 33% 33% 33'A + % 4 17'A 16% 17'A + 'A 21 24% 24% 24% + % 10 38% 38 38% +1'A 1 36 38 38 + 'A 30 27% 27% 27% + % 4 57 56’A 57 + 'A 83 32'A 31% 32+4 + % 9 56 55% 55’A + % 4 7'A 7'A 7'A + % 62 58 57% 57% +1 8 27% 27% 27% + % 3 40’/» 40'A 40’A + +4 14 38% 37'A 38’A +2'A 57 45% 4S'A 45% + % 24 15% 15 15'A +1'A 1 7'A 7'A 7'A 7 33'/’ 33'A 33'A + 'A 38 61 60V4 61 + 1 11 20 20 20 + % 6 46 46 46 24 623/4 62V2 623/4 17 47'+ 46Vs 47 +1 20 W'k SVA + V4 59 23’/4 22% ■Z3'/4 +i AT&T Income, Earnings Tops NEW YORK (AP) - The American Telephone & Telegraph Co., the world’s largest corporate enterprise, reported today record earnings and net income for the 12 months ended last Nov. 30. k k k AT&T said earnings for the 12 months were $3.67 per share on net income of $2,021 billion. But earnings for the three months ended Nov. 30 dipped to 93 cents per share compared with the record 95 cents in the three months ended last Aug. 31. Net income for the quarter was $514.3 million compared to the Aug. 31 record of $528.3 million. ★ -R ★ The previous 12-month earnings record was for the year ended Aug. 31 when earnings were $3.63 on net income of $1,994 billion. AT&T said its annual stockholders meeting will be held Apr. 19 in the Baltimore, Md., Civic Center, the fourth time the meeting has been held outside New York City. DETROIT (AP) - Three De-troit-area youths who were released by a Recorder’s Court judge last week when they promised to join the Army have been charged again with armed robbery. The charges were reinstated Monday against Thomas Kania, 19, Dearborn Heights; Mark Kalski, 17, and Wayne Pryce, 17, hot hof Detroit. Kania was released on $3,000 bond and the other two on $1,000 bond each after they entered pleas of innocent. Charges against the trio were dismissed last Thursday by Judge Joseph Gillis, who said he was informed that the court’s probation department had agreed to action that would wipe out a previous felony conviction against Kania if the robbery charges were dropped. ERRONEOUS INFORMA-HON The judge said he also was assured by U.S. Army recruit ing Sgt. Robert Fulton and Kan-la’s attorney, Sheldon Otis, that all three of the boys would be enlisted immediately if they had no robbery charges against them. All the information turned out to be erroneous, said Gillis, add ing that Fulton and Otis had perpetrated a ‘swindle on the court.” If he were still on the bench Gillis said, both would be cited for contempt. Gillis retired Sat urday. In court Monday, Otis apologized but said Gillis had been misinformed unintentionally. News in Brief Burglars who broke into Precision Automatic Parts Co., 366 E. South Blvd., rifled vending machines and took an undetermined amount of money, it was reported to Pontiac police today. Business Notes Charles Biegun of 1290 Maurer has been elected a director and officer of Giffels - Webster Engineers, Inc., Avon Township. Biegun has been employed in the consulting and contracting fields and is former city engineer of Troy. BIEGUN Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)—The cash position of the Treesury compared with corresponding date a year ago: Dec. 28, 1966 Dec. 28, 1965 Balance— t 6,291,713,406.21 8 6,853,908,002.72 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— 69,614,906,776.46 57,639,148,171.80 Withdrawals Fiscal Year— 83,102,764,752.32 68,622,347,478.28 X—Total DeM- 330,100,569,415.24 322,601,496,102.27 Gold Assets— 13,159,019,062.21 13,731,449,397.90 X—Includes $266,204,729.29 debt not subject to statutory limit. Friday's lit DIvidtnds Declarad Pa- SIk. of Pay-Rate nod Rtcord abit STOCK EmSetety 3-' Gateway Sprtg Gds .08 Q 1-16 1-31 John K. Martin, manager of Goodbody and Co.’s Birmingham office, has been admitted to the firm as a special partner, it was announced by Harold P. Goodbody, managing partner of the national firm of securities brokers. Martin of 5261 Deepwood, Bloomfield Township, has managed the brokerage office in Birmingham Hills since 1959. H. Albert Inkel had been promoted to account underwriter in the Michigan regional office of Allstate Insurance Co. Inkel of 1445 Glenwood, Sylvan Lake, joined Allstate in 1964 as an underwriter. Detroit Edison has announced recent changes in the underground lines department. William M. Dull of 4399 Chisholm Trail, Bloomfield Township, has become head of the department. He was assistant general superintendent s i n 1965. Missing Trio Makes Way Out of Woods ON AWAY (AP)—Three young brothers who disappeared on an ice-fishing trip Monday made their own way out of snow-clogged northern woods today while a manhunt was being pressed for them in this area 25 miles southeast of Cheboygan. The three, unable to restart the family car, had huddled to gether in it overnight in 27-degree weather three miles east of Wolverine. Twelve bars of candy made up their food supply. ★ ★ William Moran, 16, and his brothers, James, 12, and Daniel, 7, made their way at dawn today to a highway where a passing motorist from Onaway, Charles Hoffman, picked them up and returned them home. Hoffman was en route to work in the woods when he spotted the youths, who had been sought overnight by sheriff’s men and volunteers. LEFT HOME The three left home Monday to go ice fishing. Passable roads and lakes and streams had been checked overnight in the Onaway area, some 20 miles east of Wolverine. Onaway Police Chief Ray Preston organized today’s search which fanned out from Onaway’s Waterworks Park. Harry Moran Jr., of Onaway, the boys’ father, said the sons hadn’t mentioned where they planneii to fish. Rise of Dailies' Revenue Seen 1966 Estimates Show A(dvertising Record NEW YORK (UPI) - Total daily newspaper revenue f o r 1966 was estimated at $7.05 billion today — a record $4.85 billion in advertising and about $2.2 b i 11 i 0 n in circulation income. The advertising revenue was up about 9 per cent over 1965. Classified advertising and national advertising both increased about 10 per cent to $1.33 billion and $960 million, respectively, and retail advertising increased 8 per cent to $2.56 billion. The figures were released by the American Newspaper Publishers’ Association’s Bureau of advertising, which said the 1966 gains continue “a trend of" steadily growing share of annual advertising growth dollars going into print media, in general, and newspapers, in particular.” ^ ★ ★ ★ The report said several dramatic developments in color advertising contributed to the gains. NEW INKS New inks developed by the ANPA Research Institute, the American Association of Advertising Agencies and the National Association of Printing Ink Makers became available early in 1966 to more than 1,000 dailies offering run of press color advertisers. The Newspaper Preprint Corp, was formed in May of 1966 to speed the growth of preprinted newspaper advertising by coordinating orders to simplify traffic and reduce operating costs, the ANPA report said. ★ ★ ★ The new corporation, which purchased the assets of Preprint Corp., offered each of the nation’s daily newspapers the opportunity to purchase one share of its stock. Successfuhlnvesting .1 4 DULL HAFELI Bernard W. Hafeli of 2732 Brady, Bloomfiqld Township, has become superintendent of the cable division. Hafeli, registered engineer, joined the company in 1949. Stock exchange member Wat-ling, Lerchen and Co. have admitted Thomas A. Mackey, Detroit, as a general partner. The firm maintains ofices at 2 N. Saginaw. Pontiac Scrap Co. recently won an award in the 10-or-fewej^l employe class in the Institute of Scrap Iron and Steel’s 1966 Safety Contest. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “We are in our early 60s with plenty of cash re-setwes. We bought Gillette in 1951 and through stock splits we now own 1,200 shares. Should we add to this holding? Should we buy more stock now, such as Minnesota Mining & Mfg. and Flying Tiger? Our objective is both growth and income.” A. A. A) Your 900 per cent gain in this stock shows very clearly why buying for long-term growth is the best policy for most investors. You mention no other holding, so I assume that Gillette represents your entire portfolio. If that is so, I would not add more shares, but would gradually lessen my dependence on a single issue by switching portion into other consumer stocks — as tax considerations warrant. For this purpose, I suggest Consolidated Foods and American Home Products. Since thd market outlook at present is pretty uncertain, I would not dip too heavily into cash reserves. A moderate commitment in 3-M seems justified because of its excellent growth record. Flying Tiger is too dependent on military business and is a stock for speculative gains rather than growth. No cash dividends are paid, and I do not believe the stock is suitable for your goal. Instead, I recommend Plough, Inc., a consumer stock with a consistent pattern of rising earnings and dividends. ★ ★ ★ 1 Q) “I am a widow looking for more income. What do you think of Public Service Electric & Gas; Columbia Gas and Seaboard Air Line?” M. L. A) I believe your first two choices are excellent income stocks. Their growth rate has been moderate, but Public Service and Columbia provide stability, safety and a good return. Both utilities provide satisfactory yields. Although Seaboard’s dividend looks secure and a proposed merger with Atlantic Coast Line is encouraging, I would rather see you in a stronger, more stable situation such as Union Pacific, currently offering a substantially hif^ier return. (Copyright, 1M7) A n THE PONXIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JANUARY 8, 1987 Deaths in Pontiac^ Nearby Areas Rev. Albert Amerson Service for Rev. Albert Amer* son, 67, of 19 Grant will be 1 p.m. Thursday at the New Bethel Baptist Church. Burial will be in Oak Hill-Ottawa Park Cemetery by Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Msfsonic Service will be 9t 9 p.m. tomorrow at the New Bethel Baptist Church. Rev. Amerson died Friday. He was a member of the Pilgrin Zion Baptist Church and an employe of the Wilson Foundry and Machine Co. He was an International Mason and a member of the Ralph Bunche Grand Lodge. Surviving besides his wife Jettie, are 12 children, Elddie Lee, Robert, Pearline and Mrs Mattie Smith, all of Detroit, and Mrs. Johnnie Styles, Mrs. Eliza beth Weeden, Albert Jr., Joe Willie, I^mie, Sylvia, Neassic and Mrsi^ Irene Powell, all of Pontiac. Joseph D. Griggs Service for Joseph D. Griggs, 85, of 467 Bartlett will be 1 p. m. tomorrow at Messiah Baptist Church, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mr. Griggs died Friday. He was a retired farmer. Surviving are his wife, Mary-etta; two daughters, Mrs. Juanita Dinkins of Pontiac and Mrs. Gladys Gill of Detroit; and a son, George of Mt. Clemens. Also surviving are a sister, two grandchildren and six greatgrandchildren. Rondo E. Jones Service for Ronda E. Jones, 2-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roland Jones of 207 Mar shall, will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at Kingdom Hall with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. The girl died Saturday after a short illness. She was a mem ber of Kingdom Hall. Surviving are her parents and a half-brother, Johnnie W. Borders of Pontiac. Mrs. Wllliom R. Kester Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. William R. (Janet) Kester, 31, of Selfridge Air Force Base, Mount Clemens, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Kester died yesterday after a long illness. She had been an employe of Detroit Edison Co., when living in Pontiac. Surviving are her husband Maj. William R. Kester; a son and daughter, Phillip and Kathleen, both at home; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ku-gler of Farwell; a brother, Robert Kugler of Pontiac; and a sister, Mrs. Eugene Harry of Pontiac. Mrs. C. Walter Nelson ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed bids addressed to the Pontiac Township Clerk. 2060 Opdyke Road, Pontiac, Michigan, will be received until 5:00 p.m. of February 13th, 1967, for Fire Truck Chassis, Apparatus and Accessories. Bids to be opened at 8:00 p.m. on February I3th, 1967. Copies of specifications may be picked up at the Township Clerk's Office between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. except Saturday. The Township Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids. GRETA V.' BLOCK Clerk January 3, 4 and 5, 1967 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The Zoning Board of the Village of Wolverine Lake will hold a public hearing January 9, 1966 at 7:30 p.m. at the Village Hall, 425 Glengary Rd., Walled Lake, Mich. Purpose — RezonIng the East Side of Benstein Rd. from Delmonte to Connecticut, Blacks 13, 8 and 2, also Lots 1 thru 12 In Block I, Spring Lake Heights Subdivision, from Residential to Commercial. CAROL CHI ESA Village Clerk January 3 and 9, 1967 Cause No. 22379 STATE OF MICHIGAN - In the Probate Court for the County of Oakland. Juvenile Division In the Matter of the Petition Concerning Richard Tate, Minor TO Robert Tate, father of said minor child Petition having been filed in this Court alleging that said child comes within the provisions of Chapter 712A of the Com piled Lews of 1941 as amended, in that the present whereabouts of the father of Slid minor child is unknown and said child has violated a law of the State and that said child should be placed under the lurlsdictlon of this Court. In the Name of the People of the State of Michigan, You are hereby notified that the hearing on said petition will be held at the Court House, Oakland County Service Center, in the City of Pontiac In said County, on the 12th day of Jbnuary, A.D. 1967, at 8:30 o'clock in the forenoon, and you are hereby com mended to appear personally at said hearing. It being Impractical to make personal service hereof, this summons and notice shall be served by publication of a copy one week previous to said hearing The Pontiac Press, a newspaper printed and circulated in said County. WITNESS, the Honorable Norman Barnard, Judge of said Court, in the City of Pontiac In sskt County, this 30th day of December, A.D. 1966. (Seal) NORMAN R. BARNARD (a true copy) Judge of Probate ELIZABETH A. BALLARD Deputy Probate Register Juvenile Division January 3, 1967 NOTICE OF ZONING HEARING Notice is hereby given of a scheduled public hearing to be held by the Pontiac Township Zoning Board at the Township Hall, 2M0 Opdyke Road, on Tuesday January 10th, 1967 at 7:30 p.m. to con stder ^e following applications for re zonlng: PETITION #66-14 to change from AG to RM (Multiple Housing): "Parcel H" Commencing at the corner post of Section 25, T3N, RICE, Pontiac Township, Oakland County, Michigan thence N 00’ 55' 40" W 557.09 ft along the N-S '/4 line of said Section 25; thence N 01* 51'40" W 150.00 ft along the N-S V4 line of said Section 25 to the point of beginning on the North line of the new M-59 Freeway; thence con tinuing N 01' 58' 40" W 1007.44 fl along the N-S Vz line of said Section 25; thence S 88 * 39'00" E 1129.20 tt, thence N 87* 20' 00" E 730.00 ft; thence S 21" 20" 00" W 880 ft to a point on a curve on the North line of the M-59 Freeway;' thence along a curve radius 23,115.32 ft and long chord bearing S 83* 41' W 684 feet which is along the North line of said M-59 Freeway to a point of tangency; thence S 81“ 57'20" W 865.36 ft to the point of beginning and containing 34.7 acres of land. PETITION #66-15 to change from AG to C-2 (Commercial): "Parcel I" Commencing at the East */< corner of Secfion 25 T3N, RlOE, Pontiac Township; thence N 0* 06' 20" E 690 ft along the East line of said Secfion 25 to the North line of the new M-59 Freeway; thence S 85“ 24' 40" W 197.88 ft along the North line ot said M-59 Freeway to a point ot curvature; thence along a curve radius 23,115.32 ft and long chord bearing s 83*41' w 710 ft which Is along the North line of said M-59 Freeway; thence N 21*20' 00" E 880 ft; thence N 87* 20' 00" E 346.41 ft to a point of curvature; thence along a curve chord bearing s 79* 41'j Cemetery. 36" E whose radius Is 5,721.96 ft and L, . ''' arc length Is 259.47 tt to a point on the oUnClay. East line of said Section 25; thence S 0*06'20" W 710 ft along the East line .. _ , _ ot said Section 25 to the point of be-l MfS. Robert ROSS ginning and containing 13.7 acres otj ^ PETITION #66-16 to change from AGl (ROSClla) ROSS to C-2 (Commercial): "Parcel J" Commencing at the center post of Section 25 T-3N, R10E, Pontiac Township; thence N 00 * 55'40' 557.09 ft; thence N 01“ 58' 40" W 1)57.44 ft; thence N 2“ 05' 40" W 1232.29 ft thence N 01“ 43'20" E 578.52 ft to the point of beginning; thence continuing N 01* 43'20" E 560 ft; thence N 70" 17' 20" E 1243.59 ft; /hence N 60“ 44' 50" E 562.27 ft; thence S 01“ 43' 20" w 840.00 ft; thence S 81’43'20" W 640.00 tt; thence S '53* 43' 20'/ w 290.00 ft; thence S 16“ 28'51" W 180.08 ft; thence N 88“ 16'40" W 735.00 ft to the point Of beginning and containing 25.5 acres of land. A copy of the proposed change is on file In the office of the Township Clerk and may be examined at any time. ROY WAHL, Chairman GRETA V. BLOCK, Clerk December 14, 1966 and January 3, 1967 Service lor former Pon-tica resident Mrs. C. Walter (Olive) Nelson, 64, of Sioux City, Iowa, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Rummell’s Funeral Home in DeWitt with burial there. Mrs. Nelson died in Sioux City yesterday. She was a member of First Methodist Church, Sioux City. Surviving are her husband and a sister, Mrs. AB Leddick of Pontiac. Mrs. Fred Nierstheimer Service for Mrs. Fred Nierstheimer, 71, of 575 E. Madison will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Eagles Lodge No. 1230 will hold a memorial service at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the funeral home. Mrs. Nierstheimer, a member of the Eagles Lodge, died Sunday after a long illness, Hampton Palmer Service for Hampton Palmer, 62, of 112 S, Anderson will be 7;30 p.m. tomorrow at the Voor-hees-Siple Funeral Home, with burial in Ball Cemetery, Beatty ville, Ky. Mr. Palmer died yesterday. He had been a security guard with the U.S. government and a member of the New Hope General Baptist Church. Surviving are his wife, Anna F.; 11 stepchildren, Mrs. Faye Wilson, Mrs. Linda Harris, William Morgan, Mrs. Janet Hughes, Mrs. Terry Hines, all of Cincinnati, Ohio, David Mor gan and Mrs. June Coffey, both of Louisville, Ky., Airman l.C Duane Morgan of Tokyo, Japan T. Sgt. Edward Morgan of Wa-verly, Iowa, Hugh Morgan of Chicago, and Mrs. Ha Ball of Pontiac; and two sisters. James C. Smith Service for Jatnes C. Smith, 85, of 235 Draper will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at toe Donelson-Johns Funeral H(>me. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Smith died yesterday after a short illness. He was a member of Emmanuel Baptist Church and a retired farmer. Surviving are two children, Grady and Claude, both of Pontiac; a brother; 11 grandchildren; and 15 great-grandchildren. Mrs. Eugene Tuttle Former Waterford Township resident Mrs. Eugene (Selma) Tuttle, 81, of Lakewood, Fla. died Sunday. Surviving are three sons, Ken neth G. of Waterford Township Vincent of Milwaukee and Eric of Texas, and two sisters, Olga Vreeland of Walled Lake and Mrs. W. C. Richards of Cadillac. Mrs. Charles Wilkison Service for Mrs. Charles (Edith E.) Wilkison, 66, of 13 Chamberlain will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees Siple Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Clarence Dobson BIRMINGHAM -Clarence L. Dobson," 72, of 1352 Cole died today. His body is at Price Funeral Home. Mrs. Claud Haddix LAKE ORION - Service for Mrs. Claud (Sussie B.) Haddix, 83, of 345 Newton will be 10 a.m. Thursday at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in Bentley Cemetery, Bentley. Mrs. Haddix, a member of Lake Orion Methodist Church, died yesterday after a long illness. ★ ★ ★ Surviving are two sons, Elmer and Max of Lake Oriop; two daughters, Mrs. Beatrice Brennan of Des Moines, Iowa, and Mrs. Alta Pifer of Pontiac; two brothers; and 12 grandchildren. Delbert B. Schotf GROVELAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Delbert B. Schoff, 58, of 860 Thayer will be 1 p.m. Thursday at ^ C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonville. Burial will be in Romeo Cemetery, Romeo. ★ ★ ★ Mr. Schoff, an employe of the Allen Cooler Co. of Rochester, died Sunday. Surviving are his wife, Viola; a daughter, Adele Allen Schoff of Waterford Township; two sons, Jacqueline of Berkley and John of Ortonville; and 10 grandchildren. Earle W. Pa^t^Us, 67, of Grosae Polnte Park, a stockbroker with Charles A. Parcells & Co., Detroit and former P(xi-tiac resident, died Sunday. ★ ★ ★ Service will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at All Saints Episcopal Church. His body is at Bell Chapel of William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Surviving are his wife, Katherine H.; a son, Earle W. Jr. of Bloomfield Hills; a daughter, hfrs. Donald O. Frazier of Porterville, Calif.; eight grandchildren; and three brothers. Parcells was a general partner of Parcells from 19^ to 1949 when he became a limited partner. In 1953 he became a director and an officer of the company. He was a member of the Detroit Club. The family suggests any memorial tributes be made to toe Michigan Cancer Foundation. More than half of the world’s resins and turpentine come from the state of Georgia. PARADE WINNER - A float prepared by the city of South Pasadena was named ‘‘Sweepstakes Winner” in the Tournament of AP Wiraphoto Roses parade in Pasadena prior to the Rose Bowl game yesterday. Train Kills AAan ROYAL OAK (AP) - A 25-year-old Royal Oak man, Gerald W. Erickson, today was killed when struck by a Grand Trunk & Western Railroad train at a crossing in Royal Oak. Police said Erickson apparently slipped and fell in front of the train. LOW lease rates. Lots Of extras at: Birmingham Leasing Call 641-3211 Chuck Monicemcry Birmincham, Mich. Pension Plan to Be Eyed by Commission Frank C. Paderewski Requiem Mass for Frank C. Paderewski, 81, of 34 Miami will be said at 10 a.m. Thursday at St. P e r p e t u a Catholic Church, Waterford Township, with burial in Ferry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Paderewski died yesterday after a short illness. He was a retired chiropractor. A Rosary will be said 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mrs. Clyde Quant Service for Mrs. Clyde (Olo) Quant, 61, of 883 Kettering will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Mrs. Quant died A resolution will be considered tonight by the City Commission to put city employes un-|der a reciprocal pension system. ★ ★ * According to provisions of a 1961 state law, the city can vote to join the system which essentially provides that local employes can retain their earned pension rights if they transfer to another unit of government. ★ ★ ★ City officials are making the proposal in light of the pending transfer of Pontiac Municipal Airport to Oakland County ownership. ♦ ★ ★ In other business, final action is expected bn an application to the State Municipal Finance Commission for approval to issue $1.8 million in revenue bonds for two trunk sewer projects. Four Perish in Plane Crash Mailtxixes Hit in Waterford ARDMORE, Okla. (AP) An Air Force sergeant from Muskegon, Mich., and his wife, infant daughter and sister-in-law were killed Monday when their light plane crashed at Ardmore. Killed were Staff Sgt. Gordon A. Hunter, 32; his wife, Johnnie Bell, 29; their 2-months-old daughter Michelle Renee, and Mrs. Ella Rodgers Dunn, 19, of Malvern, Ark. Hunter, stationed at Sheppard Air Force Base at Wichita Falls, Tex., recently had been reassigned to Korea. ★ ★ ★ The single-engine plane, a Mooney Mark 21, stalled while making a landing approach at Ardmore’s Downtown Airpark, a witness said. The craft hit the ground and cartwheeled short of the runway. ★ ★ ★ A spokesman from Sheppard AFB said the plane was en-route from Malvern to Wichita Falls. Mrs. Charles C. Schuelke TROY — Service for Mrs Charles C. (Louise) Schuelke, 78, of 6805 John R will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Getosemane Lutheran Church, Rochester Burial will be in Union Comers Cemetery. * ★ ★ Mrs. Schuelke died yesterday after a short illness. Surviving are a son, Carl 0 of Troy; a sister; and a brother Emma Trost 91, of 1061 Voorheis died yesterday. Her body is at the Sparks Griffin Funeral Home. Funeral and burial will be in Beaverton Ont. Mrs. Ross died after a long illness. She was a member of the United Church of Canada. Surviving are three sons, Clifford, Charles, and Russell, all of Beaverton, Ont. and t w o daughtors, Florence May White of Pontiac and Mrs. Fayne Freshwater of Columbus, OWo. TROY — Service for Emma Trost, 71, of 930 Sylvanwood will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Price Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. ★ * ★ Miss Trost died Sunday after a long illness. Surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Frank Berndt of Troy, Mrs. Albert Beradt of Fern-dale and Mrs. Anna Miller of South Branch; and two brothers, Herman of Troy and John of Largo, Fla. Mrs. Robert B. Williams BIRMINGHAM — Requiem Mass for Mrs. Robert B. (Elizabeth) Williams, 53, of 358 Henly will be 9:30 a.m. Wednesday at Holy Name Church. Burial will be in Franklin, Pa. A Rosary will be said at 8 tonight at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hani-ilton Co. Mrs. Williams died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Susan M. at home; five sons, Richard E. of Royal Oak, Peter P. of Oak Park and Michael J.,/Timothy J. and Stephen M., all at home; a sister; and two grandchildren. Rattlesnakes are the worst snakebite offenders in the United States; next are copperheads and then cottonmouth moccasins. Vandals went on a rampage in Waterford Township last night and early today, ripping about 40 mailboxes off posts on at least eight streets. The destruction, which was done manually, occurred in various parts of the township. ★ ★ ★ Police said mailboxes were torn off posts on Cass-Elizabeth, Shelby, Orchid, Baybrook, Winslow, Highgate, Pinegrove and Silver Circle. There are suspects, according to police. But no arrests were made immediately. 1965 Mother of Year Dead in Utah at 78 Postal Official Issues Warning to Area Vandals Some 25,000 mail receptacles in the United States were damaged or destroyed in the past year, Pontiac Postmaster William W. Donaldson said today. ★ ★ ★ Mailboxes are protected by federal law and pranksters or vandals tampering with the boxes or their contents may be in for a heavy fine or imprisonment, he add^. ★ ★ ★ Fines for destroying or damaging and mail receptacle, private or public, may not exceed $1,000. Imprisonment may be no more than three years, according to Donaldson. ★ ★ ★ Citizens noticing anyone tampering with mailboxes are urged to report toe incident to the post office or a law enforcement agency immediately and note toe person’s description and license number of car if possible. How to get a Better Job withont lisMng Yonr present onel If you are in the $12,000-$45,000 income bracket and are wondering how much better you might be doing, the Chusid Career Advancement Program provides the logical answer. We determine your true potential and help you to achieve it, without revealing your name, as we havedonefor over25,000 others. Each year, Chusid clients choose from among more than 40,000 positions at the $12,000-$45,000 level—desirable positions in General Management, Finance, Manufacturing, Marketing, Sales, Advertising, Engineering, Research, Administration, etc., with good, growing companies both here and abroad. To learn what we can do for you, you are invited to meet with one of our staff of over 100 Career Advancers. These are successful leaders who have already made their mark in business or a profession and who now find their greatest personal satisfaction in helping others, like you, to achieve greater happiness and career success. For a confidential interview, without cost or obligation, write or phone our nearest office. - - K CHUSID & COMPANY WorU’s Largest Consultaryts in Executive Search and Career Advancement Isf National Bldg., Detroit—963-8695 ATLANTA BOSTON CHICAGO CINCINNATI CLEVELAND COLUMBUS DALLAS DES MOINES DETROIT HOUSTON INDIANAPOLIS KANSAS CITY MEMPHIS MILWAUKEE MINNEAPOLIS NEW YORK OKLA. CITY OMAHA PHILADELPHIA PITTSBURGH ST. LOUIS TOLEDO TULSA WASH., D.C. and othar malar citias Nat an Emplayment Agancy Illness Takes Life of Area Lumberman John H. Rosso, owner and president of the Birmingham Lumber and Supply Co., died yesterday after a long illness. He was 71. ★ ★ ★ Service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham, and burial will be in Greenwood Ceme tery there. Mr. Rosso, who lived at 1050 Henrietta, Birmingham, founded the lumber company in 1948. He had been a building contractor prior to that time. He served 12 years on the Birmingham School Board and was a member of B i r -Church, the Rotary Club and mingbam’s First Presbyterian Birmingham Lodge No. 44 F & AM. Surviving are his wife. Beryl M.; two sons, William A. and John M., both of Birmingham; six grandchildren; two brothers, A. Shanley (Rosso) of Royal Oak and Neil Rosso of Rochester; two sisters, Helen of Birmingham and Mrs. Louis Hof-man of Cridersville, Ohio. it it it Memorial tributes may be sent to the Michigan Cancer Founda tion. PROVO, Utah (AP) — Lorena Chipman Fletcher, America’s Mother of the Year in 1965, died Monday in Salt Lake City hospital after a long illness. She was 78. it it it Mrs. Fletcher was the wife of Dr. Harvey Fletcher, professor of physics at Brigham Young University, an expert on accous-tics and inventor of stereophonic sound. ★ ★ ★ She also is survived by five sons, all of whom are leading professional men: Dr. James C. Fletcher, physicst and president of the University of Utah; Stephen Harvey Fletcher, an attorney, vice president and general counsel of Western Electric Co., New York; Dr. Robert Chipman Fletcher, vice president of the Sandia Corp., Albuquerque, N.M., an atomic research firm; jDr. Harvey J. Fletcher, professor of mathematics at Brigham Young and Dr. Paul Chipman Fletcher, department head at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Research Center, Cambridge, Mass. * * it The Fletchers lived in New York for 36 years until 1952. For 33 of those years Dr. Fletcher was a research scientist at the Bell Telephone Laboratories. * ★ * The funeral will be held Thursday in a Mormon chapel here. Brazil Boy Takes Inaugural Honors LANSING (UPI) - The honor of traveling toe greatest distance to attend Gov. Romney’s inaugural probably will go unchallenged to 13-year-old Jim Brisse who came from Sao Paulo, Brazil. it it it Jimmy, the son of a Ford Motor Co. officer, was the guest yesterday of newly elected state Sen. George W. Kuhn, R-West Bloomfield. ★ ★ ★ Jimmy said he has been looking forward to meeting the governor for some time and added ‘‘I’d vote for him if I were old enough.” An Important P. S. Our continuing reiationships with over BOO corporate clients, our experience in fitting men and Jobs together in thousands ot companies, pius the inteliigence we gather from our over one miiiion annuai contacts with top management—show us that, today, there an unpreca-dented career opportunities for abie management men of aii ages. Hospital Firings OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -Alameda CXjunty has dismissed 350 hospital workers who struck two public hospitals for higher wage;s. LBJ, Romney Get Attire Honors! NEW YORK (AP)-President Johnson was selected for the fourth time Monday on an annual list of Best Dressed Men, under the category of statesman. Two Republicans, Gov. George Romney of Michigan, and Mayor John Lindsay of New York, were chosen under the respective designations of government and civic affairs. peace of mind tk ^paiks-Griffii^ FUNERAL HOME ^ ^ Medicare in Effect at Nursing Homes Nursing home care under the federal government’s Medicare program began Sunday. ★ ★ ★ Two Pontiac nursing homes, Seminole Hills, 532 Orchard Lake, and Grovecrest Convalescent Center, 121 Prall have announced they have been certified to provide the added Medicare benefits. ★ ★ ♦ Dr. Howard H. McNeil, Grove-crest administrator, s’a i d he area nursing homes had been similarlily approved. Grovecrest it it it has 48 beds. thought four or five Pontiac FE 8-9288 Outstanding In Pontiac For Service And Facilities 46 Williams St. Plan Your Next. Business Meeting at Bedell’s Private Dining and Meeting Room seals up to 100. P.A. System, and piped-in music in soundproof rooms to assure you of complete privacy. Mabel Goodwin will help you with a choice of plant,,. • Complete Meeting and Meal Package • Individual Meal Prices • Choice of Menus ' EleqcidT?umg 2395 Woodward at Sq. Lk. Rd. 334-4563 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUA.KY a. 1967 Present! '67 MODELS Sfercriitt, MFG. Johnson boats, tnotors. Carver Sea-Skiffs. Weeres Pontoons. .LAYAWAY NOWI 13» N.-Opdyke. (I-7S at Oakland University exit) TONY'S AVkRINE FOR JOHNSON mototy. boats, and canoes, 682-3000. WINTER STORAGE AND SERVICE Motors tunM. boats repaired, Phone In your reservation today. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1890 S. Talegraph Rd. 332-6033 AiifloM* M PRIVATE PILOT GROUND SCHOOL course — Starting Jah. 3rd. 1M7. Sign up now - ADI — OR 4-0441 Wonted Con - Tnicki 101 ‘IXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Cor "Check the rest, then get the best" at Averill AUTO SALES FE 2-9878 2020 Dixie FE 4-089* 1964 GMC ’/2-Ton Pickup radio, heater, sharpi $1095 HOMER MIGHT Motors Inc. On M24 In Oxford. Michigan OA 8-2528 HELP! We need 300 sharp Cadillacs. Pon* tiacs. Olds and Buicks for out-of-state market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-5900___ _____^FE 8-8825 MORE MONEY Paid For Sharp Cars I need hundreds of sharp cars to fill out-state orders, and to stock my lot, that Is a full city block In size. GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Sales 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 Across from Pontiac State Bank STOP HERE LAST ay more for sharp, late s. Corvettes needed. M&M MOTOR SALES Now at our new location 1150 Oakland at Viaduct 338-9261 TOP $ FOR CLEAN CARS OR trucks. Economy Cars. 2335 Dixie. “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS 952 West Huron SI. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 1967 GMC i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, backup lights, seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, padded dash and viiior, traffic hazard lights, directional signals, inside rear-view mirror. $1828 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 yOLVO P1800S, MICHELAN t'lfiLA''' “P*"' fatllo and heatar. 626-9972 or 62641745. _ 1965 KARMANN GH|A Club coupe with radio and heater and whitewall tires, full price ,,81395. only $49 doin and *»!!» ' weekly payments. HAROLD TURNER 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7S0Q 1966 VW, BLUE, 1300 SERIES WITH sky light. Only 3,000 mi., driven in Europe, 81,500. 682-1323. 1966 SUNBEAM TIGER, BLACK with black Interior, tonneau cover, 4-speed, Ford V8, 83,200. 625-3473 after 6. See All the Neyi 1967s TRIUMPH-MGs-SUNBEAMS AUSTIN HEALEYS-FIATS AUTHORIZED DEALER Grimaldi Imported Cars 900 Oakland Ave._ fE 5-9421 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT 1964, 4 WHEEL DRIVE 2 speed transmission, A-1 condition KING BROS. FE 4-1662 FE 4-0734 Pontiac at Opdyke Rd. ROCHESTER DODGE Always a fine selection of New and Used Trucks . . . NEW '67 DODGE PICKUP $1958. Taxes Included 651-6100 "Top Dollar" That's what we pay for I960 thru 1965 Immaculate Cars! Stop In—See Mr. Gilmer Spartan Dodge 101-A 1, 2 AND 3 JUNK CARS-TRUCKS, tree tow anytime. FE 2-2666. COPPER, 35c AND UP; BRASS; radiators; starters and generators, 75c ea. C. Dixson, OR 3-5849. WE MOVE JUNK CARS (FREE tow). Call us — H 8i H Sales. OR 3-5200. Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 CHEVY - FCRO-COMET-FALCON 6-cyl., factory rebuilt motors. c-.li install. Terms. Other makes low orlced. 537-1117. ENGINES - TRANSMISSIONS — rear axles, etc. Also buying — radiators, batteries, generators, starters. Don't fuss — call us." H 8. H Auto Sales. OR 3-5200. PARTS FOR ALL Foreign, Rambler, Jeep New and Used — Reasonable GRIMALDI IMPORTED CARS 900 Oakland U.S. 10 FE 5-9421 New Old Used Trucks lOS 1953 CHEVY '/4-TON PICKUP. 4-cyllnder standard transmission. Extra clean, good rubber. Priced at only 8395. Jerome Ford, Rochester's Ford Dealer, OL 1-9711. 1954 AND 1966 FORD DUMP trucks. 1482 F lamingo, WIxom. 1964 CHEVY % -TON PICKUP, heavy duty springs, 3-speed transmission. 6-ply tires, very good condition, must sell. 81000. 338-0158. Dealer, 1965 FORD F-100 'A TON -PICKUP V-e, Like New. Save Jerome Ford Rochester's Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711. Special Units 1963 CHEVY 1-ton stake with aerial ladder, A-1 condition. Only $1,895. 1965 FORD F-500, 12' dump stake. Only $1,895. 1964 FORD F-400, 14' alum, van - Only $2,795. 1964 FORD Pickup '/j-ton, $995. 1961 CHEVY '/2-ton, pickup, $695. 1951 FORD pickup. Only $95. 1952 DIVCO milk unit. Only $150. 30 Others to Choose from New 1967 models Ready For Delivery John McAuliffe Ford TRUCK DEPT 277 W. Montcalm FE 5-4101 SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 or EM 3-4156 TWO - 1,959 FORD FlOO 'A-TON PICKUPS 1 — 6 cylinder and 1 — 8-cyllnder. Extra clean. From $350. JEROME FORD - ROCHESTER'S FORD DEALER. OL 1-9711. VW CENTER 60 To Choose From —All Models— —All Colors— •-All Reconditioned— Autobahn Motors Inc. Authorized VW Dealer 'A mile North of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph FE 8-4531 New and Used Curs 106 ESTATE STORAGE Fine Used Cars Are Found ot: STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 4-5W7 AL HANOUTE, INC. BUICK-CHEVROLET ON M24 IN ORION CALL MY 2-2411 1962 BUICK SKYLARK CONVERTIBLE WITH V8 ENGINE, POWER STEERING, RADIO, HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $892, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly payments only $8:88. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1963 BUICK SPECIAL, 2-DOOR, Stick shift. $797. Full price, no money down. LUCKY AUTO Wreckers Heavy Duty One Ton 1961-1962 GMCs Complete — Ready to go! From $1650 John McAuliffe Ford TRUCK DEPT. 277 West Montcalm FE 5-4101 YOUR AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR JEEP complete parts — service -equipment. Will not be undersold. Grimaldi Jeep 900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 Auto Insurance Marine 104 YOUNG BRAVE HAVE HEAVY FOOT ON MUSTANG OR GTO? MANY HORSES UNDER HOOD? TROUBLE WITH AUTO INS.7 CALL OUR TRIBE FOR INS. MANY MOONS TO PAY ON BUDGET PLAN BRUMMETT AGENCY Miracle Mile ' FE 4-0589 Foreign Curs 105 1951 MG TO, DARK GREEN, needs work, best otter over $250. 673-8958. 1960 MORIS MINI-COUPER WITH 19,000 ml. 673-8257, after 4 p.m. or all day SaL________________ 1962 AUSTIN HEALY SPRITE CON-vertible, $695 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. OB OLIVER BUICK FE 2-9165 1963 BUICK LESABRE, 4-DOOR hardtop, a real sharp car. $1197. Can be purchased with no money down. LUCKY AUTO BEEN bankrupt? NEED A CAR with as low as $5 down? Try MARMADUKE 1966 Cadillac Sedan DeVllle. Gold with a white leather top, full power, and air conditioning. Save ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Cadillac Ml 4-1930 By .Mdersdn and Leeming Now Is the Time to Save On 0 New Model lyiatthews-Horgreaves 631 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-4547 1954 CHEVY, TIGER GOLD, chrome engine, tiger upholstery, 1957 CHEVY 2-DOOR HARDTOP — excellent, 283 3-speed - MA 6-1985. Transportation Specials BUY HERE-PAY HERE No Application Refused BANKRUPTCIES, REPOSSESSIONS ' FULL WKLY CAR PRICE PYMT 1959 CHEVY 2 door $347. $3.99 1962 OLDS ............... double power, deluxe. MA 6-2"358 “What do you mean, ‘playing’?! If I was playing with him, I’d be smiling, wouldn’t I?” 1961 CORVAIR Auto ...$297. $3.05 1961 FALCON 2 door ..$397..$4.10 1961 CHRYSLER Ayto ... $397. ,U.10 1961 FORD 8 auto ....$397 .$4.10 1960 PONTIAC hardtop .. $497. $4.75 1962 BUICK Wagon ....$697. .$6.98 1962 MERCURY auto ... $297. $3.05 1960 BUICK 2 door ..$497 .$4.75 1961 PONTIAC Starchief . $597. $5,95 NO DOWN PAYMENT IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN AT FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just east of Oakland 1959 CHEVY BEL AIR 2-DOOR, V owner, very nice. 333-7542, Riggins, 1962 CORVAIR, 4 TO CHOOSE from~8s low as S397 and up. Can be purchased with no down pay ment. LUCKY AUTO 1962 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, POWER STEERING, WHITEWALL TIRES, Full PRICE $766. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, W fe e k I y payments only $7.88. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1963 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 9 PAS senger Wagon. 1 Owner. VB, Radio, Heater, Power Rear Window, Grimaldi Cars 900 Oakland FE 5-9421 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA HARDTOP WITH V8 ENGINE, AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $995, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly payments only $8.88. CAlL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. LLOYD 1963 BUICK LeSabre Sedan. Automatic, power, sandstone beige. Immaculate condition. One owner. Full price $1097 $45 Down LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1966 RIVIERA COUPE. POWER steering, power windows, bucket seats. Console, and a beautiful Turquoise exterior. A NEW YEARS SPECIAL AT ONLY $3288. FISCHER BUICft 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 1962 CADILLAC 2 DOOR HARDTOP, Power, $1295 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. 1963 VW, RED, GOOD CONDITION, $850. 625-3473 after 6. BEATTIE —Quality A-1 Unit-1963 Econoline .........$ 895 Van with 6-cyllnder, stick shift, real good unit—will do the |obl 1963 Willys ............$1395 with snowplow. 4-wheel drive, solid green finish. 1965 Jeep ......... .$1695 Extended wheel base, metal cab, 1965Buick LeSabre ... .$1995 2-Door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, automatic, extra clean. 9,000 actual miles. 1965 Dodge 2-Door___________$1495 V-8, stick shift, plenty ot warranty. 1965 Ford Galaxie.............$1695 2-Door Hardtop. V-8, automatic, dark blue finish. 1964 Corvette................ $ave Convertible with V-8. 4-speed, AM-FM radio, bright red finish. BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie Hwy. in Waterford OR 3-1291 1965 Cadillac Coupe DeVllle. Samoan bronze with matching trim, 20,000 miles, radio, heater, full power, air conditioning. Save ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Cacdillac Ml 4-1930 lEROME MOTOR SALES 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON vertible. automatic, sharp $995 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Bin mingham. Ml 4-2735.___________ 1963 CORVAIR MONZA, 2 DOOR hardtop—turquoise blue, radio and heater-defroster, whitewalls, automatic transmission, $491 Private owner. Dell Earl Jones. FE 2-8181 or evenings 546-1880. IS® CORVETTE FASTBACK Auto. red. 682-7461. 327 1964 CORVAIR MONZA COUPE. A-1 owner new-car trade. Automatic, buckets. Nice color. $ave. Grimaldi Cars 900 Oakland FE 5-9421 1964 CORVAIR MONZA 2 DOOR with 4 speed transmission, $795 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Bir mingharn, Ml 4-2735. ____ 1964 CHEVY SUPER SPORT 300 horsepower, Herst shift, burgandy, black Interior. 682-6454. 1966 CHEVY CAPRICE, V8, 2-DOOR sports sedan, full power^ bucket seats, console vinyl top. 549-1322. MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 New^and Used Cers^ 106 1966 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 DOOR hardtop, burgundy finish with black vinyl top, automatic transmission, power steering and still under new car warranty. $2295 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth Valiant-Imperial 724 Oakland /^ve. KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service ford DA 8-1400 New and Used Cert 106 BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Fii-iance You- Jus* Call Mr. AAason or Mr. AAurphy at FE 5-4101 McAulItte 196S MUSTANG VB, STICK, BUR' gundy, excellerrr, best offer, call FE S-7878, aftei- 6 p.m. FE 5-0033. 1959 FORD STATION WAGON. Excellent condition. 47,000 actual ml. 1 owner, $350, 651-0625. I960 FORD. RUNS GOOD. POWER Steering, Power Brakes, Full Price $59. Reliable Motors, 250 Oakland Ave. FE 8-9742, WINTER SPECIAL 3 Fords 1961-67 $45 up 1961 International truck $495 4 Chevy 1957-62 $35 up 1957-1959 Buick $35-$197 3 Ramblers 1963-64 $597 up Ponfiacs 1957-64 $55 up Others and trucks (ECONOMY CARS. 2335 DIXIE HWY.) Pretty Ponies 1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USE D MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As low As $49 Down And $49 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 1961 T-BIRD POWER, AUTOMATIC, $795 at AAIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-LET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. 1962 FALCON 2-DOOR WAGON. 6-cylinder standard transmission. Extra sharp. Only $595. Jerome Ford, Rochester's Ford Dealer OL 1-9711. 1963 FORD GALAXIE A DOOR. V-8, automatic, radio, heater and pow er steering. $895. Jerome Ford Rochester's Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711 1963 FALCON FUTURA, 6-CYLIN der stick shift. Radio, heater, 1 owner, A-1 condition. 363-0866. FORD GALAXIE 500 4 DOOR, V-8y automatic/ radio* and heater Special at'only $595. VILLAGE rambler. 666 S. Woodward. ‘ 6-3900. 1965 FORD Station wagon with V-8 engine* auto-matic transmission* radio* heater and whitewall tires. Full price $1295* only $49 down and $10.66 weekly payments. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 1965 FORD COUNTRY S(3UIRE 9 passenger wagon. 8 cylinder, automatic, power steering, power brakes. Save Jerome Ford Rochester's Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711. LLOYD 1956 FORD "500" 2-Door Hardtop. 8 cylinders* power, special Brittany btoe with vinyl In' terior. New car warranty. Full price $1989 $89 Or Qld Cor LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1942 JEEP. 4 - WHEEL DRIVE Will sell cheap. ROSE RA/VIBLER-JEEP EM 3-^155 or EM 3-4156 1962 GMC SUBURBAN VAN. THIS 9'Passenger fc»«auty is Ideal for the outdoor sportsman and a real buy at only $695 at BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY Birmingham 1965 FALCON 4-door station wagon with automatic transmission, radio and heater and whitewall tires, full price $1195, only $49 down and $9.r weekly payments. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WDODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 1965 FALCDN 2-DDDR, RED, STAN-ard shift, 6-cyl., spotless. Still In warranty. $1,075. DR 4-0034. 1966 Chevy Impolo top, V8, si •ater, radi $2188 1965 Chevy Impolo 2 door hardtop, V8, automatic, power steering* brakes. Only— $1980 1964 Chevy Super Sport 2 door hardtop, with Vd, automatic* heater* radio, whitewalls, Only— $1675 1964 Pontiac 4-Door V8 stick shift, power steering* brakes* tan finish, heater* radio* whitewalls. Only— $1435 Crissman Chevrolet 1965 LTD 4-door hardtop with V6 engine* automatic transmission* radio* heater* power steering, power brakes* whitewall tires* full price $1795* only $49 down and $13.92 weekly payments. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 LLOYD 1966 MUSTANG Hardtop, V-B* power steering, harbor blue with matching interior. New car warranty. Full price $1889 1966 GTO 2-door Hardtop, Tiger Gold. Auto. Lease 1966 GTO 2-door Hardtop, Burgundy. Demo Unit 1966 GTO Convertible, Gulf Turquoise, Stick 1967 GTO 2-door Hardtop, Turqupise. New Unit 1967 GTO 2-door Hardtop, Black, 4-speed. New 1967 GTO 2-door Hardtop, Burgundy. Hydromotic 1967 GTO Hardtop, Regimental Red, 4-speed Ask for one of our courteous salesmen DISCOUNTS up to $1687.94 RUSS JOHNSON On M24 in Lake Orion Open 9 to 9 Mon. - Fri. 3-6266 $89 Down LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1966 Lincoln CoDT.'nental. Full power. Factory air conditioning, vinyl top, low mileage. Plenty of New Car Warranty. Th's is the Boss' own personal car. Only $4695 Trcidell Ford 777 John R, Troy 585-2522 New and UsmI Cars 106 1963 COMET HARDTOP WITH AUTOMATIC TRANS-M I SSI ON, RADIO AND ME A TER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $792, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY down. Weekly psyments $7.88 CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Park! at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. LLOYD 1965 MERCURY Monterey 2-Door Hardtop. Twilight turquoise, automatic, power, full factory equipment. Sold by us new and serviced. 24 months or 50,-000 mile warranty available. Full price Ntw Old 11^ 106 DON'S USED CARS Small Ad—Big Lot 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM We buy or will adjust your payments to less expensive car. 677 M-24, Lk. Orion MY 2-2041 NEW IN THE AREA? Drive a new or used car from Keego Pontiac Sales. Call Mr. Clay at 682-773300. 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA. 2-DOOR hardtop. Gq^ condition. FE 5-7612. $1789! $89 DOWN 1962 PONTIAC Catalina 4-door hardtop* power steering. A one-owner Birmingham trade. Ideal second car. Bank ,fi nancing. Only $795 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 860 S. Woodward Ml 7-3214 Naw aiNl Used Cart 2ND CAR headquarters 75 cart In stock — atl timet $S«toS$00 MARVEL MOTORS 251 Oakland (N. of Baldwin) _______FE $4079 LLOYD~ 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 2-Door Hardtop. Metallic silver finish. Automatic, power steering and bra k.e s. Garage-kept condition. Full price $1789 1962 PONTIAC, 2-DOOR HARDTOP, I I nvn HAnrnnr brakes, steering, can be LLUYU IVluTURS purchased with no down payment. 1250 Oakland J337863 | LUCKY AUTO LOW MILEAGE, $89 Down LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1965 TEMPEST 2 DOOR WITH Automatic transmission, power steering, $1495, MIKE SAVOIE CHEV-RPLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. NO ESTABLISHED CREDIT? Drive a new or used car from Keego Pontiac Sales. Call Mr. Clay at 682-7300. 1963 OLDS STARFIRE 2 D 0,0 R !-automatic, power steering, power brakes, FM radio, power windows, I Only $1095. BOB BORST t' LINCOLN-MERCURY 520 S. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM' ___________646-4538______j 1966 OLDS F85 2 DOOR % CYLIN-i der, Standard Shift, Radio, Heater, Low Mileage. Priced at only $1595. Jerome Ford, Rochester's Ford Dealer, OL 1-9711. 1966 OLDS CUTUASTCONVERflBrE Loaded, gold color. Must sell. FE 2-4489 after 6 p.m. SHORT ON DOWN PAYMENT Drive a new or used car from Keego Pontiac Sales. Call Mr. Clay at 682-730g. ;_____________ NEW 1966 Olds Toronado FULL factory equipment Our sale price now $3498.20 $150 down, low monthly payment $79.80 (IF YOU QUALIFY) ALSO We still have 12 new 1966 Olds-mobites in stock at $1941.80 WHY DRIVE A FORD-CHEVYPLYMOUTH DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland Avenue FE 2-8101 GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC and Save $ $ $ On Main Street :Clarkston__ _ MA 5-5500 ■1962 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, I exc. condition, new tires. FE 2-9360 ) or FE 5-6412 after 6. SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 855 5. ROO^ESTER RD. 651-5500 1966 GTO, BURGUNDY WITH black vinyl top, 4-speed* tri-power, custom steering wheel, rally gauges, AM-FM radio, reverb* and stereo tape pack. 569 W. Huron or call FE 5-7428, TAKE OVER PAYMENTS ON 1966 Pontiac GTO (Convertible and 1966 Pontiac Catalina. 62A-2358. 1966 PONTIAC LEMANS. 2 DOOR hardtop. Silver with black Interior. Many extras. $2100. 628-1749. 1964 LeMANS WITH 4 SPEED TRANSMISSION* RADIO AND HEATER. V8 ENGINE, WHITEWALL TIRES* FULL PRICE $1095* ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Weekly payments only $9.«8. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. CREDIT PROBLEMS? Drive a new or used car from Keego Pontiac Sales. Call Mr. Clay at 682-7300._________ 1964 GTO 2 DR. HARDTOP TRI-power, 4 speed, aluminum wheels, radio, heater, for only $1495. VILLAGE RAMBLER. 666 S. Wood: ward. Ml 6-3900. THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Trbv—Pontiac—Birmingham Area 1850 Maple* across frbm Berz Airport 642-8600 1965 RAMBLER Classic station wagon. Blue with white top. Real $harp and priced to sell. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM_J-415^_ or______EM 3-4156 1965 AMBASSADOR 9 PASSENGER WAGON Radio* heater* automatic* and V-8. $1796. VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward. Ml 6-3900. VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-3900 1962 VALIANT CLUB CDUPE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE $595, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Weekly payments only $5.88. CALL CREDIT Mgr. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7580. Kessler-Hahn OAKLAND COUNTY'S NEWEST CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Dealer On Dixie In Clarkston MA 5-2635 TAYLOR'S 1966 Plymouth Fury, 4-door sedan, auto, steering, brakes* factory air ......................... $1,995 1965 Ford V2-ton pickup, V8, stick.......................SU95 1965 Chevy l-ton stake* low ml. $1,295 1965 Chevy Impala Sport Coupe 6, standard ................ $1,295 1965 Olds Starfire. Factory air Full power, console with tachometer ...................... $1*995 1965 Olds 88 Coupe-Factory air ......................... $1*895 1964 Buick Wildcat Sedan — I Clean ......... $1*195' 1964 Chevy Impala 4-door hard- ' top ..................... $1,195 1964 Chevy Convertible .... $1*350 1964 Rambler Classic* 2-door . $ 695 1963 Bel Air Sedan ........ $ 795 1962 Chevy II wagon ....... $ 575 TAYLOR CHEVROLET WALLED LAKE 624-4501 Dakland County's Oldest i Chevrolet Dealership 1962 COMET. 2 DOOR. V-8 RADIO, healer, standard transmission. Only $«5, VILLAGE RAMBLER. 666 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 6-3900. LLOYD 1962 COMET 2-Door. This car Is extra special transportation. Full price $399 No Money Down LLOYD MOTORS 1250 Oakland 333-7863 SHOP THE "GOODWILL USED CAR" LOT FOR GENUINE VALUES. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt, Clemens St. (AT WIDE TRACK) FE 3-7954 CHEVY- OLDS Our Guarantee Olt) Months on "OK" Cars GMAC PLAN 1964 BUICK Riveria Hardtop, full power, one owner, new car trade. Only ........................$1795 1964 CORVAIR Monza 4 door, automatic radio, heater, new car trade............................$895 1964 CHEVY Impala Club Coupe. V8, automatic, radio, one owner. Only 26,000 miles ..;...........$1450 1966 MUSTANG 2-door hardtop, 6 cyl., stick. Vinyl roof, radio, heater. Only...................$1^95 1965 CHEVY Wogon, V8, automatic, power steering, brakes, one-owner, low mileage. Only.......$1895 1965 CHEVY Impala Coupe. V8, automatic, power steering, brokes. One owner. Only............$1795 Want More For Your Money 40 Others In Stock ON DIXIE HWY. AT Ml 5 "Your Crossroads to Greater Savings" CLARKSTON MA 5-5071 1940 PONTIAC, NO RUST, SOUTH-ern car with good tires. Needs new engine, best offer. 674-2407, 1958 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. Runs like new. $95. Reliable Motor^, 250 Oakland Ave. FE 8-9742. 1960 PONTIAC, 2 DOOR, $600, EX'- cellent condition, FE 5-9333._ 1961 TEMPEST WITH AUTOMIATTc transmission, radio, heater, $295 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Bir-mingham, Ml 4-2735. 1961 BONNEVILLE, 2-DOOR HARD-top,. lust like new. Can be purchased with no down payment. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track FE 4-1006 or fE 3-7854 WOULD YOU BELIEVE NO CASH NEEDED-BANK RATES 60 Pontiac Catalina wagon ... $299 61 Pontiac Catalina convert. ... $599 '60 Corvair coupe ......... $199 61 Chevy Impala hardtop ___ $599 '62 Plymouth Fury convert. .. $499 62 Olds F85 Cutlass ....... $599 OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at D;IdyKe FE 8-9237 FE 8-9238 1961 PONTIAC, STARCHIEF, 4-DR., air conditioning, power brakes, steering l owner new car trade in. Assume small monthly payments. LUCKY AUTO Buy With Confidence AUTHORIZED GMC FACTORY OUTLET New '67 GMG Pickup FULL FACTORY EQUIPMENT INCLUDING . . . BACKUP LIGHTS WINDSHIELD WASHERS 2-SPEED ELECTRIC WIPERS , DUAL HEADLIGHTS FOAM PADDED DASH FOAM PADDED SEATS DUAL BRAKING SYSTEM 4-WAY SAFETY FLASHER 8:15x15 TIRES INCLUDING SPARE For Only $1789.00 ■ Ask for Leon (Goose) Robertson, Bob Mathews or Vern Sheffield, Sales Manager HOUGHTEN Olds OL 1-9761 Rochester ONE-STOP TRANSPORTATION CENTER VALU-RATED USED CARS 1965 RIVIERA. Air-conditioning....................$2595 1965 OLDS Dynamic 88. 4-door......................$1895 1963 OLDS Super 88. 4-door hardtop ..........$1095 1964 OLDS ^8! 4-door. Air-conditioning . ..... .$1695 1964 OLDS 88 Convertible. Like new..............$1495 1965 OLDS 98. Luxury sedan......................$2395 1966 PONTIAC Bonneville. 2-door H.T. Air.......$2895 1962 CHRYSLER Newport. 4-door......................$745 1965 MERCURY Monterey. Convertible ...............$1795 1965 PLYMOUTH Belvedere. 2-door hareftop ., .$1495 2 YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woo(dwarci Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 1966 Pontiacs $1795 OAKLAND COUNTY CARS 1966 PONTIAC Catalina 4-Door Sedans. TWO to choose from, all formerly pakland County cars and are priced to sell _________ $1795 1965 MONZA Corsa Convertible with 4-speed transmission, bucket seats. It has a real nice red and white finish, a beauty. $1495 1963 BUICK LeSabre 4-Door Sedan with extra low mileage* automatic transmission* radio and heater* power brakes and steering* WOW ..................... $1395 1962 MERCURY Custom 2-Door Hardtop. It has power steering* power brakes* automatic transmission* radio and heater* 1-own-er. You must see ................ $995 1965 GRAND PRIX. Has aute* mafic transmission, bucket seats* radio and heater, power brakes and power steering. Let's alt go first class .................. $2195 1965 BUICK LeSabre 2-Door Hard- top. Has power brakes and steering* automatic* radio and heater* a ]-owner that has low mileage. A real steal ............... $2095 1964 KARMANN GHIA. Here is the sportiest car on the road. It is a bright and flashy red with sparkling trim. Save now. $1395 1966 PONTIAC Catalina 4-Door Hardtop, DEMO* double power* automatic transmission. Only one left and it has a bronze finish. $2695 1963 PONTIAC Bonneville 2-Door Hardtop. All white with black leather interior. Here is the car to go first class in . $1495 1966 BUICK Riviera DEMO. Has custom trim* power windows* power brakes, power steering* automatic* lists out at $5,200. Now priced at .................... $3695 1965 BUICK V^ildcat 4-Door Hardtop. Has power brakes and power steering, automatic, radio and heater. Buick has never built better ...................... $2095 1960 PDNTIAC 4-Door Sedan with power brakes and power steering, automatic transmission, radio and heater, 39,000 actual miles. .............................. $995 1966 TEMPEST Lemans Convertible with sprint option, 4-on-the-floor, DEMO model. This one is the last one ot Its kind, so hurry! .................................. $2495 1963 PONTIAC Bonneville 2-Door Hardtop. Air cortditloning, double power, automatic, radio, heater. Let's go first elass ...f ... $1495 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 4-Door. Do you want to save a bundle? This Is It. An Oakland County special and It is priced to save, ............................... $1195 PONTIAC-BUICK 651-5500 Ed Broodway-Dewey Petiprin-Pot Jorvis-Tommy Thampson, Sales Mgr. 885 S. Rochester Rd. Vz Mile South of Downtown Rochester