The Weather U.I. WMthw BWMU Poracatt Cold (DatalU Paga l) THE Home Edition PONTIAC PRESS PONTIACi MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1], 1969 VOL. 127 - .NO. 4 ★ ★ * * 36 PAGES 10c Start-Up Seen by Key House Dem WASHINGTON (AP) — The chairman of the Hou$e Appropriations Committee says emphatically “I know” work will resume on the controversial Sentinel antiballistic missile system. Democrat George D. Mahon of Texas, whose committee holds the purse strings for the $5.5-billion system, made the prediction in an interview yesterday although he said he had no direct assurances from Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird. But, he added, “I know the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and I know Secretary Laird, and I know what their thoughts are on this matter.” The Nixon administration last week halted the work on the system pending a high-level Pentagwi review. The action followed mounting criticism in Congress Building Trades Integration Up MIAMI BEACH, Fla. UP) - An AFL-CIO official said today that construction unions, once a major target of racial discrimination complaints, have tripled the number of Negro and other minority group apprentices in the last nine months and might double the figure again this year. “We’re on the verge of something great,” said Robert M. McGlotten, a Negro who is on the staff of the labor federation’s civil rights department. McGlotten, here for a meeting of the AFLrCIO Building and Construction Trades Department, said 2,400 Negro, Mexican-American and other minority youths were placed in apprenticeship in the past nine months through project outreach. The effort is sponsored by the ■ federal government, the 17 construction unions and civil rights groups. The increase brought to about 8 per cent of the number of Negroes and other minority group youngsters in building trade apprenticeships in 52 cities and “This year we might double it to 16 per cent,” he said. * * * Before the recent upsurge, the figure was below three per cent of the 50,000 construction union apprenticeships across the nation, he aiided. Building trades officials concede that much of the gain in integrating construction unions’ job training grew out of federal pressure and the hope of a big surge in government-financed public housing construction that will create thousands of new jobs. - In Today's ^ i Press Walled Lake School board puts off action on upcoming millage — PAGE A4. Nixon—West Berlin President lets world know he’ll visit divided city — PAGE A-8. Business Empires One-bank holding companies, other conglomerates under U. S. scrutiny — PAGE A-3. Area News ................A4 Astrology ...............B-8 Bridge Crossword Puzzle .......C-11 Comics ..................B-8 Editorials ..............A-« High School .........B-1, B-2 Markets B-11 Ohitnaries ..............B^S Sports ..............C-1—C4 lleaters ...............B-10 TV and ^dio Programs C-11 Vietham War News ........A-2 WUson, Earl.............C-11 I’s Pages .....B-5—B-7 and from residents of areas where Sentinel sites are planned. Mahon said the Nixon administration not only will ask for the money to go ahead with the Sentinel, but will get it. He dismissed congressional critics—who included notably Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., and John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky.—as representing a minority. ★ ★ ★ And he said that despite opposition in areas where sites are planned, he believes the American people support antimissile work. Congress authorized funds for the Sentinel last year. When the project was first unveiled in 1967 by then Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, it was portrayed as an effort to guard against a potential low-scale atomic attack by Red China in the 1970s. MODIFICA-nON This was the position taken last month by the Sentinel system manager. Army Lt. Gen. A. D. Starbird, in testimony before the Appropriations Committee. He added, however, in secret testimony made public today, that the Sentinel also “would reduce somewhat the number of casualties” from a Russian attack. ★ W * Starbird said McNamara, in a speech Sept. 18, 1967, “indicated that he believed that no perfect defense against the Soviet Union was possible. He pointed out that the Soviet Union could increase its offensive power to compensate.” Storm Cleanup Under Way in Northeast; 82 Are Dead NEW YORK (AP) — With snowplows working around the clock, the Northeast dug out today from the big weekend storm and the death toll mounted to 82. Most of the deaths were blamed on snow shoveling with suburban Westchester County counting seven such fatali- Relafed Pictures, Page A-5 ties. Three travelers died in a stalled auto at New York’s Kennedy Airport, apparently of asphyxiation. 'The storm paralyzed transportation, cut off food supplies in some areas and throttled commerce from New Jersey to Maine. ★ ★ ★ Air, rail, bus and auto traffic began to move sporadically late yesterday. But a return to normal sch^ules appeared some time off as gusty winds continued to pile drifts after the storm moved out to sea. Helicopters proved invaluable in supplying food to 6,000 passengers stranded at Kennedy Airport Monday. They also made a number of ambulance rims, carrying several heart attack victims who otherwise could not have been aided. 4,000 MAROONED An estimated 4,000 persons remained marooned at the airport overnight. They bedded down on floors, benches, chairs and in some cases in planes. The other 2,000 strandees were airlifted by helicopter to the Wall Street heliport or managed to get the few available buses able to leave the airport. Flight operatims at Kennedy were expected to resume this morning and at LaGuardia this evening. Newark Airport reopened yesterday afternoon and Logan International Airport in Boston last night. Throughout the snowbound section, the failure of delivery trucks to get through drifts of up to 10 feet led to a shortage of milk, bread and other staples. Both the American and New York Stock Exchanges closed yesterday and the city’s Commerce and Industry Association reported that absenteeism at commercial establishments ran at 73 per cent. As the cleanup operation got into high gear, the Massachusetts Department of Public Works asked the assistance of the National Guard to remove an estimated 2,500 abandoned cars on state highways. ORDEAL ENDED—Janie Lewis, 17, is escorted by two unidentified men from a suburban Dallas cafeteria where she was held as a hostage by a young gunman for 10t4 hours. The girl broke free and police officers shot and killed the gunman, identified by police as Freddie Robert Mullins, 21, of Dallas. Girl Runs to Safety as Captor Is Killed Wilson to Visit Berlin LONDON (AP) — Prime Minister Harold Wilson will visit West Berlin Friday despite tension there over new travel restrictions imposed by the East German government, aides said today. Spokesman at No. 10 Downing Street would not comment directly on a report in the Soviet government newspaper Izvestia describing Wilson’s visit as a deliberate provocation. DALLAS, Tex. UP) - A blonde schoolgirl cheerleader, held under threat of death for lOVi hours, darted to safety last night as police gunfire killeij her pistol-waving captor. Janie Lewis, 17, escaped harm as the tense drama ended in a cafeteria where a long-haired parolee had confined her in a booth, rejecting repeated pleas to free the young woman. * * * Officers identified the slain man as Freddie Robert Mullins, 21, of Dallas. They said he had served a term for armed robbery in Minnesota. As many as 500 persons assembled at times to watch what was taking place at the Big Town shopping center in suburban Mesquite, just outside the east Dallas city limit. Heavily armed police kept the crowd at a safe distance. MOTIONED WITH EYES Mesquite Police Chief L. H. Llmmer, 33, said he motioned with his eyes for Miss Lewis to run behind a retaining wall in the cafeteria when Mullins finally took his attention from her to unscrew a light bulb in a low-hanging chandelier. ★ ★ ★ Three bullets pierced Mullins’ chest and he died as he fell. ★ * * Police Sgt. L. C. Tidwell said it was about 11 a.nv when he stopped Mullins and a companion, Richard Launderville, to check their driver’s licenses. As the licenses were handed back, Tidwell related, Mullins pulled a gun, and both men jumped from their car and ran. Two warning shots from Tidwell halted Launderville, but Mullins dashed into the cafeteria nearby. GRABBED DAUGHTER Janie’s mother, Mrs. C. S. Lewis from the neighboring town of Forney, told officers that a tall man in a black leather jacket grabbed her daughter as they stood in line awaiting food service. The long vigil followed. Limmer and others talked to Mullins time and again trying to persuade him to release his hostage. Officers said he never gave a motive for holding her or voiced any conditions for freeing her. Pay Showdown Looms for Board The matter of how much Oakland County supervisors will be paid is to be discussed and maybe determined in a special session at 1:30 p.m. today. The board has until Saturday to set its own salary as provided under state law. Other board meetings have been scheduled" for 1:30 p.m. Thursday and 9:30 a m. Friday if additional time is needed. The personnel practices committee’s recommendation of a base salary from $4,000 to $4,900 with a daily rate of $25 to ^5 is expected to undergo hot debate today. ABSENTEEISM SEEN Several supervisors, both Republican and Democrat, have said they think the total pay should not exceed $5,000 a year, and others have indicated the committee’s maximum recommendation of $|,400 a year is not enough and will cause absenteeism on the part of supervisors. Lee Walker, D-Madison Heights, said: “There are going to be a lot of absences from committee meetings. If they don’t pay us what we’re worth, then I’m in favor of a flat $1 per year.” N. Vief's Envoy to Return Home; Paris Hopes Up PARIS (AP) — Le Due Tho's two previous trips home from the Paris peace talks coincided with a delicate phase in negotiations between North Vietnam and the United States. Now the chief adviser to Hanoi’s peace conference delegation is on his way home again. Tho left yesterday with stops scheduled in Moscow and Peking, principal contributors to North Vietnam’s war effort. U.S. delegation sources feel Tho might have been recalled for a policy review. They are discouraging speculation he is taking back a new U.S. proposal for top-level consideration. . ★ ★ ★ There are no symptoms of progress in the talks, but circumstances of Tho’s last two trips home give support to speculation his trip may be due to some hidden, significant developments. After arriving in Paris June 3 to supervise the North Vietnamese delegation, Tho returned to Hanoi June 29. This was at the start of a summer-long lull in major Vietcong and North Vietnamese ground action in South Vietnam and of a period of intensive secret deplomacy in Paris. LULL CALLED RESPONSE During Tho’s absence, a ranking North Vietnamese official confided to the French Foreign Ministry that the lull was Hanoi’s response to American demand for reciprocity in negotiations for a total halt in the bombing of North Vietnam. Throughout July, Washington debated whether the lull in fighting was initiated by Hanoi and whether it was sufficient reason to halt all bombing above the 17th Parallel. The Johnson administration decided against halting bombing then, and Tho came back to Paris Aug. 13. ★ ★ * His next departure on Oct. 14 was during terminal bargaining over a bombing halt, when proposals were being exchanged between the Americans and the North Vietnamese in private meetings outside the conference hall. Early in October, Ambassador Xuan Thuy hinted Hanoi would agree to Saigon and the Vietcong participating even if U. S. reconaissance' flights over North Vietnam continued. This was significant modification of TTiuy’s stand i n preceding talks. * * * While Tho was home reporting to President Ho Chi Minh, the North Vietnamese signalled acceptance of the U.S. bombing halt package. On Oct. 31 President Johnson announced cessation of bombing. Lincoln's Birthday Closings Are Told Banks, savings and loan associations and some city and county offices will be closed tomorrow in observance of Abraham Lincoln’s birthday. Pontiac State and Community National banks. First Federal Savings of Oakland, Capital Savings and Loan, Pontiac city offices, Oakland County offices will be closed. Waterford Township offices and some other area government offices will remain open. A Bit of a Flurry, but Little Snow There’s a chance of a few snow flurries fluttering around the Pontiac area until late today with little or no accumulation of snow. Clearing and cold is the forecast for tonight with a low of 12 to 17. Mostly sunny and continued cold, the high 26 to 31, is the prediction for tomorrow. Fair and a iitUe warmer is the outlook for Thursday. ★ ★ ★ Morning winds westerly at 15 to 25 miles per hour and gusty will become norUiwesterly at eight to 16 miles tonight. ^ Precipitation probabilities in per «nt are 30 today and 20 tonight. Thirty was the low temperature* in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The merdlry had mov^ to 35 by 12W p.tn. City Stadium Bid Backed Rochester went on record last night in favor of Pontiac’s bid as a site for a new athletic stadium. Proposed by Mayor Roy Rewold, a resolution was unanimously approved by the Rochester City Council to support a Pontiac site for a fiew home for the Detroit Lions and Tigers. ★ * w 'The Pontiac site for the proposed domed stadium is near 1-75 at M59, which would be southwest of Rochester. Rochester’s resolution also authorized that copies of its resolution of support be forwarded to the football and baseball companies should Pontiac supporters deem it appropriate. Vote'Hits Thai Regime BANGKOK (AP) - Thailand’s government'party seemed sure today of electing the largest bloc in the new House of Representatives, but it apparently will be much smaller than anticipated. Political observers predicted the final results from the national election yesterday would give the military government’s United Thai People’s party about 80 of the 219 seats in the lower house. They said smaller parties and independents, many of whom are government supporters, would get about 80, and the opposition Democratic party would get the remaining 50 or 60. Head of Schools in Romeo Resigns Veteran Romeo schools Supt. T. C, Filppula submitted his resignation, effective June 30, at last night’s school board meeting. Although Filppula’s letter did not state a reason for his resignation, there reportedly has been some question among board members about renewing his contract. Filppula, 51, who has headed the Romeo School District for the past 17 years, stated he did not want his contract renewed. Includes Help for Parochial Students Voucher Plan Proposed to Aid Schools Lenten Series Due For a thdy inspirational readhig experience read Lenten Guideposts J. personal experiences of faith in action by 40 persons, some famous, some unknown, starting Feb. 19 in The Press. Each person has a moving, human story to tell in the series, which will appear evc^ wedtday daring Lent. Watch for Lenten Guideposts. Dr. LEROY AUGENSTEIN A revision of the method by which Michigan hands out school aid funds, including a proposal to give state money to parochial students, was suggested today by a State Board of Education member. Dr. Leroy Augenstein of East Lansing outlined his proposal in • a speech prepared for presentation tonight to the PTA Council Founders Day Banquet at 6 p.m. at Keimedy Junior High. Augenstein suggests that the state give each school child in the state a voucher, redeemable at any school which meets specified criteria. Under Augenstein’s proposal, vouchers — “for sufficient funds to insure an adequate education” — would go to each child of school age in a school if: • Teachers and curriculum are properly certified. • Neither students nor faculty are selected or rejected on the basis of creed, color or national or ethnic origin. • The school does not impose discipline on the basis of creed. • Students are not required to attend religious exercises nor are religious symbols used in the school. • The school accepts all students up to its capacity, no matter what their race or religion. Augenstein said the prpposal had been checked by five attorneys for constitutionality, and had the support of backers of state aid to nonpublic schools. He said the proposal probably would be introduced separately in the Legislature if the State Board of Education endorses it. Otherwise, he said, it could be added to already existing parochiaid bills. The voucher system, Augenstein said, was aimed at facing up to “crucial problems in education. Our present system of funding education is quite inequitable and is not providing adequate operating funds in far too many communities around tin state: ★ ★ , . • “The financial stability of many of our nonpublic schools lias deteriorated quite badly in recent years,” he said. “We dare not disregard any longer the fact that some of the schools serving the 14 per cent of our students in nonpublic schools are also in debt.” COULD IMPROVE QUALITY Implementation of this proposal could help improve the quality rf education in the state, Augenstein said. He said he felt that individual families should have the option of educating their youngsters in any of a variety of sdbools. But, he added, “much as I believe that all schools must teach about values in a (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) A—2 TIIK rONTlAC rilK.SS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 11. 19 Bill Seeks $700 Million to Aid Michigan Schools Birmingham Area Battleship Guns Hit Red Bunkers Mo Commission Candidofes in Da Nang Area LANSING (LTPI) - Gov. William G. Milliken’s first big bill - a $700-million public school aid measure — has been dumped into the legislative hopper, where it races an uncertain destiny. The massive spending proposal was Introduced jointly in the House and Senate last night. Appropriations Committee members of both chambers said it would be scrutinized carefully. * ★ “Probably no expenditure is more vital to the progress and future of our stale,” said Chairman Charles 0. 7x)llar of the Senate Appropriations unit. “We must be certain it is wisely spent ” Milliken outlined keystone features of the legislation in his budget message nearly a month ago. Over-all, the proposal is up $85 million from the current state-aid allocation of $615 million. Michigan presently has 2.4 million youngsters enrolled in its elementary and secondary public school system. The state4tld bill anticipates a 49,000-student growth next year, including the transfer of 24,000 parochial school pupils. The average per pupil increase in state aid would be $17. The low would be $4 per pupil In depressed areas. ★ ★ ★ Major appropriation increases contained in the legislation; • $48.9 million for direct per pupil grants to public schools. • $24.4 million for special education, remedial reading and transportation “to keep pace with rising costs." ★ * ★ • $6.3 million for environmentally disadvantaged students. • $5.4 million for other programs, in- cluding $1.5 million to initiate a state-supported community school program. The legislation also earmarks $154.6 million fpr teacher pensions, an increase of $12.9 million from the 1968-69 fiscal year appropriation. But the bill contains no funds for tax aid to Michigan’s 1,000 parochial schools. Milliken has said the Leglskture must find new revenue scources for this type of program. Bills proposing tax credits for parents of parochial school students and teacher subsidy payments to nonpublic schools await action in the Hou.se. ★ ★ Milliken’s state aid legislation would require no tax hike, though it drains heaviiy on anticipated treasury surpluses and increased sales-income tax collections. -w-v—. -***’'"• '***■ "i OUT OF DANGER—This is the freighter Exmin.ster, which was in trouble yesterday during an Atlantic storm but is now out of immediate danger. The 473-foot vessel, manned by 46 crewmen, had radioed that she was sinking in 17-foot seas 180 AS WIrtphot* miles southeast of Nantucket. However, two pumps were dropped on board by a Coast Guard plane and two more were pas.sed aboard by the cutter Sherman (right), and the leakage in her engine room stopped. Senate Is Soothing Conodo NoflfieS Red China Mansion Squabble t r\ • r\- t- or Desire to Discuss Ties LANSING on - The Michigan Senate today planned to assure a wealthy Lansing businessman that “things are progressing nicely” despite legislative squabbling over accepting his offer of a $44,000 home as a temporary governor’s residence. Senate Majority Leader Emil Lock-wood, K-St. Louis, said he would ask Howard W. Sober to “keep his cool ” over the situation. The Senate voted to accept the gift home, but a House amendment to the acceptance resolution stipulated that the legislative committee negotiating for the gift return to the House and Senate for final acceptance approval. The upper chamber refused yesterday to accept the amendment, leaving the resolution in Umbo pending further House discussion. The House put off action until today. OTTAWA (AP) - The Canadian government has notified Red China it is prepared to open talks on establishment of diplomatic relations. Foreign minister Mitchell Sharp told the House of Commons yesterday the Canadian Embassy in Stockholm was ordered to approach the Red Chinese Embassy with a proposal for talks “to be held at a mutually convenient time and place in the near future” Sharp told newsmen the United States “and our other friends” were told of the decision in advance “so they would not be taken by surprise” There was no immediate reactiotf from Washington, but State Department officials were expected to be unhappy with The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Cloudy and windy today with a chance of snow flurries. High In lower 30s. Clearing and colder tonight with diminishing winds. Low 12 to 17. Wednesday mostly sunny and cold. High 26 to 31. Thursday’s outlook: Fair and a little warmer. Winds westerly 15 to 25 miles per hour and gusty today and northwesterly eight to 15 miles tonight. Precipitation probabilities in per cent; 30 today apd 20 tonight. the Canadian move, as they were when Italy announced Jan. 24 that they planned to recognize Red China. SECOND PROTEST Sharp first announced Canada’s intention to recognize Red China Jan. 22, which prompted a protest from Nationalist China. His speech yesterday brought a second protest from Formosa’s ambassador In Ottawa, Hsuech Yu-chi, who said; “It is still the hope of my government that the Canadian government will reconsider.” “The Canadian action is tantamount to giving encouragement and support to the tyrannical rule of the Chinese Communist regime and deal| a severe blow to the 700 million Chinese people in their struggle for freedom,” said Hsuech. * ★ * Sharp acknowledged that Canada’s relations with Nationalist China are "bound to be affected” But he denied that Canada is allowing these relations to “go down the drain,” indicating Ottawa would like to have a two-China policy. Both Chinas are against this. During preliminary contacts with Canada in Cairo, the Red Chinese reportedly demanded that Ottawa withdraw its recognition of Nationalist China as a price for diplomatic relations with Peking. NATIONALIST THREAT Nationalist China threatened t o withdraw its ambassador from Rome because of Italy’s moves to establish relations with Peking and is expected to do the same in Ottawa if the Canadian government follows through with its intent. Washington officials on Jan. 2 5 privately expressed concern about the impact of expanded international contacts with Peking on the positions of the Nationalist Chinese regime and other non-Communist nations in the Far East. SAIGON (M — The battleship New Jersey returned to the Vietnam war after a month off the firing line and smashed 64 enemy bunkers south of Da Nang, military spokesmen reported today. For four hours yesterday, the 56,000-ton battle wagon hurled 1,900-pound shells at North Vietnamese fortifications which an air spotter said “have been impervious to previous strikes.” ★ ★ ★ The New Jersey’s bombardment was in support of South Korean marines and killed at least five enemy soldiers, a spokesman reported. “We were at extremely close range, about 10,000 yards,” said a member of the ship’s crew. Boatswain’s Mate 3.c. James Swan, “and I could follow the trajectory of the rounds and see them impact. 'The bursts sent smoke and debris about a thousand feet in the air.” Swan, 25, is from North Platte, Neb. ROUTINE JAPAN VISIT The battleship has been in Japan for maintenance and replenishment of her supplies. The U.S. Command also announced another American Jielicopter was shot down and destroyed near Pleiku, in the Central Highlands, but there were no casualties. It was the 2,356th U.S. helicopter lost during the war. * * ★ Vietcong and North Vietnamese forces stepped up their ground war during the night with attacks on three provincial capitals, two allied bases, a pacification team and a government infantry battalion. The North Vietnamese also fired on a small U.S. observation plane over the southern half of the Demilitarized Zone but missed it. South Vietnamese troops were hard hit in two of the attacks, suffering 24 dead and 53 wounded while accounting for only 14 known enemy dead. The rest of the attacks caused only a handful of American and South Vietnamese wounded and light damage. VC RIP SOUTH VIETS In the Mekong Delta, 102 miles southwest of Saigon, Vietcong soldiers ripped into a South Vietnamese infantry battalion with withering niachine gun and small arms fire. Twelve South Vietnamese soldiers, were killed, 35 wounded, and only seven.; enemy bodies were counted. The South Vietnamese soldiers may have been ambushed in the canal-laced delta, but no other detail.^ County Asked for Tax Refund School Aid Plan Proposed NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers are predicted along the Pacific Coast, changing to rain inland through the Rockies tonight. Snow flurries are expected in the Great i-ateg area. It will be warm in the Southeast and cold from the Great Lakes to the Ohio Valley. (Continued From Page One) meaningful way, 1 do not feel that public funds can be used for the indoctrination of specific values.” Augenstein said that he did not want the state to provide funds or facilities for inculcation of religious values. SEPARA-ra REUGIOUS INS’TRUCnON Under the proposal, he said, all pupils would speure their secular education during a specified five or six hours of the day. “TTien either before or after the regular school hours, those pupils who chose to do so could go to separate facilities for their religious wewship or instruction,” he said. His proposal incorporates provisions to insure that participating schoois do not give courses or use texts designed to indoctrinate specific religious beliefs during regular school hours, he said. Augenstein said he favored modifying the present system of granting school aid funds by establishing.the principle that the “state should prov^e the fluids according to the level of taxes that the local district is willing to levy on itself.” Such a method, he said, ‘‘Provides an important means Of leveling the effective tax base.” and would be a basis for deciding the values of "Oouchers. The proposal would not cost the state more, because the funds are already being used, he said. It would only be a realignment of the money. Besides, be suggested, many of the state’s 1,000 parochial schools would probably elect not to participate. BIRMINGHAM — No residents have filed as commission candidates for the April 7 election yet. Deadline for filing nominating petitions is Monday, Feb. 17 at 4 p.m. Nixon Aide First to Meet Soviets WASHINGTON OP) - Gerard C. Smith, new director of the U. S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, will become the first high Nixon administration official to join in an international conference with Soviet representatives. Smith’s meeting with the Russians will come when he attends the next session of 18-nation disarmament commission opening in Geneva March 6. ★ ★ ★ There had been speculation that Smith’s short time in office might cause President Nixon to send a temporary representative. But Smith, in an interview, said, “It would make sense for the new director of the agency to present the American position and also get to know the other disarmament negotiators.” UNCERTAINTY ON TALKS Ultimately Smith will be deeply involved in U. S.-Soviet talks on limiting the deployment of nuclear missiles. When such talks will start, is uncertain. The nuclear missile talks are independent of the international com- The terms of three councilmen: David F. Breck, 752 WiUits; William E. Roberts, 745 Abbey and William B. Saunders, 685 Pierce, will expire in April. Petitions for all three incumbents are reportedly being circulated. However, Saunders has publicly said he is not interested in another 'term. ★ ★ * There will also be two posts open on the city’s library board. The posts are currently filled by Mrs. Pell Holl-ingshead, 489 Argyle and Charles Renfrew, 987 Arden. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Nick D. Christy, 6355 Hills, a director of food service for Awrey Bakeries Inc., has been elected a vice president of the corporation. Christy has complete responsibility for institutional sales, including marketing, new product development, packaging and distribution. He joined Awrey in February, 1967 as food service director. BLOOMFIELD HILLS — John Hutsler, 1935 Quarton, has been named vice president of drug and general merchandise at Allied Supermarkets Inc. in Detroit. ★ ★ * Hutsler will be responsible for the direction of drugstore operations in the Michigan-Ohio area and the activities of the nonfood and general merchandise service. He joined Allied in 1964 as director ol drug store operations and was appointed Director of nonfood operations in 1968. The Geneva conference is scheduled to take up in its regular meetings a variety of disarmament proposals, including the total ban on nuclear weapons, test explosions, control of biological and chemical warfare, prohibition of nuclear weapons installations under the oceans, and eventually a cutoff in the production of nuclear weapons. The Oakland County Board o f Supervisors will be asked this week to pass a resolution .providing for the refund of nonvdted taxes collected during the last three years over the 15-mill limitation. George H. Williams, chairman of the Oakland County Homeowners and Taxpayers Association county committee, sent a letter to the board, asking it to pass a resolution “refunding that portion of our taxes levied and collected over the 15-mill limitation.” * ★ * A formal opinion by Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley last week jeopardized the county’s method of paying courthouse east wing construction costs and much of th? Oakland County Intermediate School budget from funds collected above the 15-mill limitation. TTie current budget calls for a levy, approved last year by the supervisors, of .112 mills over the limitation for the payment to the building authority on lease agreements on the east wing and for paying of drain assessment bonds. The sum to be collected amounts to some $300,000. Intermediate schools are largely financed from a mill levy, two-tenths, above the limitation, which is expected to raise $680,000 this year. Kelley said the county could not gay> construction costs on a long-term basis through the additional leyy, but only on a temporary basis. ★ ★ ★ He ruled that the Intermediate School District is illegal in exceeding the 15 mills. I License Plate | I Deadline Nears | Time is running out for motorists, to purchase 1969 Michigan passenger vehicle license plates within the legal d^^ine period. mier the last-minute rush Feb. 28, drivers whose cars still sport 1968 plates will be ticketed. * * * Area ihotorists wishing to avoid the long llth-hour lines may purchase their plates at 96 E. Huron in Pontiac, 4520 Pontiac Lake in Waterford Township, 329 Walnut in Rochester and 141 E. Walled Lake Drive in Walled Lake. Weiekday office hours at the secretary of state branch offices are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday hours are 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Pontiac and Rochester and 9 a.m. to noon in Waterford Township and Walled Lake. * ★ ★ Fees are payable in cash, payroll checks or cashier’s checks, but not personal checks. Castro "Thaw' on Hijacks Seen By The Associated Press The 110 passengers hijacked to Cuba yesterday were allowed to fly to Miami five hours later aboard the pirated plane — touching off speculation that Fidel Castro has changed his policy toward the unscheduled Havana hops. But the hijackings continue. A Venezuelan airliner with 68 passengers aboard was ordered to fly to Cuba today. The government-run airlines Aeropostal said the plane is a DC9 twin-jet, short-range airliner. It had a crew of five. pe airline said the plane had taken off from Maracaibo at 6 a m. and headed for Caracas. A short time later the pilot, Vladimirp Fernandez, reported to the control tower at Caracas that a hijacker had ordered the plane to Havana. ★ ★ ★ Yesterday’s passenger return marked the first time in 27 hijacks — dating back to last July — that all the passengers were allowed to return with the crew. In New York, Eastern Airlines Vice President Jonathon Rinehart said prompt release of the hijacked crew and passengers indicated a “slight thaw” in the Cuban government’s attitude toward hijackings. ★ ★ ★ The pilot of the hijacked plane said he didn’t know why the Cubans let the passengers return with him, but officials who asked not to be identified said it was the result of negotiations between the U.S. and Cuba. Farmington Twp. Incident 3 Arrested in Stabbing at OCC Three suspects have been arrested in connection with an incident Friday in which an Oakland Community College student was stabbed with a screwdriver. Michael Berger, 21, of Oak Park, was released from the William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, yesterday, two days after undergoing a 2V4-hour operation to remove the screwdriver lodged in his |aw. Arrested by Farmington Township police were Walter G. Wheeler, 19, Durane L. Jones, 18, and Dwight R. Moorehead, 18, all of Detroit. They were arrested when they entered the campus yesterday morning to talk to the dean, according to a Redford State Police post sopkesman. Wheeler was charged with assault with intent to do great b^ily harm less than the crime of murder, while the others were charged with assault and battery. Investigations are continuing to see if anything more is involved, according to Redford State Police. The three were arraigned before District Judge Michael Hand, and all entered an innocent plea. All are in the Oakland County Jail. Bonds are set at $1,000 for Wheeler and $500 for the other two. * ★ ★ The stabbing occurred when Berger attempted to turn away five persons from a fraternity dance at the Orchard Ridge campus in Farmington Township, because they refused to pay. * ★ ★ Shouting reportedly developed between Berger and one of the other men after Berger noticed that they had tried to duplicate a mark on their hand with ink resembling a stamp mark identifying those who paid. 15% OFF ON ALL HAIR GOODS SALE ON FOR ALL OF FEBRUARY Once a Year Special! AVAILABLE AT All 8 Perry Pharmacies, Thrifty Drugs and Lee Prescriptions in Drayton Plains. DRAYTON WIG Distributors Card* (Wholesale and Retail) Honored 4666 W. Walton Blvd. One Block East of Dixie Hwy. 673-071g __________J573.3408 '5 THE PQNTl^AC PRK.SS, Tt’ESDAV, FEBRUARY 11, 1909 Nixon Zeroes In on Business Empires WASHINGTON (AP) — A call that such legislation already by President Nixon for legisla- was in the works and will be in-tion to control some conglomer- troduced in about a week. He ates cdmes when the sprawling said it would zero in not only on business empires stitched to- one-bank nolding companies, gether by mergers of companies buj also on conglomerates com-in unrelated fields—are already posed of manufacturing and under increasing scrutiny by the other types of companies show-government. ing an increasing appetite for The Florida White House said banks, over- the weekend Nixon had Since the number of one-bank asked the TYeasury Department holding companies has nearly doubled in four years, adminis-tratiwi spokesmen said, it is felt there is no time to be lost in defusing the situation. to draw up legislation aimed at one-bank holding companies, which are single banks that have set up holding companies capable of expanding into unre-BLURRY OF INTEREST lated areas. j noted that there * * were more than 800 one-bank An authoritative Treasury De-1 holding companies in December partment source said Monday| with aggregate deposits of more than $100 billion. In 1965 there were 550, mostly snriall ones, with $15 billion in deposits. Word of the impending bill follows a flurry of government interest in the growth of conglomerates. Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., of the House Ways and Means Committee suggested Sunday that conglonerates go slow in snatching up companies if they are depending on current tax provisions to give them a break. Mills said the financing of conglomerate empires is top-heavy with debentures which, he said, not only present problems for the management but «ould lead to tax deductions that could reduce government revenue. OTHER PROBES Besides the ways and means committee, the Federal Communications and Trade commissions plan separate lopks into the conglomerates, as does the House Antitrust subcommittee. •k -k * The House Banking and Currency Committee issued a 393-page report Monday, warning against the growth of one-bank holding companies. No legislation was proposed, but the committee chairman, Texas Democrat Wright Patman, is expected to propose his own bill next week. Troop Pullout Prime Topic library in Area Sets No-Fine Day U.S., Viet Allies Due to Meet WASHINGTON (AP) — The the Philippines and South Viet-jby Secretary of State William P. | first high-level meeting among nam. [Rogers. | the United States and its alliesj one of the prime subjects ex- Besides the more than half-1 in the Vietnam war since the-pected to be discussed at the al- million Americans fighting in e advent of the Nixon administra- ijgd meeting would be the se- Vietnam, South Kotea has 50,000|t tion is expected to take placejqugnce of troop withdrawal if troops, Thailand 12,000, Austra- i this spring in Bangkok. and when the peace talks showjlia 8,000, the PhiUppines a com- t Patrons holding overdue U.S. officials said the session positive results. [bat engineer batallion and New books may return them The Waterford Township public library bas designated tomorrow as “no fine” day in honor of Lincoln’s birthday. „ SAIGON STEP-UP probably will follow immediately after the ministerial meeting of the Southeast Asia Treaty Or- . i ganization. No date has been an- Vietnam have been discussing nounced for the SEATO meet-[‘be possibility of substantial ing but in the past such troop reductions in sions were held in April. ‘be relatively near future as the * * * Saigon forces increase their Such a meeting would proceed ability to take over more of the any summit session that Presi- fighting, dent Nixon would hold with the| The spring meeting will in-Vietnam allies—the heads oflvolve the foreign ministers of government of Thailand, South the involved countries, with the Korea, Australia, New Zealand, United States to be represented The Treasury Department source said the legislation now being written would set down strict boundaries (or one-bank j holding companies, compelling them to stick to financial activi-' ties instead of branching into' manufacturing or other fields. Under the Bank Holding Act of 1956, a company holding 25 pel cent interest in two or more banks was barred from control of any nonbanking concern. I ★ ★ ★ But companies holding a single bank were left unregulated. This loophole has allowed conglomerates to take over one bank while at the same time allowing single banks to set up their own holding company which would take control of thei original bank and move into at^ i areas it wished. QUALITY REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE HEARING AIDS Loanart Available bat engineer batallion and New i Zealand less than 1,000. ' without cost to the main Ministerial meetings among,-jthe allies nave been neia every, , year smce the foreign troops, | ^ake, from 10 were sent into South Vietnam.,^ to 5 p.m. And there was one summit |p meeting involving President | Johnson and the other allied | heads of state. Ij Here’s Your Chance for Big Savings on American Tourister Luggage Valentine Gift Suggestion :% off lls the only luggage with exclusive lectures such as foom-rubber handles, stainless steel tongue-ingroove closures and non-spring swivel locks that con't get sprung. Inm, sleek styling in attractive colors. Choice of totes, 2- or 3-suiters, Pullmans, beauty coses. SIMMSil Luggage - Basement Level State May End $1 Fee for the Insured Drivers WITHDRAWAL FORMULA That session at Manila in 1966 | resulted in a formula for withdrawal from South Vietnam calling for all foreign troops to leave the country within six months of a settlement. There also is a slight possibility that President Nixon might meet with South Vietnamese [leaders sometime before the foreign ministers gather in LANSING (AP) This may be ble for an ac-cident is supposed* * * the year to bring repeal of the to repay the fund for damages j^e said at his news confer- controversial $1 which motorists causes. ^gg|j j^g who have auto insurance must * * * present plans for such a meet- nav each vear because of mo- Carroll, deputy ad- ing, but indicated a session ^ ^ ^ ministrator of the fund, said the|could be worked into his sched- torists who have none. three-year-old fund contained ule during his upcoming West- Secretary of State James $28.85 million as of Jan. 13, of ern European tour if it is con- Hare, whose department admin-l which $11.1 million was ear-sidered advisable. isters the motor vehicle accident marked for claims then being—------------------------------------ claims fund, says a study is adjusted, now being made to see whether * * ★ the fund can afford to do with-! Carroll said fee payments into out the $1 charged to insured the fund in the fiscal year 1967-motorists. 68 totaled just over $13 million. * * * , Of that total, $8.97 million came| “Right now,” he said, “it cer- from uninsured drivers, he said,' tainly looks like we think we’re adding that insured motorists sound for a three-year period.” contributed $4.07 million. No questions will be asked, according to a ? spokesman. PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL & HEARING AlO CENTER Phone 682-1113 EAR WAX? HEARING AlO OEALER nl Service Hours Wednesday 10 a.m. to 3 p.n All Popular Make Electric Shaver Tune-Up Clinic Guaranteed service-trained expert will clean, oil and adjust all popular makes of electric shavers while you wait. Sundries —Main Floor . . AT ALL SIMMSil. 4.10 1/8-lb. Miniature Heart !^-lb. Miniature Heart Fllj Delidovl McDonoldl Chocolol.i.. ^ M '/2-lb. Heart Box Mb. Heart Box p 1-lb. Deluxe Heart $2.25 list Brochi Chocoloiei |.39 Mb. Flower Heart 995 #8966 BrocIC. Chocolo.., .... Ml Mb. Ribbon Heart $2 25 l.st, # 8967 Bracbi |95 2-lb. Lace-Flower Heart 49.5 2-lb. Miniature Heart 99.7 ) list, #20923 Brochs.. W 450 P 2-tb. Red Satin Heart 4931 2-lb. Foil Heart 9751 $4.50 liM, McDonnldi Oiocolnlei. 0 2-lb. Fabulous Heart ^951 -lb. Tear Drop Heart ^95 j 4-Oz. Conver. Hearts |^c| 98 North Saginaw St. Gunninaliam’s SIMMSil. That is, even if the charge Is removed this year, it might have to be reimposed three years from now. That, he said, would depend on what is shown by further experience with the fund. PAY $35 Under the 1965 law which established the fund, uninsured drivers pay $35 into it each time they apply for new license plates. Drivers with insurance pay $1. Money in the fund is used to pay damage claims to the victims of uninsured motorists. The uninsured driver responsi- FRESH STOCK AT SIMMS AMAZING NEW They Last a Lot Longer tf» raOTOGRAPHT, RASHUGHTS; TOYS, GAMES AND » RADIOS MallorY 98 N. SAGINAW ST. Discounts All Over the Store-Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. TOMORROW WEDS Out/ LINCOLMS BIRT«DHy 12 ‘ 0 n m — vnu can come to Simms and buv these 'LINCOLN BIRTHDAY' specials at the Tomorrow only 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.-you con come to Simms and buy these 'LINCOLN BIRTHDAY' specials at these extra low prices. And you con ^ in downtown parking mall in front of Simms for 1 hour ... hove ticket stamped at time of purchase (except on tabocco 0"° items). EXTRA-STRENGTH EXCEDRIN TABS $:i.69 jniik 375 212 Extra strength pain tablets for headaches, minor aches and pains. Limit 1. -DRUGS, Main Floor LANOLIN PLUS HAND LOTION $2.25 Value J12 With dispenser. Softening action due to lanolin contents. Limit 2. -COSMETICS, Main Floor FAMOUS VITALIS HAIR TONIC $1.79 Value |12 Barber size—12 ounces to groom hair without grease tor men. Limit 2: -DRUGS, Main Floor For Upset Stomach PEPTO-BISMOL $1.69 Value jl2 16-Ounce size of Pepto-Bismol for upset stomach, indigestion, nausea etc. -DRUGS, Main Floor ‘CALM’SPRAY DEODORANT $1.89 Value F Anti-perspirant spray powder for complete all-day protection. 8.8 ounces. -COSMETICS, Main Floor DANDRUFF CONTROL ^RINSEAWAY’ $2.00 Value F Corrcentra(ed medical formula for control of dandruff. Limit 2. -COSMETICS, Main Floor 9-V. Fresh Hi-PoWer TRS. BATTERY Simm» Low Price I2f Fits most all transistor radios. Imported hi-power battery. Limit 10. -CAMERAS, Main Floor 20-Exp. Instamatic KODACOLOR FILM Simms Lower Price Cxi26-20 film in 20 exposure rolls, limit 10 per customer. -CAMERAS, Mioin Floor Kodak 124 Insta. CAMERA SET Complete set to take color pictures now—camera, cube, 4ilm and batteries. -CAMERAS, Main Floor BLACK & DECKER 3/8-ln. Drill =1412 2 s |12 Powerful %-inch electric drill for home and shop use. Limit 1. Model U124. READY TO USE ANTIOUING KIT Use these to give your furni-, ture that antique look. Red or white finishes. -HARDWARE, 2nd Floor BERNZ-O-MATIC PROPANE TORCH 91! Model TX20 Bantam torch for the home workshop. Limit per person. -HARDWARE, 2nd Flooi METAL KING SIZ^ TV TABLE TRAY 16 X 22 X 24-inch decorated trays with brass finished legs that fit over the lap. Hardware, 2nd Floor MIXES and POURS DRINKMASTER $4.95 Value Battery operated — no plugs, no cords . . . press mix to blend your drinks, press pour to serve. Battery included. -HOUSEWARES, 2nd Floor ‘EARLY AMERICAN’ DIL LAMPS $4.95 Value Charming lamp for many hot of gentle glowing light. With scented oil. Gift boxed. -HOUSEWARES. 2nd Floor ‘WAHL’ ELECTRIC DOG CLIPPERS $18.75 7-piece set to clip pets hair correctly. Deluxe od|ustable clipper and accessories. -SUNDRY, Main Floor McGILL 4-BARREL MONEY CHANGER 51! Hi-speed money changer holds pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters. -SUNDRY, Main Floor GROUP OF SELECT WALL DECOR $7.99 Pair Q12 0 Choice of Gold Flock Mir and Brass Wall plocques Ceramic decorated centers. -HOUSEWARES, 2nd Floor FAMOUS BRANDS CIGAREHES U " fl vr Choice of Regulars, King and King filters. 100 and 101 mm size not included. Limit 2 ctns. -TOBACCO, Main Floor MEN’S CALENDAR WRIST WATCH ^ $12.95 Value yi2 Antimagni^ic watch with sweep second hand. Gold color or chrome case. -SUNDRY, Main Floor BIG 4 BABY BEN ALARM CLOCKS £1! Choice of Big Ben or Baby Ben Alarm clocks. Plain dials. -SUNDRY, Mam Floor Troy District Gives State Its Side of Story By T()M GRAY TROY — Officials in this school district have completed answois to V questions raised by the Stale Attorney General's office, hut a dale for the oiii-come of the slate's investigation of district finances remains in the imielinile future. The attorney general's office has been conducting the probe since last Fehriiarv, when board of education trustee, Harold A. Janes announced that he "had con-. (erred ’ with slate officials on ' ixissible misuse of funds ’ * * * Janes' announcement was follow'cd in October by a report from auditors of the Slate nepartmeni of Treasury, who alleged that •'improper spending” by the board from the 1%5 and 1966 building and site funds totaled $858,000. Assistant Ally. Gen Kugene Krasicky said last month that district officials wi'ie allempimg to show that some of the allegedly misspent funds were used propwly. IN MAIL ON FRIDAY According to Schools Supt. Rex B. Smith, the final .portion of the ad-mini.slration's response to the state was completed and mailed PYiday, Krasicky, who is to write an opinion when the investigation is complete, said yesterday his office is ‘‘working on another aspect” in the Troy situation — an aspect not related to the answer. * * ★ Smith, who said earlier that in most of the board of education's opinion, “practically all the auditors’ conclusions and opinions are either erroneous or of little importance,” reiterated that position yesterday. While allowing that “some things will depend on the interpretation of certain parts of the law by the attorney general,” the superintendent added, “I still don’t believe anything seriously irregular or improper was done.” The question of what action, if any. will be taken if the audit report is found to be accurate reriiains unanswered, Krasicky haS said only that two questions will have to be considered: first, what can be done to correct any errors which havfe been made in spending from the two site funds, ^ind second, whether any action against district officials should be taken. In the meantime, the possibility exists that district voters may face a fourth straight special election on a money request without a determination of the results of the investigation. On April 7, citizens will go to the polls to vote on approval of a $3.5-million bond The board split, 5-2, on scheduling the vote before the attorney general’s opinion is received, with Janes and Trustee Leonard P, Lucas dissenting. * * * If the issue passes, it will be the second vote in the year since the investigation began in which additional funds have been approved. * ★ ★ A bond issue attempt for $6.5 million failed in January, although a millage renewal passed at the same time. Earlier, a request for additional miH'age passed at the annual school board elections last June, with the amount trimmed from a previous failure. THE PONTIAC PRESS H KSDAV, 1 KimrAHV II, A $ hff/f/em City Council Members in Rochester Table Second Offer to Join SEMCOG ROCHESTER - City officials still do not want to join the Soiillicastcrn Michigan Council of Governments (SEMCOG I. That much was clear la.st night as the City Council unceremoniously tabled indefinitely a second offer to join the regional organization. The vote was unanimous. * * w The move to table failed to provoke any discu.ssion from council members. ' A letter from SEMCOG chairman William L. Mainland of Milford Township was read at last night’s council ses.sion. Mainland wrote that SEMCOG now has a membership of 114 local units of government, and had build a solid foundation in its first year of operation. SUPERVISOR I‘AY Despite the relative silence on SEMCOG, councilmeq indicated some interest in proposed salaries for members of the revamped County Board of Supervisors. After quizzing district Supervisor Fred Houghten, R-RiK’hester, council approved a resolution backing Houghten’s stand for a salary somewhere around $5,000 to $6,000 per year for .supervisors. * ★ ★ Houghton, a member of the county board’s personnel practices compjittee, explained his committee’s salary recommendation, which was to be put to Regional Treatment of Sewage Opposed By L. (SArY THORNE Assistant City Editor-Suburban ROCHESTER - “Used sewer equipment just doesn't .sell.” Despite the intended levity, this city could some day be in the position of trying to peddle its sewage treatment plant, according to a report last night to the City Council. A * * Assistant City Manager Robert Smalley reported on a hearing in Warren yesterday on the state’s move to invoke a future regional plan for sewage treatment. * w * The hearing featured testimony by Roc'he,ster, Warren, Mount Clemens and I’ontiac. It wa.s conducted by a joint House-Senate legislative subcommittee. Rochester High Plan to Be Aired ROCHESTER — The board of education last night scheduled a special public meeting for Thursday at 8 p.m. at the board offices, 522 W. Fourth, to di.scuss further a proposed secondary school housing pLan Schools Supt. Douglas Lund said the board “hopes to make a final determination” Thursday on a solution tor the problem of secondary school housing for next year. * * ★ After studying the problem for about two months, a citizens’ advisory committee appointed by the board suggested two weeks ago that a split-shift arrangement be adopted at Rochester High School, with two separate student bodies attending at different times of the day. Students to attend Adams High School, which will open during the next school year, would have their own faculty, administration and athletic program. According to Lund, however .'representatives of the junior class have expressed concern about the proposed splitting of their class, which would graduate at the end of next school year. The board discussed the question at some length last night, the superintendent said, before postponing a decision on the question and calling the special meeting. Rochester, along with the other three citie.s, is opposed to the regional approach, which could have the effect of forcing the four cities to shut down their sewage treatment plants and join a giant treatment network. Detroit would anchor the network. “We let it be known we aren’t going down without a fight,” Smalley reported to the council. He said testimony covered objections to the plan, pointing out, for example, that Detroit Is getting only 35 per cent removal with its current primary plant, while Rochester and other communities feeding effluent to the Clinton River are getting up to 90 per cent removal. Smalley said a Warren spokesman even claimed they were producing a 99 per cent pure output; IRONY CITED City Manager William Sinclair commented on the irony of the controversy. Said Sinclair: . “Rochester started working on this (sewage treatment) many years ago. What they’re saying is ‘it’s tough luck you took the initiative, but this is the plan now,’ It (the regional plan) penalizes communities that did something about sewage treatment.” * ★ * Smalley said that the solution for communities wanting to dissent from the regional plan may be a higher level of treatment so that the effluent discharged into the Clinton River is pure enough to satisfy the State Water Resources Commission. In the past, Pontiac cify officials have indicated they could provide a level of treatment equal to or beyond Detroit and still do it more economically than the Motor City. if it it Last night, Smalley and Sinclair said there was even a question of whether a so-called regional plan existed. They contended the plan had never really been formally adopted by any agency or governing body. the full board of supervisors this afternoon. The committee, he said, recommended a range of $4,000 to $4,900, plus a range of $25 to $35 per diem with a maximum of 100 meetings per year. THREE FACTORS Houghten said the new board was going to cost taxpayers more money because of three factors. First, the board will act more often as a committee of the whole. Secondly, Houghten said partisan politics costs more, and thirdly, a good cross section of people is needed for the board and some people wHl need the money. Asked to explain why partisan politics Increases the cost, Houghten replied that “It just takes more time — probably twice as much time.” * * ★ The question of supervisors’ pay was raised in a rejsolution sent Rochester by the Troy City Commission. The Troy resolution backed a pay plan of $40 per meeting or $5,000 maximum per year. Also, the 'Troy resolution urged the county board to hold night meetings, which has been urged by some groups interested In county governmental operations. PAVING PLANS OKAYED Rochester supported Houghten on this when the supervisor said he favored three or four night meetings a year. In other business last night, the council approved revised plans for the paving of South street from the east city limits to First. Total cost is estimated at $170,000. As.sessments have not yet been worked out. A public hearing is set for Feb. 29. City Manager William Sinclair reported last night on changes in the traffic control signals proposed for Main and University where the two streets intersect downtown. A 90-day trial was ordered for a ban on left-hand turns off westbound University onto southbound Main. The new regulation is to be effective March 1. In still other business, council approved making a request of Detroit Edison for a cost estimate on putting Edison lines underground in the east and west alleys back of Main. A cost estimate is needed for next year’s budget, said city officials. May 1 Delivery Date for Book on Rochester ROCHESTER — A delivery date of May 1 was announced last night for the “Rochester Historical Book,” which is being printed in conjunction with this city's centennial this year. Councilman John Boeberitz, who is also general chairman of the centennial commission, said a. late printing schedule caused the delay. He said the book had been scheduled for delivery this month, but unavoidable production problems developed. MOVING DAY — Miss Rebecca Lamb (left), assistant library director, and Miss Nancy Richardson, head circulation clerk, pack part of the library’s 40,000 books for the move to Bloomfield Township’s new library on Lone Pin^. Bloomfield Twp. Books Are Moved to New Library BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Librarians at the township’s old library couldn’t pack fast enough yesterday as they began moving to their new quarters. After four years of cramped quarters In an office building at Long Lake and Telegraph, the township’s library will now serve the public from a new facility on Lone Pine just east of Telegraph. The new $1,160,000 library was financed from a tend issue voted by township residents in 1966. It opens to the public Monday at 10 a.m. Built on two levels, the new library is composed of four interconnected brick Injuries From Car Fatal to Novi Man NOVI — A village man, William R. McQueen, 52, of 40995 Grand River died today from injuries received when he was hit by a car last Wednesday, according to village police. McQueen was .crossing Novi Road near Grand River at 6:49 a m. when he was hit by a southbound car driven by Gerald T. Cook, 23, Oakland Highway Toll in '69 18 L«st Y««r to DaU 15 pavilions with sharply sloping roofs. On the upper level are the adult reading room, the youth room, the reference room, an adult lounge, study carrels and administrative and work areas. ROOM FOR MEETINGS A 150-seat lecture room to be used for educational, cultural and civic meetings is located on the lower level. Stackable chairs and a display system permit conversion of the lecture room to an exhibit area. H. G. Johnston, library director, said approximately $150,000 left from the bond issue will be spent on increasing the book collection and equipping the library. * ★ ★ The library is tax-supported by Bloomfield Township and can be used by any township resident. Through library contracts, residents of Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills, and other areas whose libraries have contracts with the Wayne County Federated Library System (of which the new library is a member) also can use the new facility. of 31161 Old Plank, Wixom. Police said no charges were filed. McQueen wak wearing dark clothing, and the driver^of the car behind Cook’s told police that he couldn’t see McQueen either until just before the man was hit. Increase Is Approved OXFORD! - Stockholders of Oxford Savings Bank have approved an increase in the bank’s capital stock from $300,000 to $400,000 by means of a one-for-three stock dividend. In the annual report to stockholders, , H. A. Pickford, 64 Pleasant, executive vice president and cashier, said growth • in assets for 1968 totaled 10.2 per cent, to $13.4 million as of Dec. 31. The cash dividend to stockholders was $3.25 per share. BRANDON TOWNSHIP - Residents of the school district here will be asked to approve a bond issue package this spring, the board of education revealed last nigbt. The package will range from $3 million to $3.6 million, depending on costs. The funds would be used for construction of a new high school and additions and renovations to the district’s existing junior-senior high school and elementary schools. * * ★ The new high school would be built on a di.strict-owned 20-acre site directly across from the present junior-senior high school off M15 at the south edge of Ortonvillc. ' Board President, Ronald Sutton noted last night that the growth potential of Brandon Township and the rapidly increasing enrollment makes it imperative that a new high school be opened within two years. The board plans two study sessions next week to work out plans for the tend issue package. Preliminary plans for the high school are expected to be ready in a month. After building plans and costs are firmed up, "a bond issue will go to the votersf sometime in late spring, Sutton .said. He indicated the school board plans no increase in the present ceiling of 12 mills for tended indebtedness. ★ w ★ Sutton said the board would probably need the full 12 mills for the bond issue package. The operating millage of S mills is the fourth lowest of all Oakland County school districts, Sutton pointed out. If approved the package would give a taxpayer with an assessed valuation of $5,000 a total tax bill of around $148 per year. ADD TEACHERS Clyde Fisher, superintendent o f schools, said the proposed bond issue, if approv^, would provide funds during a five-year period to renovate all of the existing elementary schools, construct an addition to the Belle Ann Elementary School and a curriculum resource center, and add additional teachers as needs warranted. Fisher indiclled, however, that plans concerning the extent of the renovations at some schools have not been clarified. School Millage Action Delayed in Walled Lake WALLED LAKE — Although an exact amount has yet to be set, the board of education did discuss the upcoming millage in detail last night. Board member Mrs. Barbara Scully left early because of illness, and a decision was made to wait for a full board before taking action to set the millage amount. Action will probably be taken at a special meeting Feb. 24. The board last night reviewed projected income for next year versus a tentative budget, according to schools Supt. Dr. George Garver. This year’s budget is $6.2 million. 'The tentative budget is approximately $7 million. QUESTIONNAIRE RESUL’TS The board also reviewed some results of a questionnaire sent to every household in the community—even those with no school-age children. The questionnaires, which included two pages of facte about the community, asked the community to rate the school system and discuss problems. “The response has been overwhelming. 'There is a 13 per cent return to date and returns are still coming in,” Garver said. * ★ * Educational specifications for the new vocational center to be built soon and reports from committees on the year-round school operations and community school programs will also be discussed at the Feb. 24 meeting. In other business, L. D. Armstrong Landscape Co. of Fraser was awarded the contract for the site development of Western High School. The contract of $189,670 will go for development of outdoor facilities, including eight tennis courts, football fields, a hard-surface running track, baseball fields and related facilities. TWO RESTRICTIONS Mrs. Scully last night Introduced two resolutions—which were passed—declaring board opposition to aid for nempublic schools and encouraging additional financing of the public school systems. The administration gave the board a brief report on the review of debt needs involving the school bond loan program. The report showed that no money will have to be borrowed on this program for at least the next three years and perhaps never—because of the area’s increased tax base. When a bond Issue for the high school was passed, a provision stated that if more money was needed to pay for principal and interest on the loans the school district could borrow money from the state. This would hold only if residents were paying the seven mills assessed for debt retirement. School officials had thought some $400,-000 might have to be borrowed over the next three years. Brandon Schools Plan Spring Bond Vote Four Promoted to VP by Bank Sidney C. Skaar of 3645 Upton, 'Troy, was promoted to vice president and head of the metropolitan department of the Bank of the Commonwealth, bank Present George W. Miller announced today/ Sktor, formerly vice president In charge of the loan administration and analysis department, was recently promoted t» executive vied president in charge of the bank’s commercial and installment lending operations. Lake Orion PTA Unit to Elett New Officers LAKE ORION - The Carpenter Elementary School PTA will elect officers for next school year at its meeting tonight at 8 at the school, 2290 Flint-ridge. Orion Township. Students from the third and fifth grades will present a talent show at the meeting, and youngsters from all grades will present solos and instrumental music. SKAAR BERGMAN Reuben T. Bergman was promoted to vice president and group head, metropolitan department. Bergman of 32870 Robinhood, Bloomfield Hills was named a vice president in the metropolitan division in 1967. Donald B. Delzell of 7409 St. Auburn, Bloomfield Tow’nship was promoted to vice president and group officer, branch administration. In his new post he will .supervise 20 Commonwealth branches located on Detroit’s West Side. In other business, the board named Fisher as head negotiator during upcoming teacher contract negotiations, and elected Fred Howard as the new board vice president replacing James Wright who previously resigned. The board also agreed to oppose aid to nonpublic schools. Noting the Brandon district has no nonpublic schools, Sutton said, “Taking money out of the system to help nonpublic schools would hurt the Brandon district very hard financially. WRITE LEGISLATfMIS He urged township residents to write Legislators, expressing opposition to parochiaid proposals. The board will meet Feb. 17-18 to review teacher contracts and furfher, discuss the bond issue proposal. DELZELL KORNEY John J. Korney of 16771 Patton, Detroit, was promoted to vice president. Midwest department. He will assun^ responsibility for the bank’s newly formed public funds department, directing the bank’s activities with agencies of the city, state and local governmeht and other public and quasi-public organizations. A L THE h)NTIACri»RIvSS. l UESDAV. FERHUARV li. ii)(59 ----:----^----------------^—...........-.- -- Effort to Save Birds in 0/7 Slick Goes On SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) — Most of the oil slick off the California coast has broken up, but it will be a long time before the bird crisis is over. | Cormorants, ducks, gulls, sandpipers and loons still are dying from oil poisoning despite volunteer and professional efforts to save them. ■ * ★ * I Three bird-rescue stations re-* ported Monday 1,053 birds brought in since a well on the ocean floor started leaking ^wo weeks ago. Of this number, 297 have died. Uncounted hundreds more have been found dead on thei beaches, their feathers black-1 ened with crude oil, their ei^e? inflamed, their intestinds| burned with a purgative far! more toxic than castor oil. 200,000 GALLONS i The runaway well spewed’ [more than 200,000 gallons of oil into Santa Barbara Channel and I along about 30 miles of Pacificj j Ocean beaches before it was plugged Saturday. The slick once extended over 800 square The main body of the slick j Until the ocean and beaches was broken up by winds, waves can be cleared of this, slime-a and chemical dispersants but task that may take weeks~the great patches also soaked into , . , , ^ u the sandy beaches, said Paul ".u "a? t Falco, regional director of the'^^ged birds that dive for fish U S. Air and Water Pollution the long-legged ones that Control Administration. sprf for crabs and * * * clams. I “The oil still at sea should BIRD LAUNDRIES | come ashore in the next week or[ The rescue stations are bird| so,” De Falco said. jlaundAes where the feathered! Round-the-clock efforts con-j unfortunates are washed in oil-! tinued to suck up the remainingjdissolvli^ agents, hand-dried oil with pump ijoats or to soak it land kept in warm pens, up with tons of straw or similar} Upon arrival, the birds are materials. fed butter to cleanse their How do you pick tho hoorlns aid that’a right for yOu7 Beltone offers you the broadest range of hearing correction in the world . . . ' to fit any hearing loss that can be corrected. But with this wide range of choice, how do we select the aid for your individual loss? Let us show you how easy—and how accurate—it is with the Beltone Audio Selectometer, a remarkable electronic device that lets you hear for yourself the fitting that's right lor you. There's no cost or obligation to "hear what you've been missing." 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MOTOROLA 18" UHF/VHF PORTABLE Here's big screen portable — front is all picture — but still the controls ore conveniently up front. Sound is out front, tool Cabinet is slim and lightweight. Disappearing handle. Sturdy antenna. All channel UHF/VHF. Giont 172 sq. in. picture area. 100 Pay even less with coupon. NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH RD., CORNER ELIZABETH LK. RD. • DAILY 10 to 9 9 PHONE 682-2330 OAKLAND MALL IN TROY I-T5 at 14 MILE RD. OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 PHONE 585-5143 mouths and crops, and to act ing wings and pecking beaks in as a purgative to rid them of a labor of mercy. (poisonous oil. After being| At two other stations in near-cleaned they are put in the sun-j by Carpinteria and Goleta, simi-shine and encouraged to preen, jlar salvage is under way under * J * ★ jlhe guidance of agents of the One station is at the Child’s Department of Fish and Estate Zoo here, where volun- u teer townspeople Onder the di-jO''’ rection of Dr. Waldo G. Abbot, curator of birds and mammals CAN’T BE PUT BACK at the Santa Barbara Museum One problem: Laundered of Natural History, brave buffet- birds can’t be put back in the isea right away, says a fish and game man, because "they'd 2_. sink like a rock. They have no Clfw frPDOrrS on their feathers.” Experts aren’t sure how long it will take this oil to return, but think it might be months until the next moult. At Carpinteria, Allen Percy, an automotive engineer for the oil firm, has found it takes two men about 20 minutes to clean a Will Be Aired Two year-end reports will be up for consideration by the City Commission at its meeting at 8 tonight at City Hall, East Wide small seabird such as a grebe. Track and East Pike. i Says co-worker J. G. Huff- * ★ * I man, normally an electrical en- Due to be submitted are a beginning to report by the Litter Control!smell like a fish and think like Division 1 of the Department of^ Bird.” Public Vrorks and tovices and' Donald M. Robinson, superin-a report by the Hospita !tendent of the Channel Islands Building Authority. National Monument offshore, j ★ * ★ said that unless winds change, [ (rare seals on the channel is- Also on the agenda are some jgnds are expected to escape rezomng requests and ap-harm. He said the only present pointments. | danger to sea life was to abalo- ~ ^ ; !ne, lobsters, sea urchins and un- The value of U.S. shipmentsidergga plant life in tide pools hit abrohd of manufactured articles by oil. The seals apparently reached a record level of $20.8 realized the danger, he said, billion last year, 8.5 per cent “and didn’t go near the oily wa-higher than the preceding year.'ter.” CI.EAN1NG A DIRTY BIRD - Housewives, ornithologists, teen-agers and scienti.sts have turned out to ease the plight of oil-encrusted seabirds along the beaches of the Santa Barbara channel in California. 'I'he birds were caught in the slick caused by a seeping oil well. A cormorant (top), with his long bill held by a rubber band, is given a soaking in nonsudsing dispersant to soak the oil off its feathers. A duck (bottom) takes it calmly as it is rinsed in clean tap water. The birds are dried and fed and have to be kept for several months until the natural oil returns to their feathers. YOU CAN S^E FOREVER — Denver architect Charles Deaton has built his home atop 8,000-foot Genesee Mountain 20 miles west of Denver. The $100,000 home commands a view of 80 miles over the mountain see his home as “sculptural architecture, the three-bedroom, trilevel home. ■nery. Deatop refers to An elevator services STOPPED COLD BY STORM — This huge traffic jam resulted yesterday on U.S. 1 north of New Brunswick, N.J., alter a crippling storm dumped 15 inches of snow on the Northeast. Hiis traffic pile-up was caused when the northmi end of the New Jersey Turnpitee was closed by drifts. STRANDED BY STORM — Passengers at the Boston bus terminal early yesterday ride out the storm in various ways. Some catch naps, while others read or converse. A state of emergency was declared as the area was paralyzed. THET PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 48058 48 West Huron Street IxecgUve Vie* Pte»l<) *Dd Editor J. Keep M»naBtng Editor TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 11, mi9 Legislator Pay Soars At a time when inflation in the United States is no longer an abstract concern of economists but a grim reality affecting the personal fortunes of every American, the Uountry is being treated to a most inflationary round of salary increases for its public servants. No. 1 on the Gimme Parade was the 100 per cent annual increase (from $100,000 to $200,000) Congress voted the presidential office, followed by the 41 per cent boost in tlie yearly pay of Congressmen— jumping if from $30,000 to $42,500 with whopping salary ri.ses for Uabinet officers and other high Government functionaries. ★ ★ ★ Here at home, our State legis-1 a tors presented themselves with a 20 per cent increase that raised their annual stipend from $12,500 to $15,000. Incidentally, pa>^viso, Michigan’s lawmakers arc second only to California’s. And in Wayne County, the citizenry witnessed as bald a disregard of public interest as is seldom seen in the action of the Wayne County Hoard of Supervisors, led by Chairman Albert J. Zak, voting themselves a pay package that would have jacked up (no pun intended) the yearly pay of $45,000 for the old 135-member board to more than $500,000 for the new 26-momber board. Widespread pro);ests of the grab and recall threats against board members, however, have moved the supervisors to lower their dollar sights substantially. All this, mind you, when governmental units on all levels are struggling with red-ink budgets; when taxpayers are groaning under the hack-breaking burden of rising taxes; and in the face of periodic pleas by (he Nation’s leadership that labor and industry “hold the line’’ against excessive wage demands and unjustified increase of product prices to combat the inflationary spiral. If consistency is indeed a jewel, as has been said, the fiscal gem image of a disturbingly large number of our elected representatives and high office holders has assumed a strong resemblance to paste. Stamp Out Smut Mail Is there anything an indignant householder can do to shut off the unsolicited flow of obscene advertising or other matter of like character that comes by mail to his address ? Indeed there is. Spurred by the flood of vicious mail that finds its way into Ameri- ^ can homes, post office authorities two years ago effected a postal regulations amendment that makes the addressee the sole judge of whether mailed matter is “erotically arousing or sexually provocative.’’ The U.. S. Post Office Department received 140,000 complaints last year, and the local post office reports that daily protests range from seven to 10. There are, however, a couple of procedural steps to ,be observed by an addressee desirous of damming the stream of obscenity at the source: ★ ★ ★ • 1)0 NOT give the objection- able material to your carrier or send it to the post office. • 1)0 call the post office (FE 8-4511 Ext. 21), or call there in person, for the required forms that will remove your name from the mailing list of the sender. The Post Office Department has published a pamphlet — How You Can Curb Pandering Advertisements —which is now available at the Pontiac post office. In addition to explaining how the law works, it contains a form letter that can be followed when filing a complaint. Although the bulk of obscene and pornographic mail originates from no more than 20 firms, it is high time that their nefarious traffic in smut be outlawed. Concerted action by recipients against indecent mail solicitation can do it. Pity Your Poor Pores The list of maladies for which cigarettes, are supposedly responsible seems to be endless. A Redding, Calif., physician claims that habitual smoking causes crow’s-feet and other wrinkling of the facial skin. Dr. Harry W. Daniell also says that threats of crow’s-feet are more effective in making his female patients give up smoking than warnings about something minor like lung cancer. ★ ★ ★ » There was a touch of sentiment in the old song “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes’’—but in your pores . . . ugh ! Rise of Dixie Negro Leader Is Traced By BRUCE BIOSSAT NEA Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON — The moment of drama seemed to be missed by most Democratic leaders in the room when Charles Evers of the Mississippi NAACP, the state’s new Democratic national commit-teeman, step-p e d to the podium to ad- BIOSSAT dress the party gathering. Evers said he was nervous, and that he never thought he would see the day when he or anyone of his race would be standing there representing Mississippi. In its way, it was much more a milestone than the party leadership changeover which took place that day Behind his rise to national committeeman lay four years of history which began in turbulent hearings at the liiemocratic convention in Atlantic City, wdien a group of Mississippi blacks sought to be seated as their state's delegates. That effort failed, but It led to creation of a special Equal Rights Committee under first the late David Lawrence of Pennsylvania and then Gov. Richard Hughes of New Jersey. RULES ESTABUSHED That committee fixed rules for balanced representation in delegations to the 1968 convention. Elvers, Dr. Aaron Henry and others carefully complied with these, and won recognition as Mississippi’s delegates over a rival slate which convention officials disapproved. The lesson In this, among other things, is that it was the consequence of a determined spirit 0 f accommodation between blacks and whites. ★ * * With George Wallace riding high in the Deep South last fall, no regular party nominee for president had a chance. But the E V e r s - H e n r y leadership, obviously drawing most heavily on thousands of newly registered black v(rters, nevertheless mustered 150,tWO voles in Mississippi for the . Humphrey-Muskie ticket. What all this portends for the Democratic party i n Mississippi and elsewhere in “Wallace country” is a story >el to be told. The red dust Everybody (We Hope) Loves A Lover! David Lawrence Says; Hanoi Feels U.S. Has Lost Will needs to settle awhile before signs can be read. STRONG FIGURE But Evers emerges as a -strong figure. As he made impressibly clear last year on a national television panel, he is an accommodator, an instinctive if not deeply schooled rationalist, a man with an eminent sense of fairness and balance. He Is an enemy of blqpk separatism, against hate as a weapon for the betterment of his people, against the seeking after revenge. ★ ★ * As a true activist, he puts to shame the firebrands who think that venom, vandalism, obstructionism and outright social blackmail are the means of progress in a nation with a permanent inescapable, and indeed ^owing mix of blacks and. whites. Charles Evers, taunted by militants even as he hides scars deeper than any they have ever known (including his brother’s murder), moves into the world of real power and action. ★ * ★ He seeks black betterment by practical stages aimed at harmonizing the aspirations of all Americans. WASHINGTON - Although the United States recently stopped bombing North Vietnam as a gesture to help make peace, the Hanoi government now is known to be planning a big offensive i against South I Vietnam. This development has LAWRENCE more significance than what the negotiators are saying to each other in Paris. For it means that North Vietnam has about made up its mind that the United States is ready to get out of the war at any price, and that this is what American public opinion today is supposedly demanding. ★ ★ ★ The Communist tacticians have access to all American publications. They surely have noted the trend of thought of many of the so-called intellectuals who keep on saying that America escalated the war in Vietnam, and that the South Vietnamese aren’t worth protecting because there is some corruption and mismanagement in the government at Saigon. Efforts are being made apparently in a few of the editorial commentaries i n America to discredit the South Vietnamese government and to exalt the National Liberation Front — a Communist apparatus — as a faction that should, in effect, be given a chance to take over South Vietnam. REAL STORY. The real story of why the United States has gone to such lengths to defend South Vietnam actually hasn’t been emphasized. The truth Is the United States never openly named the Soviet Union and the Red China regime as the primary adversaries of this country and did not formally proclaim that a “state of war’’ existed in Southeast Asia. Meanwhile, both Moscow and Peking supplied billions of dollars worth of arms and equipment, as well as military advisers, to help kill 31,379 Americans and wound 198,374 in the Vietnam war. Our own military com-, manders naturally advised escalation and the bombing of supply lines in fighting the gerrilla warfare of the Communist belligerents. ★ ★ ★ Some of the critics nevertheless still write about or speak of Communist imperialism as a myth. Evidence of what Russia and Red China have been doing to keep up the North Vietnamese aggression has been revealed not only before congressional committees but In news reports from Southeast Asia. The question now is whether American public opinion can be truly described as inclined toward a virtual surrender and toward a disregard of the sacrifices made by American and allied troops and by the hundreds of thousands of South Vietnamese soldiers. * ★ ★ The basic issue today is how the provisions of any agreement reached at Paris can be guaranteed unless the United States is willing to keep' an adequate military force in South Vietnam to convince the Communists that any violation of the pact will not be ignored. Bob Considine Soys: Show Biz Swordsmen Always Win Duel of Wits NEW YORK - The Concise Oxford Dictionary defines “riposte” as “n. & v. i. 1. Quick return thrust In fencing: (trans.) counterstroke; retort. 2. v. i. Deliver —. (F. f. It. riposta (or) response.” Nuts. Joey Adams, one of the more brilliant masters of ceremo-l nies, says itj simpler. “The show cONSIDINE Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Kinney Lovelace of 82 S. Ardmore: 52nd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Koumandrakis of Marion, Ind., formerly of Pontiac; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mrs. John A. Linabiiry of 81 E. Iroquois; 89th birthday. Mrs. Emma Young of Clarkston; 86th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. McGinty of 4719 crescent Point; 61st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Ward Pinner of 102 E. Longfellow; 52nd wedding anniversary. Henry Platter t of Union Lake; 86th birthday. temity has left longer-lasting scars on hecklers than Zoro,” he observes in his “Encyclopedia of Humor,” recently published by Bobs-MOTrill. “But still the lampshade wearers and the table comics keep coming. When are they going to learn that a professional can make a jerk out of them in one line? PIN-THE-TAIL “Every circle has a square who is ‘funnier than the guy on stage’—until the guy on stage puts him back in the woodwork where he belongs. ★ * ★ “Professional comedians play their own version of pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey. Point out a jackass and ftey pin the joke on him: ‘You have a nice personality—but not for a human being.’ ” So true. At a recent dinner, Joe introduced a fellow he didn’t especially like. “He’s got more class in his little finger,” Joe said, “than he has in his thumb.” An actor rushed into Toots Shor’s one njght and gave Groucho Marx a gI(»ious report of the show he was appearing in. 16 STANDING’ “We had 16 standing tonight,” he burbled. “Any sitting?” Groucho asked. Jack E. Leonard said to Frank Sinatra, “You have a nice voice — one of these days it will reach up to your throat.” ' ★ * “Why, ya crum bum,” Toots Shor said to Jackie Gleason, “I’ll put you in my back pocket.” * ★ ★ “Then,” the Fat One answered, “you’ll have more brains in your pocket than you have in your head.” ‘BATTLE OF WITS’ A small-time comic insulted Milton Berle at the Stage Delicatessen and challenged him to a “battle of wits.” “Okay,” Milton said. “I’ll check my brains and we’ll start even.” CRUSHING UNE A Broadway vaudeville ham once asked Bugs Baer to write him a crushing line that would kill any heckler who dared in-terrupt his routine. Bugs obliged. “Just say to the bum, ‘How much would you charge to haunt a house?’ ” Bugs suggested. ★ * ★ Sure enough, the opportunity soon came. 'The heckler, however, was a dame in the front row. Stoned. She kept intruding into the ham’s material, so he hauled back, even though she was a lady (it is believed) and hit her with Bugs’ great squelcher. It killed the audience, but not the lady souse. ★ ★ ★ When the laughs died down she asked, “How many rooms?” Vbice of the People: County Supervisors* Pay Is Discussed by Reader Your article quoting the Oakland County Supervisors on what pay they feel will be a good salary for them to receive was very interesting. I hope the Supervisors of Oakland County will have more respect for the people they represent than the Wayne County Supervisors did. The “public be damned” way of doing business should be stopped. ★ ★ ★ The comment of one supervisor from Pontit^c ^ that he felt the supervisor should be paid as much as the Chief Dog Warden, $8,300 to $9,200 a year, was quite a statement. The dog warden has to work at least 40 hours a week, 52 weeks a year to earn his money. This supervisor would like the same pay for eight hours a week and maybe 26 weeks a year. Equal pay would be nearer $2,000 or $3,000 a year, or maybe $26 a day. That way, those who really work will receive more money. J. C. DODD 2462 Derby, Birmingham Opinions Vary on Oukluiul County Airports I’m happy Mr. Hellhake can afford a plane. He may use his plane for the same reason I use my car to his advantage. The cost of interstate highways is enormous — so is the cost of airports. How many use roads —^4iow many airports? My sympathies are with the pilots association, and they should be able to utilize existing airports but not neWgeneral airports at taxpayers’ expensej\ '/ OaklandpMlffiy cannot afford twA general airports as long as therp.'ilfe hungry children, nnmcIesF^eqnIe,^j^ed roads, etc. Tax dollars should go for Mcessities nfsi, not padded salaries, ivory towers, plush jails, etc. MAE KLIPFEL 830 Lake Angelus Shores Opposition has been expressed against expansion of airports. The contention has been that airports are only for the small percentage of people who fly, but the facts are that the economy of an entire community is affected by the type of aircraft landing facilities available. Surveys show that K per cent of the corporations polled indicate that convenience of an airport would be essential to plant location. ★ * * The tax advantage of the community is obvious, more than compensating for the cost of airport expansion, and with concomitant relief to the individual taxpayer of the full burden for roads and schools. In city after city, people who don’t fly pay the penalties for inadequate airport facilities, in much the same way as those communities in the past which didn’t have the services of a railroad. RAYMOND J. SYMONS 2687 MOHAWK LANE, ROCHESTER Citizen Mae Klipfel is misinformed. General aviation pilot does not have free use of any airport. At Oakland-Pontiac Airport the general aviation pilot-owner pays well over $200 a year for a space about 40 ft. by 40 ft. to park his aircraft. He also must pay over $400 a year if he wishes to keep his plane in a hangar. A recent statement in The Pontiac Press showed Oakland-Bontlac Airport operated in the black for 1968, so where is all the burden on the taxpayer? WA’YNE F. SAYRE 216 W. YALE ‘Urge Citizens to Help Preserve Our Rights’ What rights do law-abiding citizens have? The men who wrote the Bill of Rights would turn over in their graves if they knew how our country is being run. The men who wrote it were under the impression that most people were good and honest, but they were wrong. Politicians and lawyers take our guns, and want us to pay for the private schools. They get people out of jail that join in on riots. They twist the Bill of Rights around to suit their purposes. Sooner or later it will catch up with them. * ★ ★ Why don’t Americans wake up and get the Bible back In our famUies and schools. When the Communists take over you will care, but it will be too late. Stand up for the men in our police departments and give them power to do the job we spend our tax money for. GERALD BAKER (Editor’s Note: If the writer of the letter signed Donald W. Brown will submit his address, we will be happy to publish the letter.) (Continued on Page A-7) Question and Answer We Bloomfield Schools’ bus drivers want to know why our mechanic has such a hard time getting parts for the school buses? He keeps patching and we keep breaking down. I’ve had four different buses in one day. Why didn’t safety inspectors take them for a dry run? Why buy buses they can’t get parts for? We feel we shotild have better upkeep. BUS DRIVER REPLY Erwin Johnson, assistant superintendent, gives us this reply: "Bloomfield Hills School District employs four mechanics to provide preventive maintenance for 50 vehicles this year. Some heavy maintenance is farmed out. All buses are purchased from reputable dealers and leading manufacturers. There is frequently, a time lag on supply and delivery of repair parts. School buses, just as privately-owned cars, are subject to quality maintenance regardless of age, model or make. School transportation is under the most rigid and valid inspection possible at the present time from within, by insurance safety inspectors and Michigan State Police.” Question and Answer I’m concerned about the people at Pontiac State Hospital. Could we form a group of volunteers to paint waBs, make re- J otherwise cost the hospital money? Whom should we contact? MRS. JAMES BOYLAN DRAYTON PLAINS reply Director of Community Relations, Ted Pana-concern. You can call him at 33S“i241, THE PONTIAC PKKSS. H ESDAV. FEBRUARY ii. iD A-^7 Voice of the People ^ (Continued from Page A-6) Readers' Opinions Vary on Parochiaid Issue Many citizens of Michigan have taken into account the possibility of a tax increase and have considered the probability of ’an increase of population in Michigan if a pro-parochiaid law were to be legislated. But as for communism, fascism, Nazism being taught, this is only conjecture. Judaism, Catholicism, and Protestantism have been taught In America for centuries. It is one of our fundamental freedoms of self expression. The people of Michigan are all taxed for schools, but only the public schools have received financial aid. If all are taxed, all should receive financial aid. Equal taxation and educational equality are as important to our City, County and State as the equality of race, color or creed. FRED A. BEST 2181 WILLOW BEACH, KEEGO HARBOR If our parochial schools are sincere in their beliefs and teachings and really want their children to be strongly based in these beliefs, they would not allow government to have any part of the running or control of these schools. Prayer was taken out of the public schools and I would not give the government a chance to dictate what can and cannot be done and taught in our parochial schools. When the parochial schools are opened to control by government then they are open to be controlled by all people of the Nation, no matter what their religion or beliefs. Is money that important? AGAINST GOVERNMENT CONTROL I have taken Ume to consider what Parochiaid could do for Michigan, but I don’t think some people have. We have communism, fascism and Nazism in our State-supported colleges that c6me from Catholic, Jewish and Protestant tax money, and many people send their children to parochial schools for a good religious education. They pay double. This Isn’t fair. I went to a parochial school and a public school and was given a much better education at the parochial school. Maybe all children from parochial schools should swamp the public schools, then I bet people would complain about the higher taxes it took to run public schools. MRS. RICHARD D. KNIGHT 3851 COLEPORT ‘Question Logic of Pontiac City Incoine Tax’ How can the City of Pontiac logically extend its incoVne tax beyond the City limits for those living in the City but working outside it? It seems ludicrous for the City to expect its income tax to take on the character of a residency tax. CURTIS H. ROSSOW Tells of Hazardous Conditions on M59 ^ In addition to M59 being narrow and winding, with heavy traffic at times, the condition of the road for about a five-mile stretch in the vicinity of Highland is almost impossible to describe. Every 50 feet or so a crack has raised up some three or four inches that extends the full width of the road. If it doesn’t shake the car and its occupants apart, it should be viewed as a hazard because if you don’t hang onto your steering wheel for dear life, you could wind up in the ditch or somebody’s barnyard. D. E. HAVILAND 5572 KINGFISHER LANE, CLARKSTON Congratulates Kettering Wrestling Team As a student of Waterford Kettering High School, I am proud of our wrestling team and especially for their victory over Waterford Township. 'This is only the second time in Kettering’s history that we have defeated them in wrestling. Congratulations Captains! CAPTAINS’ FAN Another Opinion on Daylight Saving Time The battle about Daylight Saving Time goes on and on. The recount did not change the result and now those who don’t like the result of the election are going to take our vote away from us by trying to nullify the vote. Will the time come when laws will be enacted or changed if we do not vote to please certain blocs? MRS. W. A. L. Comments on Lack of Telephone Service I see in The Press where Michigan Bell is going to spend millions on buildings. I wish they would spend some out here for better service. We only have about 11 months service. We did not have service Cihristmas or New Year’s. ERNEST YOUNG 1573 W. SUTTON, METAMORA Discusses Right of Citizen to Vote on Taxes How long has it been unconstitutional to get up a petition to stop a city income tax Pontiac has already voted down? How can we prevent County Supervisors from raising their own pay? ’They can buy all the land they want for airports and build all the county buildings they want. Why can’t some of that come before a vote of the people? A. M. TANG 46 N. TELEGRAPH Eliminate Inequities in Levying Income Tax In .the January Congressional Report we read of many notable achievements of the 90th Congress. Law enforcement has been stepped up, more urban renewal and public housing provided, help for senior citizens, education, veterans pensions, and many more new or expanded projects. Plans for the future are ambitious, including potentially very expensive war on pollution. ★ ★ ★ We believe most of the above to be commendable and necessary, though the tax load is heavy and getting heavier. In view of this, why has Congress done nothing about certain inequities in levying the Federal Income Tax? We refer specifically to people, numbering in the hundreds, with an income of from $200,000 to $1 million who pay no Federal Income Tax. It seems that the time for tax reform in this ‘area is long overdue. CHARLES KURZWEIL 3558 WINTERBERRY, ORCHARD LAKE ‘Let’s Support Missile Sites in Our Area’ Citizens, support the Army A.B.M. missile sites in our area. The left wing liberals and Communists want world conquest. Can you think of a better way than to have to surrender? They want America defenseless not only regarding the A.B.M. system but also the right to own and bear arms. At Oakland University recently, women spoke who opposed missiles and nuclear warheads. In all the speeches, not one was in any way for defense. They talked so well of Mr. McNamara, yet he has cut the U.S. defense system so badly that we may not be able to defend ourselves. The United States has scandalously neglected civil defense. We spend only $1 on civil defense for every $1,000 we spend on other defenses. Ask the Communist who financed the civil rights riots. ' L. D. JUENGEL 210 DIVERSION, ROCSES'rER Population Soars in Slums Gypsy BaneJs Worry Czechs PRAGUE (AP) — Czechoslo-jthe bulk of Czechoslovakia’s war the Gypsy population grew vakia’s Gypsy population is ex-[Gypsies would accept an or-[again. In 1958 the Central Com-pected to exceed a million in thetdered way of life in the Socialist Czechoslovak Corn- next 10 years, and worried offi-'society. • ^ cials are wondering how to inte-[ Education is available for the grate the Ropiany bands into young, but few take advantage [°^ money on attempts to break the Communist way of life. 'of it. There is work for the "P resettle the large Gypsy A recent report published in’adults, but few relish the idea.again without suc-Zemedelske Noviny said 250,000 Health is a major problem. Gypsies are living in slums and; berculosis and trachoma, an’eye! Overcrowding and unhealthy are bearing children at a fantas-| disease caused by diet deficien- conditions perpetuated tic rate. icies, are widespread. [disease among the Gypsies. In It expressed little hope that Mnui;'cirptmic attempt to combat this, the government started a I More serious is the Gypsies’ social survey of the Gypsies in totaldisregardforbirthcontrol, 1965. It is not concluded yet. Wounded Wna/e^°'''"y Bratislava and Brno, a I In the early 1900s, authorities [ Gypsy Union of 1,500 well edu-[ sought ways to resettle the res- cated, socially integrated Gyp-tive Gypsy hordes, mainly in sies has offered to help the au-Isouthern Moravia, but without thorities overcome the problem, [much success. Union members hope they can [ ★ * * persuade their compatriots that LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) — During the Nazi occupation of rehabilitation into modern, A 14-foot pilot whale swam thousands of productive socialism is better within a few feet qf shore Monday in Long Beach harbor. Lifeguards said that it appeared to have been shot in the back and was too weak to return to sea. They said the 1,500-pound whale seemed shot near its dorsal fin and “might have been mistaken for a shark by some t^ter or else someone has a morbid sense of humor.’’ * ★ ★ “I doubt he’ll survive,’’ said Bill Ward, a lifeguard. Attempts to guide the whale out of the harbor failed. Is Too Weak to Leave Harbor Gypsies were exterminated in than living in slums and idle-Hitler’s gas ovens. But after the ness. Stork Defies Drifts at Military Airfield NEW YORK (AP) - An expectant mother, prevented from getting to a hospital by the Northeast snowstorm, was rushed to the dispensary of Floyd" Bennett Field. She walked the last 300 feet through four-foot drifts, then gave birth to a son. * * * Sailors at the military air field in Brooklyn dubbed the infant “Mr. Floyd.” The mother, Mrs Frederick George, named him Rod Thoma^i George. Dr. Cecil Grimes, assisted by three other snow-stranded surgeons, performed the delivery. “This was better service than expected,” said Mrs. George, ‘but I don’t expect to be back.” I OPEN TONIGHT I DON'T WAIT TILL THE LAST KNIGHT With Your NCOME TAX Avoid the last minute rush. Let BLOCK slay your income tax dragons. We're quick, convenient, and we guarantee our accuracy. Don't put off till tomorrow what you can do toknight. 50-MONTH GUARANTEED BATTERY . FACTORY FRESH • FULLY CHARGED . DEPENDABLE STARTING POWER 0488 EXCHANCi All CARS W« g • accural* prtporalian of *v*ry LF„S WITH ADLAl HI Former Vice President Huhert Humphrey (left) huddles with Illinois State Treasurer Adlai E. Stevenson HI Ncstcrday at Chicago’s O'llaro International Airport. The visit came during a stopover prior to Humphrey's speech in Springfield, 111. Turnout for Hubert Is Sparse in Illinois I’ress Secretary Honald Ziegler said, “The President will make the trip to W(2st Beilin,’’, and supports "fully’’ the .state- Taxes Topic in Waterford Waterford Township officials . will discuss property tax in- SI’HlNCiFlEl.l), III. (Al’i - Democratic parly leaders when at tonight’s meeting of Former Vice President Hubert he spoke at a meeting of the crpater Waterford Com- H Humphrey was ignored Democratic House study group, niunity Council. Monday night by most stale The lurnoul was in sharp con- ' * * * tr.ist to his last a|)pearance at -pj,,. panel will be headed by the stale capital during last Township Supervisor E 1 m e r fall's presidential campaign, j „ „ s 0 n and will air which drew 000 spectators. developments in the six- I * * * township sewer system a s Only 24 of 81 Democratic state related to the recent state an-| I representatives and one of 19 (jpoHution vote and community I senators turned out. Former! posts Samuel H. Shapiro hadi ★ ★ ★ been invited but had business xhe public is invited to the 8 ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) - elsewhere as did the party’s leg-jpm, meeting in the Pierce The Maryland House of Dele-'slative leaders. Sen. Thomas A junior High School cafeteria, gates refused Monday night to McGoon and Rep. John P. Tou- 5145 Hatchery, lighten state laws against cock- hy. both of Chicago, fighting after hearing a protest Humphrey, in his speech, against “this great mass of con- urged the formation of similar formitv sweeping over us” groups across the country and Republican C. A Porter Hop- called upon the group to attack kins of Baltimore County, lead- problems .such as mishandling ing the successful fight against of welfare programs, which he the bill, lamented that the Gen- called "rotten to the core,” and ('lal Assembly has already leg- election reform islated away slot machines. 'NEED IDEAS’ "We're going to need your ! ideas on how to reform the national convention,” the former > president said. During the Cockfighting Curbs Rejected E PRESIDENT LEAVES FLORIDA-Presi-dent Nixon gives a wave as he prepares to leave Florida yesterday to return to Washington. Tlie Pi-esident is walking with Secretary of State William Rogers and Col. Wiltz AP Wirephoto Segura of Homestead Air Force Base. Nixon and Rogers traveled by helicopter from Key Biscayne where they had been working,and vacationing over the weekend. "We can’t play numbers more-w’c can't do anything,” he told the Hou.se Del Alexander ,, , ■„ 1 II 19<)8 convention, he said, “the Montgomery news outside got more attention campaign with a "a'-mng th^ f ^ the General Assembly prohibit- , ,, . r cd game birds from nghling, Democrats, if "then they’re going to be frus Iralgd” fool around, we'll lake a licking 1970 1 intend to work for vic-v in 1972." 500-Wig Theft Humphrey referred to himself as titular head of the party then added, “kniK'k off tljc titular, 1 AP) — intend to be the leader of the ROCHESTER, N Y. Burglars made off with 500 party.’ women’s wigs valued at more Humphrey was invited to than $15,000. Police said the bur- speak at the meeting by .state glars broke into a beauty shop Treasurer Adlai E. Stevensonl that was being remodeled for a 111. who helped form the study! ' Wednesday opening. group. 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It talpi llwn I*! rarMnd ct»ck,-«oct|ittd w cith*< 4Uick-I, mi4 ••mmwnMir. Tn kraunt it witk y*ur fprimtl cktek t* •ii|r ul*Mltlw4 kutinin fin*. Tin card Vtsurai tk* fin* tiul tin Imk <>111 Inner jrwr ck*ek l*rAiii*unt> u* h IIN, *i«vMin( tin i«-•Iraolicnt M Hn kK« *1 tin ckrd *r* lollowtd. Akplicnlian^ Ckteknate enn kt rntdi it H wr II The Bank on the GROW 12 Convenient Offices Pontiac State Bank Member Federal Depotit Insurance Carp. With Deposits Insured to $15,000.00 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TI ESDAV, FEBRUARY 11 !H;9_ A—9 HUDSON’S GREAT HONE SALE SHOP THE HUDSON’S HOME^IMPROVEMENT CENTER NEAREST YOU SALE! thcrmador built-in dishwasher Know the joy of automatic dishwashing with this famous-name brand from Hudson's. Many deluxe features include 4-level washing action, stainless steel interior large capacity, multiple cycles, automatic detergent ;e dispensers, quiet operation Savings priced! •Installalio SALE! 40-Gallon AMC water heater All the hot water your family needs with this glass-lined heater Recovers 42 GPU. Full 10-year warranty JO-gallon heater $58 40-gallon heater $67 50-gallon heater $85 'Installation axtrj SALE! G.E. central air conditioning Entire home air conditioning for |ust $400 plus installation.2 -ton size. Installed to operate from present warm air heating system. Features convenience. A Hudson's representative will give complete estimate in your home. 2 “-j-ton G.E. Central Air Contlitioning $510* ' Installation extra SALE! G.E. garbage disposer Throw away the old garbage pail and dispose of food waste the mod ern. sanitary way Super hard cutting teeth grind bones, fruit pits, large rinds, and food waste of most every kind. Has 2-quarl capacity and safety-twist top. A tremendous asset in your home. Save! * lnMt up with dwinning r o h b e r y suspense film. "Hififi." and followed with such gems as "He Wlm Must Hie." the Christ parable from N i k o s Ka/ant/akis' novel, "The Greek Passion," and "Never on Sunday," that pofMilar tale of the warm-hearted prostitute the latter two with the Greek gexf-dess of his life. Melinda Mercouri, now Mrs. Dassin There were some duds, too "I’haedra." "10 30 PM Summer," the latter a "monumental failure," by his own admission. REl.AXKI) REFLECTION Now Dassin was back and anxious to talk of his new film,' "■Fp Tight " In black turtleneck sweater and sports jacket, pacing the floor intermittently lt> collect his thoughts before answering a question, he spok.p with relaxed reflection. His curly white hair and bright blue eyes made him appear younger than his 56 years, and despite an oncoming cold he looked fitter than ever. He joked about a recent TV talk .show he was on, in which they spent most of the time talking about the vivaciotis Melina and not the new film. And he shrugged off the "bad" years, with an air of a man who had made the best of wherever he was — and had a good time doing it. Having Melina there for .some HI years of it helped, of course. * * * What brought him back ' Only a slight pause, then; "This film brought me back " "1 became employable about five years ago." he said with just a trace of a grin, but with no hint of bitterne.ss. "But 1 waited to do a film on this theme 1 always wanted to lome back here to live," MORE FREEDOM It was, of course, a good deal more than just the film that brought him back, Hollywood had changixl; he felt there was more freedom there, now. And, more importantly, "This Greek thing came up.” "This Greek thing" was the military-backed take-over in Greece, where Dassin has spent inuch of his self-exile with Miss Mercouri and where he had filmed "He Who Must Die" and "Never on Sunday " Now Miss Mercouri, kind, of a Mother Greece violently opposed to the new junta, became persona non grata in her native land * ★ A So. the couple came back First, they did "Hya, Darling," the Broadway musical version of “Never on Sunday.” Then, with Miss Mercouri in Hollywood for the movie, “Gaily, (’laily," Dassin filmed "Fp Tight." It's probably the first American film from a major company Paramount - to deal in basic terms with the current Negro unrest. It's a subject, like the Vietnam war, that Hollywood has shied from. But "Fp Tight" deals with it direclly, pilling the philo.sophies' of black power and "freedom; now" against the theory of nonviolence. ■NO’ TO REMAKE It started when Dassin’s; agent, Paul Rosen, asked him about doing a remake, “No," was the inimediale reply. “Want to do a remake of ‘The Informer"’" the novel by some theater acting, was talked Fiam O'Flaherty, which John; into co-writing the script -- and Ford made into a classic film in before he knew it, was starring in the film. "YiHi're out of your head'" was the reply. "Want lo do a remake of ‘The Informer' -- in Harlem "Yes'" A A * But Harlem -- where the Fonnecticut-born Dassin was rai.sed and educated — didn’t work nut as the setting. Dassin said New York police wouldn’t let him film after It p.nr, citing: an "antinoise law." The com-[ pany went instead to Cleveland — "it’s a more typical big F.S. city, anyway" — and did loca-' tipn shooting in the Negro; Hough section, where racial rioting hit in the summer of 1966. There were no serious problems there, though there were "moments of difficulty,” Dassin I recalled. He said you could still[ feel a tension; the residents still were “up-tight," particularly the young. •REAL ENOUGH’ "In the film, we’re really trying to tell the country and the world what is in the heart of a black man in America today. And, in order to do this, we' tried to view them as truly, as realistically, as we knew them, as we met them and as we’ve oh.served them from our own experience in life. And in the context of today, in the m«H)d ol today and perhaps tomorrow They're real enough.” The black man in “Up Tight” finds himself faced with two philosophies'.' nonviolence as a; still-worthwhile principle, o r| "forget it” — nonviolence was| as.sassinated with Dr. Martini Luther King Jr. last April. Dassin felt it essential to getj black help in the film. He goti actress Ruby Dee lo help write it; her hu.sband, Ossie Davis,i was unavailable. And Julian Mayfield, primarily a writer and teacher, though he once did Mayfield plays a weak, alcoholic black who informs to police on a black militant friend. In the original ‘ ‘ I n f 0 r n 1 e r ,’ ’ the Irish Republican Army is the black II militant equivalent, with Victor MacLaglen in the film title role as Gypo Nolan, squealing on Wallace Ford. “Up Tight” has basically an all-Negro cast, with Raymond St. Jacques, Frank Silvers and Ro.scoe Lw Browne in addition to Mayfield and Miss Dee. Dassin finds an enormous change in Hollywood since he was there last. “A very good . change. It is a much freer place. A film maker who pares enough ;can make the- film he wants to-' May, without interference. He couldn't before,” ' The change, he feels, came; about mainly with the breakdown of the big studio system. I really think in the last few years there has been a strong liberating impulse in Hollywood. Guys making films have gotten a hold becau.se they have fought for it ~ and they'll have to continue fighting for it. And they’ll have to make good pictures. "Today, if you care enough” - he stressed the “care" - "to make it 'like it is’ — straight, direct, true, real — you can do it.” As he did in Europe for the last 20 years, Jules Dassin has; made a film he cared enough about. He produced it, as he has every film he’s made sincel “Rififi,”' he directed it, he helped write it. “1 hope it gives other guys ai little nudge to do what they] want to do,” he said. Next for Dassin is Romain Gary’s "Promise at Dawn” and one of the things he wants to do eventually is a film on Greece, Greece foday. With Melina, of course. Million-Dollori Error Gives Him Pleasure CLEVELAND, Ohio fAP) -"Bring it back,” said the bank officials. “Come and get it,” said Ed Bartunekl "It was your mistake.” Neither side wants to give in. The mistake was for $1 million. Bartunek's "tenant, Mrs. Otis Spears, asked for a $70 money order and a bank machine made it out for $1,000,070, Shi didn’t notice and mailed th( money order to Bartunek. Bartunek can’t cash it and he’s out the $70 rent until the mistake is corrected. But he’s having fun flashing the big amount to his friends and adds:! “As long as I’ve got the mon-| ey order, I feel like a million dollars.” I wh*r«, ceurtaty it cooIobIou* Early Bird 3 Pc. SPORTSWEAR. WARDROBE Special! ^63 YOU SAVE $13.50 NO DOWN PAYMENT 6 MONTHS TO PAY • Choose a Royal York Sport Coat.. • Choose 2 pairs $16.50 Proportioned-fit Pure Wool Slacks.. ,.$43.50 $33.00 Regularly $76.50 You pay $63.00 Your next can Chrysler The possible dream can mean a great deal to you The Great New Chrysler. The Great New Chrysler is a possible dream and it can easily come true. Full-size Chrysler luxury is not at all beyond your reach. In fact, if you drive one of the most popular smaller cars, a 1969 AUTHORIZED DEALERS OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC. 724 Ookiand Avenue Pontiac, Michigan Newport is priced only a few dollars a month more than what you’re driving now. See for yourself. See your dealer. He’ll show you how a great deal can make your dream possible. CHRYSLER M0T0R8 CORPORATION HAHN CHRYSLER4PLYMOUTH, 6673 Dixie Highway , Clorkston, Michigan THE PONTIAC MALL THElPONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 11, 1969 Organization of the Late Dr, King Retrenching ATLANTA, Ga. (A) — Ten Jinonths after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the organization which h e founded and headed for 11 years is pulling its^f together, reorganizing, trimming staff mapping new campaigns to fight poverty and racism. It is a “new thrust’’ for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), under the command of the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, the Alabama-born Baptist preacher who succeeded King last April. * ★ ★ Long-range efforts to organize on economic, political and educational fronts key not Abernathy’s Strategy. The emphasis will be on often undramatic programs, such housing projects and negotiating for better jobs, rather than headline-getting marches and protest demonstrations. PILOT PROJECT A pilot project in the organizing stage Philadelphia, Pa., will concentrate on improving schools for Negroes. “This is the real hard nitty-gritty,’’ said the Rev. Joseph E. Lowery of Atlanta, chairman of the 53-member board of directors. “We recognize the fact that a larger percentage of our work may not be glamorous, I dramatic, attention-getting.’’ * it.' * Lowery and other SCLO sources confirmed tlfat the organization, dependent upon contributions, has been in a low period financially but expects to remain solvent. Some staff members, including many hired for the Poor People’s Campaign last year in Washington, have been discharged. Others probably will b e released. The staff numbers about 100, trimmed from upwards of 150 during the Poor People’s Campaign. CHANGES IN WORKS “There will be changes in staff structure and staff -Junior Editors Quiz, on— OXYGEN responsibility,’’ Lowerey said. These changes will be worked out over the next three months. But he said no drastic or major change of personnel is likely. Nor will Abernathy be shifted from the president’s job, Lowery said. It’s a matter of streamlining, he said. ★ ★ ★ Bernard Lafayette, 28, program coordinator who joined tte staff ^ior to King’s death, said the staff was being tailored to fit program needs. “We haven’t finished yet,’’ he said- 'PRETTY GOOD SHAPE’ Treasurer Cirilo McSween of Chicago said SCLC was “in pretty good shape’’ financially. He said there will be more direct fund raising in black communities by soliciting. A ‘Tag Day’’ project initiated last year in several cities will be expanded nationwide, he said, with contributors being given tags to indicate their support. SCLC operates mainly ( money from its regular mail appeals. Funds also are raised at benefits by entertainers and at rallies. Foundations finance some projects. Last October, SCLC Foundation received a $35,000 payment of profits from King biography. HIGH DIVIDENDS Little change of direction seems likely. Instead, SCLC will QUESTION: How is oxygen used in the body? ANSWER: Oxygen is a marvelous gas in the air which is absolutely necessary for us to have in our bodies. It penetrates to all the cells and oxidizes (a process like slow burning) the food materials which have ^n distributed by the blood stream. As a result of this slow burning, we get the inner heat so necessary to us. We get the kind of energy you need to bat a ball and the kind with which to think and do schoolwork. After the burning process, there are waste materials remaining. These must be removed. The Wood stream takes on the jobs of both bringing in oxygen and taking out waste. Charlie breathes air into his lungs (left) and breathes waste gases out at right. The lungs contain about 100 million little air sacs or alveoli, such as we picture. The air com^s in at (A). Meanwhile, the blood, carrying waste in the form of carbon dioxide, enters at (B). Blood, flowing through the tiny capillaries (C) outside the air sacs, gives off waste carbon dioxide, exchanging it for life-giving loads of oxygen which it carries throughout the body. (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) Abraham Lincoln speaks on The Peace Corps; **To correct the evils, great and small, which spring from want of sympathy and from positive et^tyaittong strangers, as nations or as individuals, is one of the highest functions of civilization. in with The Advertising ■ " S- cWv The Pontiac Press be concentrating on the type of form and mobilize Negroes, programs begun in recent The move now, he said, is years, unspectacular programs toward improving black schools, that have paid high dividends achieving integration of these and often go unnoticed publicly.! institutions and preserving Most significant of these is Operation Breadbasket, t h e economic improvement pro-, gram which in Chicago alone | has gained hundreds of jobs for[^ Negroes. It's Birthplace Jot 1st President Last December, C h r y s Corp. agreed to set up _ tra^g program for ethruc mi- g National Geographic Society nAWiiAO in loom oiitn TnoohoniPo ... . .r-. w.* __*. ^ norities to leam auto mechanics — and train Negro dealers, of which there are eight In the entire nation. Chrysler also agreed to deposit $100,000 monthly in a Negro-Own^ Atlanta bank as a means of putting capital into black conununities. The Philadelphia project directed by the Rev. James Bevel, who is direct-action and •violent education director of SCLC, reflects “a new concept philosophy of violence,’’ Lafayette said. It will be a sort of psychological warfare. DEMONSTRATIONS ^ There will be demonstrations, Lafayette said. “But they’ll be putting on plays also in the theater. James Baldwin is working on a book with Bevel. And Bevel is working on setting up a radio station for the community,’’ Lafayette said. These efforts will seek to in- WASHINGTON - George Washington, “first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen,’’ first saw the light of day in Wakefield, Va. On the morning of Feb. 22, 1732, the first president was born on the family plantation overlooking the Potomac River in Tidewater, Va. To celebrate Washington's birthday there this year, crinolined ladies in hoop skirts and powdered wigs will serve visitors hot, spiced cider and gingerbread made from a recipe of George’s mother, Mary Ball Washington. The 394-acre George Washington Birthplace National Monument includes an eight-room red brick mansion furnished in period antiques, a separate colonial kitchen, the Washington family burial ground, flower and herb gardens, and a “living’’ colonial farm. ‘ black culture. “The new trend now is in terms of local trol,’’ Lafayette said. It fits in with the black awareness, black power movement. ORGANIZING PUSH SCLC is moving to organize n 0 n p r 0 f essional hospital-workers in Atlanta, Baltimore, St. Louis, Cleveland and Charleston, S.C., Lafayette said. Six staff members have trained as organizers for Local 1199, a union of drug and hospital workers in New York. A new push by the organize-! tion will be for involvement of students and youth in the non-! violent movement. A special, division for youth and campus | activities is being formed. FINHinHS A FAMILY AFFAIR Fidgeting, nose-picking, a tormenting rectal itcTi are often telltale signs of Pin-Worms...ugly parasites that medical experts say infest 1 out of every 3 persons examined. Entire families may be victims and not know it. To get rid of Pin-Worms, they must be killed in the large intestine where they live and multiply.That’s exactly what Jayne’s P-W tablets do... and here’s how they do it: First—a scientific coating carries the tablets into the bowels before they dissolve. Then — Jayne’s modern, medically-approved ingredient goes right to wor)c—kills Pin-Worms quickly, easily. A,k your pharmarUt. Don’t take chances with dangerous, highly contagious Pin-Worms which infect entire families. Get genuine Jayne’s P-W Vermifuge . . . small, easy-to-take tablets... special sizes for children and adults. A—n DON’T POP YOUR TOP OVER deduction that you ore entitled to. You may be turpriied on what deduction! you've been mining ... and Natianwlde guaranteei curacy. We guarantee our returns for sKCwrocy. If we make ar error which coiti you a penalty or Interest, we will pay the penalty or Interest. NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK fTflationwide L/ ■ I INCOME TAX SERVICE HOURS: Man.-FrI. 9-8:30 Sat. 9-S.OO Sun. 11-2:00 PHONE 335-1490 FOR INFORMATION 1 Mile East of Telegraph 330 West Huron, Pontiac, Michigan The great escape from Winter Whatever summer means to you, Florida has it. Now. In abundance. And with a fabulous flair. And all under that warm, friendly sun. Running away from winter has never been more appealing. Nor easier! Delta is ready with the greatest line-up of service south since jets began. More non-stop jet seats to Miami than any other airline. The most Super DC*8§-the world’s biggest jetliners-with seating limited to 195 in a chbin designed for over 250. Those delightful Delta menus, too. And the warm Delta people who serve you with such a personal interest. Why riot treat yourself to summer. And Delta. Now! Delta is ready when you are! MIAMI Lv. 7:20a Arr. 11:35a 11:53a 12:34 p NS 4:09p NS Super DCS 9:31 p 1-sfop Super DCS 12:3Aa NS Super DCS 2:20a 1;29a 8:00a 10:00a 1:35p 5:55p 10:00p 10:00p ll.’OOp* •frWay only Day Jetourist $73; Night Coach $57 FT. LAUDERDALE Lv. 8:00a Arr.12:18p 1:55p 8:10p 10;00p 1:31a 1-stop Day Jetourist $73; Night Coach $57 WEST PALM BEACH Lv. 8;00a Arr. 12:28p 1:55p 7:19p lOiOOp 1:26a Day Jetourist $70; Night Coach $57 TAMPA/ST. PETE/CLEARWATER Lv. 7:15a Arr. 11;37a 8;00a 11;37a 7:20a 10:22a 1-stop 1:55p 5:28p 5:55p 8:13pWS Super DC-« 10:00p 12:18a/VS Day Jetourist $63; Night Coach $50 ORLANDO Lv. 8:00a Arr. 11:23a 5:10p 9:30p 10:00p 1:14a Day Jetourist $61; Night Coach $50 JACKSONVILLE Lv. 8:00a Arr. 11:11a 1:55p 5:1 Op Day Jetourist $55; 15p Big Family Plan discounts everyday of the week except Friday PM, Sunday PM and Monday AM. Thrifty new Air/Sea Tours, Bahamas, West Indies via luxury cruise ships from South Florida. Instant Reservations via Deltamatic.* Call Delta or see your Travel Agent NS—Non-stop. Add tax to all fares, ADEUA More big jets, more jet seats to Miami than any other airline. A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1969 Let’s work together. City Manager Joseph A. Warren Sheriff Frank W. Irons Citizens of Pontiac and Oakland County are fortunate that our government leaders are men \ of experience and integrity. We should be proud of officials like City Manager Warren, Sheriff Irons, and Chief Hanger. Their jobs are tough enough. They need encouragement and cooperation from every one of us — not harassment. / You can’t build by tearing things down. Chairman of the Board Chief of Police William K. Hanger National I Bank Are Vour School's Activities Now Appearing in The Press? THE PONTIAC PRESS l’ONTIAC\ MK'IIKiAN. Tl ESDAV. FEBHUAKV 11, HHii) Tur)l to This Page Tuesdays, Fridays for Senior High School News PCH Club Plans Events GOING SOMEPLACE?—Junior Gail Miller and senior Gary Biron, Waterford Kettering High School students, may wish they had a horse as they hurry for the car to head for the airport. Other members of the school’s Stagemasters Sightseeing Tour Planned group will join the twosome on a trip to snowbound New "Vork. Sponsoring the tour are Kettering teachers Patty Ijooman and Duke Chaffee. By PURVIS HUNT JR. Pontiac Central’s Campus Life Club is making plans for coming events. Major plans include a Senior High Club party, featuring a gigantic pillow fight, and either a sandwich smorgasbord, or the world’s largest sundde. Sunday is the day, and the party will be open to all interested students. Further information will be given at Campus Life Club meetings held every Wednesday morning in room 134, at 8. Donna Lunenberger represented the CLC and Pontiac Central in the Youth Christ Sweetheart Rally, held here at Feb. 8. COMPETE FOR AWARD Contestants from other branches of this organization, under the leadership of Norm Clothier, competed for a first-place award. The Pontaic Elk’s Leadership Award — a $100 bond - was won by Central student Gay Behler. * * ★ By placing first on the city level, her entry was sent to the state competition, where she won fourth place. Now Gay is being considered on the national level. The Elk’s National Foundation is sponsoring its annual “Most Valuable Student” scholarship. NATIONAL PRIZES The prize on the local level is $100 for Kettering Stagemasters Bound for East By DONNA FURLONG Thirty-five Waterford Kettering High School Stagemasters are preparing to leave for New York City. The group will fly via Northwestern-Airlines and will stay in the Hotel New Yorker. ★ ★ * While in New York it will see the “Fantasticks,” an off-broadway production, and “The Man in the Cage,” a Broadway Show; plus performances at Radio City Music Hall. Students will also tour Chinatown, the Greenwich Village, the Statue of Liberty, Rockefeller Center and the Brooks Brothers Costume House, largest in the nation. BOUND FOR NEW YORK Eastward-bound are Kathy Arkles, Sheryl Betzing, Gary Biron, Judy Brown, Gary Brady, Rick Crigger, Mo Crowley, Debbie Daubner, Brenda Fields, Mary Florio and Sid Graves. Others are Mona Haviland, Geri Klock, Debbie Krause, Evie Lalone, Julie Largent, Mary Maguire, Jill McClune, Linda McClune, Peggy McGinley, Gail Miller and Connie Myas. Rick Newman, Jenet Scarbrough, Erika Schaefer, Gail Sheriff, Chris Siano, Mary Sies, George Smith, Sandy Swain, Rob Tackaberry, Steve Van Roekel, Kim White, Sandy Whitehead and Sue Work conclude the list. Their sponsors are teachers Patty l^oman and Duke Chaffee. Senior mock election finals will be held this week. Primaries were held last Thursday. PRIMARY WINNERS Primary winners were Bill Hazelett, Hank Longo, Larry Thompson, Claudia Everett, Mona Haviland and Colleen Nolan, class fliptr'Bruce Zollner, Mac Miller, Larry Burns, John Williams, Nancy Hogarth, Marcia Steehler and Laurie Jackson, most likely to succeed; Harry Booker, Bob Earl, Dennis Wooster, Jackie Gibson, Karen Godschalk and Nancy Stoppert, most athletic; Tom Howieson, Dave Powell, Bob Orosey, Janet Barton, Sue Sayer and Kathy Baier, most courteous. Others are Dennis Wooster, Bob Earl, Bill Theuerre, Hazel Goodwin, Lynn Batchelor and Linda McClune, most school-spirited; Dave Stone. Hank Longo, Bill Crooks, Karen 01ms, Sue Thompson and Linda McClune, class wit; Gary Allen. Tom Donaldson, Lee Scarlett, Debbie Dunkle, Loui.se Marhall and Jerri Kecch, prettiest smile; and Gary Allen, Charlie Patrick, Jerry Velzy, Janet Barton, Regina Farmer and Margo Terry, most shy. * ★ ★ Still others are Tom Donaldson, Rick Schawch, Lynn Batchelor, Debbie Baer and Mary Sies, most all around; Larry Burns, Mac Miller, Bob Orosey, Nancy Hogarth, Laurie Jackson and Mary Sies, most valuable to class; Randy Portwood, Dan Gauthier, Dave Powell, Mona Haviland, Debbie Baer and Hazel Goodwin, most friendly. Rounding out the list are Mark Mercer, Jeff Appel, Mike Hurd, Pam Leitner, Vicki Tosto and Joy Campbell, Course on Human Values Introduced at Lahser High By GRETCHEN HAAS “Human Values,” a new course this semester at Bloomfield Hills Lahser High School, is a student-directed experiment in learning. Written and conducted by students, it deals with man’s values in a rapidly changing society. Three days each week the class discuses topics revelant to today’s world. The remainder of the class periods are used for research on subject matter. ★ * * Seniors Chris Buzan and Brad Shimp organized the basic course content. However, the emphasize that the pro- Formal Is Near af Kingswood By MARY STEWART “Scarborough Fair” is the theme of the social committee’s midwinter formal at Kingswood. The Meditations will provide the music from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. * ★ * Creating a carnival atmosphere in the auditorium will be red and white crepe paper and helium-filled balloons. A large number of volunteers form the student body comprise the decoration committee. Social committee chairman Kitsy Hanson estimates that 250 people will attend the dance. ★ ★ * Other members of the social com- mittee arc: Julie Martin, Pam Jahnke, Lisa Newell, Melissa Frey and Marta Helfrich. In addition to the midwinter formal. the first four years of college. On the Oiencia national level, approximately $181,000 is divi.sion available to 200 winning contestants. / Deadline for entrance is Saturday. Any interested student should contact Fred Zittel or the local Elk’s Temple. 1 No. 1 ratings in the solo Each year the PTA raises $1,500 to support a scholarship fund for students entering the field of education. Students applying for this .scholarship will be judged by rank in class, character and economic standing. Contact Vera Mae Adams immediately if you wish more details. SUPERIOR RATINGS Feb. 1, at Madison Junior High School, two Pontiac Central choral groups and three Central students received superior (no. II ratings in the annual Solo and Ensemble Festival, sponsored by the Michigan School Vocal Association. Central’s Madrigals, and the Senior Girl’s Ensemble were awarded top ratings in ensemble competition, and Linda Davis, Pete Marinos and Mike Carnival Spirit Is Contagious at Marian High prettiest eyes; Harry Booker, Tom Howieson, Rick Schwach, Marcia Steehler, Debbie Dunkle and Vicki Tosto, most attractive; and Bill Crooks, Dave Stone, Larry Sword, Sue Thompson, Everett and Lynda PArbes, most talkative. SIGN UP NOW Juniors interested in taking the National Merit ’Scholarship Test Saturday, should sign up in the counseling'area. The $2 registration fee must be paid at sign-up. The Girls’ Athletic Association will sponsor its annual play day Saturday. Events begin at 10 a m. ★ * ★ Tonight, Kettering’s basketball team plays archrival Waterford Township on Township’s court. An aftergame dance will be held Friday after the game with Milford. ★ * ★ Kettering’s grapplers will participate in the Wayne-Oakland League Meet Saturday. By BARBARA LENAR'I’OWICZ , Enthusiasm for Marian’s weekend Mardi Gras is becoming contagious. Sister Baptisca, sophomore religious teacher, and junior Sandy Zatkoff, Marian financial commissioner, are coordinating the activities. Students are now engaged in a spirited gift-award contest. Prizes are $500, $100 and a tape recorder. COOPERATION CITED “The successes of the past have been due to the tremendous cooperation and enthusiasm of the entire Marian family , students, parents and faculty,” Mr. and Mrs. John MacAloon, general chairman, said in analyzing the situation. “We are confident that the same support will be the key to even greater achievements this year,” Each Thursday, ticket chairmen announce which class has the highest percentage of students bringing in the $2 weekly quota. As a reward, this class does not wear uniforms the next day. * ★ * Ticket chairmen will treat the commission room selling the most tickets to a victory luncheon in the cafeteria. Although most of the Mardi Gras festivities will take place Friday night and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday one activity will take place this evening. Elected by the class, 40 girls will model spring and summer fasiiions supplied by the J. L. Hudson Co. at a student Mardi Gras Fashion Show. Completing PCH's choral strength wa.s the Senior Boy’s En.semble, which received a 2 rating. Pontiac now has a Creative Arts Center located at 47 Williams Si. Students are invited to attend the various activities and shows held there Students at Rice to Help Marian By MICHAEL R. McGILL The Brother Rice Student Council Fri day voted to help in Marian’s Mardi Gras by building a booth. May styles of booths were suggested as possible constructions by the men of Rice. The final choice was a “tip-over-Coke” game which will be build and manned on Saturday with proceeds going to Marian. The newlv elected freshmen officers attended their first Student Council meeting Friday. The officers, elected last week under the direction of RoberL^—^ Schriener, election committee chairman, were Roger Williams, president; Peter Bookmeyer, vice president; Brian Ru.ssell, secretary; and Mark Sullivan, treasurer. Assisting in the election proceedings were Tom Meyer, Mike Mayer, Paul Mever and Rick Tuyn, senior officers. Just recently, a new project popped up. Backed by Jerry Duerr and a number of juniors, a group of students have formed what they call a “Curriculum Committee.” In an interview Jerry was asked, “What are the project and committee for?” SCIENCE COURSES “The purpose of this committee is lo serve the students with a better array of subjects. For example, our school has only four science subjects—Bio 1. Chem 1, Phys I, and Cosmos. “To give a student a deeper uii-derslanding of biology, we are petitioning for a Bio 11 course. So fur we have gotten excellent response from faculty, administration and students,” he replied. ★ * * “The procedure we must go through to obtain a course is to get student support, then to see if the new course will meet with the department head’s approval. “If all gocs Ayell, we then must find a teacher who is Cs^pable and willing to teach it. “Once these steps are completed, the administration gets the final word when we submit the proposal to Brother Popish. Additional School News Found on Page B-2 UP, UP AND AWAY—Looks like the balloons are going to make a quick get- ... -------- away from Julie Martin as she assists Kitsy Hanson with decorating for Kingswood’s the social committee sponsors the fall midwinter formal,“Scarborough Fair.” The gala will be held Saturday from 9 p.m. formal in November and the com- to midnight with the Meditations providing the music. formal in November and the mencement dance in June. gram of study is flexible and can be altered to fit the needs oj the students. The group is free to consider the dimensions of a specific subject for any length of time before moving on to the next topic of interest. MORALITY AT ISSUE Morality is the current point at issue, and will be followed by such subjects as religion, the Selective ’Service and music as it relates to the attitudes of today. A list of suggested reading materials for students has been compiled to aid preparation for the group intra-action. * * ★ The list includes such titles as “Our Unfair and Obsolete Draft” by Bruce Chapman and “Unmarried Love” by Eustace Chesser. When asked the purpose of the course, Buzan commented, “Students today are using canned knowledge. They are blinded by traditional value systems and archaic attitudes toward life. REEVALUATION SOUGHT “We want them to reevaluate the things they believe in and not just accept the things their parents dictate as right or wrong.” “We hope that other schools and school s^'stems will possibly benefit from the undertaking. Whether it fails or not they should at least try to reevaluate their own methods of teaching and possibly institute a course like this in their own curriculum.” * * * At the completion of the course the class will evaluate the accomplishments of the semester’s studies and submit suggestions to the administration for further experimentation. Buzan explained that although “Human Values” is a noncredit course at present, it is hoped that it will be accredited after considering results of this year’s efforts. STAFF OF LIFE—Sister Dorothy, head of Marian High School’s home economics department, gets an assist fmm !joyce Jateko (center) and Linda Wean-mueller as the threesome makes rolls for sale at Friday and Saturday’s Mardi Gras. Joyce and Linda are freshmen. B-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 11, 1969 A WITCH’S INVITATION-’ C'omo in. my dear," uf■^^es the witch (Connie Hush) as her cat (Jim Cordon) looks on and Crelel,” will be pre; Crrtrl (Sue Siirrie) he.sitatcs Sue and Jim are freshmen and students, Thursday i Connie is a senior. The children's classic, "Hansel and Saturday at It) a in a ’larkston lli^jh School drai I , Friday at 7:;t0 p in. a a SCHOOL NEWS iC^^^ROUNDUP St. Lawrence By MAUREEN CHAPATON The senior play, “The Night of January 16th”, will be held at St. Lawrence High School Sunday and Monday evenings at 8 p.m. Tickets are at the door. Report cards are being mailed to students, marking the end to the first semester officially. The delay of the semester’s close was due tp the unscheduled vaction students received when furnace trouble plagued the school. Friday, the boys’ basketball team will host St. Gertrude at 6 and 8 p.m. A dance will follow the game. The junior varsity and varisty girls’ basketball teams are in first place in their suburban league. This top rating came when the Mustines defeated St. James. Country Day By JANET IVORY Following midyear exams, seniors at Bloomfield Country Day School initiated a new program for the second semester, a term of independent study. During a certain period, instead of doing class,,^worky they will choose a topic of special interest and do intensive research on that subject. The girls are expected to read as many as 25 books in their chosen field of interest. t This new program should give the ' student an opporunity to study in depth and learn without prodding from teachers although they will be available for assistance. Hansel, Gretel' Set at Clarkston By TRUDY BEALL “Look, Hansel. A gingerbread house. Doesn’t if look delicious?” Beginning Thursday at 4 15 p.m. these words will be spoken in front of live audiences, as the Clarkston High School drama deparfment presents “Hansel and This children’s classic will also be presented Friday at 7:30 p rn. and Saturday at 10 a m. and 1 p.m. in the Little Theater. A performance will al.so be given at Jolm Monteith elementary school in Waterford and at the Pontiac State Hospital. The purpose of the Children's Theater is to give students experience in a different kind of acting. An audience of children requires different attitudes on the part of the actors, than an adult audience. The theater also serves the children in the community by providing good entertainment for them while exposing them to live acting on stage. ADMISSION PRICE Price for admission to this cla.ssic is 25 cents Mrs. Robert Gibson is coaching the students in this production. Saturday, from noon to 8 p.m., and Sunday from 2 to 6 p.m. the Student Council-sponsored Creative and Industrial Art Show will be held. •k -k -k There are three areas in the English department in wliich students may participate: poems, es.says and short stories. All entries must be completely original. ART CATEGORIES In the Art Section the categories are oil, polner, transparent water colors, opaque water colors, pencil drawings, ink drawings (drawing inks, felt marker and other ink media), pastels (crayons. charcoal and chalk drawings) and print making (block print and other prints). Completing the categories are mixed media, graphic design, design for fashion (approval design, fashion illustration, textile design), design for textiles on paper, applied designs material, sculpture, pottery, jewelrv and crafts. The Industrial Arts Department will include drafting, cabinet making, metals, general woodwork, electricity and auto trouble-shooting. Judges for the show will be teachers and adults from the area but not from within the school. Milford By ROSE MAKI Hearts will throb as the sophomore class presents a valentine’s dance entitled “Cupid Caper” Saturday. 'The bows will begin to snap at 7:30-11:30 p m. in the Milford High &hool cafeteria. Tickets will cost $1.50 per couple and $1 stag. Pictures will flash as couples are photographed during the evening. The pictures may be purchased for $1.20 per couple. Small party favors will be sold. A door prize will be given to those who attend the evening’s events. ★ * ★ Refreshment committee members will wear white ruffled blouses and red miniskirts. Under the direction of decoration chairmen Robein TPigman, sophomores will work for the party success. Sophomore sponsors, Babara Zeek and James Lucadem of the faculty, will chaperone the dance. Sacred Heart By TERESA FIASCHETTI The Student Council at the Academy of the Sacred Heart is organizing a fair for the entire student body. Scheduled for next Monday afternoon, the fair will offer a diversion before second semester exams. The exams begin the week of Feb. 24. Each class, club and student activity will prepare its own booth. All funds raised will ro to school charities. Two seniors, Mary Tindall and Teresa P'iaschetti, will repre;sent the Academ ' of the Sacred Heart at the annual Science and Humanities Symposium at Wayne State University, Feb. 28 and March 1. North Farmington • By KATHI CAMPBELL The music and arts departments of North Farmington High proudly announce this year’s Broadway musical presentation will be “Showboat,” by Jerome Kem and Oscar Hamerstein II. Performances are scheduled for May 9, 10, 16 and 17. “Show boat” is based on Edna Feber’s novel “Showboat.” The setting opens aboard the “Cotton Blossom” in the 1880s. it then moves to Chicago then returns again to the riverboat for the final scenes set in the year 1927. The plot is built around two love stories. The first is the story of Julie and her husband, Steve. The second is of Magnolia and Gaylord Rabenel, who is a riverboat gambler. Lapeer By SUE DeARMOND During the spring semester, nine afterschool enrichment classes will be offered to Lapeer Senior High students in the 10th, 11th and 12th grades. The nine classes being offered ^e World Affairs — a study of the problem areas of the world and the U.S.; Power Mechanics — to acquaint students with a small gasoline engine; Studio Art — work in an artistic area of interest with supervision and instruction by a teacher; Speed Reading — the pcomotionj, of reading efficiency; and 'Theater — an in-depth study of the various elements of the modern theater. * ★ * Others are boys’ Swimming and Girls’ Swimming, Science Enrichment, information and lab projects in the areas of biology, chemistry and physics; and Mechanical Drawing for Girls — proper use of instruments and instruction about simple three-view drawings. Students may pick up any one of these classes, and pay the $2 enrollment charge at the first class meeting. A report card mark will be awarded to each student and will be entered upon the student’s permanent record. One-half a credit toward graduation will be given for successful completion of all courses taken. Mercy By MARY ANNE MADDEN Glen Oaks Country Club in Farmington will be the setting Friday, 8:30-11:30, for Our Lady of Mercy’s Valentine’s Dance. Sponsored by the senior class, the semi-formal will feature the Stuart Carr Orchestra. Highlight of the evening will be the crowning of a queen and her court. Each class will select a girl as its representative for the court, while the senior chosen will reign as queen. TO REMAIN SECRET Results of the voting will remain a secret until the dance. Decorations, headed by senior Pat Steimel, will consist of flowers, hearts, and streamers. Other chairmen are Janet Muiler, chaperones; Leanne Kopmeyer, bands; Liipe Munoz, voting; Jan Boettcher, publicity: and Kris Sornson, tickets. Senior class president is Jo Ellen Rick. Three hundred tickets are available during lunch hours and can be purchased from seniors Laura Dolata, Nancy Weber, Mary Ann Dalla Guarda, Mary Anne Madden, Maureen Trim and Kris Sornson. The tickets are priced at $3 per couple. Seaholm High's Journalism Students Having a Go at a Daily Newspaper By MIKE FOX A deadline every day has become a reality for journalism students at Seaholm High School. Last Friday marked the start of a Seaholm daily newspaper. The newspaper, titled The Experiment, is presently undergoing a three-week trial to determine the practicality of having a daily newspaper ★ * * The paper Is staffed by the members of the school paper, The Highlander, which has temporarily terminated publication. Under the faculty spon.sorship of Thomas C. Hammel, the staff hopes to maintain the daily 8'ii by 11 paper. MAIN ADVANTAGE The Highlander, Seaholm’s weekly At Rochester High in its 30th newspape operation. The Experiment’s main advantage will be immediate reporting of school happenings. The paper, which will be distributed every morning through homerooms to all students at Seaholm, has a noon deadline the day before publication. * k k It will include daily bulletin announcements published by Seaholm's main office and supposedly read in homerooms. But failure of some homerooms to read the daily bulletin and class disturbing PA announcements provoked the students on the newspaper staff to try a daily newspaper. Each issue will be a two-page sheet. The back page is done up to one week in advance at a local commercial printer. Classes Hear Noted Doctor By MOLLY PETERSON Social Living II classes last week hosted Dr. Sonya Friedman, the recipient of the Knight’s Award of “Most Outstanding CRizen of the year. She came to Rochester Senior High School to share her knowledge and ideas with the students of Mrs. G. McKenney. The Pilot’s Club of Birmingham awarded Dr. Friedman the title for her work in the area of children’s mental health. As recipient of the award, the doctor was given a check for $100 which she said will be used to provide assistance for Rochester children in need of mental therapy. Dr. Friedman spoke on “Ideas of Masculinity and Feminity and Them Relationship to Marriage.” The Social Living II classes are presently studying modern viewpoints on dating, courtship and marriage. GOP CLUB Republican students of Rochester Senior High are as anxious to get on with the 1972 election as are the “Students for Edward Kennedy ’ organ- ization. 'Die Republicans have now formed the TARS Club (Teen-Age Republicans) The first meeting of the TARS was held last 'Thursday. Although spring may seem a long way off for undergraduates, it seems like just around the comer for most of the Class of ’69. Spring Fever in February fell upon the class at a senior class meeting held last Wednesday. Ray Lawson, senior class sponsor and head of the English department, announced to the seniors that during the coming week they are to place their orders for commencement announcements and announcement cards. The students were also advised that they were to be present in the gym lobby tomorrow so they can be measured for caps and gowns. PANELENTOLOGISTS Graduation is about 16 weeks away. Among the many fascinating organizations present at HHS this year is the Panelentologists Club. This club is devoted to collecting old comic books add is headed by seniors Tim White and Bill Gibson. But the front page is set in type, layed out and printed on the day before release. AT PRINT SHOP Students at Seaholm’s print shop, under the supervision of Chuck Foust, will handle the printing of the paper. Student advertising manager Jenny Jickling figures that the ads used in a typical four-page weekly paper can I easily be spread out over five days with ads on the back pages taking up about one third of the page each time. \ k k k ' The daily publication helps advertisers • in that only two or three advertisers appear in one issue and they do not need to compete against other advertisers of the same product for readership. Financially, advertising and student activity ticket funds will pay for the paper. IN CHARGE OF CIRCULATION Circulation manager junior Claudia Prior must provide copies of The Experiment to advertisers and other .schools who exchange papers with Seaholm. Also, she must see that every student have a copy made available to him. The photography staff includes Dick Clark. Tom Johnson, Bob Charlton and Mark Kell who will be kept busy capturing Seaholm life on film. Also busy .will be staff artist Mike Sinelli who designs ad sketches. * * ★ Feature editors Jenny Neal and Dee Edwards must make the newspaper appealing in the special feature category. The sports boys, who see Tuesday as their big day to report last weekend's results, are Steve Buechlor and Jim Jones. ^ STRAIGHT NEWS Straight news is the specialty of news editors Peggy Westerby and Mike Fox, who are assisted by Bert Moore. I’he over all student responsibility falls on the editor, senior Randy Smith. He is a veteran of thrpp years with Seaholm journalism * * * The editorials, the responsibility, and the leadership are his, and he is striving to (iresent a good newspaper. Young marrieds: $3?;000 in life insurance lbr50<^adag? Can’t believe it. Believe it! $37,000 in life insurance for the first year for only 50<: a day—if you’re 25. For less, if you’re younger. And Nationwide’s “Family Security” plan lets you put the coverage where you need it, when you need it. Like $33,000 on yourself, $4,000 on your wife. And if you have children, $1,000 on each at no additional cost. Still can’t believe it? The coupon below will make a believer out of you. Just send it to us. Or call the man from Nationwide nearest you. “Family Security” is part of Nationwide’s Blanket Protection-every kind of insurance for every kind of family. jfiaiitioiiwide. I Ym, I aii tetonited la yow SwMHy* ftogtiM. LIFE • HEALTH • HOME • CAR • MUTUAL FUNDS • BUSINESS Nuionwide Mutual Insurance Co. Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Ck. Nationwide Life Insurance Coi. Heritafe Securities. Inc. Home Office: Columbus,Ohio —clarkstoKi— —PONTIAC— —CLARKSTON— ^COMMERCE— Spence Butters Ken Drechsel Don Cooper Art Lange Home 625-2895 Home 391-2517 ^ Home 625-2209 Home 363-9933 Office 682-9281 Office 682-9281 Office 682-9281 / Office 363-7473 THE PONTIAC PKESS. IT ESDAV, FEBRUARY W, IDGO B—3 . - • '*v>. .--.‘“sr- Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas John F. Anderson Service for John F. Anderson, 64, of 4160 Airport, Waterford Township, will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Coats Funeral Home, with burial in Lakeview Cemetery. Mr. Anderson, who was a painter at Fisher Body, died!Mrs. Ruth Williams of Pontiac. Saturday. He was a member of Mrs. Samuel Cooper Sunday. He was a member of the South Side Seventh-day Adventist Church. i LAPEER - Service for Mrs. Surviving are his wife,'Samuel (Cassie) Cooper, 72, of Bernice; his parents, Mr. and;680 Lincoln will be 1:30 p.m. Mrs. Thomas Benton; t w oTomorrow at the Lapeer Church children, Brenda Lee and Tef- of the Nazarene, with burial ii rell Lee, both at home; and ll'lmlay Township C e m e t e r y , brothers and sisters, including imlay Township, by the Muir brothers Funeral Home. Fraternal Order of Eagles, Aerie 2887, Waterford Township. Surviving are three stepsons, Gary Thomas of Pontiac, William Thomas of Louisiana and Ronald Thomas of Texas; two sisters; and three brothers, including Orval And' Waterford Township. | Mrs. Ziva Dostanich Mrs. Cooper died Sunday. Surviving are four brothers, Service for Mrs. Ziva (Eva)'including Leroy Roberts of Dostanich, 79, of 4966 Highland, jLapeer and Earl Roberts of Waterford Township, will be Clarkston, and four sisters, in-1:30 p.m. tomorrow at eluding Mrs. Mildred Boyer of Voorhees-Siple Chapel withi^pcec-. burial in Perry Mount Park °‘|cemetery. James Gollogly Mrs. Dostanich, a member of Levie Benton Lazarus Serbian Orthodox BIRMINGHAM — J a m e s to head a new agency promot-iyear college,deferments should ,30, 1971. Church, Detroit, died yesterday. I ^cllcily- '^3, of 1047 Emmons ing municipal court probation ; Service and burial for ^ Eie^Sv FuL^afVomf ' Benton, 28, of 447 E. Wilson wilL^^’ George D.tmch of P«nGfe; Ma^^ Badey Funeral Home, * * * , be 2 p.m. Sunday in Colquitt,I‘'"V two Bimingharn. | osgood’s appointment leaves! Ga.- His body will be at I P®. ^™ the three-man County Board of| Frank Carruthers Funeral; r' u ix c _rr lemploye of GMC Truck and ^ short. It willj Home from 7 to 10 p.m. today, j Evanoff Coach Division. up Democratic-domi-! Mr. Benton, an employe of' Gencha K. Evanoff of 324 Surviving are his wife. Mar-nated Oakland County Board of| Pontiac Motor Division, died Wessen died yesterday. \ ^ Supervisors to make appoint- ----------------------------- Funeral arrangements are Gugh of Birm- ment to the auditors. i pending at Huntoon Funeral‘"Sham; and ‘® ® lONE DEMOCRAT NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ' HomC oranflr'hiIHrpn Notice Is hereby given nf e nubile, --------------a Auditor Named! Lottery-Draft Idea Gains Poit'ac Teen Held Two sentenced District Judge More Favor in Congress > ' A Pontiac youth wa.s arrested Michigan men involved in sep- leaves Vacancy fori Washington (UPD -,be dropped to make the lottery ^ty detectives ye.sterday on arate bank robberies were sen-_.I, There are indications Congress!effective. Rivers and his coi-“ urmed robbery tcnced Mttnday to 12 years each County board to rill rggy answer demands for a!leagues on the c o m m i 11 e el Bennie L. ( lay, 18, of 321 P^'^n^y district Ju^ jehange in the draft law by con-|believe deferments and other Fisher was accused of the $170 Fox. Anthony J. Bailor Pnv William C Milliken hasis‘‘^ering a lottery. But it ap-parts of the law should be left holdup of Dan's F r i e n d I y 2^. Warren was convicted of nam.H SilanH change might be unchanged. Market, 406 On Hard Lake, on robbing $8,469 from he Wood- ivniri q.kl.nd Cminly s 3^.11 Pres4nl Nixon has noUaken ni, ( ™ri Sale Bank al Dow,tt on linne and,lor, John B, ,, „„ o I Chairman L. Mendel Rivers, has proposed the draft be (Di,nty ,l;ul after arraignment i.,,, 'aar,.v' u,nu in thf EFS.C., of the House Armed eliminated entirely when the before District .liidge Cecil ‘‘/' . C t Services Committee said he has demands of the Vietnam war M,,(;;,lluni, who set Imiid at softened his previous opposition ease. $:!,ooo, Cuiirt ............. " * ' to a lottery and will hold hear-, * * * set for Feb 20 ings this spring on the Selective' The current draft law, as _ ........... ......... Service Act. written by Rivers’ committee. The lottery idea is part of a prevents the president from' « Qm'ri'r/o growing public clamor f o r making any changes in the act! UGOTfl u OUlClUG changes in the draft laws. But without congressional permis-| ^ , „ . , jbackers of the lottery proposal sion. The law was revised in' Gakland County 1'/’>•' f/ § believe that mandatory four- 1967 and is effective until June “Puut^ bavc luied tne ■ ■ ■ strangulation death yesterday of Mrs. James (Beatrice) Hoag, long $6,173 fron of the American Trust Bank at Lansing, on Jan. 12, 1967. The city of Chicago is host to about 1.200 conventions a year. County Official Named fo Unit Fire, Traffic Codes OK'd in Waterford 39, of 1196 Inca Trail, Orion Tmviisbip, a suicide. She was found by her husband in their home. HEARING AID CENTER Vicon. ■ Qualitone & All| Leading Instruments THOMAS B. APPLETON 25 W. Huron - Main Floor 332-3052 Hiker Bldg. Twp. Planning Commission to be Monday, February 17, 1969, at 8;00 at the White Lake Township Hall, Highland Road, to consider the folh changes In the Zoning Map: From cultural District to Multiple Family Dale A. Kimmel grandchildren. Mrs. James Hoag Word has been received of the ORION TOWNSHIP—Service death of former Pontiac resi- for Mrs. James D. (Beatrice) I dent Dale A. Kimmel in Orlan- Hoag, 39, of 1196 Inca Trail will lone Democrat do, Fla. be 1 p.m. Thursday at Allen’s board. Service will be Friday in that Funeral Home, Lake Orion,j Murphy’s term The board of auditors is currently chaired by Daniel T. Murphy on appointment by su-pervisors. He serves with Robert B. Lilly, who has been the the powerful lit; ntU’AKKD for Vi lMT Jt W illi a Ne w city, with burial following. T3N, R8 Cdunty, I That pari of the N.E. V. of Section 1 and part of the N.W. W of Section 21 T3N, R8E, Oakland County, Michigan, di scribed as beginning at the N.W. come of Section 20 and proceeding thence along the North line of Section 20 Easterly 1320 feet more or less; thenre along the centerline of Hill Road Southerly 1850 teel more or less; thence Westerly 1320 feet more or less; thence Northerly 1190 feet more or less; thence Westerly 1320 feet more or less; thence Northerly 660 feet more or less; thence along the North line of Section 19, 1320 feet more or less to the point of beginning. Formerly known as part of the Thompson Farm on Hill Road. Containing 76.8 acres. Parcel H: Proposed Apartment Site That part of the S.W. 'A of Section 20, , R8E, White Lake Twp., Oakland ‘ “’thigan, described as beginning t 'A corner of Section 20 and proceeding thence along the East and West 'A line of Section 20, also being the centerline of Highland Road Easterly 740 feet more or less; thence Southerly 490 feet more or less; thence Southeasterly 720 feet more or less; thence Southwesterly 940 feet more or less; thence West- beginning. Also part of Tip-Top Ranch being Westerly corner Ford Road and M-59. Containing 32.6 acres. From Agricultural District to Light In- Par'cel C: Proposed Industrial Site That part of the N.W. 'A of Section 20, T3N, R8E, White Lake Township, Oakland County, Michigan descrllxrf as beginning at the center post of said Sec. 20 and proceeding thence along the North and South 'A line North 3°37'19" East 373,84 Ft ; thence North 88"22'47" West 67r.31 Ft! thence Sou^ Norm* 89»02'M'' e' St 674.57 F ■«rT I Agriculti less DIstric with burial in East Lawn Ceme-;is for one year, and his term on Gerard Lacey as s . s t ant, ^ Township director of the Oakland County ^ ^ ^ ^ Parks and Re6reation Com-Lj^j^ Police code.s for the mission, has been appointed traffic and fire the legisJative committee of the prevention odrinance.s. I Michigan Recreation and Parks laws are designated Association (MRPA). 'numbers 59 and 60, respcc- Kenneth J. Smithee, chairman tively. of the. committee, made the ★ ★ * chairman appointment this week. In addition, seven busine.sses Coolerator. HUMIDIFIER William Murphy Surviving are his wife , tery. Lake Orion, Madaline; four daughters, Mrs.; Mrs. Hoag died yesterday. Charles Baxley of Tampa, Fla., she was a member of Lake Mrs. James Drake of Orlando, Orion Methodist Church and Fla., and Barbara and Kathy at Lake Orion Child Guidance home; and a son, Allen at ojyjj gnd was a past worthy home. . advisor of the Rainbow Girls, Lansing. i Surviving besides her hus-Requiem Mass for William L. hand are her mother, Mrs. Murphy, 51, of 752 Irwindale,'Bernice Foote of Williamston; Waterford Township, will be 11 her grandmother, Mrs. Robert a.m. Thursday at St. Benedict Deitz of Williamston; a daugh-Catholic Church with burial in ter, Jackilyn, at home; two St. Peter’s Cemetery, Mount sons, Robert and William, both Clemens. at home; a brother; and two The Rosary will be recited at sisters. 8 p.m. tomorrow in Donelson- johns Funeral Home. William O. Rogers Mr. Murphy, an employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died METAMORA TOWNSHIP — yesterday. Service for William O. Rogers, Surviving are his wife, Una; 83, of 440 Sutton will be 11 a.m. the board also expires in onC| year. Lilly’s term is for two;^ more years. ^ reached agreement with (lie MRPA was organized in 1935 board to become eollcclion 5 Uie Michigan Municipal P<*mts for water bills. Amateur Athletic Association Collection .stalions will include * * * ' and became the M i c h i g a n ‘he Indepem ence V 11 a g *• The question of whether a Rggreation Association in 1938. |Fharmacy, ,)895 Dixie; John t Democrat or Republican will be! There are 449 recreation named to replace Osgood ap- organizations under MRPA. pears wide open. Democratic supervisors have suffered from! disunity, increasing chances for a Republican. 'Drugs, 1120 W. Huron; ' Montgomery Ward at the Pon-;tiac Mall; all Pontiac State ~ ;Bank branches and Community y I 4 ■ J National Bank branches in the 6dCll6r Arr9IQn6d i‘°'™®hip; Russ s country store, y 4500 EUzabeth Lake; and Perry Pharmacy, 739 N. Perry. on Assault Charge BACKHOE BID OK’D Money-Hungry Pup Saved by a Fast Check MEXICO CITY (UPI) - irfpf‘the‘‘N!E!'" o['section 19, sing, Waterford Township, will " ‘’b^lnnlng be 11 A.m. tomorrow at St. orLTuon Mary’s in the Hills Episcopal )f*he East Church, Lake Orion, with burial flirt ™l!e in the Crescent Hills Cemetery M^59*;‘Vhence*atong^h;\entem^^^^ by the Sparks-Griffin Funeral HO “2t’*morrtIi-* l^sslThiencel HomC. and |rTCeedlng^l The board accepted a $7,074 A Pontiac first-grade teacher bid on a tractor-trailer-backhoc was arrested yesterday and from the Pontiac Tractor and accused of severely paddling a Equipment Co. 6-year-old pupil. ‘o other business, the building Released on a $100 personal department and fire department ' bond after standing mute at January reports wqjejieard. Tj^g arraignment before District tw7‘chlidren,’ Stephen' a nd.tomorrow at the Muir BrosJ department of a Mexico ^ “ J"e * commerdaT'*" Dianne, both a. home; a Funera|__ H.m.,^ Cemetery, Burlington Township. I received the following letter: i Fildew. Preliminary i Mr. Rogers died Sunday. He ★ * ★ j amination was set for Feb. 20. :''sV?vTv''.Vg''‘™e' three' ''■^ar Sir. M, namO i, Rubenle^la’’’S, daughter 0, ,, daughters, Mrs. s t a n 1 e y Mercado. My father s name is Mrs. Anna Lou Evans^ 858 Famham of Pontiac, M r s . Joaquin Mercado. My puppy is Palmer, at Herrington School Wanda Danielson of Norway^ named Caroline Mercado. I am'’‘"‘‘“''sday-Mich., and Mrs. Burnell Glazier ^pitjng you because Caroline of Ouray, Colo.; a sister; 11 v, i t grandchildren; and five great- ate half of daddy s pay .check. I grandchildren. am sending the other half so ------------------ i you can see what happened. Dianne, brother; and two sisters. Mrs. Kenneth Sims Service for Mrs, Kenneth (Cheryl C.) Sims. 17, of 280 Lan- issued for d d i t i o n and remodeling totaling $59,700, while $22,964 in residential remodeling and additions reported. Permit totals were 36 for (t() Days Sanu' Iifully V t’-blylfd us < Cush • i; v:i|)oralrs up to If. gallons a i vr. m Roy-i)o\rynt\ry ivuvtiac h: t ir, >oint of bMinr sort of Weber llnnlng. Formerly il Site John D. Carr ATTICA TOWNSHIP -i Found Hanged "Daddy says he is going to ...........i»Lak«"townihiS;-oaki»ndl Lapeer County S h e r i f f ’ skill Caroline. Please check, and sa,e my . tomorrow at the'Boss. 57 of Oregon TownshipJpuppy -' —, found hanged in a cell at; ’distant' Northerly 430 feet moi West 'A corner of Sec- of Hill Road Southerly 810 teel more oi less; thence along a curve, also helm, the centerline of M-59 Northwesterly 1420 feet more or less to the point of hegin-ning. Also part of Former Thompson Farm and located Northwest corner of Hilt and M-59. Containing 20.6 acres. Parcel F: Proposed Commercial Site That part of the N.W. 'A of Section 20, T3N, R8E, White Lake Township, Oakland County, Michigan, described as beginning at a point distant Westerly 660 feet more or less from the center of Section 20 end proceeding thence along the center-line of Highland Road Westerjy *““* x) Hill Road ; thence thence to the ----- - - at the Northeast cornei between ‘ ‘ Parcel G Containin.------- That part of ft Easterly 132 feel; thence Northerly 380 feet; thence along the centerline of Highland Road Easterly 800 feet more or less, to the point of beginning. Being partly ol the TIp-Top Ranch fronting on M-59. ;!! From'" AgrioiUifrYl** District to Mobile Home Pa?k District (R-3): Parcel I: Proposed Mobile Home Park is* That part of the S.W. 'A of Section 20, T3N, ROE, White Lake Township, Oakland County, Michigan, described as beginning at the S.W. corner of Section 20 and pro- * ceeding thence along the West line of N lUth 'A line of Section 20 Soothe et more or less; thence along th le of Section 20 Westerly 2640 fei GOP Chief in 18fh Seeks Reelection Muir Brothers Funeral Home, I m a ceii aij paymaster said another Lapeer, with burial in Attica' ^^|ghec Mr. Carr died Sunday. He ^ traffic charge. ______ i was saved. was employed by the Chevrolet! Motor Division Flint. j Surviving are a son, (JharleSi of Waterford Township; a daughter, Mrs. Lucille Bailey of| Pontiac; a brother, Merle of; Lapeer; and two grandchildren. Persons^lnferested ) requested to be | of the proposed changes ' office of the Township " Police Action Pontiac police and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 94 reported incidents and made 17 arrests the past 24 hours. Causes for police action: 'Traffic offenses—18 Burglaries—12 Assaults—6 Injury accidents—5 Auto thefts—2 Larcenies—16 Property damage accidents—13 Disorderly persons—6 Vandalisms—10 ShopIifUng-1 Obscene phone call—1 Carrying concealed weapons—1 Bad check—1 Suicide—1 Unarmed robbery—1 Job-Experience Survey Due for 100 in County About 100 residents in Oakland County will be asked about their work experience during 1968, as part of a nationwide survey next week, according to Hobert A. Yerkey, director of the Bureau of the Census Regional^ Office in Detroit, i The sampling will involve about 800 households in Oakland, Wayne and Macomb counties, he said. I Questions will be asked about the number of weeks worked last year, the number of weeks lost because of unemployment lor other reasons, and the longest job held during the year. The survey is taken annually to provide data for use by the U.S. Department of Labor. The questions supplement the bureau’s regularly monthly inquiries for the Labor Department on current employment and unemployment. I , •*■*■*• The identity of households in the survey is confidential, and the information obtained will be used for statistical purposes only, said Yerkey. ___^ _ Oakland County GOP District Chairman John A. Gibbs of Troy has announced his candidacy for reelection to the leadership post I of the 18th Congressional District Republican Organization. Gibbs, an advertising executive with Batten, Barton, Dur-stine and Osborne of Detroit, was elected district chairman in 1967. ! * * * . He said he is seeking reelec-1 lion because he considers the; next two years crucial ones for the party in the 18th District, j He said the election of Gov. William Milliken is the most crucial task the party faces. Milliken, who succeeded Gov, Romney, will be up for election in the fall of 1970. The election of district chair-len is due at the Republican spring state convention Friday! and Saturday in Grand Rapids. John Cartwright, 19® District chairman, has said he will not seek reelection. Being mentioned for the position is Shelden Smith of Pontiac, who has not officially declared his candidacy. revival revival EVANGELIST Rev. D. R. Matherlee Findlay, Ohio Evangelical Holiness Church Corner of Auburn and Morivo Ave., Pontiac Public Welcome February 12 to 23 7:30 Eich Evening \ REV. K. J. BICKERTON. Pastor Our firm was established in Pontiac 40 years ago. The number of families we serve each year increases and the resulting expansion of facility and staff makes it possible for us to constantly serve you better. ' SPARKS-GRIFFIN FLNElfAiu HOME 46 Williams St. Phone FE 8-!)2!ScS AAOI\nrCOAAER\1 Bdays only! New, breathtaking 8x10 LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT Your money back if this isn't the most lifelike portrait of your child ever. Not just an old-fashioned tinted or colored picture, but "Living Color”! The complete portrait comes oliVe—^captured in amazing full-color realism with Eastman Professional Ektacolor film. » Choose from actual finished portraits—not proofs. • Extra prints available at reas< able prices. No obligation to b • Groups token at 99« per chile • Age limit: 5 weeks to 12 years » Limit; one per child— two per family. Pontiac Moll Now thru Sat., Feb. 15 Hours: 10 to 8 P.M. 'rilE PONTIAC PRESS. 'HO-:Sl)A^^ EEBIUJARY 11. 1969 Pictured are Mike Pattemon, Waterford, Jerry Hamlin (Mr. G), Waterford and Ralph W. Steward, Berkley, Michigan People Who Read The Pontiac Press Every Evening Have More To Talk About The Next Day SPORTS ENTHUSIASTS debate the controversial decision as to where a new stadium should be located to best facilitate travel, transportation and parking. The projected growth and expansion of the Southern Michig'an area in the next twenty years plus the present interest of fans in other cities — Grand Rapids, Battle Creek, Saginaw, Lansing, Flint, etc. — must be considered. The known facts of highway congested travel points out the need for rapid railway transportation that can serve a location for the new sports stadium. Summing the problem . . . travel time, highways, railways . . . using the now existing highways and new rapid transit on railways is a logical conclusion. The Pontiac Area offers the answer to the best location for the new stadium. The Pontiac Press Will keep you informed as to the TRENDS AND ACTION WHEN IT HAPPENS! THE PONTIAC PRESS For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Wofim THE PONTIAC PI|ESS Tt^ESDA^ . EEimUARY 11. 10(;9 'Demand, Excellent' Result: Citrus Official Advises Upping Price LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) — Housewives may have to dig still deeper into their pocketbooks in a few days to keep up with steadily increasing prices for frozen orange juice concentrate. And the citrus industry is confident the buyers will dig. “Demand for concentrate is excellent with consumers spending $7 million per week for concentrate in January, which represents a 25 per cent increase over last January,’’ said an official of the Florida Citrus Mutual. The official, Robert W. Rutledge, used this word Monday to back up a recommendation that packet's increase f.o.b. prices from the current standard of $1.85 to $2 for a dozen six-ounce cans of concentrate. If packers agree, it would mean an instore increase of at least 1.5 cents on each six-ounce can. Most stores now sell juice for 21 cents. Calendar WEDNESDAY i Woman’s World Series, 10 a.m.. The Pontiac Mall. “Woman’s Responsibility in the Family Tax Pic- i ture’’ by Stewart Frank. Lone Pine Garden Chib, 11:30 a m., home of Mrs. R. O. Bailey of Echo Road, Bloomfield Township. William J. Collins will speak on “A Thorny Problem.” Ikebana International chapter No. 85, 1 p.m.. West Bloomfield Library. Noble Uyenishi on Japa-; nese customs and gardens. American Association of Retired Persons, Pontiac chapter No. 7, 1:30 p.m.. Community Services Building. Robert Payne will show film on underground railroad. National Secretaries Association, Pontioak chapter, 6:30 p.m., For-tino’s. Regular dinner meeting with speaker. Pontiac Audubon Club, 7:30 p.m., All Saints’ Episcopal Church. Dan MoGeen will speak. Woman’s Society of Christian Service, St. James United Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m., in the church. Regular meeting. North Woodward Area Alumnae of Alpha Chi Omega, Group II, 8 p.m.. Pleasant Ridge home of Mrs. David White. Capt. Milford Fuller of the American Red Cross will speak. Oh, When the Saints Come Marching In . Jan Semelroth of Royal Oak (left) practices^ bathing a '‘baby” under the watchful eye of Mary Walker, director of nurses at St. Joseph Dfercy Hospital. The nurses' alumnae group which gave Jan a scholarship* is .sponsoring its annual dinner dance Saturday in the Kingsley Inn ballroom to raise more scholarship funds. Tickets for the 7:30 p.m. event, open to the public, may be obtained from the hospital nursing office. Focusing on the (heme of Mardi Gras, the St. Regis Altar Society, under general chairman Mrs. Paul J. Carron. of Birmingham, (above) will present a noon luncheon and fashion show at the Raleigh House Feb. 18. Fashions are by Jacobson's. The public may contact Mrs. Allan G. Campbell Jr. of Round Hitt Dnce or Mrs. Joseph Maher of Sandringham Way, for tickets. Drummonds, Former Hills Folk, Feted by Harlan Clan, Friends Getting into “step” with it all for St. Benedict's Altar Society's card party are from left, Kathy Dawson of Sylvan Lake and Judy Einheuser of South Tilden Street. The event, open to the public, begins at 8 p.m. Monday in the church halt. Chairman of the benefit is Mrs. Max Keller. County Artists Win Awards at Annual Mall Art Exhibit Mr. and Mrs. Victor Drummond of Cleveland, former Bloomfield Hills residents, were weekend guests of the C. Allen Harlans of Bloomfield Hills. Saturday night all the 11 a r 1 a n s gathered to vi.sit the out-of-towners — son John and his wife Beth of BlcKimfield Hills, daughter Joyce and her husband, John Scott, son .lames and his wife Susan of Birmingham, and Scott, a U. of M. student. Monti Salomaa, a Finnish exchange student living with t h e Harlans, joined in. On Sunday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph llenninger of Beverly Hills, and of BlcKimficld Hills, the Drummonds, In the Seventh Annual Art Exhibit at The Ponfiac Mall, the two Merchants’ Awards went to Wanda Northen of Farmington for best use of color and to Ronald Pavsner of Oak Park for fusion of message and media. Cherry Queen Is Making a Tour TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) - Michigan’s national cherry queen, blonde Julie Hamilton of Cedar Springs, will embark on a promotion campaign involving several states and thousands of miles to promote the cherry industry of Michigan in other parts of the country. She will leave here for Indianapolis, Ind., Friday when she will be received by Gov. Edgar Whitcomb and Mayor Richard Lugar and attend a press conference in her honor. * * * The 18-year-old queen will be loaded with cherry recipes and cherry pies which she will distribute in various states. Miss Hamilton is one of eight children of Mr, and Mrs. Donald Hamilton and won the national cherry festival crown ' and reigned ,over the event last summer. She sews, cooks, has tennis, bowling, water skiing, swimming and ice skating as hobbies. But most importantly. Miss Hamilton — who goes to business college — can bake a cherry pie. The Pontiac Society of Artists’ May Sterling Memorial Award for best use of media went to Jean Belknap of Ottawa Drive. Harry Booth of Orchard Lake won the prize given by Donnell's of The Mall for best in sculpture. Other ribbon winners were: Ted Prueter and Joyce Cotter, second and third prizes for graphics; Ronald Pavsner, Neil Geiger and Irene Catcher, first three awards for drawing; Max Wright of Union Lake and Frank Highly of Franklin, second and third awards for sculpture; Edward Smith of Rochester, Irene Stretten of Union Lake ,md Dorothy Clark of Farmington, the first three awards in mixed media; Marty Me Andrew of Keego Harbor, Barry Michaels of Royal Oak and Kate McLean of Pontiac, first three awards in pastels. the Thomas Osthy all old friends dropped by. Caprice Chapman, daughter of Mrs. Betty Ellen Chapman of Beach Road, Birmingham, just turned sweet 16. She marked the day with dinner at the Bloomfield Hills Country Club, joined by her mother and grandparents, the Arthur R. Hoffmans of Gros.se Pointe. ★ * * Mr. and Mrs. Gary Downey of Birmingham are back from a stay in sunny St Croix, where they visited her parents, the Harpy B. Cunninghams. Mrs. Walter J. Kowahryk, West Maryknoll Street, Avon Township, was chosen one of “Four Outstanding Young Women in Michigan" by the state Jay-cee aicaliary last weekend. She IS active ii]^ civic programs, club work, church groups, teaches part-time and has a career as designer .of doll fashions. The Ko-walc.zyks have two sous. Children Suffer Claim Experts in Social Work By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; As Los Angeles county .social workers, we were very disappointed in your remarks, as we quote: “I for one am disgusted with handing over my tax dollars for the welfare of women who have one illegitimate child after another for the sole purpose of picking up the welfare check. I think that a woman who bears more than one illegitimate child should become automatically ineligible for welfare.” Abby, in L.A. qounty a woman with one child (legitimate or otherwise) receives aid in the amount of $148 a month. A second child increases her check LESS than one dollar a day! Do you really believe a woman would have “one illegitimate baby after another for the sole purpose of picking up the welfare check?” The fact is that many welfare recipients are so ashamed of their second pregnancies, they wait until ' the last moment to inform their case workers, thus sacrificing their $20 a month pre-natal allowance. Our agency dispenses information on family planning, and contraceptives FREE through the Medi-Cal program, and most clients are extremely receptive to their use. Aid to Dependent Children is just that, paid to the CHILDREN-not to parents, so if a woman becomes ineligible for welfare after one illegitimate child, it’s the child who suffers. Is that fair? Please reconsider. KETZIN, SHANTON, DICKER, AND SCHMIDT .DEAR KETZIN. SHANTON, DICKER and SCHMIDT, and the many other in- formed persons who wrote to point out the above to me. We can all learn. I have learned. I am grateful. * ★ * DEAR ABBY: My wife's boss comes to town, and instead of having their business conferences in the office, she goes to his motel room, and she doesn’t get home uhtil the early hours in the morning. She is very indignant when I tell her I don’t think it’s proper. I am honestly not doubting her morals. I love her and trust her, but this is a small country town and the folks here like gossip. I am not asking you to agree with me, just tell me what you think and it will go no further. SMAIX TOWN HUSBAND DEAR HUSBAND: Business conferences should be carried on in an office, and during business hours. As her husband, you have a right to Object— and loudly! * ★ ★ DEAR ABBY; I feel like an absolute crumb. Friday night I was out with a wonderful boy. It was our third date, and we both had a great time. We talked some and then stopped and parked and he started kissing me tenderly. He didn’t get wild or anything like that, he just started kissing me harder and harder until I thought he was going to push my teeth in. I tried pulling back but it didn’t help. I finally said, “Please, Rick, not so hard!r‘ That helped a lot. But he wasn’t quite the same after that. Since then I talked to my girlfriend and she said, “Never criticize a guy's kissing — no matter what. If hurts his ego.” Is that right? What should I do? Apologize to him? 1 am 18 and he's 19. Thanks. MADE A BOO BOO DEAR MADE; Sorry, but I think your girlfriend made the boo boo. Don’t apologize. Your frankness shouldn’t “hurt” him. In fact, he should thank you for the tip. William Finger (right) presents a $125 check to William McNaughton of Royal Oak for his painting, “Orbit Junk No. 12” which won first place in Pontiac Press Photos by Rolf Winter watercolor and Best of Show at The Mall art show. The show which runs, through Saturday includes entries from all over the county. Mrs. William. McNaughton of Royal Oak holds her entry in The Pontiac Mall art .show. She won second prize in watefcolor for “Untitled No. 70.” Third place went to Floran Buehre of Pontiac. Gale Luth of Rochester entered an oil vaintihg in The Pontiac Mall art >show, “The Conflict." won a first prize. Dan Williams of Clurkston took second and Marilyn Spencer, Bloomfield Hills, third. X;V. B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 11, 1969 Oakland County homemaker today received a ‘Heart of Gold’’ award for creating a volunteer organization designed to help talented-inner-city children realize their potential. She is Mrs. William C. Newberg, of Vernor Court, Bloomfield Township, who was among 12 Metropolitan Detroit women saluted at the second annual recognition ceremony staged by the Volunteer Award Council. A ★ Mrs. Newberg was presented the gold heart-shaped charm bearing a “Spirit of Detroit” emblem and signifying noteworthy community service at a luncheon in Cobo Halt. ★ ★ ★ She earned the award by mobilizing fellow members of the Birmingham Society of Women Painters and other volunteers to create her “Drop-in-the-Bucket Program” which provides inner-city youngsters with instruction in various artistic media. 1 ★ ★ The year-old Award Council, which afford community-wide recognition f o r outstanding volunteers, is comprised of 41 leading women’s organizations Newlyweds, the Richard Louisi Escorted to the altar by her llauser of Howell and the late working with Women for the Achimovs (nee Carolyn LaDon brother Wesley, the bride wore Mr. Hau.ser were married fchatlUuded Foundation (WUF). .Sebastian) are honeymooning in a gown of peau de soie and evening in Williams L a k e hepresentaxiVE New York and Washffigton Alencon lace. She held a white Church of the Nazarene. ^ volunteers receivin GOWN I “Heart of Gold” awards were f* p'w” oH '★ Attended by Barbara Ingram, I chosen by a panel of community A. Sebastian of Last Beverlv; ★ ★ ★ , .1 * j *• n k r . * u 1 • i::^(is'AchL;^.rDetroit S. an:r^;e.lXgo:^ community bet- exchanged vows Saturday in St, Mrs, .Jacob Hamig and Deborah carnat.ons and terment. Trinity Lutheran Church. Clayton as bridesmaids and ' The winners were screened Clo’n Clayton, Steve Howitt and ^ther members of the yy nominations submitted , ............ (Jeorgc Sebastian as ushers. bridesmaids j,y agencies, organizations and f ' '« ' * * * .lanet Martin and Mrs. Jauiesij,^jjjyjjjyglg (i,,g three-county fgfgj Coffel with Donald Cornell and[g|,^ the viort’ eager audience you couldn't ask for than 40 Donelson School first graders who lined up Monday to test their taste buds on foreign foods as guests of I^el Pueblo Tortilla Bakery, Auburn Avenue. The outing, part of a se- Punltic Preii Phot# niestcr study on “Children Around the World," also gave the class a chance to try some long rehearsed Spanish tunes on hostesses Mrs. Mane lleniandec, front right, and Mrs. Richard Narva.ee. Saturday Was Their Wedding Day Helps Paint Colorful Future for Kids The program that earned Dorothy Newberg a “Heart of Gold” award was launched last spring with 40 fifth and sixth graders participating in the pilot project. Its name came from early discussions of plans in whiefi Mrs. Newberg Invariably was reminded: “But your program would be just a, drop in the bucket.” DROPS ADD UP Her reaction, she says, was “so be it; enough drops finally will fill a bucket.” Mrs. Newberg singlehandedly talked her artist friends into giving a day each as instructors. Detroit Adventure which worked out organizational details while the Detroit of Education arranged for the selection of students in six inner city schools. She persuaded suburban friends to make sandwiches and cookies for the Wednesday classes, and her m i 1 k m a i donated the milk. ★ * ★ ' She mobilized an urban suburban committee to support the project and secured a bus and driver from General Motors Corp. to transport the children to and from classes in Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills. For the parents of the children, she arranged an art exhibition. The art works were sold with the proceeds going to the young artists. CONTINUES Mrs. Newberg currently is directing a Saturday program to maintain contact with the children until next summer when they will return for an expanded program. Arrangements have been completed for classes to meet five days a week at Cranbrook Academy of Art with 150 children participating in the 1969 summer program. Mrs. Newbergis married and the mother of a grown daughter, now married; two teen-aged sons, and preschooler. ★ * ★ Another winner was Marjorie Gibbs who at one /tinie was senior home economist at the Pontiac Consumers Power Co. tall Now For I CRAFT CLASSES := Beginning in Feb. I FLOWERS and other new items 1 CliO’S “ZT’ The newlyweds were with a reception at American Ix'gion Mall. Hauser-Burneff i Paul Parker as ushers. Bruce ^ Brayton was best man. The newlyweds are honeymooning in Niagara Fall.s. | Lake-Miller ! PTA The Thomas Hausers (nee t’hailene Burnett) were feted THURSDAY with a reception Saturday at the T'h A. Miller was escorted to Masonic Temple of Clarkston. IIC, ARCHirecTURC.. .THese ARE THE OkJLY TRUCY IMFORTAfOT THIMGS IW Lire! seeepiMG, TAKJWG HOT BATHS AMD lOATCHiMG IBLBVISIOK)... THESE ARE THE OWLY IMPORTAWT -mikJGS IM LIFE I I I GET THE F 1 OME OF US is MISSIWG A LOT IK) LIFE' An. Exception? WAUPUN, Wis. (AP) - Tlie ”We Likf if Here”’’ irnowaj- iTbit*of a doubt a^ to uracy of'the statement I being sent oUt of the BOARDING 1 THANK'S TOTHl^ /UM,YA6,MV LON(3 LO\JE Y <^p’Ba^L Of RAfKE BOOK6 INFORMATIC PRODUCED A c^\l I FiNiAKiClAL REW'ARD.y/ THE ONEX ^ research A-l THE-/ \60U(3HT I LIBRARY ^AKE 1 THAT OLV TEXT BOOK/ \ARE VALUABLE TO . BUFFER ) '|/Up(RE THAN / THOU6Ht)\ A C5LA5S-■ 4TUCK \\ SLOWER Tc3HT(N6 ^ 6NEEZE.y VYHAT'S THAT ¥1^1 MY1FUE FATHER HER BUT WILL A VAIAVl INTLETH 5ME1...BC ID75AUXK,TAKE AN' BRING BACK HER ANSWERl rrnm ~ DONALD DUCK THE PONTIAC PIU^SS, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 11, 1009 n:"‘ YWEE DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES [BEAUTY MO DEPARTMEMT A VMiicii STopf S«i TA, rnCFl ALBUM mcC! -^>PAGE Op«n Nights Until 10 P.M. Open Sundays Until 7 P.M. Pontiac Detroit Sterling Heights Riverview I MoiganBa^ 1125 N. Perry Corner of Joy Corner of 14 Mile At The Corner of I At Arlene t Greenfield and Schoenherr Fort and King | THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAV, FEHRUAIiy II, 19()9 STOCKS are our stock in trade. See Us for data and • advice on the corporate stocks we think ore best suited to your investment program. For mformed investing, see the specialists at FIRST First of Michigan I Corporation IPMI 742 No. Woodward Birmingham • 647-1400 SI l.K DKFKNSF. Mi'kons IVlt.r rec m villapeis from My Lonp in the ■cion "of South \ idnam, are newly p.mtied Hie po\eminent has established nominal lonirol ot the h.milel and has orcanired a Ux-al self-defense force The man in the rear carries an American M16 rifle Two months ac", the \ ictconp was orpanizinc self-defense in the ai ea - and no one really knows whether or not they will he back ENTRENCHMENT - lliese South Vietnamese villagers have been recruited by the povernment to build an outpost near My Fonp, in the Mekong Della. This is part of the "accelerated pacification” campaign which is aimed at bringing as much of the countryside as possible under government control. The digging uncovers remains of previous attempts to establish outposts on the site. SPEARHEAD — The Vietcong dominate most of the area in this picture — on an island in the Mekong Delta. But the South Vietnamese government has established the arrow-shaped outpost, at whose center live the defenders and their families. It is also a base for pacification workers who are accelerating efforts to gain control over previously doubtful areas. TTmrrrnrrirrrrrrrr Viet Pacification' Plan Pushed Before Truce John Wayne Katherine Rom HELLFIGHTERS Starts TOMORROW! rtm CHA^HCiEzOF THE LIGHTT ffiUQADE By PETER ARNETT And HORST FAAS M\ l.O.NC., Vietnam i.li - T’he hot delta sun beat down into a clearing where six sweating men dug into the soft, peatlike soil of the river bank. ' As they dug and tore at the vegetation, the record of similar endeavors in the past unfolded like an archeological excava- grab ” He was alluding to the pacification” hamlets, is beingito compete politically with the official reasoning behind the built on the ruins of past j Vietcong. The Saigon govern-new program: get control of as j pacification failures. If much ment was claiming control over much land as possible before a has been learned from the past, cease-fire to diminish the Viet- it is not yet visible, cong’s political influence locally The current project bears and internationally. [some similarities to the In the past, pacification has strategic hamlets of the late been seen as the tortuously slow Diem regime that collapsed 68 per cent of Vietnam’: million population in early November, statistics which; credit the Vietcong with control of fully or partially 32 per cent of the population, or more than' attempt to win the allegiance of chaos because Saigon resources I five million people. every ^Wednesday SgR* /VHVOUcaneat^ The rotted stump of a fence post, entangled with rusted barbed wire, was evidence of one former habitation in the jclearing at the bend in the riverj ; built by the late President Ngo Dinh Diem in 1963. j| A concrete wall of a pillbox concealed in the undergrowth' showed where an attempt had Ibeen made to reestablish r government presence here late lin 1965 after the strategic hamlets had failed. Vietcong explosives had smashed down the buildings. REMINDER OF PAST Three feet below the surface of the clearing, a shovel banged against a stone fence, possibly I the one 4hat, according to I district records, surrounded a j French fort that sought, in the early ’50s, to control the canal, ;that flows past My Long hamlet' into the Mekong River nearby, i The workers brushed the sweat from their foreheads and piled dirt and rocks into a new wall they were building around the clearning. This will enclose yet another outpost for My Long, again symbolizing government authority. This prosperous hamlet of orchard growers is one of 1,100 in the Vietnamese countryside earmarked f o r “accelerated pacification,” a scheme begun in November and described by one American pacification worker as “the pre-cease-fire land 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC OPEN 9:45 A.M. SHOW AT 10:00 A.M. Continuous - 334-4436 *^OU MUST BE 1 8 - ENDS TUESDAY OPEN 9:4S A.M. EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY OPEN 3:45 P.M. 0 tflOVGODIVA RIDES Jt: SEE HER AS SHE REALLY WAS IN COLOR 2nd “NATURES X 1 hit PLAYMATE” "Fm»i oi Flounder. French Fried Potatoes. Cole Slaw. iTartare Sauce, n and aaaoned ■ountryside to the govern-1were stretched too thin, ment side. Those who devised!SETTLE ON PROGRAM the new program argued that] T,,e Diem regime's U.S.-haste was the important factor L a c k e d , multimillion-dollar that government control should gtragetic hamlet program be established first, pacificationjgggjjjgfj at the time the logical i solution to stop Vietcong en-REVERSE RULING croachment into the coun- Saigon authorities also tryside. When it failed, Saigon reversed a ruling for the 59- authorities went through half a member revolutionary develop-1dozen schemes before settling ment teams that decreed they upon the re.volutionary develop-work only in safe regions. These ment program with its 59-man teams are now out in the con- teams as the best way to extend tested badlands, a move that government control, failed in 1967 because the Viet-L But the program moved cong zeroed in on them ancfslowly because of its insistence killed many. patience. “The All over the country ^ Vietnamese were too careful,” November, American officials a senior U.S. province official and advisers coaxed the Viet- said recently. ‘‘Saigon namese into the contested areas demanded such a high degree of I tecting themselves, so that’ to occupy hamlets like My Long perfection that province chiefs [why there is no money,” said that had been occupied and then slowed down the work and Capt. Terry Carr, from given up so often in the past. minimized progress,” he said. [Goldsboro, N.C., commander of * * * I * ★ ★ the small MATIS 26-mobile ad- One reason for the Saigon The possibility of a visory training team — that at-government's reluctance t o breakthrough at the Paris peace | tempts to pump adrenalin into move previously was un-' talks brought home to Saigon j the regional force company ^ubtedly historic. My Long,|authorites the realization that securing My Long, like most other “accelerated pacification must be speeded up The diggers were drawn from This huge chunk of population would qualify the Vietcong, in the eyes of the world, to a big slice of government representation,” one U.S. official declared. It was therefore decided to try and whittle down the size of the Communist part of Vietnam, and “accelerated pacification” resulted. INTEREST IMPORTANT ‘ ' Accelerated pacification” here in My Long is the six men digging into the soft brown earth to build the new outpost, sweating in the sun but generally taking their time about the job because they were not being paid for the work. “The idea is to get the population interested in pro- population. Two months teri.stics of ‘‘accelerated 'earlier these same men had pacification,” he said, might-helped to build a mile-long doom it to the fate of all the trench line along the canal bank other programs that preceded ^beside the hamlet for the Viet-.it. i cong, also unpaid, and also “to assist in protecting themselves.” Both sides make free use of the delta population. OPEN FOR BREAKFAST AT 7:00 A.M. “LAND GRAB’ — The flag of the South Vietname.se government flies over the village of Paris Tan Qui, 20 miles north of Saigon. And yet it is known that the villagers are sympathetic to the Vietcong. What it all means is that part of the “accelerated pacification” campaign (an intensified drive to extend government-controlled territory before a possible cease-fire) has gone into action here. One American calls it a “precease-fire land grab.” About 3,000 people live in My Long, and they are reluctant to talk with visitors./These people are now included in the Saigon s 73 per cent of the population now claimed under control. Yet it is quite obvious here that at night, when the regional force company of 100 men pulls back into its defensive perimeter,' Vietcong cadres could move at will among the people. POUTICAL CONTROL ; “We know about this,” one U.S. district adviser said. “But we don’t care. What we want is' political control, to fly the flag. For too long we have been trying to win the people by building schools and dispensaries. The Vietcong have never done that. Now we won’t. Maybe later we will build the people of My Long a school.” Should the Vietcong remain as indifferent to the government pacification work at My Long as it has up to now, then the hamlet could well survive. But Americans in the area have no illusions about the future of this hamlet and the others in the scheme should the enemy main forces decide to make a concerted effort to destroy the program. * * ★ U.S. officials say the Vietnamese authorities have made no specific commitment troops to assist outposts in these out-of-way places should they get in trouble. These new pacification hamlets, if tacked, might easily b e destroyed unless A m e r i < forces were committed to help them. Some Americans believe that the Vietcong will make no move for some time, believing that government soldiers and officials eventually will lose interest in the new program and retire back to their towns and outposts, leaving the population to the Vietcong. “Historically, they would be right in thinking this,” one U.S. pacification officer said. The hit-or-miss charac- BLOOMFIELD INDUSTRIAL PARK SQUARE LAKE RD. AT FRANKLIN RD. Choice industrial sites now for sale. Parcels range in size from % acre to 6 acres. Paved roads; sewer and water. Or you may fit into one of two buildings of 8,000 sq. ft. and 16,000 sq. ft, now under construction — ready for occupancy March I, and available for lease or sale. One block from Telegraph Road and near the l-75-Square Lake Rd. interchange. Investigate this new and most prestigious industrial district. For details, phone 1-963-6900. CARL ROSMAN & CO. Realtors Guardian Building Detroit, Michigan The John Fernald Company present* Euguene O’Neill’s Stunning Drama LON(; DAY’S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT TONIGHT AT 8:1.') P.M. EVENINGS; Tuesdoy through Soturdoy at 8:15 p.m., Sunday at 6:30 p.m. MATINEES; Wednesday and Thursday at 2:00 p.m. Tickets; Hudson's (all stores) or phone 962-0353/338-6239 TIIK. JOHN H;RNALI) COMl-ANV OK University Wednesday 49t 49’er DAY Dig into as many golden BUTTERMILK PANCAKES as you can eat for just PER CUSTOMER Bring Along All Your Prospectors • 15325 W. SMILE RD. JvO E. of Gr.*nfi.ld • 10001 TELEGRAPH HBWIM1 E f ■# / t 1* f- *• T# .* f niE ]>OXTIAC I’RKSS. TI KSDAV. FKHKIJAUV 11. I'MiO B-11. V* Moderate Advance by Mart The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and Sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by thei NEW YORK (AP) — The couraged over the possibility of The Associated Press 60-stock Detroit Bureau of Markets as of stock market advanced moder- an extension of the general average at noon had gained 4 s ‘zrSioSd “•.»=.»h wus.ri.1, up 1 Trading opened at 11 a.m. good business develop-® “tilities up .6. 'eST—Qne hour late-because of over the weekend and in- * * * M New York City’s snow emergen- dications of an easing o world Advances by individual stocks 5§'Cy. It will close as usual at 2 Political situations. topped declines by nearly 200 is-' “ip.m. under the schedule of Paul McCracken, chairman of sues on the New York exchange. I " shortened trading sessions in ef- President’s Council of Eco- * * * |Iect since Jan. 2^ The New PHces ,d,ai,»d an the Amer- “and American Exchanges were encouraged about tlie out- c* u p„„hanep Cains of a I f closed Monday because of the for the U. S. economy. ^nt ^so wereTosted^ 50 snow storm. AVERAGE UP Lama, Loew’s Theatres war-1 j)Qyy Jones average at rants, Four Seasons and Equity Brokers said they were en-noon was up 0.31 at 948.16. Funding. Wednesday. Produce FRUITS Apple Cider. 4-gal. case Apples, Delicious, Golden, t Apples, Delicious, Red, bu. Apples, Jonathan, bu. Apples, McIntosh, bu. Apples, Northern Spy. bt VEGETABLES Beets, Topped, bu. Cabbage, Curly, bu...... Cabbage, Red bu. Cabbage, ^Standar^Varlelv, I HoSad?shl*'plc bskt. Leeks, dz. bchs. ....... onions, 50-;b. bag New Manager at Pontiac Div. Bloomfield Township Executive Is Retiring The appointment of Arthur C Harrison as parts and accessories merchandising manager for Pontiac Motor Division was announced today by general sales manager Thomas L. King. Harrison has been assistant ATTRACTIVE DISPLAY - Bob Itob-inson’s Maganavox, 3244 Orchard Lake, in the Orchard Lake Shopping Center, offers televisions, stereos and audio accessories. The store, open from 10 a m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, also s*ells auto in-car tape recorders and has a complete service department. Parsnips, Cello-Pak, Potatoes, 20-lb. bag Potatoes, 50-lb. ■ b The New York Stock Exchange Stock Chaos Leading to Thieves Utopia? Livestock ots choice 900-1,250 lbs. 2f ufa: ’utllltv'°C0W5 iO-OO-i Hogs 200; barrows and tOO-220 lbs. 21.25-21.50; : 10.75-21 25 ; 3-4 240-270 —A— ^ (h^.l Hl^h L( I 72'/. tjt ’ 220-240 lbs: AlllSPw i. 19.75-20.75; AlliWtCh 17.75; 2-3 400- AlliedStr GPubUt 1.60 Gillette 1 Glen AW( i 53;m. 53 V. 53^ -+ 43.00-44.00; choice 39.00-43.00; good 33.00- A. pr?me%0-l05’ lb.* slaughter lambs 28.00-jAi CHICAGO livestock a CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - Hogs|A 3,000; butchers steady to most y 25 high- A er; fairly active; shippers took 2,500 1-2|A 205-230 lb butchers 21.75-22.25; “ J Rohr Cp .81 RoyCCola .8 RoyDut^ 1.8S r 50^/8 503/4 5(P/- - . .. 28.25-29.75; a s 27.50-28.50; a Mixed high choice i 28.00-28^50; small lot choice 825-1,025 lbs v 27 25-28.00; mixed goo' 7ew hfqh dressing IB.75-19.00; can- Beat Fds 1 ners'and cutters 16.00-18.25; utility and Beckman .. .,smmorrl»l hlllt^ 91.50-24.00. ’ —Q— —rIL >si chg. , EDITOR'S NOTE — Th'is is Corp. “Tliere has been some try investigation is to define the I . +HARRISON DRURY jj^st of two articles on concern voiced in the street, problem. The second stage, if iv. -'/. zone manager for the division inOur position is, ‘Let’s take a there is one, will be to set up a Philadelphia for the last seven describe conditions in the look and see.’ ” program to upgrade brokerage 123 28 " 27V, 28 ‘ +'/‘lyears. He succeeds Asa securities industry. The second, Frank Zarb, a partner in house security. !43 44Vy 4k ik+'v!'Drury of Bloomfield Township,explain how the problems ^ chairman cpypRArkPRonn 5? ??'. ?7H T ukho is retiring. developed and remedies being comittee, said: ‘‘Thefts ' ,, .definitely are a problem, but 181 43 Ik 43 i Harrison joined the division in JOHN CUNNIFF 166 " 8 O'* ive t'lj! ^ service adjuster in Business Analyst II 4o’* 39'i 4o’* I ;■ Philadelphia, being promoted to NEW YORK-The nearly in-168 53 52V; 52', ‘ service instructor and district credible behind-the-scenes con- ” ^^"';manager before transferring to fusion in some brokerage houses. New York as parts merchan- where stacks of , Ik Ikdising manager in 1954. He stocks worth In'* 7 ’’ returned to Philadelphia in 1962.' .... , . , 37^’ lak +i'/;|A naUve of Canada, he is a 1949 "’'•lions of dol-I 40H 40!8 + '*jgraduate of the University of cannot be] , 1 1 Michigan. identified w i t h | ! 2856 285? -'/‘b Drury, 3919 Mount Vernon, ,o . :Jki3kTk^a 28-year veteran of t h e « [ w ' Jk division. He became a district ^ ° ‘ ® ® manager in St. Louis in 1943, ' 45'' 45', - '8 moved to Minneapolis as parts . • "at >s I Ik 39'S - '! and service merchandising Judgment ot a ' 'sk +i4e manager the following year and ! 38H till i iS in 19‘15 became parts and ac- * " Behind the industry activity, Lrd\m^“knLre‘"copc"and several prods: ‘ depth. We need to determine ., Legislative Committee on Crime has set up offices in the finan-‘IN THE MILI.IONS’ (.ja| district to study the same In the opinion of some finan- problem. The Securities and Ex-cial authorities who were asked change Commission and other for estimates, that figure isjpublic agencies are concerned, going to be well up in the mil-'also. And there are the insurers, lions of dollars. Nobody cared to * * ★ name a specific figure or, in “if corrective action is not fact, felt that they could. taken, the roof will fall in on * * * the brokers in six months andi| i Some thefts may not be un- then they’ll be left without any covered, because some firms insurance whatever,” said the arc believed to be accepting the highly placed insurance execu-xTivr-E. [losses rather than to suffer the live, who asked not to be iden-iicLT ... CUNNIFF I Some securities may Ufied. the largest underwnters ..J, I a * * If p f r hr t rc Pnra •’^ listcd as mlsplaccd Until,! [ot insurance for brokers. Para- ___.u.,.,' disc might, in fact, here, he suggested. cessories manager in Chicago. realized they’ “We’re not pulling out of the He was named a s s i s t a n t “Z hf "V.l.e.ta ^ have been stolen. market vet.” he said, “but there market yet,” he said, “but there will be a radical reevaluation if Poultry and Eggs *Budd^Co’'80 I Ik Ik lk = ! roasters 25-27* br*oHers*knd fryers'' 19-21;!| heavy type young hens 23-24'/,; ducklings large 42-45; medium 36-40; small 29-31 CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago MercanI Exchange-Butler steady; wholesale b ing prices unchanged; 93 score AA 66; 66; 90 B 63'/,; 89 C 60'/,; Cars 90 B . 89 C 62. Eggs easy; wholesale buying prices LoneS Cerr LoneSGa LuckyStr American Stocks Exchange selected noon prices: ^ (hds.) High Low Last Chg. Aerojet ,5(fa 8 30V4 297'e 30'/4 + J/4 Gulf Ar^Cp Husky 0 -30e Hycon Mfg Hydrometl lmp5^ Oil w*! IT I Corp Kaiser Ind McCrory wt Mich SuQ .10 Syntex Cp .40 Copyrighted by Conti I Data Corn Ptj i.fw CorGW 2.50a Cowles .50 CoxBdeas .50 5 4(F/$ A0V4 403^ - )wn Cork Stocks of Local Interest THE COUNTER STOCKS s from the NASD are repri oter-dealer prices for OPP'O* East Air .5 E Kodak .81 EetonYa 1. Ebasco nd EG&G .10 IIpbso^g' -‘fra ’ ner El _..dJohn Ethyl Cp 20 45'/l 45« 45'/l -I- 33 104'/8 103V, l04'/s -f- idJohn .12p 3 43'/5 43'A ' 52W ; 3S*i + AMT Corp.............. Associated Truck ....... Braun Engineering . . Citizens Utilities ..... Detrex Chemical ........ Diarnond Crystal........ Wlohawk 1 Rubber Co. Satran Printing......... Wyandotte Chemical . _F— 50 74Va 72»/» 73’4 ~ 73 22% 22% 223/4 + 28 28% 28Va 28% - i22 56% 56 563/4 + m 35% 34% 34% + 74 53 52Va 52% -|- 43 ^1% 61% 61% -i-40'*^7% 37 37 39 23 22% 22% - 162 51V4 51 51% - 15 31% 31% 31% 4 130 40% 40 40 - 86 39% 38% 38% 4 : 303 0 30Vi 30' i - ' ) 53% 53'/4 : S r iii ; have been stolen. ' manager of Parts sales in ^ tiac s central office in 1947 and r,-he certificates may have they don't correct conditions. ‘ r,'-cp- rOfe to Struggle, Dare to 29 29:^8 _ ve . f h' h <5iiallv rf#* study. vefsity faculty Monday mght to Win. Ik t ’ly'^after December ' Despite the apparent need for call in civil authorities when A reception scheduled to fol- --------- r much less than expected. >Peed, the public attitude of di-ssenters disrupt orderly proc-low t^he convocation was cam isG''psrn''3a 83 827^ 82" lv‘ - 'A, ★ * ★ Committee members sounds de- esses. celled. Hannah, MbU trustees, fo 171 3PA 3j^ 3k -'bI Asked if this meant a warm-cidedly less anxious than the In what was expected to be faculty members and others who irlCi'fb 3? sk sk Ik I 4 ing up in the economy, Harold private worries of insurers. his farewell “State ot the Uni-made up an audience of II ti«*r2.40 29I 5k 5k 5k 4 ^hief of the Office of * * * versity” address Hannah told a about 500 were escorted by po- 102 ?25J 52'/' 52'/, - 38 Employment Manpower Statis-] ‘‘My mind is open on the mat-faculty convocation to‘‘continue •>« through the auditoriums . 8 -rX;r 3,V, 31', _'8 tics in the Labor Department ter,” said Gene McHam, vice 3 P°s'b0"- Dack entrance. !?k*oco”.M 19 3o4 3^ 30.8-381 said, “Well, it’s just as warm as president of the New York Stock, , ■ * i. *. , * ■ ,, -|it has been ,or several naonlhs.;; Exchange's Slock Clearing' S’"! inOilCal 1.40 C^p .60e YngstSht 1.80 ZenithR 1.40 Copyrighted h Sales figurt Unemployment rates for adult 9? 5k 52?, 52w + % men and all full-time workers^ iw Ik 43^ 4318 + zi I rose in January while the rate ”5 sk el’/i ak klSJor teen-agers declined, the La-49 58'/. 58V. 58'. - 3/. Ibor Department figures showed. [ I7 36vi 36 36^ + '^iThe number of employed per- il? 27?v, 37m 27?’'" +2'8|sons fell less than expected, and iM 54V8 53^ w^-iiv the number of unempleyed rose The Associated Press 1969 gbout In line with scasonal i*s" no'?.°d”'''r*'ies of divi- pectalions. regoing table campus police, equipped with the university,” Hannah tojd the ;helmets, nightsticks and gas faculty the question is “whether p 1 L • masks, stood in the lobby of you have the courage and the oupermarf Lno/n MSU’s Falrchlld Theater during willingness to defend order and Hannah’s hour-long speech. freedom and basic decency InCreaSeS Sales outside demonstrators chant- and ethics and integrity and ed: morality.” W78 +^'i'8!"ol'owlng* footnotes.' Allied Supermarkets Inc. sales , for the 12-week period ending ISl:? Jan. 11, 1969, were^$201,7 mil-Ty 4 MONTHS OF GAIN lion, a 17 per cent increase over 'desig^ After season adjustment, the the same period a year ago, C ^ % yT % HliiP Hag MP 1.10 lorfolkWst 6 loAmRock 2 NoNGas 2.60 Nor Pac 2.60 NoStaPw 1.60 Northrop 1 NwstAirl .80 NwtBanc 2.40 iiii; 30 I 50'/. — 3,i '* total of nonfarm jobs, at 69.5 E. Jolitz, chairman of the i^^rong' dwi* million, was up 250,000 over the board, announced today. I"! 'kr’V-Pay* previous month, the fourth con- He added that earnings were s< yea?-. . ay^- month of substantial adversely affected by — Successful ^Invesfinq ,i4 Aa * k. ... c. m a. ^ >!• H dock dividend. Occident OhioEdls Okie GE akleNGs )lln By ROGER 8: SPEAR two-for-one split will be voted __ ......... ........ _____________________________^ _________ Q _ My mother, a 67-year-old on in April. Although the cash j or paiQ 50 ■«> this gains. The advance occurred tinuing competitive p r i c e widow, has $18,500 savings plus dividend yields only 1.1 per up"k-'oeciared*or*p“d despite a 90,000 net increase in!prfessure, the opening of 24 new Social Security. She uses some cent, a stock dividend of 1 per ccumuiative Issue with j|^g number of workers off pay-stores and the closing of eight principal yearly for expenses, cent is paid quarterly, ividend ornttied,*deterred mils because of strikes. older stores in 12 weeks. Once this is gone she will, of Tv/o utilities for income, Vka1d‘’in‘’*968"’prus The number of unemployed At thd end of the period, 374 course, live with me. Would a Pacific Gas & Electric and k'’vaVkn'exdi?!il'en3 pcrsons rosc In January to 2.9 stores were in operation. ‘‘blue chip” investment give her Washington Gas Light, <:ould date. million, about as expected. It -------------------- a chance of some appreciation also provide gradual growth. Ex dividend. y-Ex divi-was up about 450,000 from De- n ’ .. while receiving d i v i d e n d s ? I •‘• words, hut (lieir letters have been mixc'd u|i hy some-oneA'ou must put tlieirlottorsiiackm-totherinht onierso that tliey make or (linary w'ords that vou ean find in the dietionarv. WIilTK TUK LKTl'KKS OF KAt'il WORD UNDER EACH NONSENSE WORD- HUT ONIA ONE I.E ri’ER ro EACH SQUARE ' iiw hiS 1 ro\K w h tY r. ^:y ({ WHAT THE SAE^ &A,P~OHi3 Fi?lE\'D THE ^EFF^SR. “Ij^lor me]' Now vou ar.‘ roadv to find lli Fl’NNY ANSWER to t his pu//lo, Tli imlure aimvo will ^;lve vou a hin Studv It earerullv. Then tako the Ir s that appear in thenrclesand play .und with them. You will find tlia'l Iean put them m order sothat they III the answer you are lookinj; for. Print the FUMWV ANSWER here ) “OOCZU' " si whcir on this pant'I Special Prison for Sex Offender Urged OTTAWA i.ipi - - WhaPniiftht he persrrn, throiiRh failure, in the pulses, or is likely to commit a do ’ future to, control his sexual'im- further sexual offense.” This is the vexing question about the sexual offender, and Canadian [rsyehiatrist is tr\ing to an.swer. Federal prisons held 73 men at the outset of 1969 who are under preventive detention a^ ■ liangerous sexual offeuitlers This has become the toughest rap in the Criminal Ccxte. Ever since a paroled rapist strangled four bo\s in Quebec sex slayings, officials have been doubly hesitant about releasing sexual offenders Those labeled • dangerous” hy the courts and packed off to an Indeterminate sentence have an almost-hopeless outlook A report by Dr. A M. .Marcus, a psyehiatrist who has been study ing cases in B r i I i s h Columbia Penitentiary , suggests that spei'ial prisons should he built for them. Dr. Marcus savs it is almost impossible to gauge the poten tial of such offenders for parole when they are being held in a penitentiary. The .sex offenders sense that they are being left to rot lor long ix>riod of time, stored like furniture, and this, along with any of several hundred hostile e o - i n m a t e s , makes in-eareeration something less than satisfying and, even with a superabundance of good will they find 'rehabilitation' an empty word." he writes Under the law now. a dangerous .sexual ofiender is ' a person who. by his conduct in any sexual matter, has shown a lailure to control his sexual impulses, and who is likely to cause injury, pain or e\il to any TOKYO l/P - At Tokyo University, a degree is almost a guarantee of success and security. Many of Japan’s leaders In government, business, science and education are graduates of the state-run school. Just now its campus is a mess, and its spring entrance examinations have been canceled to the chagrin of .30,000 high school students hoping to get into the school against the normal odds of 10 to 10, Only 3,000 of those who take examinations are accepted. The 93-year-old school, Japan's paramount seat of learning, has been assaulted by months of disorder, capped by a 35-hour battle last month. Several hundred radical students, entrenched in 1 2 university buildings, battled several thousand riot police. When the smoke cleared, damage was estimated at more than $4 million. A hundred (persons, mostly policemen, were injured, and 630 students were under arrest. Both government and university authorities had hoped that the dislodging of the radical students would make it possible for the school to reopen for the spring examinations. But the scars were too deep. The chief cabinet secretary, Shigeru llori, said the cancellation of exams was ‘ regrettable but unavoidable In restoring the normal function of the school" * * * Campuses have been ‘off-limits” to the police in postwar Japan to protect what Japanese scholars call universityi autonomy. This belief stems from prewar Japan when' liberal education was trampled under by the militarists and thought police who moved into the campuses to round up pro-fes.sors and left-wingers harboring ‘‘dan gerous thoughts ” Police on the campus, university authorities and scholar.s claim, will mark the return of witch hunting. Tokyo University has an enrollment of 16,000. The campus dispute began last January when medical students objected to an internship system said to be outmoded. The strike snowbalied. So did demands to include the right to' participate in school administration, camp democratization and calceling disciplinary procedures against students ^Iready involved in disputes. f Inspired by the Tokyo University dispute, student disorders began rocking other campuses. By year-end, the National Police Agency said, colleges and universities h^yet to settle their campus disputes. From the way things have been developing, with entrance exams put off for one year and simmering dissatisfaction among students and teachers, it will be some time before thei j turmoil settles on the Japanese j campuses. MPFOV PI S .".Great summer breeding range of ” " CANADIAN GEESE EXTENDS FROM LABRADOR AND QUEBEC TO NORTHERN ONTARIO AND MANITOBA, WITH A FEW AS FAR NORTH AS ALASKA. THESE MAJESTIC BIRDS ESS WINTER IN THE SOUTH, FROM THE CAROLINA COAST TO LOUISIANA AND TEXAS; SOME GEESE SETTLE ■ IN THE WESTERN THESE ARE BIG BIRDS, AVERAGING 9 TO h POUNDS; SOME 20 POUNDERS ARE MORE THAN 3G"L0N6. MATE FOR LIFE. A GANDER WILL LEAVE THE FLOCK TO LOOK FOR HIS WOUNDED OR MISSING MATE, MIGRATE ANNUALLY. FLYING IN A *V' FOR-, MATION, FAMILY FLOCKS KEEP TOGETHER AND ARE LED BXAN EXPERIENCED GANDER THE BIG “HONKERS" LOOK SLOW IN FLIGHT, BUT CAN CRUISE OVER ^Omph.and have been KNOWN TO DO GO- CANADA GEESE HAVE - ---- AN 1N-FL16HT ALTITUDE OF iOOO TO aoobrtTAND HAVE BEEN SIGHTED AT 15,000 FT, CAUSING COLLISION WORRIES fOR AIRUNES DOUBLE STAMPS HWED. ONLVI at Thrifty-Gloonan Drug Stores Get double Holden Red Stamps on Wednesday only at any Thrifty-Cloonon Drug Store with any pur- s/./fftj*!; of Telegraph • 4895 Dixie Highway BUY!SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Jumbles: OAR A.SK KNO'l HKKi: Answer; What the salt said lrryaban, munches dog biscuits in retirement in the Darien, Conn , home of his own-1 ers, Mr. and Mrs. James A Farrell Jr. Other highlights of the first day's competition: Mr. and Mrs. Ralph West of Livonia, Mich., produced a: breed winner for the 17th consecutive year, Ch. Ralanda Ami Pierre, a b'rench bulldog ' Ch ftenreh Lorelei o f Wilt Making Move: j Now 19th in Scoring NEW YORK (AP) - Elvin . Hayes of San Diego is the National Basketball Association’s scoring leader. That’s old hat. Rut what about that new guy in 19th place—Wilt Chamberlain of Los Angeles. | Chamberlain scored 66 points Sunday night against Phoenix—| a season high for the league— and cracked the top 20 for the first time in about two months,! with 1,209 points for a 20.5 aver-^ age, according to NBA statistics released today. Foul Shots Decide City League Tilt BASKETBALL SCOKES Charmaron, a toy Manchester Flerlage, a West Highland white! terrier, owned by Charles A. T. terrior, who won his breed, has! Superior free throw shooting ' O’Neil of Philadelphia fi i s taken championships in the^‘^rried Club One Spot to a 77-76 daughter, Marie Elizabeth, United .States, M e x i c o ,'showdown triumph over the! captured his breed tor third Ireland and probably, qualifies *J*^eatables Monday night in consecutive year. as the most international dog in •■he city men’s recreation! Ch. Monsieur Ans D e r the show. | basketball league. j Conn’s Clothes outs cored Perry Drugs in every quarter to post a 64-43 win in the other Class A game. * * ★ Club One Spot overcame the Unbeatables' 30-26 edge in field goals with a 2 5 - o f - 3 5 performance at the charity stripe. The losers hit 16 of 25. * ★ * ' The clubmen jumped into a 39-34 lead in the opening half and the Unbeatables couldn’t quite overcome the edge. Felix Brooks, Cy Green and Vern Ellis each netted 16 points for the winners. Ruday Ransom hit 18 in a losing cause. GOOD BALANCE Jim Patterson and Cliff Benson each had 15 as the , losers put five men in double figures. Club One Spot had eight players with at least four points. I Dwayne Hardiman sank 18 points, Bob Rahban hit 17 and John Rollms added 12 to lead Conn’s conquest. Rick Trudeau produced an even dozen for Perry Drugs who fell behind, 8, in the opening period and never gained any ground. ★ * ★ Rahban had 9 of those first 19 points for the winners. j In Class B, the Unbeatables 0. 2 unit held off the last-quarter surge of the Black Culture Center for a 57-52 triumph as Obie Ramsey dropped in 22 points. Ilona at Bridgeton j)pd, s Grove' c'ty^7'5,^*enava*7? HEY, LOOK ME OVER!—Kanangnark’s Kiev beams as he displays his coveted best of breed ribbon following the Siberian Husky judging Monday night at the prestigious Wi'stminster Kennel Club Show at Madison Square Garden in snowbound New York ('ity. Owned by Mrs. Emil Knorr of Sheboygan, Wis., he now goes into the best of show judging tonight. There were 45 huskies entered. COLLEOe So. Car. SI. J. J. C. Smith 0, I Kentucky »1, MIjs. State 69 GMrgla'87,'Alabama 78 Tennessaa 61, MIsalasIppI 45 Georg^towm D;C. 77j^Xavler, OhI Georgia ?'ech^,^AIr Force 67 Morehead 106, Middle Tennassee St. Andrew's 79, Col. of Charleston 68 North Car. Col. 77, Morgan Slate 70 Johns Hopkins 65, Frank. & Marsh. Florida 75, Vanderbilt 73 George Wash. 70, East Carolina 69 Tolane 110, Louisiana State 94 Gulllord 76, Presbyterian 57 North Carolina 85, N. C. State 62 yberry 108, Landac 73 Campbell 80, Ashevllle-Blltmore 78 PIkevllle 84, Northwood Inst. 72 Union 83, Georgetown, Ky. 75 Transylvania 120, Belmont 86 Hampton Inst. 81, Livingstone Pembroke 74, No. Car. Methodist 67 Frostburg 123, George Mason 60 =alrmont 85, West Liberty 75 Murray 62, Tenn. Tech 59 Bryan 75, Johnson Bible 60 Western Carolina 88, Catawba 67 Cen^nary 91, Nevada Southern 79 Southwestern, Memphis 77, Lambu Knoxville 105, Fisk 95 Alcorn A8.M 72, Texas Soulhern 70 Grambling 83, Prairie View 80 South Alabama 69, Tampa 64 Southern Miss. 110, Spring Hill 79 ^uthern U. 102, Arkansas AM8.N ( Falrleigh Dickinson at American Washburn 91, Colorado Butler 74, Wabash 59 Emporia State, Kan. 8 Ao. 95, Oral Roberts S St!"j'oIm%!!'M’Inn.*^,“'cmcordia, 2 Southwest McMurrv 79, Texas A8.I 78 Pan American 85, Midwestern, Tex. 10 SW Tesfas St. 92, East Texas St. 62 Howard Payne 93, Stephen F. Austin 80 Texas-Arlington 83, Ark. State 80 Houston Baptist 77, Austin Coll. 69 Sul Ross 99, Sam Houstbn St. 98, O West Texas St. 108. Denver 90 Henderson, Ark. 80, Ark. A8.M 64 Ouachita 84, Ozarks 79 PITTSBURGH-Joe I le Associated Press llodelphia—Dick Dl Veronica, ^'?i?,:.r"rv jls^Curtis Cokes, Dallas Don Cobbs, St. Rocky Ended Servo's Ring Career i. iTxr, Retains Ring Crown TOKYO (UPl) — Japan’s, Shozo Saiyjo retained his world' featherweight crown Sunday by winning a unanimous 15-round decision over Pedro Gomez of Venezuela (Continued From Page C-1) In order to get the additional l$14,000 to pay Cochrane, Servo agreed to an almost immediate non-title bout with Rocky Graziano who, at the time, was tougher, fiercer and meaner than Bonnie and Clyde ever were put together. Many people felt Servo was making a mistake taking the fight with Graziano but he was bent on paying off Cochrane. So two months after winning the welterweight title. Servo took on' Graziano and was knocked out in two founds. Graziano had hit Servo so hard he had broken the Ubidge of his nose. After examining the damage, doctors told Servo tliere was a piece of bone that could enter his brain if it was hit again. They advised him to quit fighting. Six months after his fight with Graziano, Servo announced his retirement although he still held the welterweight title. By now Marty Servo was 27. He still needed money. Nearly a year after his retirement he] began thinking maybe he could fight again. Maybe he could even win back the title. I His first warm-up went fine. Servo kayoing his man in two rounds. His next warm-up was a disaster. Joe DiMartino stiffened him in the first round at Bridgeport, Conn., and it was to be Marty’s last fight. * *■ ■* Marty Servo left a wife and three children. He died practically penniless. He was a victim of circumstances. (t8peci8/5i5 Remodel Now! BATHROOM EXTRA BEDROOM RECREATION ROOM Call Jim McNeil & J Cabinet Shop 924 W. Huron Ph. 334-0926 MID-WINTER PMELING SALE!' IS ! 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As low at $1.25 a week. 1 year — 20,000 mile guaran- Most Cart SAM BELUMY Credit Manager "You don't need cash to deal with Motor AAart; We con easily arrange a 'Pay At Yoii' Drivo' plan which enables you to got your car on the road now and take up to 12 months to pay!" « U mu C»M0» BY HlfitM WAIUB IMPOBUBS IkC . DU80I1. MICH. TERMS ■ I MOTOR MART S i ■ 123 East Mentealm FEI-TI46 S THE EONTIAC PHESS. 'H ESDAV. EEHUl’AHV 11. liKi! WTHS Girls | Buckeyes Try to Slow Ski to Victory ! Purdue's Title Express High School AP Cage Poll 2Va CAR GARAGE Meet on Slopes Kettering, Mott Split Chicago (AP) — Ohio action. Illinois is at Michigan State's Buckeyes, reeling fronVand Iowa (3-3) takes on North-two straight losses, hope to re- western at Iowa City, In still gain their earlier form at home anoher Big Ten game. VViscon-WaterforcT Township’s girl attempt to keep sin is at Minnesota while non- it four straight A hiinr.ii ^ rr . ^ , , sL-iprs it fmir «iraioht P^rdue from making the Big conference action finds Michi- A bunch of young men at Kettering High School has amazed nearly everyone but themselves this'ciarkston Monday afternoon in Boilermakers, overtime That will mark the final oiit- •year. p League makeup side game of the regular sea- The youngsters form Kettering’s wrestling team,!match at Mt. Hollv. |fayette a week ago, are riding s„n for Big Ten teams who hold a squad that almost folded but didn't and since has The ™heaten Skipixr coed, o,eT’‘ :h5me on to post a cemarhable rocoed. ~ 'SoS wl.h^ a ---------------------------- The team has no bonafide wrestling coach. edging the Wolves handily, i victory at Columbus. i/ . i f i n J In another makeup meet,! * * , KPlfh NpK rcPfOrfl e Kettering split with Waterford j- Illinois are - Mott. The, WKHS boys upped bee for second place with 4-2: ■There are a couple of coaches, but both admit! Tim Megge of Orchard Lake they know little rnore^*- 's getting some scor- about the sport'than the ™mpetjtion from within his'tneii mark to 2^2-1 with an easy eonferen^c^^ games [)y| jp . . - . * farm V rirrlp win a thniiffh Harrv Dr ... , ^ family circle. win although Harry Drake of behind Purdue, ■ „■ . TEAM UNBEATEN |winless Mott was the individual “TJie pressure i^s on them LAUDERDALE, Fla. *‘Tlje wrestling coach la.st sa,d Purdue C^^eh year (Doug Spiceri received a s sister Melanie, 12, is a similarly, Nancy Stoppert of <''eorge King after Ins club set a new chmsed grant-in-aid from Harvard Uni-ffventh grader at Our Lady Kettering paced the girls but knocked off Northwestern Sat- ppip ,o,.he 403-mile St Pelcrs- ■" •Detroit.:Mott’s team claimed its second neday night 97-84 while Ohio ’ c straight victory after „ 7,.70 versity and he’s there now doing Q'icen of Heaven graduate work,” explained Hal Through five games, t h e_______________^ Farah, an English teacher who basketball team on which defeats, assists head coach Charles Grif- Melanie plays has a 5-0 record fith (Kettering’s track coach), a Melanie owns a scoring drafting instructor, with the average of 22 a game. j Wrestling team. * * -k ir ■), i, “We’re thinking a b 0 u t Laura “Before the season it looked cocduccation at OLSM,” laugh-|®^^^^'''J^^d Jike no one wanted the wrestling ^d one of the officials of the all-j b team,” said Farah- “.So they school. iic^eslar (members of the team) came to ... ., ~ (wT"3l2, «.’c us and asked if we would just Michigan School for the Blind ,<£tterino sponsor them. as the winner of the b recent 13tli annual wrestling pockey (ki, 2: ‘DIDN’T MIND tournament of the North Central “We told them we didn’t know Association of Schools for the anything about wrestling but Blind. Michigan was the winner they said they didn’t mind,” 'of the Class A division, while * * * Iowa took the Class B title. From that begitfriing, Kct- In the finals, Pontiac’s Stove tering has gone on to compile a Council placed second in the 9-1 won-lost record in dual meet 112-pound weight class. qorpoetition, the best in the --------------------——------ short history of the school. Previous best was in 1964-65 when the squad was 9-3. j KIMBALL IN FINALE ! There’s another meet on the! schedule — Royal Oak Kimball — but even a loss there won’t! dull the team’s ac-complishment. burg to Fort Lauderdale ; WATERFORD GIRLS 1( CLARKSTON U4.J 1, CLARKSTON 13J.S WAT. MOTT 101.0, KETTERING H : 3. Denise Grei toss at Wisconsin. Mlf T WIN rected time. ^'keye Coach Fred Taylor The Windward Passage, seemed to agree when he said owned by Bob Johnson and flyin “We need to win. If we don’t,: the burgee of the Lahaina Yachtl the race may be just about Ciub of Maui, Hawaii, crossed over. ” the fini.sh line at 10:44.41 to beat Purdue, virtually unbeatable the l%2 record set by the Tie-":at home, has fared well on the onderoga. road this season. In addition * * * to Northwestern, Wi.sconsin and The American F^agle, 41-foot e .Minne.sota are numbered among geteh .sailed by Ted John.son of MIAMI (AP) — The Orange n Purdue’s victims on the road. Atlanta finished at 1:45 p.m, to Bowl Committee Monday elec- While the spotlight is on the beat the Windward Passage on ted L. Alleai Morris, Miami n Purdue-Ohio State game tonight, corrected time by about 17 min- realtor, 31st president of the two other contenders will be in utes, race officials said. committee. Mat Leaders Retain Holds in Prep Poll ir: NBA Standings western Division record, F'arah KALAMAZOO (UPI) -~ Tren-.Soiith Haven and Williams- p About simply says "It’s remarkable, ton have regained their holds on Everyone pulls together. We’ve the top spots in Class A. R and all been sacrificing and that's coinbined C D in the sixth we"k-rcally the thing. Iv high .school wrestling poll. “And wp’ve had immeasur- George Hobbs, assistant able help and assistance from wrestling coach at Western Bob McGregor, who was captain Michigan University, compiles of that 1964-65 team. He’s night the poll weekly on balloting from^ manager at Champ’s pren coaches around the stale Restaurant on M-59 and work- Ttie rapkings: Ing night? poses problems but ^ he works twith us as much as he 1 Trenion can.” j 3: BMtIe'creek Central I 4. Temperance-Bedford I SUCCESSFUL TRIP I a' Ponllic Ceno'al ^ ! The team's latest venture was I, a trip to Alpena over the^st Pojii^cj^^orjhem |i weekend and the Captains came * ^'cfAls'B back with the champion’s , soum Haven ' tr«phy, besting eight other ] teWs for that honor. It’s only ^tand^R^pids^Forest hihs the second wrestling trophy in t. g^Tioue^ the Captains’ showcase. The si H^iings | other was collected at the ,0: fiw Atherton Waterford Invitational in ’64- class c-d i 65. : yifl'sle'M! * * * t Ga*?sbu?g-AuQU5ta A couple of the individual 5- vandercook Lake winners at Alpena for Kettering were Larry Bridgewater, 95 pounds, and 138-poundcr Joe LeMarbe. Bridgewater, a | junior, ran his number of wins for the season to 19, believed to be a record for the Kettering; squad. Where there’s a will there’s a way OVERLOOKED CAGERS Only games scheduled. ABA Standings Today's Games dnesday's Games Bruin Center Nearing Mark NHL Standings NEW YORK (AP) - Boston’s Phil Esposito is closing in on the alltime National Hockey League Among the overlooked players scoring record and could j this season are Mike McGill, a become the first player in his-64 center for Birmingham jq spo^e more than 100 Brother Rice, and guard Rich points in a season. Porritt of Clarkston.They rank as the week's ‘Unsung Heroes.’ 10.,oilman, Tor. Today's Gamts Dayton Only g. WHITEWALL McGILL PORRITT Porritt, a 5-8 guard, is seldom! high in the scoring column, but his value to the Clarkston squad-is in his over-all floor play, of-' fense and defense. Clarkston, after a rocky start, has won four of its last six games and much of the credit must go to Porritt. McGill is another name seldom found among the scoring^ leaders. He’s one of the team’s j strong men on the backboards,' the place where coaches tell you the game is won. t 1 iftECORD FALLS \ V ! * Coach Jerry Barr, head man| of the Romeo quintet, saw an old record of his go by the wayside this year. Back in 1958 — Feb. 7 — Barr scored 43 points as Port Huron Junior College defeated Bay City JC. | ★ _ I That mark was topped earlier ^ this year by Jim Harris. He; flipped in 44 ' SNOW TIRES Tubeless 2,or$0022 igUg recaps 6.50x13 - 7.00x13 7.35x14 - 7.75x14 8.25x14 > 8.55x14 Plus 4S - lie Fad. and StalB Sales Tax FREF MOUNTING NO TRADE IN .NEEDED Inilant Cradil, Lifstimt S«ad Hsurd OuaranUt SAFETY STUDS AVAILABLE Hew Snow Tires as loiv as $ 1995 ■ ■■ l-MxOX* HOURS: MON., SAT. 8 A.^. - 8 P.M. TIRE SERVICE CO. 190 W. Walton Blvd. Va Mile West of Baldwin PONTIAC Save on Ford Galaxie 500^ loaded with popular options during your Ford Dealer^ Pop-Option Sale! L T Pts. OP GA Ford is: Your Ford Dealer's just made his best seller a better buy than ever. The Galaxie 500 smooths your ride with a longer wheelbase than Chevrolet. It hugs the road with a track as wide as Cadillac. It has a smaller turning circle than Plymouth. And now your Ford Dealer's added lots of extras to the car—without adding lots of dollars to the cost. You get all these popular options included in ithe low sale price; (• Luxurious vinyl interior trim ^ • Extra exterior protective trim • White sidewall tires • Full wheel covers • Rim Blow deluxe steeringNwheel Your Ford Dealer’s also offering special savings on big extras like V-8 power, air conditioning and tinted glass. Come to the Pop-Option Sale today. It’s like learning to be an expert bargain hunter in one easy lesson! FORD Galaxie 500 SportsRoof The place youVe got to go to see vvhafe going on--your Ford Deafer! Save at his Pop-Option Sale! JOHN McAULIFFE FORD, INC. 630 Oakland Avenue Pontiac, Michigan THE PONTIAC PRESS. TI ESDAV, FEBRUARY 11, 1969 Last week's uncommon scor- Walt Stoddard cadi had a ; tag explosion wasn't limited to game, the ear^ week reports. Highlighting the end of the week scores, was Itaug Swords' ^3 6V jor roMu 2i4;?4 am i\ n'>-245-246-726, and his team- ?i5V24";a..o mates Bud M n 1 h o 11 a n d (263-^6lii and Pat Sweeney- ihu*i?d°y^^5ish° GOOD TOTALS r'.nv'apmS"' Donn:' fuJZ, Ed Ciibhs rolled a 245-255-^589 f()r Hartford Hoofing. g Foster hit 236--681 for t’Gntiac high)^or^B»«ub^«L^ .lanitor Supply, Bob Cham-jsaj split conversh beilain posted 2.34- 678 for ^'“*'Vhur«d»y'AMdriw Gniewek Trophies, and Neil g^iuoiI^'sis; Picketts had a 277 (6,34) for E'e»h Veterans’ Disposal Dave h*gh’’gamfs’^an% s"'" ? Moreno rolled a 260 game. OAvid 'H^ 30 In Huron's Thursday Ladies Ken''wVi'te^ jij'eirhi^pV^^^^^ Classic. Terry (Jrant's 226 618 and Shirley Pointer’s 235 602 topped tile list, ” ilV Chenoweth nipped Shirley for ‘ ^^wMnewiiy|^Mornin^Jc^^^^ wc high game honors with a 2,36 in Wednesday Ladl« Cla»»lc her 577. M'gh'^GAm'e'^^ Jrnim.’' Met! Helen Fry had a 'M and a m Marv Foster a 587, while Betty [’5nv\R\'io"N *' Smiley iMiwled a 223. lluntoon’s ‘‘JriLTN posted a 935 actual game in a high gam'es an'B sesTies 2644 series. Huron had a 2671 jtn"'Ri^!iio.* 3r;'’2tio^''n'u* Dlmt series, and S\l\.'in Plumbing"”'"' and Heating recorded 890 '2.3,50 actuals. itfl*! SJIA.SON HIGH There was a season higli set kmii' In the ,300 Bowl Classic as Bill jw“ Kirkland’s 244 248-212 704 sparked Deni’s Market to a 3193, hu series and a 19-point taad over runner-up McCullough Healty "Hjal'ki’ia.’MJ the team standings ^ Thuridiy Bob Garrett rolled 2 2 2 - e ’ -' 244 -656. .lop Foster 235 -647, I Fd Austreng 211-246 627, ‘‘Mo" ' Moore 236 211 63.3 and Dick, King a 243 (6131. Tlie Wednesda\ Cooley I.anes Classic liad a 692 high liy eoowner Dick Viles (255 227) for [ Gniewek's. Don Lawson’s 217-2.35 644 led Doyon Painting to r 1112—3103 highs Sportsman’s Bar boasteri a good duo in .lack Henkel (2.'U-2‘20 6491 and Boh Chamberlain !■ (215-227-6.32), Jim Tin son bowled 220-223-633 for JaA's , Marathon, and Angotl Vending teammates Tom Pasehke and ^AIRWA^ LANES A emiple of junior college players are running a tight race Dick in the scoring column. ,n?o“" Glenn Lenhoff of Auburn Hills ' ((K't'l contimics to set the pace with a 29 6 average through 21 games. The sharpshooting ^Dof, Lenhoff has amassed his points on 2,57 field goals and 109 frc(F throws. The Nikes have a Khll record. , .SECOND PLACE gi,',,''. Hunnihg a close second is 6-3 'uni!« ^'■*'<1 Street of the Orchard «*•'« Kidgc campus. Street owns a lEAM '* avera|^built on 431 pointsj Dif^ V j,i Ki outings. Along with his scoring Street is hauling down yc ;in average of slightly more fliKh! than I,3 rebounds a game. \ ken * * ★ ! !',"23? Harold I.owe, one of Street’s ' ]]'y running males, is second in t 2nd seoring*^and rebounding. He's ^ averaging 2.5.3 points and 12-rebounds a game. r"i'o3 LEADS HIGHLANDERS | rsBi.i Holding the lop spot on thcj , 539 Highland Lakes (7-13) team is; Tiore'V former Pontiac Central star, s'pLiT Frank Russell. In 19 outings, Russell has a ‘22.0 average, while | f.conard Cole, another PCHj ‘ priKfiict, is second with a mark 20', ■ of 14.2. I .lerii * * * aVVV, Cole tops the flighlanders in ‘ ' rehoiiiiding with 268 in 20 (,»y games. Walter Causey, also a I’Cll graduale, is second in re-" bounds with 186 and he owns a 12 3 average. Mfiiiv ORCHARD RIDGE Al GAMES POINTS AVO GAMES POINTS A Struble Erupts in Final Half Upset Bi(J Thwarted; Lawyers Stay Close UCLA Still Leads Poll 'M Big Cage Strides Don't Help Pontiac PrtM Photo WUTKIAT SPARKPLUG -Diminutive senior Dave Gem-mel has developed into the top scoring threat on the Oxford cage squad. His 19 points in each of the last two outings are the top output by any Wildcat this sea.son. Oxford is host to Holly tonight in its next-to-last home game of the campaign. Former Tiger i Is Manager LOS ANGEI.es (4>I - Bob! Shaw, who pitched With seven different major league clubs, joined the Ix)s Angeles Dodgers Monday to manage the Daytona Beach club in the Florida State League. - a right-hander, won 108 games in the majors for the Detroit Tigers, Chicago White .Siix, Kan.sas Cily A’s, Milwaukee Bt;pves, San Francisco Giants, I\lew York Mets and Chicago Cubs. Struble Realty outclassed the Buick Warehouse quintet jn the final half Monday night to retain its one-game lead in the Waterford Township men’s recreation basketball National League. After trailing, 28-26, at the intermission, Struble shot the warehousemen on a three-man effort for a 33-10 margin and a 59-38 victory. Struble is 8-1. Jim Bertrand hit 11 of his 18, Ron Tosh 10 of his 18 and Sam Gibbons 8 of his 13 to provide 29 of the 33 last half points. Phil Hneg’s 13 keyed the Buick workers’ opening half exploits. By The Associated Pre*s LaSalle and Tulsa made some ig strides ~ but it’s doubtful they’ll provide any immediate threat to the four powerhouses at the top of the weekly Associated Press basketball poll. Not this week, at least, if first-time meetings mean anything. LaSalle, 18-1, and seventh a week ago, leaped into the No. 5 slot, while ’Tulsa’s Missouri Valley Conference leaders zoomed all the way from 11th to seventh. proven success against their I of the season over Flwida Sat-foes this week. urday night. The Wildcats won The Bruins have qnly one | the first meetmg 88-67. ________ game on tap—at Washington State Saturday night, a team they easily dismissed 108-80 last week. However, the top four remained unchanged, headed by unbeaten UCLA, again a unanimous choice of the panel of sports writers and broadcasters. The Bruins, winners of 18 in a The L.L.B.'s stayed on theTow, drew 760 points—88 realtors heels with a 7-2 mark, than second-place North Caro-as they outlasted Don Murphy, Una. Santa Clara was third fol-Inc., M-51, thanks to a 27-211lowed by Kentucky, edge in field goals. Ron StaffordipRoVEN SUCCESS of the losers led the scoring! j^ere will be with 16, and Hanley SandersL ^^.^foing among that group sparked the lawyers with 16. The third game saw Booker Brothers Concrete cement a 61- rJo''r*ds*ThrouBh'gamVj’’of‘ 47 victory over Lakeland Hardware with a 34-18 first-half j- c^iima cushion. Jeff Harnack and Joe J Kentucky*'^* Beseau each posted 16 for the s oavfSso winners (4-5) who captured rJisa their fourth straight decision. V si!" John's, n v. They had a 26-19 edge in v'il"anova baskets. The Buick Warehouse and!'< Colorado Don Murphy remain tied with 3-[i».' Ohio state ° *" 6 marks for fourth place, while !e: MaTlfuett# ‘ Lakeland Hardware is 2-7. !m. louIwnib North Carolina, which turned back arch-rival North Carolina State 85-62 Monday night to run its record to 18-1, has a first-time meeting with South Carolina Friday night, then takes on Clemson, a 90-69 victim of the Tar Heels earlier, the next evening. » Santa Clara, 20-0, has a return meeting with San Francisco Saturday night—a team it beat 86-66 earlier. And Kentucky, 17-2 after beating Mississippi State 91-69 Monday night, will try for its second FEB. 14th GIVE" KINO" EDWARD Amtriet'* tMrgwt StWitg C/atr 'ameHgo PICKUP CAMPERS 1 pc. fiberglass top, front, tinted plexiglas windshield, shower, stool, intercom, plush interiors, many luxury features. Bank Financing Available Biffi TiUOlUHli TRAILER AND OUTDOOR CENTER ^ , Htatad Showroom ot 2012 Pontiac Dr. (1 Bl. N.W. of Orchard Loko & Tologroph) Houri: 9-6 Except Sunday Tol. 682-8945 GAMES POINTS A GOODWYEAR SER VICE ^STORES M Maryland Chooses ADi COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) I,'- Tile appointment of Jim Ke-I ,^!hoe, track eoaeli al Hie Univer-j ' ,sily of Maryland since 1946, as; I' new athletic director was announced Monday night by uni-14 ver.sity President Wilson H. El-| ''Lins. I S '''■ ■■ y/\ndsor ^ Raceway Windsor Results S(h—1*00 Cwiditienad Pacai QUINELLA: (4-SI paid IS4.10 ttp-ti^too —’ 7th-il,«C# Claiming EXACTOR: (t-t) I Clyde Elliott Joins Al Hanoute's Clyde Elliott, who has been selling General Motors cars for over 18 years, has rejoined the soles staff of Al Honoute, Inc., where he hod formerly been a member of that soles force for more than 14 years. Clyde has consistently been a member of every GM Soles Achievement Club. And whether you're thinking a new cor or a used one, Clyde has the know-how and experience to put you in the best buy at the very best price for you. AL HANOUTE’S CHEVROLET BUICK-OPEL, INC. 209 N. Pork Blvd., Lake Orion MY 2-2411 4WHEEL, BRAKE SPECIE- * Regular %jl9 2 Billiards Runs Feature Victory .LOS ANGELES '.’Fi - Jimmy Moore of Albuquerque. N. M . put together runs of 46 .and 42 balls in defeating Richie Florence, Torrance. Calif.. 150-,\ J., topped Long Island s Michael Eufemiz 150-107 Monday night in the World’s Invitational Pocket Billiards Championships. ★ * * The co-leaders of the tourney - Joe Ral.^is of Minersville, Pa . and Kd KelK of La^ Vegas. Nc'v . and Ronnie .\Hcn of Burbank. Caiif . all with 5 1 ref ords — were idle Monday RENT-A-CAR Only ^ j;r 1969*Chcv7ll V-8, Automatic Trantmiasion. C.A.R. Rentol & lease, Inc. 631 Oakland at Cat! PE 5-4161 UNITED TIRE SERVICE WHITEWALLS! FULL 4 PLY! ANY SIZE I 10 650x13 775x14 825x14 855;c14 NO EXCHANGE NEEDED ...........1240 900x15..............13.50 rw P$y Only Adytrtittd Prieto «t Untted Tire All new |NMM«f|er wito ewe nricMi piM PedeialTac^ pdeli «• t(w maximum you pep fornew Him at INSTANT OREDIT - NO MONEY DOWN VISIT UNITED TIRE TODAY... AND SAVE! OPEN MOII.'rWIMI nil. ttei-UT.M PLUS F.E.T. .43 to .73 WIDE WUITERETREADS We remove front wheels, clean and inspect front wheel bearings, inspect grease seals, add brake fluid if needed (no extra charge], adjust brakes on all four wheels & test. Apply your brakes with confidence! Take your car where the experts are! NO MONEY DOWN WITH APPROVED CREDIT FREE MOUNTING! HIGH QUALITY.. "GO-POWER' Yours today at a Low. Low Price GOOofirEAR "ALL-WEATHER" SPECIAL BAHERY ^1835; iw-2ir A low cost battery that offer* the tame high'quality found in many more expensive batteries. IJry charged and packed with pov\er. Frae Installation—EasyTerms! NO MONEY DOWN on our Easy Pay Plan! SAFETY SERVICE BUY 3 LOW PRICES mONT-END $gS0* $|Q50' $1250' Compact cart Standard care Daiiixa haavy can *Ptin fu tar IfS. aatt flat partf. Adi $2 for torsion tors. Our alignment apecialiita will do all this work . 7. inapect com-pleta front^nd, including springs, shock absorbers, ball joints. Idler arms, tie rod ends and steering wheel assembly; realign front and; correct camber, caster and toe-in (chief causes of fast tire wear). Drive in or call for appointment and use our easy pay plant oaauvEAR SERVMBE UNITED TIRE SERVICE “WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTED - NOT QUALITY” 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 1370 WIDE TRACK DRIVE PONTIAC PHONE; 335-6167 WATCH FOR OPENING .OF ANOTHER NEW STORE AT 525 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. Acrota from tiw Ponriac Mall night, hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) ENTON, LEVIE; February 9, 1969 ; 447 East Wilson Street; age 28; beloved husband of Bernice Benton; beloved son of Thomas and Carrie Benton; dear father of Brenda Lee and Terrell Lee Benton; dear brother of Mrs. Eurnice King, Mrs. Rutha Williams, Jerry, Ivory, Joe, Barney, Willie Lee, Thomas Jr., Bai-nie Louis, Cora Lee, Ann and Jeannette Benton. Funeral service will be held Sunday, Feburary 16, at 2 p.m. at Colquitt, Georgia. Mr. Benton Will lie in state at the Ffankj Carrufters Funeral Horn from 7 to 10 p.m. tonight. HENDERSON, ANSON H.; February 9, 1969; Cass City; age 93; dear father of Mrs. Thelma Pratt, Stuart and Arthur Henderson; dear brother of Mary Sweet andi Margaret Wagg. Funeral, service will be held Wed-j nesday, February 12, at 3j p.m. at the Novesta Church of Christ, Cass City. Interment j in the family lot in Novesta Cemetery. Mr. Henderson will lie in state at the Little’s Funeral Home, Cass City until 12 Noon Wednesday at which time he will be taken to the! church to lie in state until Cemetery, Waterford Township. Mrs. Sims will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) Assistant Department Managers Card of Thanks E FAMILY OF OSCAR R. Walz i>h «n thair heartfelt _____ .. ____ their heartfelt • thanks and apprecletion for the acts of kindness, messages of sympathy and beautiful floral offerings received from our kind friends and neighbors during our recent bereavement. Special thanks to Rev. Robert Davis, the Dryer Funeral Home, and WSCS of the Davisburg Methodist- Church. In Momoriam 2 M deparrtment managers In lume department. Send con sume or apply at: PERSONNEL DEPT. 2ND FLOOR IN LOVING MBMORY of our Mother Isabelle M. Stiles, vyho passed away February 11, 1968. Montgomery Ward I time of service. SENIOR PROJECT ENGINEER PISTON PUMPS These are career positions offering excellent salory and fringe benefits that include paid vacotions, holidays, sick leave, medical insurance, life insurance and a modern retirement plan. Additional earniqg possibilities, planned advancement, company-provided vehicle and tools. Extended training program in advanced electronics. CALL MR. RICKETTS FOR INTERVIEW: 335-6118 9 A.M.-6 P.M. MONDAY THR0U(3H SATURDAY AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER c—r> ^ TIIK roN HAl IMIKSS. Tl KSDAV. FKimUAlfV 11. 1 HtHi W.«t«d M«lt 4 H.lp Wonted M.I. 6 Help Wanted Femol. 7 |Holp Wonted F.mol. 7 Help Wonted Femole 7 WANTED SALESLADIESi Superintendent SALESMAN ^rEN^NruvE D.P.W. £ rSr^irEr " ATtTnTION PEGGYS-BLOOMFIELD ^u,nr?or girls i r'oU\'’r;*To •rXrVr^*''”'' fashion WE NEED: ........ ^ .' uy ]\]PPP). OrPORTUNITY EMPlOYt R 5 7711 ACCOUNTING CLERKS : S.=L-vSsrHl' KK?;:L”ti, WF OFFER- r,"ier.;ii““s.,;,''sr..£ CASHOFFICE : “"-ss-tEf,;™ CLERKS^ diaL'^dLuio«)io«, : CREDIT "TrSiit?.¥f~c S' i pro'Ho7"r^"«n,,rw“..i: |3,5_dui. hwy n .... .nd |,MUUIPLE^ USTING WANTED ^ .ss«tKn«».--------------------— ■‘i^fss^±sss cE:™:::.,. "“^ss^r- ,SliE5 «-I’KZZZ^ Mi^tenemr's.'. Montgomery >£r»S»"s.‘. J"' Word general oFFicEL^Bookko.ping Telephone ,E2v.“E^ TURRET LATHE CarYou”silI? , .. . , 6-wEEK‘^TYpm™uRSE HERE'S WHERE '■RETURNS ACCEPTED" Ts Bass-ifaps s32S Es?ATC Eies§hs^:§s^l^“ ^ Sisi- !Sr i;i,7'', " ' R^nce • ■ ■'' F«.r.Ta's.5.'r“ ..™..»— ’HKw'Sr’ r UuicK Keterence ^ -"“r.- Rl|?aMFSS «» SHWieE DIREemBYi 7«c s„r-sa..'--‘ ^WANTED ' MATURE LADY“ ^ANTED PART-TIME “ : wen ,o .ho._and sell sm.ll PORTUNITY IN TH eS >> W ^ ’ Quick Reference BUSINESS «.samDIIIE^i SERVICE-SUPPUES'-'eOUIRMEHT _ L 1‘iSX^ s GOODYEAR BENEFITS • Paid Vacations • Pension Program , Hospitalization and Insurance GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE —APPLY IN PERSON— 1370 Wicie Track Dr., Pontiac Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action t Ads Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAV, FEBRUAKV ll, 1009 1 to 50 HOMES. tOTS. ACREAGE PARCELS. FARMS, BUSINEbl PROPERTIES, AND LAND CO*F vWARREN STOUT, Realtor 1«0 N. Opdykt EC 5,«l«5 Urgtntlv lor ImitwdUt# uKl PontiK i Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Rent Office Space I ROOMS AND bath, refriMrator and utilities fu AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS Accepting applications t^room ---------— illable a. i SEPARATE OFFICES to 14 Open onto fovar. Brand , Paneled, carpeted. Heat, a - dltlonlng and cleaning tur I Call Jdhn Sttar,_«7^l3S. OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE, I HJ„U, (p ,p|, — ----- . 47 Sale Houses r^ DUIE^ LAKE FRONT, con-i carpeting 49 Sole Houses 49; Sale Houses T MIDDLE STRAITS LAKE PRIVILEGES ,----- j fireplaces, 7 ~ BREWER REAL ESTATE Wideman Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action THE PONTIAC THESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 11, For Want Ads Dial 3344981 JOHNSON ■T I ANNETT OFFERS ;’lr KINZLER ‘GAYLORp * HOW ABOUT THIS ONE? Evening c.l, C.rro,, Br.« JOHNSON I’M S T»lnr«ph .FE 4 JS1 AVON ? r»m, REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. STOUTS Best Buys Today 4140 AVON REALTY ROYER!! AREA CONSCIOUS? WOODED SETTING - ARRO eastham ritist: • ....................... - ‘;"with iivinTtwm, HADLEY-LAPEER AREA ™.r«| 682-2211 ■ e«t, living room, nMU r.r«j I ■ ’• -.iMi-s" _ K™-r, .. s. TIMES LIKE CONTEMPORARY? m-fj 3£SS, rj'^ Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO VON REALTY , „ WHY NOT TRADE? BE READY FOR SUMMEF I “I AN INVITATION TO « PROFIT! - wrEuTo-TRAoT '^^fETeL' ' PHONE: 628-2548 spring does .mve? I Brown Waterfront Home Times Realty ROYER =1 SOON IT WILL BE PHONE: 628-2548 ROYER REALTY, INC. EXECUTIVE LIVING LOOKING FOR ROOM? Times Realty iL'PSH Lsr=t= = = 'SsppiS?: CROSS Realty & Investment Co. 674'!3105 “ LS GILES" ’ TED'S Trading M RHODES ,-r rJ "rt tests 1 MILLION APPLIANCE arils?;. I Goodyear Service Store MO. FOR 8 MOS. OR $44 CASH BALANCE t . Yr$59 CASH' UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER unIVERSaT‘'sEW?Ng”"ce'nTER McCullough realty ! LAND CONTRACTS I ____________ " Warren Stout, Realtor i ?:;[!?"** $400 CLOSING COSTS i OF PONTIAC 391-3300 „„ 3 A RUSTIC STYLED f “IS THE BIRD TO ! 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Lee 28 E^"rrLil"sT'^®338-04< BUILDING— '"?£r b.t^cer*?;s’sSn.'b%"* z AL PAULY COUNTRY HOME ON FOUR ACRES 't Look 1 Now HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty 3-BEDROOM LAKE FRONT £,s=3s~=Ks™j^; INVESTMENT --(Uc.n»e»a«1, Speclellting In furniture refInIshIng end repairs of a" *">“• Msn-Sef. DyNcAN_JPHYFE table,_« e¥eir», 1 n NO BARGAINS. FREE »»?!!■ 462; J5”iS I59.t5; laundry tray. trim. --------- Baldwin. FE 4-I5U. ___ L SHOWERS COMPLETE »ml curtalni gee.so i facets ^114*1? ** ,“"’Flata SBTe 0*chVrd ^ply. 2671 Orchard Lake, «l^ STITOHMasTER SEWING~SirtihS, w^en, naugahyde breakfast set. SNO-SPORT by Rupp, 18 h.p. -. ec, ttOIK a?*-aw after a p.nn. IMS 2b' horsepower snowmobile -*—* excellent condition --------------Attar 5 r l<* MOTOSKI, SM <34 CC, factory modified, one of 4 In the state, new. <73-»<4.__________________ .74? RED WING Hunters ..... $34.50 GENE'S ARCHERY .............. ' 424-3290. <52-3511 or 75^3427._________ PINE DkY jINK, PIOTe hutc cherry droplaaf table, Ham lamp, Y-Knot Antiques, Davisbui 434- 8, VACATIONAIRE ■ TRAVEL TRAILERS Heated and Indoor showrooir TReanor's^tra^ STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. OAKLAND CAMPER Midwest covers and sleeoer steel frame. 1’°“F-a-ho^e and'accessories. Baldwin at Colgate 335-06J STEEL FRAME PICKUP sleeper and tops. Cab to camper ^ Sportcraft Mtg. 4168 Foley Waterford. 423^450. ________ PIONEER CAMPER SALES Trailers: Jubuee, Globe Star Barth Campers; Swinger, Mackinaw, Travel Queen, Car'bou, Barth . Covers:Slut« Bearcar, Merit „ PEARSON'S furniture has NOW MOVED to 448 AUBURN, PONTIAC, FE 4-7M1. ftUWiMAOB AND h TERRIFIC SAVINGS for the "Early Bird" Shopper On now Johnson motors And Starcratt boats. Also see SCRAMBLER The new concept In mobility., : tew 1949 Ski Doos left In stock. JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT W Ml. E. of Lapeer City limits On M-21 Open 10 to 9, Mon. - Fri. 10 to < APPALOOSA^^^MAREj^ ^loHd*'^c gentle, rides and drives, bre quarter horse. See at Rafte Ranch, N. Rochester Rd., Oxto ARABIANS FOR BALE. Double D-C Arahlan Farm. 435-3550. horse, saddle, BRIDLE an access, separata. 4580 Hilli Oarkston. MA 5-5480.________ BUY, SELL OR TRADE GUNS Aisp sell ammunitlen OPDYKE HARDWARE FE 1-4414 YEAR REGISTERED Quarter TROTWOODS JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS 517 E. Walton Blvd.—FE 4-5853 REFINANCING. TROJAN CRUISERS CHRIS-CRAFT AND SLICKCRAFT 30 BOATS ON DISPLAY LAKE & SEA MARINE i. Blvd. at Saginaw_FE 4-958 UNION FINANCE CORP. Wanted Cars-Trucks 101 Desperately Wanted 1944s through 1949 Chavelles, C a m a r o s, Corvattas, GTOs, Firebirds and 442s.^Musl Averill's' ROYAL-OR-REGAL AOTVE TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Telegraph at Dixie Hwy. 334-6694 Open Dally 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Open Saturday 10 a m. to 6 p.m. Open Sunday 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Other times h" *—'• STOP PAYING RENTI START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT SEE THE ALL NEW DETROITER AMERICAN KROPF BUY WHERE SERVICE IS BEST BUY WHERE SAVINGS ARE GREATEST . HEATED MODELS AT Bob Hutchinson's Mobile Home Soles Open Daily 'til 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 'til 5 DRAYTON PLAINS 4301 Dixie Hwy. (U.S. 10) OR 3-13C NEW LOTS, 2285 Brown, ^ ol children. 335-0155. Tires-Auto-Tr^ REPAIR, MOUNT, and balancr Mag and chrome wheels. New and used wheels. MARKET TIRE, 2435 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego. EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Cor 'Check the rest, men gat the bei at Averill's Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Sharp Cadillacs, Pontiac, Olds and BuIcKs tor out-oFatata market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES GMC Factory Bronch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 International Trucks Newly Appointed Dealer 10 Trucks Now Ready For Immediate Delivery GRIMALDI IMPORTED CAR CO.^ 900 Oakland Avenue _____FE 5-9421 ___ JEEP 1963, CJ-5. 4 wheel drive -- plow, half metal cab, cal len 9-1. 334-4137._ 5 BUICK SPECrAL^4 dMr. No S 695.' Call Mr, Parks, credit HaToLD ^TURNER FORD S. Woodward _____Birmingham This'Weak's Special 1968 BUICK Skylark ■ 'la power, V-8, automatic. 1968 BUICK Electro 225 Custom factory ^e^iulpmenf, black viny ’"’$36'95 Matthews- Hargreaves 31 Oakland Ave._FE 4-45 late model CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES lEROME CADILLAC CO. 990 Wide Track Dr. FE 3-70 957~ CADILLAC, 40,000 miles. 3: JOHN McAULIFFE FORD I. 334-3515 from 9-5 p lEEP Sales-Service Over 23 Used Jeep* stock — Ready to gy. i HAHN JEEP CHEVY: riarkston^ ^°*'ma'5-2435; 1968 ELDORADO Full power, Stereo. Lika new.'$av* BOB BORST STOP HERE LAST M&M MOTOR SALES a pay more for sharo, lata mo«< can. Corvettes needed. 1158 Oakland at Viaduct s, Economy Cars. 2335 DIxH TOP $ PAID All Codillocs, Buick Electro 225s, Olds 98s, Pontiocs and anything sharp with air conditioning. WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC Auto Insurance-Marine 104 AUTO INSURANCE Also Cancelled k Refused I ANDERSON & ASSOCIATES WE CARRY AND SERVICE Frankllns-Creea Fana-Streamllna Skamper-Pleasura Mstaa Truck CwTipari^^^ >rs MUST, GO—at Year-end Prio Motor Scooters 94 FEBRUARY SPECIAL "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CAR* We w 0 u I d like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. . LowiY Camper S iipital Rd., Union Li Motorcycle*^ __ I960 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, ax-cellent condition, f 1944 HONDA SCRAMBLER 385, $3$5. TRAVEL TRAILERS BONANZA WEST WIND WOOD I ROMtO »^AT CENT^ER^^- iior'’^L*'S29i.rsi: Form ProdoCT POTATOES ~ 335 W. Sllvarball Out Parry. Bring oentainara. All !(jzes 13 teat thru 29 taat. McClellan travel TRAILERS M28 Highland Road (M-59) Phona 474-1143 > '"■“FISCHER BUICK condition. Call Bill, 402-8394. TOP DOLLARS FOR ........ MILEAGE AUTOMOBILE! Motorcycle Sale SPECIAl PRICES ON ALL MODELS Anderson Sales & Service 1445 S. TELEGRAPH FB 1-7102 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 OR 3-13551 JEEPS New and Used Ready For Immediate Delivery GRIMALDI IMPORTED CARS 900 Oakland Avenue FE 5-9421 condition. Maka < ' automatic, radio. b CORVETTE h V8, . ■adio, heater, whitewalls, t\ Foreifi^Cw»_^ 105 W EXTRA WHEELS and snow '$350. 473-3494 1942 CORVAIR 2 DOOR. Must sell. Runs well, looks good, stick, radio, heater, two new snow tires. Call 474-3710 attar 5:30. 1963 CHEVY 2 4-DOOR, automatic, power steering, 38,000 miles, $375. Ml 4-3407.______________________ 1962 VW ............... $495 Bill Golling VW Inc. 12) Maplelawn Blvd. Ml 2-4900 rom Pontiac to Birmingham, 75 Clark, FE 2-1779. 54 VW BUG, Blue. 595 Willard Phone 451-8458, Rochester. 967 VW FASTBACk, axcallant I, WHITEWALL tl 968 OPEL STATION WAGON. Radic and heater. S39 down, peymenti $10.65. Full price $1295. Call Mr Parks, credit manager at Ml 4 vertible, good condition, $750. 451- Junk CaM-Trocks^^__________101-A| TKYTM ''^.I;2-h.J^N'<^CARS.Jruck$, tree qEIILL i KDiN Cl uiour. niii, o red Interior, a -eat collector's Item. Only $1595. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 51 CORVAIR MONZA. 444-0715. weekdays attar 4. ________ 61 CHEVY, V8, stick, axcallant snsportatlon, $165. Buy here, Pay re. Marvel Motors, 251 Oakland, CHEVY 2 door automatic, 1941 Buick full power. 1. FE 4-8982. Both In perfect ! CORVAIR, good ! 54 BELAIR CHEVY... $700 CHEVY ^DOOR, Blscsyne, 1964 CORVETTE, 2 TOPS 327, 4- speed. 425-4291 after 5:30._ 1944 CHEVROLET IMPALA, 2 door hartop, $797 full price, no money LUCKY AUTO 1965 CORVAIR MONZA Convertible, excellent condition, $550. Owner, 851 -0784^__________________ 1945 CORVAIR MONZA, —Ilo, heater. Naw tire-, .. IS good. $450. FE »8440. 1-2-3 JUNK CARS - TRUCKS, I tow anytime. FE 2-2444.____ 111 JUNK CARS, PAY FOR SOA ■ ■ -’■7(»0. ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS scrap, wa tow. FE 5-0201. OFFER - BRASS; RADIATOR-atarters end generators, C. DIxinn, 1965 CORVAIR. Full price S59s7'Cali'Mr'. 'Parkal credit manager at Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 64 s. Woodward_____Birmingham 9'65"CHEVY IMPALA 2-door Sprrt PONTIAC-BUICK-OPEL $55 S. Rochaitar fid"'” c—10 THE I’ONTIAC I'HKSS. TI KSDAV, FEBUrARV 11. 1909 Ntw aiid UsH Cart 1061 N«w «iid Uitd Con 106 Ntw and Used Cars 106|MARMADUKK ISAVe MONBY AT WIKB SAVOIE SAVE MONEY A1 MIKE JA I M*ple Ml 4 i7S3 CHhVV WOO W Maple. Ml 4 ! milosch:: :' milosch By Anderson and Leemine New and Used Cars 1966 Chevy with VS, r55!o*M»*«f?only. $1195 FLANNERY FORD On DI«l»°Hwv'!!''v^”rlPrd ° '**23 0»00 CHEVY~ WAGONS 1»** Thru 1*61 som* ♦ p»»seng*r, •II pricwl lo Sflll BILL FOX CHEVROLET TS5 S Rochester RO / *51 7000 Rademacher CHEVY-OLDS Over 75 Other Cars to Select From CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IM7 Chrysler Ntyrport custom $2495 BIRMINGHAM! CHKTSUII PLYMOUTH I S' CHRVSIEII-PIYMOUTH 6 FORD STATION wagon. No" Iciwn, ''harold'^turn^^ ford 1966 Ford '“"'''~$1495 FLANNERY FORD HAROLD TURNER FORD m3 DODGE DART 332 3155 KESSLER'S OOOGE CARS AND TRUCKS S«l«l And SorvlCA )*forcf OA S-Ufl 964 pART^convortlblO, qoQ 966 CHARGER, power iteerln(|j end snowtirei. $1s6o. 363 7669. ” ' ' 966 DODGE CORNET ^500, enotnej m. elr condilion^d, 41,650. 62B-1 969 DODGE DART 2 door'sedtn, 6 HAROLD TURNER^ FOW 1**7^ FORD gala^E^^SOO herdloi Illj|‘*'vaj*n?inf''^spe^^^ only Vwl '“jcfHN ’ McAULIfFe" FORD N. - For Want ^ds Dial 3344981 ^ ID* N.. ..rf U»d C„. igrihwT.rUl.4 t.,. 1« N.» ..4 lh.ll Cjis^JM ------- ------—-- --------1 .— - K.rrttnDh**? NASH RAMBLEft, Station I PONTIAC CATALINA, GOLD 1**7 BONNEVILLE. 7 dow hard P^ wagon, excellent lr»n5porlallon, $150. „lth black vinyl lop, 2 door, power, power steering «''<< ''”‘*,Buy here. Pay here. Marvel Motors, ifeerlng and brakes, excellent over payniwls FE 2-37«i, --j 251 Oakland, FE 8-4079. ^J!!?!!^334:025?, ------------ ■** RAMBLER- 1966 TEMPEST Automatic PONTIAC: WHEN YOU bUV II the experts at Merkel TIra Co. c your lire*. 2*33 Orchard Lake Keego, ___ X>lr'j^0^65I-0437_^ 1968 '^ONflAC. 4^^DOOR^^h. JEMPEST,.CUSTOM ; PONTIAC 2 DOOR Hardio nnevllla, $200 1933 Ford 4 doc . standard shllt, $200. MA 4-2449 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, or herdfooa I owner, lot t be driven to ai; axcellent condition. 473- HAROLD TURNER FORD steTrn’ . ' 81095 GRIMALDI BUtCK-OPEL _______________ ’I® J9rch»r<» L^e _ _ 2-9163 J>E:________ t*«3 PONTIAC CATALINA, 28,000 ■ miles. Body and Inside Ilka new,I double power, premium tires, rear o-rV, r?. speaker, reverb, custom mad I Call Mr^^r-aras, cm naugahyda seat covers. Best 381-fa22.___ /______________ 'MVi09*' ----- ■’'■■'94*'PONTIAC CAfAU'lfA, 2 door-4*4 J. Woodward Birmingnarr. 1962 7pONTIAC“ CATAUNA—Cw-i jjr ”Vl0.Engineers CATALINA 2 door^ powor',*clMm*OR S’-MlV*'*’*' PONTIAC CATALINA 4 doirj ife‘e?ing, posliractlon, 14,000 miles. ?&*^|3«3F' ivlr^ta ”ve^ :osl, credit manager at PONT.AC~GFUND^P^^^^^ 82,100, 338-*234. ________: 1967 Catalini 2-door $!?*5 1937 BONNEVILLE BROUGHAM,! 1933 Bonneville 2-00 air. full power, loaded! Clean. 1965 Wildcat 4J1 .^—'’'"..BONNEVILLE, lour d o o r; j’" , ,31 “ KEEGO PONTIAC SALES Keego Harbor _ 382-341 1938 CATALINA STATION Wage RAMBLER JEEP, Union Lake, 1937 RAMBLER REBEL 770.4 door,' beautiful candy apple red with black individual reclining seals, radio, heater, slick shift, 232 Cu. In engine, the best 3 cyl. on the market today Valentine special only $1088 lull price, lusi $88 down. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 330 Oakland_Ave._ FE 5-4101 1969 AMERICAN $1999.80 VILLAGE RAMBLER 338^9238 ' 673 lOoS'after 4 'GO! HAUPT I New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cart 106 . .. 373.7324 ’ ‘“>'*1 PONTT A C 106 [EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN 1*33 -L '-'IN i ES'b3?i'£^lF4Csu ^ ^ ^ owner, best oiler. 334-9514. before ciarkslon__32 t934~LeMANS~“CLUB~ C O U Ve“' UNBELIEVABLE 1937 Ponll, _33^9238 no" ”‘v',® 1963 tempest CusI eutomotlc, power elr conditioning. C MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ^ good shape. 677 M-24, Laka Oric I960 CHEVY IMPALA Sport COUP 1950 FORD CONVERTIBLE, GOOD machanicaljy, ^ood tires. 682-0514. 1931 FORD, 4 DOOR.H'cyilndor,! Clean and runs good, $125. 682-9146 | 1962 FORD GALAXiE Convertible, ^^JOHN^McAULIFFE FORD 962 FORD 4 DOOR, good condltlor JOHN McAULIFFE FORD ' ','630 Oakland Ave. FE S-4I0I, 1968 FORD FAIRLANE, 500, 2 door,; 1966 OLDS HOLIDAY Coupe, f and automatic. $39 down, payi good tires. $850. 755 J 7500. Highland 385-2252 | HAROLD TURNER FORD f Montclair two ddor 464 $. Woodward___________Birmingham manager at Ml 4-7500 | wwii. ja^ueniR fOBD I lucky auto steering. SO.MO mik Mw^ca^r wai ‘jOHn“mcAULIFFE FORD 938 ^^MUSTANG'^HARDTOP. 3^0t ’’ToHn’m'c'aUlTfFE FORD 938 MUSTANG hardtop with VI SEDAN JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 150 Oakland 333-7833. SPECIALS WHAT A SELECTION 50 NICE CARS TO CHOOSE FROM Specli I $1588, JOHN McAULIFFE FORD e 1934 Chevy Corvi JOHN McAULIFFE FORD i •30 Oakland Ave______I 193* CHEVY BISCAYNE, 3*6-330 HP., beefed turbo and axtra*. $]2»^ F E ^350.______________ I f*M ChWY impala 4-door, low mileaga, power steering a n d 4i braker New anow tires, 81250. FE, 8-237L_________________________ i 1*6* CHEVELLE WAGON, 20,000 mllas, exc. condition, $1300. OR 4 f**7 ChYveTlE”5S, aulomalic, Una j condition. FE 5-441*.__________ ! 1**7 CHEVY IMPALA 327, 3 iwa, loaded, air, vInt SPARTAN DODGE SELLS FOR LESS (Tell Us If We're Wrong) 855 Oaklond Ponjiac FE 8-9222 THE QUALITY OF MINK FOR THE PRICE OF RABBIT On New 1968 Chryslers and Plymouths OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth 1969 PONTIAC Grand Prix ova top, hydramatic, push button radio, rear speaker, Dup, power steering, power ^dlsc ^brakes.^tin^ed ^windshield. 1969 FIREBIRD SPECIAL BRAND NEW $3765 , $2562 OUTSTANDING QUALITY SELECTION 1966 PONTIAC -■"'1 1963 LINCOLN door hardtop, with ft $898 Continental 4-door 1967 Mustang 2-Door Hardtop Automatic, power steering, brakes, factory air, sharp. Only- $1995 1968 Pontiac VENTURA with V8, automatic, power steering, powar brakes, cordovan top and air conditioning. $3195 Bonneville Convertible ready to go with power steering, brakes, windows, and is yours for only- $1595 1968 PONTIAC Catalina 4 door, with power steering, brakes, hydramatic, new whitewalls. Car, and Is only— $1798 1968 Bonneville power seats, ^asy aya $3495 1963 LINCOLN Hardtop .......$895 1965 TEMPEST WAGON ...... $1295 1963 PONTIAC WAGON ....... $595 1966 PLYMOUTH...............$1295 1967 TEMPEST LeMans ........$1595 1963 FORD Convertible......,$395 1966 PONTIAC Brougham aded with equipment, uke new tires, lit* with black cordovan top. Only - $1695 1965 TEMPEST rails, economy *p*clar“a/S*'a' cyt n. Only— ' $1291 1965 Pontiac Bonneville $1395 WE WIU MEET 08 8EAT ANT DEAL WE WIU NOT BE UNDENSOLD PONTIAC-TEMPEST On M-24-Lake Orion . MY 3-6266 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY ll. 1909 Medley ICardgame 39 Altazimuth ...--------- ■♦Olnvprudent like napoleoo ^ Abstract being 4 Television’s 43 First homo-forenumer cide victim SPobm 44Boatpaddie 12 Bullfight 46 Chilcfs game cheer 48 Felt concern ISCifyin about New York 51 Border 14 Wicked 55 Ebcist 15 Legal point 56 Harangue 16 Mortgages 60 Whole of ’ 17 Anger 61 Narrow inlet 18 Artist’s frame 62 More .................. underdone 5 Mohammed’s 31 Desert nmnad 32Loose outer 6 Scottish. gtirment id^duck 22 Scepter 24 Goddess of infatuation 25 Box 28 Auricle 30 Small tumor on the skin 34 Mongrel 35 Suffix for adjectives 36 Caviar ______ 37 Danish county 3'^tch 38 Hawaiian 4 Masculine foodstuff appellation IT C, A , 7 John (Gaelic) 41 Garden tool 8B««inning \ 43 lifetime 64 Child 65 Heating devices 66 City in the Netherlands DOWN 1 Minute skin 9Deatfanotice 45IdoIize 2-Athena -Television Programs- Pregramt fumithcd by stations listocMn this column ^ro subjoct to change without noticol Chonneis; 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV;56-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV Will Men Kissing Men Start New Bussing Controversy? By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Kirk Douglas recently upheld the right of a man to kiss a man — he puts his lips to those of Alex Cord in “The Brotherhood’’ —and now James Stacy, star of 20th’s “Lancer” TV series, reminds me that the late George M. Ck)han kissed his father every morning of his life ... 'The late Gene Fowler kissed his sons, includ- ' ing Will Fowler, now a Hollywood publicist . . . Not quite the same way Laurence Harvey has always had a lot of fun kissing fellow actors he meets at Sardi’s, and he even kissed Vincent Sardi Jr. Another great kisser qf male friends is handsome, muscular singer Steve Rossi. WILSON About Gary Grant’s possible retirement because be’s not sure that at 65 he’s young enough to get the girl, reader Carol Robinson, 25, says, “I wOnld like to see him go on making films until he’s 164. He gets more attractive as be gets older (most men do)” —Isn’t that the truth? “I’ve noticed it — and what’s the matter with him romancing Katharine Hepburn, Deborah Kerr and other woman stars over 40? Paul Newman might as well worry about how he’d look romancing a 6-year-old.” Valerie French, who went naked on the B’way stage in ‘"The Mother Lover,” attracted considerable attention to herself even though the show lasted only one'^night and she was seen nude only frqm the back. Valerie, playing a Christine Keeler type, yanked off her dress and walked naked into a bedroohi. 'The B’way audience gasped a little — because theater audiences aren’t yet accustomed to nudity. “One night before the opening,” Valerie toTH £e, “as I was faking my dress off, I saw a man’s head and he was peering at me through a little window backstage. I yelled ‘Who is that?’ He dodged — and then I saw two men, stagehands, scuttling off to the basement. “I had visions of the whole membership of Local 1 coming in to look at me in shifts and I came out of there ranting that ’ wouldn’t do the show opening night if it continued.” Producer Leland Haywood qnd Playwright Jerome Weidman calmed her. Miss French hired for pictures by the late Harry Cohn as a threat to Kim Novak, would probably be the first actress to move about the B’way stage naked if it weren’t for " kids in “Hair.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL . .. Hedy Lamarr’s turned photographer; her picture of Andy Warhol will be in Esquire . . . Duke Ellington got a letter from the President thanking him for his music at the Inaugural ball (and signed “Dick Nixon”) . . . When a hijacked plane was allowed to leave Havana this week, the Cubans kept several movie films that were aboard (including “Otley”) . . . Columbia Pictures’ll take a look at Barbra Streisand’s half-sister, Rosiyn Kind ... Ron Moody (of “Oliver!”) is phoning HiUary Beckett from London; they met here on a blind date. Harry Belafonte starts filming “The Angel Levine” here next Monday . . . Faye Dunaway insisted at the Ginger Man there’s no romance with Marcello Mastroianni, says the important guy is still photographer Jerry Schatzberg . . . Dustin Hoffman, who got $17,000 for “The Graduate,” now has an asking price of 400Gs. At Barney Google’s; Anita Ekherg and husband Rik Nutter . . . Dorothy Stickney, who appeared on B’way in “The Front Page” 40 years ago, was asked to appear in Robert Ryan’s revival. She declined: “It would be too painful.” TUESDAY NIGHT 6:06 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “Dear Ruth” (1947) A teen-ager writes to a soldier, using her older sister’s name and picture. Joan Caulfield, WiUiam Holden (50) R C — Fllntstones (56) Friendly Giant (62) R —Sea Hunt 6:15(56) Mr. Lister’s Storytime 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — News — Reynolds (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) R — What’s New (62) R C — My Mother, the Car 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C—News, Weather, (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) Nine to Get Ready -Hospital services available t o expectant mothers when they arrive for delivery are discussed. (62) R C — Movie? “Fort Worth” (1951) A famous gunfighter battles lawlessness as a newspaperman. Randolph Scott, Phyllis Thaxter. 7:30 (2) C — Lancer — an aging fix-it man agrees to build a badly needed town jail, and the project becomes as important to him as his own life. (4) C — Jerry Lewis — Nanette Fabray and James Brown guest. (7) C—Mod Squad—Blind girl (played by Gloria Foster, wife of costar Clarence Williams III) mysteriously becomes the target of an unknown and unseen assailant. (50) R C — Hazel — George’s business partner and his bride move in next door, and Hazel is ready with advice for marital happiness. (56) Antiques — Furniture produced in the middle 19th Century is presented. 8:00 (9) R C - I Spy (50) C—Pay Cards (56) French CSief — Veal stew of Italian origin is prepared. 8:25 (62) Greatest Headlines 8:30 (2) C — Red Skelton — Guest is singer Bobby Rydell. (4) C — Julia - Julia launches a search for her missing landlord. (7) C — It Takes a ’Thief — Mundy checks a hunch that a 12-year-old boy may be the brain behind a solid-fuel missile formula he has been ordered to steal. (50) C — Password (56) C — International Cookbook — Dishes from Israel are prepared. (62) R — Movie: “As Long as You’re Near Me” (1956) A film director searches for realism and finds a dramatic love story. Maria Schell, 0. W. Fischer 9:00 (4) C — Movie; “Any Second Now” (Premiere) A philandering photographer’s attempt to murder his wealthy wife backfires when the wrong woman is killed. Stewart Granger, Lois Nettleton, Joseph Campanella, Dan Wynter, Katy J u r a d o r-Tom Tully (9) R O-(Return) Wojeck — In first of two-parter, Wojeck feels fatal accident should be blamed on unsafe car, calls for hearings. (50) R — Perry Mason (56) C — NET Festival-How trends in ’Twentieth Century paintings an^^ sculpture have ext^hd into film are discqssed. 9:30 (2) C — Pofis Day — An Air Forfce officer bets his ipert he can make a direct romantic hit on the heart oi Owls Martin. (7) C - N.Y.P.D. -Investigation of the robbery of a grocery store leads to a drug rehabilitation center where the detectives hope to find the culprit. James Earl Jones heads guest list. 16:00 (2) O-News Special— ‘"The Mayor and the City” (7) O-That’s Life—When one of Gloria’s former beaux visits, Bobby does a slow bum. Norm Crosby, Doug McClure and Totie Fields guest. (9) O-(Special) Federal/ Provincial Constitutional Conference (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) Rainbow Quest — The New Lost City Ramblers are guests. 10:30 (9) Newsmagazine (50) R - Alfred Hitchcock — A group at a resort is tricked into wagering with a mental patient. (62) R—Star Performance -David Niven stars as an Australian Army officer charged with cowardice under fire. 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (50) R - Movie: “Yellow Sky” (1948) Gregory Peck, Ann Baxter, Richard Widmark (62) RC - Movie: “Blood Alley” (Ufe5) John Wayne, Lauren Bacall 11:30 (2) R C - Movie: “The Kid From Brooklyn” (1946) A mousy milkman turns boxer. Danny Kaye, Virginia Mayo, Vera Ellen (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R — Movie; “Violent Stranger” (1958) Zachary Scott 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R—Texan (9) C — Perry’s Probe 1:30 (2) R-Naked City (7) R — News 2:30 (2) News, Weather 2:35 (2) TV Chapel WEDNESDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C — Sunrise Semester 6:30 (2) C - Woodrow the (4) Classroom 6:45 (7) C — Bat Fink 7:00(4) C-Today (7) C — Morning Show — Detroit Schools Supt Dr. Norman Drachler continues his discussion on education today. 7:30 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports 7:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:00(2) C— Captain Kangaroo (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30(7) R- Movie: “Vicki” (1953) Jeanne Crain, Richard Boone, Jean Peters (9) R — Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) R C —Beverly Hillbillies (4) C—Steve Allen (9) C —Bozo 9:15 (56) Science Is Discovery 9:30 (2) R-Dick Van Dyke (56) R — Listen and Say 9:50 (56) All A b 0 a r d for Reading 10:00 (2) R C - Lucille Ball (4) C—Snap Judgment (9) Ontario Schools 10:10 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 10:25 (4) C —News 10:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas (4) C — Concentration (7) G—Anniversary Game 10:35 (56) Reason and Read 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (4) C — Personality (7) C — Galioping Gourmet (9) Ontario Schools. (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:20 (56) Misterogers’ Neighborhood 11:30 (4) C - Hollywood (9) Take 'Ibirty (50) RC-Kimba WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) R —Bewitched (9) C — Bonnie Prudden (50) C - Alvin 12:05 (56) Americans From Africa 12:15 (56) Misterogers 12:25 (2) C-Fashions 12:30 (2) C - Search for Tomorrow (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Funny You ShoiOd Ask (9) R —Real McCoys (50) R — Movie: “House on 92nd Street” (1945) 12:45 (56) R - Spanish Les- (7) Bachelor Father A Look at TV Little Disarray in Storm RacJio Progrdms— WJR(760) WXYZQ 270) CKIW(800) WWJ(950) WCAWl 130) WPON(l 460) WJBKQ 500) WHFI-FM(04.^ «:0O-WWJ, News, Sports WJR-Ncws CKLW, Tom Shannon WPON, News, Phone Opinto WHFI, Don Bosco WCAR, News, Ron Rose WXYZ, Newscope WJBK, News, Hank *:1S-WJR, Sports Wpon, Pat Appolaen WJR, Rateoner P-Choral Cavalcade lowcase. Close- Iiy Repo.. Tom Coleman WJR*' N««, ^?Bleldosco|Je Encore lOsOa-WJR, News 10:15—WJR, Focus Encore 11:00—WJR, News 11:15-WJR, Sports Final ll:JO-WWJ, Overnight WJR, Music Till Pawn uieo-WJBK, Nighr..„.< WXYZ, News. Jim Dev's CKLW, Mark Richards WCAR, News, Wayne Phillips WEDNESDAY MORNING WCAR, News, Pill Delzell WXYZ, News, Dick Purtan CKLW, Charlie Van Dyke 0:30—WWJ, Morria Carlson 7:0O-WHFI, Gary Purece WPON. News, Chuck Warrei l:0»-WJR, News I:1S-WJR, 9:00-WJR, News »:1S-WJR, Open House CKLW, Frank Brodie WMFI, Uncle Jav WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON CKLW, Jim Edwards 11:15—WJR. Focus IliSO-WWJ, Marty McNeele; 1:00—WJR, News, At Home ins—WJR, Arthur Godfrey t:45-WJR, Sunnyside 1:00-WPON, News, Doi X^jWl,tt..on WXYZ. News, Mike Shermai 1:1»-WJR, Music Hall _ *itO-WCAR, News, Ron Rosa CKLW, Ed Mitchell WJBK, News, Hank O'Nall S:0O-WWJ, Newsttme StIS—WPON, Lum 'n' Abner S:10-WPON, Don Singer By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK - ’The weU ordered world of television where almost everything is taped or filmed in advance, suffer^ little disarray after the mass! snowstorm that, on Sunday and Monday, practically paralyzed the eastern Seaboard from Virginia to New England. Just about the only really noticeable changes were on NBC’s ‘Today” and “Tonight” shows. Today’s Frank Blair was the only regular in sight. Hugh Downs, weekending in Arizona, couldn’t make it back to New Yprk since the city’s airports were closed. Ed Newman, NBC’s competent man of all took over on short notice and handled his as smoothly. Joe Garagiola and Barbara Walters were both away from the show, too, and none of the Tonight regulars made it. * -k * But any emergency—the East’s crippling snow, the West’s destructive rains, the power blackout of several years ago—serve to demonstrate thfe^ usefulness of ’TV’s less-glamor-as sister, radio. TV may hayq Smt bulletins about the stpnh crawling across its scre^during scheduled pro-graqis;^ but it was radio that was the citizen’s friend. As conditions worsened, radio became our primary source of information throu^ Monday. Since there is always a chance that electric power may be knocked out.in a storm, a good 1969 resolution is to be sure there is a transistor radio in good working order around the house as well as the usual flashlights and candles. After warnings all day about overexertion from snow shoveling, ABC’s excellent special, Heart Attack” was especially timely. ★ * * ’The program interestingly showed the most elaborate it for heart patients, and its point was to demonstrate the work of coronary care units in hospitals. These units are still not installed in 70 per cent of the nation’s 7,000 hospitals. And the heart patient taken to a hospital without such unit, said the program’s narrator, E. G. Marshall, is “not bit- ter off than he was if he had had the attack 30 years ago.” ’The program, filmed in the coronary care unit of Los Angeles, Good Samaritan Hospital, followed four patients with various heart diseases through diagnosis and treatment. Shown, too, was open-heart surgery as it was performed on one of the men. Especially impressive were ;enes showing the doctors and specially trained nurses of the working like a well-re-hearsed team a moment after the nurse noticed a change the beat of a patients heart, seen on a monitor. ★ * ★ It was an extremely well conceived and executed program that accomplished its purpose. 12:55 (4) C-:News (7) C — Oiildren’s Doctor 1:00(2) C-Love of Life (4) C — Match Game (7) C —Dream House (9) R — Movie: “The Raid” (1954) Anne Bancroft, Richard Boone 1:05 (56) Art Lesson 1:25 (2) C-News (4) C — Carol Duvall (56) R — Science Is Discovery 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C — Hidden Faces (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal 2:00(2) C—Divorce (fourt (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game^ (50) C—American WeSi (56) R—Reason and Read 2:15 (56) American Kstory 2:30 (2) C - Guiding Light (4) C—Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 2:40 (56) Spanish Lesson 3:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C—Another World (7) C — General Hospital (50) R —Topper, (56) Auto Mechanics 3:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t ^ (7) C — One Life to Live (9) C — Bozo’s Big Top (50) C—Captain Detroit (56) Memo to Teachers 4:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show (4) C—Donald O’Connor (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C—Tom Shannon (56) Les Fleurs 4:25 (2) C - News 4:30 (2) C-Merv Griffin (7) R C — Movie: “From the Terrace” (1960) Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Myma Loy (Part 1) ' (50) R — Little Rascals (56) What’s New (62) R — Bugs Bunny 5:00 (9) R C— Batman -Burgess Meredith is guest villain. (50) R —Munsters (56) TV Kindergarten (62) R —Robin Hood 5:30 (4) C-George Pierrot — “Romantic Lisbon” (9) R — Gilligan’s Island (50) R C — Supermsn (56) Misterogers (62) R — Leave It to TV Features NINE TO GET READY, 7 p.m. (56) MOD SQUAD, 7:30 p.m. (7) WOJECK, 9 p.m. (9) N.Y.P.D., 9:30 (7) NEWS SPECIAL, 10 p.m. (2) College's Order Suspended After Student Protest PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) A Providence College order requiring residential students to on campus was suspended indefinitely Monday and the school moved to consid|r demands for changes in curriculum and social rules. I The order had set off student! demonstrations. I State Housing Director Named LANSING (AP) - Robert C. McClain of East Lansing, a former Model (^ties deputy director, has been named executive director of the newly established State Housing Development Authority. ★ * ★, McClain^ 35, has served as an architect-planner with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. HOW! ^ INSURE ^ Auto-Life—Home^^ s Cull ken Mohiman S S 682-3490 = |« 3401 W. Huron, Pontiac 9 S nationwide insurance 9 5 tUtlMwIdi Mutual iBiuranot Ca. ^ ■ Natlonwlda Mutual Fira Int. Ca. ^ NaManwMa LHa Inauraaaa Oa. ^ ■5^ Maiaa01flaa-ealumkua,0l>la^| The Very Rev. William Haas, president, said that the administration had not been aware of the extent of student discontent. He said adminstrative officials “learned some thingsj about student lie we either didn’t fully realize or had forgotten.” NU-SASH Replacement Windows Do U Hava the Answer to LIFE'S GREATEST QUESTION? If Not, Dial 335-0700 DOES YOUR HOUSE HAVE THE BLAHS? Don't- Move ... IMPROVE! We Are Working Now . . . CALL TODAY urusmm yOt/RBASEHm/T As Low As Per Week Here's more room for the kids ... or a bright new, clean and comfortable room for family recreation or entertaining. Let us ai-•ist you in your home beautification. ADD-A-ROOM NW! Lat ua oaalat you In planning a bright •m ream for your growing family. Thare art many naw Idnaa and «v# ui# only tha finaat matariala and craft- MONTH BvarytMnglnModtrnlMation ... KITCHENS e DORMERS • OARAOES • ROOFIMO EAVESTROUQHINO e STORM WINDOWS e PORCH ENCLOSURES ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDINO Frm floimina... Frf Earimotaa . .. Dtcorator Sarric* DAYS ... NIGHTS .. CIlIKeeGon ffonshudionffix . AND SUNDAYS CALL 1032 West Huron 2 BLOCKS WEST OF TELEGRAPH FE 4-2597 lember Pontiac Area Chamber of Commer^ Thinking of Siding Your Home? __Don't put it off any longerl NOW YOU CAN HAVE THE BEAUTY OF SOLID VINYL SIDIRG WHY SETTLE FOR LESS -at a big 20X GET THE BEST Redaction No Down Paymtnt! 10 Months Sama as Cash! 5-Year F.HAr-Loans! Not^t NofChalk Offer LimHed to Present Stock THE PERFECT SIDING e Never Nstds Painting (as aluminum does) e Does Not e L'lfotims Transferable Ouarantsa e Does Not" e Easily Cleaned Ca« 332-5231 for EsKmate Sherriff-Sosliii Ca. Pontiac’s Oldest Roofing and Siding Contractors (Since 1906) THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 11. 196tf AAOIVTGO/VIER CU Olid ClHlipaA£ Tkfide pAieed • PUR MUST POPULAR TIRE BUCKWALL TUBELESS SIZES REG. PRICE EACH SALE PRICE PLUS F.E.T. EACH BUCKWALL TUBELESS SIZES REG. PRICE EACH , SALE PRICE PLUS F.E.T. EACH 6.50-13 $22* $17.00* 1.79 0.25/8.00-14 8.15/7.10-15 $29* 25.00* 2.36 2.38 6.95/6.50-14 $23* $19.00* 1.96 $32* 28.00* 2.57 2.51 1.00-13 $24* $20.00* 1.94 845/li60-15 7.35-15 T.35/74M-14 $25* $21.00* 2.00 2.01 8J5/0M-14 8J5/9-15-15 $34* 89.00* 2.86 3.01 1.16/1.50-14 1.15/6.10-15 $21* $23.00* 2JI0 2.21 TWiHi trade4n tires off your car. WhHowalls $3 more each. ■U.QSL/ JliJtJc (/)(uiAd. •. C8; Ol’EN' MONDAY TIIIU FRIDAY 10 A.VI. To 0:0i) |>,M. SATI RDAY y:.}0 V.V'I. T«) 9:0(l P.M. SIjND VY 12 NOON TO 5 P.YI. . 6}i2-10l() The Weather Cold THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1969 VOL. 127 - NO. 4 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ un.teS'pSesVfNTERNTTior^AL 36 PAGES IOC ABA1 Start-Up Seen by Key House Dem WASHINGTON (AP) - The chairman of the House Appropriations Committee says emphatically “I know” work will resume on the controversial Sentinel antiballistic missile system. Democrat George D, Mahon of Texas, whose committee holds the purse strings for the $5.5-billion system, made the prediction in an interview yesterday although he said he had no direct assurances from Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird. But, he added, “I know the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and I know Secretary Laird, and I know what their thoughts are on this matter.” The Nixon administration last week halted the work on the system pending a high-level Pentagon review. The action followed mounting criticism in Congress and from residents of areas where Sentinel sites are planned. Mahon said the Nixon administration not only will ask for the money to go ahead with the Sentinel, but will get it. He dismissed congressional critics—who included notably Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., and John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky.—as representing a minority. ★ ★ * .And he said that despite oppositon in areas whose sites are planned, he believes the American people support antimissile work. Congress authorized funds for the Sentinel last year. When the project was first unveiled in 1967 by then Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, it was portrayed as an effort to guard against a potential lowscale atomic attack by Red China in the 1970s. MODIFICATION This was the position taken last month by the Sentinel system manager. Army Lt. Gen. A. D. Starbird, in testimony before the Appropriations Committee. He added, however, in secret testimony made public today, that the Sentinel also “would reduce somewhat the number of casualties” from a Russian attack. ★ ★ * Starbird said McNamara, in a speech Sept. 18, 1967, “indicated that he believed that no perfect defense against the Soviet Union was possible. He pointed out that the Soviet Union could increase its .offensive power to compensate.” Building Trades Integration Up Storm Cleanup Under Way in Northeast; 57 Are Dead MIAMI BEACH, Fla. - An AFL-CIO official said today that construction unions, once a major target of racial discrimination complaints, have tripled the number of Negro and other minority group apprentices in the last nine months and might double the figure again this year. ★ ★ ★ “We’re on the verge of something great,” said Robert M. McGlotten, a Negro who is on the staff of the labor federation’s civil rights department. McGlotten, here for a meeting of the AFLrCIO Building and Construction Trades Department, said 2,400 Negro, Mexican-American and other minority youths were placed in apprenticeship in the past nine months through project outreach. The effort is sponsored by the federal government, the 17 construction unions and civil rights groups. The increase brought to about 8 per cent of the number of Negroes and other minority group youngsters in building trade apprenticeships in 52 cities and “This year we might double it to 16 per cent,” he said. * * ♦ Before the recent upsurge, the figure was below three per cent of the 50,^ construction union apprenticeships across the nation, he added. Building trades officials concede that much of the gain in integrating construction unions’ job training grew out of federal pressure and the hope of a big surge in government-financed public housing construction that will create thousands of new jobs. I In Today's ; Press Watted Lake School board puts off action on upcoming millage — PAGE A-4. Nixon—West Berlin President lets world know he’ll visit divided city — PAGE A-8. Business Empires One-bank holding companies, other conglomerates under U. S. scrutiny — PAGE A-3. Area News .................A-4 Astrology .................B-8 Bridge ....................B-8 Crossword Puzzle .........C-11 Comics ....................B-8 Editorials ............... A-* Hi^ School .........B-1, B-2 Markets ..................B-11 Obituaries ................B-3 Sports .............C-1—C-4 Theaters .................B-1# TV and Radio Programs . C-11 Vietnam War News A-* WHson, Earl .............C-11, ’s Pages ......B-5—B-7 NEW YORK (fl — With snowplows working around the clock, the Northeast is digging out from the big weekend storm that paralyzed transporation, cut off food supplies in some areas and throttled the flow of commerce. At least 57 deaths were attributed to the storm which blanketed an area from New Jersey to Maine. They included three persons apparently asphyxiated while trapped in a stalled auto at New York’s Kennedy Airport. it it * Air, rail, bus and auto traffic began to move sporadically late yesterday. But a Retafed Pictures, Page A-5 return to normal schedules appeared some time off as gusty winds continued to pile drifts after the storm moved out to sea. Helicopters proved invaluable in supplying food to 6,000 passengers stranded at Kennedy Airport Monday. They also made a number of ambulance runs, carrying several heart attack victims who otherwise could not have been aided. 4,000 MAROONED An estimated 4,000 persons remained marooned at the airport overnight. They bedded down on floors, benches, chairs and in some cases in planes. The other 2,000 strandees were airlifted by helicopter to the Wall Street heliport or managed to get the few available buses able to leave the airport. Flight operations at Kennedy were expected to resume?this morning and at LaGuardia this evening. Newark Airport reopened yesterday afternoon and Logan International Airport in Boston last AP Wlrephoto ORDEAL ENDED—Janie Lewis, 17, is escorted by two unidentified men from a suburban Dallas cafeteria where she was held as a hostage by a young gunman for lOMi hours. The girl broke free and police officers shot and killed the gunman, identified by police as Freddie Robert Mullins, 21, of Dallas. Girl Runs to Safety as Captor Is Throughout the snowbound section, the failure of delivery trucks to get through drifts 6f up to 10 feeUed to a shortage of milk, bread and othdnstapldS. ★ * * Both the American and New York Stock Exchanges closed yesterday and the city’s Commerce and Industry Association reported that absenteeism at commercial establishments ran at 73 per cent. * A * As the cleanup operation got into high gear, the Massachusetts Department of Public Works asked the assistance of the National Guard to remove an estimated 2,500 abandoned cars on state highways. Wilson to Visit Berlin LONDON (AP) - Prime Minister Harold Wilson will visit West Berlin Friday despite tension there over new travel restrictions imposed by the East German government, aides said today. _ * * A Spokesman at No. 10 Downing Street would not comment directly on a report in the Soviet government newspaper Izvestia describing Wilson’s visit as a deliberate provocation. DALLAS, Tex. tJ) — A blonde schoolgirl cheerleader, held under threat of death for 10V4 hours, darted to safety last night as police gunfire killed her pistol-waving captor. Janie Lewis, 17, escaped harm as the tense drama ended in a cafeteria where a long-haired parolee had confined her in a booth, rejecting repeated pleas to free the young woman. AAA Officers identified the slain man as Freddie Robert Muljins, 21, of Dallas. They said he had served a term for armed robbery in Minnesota. As many as 500 persons assembled at times to watch what was taking place at the Big Town shopping center in suburban Mesquite, just outside the east Dallas city limit. Heavily armed police kept the crowd at a safe distance. MO-nONED WITH EYES Mesquite Police Chief L. H. Limmer, 33, said he motioned with his eyes for Miss Lewis to run behind a retaining wall in the cafeteria when Mullins finally took his attention from her to unscrew a light bulb in a low-hanging chandelier. AAA Three bullets pierced Mullins’ chest and he died as he fell. AAA Police Sgt. L. C. Tidwell said it was about 11 a.m. when he stopped Mullins and a companion, Richard Launderville, to check their driver’s licenses. As the licenses were handed back, Tidwell related, Mullins pulled a gun, and both men jumped from their car and ran. Two warning shots from Tidwell halted Launderville, but Mullins dashed into the cafeteria nearby. GRABBED DAUGHTER Janie’s mother, Mrs. C. S. Lewis from the neighboring town of Forney, told officers that a tall man in a black leather jacket grabbed her daughter as they stood in line awaiting food service. The long vigil followed. Limmer and others talked to Mullins-time and again trying to persuade him to release his hostage. Officers said he- n’ever gave a motive for holding her or voiced any conditions for freeing her. Pay Showdown Loomsfor Board The matter of how much Oakland County Supervisors will be paid is to be discussed and maybe determined in a special session at 1:30 p.m. today. The board has until Saturday to set its own salary as provided under state law> AAA Other board meetings have been scheduled for 1.30 p.m. Thursday and 9:30 am. Friday if additional time is needed. The personnel practices eommittee recommendation of a base salary from $4,000 to $4,900 with a daily rate of $25 to $35 is expected to undergo hot debate today. ABSENTEEISM SEEN Several supervisors, both Republican and Democrat, have said they think the total pay should not exceed $5,000 a year, and others have indicated the committee’s maximum recommendation of $8,400 a year is not enough and will cause absenteeism on the part of supervisors. Lee Walker, D-Madison Heights, said: “There are going to be a lot of absences from committee meetings. If they don’t pay us what we’re worth, lf!en I’m in favor of a flat $1 per year.” 'let s envoy to Return Home; Paris Hopes Up PARIS (AP) - Le Due Tho’s two previous trips home from the Paris peace talks coincided with a delicate phase in negotiations between North Vietnam and the United States. Now the chief adviser to Hanoi’s peace conference delegation is on his way home again. Tho left yesterday with stops scheduled in Moscow and Peking, principal contributors to North Vietnam’s war effort. U.S. delegation sources feel Tho might have been recalled for a policy review. They are discouraging speculation he is taking back a new U.S. proposal for top-level consideration. AAA There are no symptoms of progress in the talks, but circumstances of 'Tho’s last two trips home give support to specula*-tion his trip may be due to some hidden, significant developments. After arriving in Paris June 3 to supervise the North Vietnamese delegation, Tho returned to Hanoi June 29. This was at the start of a summer-long lull in major Vietcong and North Vietnamese ground action in South Vietnam and of a period of intensive secret deplomacy in Paris. LULL CALLED RESPONSE During Tho’s absence, a ranking North Vietnamese official confided to the French Foreign Ministry that the lull was Nanoi’s response to American de-fhand for reciprocity .in .negotiations for a total halt in the Immbing of North Vietnam. Throughout July, Washington debated whether the lull in fighting was initiated by Hanoi and whether it was sufficient reason to halt all bombing above the 17th Parallel. The Johnson administration decided against halting bombing then, and Tho came back to Paris Aug. 13. A A -A. .. His next departure on Oct. 14 was during terminal bargaining over a bombing halt, when proposals were being exchanged between the Americans and the North Vietnamese in private meetings outside the conference hall. Early in October, Ambassador Xuan Thuy hinted Hanoi would agree to Saigon the Vietcong participating even if U.S. reconaissance flights over North Vietnam continued. This was significant modification of Thuy’s stand i n preceding talks. AAA While Tho was home reporting to President Ho Chi Minh, the North Vietnamese signalled acceptance of the U.S. bombing halt package. On Oct. 31 President Johnson announced cessation of bombing. Lincoln's Birthday Closings Are Told Banks, savings and loan associations and some city and county offices will be closed tomorrow in observance of Abraham Lincoln’s birthday. Pontiac State and Community National banks. First federal Savings of Oakland, Capital Savings and Loan, P(»itiac city offices, Oakland County offices wil be closed. Waterford Township offices and some other area government offices will remain open. A Bit of a Flurry, but Little Snow There’s a chance of a few snow flurries fluttering around the Pontiac area until late today with little or no accumulation of snow. Clearing and cold is the forecast for tonight with a low of 12 to 17. Mostly sunny and continued cold, the high 26 to 31, is the prediction for tomorrow. Fair and a little warmer is the outlook for Thursday. AAA Morning winds westerly at 15 to 25 miles per hour and gusty will become northwesterly at eight to 16 miles tonight. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are 30 today and 20 tonight. Thirty was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The mercury had moved to 36 by 12:30 p.m. Lenten Series Due For a truly inspirational reading experience read Lenten Gnideposts . personal experiences of faith in action by 40 persons, some famous, some unknown, starting Feb. 1# in The Press. City Stadium Bid Backed Rochester went on record last night in favor of Pontiac’s bid as a site for a new athletic stadium. Proposed by Mayor Roy Rewold, a resolution was unanimously approved by the Rochester City Council to support a Pontiac site for a new home for the Detroit Lions and Tigers. AAA The Pontiac site for the proposed domed stadium is near 1-75 at M59, which would be southwest of Rochester. Rochester’s resolution also authorized that copies of its resolution of support be forwarded to the football and baseball companies should Pontiac supporters deem it appropriate. Includes Help for Parochial Students Vote Hits Thai Regime BANGKOK (AP) - Thailand’s government party seemed sure today of electing the largest bloc in the new House of Representatives, but it apparently will be much smaller than anticipated. Political observers predicted the final results from the national election yesterday would give the military government’s United Thai People’s party about 80 of the 219 seats in the lower house. They said smaller parties and independents, many of whom are government supporters, would get about 80, and the opposition Democratic party would get the remaining 50 or 60. Head of Schools in Romeo Resigns Veteran Romeo schools Supt. P, C. Filppula submitted his resignation, effective June 30, at last ni^t’s school board meeting. Although Filppula’s letter did not state a reason for his resignation, there reportedly has been some question among board members about renewing his contract. Filppula, 51, who has headed the Romeo School District for the past 17 years, stated he did not want his contract renewed. Voucher Plan Proposed to Aid Schools story to tell in the series, which will appear every weekday daring Lent. Watch for Lenten Gnideposts. Dr. LEROY AUGENSTEIN A revision of the method by which Michigan hands out school aid funds, including a proposal to give state money to parochial students, was suggested today by a State Board of Education member. Dr. Leroy Augenstein of East Lansing outlined his proposal in a speech prepared for presentation tonight to the PTA Council Founders Day Banquet at 6 p.m. at Kennedy Junior High. Augenstein suggests that the state give each school child in the state a voucher, redeemable at any school which meets specified criteria. Under Augenstein’s proposal, vouchers — “for sufficient funds to insure an adequate education” — would go to each child of school age in a school if: • Teachers and curriculum are properly certified. • Neither students nor faculty are selected or rejected on the basis of creed, color or national or ethnic origin. • The schozol does not impose discipline on the basis of creed. • Students are not required to attend religious exercises nor are religious symbols used in the school. • The school accepts all students up to its capacity, no matter what their race or religion. Augenstein said the proposal had been checked by five attorneys for constitutionality, and had the support of backers of state aid to non-pupblic schools. He said the proposal probably would be introduced separately in the Legislature if the State Board of Education endorses it. Otherwise, he said, it could be added to already existing parochiaid bills. The voucher system, Augenstein said, was aimed at facing up to “crucial problems in education. Our present system of funding education is quite inequitable and is not providing adequate operating funds in far too maoy communities around the state. AAA “The financial stability of many of our nonpublic schools has deteriorate quite badly in recent ‘years,” he said. “We dare not disregai^ any longer the fact that some of the schools serving Hie 14 per cent of our students in nonpublic schools are also in debt.” COULD IMPROVE QUALITY Implementation of this proposal could help improve the quality of education in the state, Augenstein said. He said he felt that individual families should have the option of educating their youngsters in any of a variety of sdhools. But, he added, “much as I believe that all schools must teach about values in a (Continued on Page A-2, CoL 3) THE rONTIAC PRESS. TT ESDAV. FERRUARV 11. 1969 Bill Seeks $700 Million to Aid Michigan Schools LANSING (UPn - Gov. William G. Milliken’s first big bill — a $700-million public school aid measure has been dumped into the legislative hopper, where it races an uncertain destiny. The massive spending proposal was introduced jointly in the House and Senate last night. Appropriations Com mittee members of both chambers said it would be scrutinized carefully * * « “Probably no expenditure is more vital to the progress and future of our state,” said Chairman Charles 0. Zollar of the Senate Appropriations unit. “We must be certain it is wisely spent.” Milliken outlined keystone features of the legislation in his budget message nearly a month ago. Over all, the proposal is up $85 million from the current state-aid allocation of $615 million. Michigan presently has 2.4 million youngsters enrolled in its elementary and secondary public school system. The state-aid bill anticipates a 49,000-student growth next year, including the transfer of 24,000 parochial school pupils. The average per pupil increase in stale aid would be $17. The low would be $4 per pupil in depressed areas. * * * Major appropriation increases contained in the legislation: • $48.9 million for direct per pupil grants to public schools. • $24.4 million for special education, remedial reading and transportation “to keep pace with rising costs." * ★ ★ • $6,3 million for environmentally disadvantaged students. • $5.4 million for other programs, in- cluding $15 million to initiate a state-supported community school program. The legislation also earmarks $154.6 million for teacher pensions, an increase of $12.9 million from the 1968-69 fiscal year appropriation. But the bill contains no funds for tax aid to Michigan’s 1,000 parochial schools. Milliken has said the Legislature must find new revenue scogrees for this type of program. Bills proposing tax credits for parents of parochial school students and teacher subsidy payments to nonpublic schools await action in the House. ★ * * Milliken’s state aid legislation would require no tax hike, though it drains heavily on anticipated treasury surpluses and increased sales-income tax collections. AP WIrepholo OUT OF DANGEIl—This is the freighter Exminster, which was in trouble yesterday during an Atlantic storm but is now out of immediate danger. The 473-foot vessel, manned by 46 crewmen, had radioed that she was sinking in 17-fhot seas 180 miles southeast of Nantucket. However, two pumps were dropped on board by a Coast Guard plane and two more were passed aboard by the cutter Sherman (right), and the leakage in her engine room stopped. Senate Is Soothing Canada Notifies Red China Mansion Squabble r r\ • -r* of Desire to Discuss Ties LANSING M — The Michigan Senate today planned to assure a wealthy Lansing businessman that “things arc progressing nicely” despite legislative squabbling over accepting his offer of a $44,000 home as a temporary governor's residence. Senate Majority Leader Emil Ixick wood, R-St. Louis, .said he would ask Howard W. Sober to “keep his cool ’ over the situation. The Senate voted to accept the gift home, but a House amendment to the acceptance resolution stipulated that the legislative committee negotiating for the gift return to the House and Senate tor final acceptance approval The upper chamber refused yesterday to accept the amendment, leaving the resolution in limbo pending further House discussion. The House put off action until today. O'lTAWA (AP) - The Canadian government has notified Red China it is prepared to open talks on establishment of diplomatic relations. Foreign minister Mitchell Sharp told the House of Commons yesterday the Canadian Embassy in Stockholm was ordered to approach the Red Chinese Embassy with a proposal for talks “to be held at a mutually convenient time and place in the near future.” * ■* * Sharp told newsmen the United States “and our other friends” were told of the decision in advance “so they would not be taken by surprise.” There was no immediate reaction from Washington, but State Department officials were expected to be unhappy with The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Cloudy and windy today with a chance of snow flurries. High in lower 30s. Clearing and colder tonight with diminishing winds. Low 12 to 17. Wednesday mostly sunny and cold. High 26 to 31. Thursday’s outlook: Fair and a little warmer. Winds westerly 15 to 25 miles per hour and gusty today and northwesterly eight to 15 miles tonight. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: 30 today and 20 tonight. rises Wednesday at 4 42 a rr Dewntewn Temperatures One Year Aoo in Pontiac s City J Lowest temperature naba 32 2S Dulutt 37 31 Fort !apids 32 30 Jscksf Ihton 33 23 Kansa. ^... ihton LK. 31 27 Us ^ngeles^ inq 38 31 Milwaukee luette 31 23 New Orleans teoon 33 32 New York ,ton 30 26 Omaha -taw 37 33 Phoenix erse C. 32 79 Pittsburgh querque 60 30 St. Louis larck 33 8 Tamofl Birmingham Area Battleship Guns Hit Red Bunkers No Commission Candidates in Pa Nang Area the Canadian move, as they were when Italy announced Jan. 24 that they planned to recognize Red China. SECOND PROTEST Sharp first announced Canada’s intention to recognize Red China Jan. 22, which prompted a protest from Nationalist China. His speech yesterday brought a second protest from Formosa’s ambassador in Ottawa, Hsueh Yu-chi, who said: “It is still the hope'of my government that the Canadian government will reconsider.” “The Canadian action is tantamount to giving encouragement and support to the tyrannical rule of the Chinese Communist regime and deals a severe blow to the 700 million Chinese people in their struggle for freedom,” said Hsuech. ★ ★ ★ Sharp acknowledged that Canada’s relations with Nationalist China are “bound to be affected.” But he deinied that Canada is allowing these relations to “go down the drain,” indicating Ottawa would like to have a two-China policy. Both Chinas are against this. During preliminary contacts with Canada in Cairo, the Red Chinese reportedly demanded that Ottawa withdraw its recognition of Nationalist China as a price for diplomatic relations with Peking. NATIONALIST THREAT Nationalist China threatened t o withdraw its ambassador from Rome because of Italy’s moves to establish relations with Peking and is expected to do the same in Ottawa if the Canadian government follows through with its intent. Washington officials on Jan. 2 5 privately expressed concern about the impact of expanded international contacts with Peking on the positions of the Nationalist Chinese regime and other non-Communist nations in the Far East. SAIGON (J4 - The battleship New Jersey returned to the Vietnam war after a month off the firing line and smashed 64 enemy bunkers south of Da Nang, military spokesmen reported today. For four hours yesterday, the 56,000-ton battlewagon hurled 1,900-pound shells at North Vietnamese fortifications which an air spotter said “have been impervious to previous strikes.” ★ ★ ★ The New Jersey’s bombardment was in support of South Korean marines and killed at least five enemy soldiers, a spokesman reported. ‘We were at extremely close range, about 10,000 yards,” said a member of the ship’s crew. Boatswain’s Mate 3.c. James Swan, “and I could follow the trajectory of the rounds and see them impact. ’The bursts sent smoke and debris about a thousand feet in the air.” Swan, 25, is from North Platte, Neb. ROUTINE JAPAN VISIT The battleship has been in Japan for maintenance and replenishment of her supplies. The U.S. Command also announced another American helicopter was shot down and destroyed near Pleiku, in the Central Highlands, but there were no casualties. It was the 2,356th U.S. helicopter lost during the war. ■A- ★ Vietcong and North Vietnamese forces stepped up their ground war during the night with attacks on three provincial capitals, two allied bases, a pacification team and a government infantry battalion. The North Vietnamese also fired on a small U.S. observation plane over the southern half of the Demilitarized Zone but missed it. South Vietnamese troops were hard hit in two of the attacks, suffering 24 dead and 53 wounded while accounting for only 14 known enemy dead. The rest of the attacks caused only a handful of American and South Vietnamese wounded and light damage. VC RIP SOUTH VIETS In the Mekong Delta, 102 miles southwest of Saigon, Vietcong soldiers ripped into a South Vietnamese infantry battalion with withering machinegun and small arms fire. Twelve South Vietnamese soldiers were killed, 35 wounded, and only seven enemy bodies were counted. The South Vietnamese soldiers may have been ambushed in the canal-laced delta, but no other detail^ were available. County AskeiJ for Tax Refund NATIONAL 'WEATHERr-Showers are predicted along the Pacific Coast, changing to rain inland through the Rockies tonight. Snow flurries are expected in the Great Lakes area. It will be warm in the Southeast and cold from the Great Lakes to the Ohio Valley. i1 ‘ (Continued From Page One) meaningful way, I do not feel that public funds can be used for the indoctrination of specific values.” Augenstein said that he did not want the state to provide funds or facilities for inculcation of religious values. SEPARATE REUGIOUS INSTRUCTION Under the proposal, he said, all pupils would secure their secular education during a specified five or six hours of the day. * ★ ♦ "Then either before or after the regular school hours, those pupils who chose to do so could go to separate facilities for their religious worship or instruction,” he said. His proposal incorporates provisions to I*" BIRMINGHAM — No residents have filed as commission candidates for the April 7 election yet. Deadline for filing nominating petitions is Monday, Feb. 17 at 4 p.m. Nixon Aide First to Meet Soviets WASHINGTON M - Gerard C. Smith, new director of the U. S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, will become the first high Nixon administration official to join in an international conference with Soviet representatives. Smith’s meeting with the Russians will come when he attends the next session of 18-nation disarmament commission opening in Geneva March 6. ★ ★ ★ There had been speculation that Smith’s short time in office might cause President Nixon to send a temporary representative. But Smith, in an interview, said, “It would make sense for the new director of the agency to present the American position and also get to know the other disarmament negotiators.” UNCERTAINTY ON TALKS Ultimately Smith will be deeply involved in U. S.-Soviet talks on limiting the deployment of nuclear missiles. When such talks will start, is uncertain. The nuclear missile talks are independent of the international commission. » * ★ The Geneva conference is scheduled to take up in its regular meetings a variety of disarmament proposals, including the total ban on nuclear weapons, test explosions, control of biological and chemical warfare, prohibition of nuclear weapons installations under the oceans, and eventually a cutoff in the production of nuclear weapons. The terms of three councilmen: David F. Breck, 752 Willits; William E. Roberts, 745 Abbey and William B. Saunders, 685 Pierce, will expire in April. '' Petitions for all three incumbents are reportedly being circulated. However, Saunders has publicly said he is not interested in another term. * * * There will also be two posts open on the city’s library board. The posts are currently filled by Mrs. Pell Holl-ingshead, 489 Argyle and Charles Renfrew, 987 Arden. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Nick D. Christy, 6355 Hills, a director of food service for Awrey Bakeries Inc., has been elected a vice president of the corporation. 6355 Hills, a director of food service for Awrey Bakeries Inc., has been elected a vice president of the corporation. Christy has complete responsibility for institutional sales, including marketing, new product development, packaging and distribution. He joined Awrey in February, 1967 as food service director. BLOOMFIELD HILLS — John Hutsler, 1935 Quarton, has been named vice president of drug and general merchandise at Allied Supermarkets Inc. in Detroit. Hutsler will be responsible for the direction of drugstore operations in the I Michigan-Ohio area and the activities of the nonfood and general merchandise service. He joined Allied in 1964 as director of drug store operations and was appointed Director of nonfood operations in 1968. The Oakland County Board o f Supervisors will be asked this week to pass a resolution providing for the refund of nonvoted taxes collected during the last three years over the 15-mill limitation. George H. Williams, chairman of the Oakland County Homeowners and Taxpayers Association county committee, sent a letter to the board, asking it to pass a resolution “refunding that portion of our taxes levied and collected over the 15-mill limitation.” w * ★ A formal opinion by Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley last week jeopardized the county’s method of paying courthouse east wing construction costs and much of the Oakland County Intermediate School budget from funds collected above the 15-mill limitation. The current budget calls for a levy, approved last year by the supervisors, of .112 mills over the limitation for the payment to the building authority on lease agreements on the east wing and for paying of drain assessment bonds. The sum to be collected amounts to some $300,000. Intermediate schools are largely financed from a mill levy two-tenths above the limitation, which is expected to raise $680,000 this year. Kelley said the county could not pay construction costs on a long-term basis through the additional levy, but only on a temporary basis. ★ ★ ★ He ruled that the Intermediate School District is illegal in exceeding the 15 mills. License Plate % Deadline Nears Time is running out for motorists to purchase 1969 Michigan passenger vehicle license plates within the legal deadline period. After the last-minute rush Feb. 28, drivers whose cars still sport 1968 plates will be ticketed. ★ * Area motorists wishing to avoid the long llth-hour lines may purchase their plates at 96 E. Huron in Pontiac, 4520 Pontiac Lake in Waterford Township, 329 Walnut in Rochester and 141 E. Walled Lake Drive in Walled Lake. Weekday office hours at the secretary of state branch offices are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday hours are 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Pontiac and Rochester and 9 a.m. to noon in Waterford Township and Walled Lake. ★ ★ * Fees are payable in cash, payroll checks or cashier’s checks, but not personal checks. Castro Thaw' on Hijacks Seen By The Associated Press The 110 passengers hijacked to Cuba yesterday were allowed to fly to Miami five hours later aboard the pirated plane — touching off speculation that Fidel Castro has changed his policy toward the unscheduled Havana hops. But the hijackings continue. A Venezuelan airliner with 68 passengers aboard was ordered to fly to Cuba today. The government-run airlines Aeropostal said the plane is a DC9 twin-jet, short-range airliner. It had a crew of five. The airline said the plane had taken off from Maracaibo at 6 a.m, and headed , for Caracas. A short time later the pilot, Vladimiro Fernandez, reported to the control tower at Caracas that a hijacker had ordered the plane to Havana. Yesterday’s passenger return marked the first time in 27 hijacks — dating back to last July — that all the passengers were allowed to return with the crew. In New York, Eastern Airlines Vice President Jonathon Rinehart said prompt release of the hijacked crew and passengers indicated a “slight thaw” in the Cuban government’s attitude toward hijackings. 'The pilot of the hijacked plane said he didn’t know why the Cubans let the passengers return with him, but officials who asked not to be identified said it was the result of negotiations between the U.S. and Cuba. Farmington Twp. Incident 3 Arrested in Stabbing at OCC School Aid Plan Proposed Three suspects have been arrested in connection with an incident Friday in which an Oakland Community College student was stabbed with a screwdriver. Michael Berger, 21, of Oak Park, was released from the William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, yesterday, two days after undergoing a 2Mj-hour operation to remove the screwdriver lodged in his jaw. Arrested by Farmington Township police were Walter G. Wheeler, 19, Durane L. Jones, 18, and Dwight R. Moorehead, 18, all of Detroit. They were arrested when they entered the campus yesterday morning to talk to the dean, according to a R^ford State Police post sopkesman. Wheeler was charged with assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than the crime of murder, while the others were charged with assault and battery. Investigations are continuing to see if anything more is involved, according to Redford State Police. The three were arraigned before District Judge Michael Hand, and all entered an innocent plea. All are in the Oakland County Jail. Bonds are set at $1,000 for Wheeler and $500 for the other The stabbing occurred when Berger attempted to turn away five persons from a fraternity dance at the Orchard Ridge campus in Farmington Township, because they refused to pay. * * *• Shouting reportedly developed between Berger and one of the other men after Berger noticed that they had tried to duplicate a mark on their hand with ink resembling a stamp mark identifying those who paid. insure that participating schools do rtbt give courses or use texts designed to indoctrinate specific religious beliefs during regular school hours, he said. Augenstein said he favored modifying the present system of granting school aid funds by establishing the principle that the “state should provide the funds according to the level of taxes that the local district is willing to levy on itself. ” Such a method, he said, “Provides an important means of leveling the effective tax base,” and would be a basis for deciding the values of vouchers. ’The proposal would not cost the state more, because the funds are already being used, he said. It would only be a realignment of the money. Besides, he suggested, many of the state’s 1,000 parochial schools would probably elect not to Jrarticipate. 15% OFF ON ALL HAIR GOODS SALE ON FOR ALL OF FEBRUARY Once a Year Special! AVAILABLE AT All 8 Perry Pharmacies, Thrifty Drugs and Lee Prescriptions in Drayton Plains. BSJ DRAYTON WIG Distributors (Wholesale and Retail) 4666 W. Walton Blvd. One Block East of D$xie Hwy. 673-0712 673-3408 »/ Credit Cards Honored mm im THE PONTIAC PRESS. Ti IvSuA K 1 ! !! .0 A){^ II. HUDDLES WITH ADLAI HI - Former Vice President Hubert Humphrey (left) huddles with Illinois State Treasurer Adlai E. Stevenson III yesterday at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport. The visit came during a stopover prior to Humphrey’s speech in Springfield, 111. Turnout for Hubert Is Sparse in Illinois Nixon Letting World Know MU4TR0UBLES? Hes Still Going to W. Berlin WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Nixon, still drawing up the details of his European trip, is making sure the world knows he will not be swayed from his intention to visit West Berlin. Twice in two days Nixon spokesmen have reaffirmed his plans for the West Berlin visit. ment of the three Allied powers lundei issued in Bonn that they did not law respect East Germany’s right to restrict land a c c e s s to West! The voting age directive went Berlin. |io Ally, Gen. John N. Mitchell. ISSUES DIRECnVES | Nixon asked Mitchell to discuss Nixon issued another batch ofi**’*^’ ‘'^ea of lowering the voting directives to various Cabinetlff.congressional Headers and to report the find-officers yesterday, asking forljngs back to him. pile harassments directed jtheir recommendations on items I against the city in recent days ranging from lowering the vot-by the East German govern-ing age to putting (arm workers h ment. I The one-week trip, scheduled to start Feb. 23, was one of the subjects discussed during Nixon’s long weekend in Florida and remained a major item on his desk after he returned to the White House last night. Talt-Hartley labor (leorge Schultz and Agriculture Secretary Clifford L. Hardin. * ★ * lYeasury Secretary U a v Kennedy was asked to study proposals for cutting state and local governments in for a share of federal income tax revenues. Kennedy was also asked to con-;sult with the White House Ways * * * and Means Committee for ways The farm workers proposaljto improve the federal tax ent to both Labor Secretary|system. CooleratoK AUTOMATIC HUMIDIFIER SPRINGFIELD, 111. (AP) Former Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey was ignored Monday night by most state Cockfighting Curbs Rejected ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -The Maryland House of Delegates refused Monday night to tighten state laws against cock-fighting after hearing a protest against “this great mass i' formity sweeping over us. Republican C. A. Porter Hopkins of Baltimore County, leading the successful fight against the bill, lamented that the General Assembly has already legislated away slpt machines. ★ ★ ★ “We can’t play numbers anymore—we can’t do anything,” he told the House. Del. Alexander B. Bell, D-Montgomery, joined Hopkins’ campaign with a warning that if the General Assembly prohibited game birds from fighting, “then they’re going to be frustrated.” 500-Wig Theft ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -Burglars made off with 500 women’s wigs valued at more than $15,000. Police said the burglars broke into a beauty shop that was being remodeled for a Wednesday opening. Democratic party leaders when he spoke at a meeting of the Democratic House study group. The turnout was in sharp contrast to his last appearance at the state capital during last fall’s presidential campaign, which drew 5,000 spectators. * * * Only 24 of 81 Democratic state representatives and one of 19 senators turned out. Former Gov. Samuel H. Shapiro had been invited but had business elsewhere as did the party’s legislative leaders. Sen. Thomas A McGOon and Rep. John P. Tou-hy, both of Chicago. Humphrey, in his speech, urged the formation of similar groups across the country and called upon the group to attack problems such as mishandling of welfare programs, which he called “rotten to the core,” and election reform. NEED IDEAS’ “We’re going to need ybur ideas on how to reform the national convention,” the former vice president said. During the 1968 convention, he said, news outside got more attention than what happened inside. My fellow Democrats, if we fool around, we’ll take a licking in 1970. I intend to work for tory in 1972.” Humphrey referred to himself as titular head of the party then added, “knock off the titular, I intend to be the leader of the party.” Humphrey was invited speak at the meeting by state Treasurer Adlai E. Stevenson III, who helped form the study group. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said, “The President will make the trip to West Berlin,” i and supports “fully” the state- Taxes Topic in Waterford 1 Waterford Township officials will discuss property tax increases at tonight’s meeting of the Greater Waterford Community Council. I The panel will be headed by Township Supervisor Elmer Johnson and will air developments , in the s i x -township sewer system as related to the recent state antipollution vote and community costs. ★ * ★ The public is invited to the 8 p.m. meeting in the Pierce! Junior High School cafeteria. rouble! couicd by horih, dry, baked-oul winter oir. Thli new Coolera--lumidifler moiileni the oir, fliteri it of dull and impuriliet. You feel con-luridble ot lower lempcroturei — lavei yotl money on fuel. $7995 TAKE YOUR CHOICE • IN OAKLAND COUNTY • SINCE 1925 • ALL CREDIT TERMS • BURNER IeRVICE PRESIDENT LEAVES FLORIDA-Pre.si dent Nixon gives a wave "as he prepares to leave Florida yesterday to return to Washington. 'The President is walking with Secre- 1 tary of State William Rogers and Col. Wiltz Segura of Homestead Air Force Base. Nixon and Rogers traveled by helicopter from Key Biscayne where they had been working and vacationing over the weekend. ClARKE-GEE FUEL OH The perfect way to say "I love you” — a beautiful Pangburn's Valentine Heart packed with Milk-and-Honey Chocolates. Your sweetheart will appreciate your good taste in choosing Pangburn’s ... America's best selling Valentine Hearts. Serving Greater Oakland County With Stores In: • WATERFORO • PONTIAC •WRMiNQHAM tffMn I ^ I Ann Fautum asked us if she could use Checkmate go to Miami Beach. to Sure, we said. Miami Beach, Hawaiian Islands or for anywhere else you'd like to travel, you can use CHECK-MATE as your ticket . . . You simply get out your checkbook and write for money . . . So start packing your bogs, you could be on your way tomorrow and no one but yourself and your bonk will know whether it was o loon or not... So, take that trip, you con pay us bock, a little at a time, by on automatic charge to your checking account monthly, when you return. Pontiac State Bank 535VJ MM 3WW riiK j'o\ i iAc ri{i:ss. . i khki Ain ii. r.tc.o Blackballed Dassin Back for New Film :\K\V YOHK r II M'.u ^ lor .hill"- I'.isMii hi hiK k lo lUh nali\r I nilnl III maki- a him .urn li< lill' llot poiaiii I'l till V 1 Ni'f;n> unri'^l lo lio il n.isMi) ii'it iiii- '-i.i'i"- (i IL'IlI llaiiiiLi \lrhiia Ihcii' Inloi/iii(''i'" Ihc nou'l li\ some Ihrah'i ai linn, ua'i lalki'ii 111 M.ii, ol il lii'l|>('(1, l,iam 0'Hall('ii\, wlurh .lulili iiilo ro vv nl inr', I hr srnpl and I'ord made iiilo a classic him m hrloir he knew il. was slarniif; » 111 Ihc film. uphl limi liaik 'niiK ' N (m'rc out of Miiir head ' ,\1a>lield |da\s a weak, use ihcii Tills him was Hie repK. alcoholic hlai k who iiiloniis lo e hai k ■ ■ Want to do a remake id 'The a hl.iek iiidilaiit empli . .ihle III llarleii Irieiid. Ill the Coniinumst epiilat ion a .illeil ol ee ' and ' X.ikis inised mialde h lent into sell e\il lhawes Ihphwa' as! him hi did i a.lies in IPPI le .iwai d w inninp i o h hspeiise him ' Hdili eiowed w ith such perns ,ho Must Die the a him on II i\s wauled lo li\e „ Wallace Ford allv an , all Nepro cast, wilh Ka\iiiond •lacqiies, h'raiik .Silve I micil I Inliirme he said wilh Y'rs' Informer' the Irish I prill, lint wilh * « * liepiihhean Arniv is Ihe black ' Itiit llarleiii where ""'itant equivalent, with Victor ronnectlent horn Dassin was "I"' ''"'i' "laised and edii. aleit didn't''" •' work Old as the settinp. Dassin 1 MttliF I'ltKKDOM ,;„d \ew York police woiildiTl I’ '''h'" Il was. ,,| course, a pood deal let him lilni alter II fi.iii . i itnip .......1......1st Ihe film that an aiitinoise law " The com back. llolKwood p.nu went instead to CleMdand h.id ihaored. he felt there was ■ ,fs a more typical hip I S Mwvfield and Miss Dee. mine lieediim there now. ,\nd, citv; anvwa> " ......' and did Im a "'"I" "" '■'"""hmis I more import,iiitly, "This Creek tioii shootinp in the .\eproI'*' '■ thinp c.inie up." Iloiiph section, where racial " I "This I,reck tlimp ' w.is the riotinp hit in the siimmei ol '■ mihlaiA hacked take o\er m pitii; ' (deeee, where Dassin lias spent There were no si'i ions proh p ,1 I ,1 ti 1 I' ( I o III \ I k o s 11)111 I, III Ins sell e\de with Miss lems tliere, thoiiph there were Ka/,iiil,aikis' iiiwel, "The (deck Mercouri and where he had "moments ol ddfielllty, ' Dassin I'.ission ' and "New'r on Sim tdmed "He Who Must Die" and recalled lie said d.i\ Hull |)o|)id.ir lale ol Ihe •■\i-\er on Simdav ' Now Miss leel a tension: Ihe w ai m he.ii led |irosliliile the Meieonii kind id ,i Mother were "iipllphl." ' T'’d (lio'ie \iolelllT\ opposed to Ihe Hie \ onnp ICC.line person, nal i\ e land resideiils slilTj part icidarlv his hie, M e I 1 II <1 .1 iiiiii.i . iiior .Mrs 1 l.issiii ||.| III |||. I here were some diid' "Tlumdr.i, ' "lU .'IO I’M Sum so, the collide came hack iiier, ' Ihc Tiller a "moinimeiil.il |.■||■.,| ||,e\ Hid llva, Dafliiip," Tiiliiii , ' h\ his own admi.ssioii H|,, Hm.idwav musical version liKI.WKD KKFI.F'X'TION "I ' Nrver on Sunday Iheii, Now Dassin was hack am aiiMoiis to talk of his new film, "I |i 'Tipht ■' In Idack liirtleiieck swe.iler and sports jarkel pac ini' Ihc lloor inlermillenll\ to l ollecl ins Ihoilphls h e I o r e answeniiL: a qnesiion liy spoke w nil I elased relleclioii with Miss Mercouri in Hollywood for the movie, "(lai l\, Fiaih, " Itassiii filmed "I p 'TiphI " It's piohald\ Ihe lirsi ,\merie.in film Iroin a major compan\ I 'ai .imoiinl lo di^d in h.isic terms with Ihe ................................... I iirieiii Nepro iimesi II s a himself faced with Iwo.niade a film lie eared enouph tniphl tiiiie eyes made him ;ip '^"^'|eet, like Itie \ielii.ini p||||,,sophies',’ nonviolence as a about, lie |)rodiiced il. a.s he h; lliat lloih wood luis shied from pi-jneiple, o r every film he's made Hid "t'p 'Tiplil " deals with it there last. V(‘r\ pood chaiipe II IS a niiich freer phn e ,\ him maker who cares enoiiph can make Itie him he wants lo ila>, wilhoiil iiileiieienee. He coiildiTl tielore " , , 'The chanpe, lie leeks, i ame ■oiild still , ^ dioiit mainly wilh Itie hreakdowii ol Ihe hip studio s\ sleiii all\ Ihmk III Ihe last lew •HF,\I, FNon.lF \ears there has lieeii a siroiip "III the him. we re rc,dl> liheralinp impulse in Hollywood liAiiip lo tell Ihe ciHinIry andG9 ^ ,V r,."Y' A'. Picliired are Mikr Patterson, ft'aterfnrfi. Jerry Hamlin (Mr. C), Waterford and Ralfth W. .Steward, Berkley, Michigan People Who Read The Pontiac Press Every Evening Have More To Talk About The Next Day SPORTS ENTHUSIASTS debate the controversial decision os to where a new stadium should be located to best facilitate travel, transportation and parking. The projected growth and expansion of the Southern Michigan area in the next twenty years plus the present interest of fans in other cities — Grand Rapids, Battle Creek, Saginaw, Lansing, Flint, etc. — must be considered. The known facts of highway congested travel points out the need for rapid railway transportation that can serve a location for the new sports stadium. Summing the problem . . . travel time, highways, railways . . . using the now existing highways and new rapid transit on railways is a logicdl conclusion. The Pontiac Area offers the answer to the best location for the new stadium. The Pontiac Press will keep you informed as to the TRENDS AND ACTION WHEN IT HAPPENS! THE PONTIAC PRESS For Home Delivery Dial 332>8181 THE PONTIAC PRESS. ri KSDAV. FKmU 'Reds Plotting Saigon Assault' Captured North Viet Says Tet Attack Set WAR ZONE D, Vietnam (AP) -- A captured North Vietnamese private told interrogators today his battalion was assigned to attack Saigon at the beginning of the lunar new year Monday. The 22-year-old soldier and a companion were captured and three of their comrades were killed by troops of the U S. 1st Air Cavalry Division Monday. They were members of a North Vietnamese patrol sent to spot American units. * ★ * The talkative prisoner wore jgray pajamas and appeared haggard as he told cavalry officers his battalion had taken heavy losses since it crossed into South Vietnam from Cambodia last summer, lacked supplies and its morale was broken. He said about 175 men in the battalion were killed by South Vietnamese troops as they moved into the Tay Ninh area 45 miles northwest of Saigon last September. SHIFTS INTO ZONE 0 Two weeks ago the halfstrength battalion shifted into War Zone D, about 30 miles northeast of Saigon, to prepare for the Tet attack, the prisoner said. He gave the approximate location of his battalion and U.S. B52 bombers blasted the area today, but the jungle barred an evaluation of the raid. ★ ★ ★ Lt. Col. George D. Hardesty, 41, of New Bern, N.C., said if the prisoner’s information was correct, the North Vietnamese battalion may have been “laying low” the past two weeks awaiting other main units to join up for the attack on Saigon. No Casualties Reported New Manager brael, Jordan Renew Firing i at Pontiac Div. By the Associated Press Israeli and Jordanian fotces reported renewed firing across their frontier between Israel and Jordan during the night, and each side blamed the other. No casualties were reported by either side. ’ Israeli sources said Jordanian machine gun and mortar fire hit an army position 22 miles south of the Sea of Galilee, and mor-| tar rounds landed near the Neot Hakikar settlement in the Ne-i gev Desert 12 miles south of the Dead Sea. They reported another exchange of fire near the Ashdot Yaacov settlement three miles south of the Sea of Galilee. “Fire was returned, silencing; the enemy positions, ” an armyj spokesman said. | ARTILLERY GUNS I A Jordanian spokesman saidj Israeli artillery and planes attacked Ghor Fiffa, nine miles south of the Dead Sea, for an hour, and later Israeli artillery fire near the Damiya Bridge across the Jordan River was returned by Jordanian guns, the spokesman said, Jordan later announced the bridge was closed to all traffic except produce trucks from the occupied West Bank. No reason was given for the move, which ; paralyzed noncommercial traf-1 fic between Jordan and the West Bank. Bloomfield Township Executive Is Retiring The Damiya's companion j span to the , south, the Allenby Bridge, is impassable because! I the river is high. I * ★ ★ I The appointment of Arthur C. I The occupied West Bank and Harrison as parts and ac-Gaza Strip were reported quiet cessories merchjndising today for the first time after!manager for Poitiac Motor more than a week of anti-Israeli | Division was anntunced today demonstrations. by general sales manager ★ * * I Thomas L. King. | Schoolchildren continued to! Harrison has been assistant boycott classes, but attempts toj hold demonstrations in Qalqili-I j-' ya, on the West Bank, were, s'**# quickly broken up by Israelii troops. Merchants in Nablus, the biggest town on the West Bank, reopened their shops, which they had closed to protest! the occupation. A'lTRACTIVE DISPLAY — Bob Rob- The store, open iron inson's Maganavox, 3244 Orchard Lake. in. day through Saturd; the Orchard Lake Shopping Center, offers ‘ tapo recorders and televisions, stereos and audio accessories. department 1 10 a m. to 9 p.m. Mon y, also sells auto in-car has a complete service HAREISON DRURY Stock Chaos Leading to Thieves Utopia? EDITOR'S NOTE — Tins isiCorp. “There has been .some try investigation is to define the _______ ____ articles oalconcern voiced In the street, problem. The second stage, if service'^instructor*’and district/".*’^^^'' stocks and bonds. Jt Our position is, 'Let’s take a there is one, will be to set up a ..nanager before transferring toi^’** desenbe conditions in the look and sec.’” iprogram to upgrade brokerage New York as parts merchan-i*®*'**^*^*®* mdustry. The second'^ FYank Zarb, a partner in house security, idising manager in 1954. explain how the problems ^ q, chairman; ro.Mr„£,a mco 'developed and remedies beinci ____..rp. aLvLKAt, PKOD.S I zone manager for the division in Philadelphia for the last seven years He succeeds Asa L Drurr of Bloomfield Township, 1 whois retiring. * ★ ★ I harrison joined the division in 119*9 as a service adjuster in Philadelphia, being promoted to returned to Philadelphia in 1962.!remedies beingcomittee, said: “Thefts „ i,- j .u j . A native of Canada, he is a 1949 ^ ^definitely are a problem, but we ^ '"dustry activity, graduate of the University of By JOHN CUNNIFF j^st don’t know the scope and however, are several prods: Michigan. AP Business Analyst idepth. We need to determine, Drury, 3919 Mount Vernon, is NEW YORK-The nearly in- it ” Legislative Committee on Crime a 28-year veteran of the credible behind-the-scenes con-!„v tiif viii i mMv division. He became a district fusion in some brokerage houses,! . iviu.uuirs.s ^.,ai dcstrict to study the same Misquoted, Says Witness at Show Trial DENIES FRAUD CHARGES - Martin S. Ackerman, president of the Curtis Publishing Co, tells newsmen in Philadelphia yesterday that charges he conspired with others in a scheme to defraud Curtis by unlawful disposal of issets “are utterly false and without any foundation whatsoever” Ackerman was naned in a new lawsuit yesterday—the fourth ii eight days. I manager in St. Louis in 1943, where stacks of I moved to Minneapolis as parts and service merchandising . I manager the following year and ^‘ ‘ m 1945 became parts and ac- lars cannot bei cessories manager in Chicago. | identified with] I He was named a s s i s t a n t|t h e owner manager of Parts sales in pon-| could become a tiac’s central office in 1947 and P a r a d i s e t c manager in 1949. He had been I thieves, parts and accessories That is the merchandising manager since i judgment of a 11957. NEW ORLEANS l-f) - A key witness at Clay Shaw’s trial testified Monday that his account of overhearing a plot to assassinate President John F. Kennedy was part of his story from the very first. Perry Raymond Russo, 27, still under cross-examination today, said Asst. Dist. Atty. Andrew Sciambra’s written report of Russo’s first official interrogation was incomplete and wrong on many points. * * * “I told Sciambra the first time that I had seen Shaw at Nashville Wharf, then at a gas station, and that then I had seen him at Ferrie’s apartment,” the dark-haired book salesman said. Sciambra’s 3,500-word memorandum to Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison on his talk with Russo made no mention of the party where Russo said he overheard Shaw, Lee Harvey Oswald andj David W. Ferrie plot to kill Kennedy. MISTAKES NOTED It quoted Russo as saying he had seen Shaw twice — not three times — first at a service station operated by Ferrie. next at Nashville Wharf. Pointing out the mistakes as detailed by Russo, defense lawyer F. Irvin Dymond asked: “Are you sure it was Sciambra you talked with in Baton Rouge?” Alternate Jurors Near OK for Sirhan Steelworkers Holding Key Vote Today In the opinion of some finan- problem. The Securities and Ex-cial authorities who were asked change Commission and other for estimates, that figure is j public agencies are concerned, going to be well up in the mil- also. And there are the insurers, lions of dollars. Nobody cared to * * ★ name a specific figure or, in' “|f corrective action is not fact, felt that they could. !taken, the roof will fall in on *■ * * I the brokers in six months and Some thefts may not be un- then they’ll be left without any covered, because some firms'insurance whatever.” said the are believed to be accepting the highly placed insurance execu-top officer in CUNNIFF™" rather than to suffer the tive, who asked not to be iden- one of the largest underwriters mayitified iof insurance for brokers. Para- * * * jdise might, in fact, already be ™*^*-*^^ later, it is realized theyl “WeYe not pulling out of the here, he suggested. have been stolen. ;market yet,” he said, “but there “The chaos is beyond descrip-! * * * ; will be a radical reevaluation if Hion and is creating enormous' 'Hie certificates may have they don’t correct conditions, opportunities for thieves,” he'been spirited out in the inner!It’s a race against time, said. “We have been extraordi-slit pocket of a worker’s suit- “The brokers have always re-narily lucky so far, but we're taken to banks byjlied on the bonding people to extremely worried.” thieves or their cohorts and pay the losses, and during the Mem- Insurance rates have risen P^’o- ’ ’ ’ ’ ■ pie have been losing money. U s PITTSBURGH (AP) _______________ ________ ibers of the United Steelworkers some business isIreing"declined remain unpaid. 1 Union vote for a president today,insurers, and informal warn-! The initial stage of the indus-'a sick situation. jin an election that could affect I,. . ings have been issued that pro- LOS ANGELES (AP) — “rm!gunshots last June, said agree-.'menl^ to the eight-man, four- ine entire laoor movement. tection might be refused alto- having my eyes treated” .. .Iment could come today. Earlier,] wom/in jury, and then testimony “My company does not wish melfive alternates were tentativelylw(^ begin, to take that much time out” .. .(seated. | We thump and roar of con- “I have strong reservations] The next step, they said, stWetion machinery at the near-against the death penalty.” would be a recess through the"^/ site of a new court building Despite such pleas, which won]wednesday (Lincoln’s Birthday'i^rred proceedings Monday, exemptions Monday, attorneys'holidav. Workmen, in the mean-^ * * * say they expect to agree shortly time, ‘would install in court t "i this on six alternate jurors for the prosecution exhibit—a la.'^e noise in the background,” one murder trial of Sirhan Bishara Sirhan, The steelworkers cast their gether. “Enormous liabilities ballots at mill gates and union . . , . halls in 3,700 locals throughout | the United States, Canada and the insurer. Puerto Rico. COMMITTEE FORMED , "They choose between the un- Earlier this month represent-! ion’s current president, I. W. ativgs of the banking and secur-Abel, 60 a soft-spoken former industries formed a com-' mill worker, and Emil Nanck,' . ^4.,. *. **u r* j --------------’ ......... — ------ - r- - , 52 a crewcu't union lawyer and "^‘ttee to study the thefts and ter W. Heller predicts President I .scale model of the first floor of . Prospective juror told Superior are expected to make their re- Nixon will let the 10 per cent the Ambassador Hotel, w)tere]Court Judge Herbert V. Walker,follow Abel in becom-within one month. This surtax expire if inflation is re- Entd of Surtax Predicted With Fed Credit Curbs HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) - who was asking him questions, second man in union his-'"'°“*^ require a rather hurried duced in the nation’s economy. Thp iiid0p IpanpH rlospr tn hiQ ® xt:___________________ _______ Wal- with bank funds flowing to higher interest rate levels. But there could be a slight easing this spring if the Federal Reserve is convinced that inflation is being reduced, he said. the shooting occurred. Lawyers prosecuting and de-, STATEMENTS tory to unseaf an'incumbent."'" ! Dixon’s economy strategy fending the 24-year-old Jorda-UFENlNG MAILMEN j microphone. | jf Narick should win he has! Despite the apparent need for: probably will be to let the Fed- nian, charged with murderingl Thursday prosecution (ind de-i “We’ll all get used to it,” Dep-]pj.yjj,jggj “reexamine and[Speed, the public attitude of;era| Reserve System continue Heller predicted the economy Sen. Robert F. Kennedy with fense would make openi/ig state-uty Dist. Atty. David N. Fitts,]committee members sounds de-]tightening credit, said Heller, will dip slightly over the next a reporter, speaking of theLj^g afL-CIO. Since Walter cidedly less anxious than the]an economic adviser in Presi-two quarters and rise in the fall, noise. Chief defense attorney]j^g^jp,g^ p^Hg^j private worries of insurers. !dent Kennedy’s administration.! The economist disagreed with Grant B. Cooper called it “terri-AYorkers from the AFL-CIO, the ★ ★ * * * * critics of the 10 per cent surtax, ble” and his cocounsel Emile j g million member Steelwork-] “My mind is open on the mat- “My opinion is that the Feder-; “Without it, inflation would Zola Berman pronounced it g^g j^^g j^gg^^ ^j,g largest ter,” said Gene McHam vice^‘ Reserve System is ream/jhave been very much worse, ! •’'harder. But defense lawyer federation, and Abel is ] president of the New York'Stock Heller told me and it does give President Nixon Russell E. Parsons clairned:Lg^gjjgpg^ d,g ^ man be-(Exchange’s Stock Clearing!Automobile “When we argue to the jury,'^ind George Meany. ^ ... ^ ®] Association Monday. IhPV-II hpar Tho Hgl,g^ ggj^ j^g^g little Ilfh-Hour Lifigofion on Vote Issues Hit subsided later in the afternoon. REUTHER MAN? There have been repeated re-] ports that Narick who calls him-j self the underdog, is a Reuther] chance that Nixon can apprecia- Supermarf Chain bly trim the budget he inherited] Increases Sales Dealers] a leg to fight inflation,” he said. Heller said he believes there will be little relief in living costs this year. Consumer prices currently from the Johnson adminlstra- are rising less than last year’s tion. 4.5 per cent increase, but infla- He predicted a credit squeeze tion will continue, he said. LANSING (UPI) - A bill The bill w^ an outgrowth of Twenty-two persons were ex-aimed at eliminating 1 as t-]last-minute /ourt decisions last g^^g^ Monday from alternate- minute court action over can-]year befiye the A u g u s t gg^vice three for opposi-uian. Throughout his campaign,! didates and issues was in-primary. .The decisions cost jl^g pg^^^j^y jj^g^g Narick has praised Reuther’s! troduced in the House last nightjcounties thousands of dollars in trial’s first two leadership, contending the auto] Allied Supermarkets Inc. sales during a 45-minute session. reprinted ballots because of men to take this stand. Several "'“'kers has shown superior|for the 12-week period ending |i|:; The measure, sponsored by'constantly changing c o u r t ^pp^^g ggpj^gj p^^_ bargaining power to the steel-|jan. 11, 1969, were $201.7 mil-! Rep. Alex Pilch, D-Dearborn,|orders over who should, or ^g^,g g^^g^gg^ pj,g^jgyg j workers | lion, a 17 per cent increase over Russo’s emphatic, “Yes Sir!”]would require all litigation over|shoulfl not, be on ballots and in j If Narick were to throw the the same period a year ago, C, was nearly drowned out by a]election issues to be under way]whajf order. ■ » ,support of the steelworkers to E. Jolitz, chairman of the Reuther, Meany’s AFL-CIO board, announced today. Q, rJ /-I r' <4 4- ^ challenge from a He added that earnings were; By ROGER E. SPEAR |two-for-one split will be voted otronaea Laasrs ipowerful alhance. adversely affected by con- Q — My mother, a 67-year-old on in April. Although the cash tinuing competitive p r i c ej widow, has $18,500 savings plus dividend yields only 1.1 per Narick has also claimed thatipressure, the opening of 24 new;Social Security. She uses some cent, a stock dividend of 1 per burst of laughter from newsmen and spectators crowding Judge Edward A. Haggerty’s heavily guarded criminal district court. Asst. Dist. Atty. James 1 Alcock, with Sciambra slumped beside him at the prosecutor’s table, brought memorandum as soon as Russo finished telling how he overheard the plotters party in Ferrie’s apartment in September 1963. NOT IN GREAT DETAIL’ “Did you relate to Sciambra what you have told this jup' about what happened in David Ferrie’s apartment?” asked Alcock. “Not in great detail but in essence, yes,” replied Russo. “How long did you talk to him?” “Two hours, two and a half hours.” “Did he take notes? DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)^ Because eight legislators wre shocked at four-letter vjprds used at a University of/Iowa symposium, the Iowa legislature is launching a Ml-scale probe of radicalism m state campuses. / Rep. Floyd Milleq, R-Farm-ington, said he feels/‘filthy language in campus n^^tings” and other manifestations of student unrest may be Communist-in-spired and direcited from outside the state. Rep. Trave 0’Hearn, R-Dav-enport, said J^nday he plans to submit to a Wgislature subcommittee inforjifiation he said he “He had a legal pad and he]has compiled over the past four made a few scribbles but no years on the use of LSD and oth-notes, no,” said Russo. In ad- er drugs on the University of dition to the omission, there Iowa carepus and in nearby cit-were descrepancies, he added, ies including Davenport. It’s all He pointed them out - 26 by]part of the “radical” influence, defense count he said. at least 60 days before elec- i,V many counties, printing ions. Jprffises were held until the 11th ... county officials waiting 4-Letfer Words Stir!t»ge"“‘ Officials then were ;/iard-pressed to meet state Iowa Colleae ™ deadlines ^ ? MUST STOP’ Successfuhlnvesting somethings about these constant - f a ?h rf t N I changes,” Pilch said. “In some ^^d and housed at New! insta^s candidates have gone Rochelle Hospital Sunday night to court only days before an]'"hea stranded by the stori^; election to challenge the legalityj^esponded with their own goodi of something or other. This sort;d®ed. of thing has to be stopped if.^^he 85 cadets, memters of the voters are to know who or what]Md>tary Academy’s Glee Club, they are voting for.” ^ere bogged down trying to re- • Pilch said the bill has support t""" ^ concert in West from State Elections Director Hempstead, Long Isl^d. Bernard Apol and various! , , ., ,, . country clerks. ^t the hospital s invitation, __________________they made themselves at home. Monday morning, snowdrifts NBWS in Brisf hospual worl^rs Ease Work Load . , ■ — ----------............................. , .----------------- lAbel, if reelected, will resign (stores and the closing of eight; principal yearly for expenses, cent is paid quarterly, of Hosoifal Hosf of older stores in 12 weeks. Once this is gone she will, of Twq utilities for income, the AFL-CIO when the 74-year- At the end of the period, 374icourse, live with me. Would a Paci^c Gas & Electric and NEW ROCHELLE, NY. (AP)|°'^] stores were in operation. j “blue chip” investment give her) Washington Gas Light, could ---------------- a chance of some appreciation also provide gradual growth. Pv;»n flrinncac Rill Rucinacc Kintar while receiving dividends?^ I like St. Oil of New Jersey Ivyail DIH DUjinSSS INOIuS Mama is a swinger and would for appreciation and growth. Little Caesars Pizza Treat, a>''« on Suporvisor P0V MieWgan pizza chain, to(jay an- ” ' nounced the promotion of Ron LANSING (UPI) -- Legislation proposing a $4,000 ceiling on county supervisor salaries has been labeled a “freak development” by House Speaker William A. Ryan. The Detroit Democrat predicted the proposal, sponsored by Sen. George W. from getting to their jobs. The Kuhn, R-West Bloomfield;wood in the Thieves made off with six cadets pitched in, waiting on Township, would get nowhere Glenwood Plaza, tires and a tire jack, valued at tables, working behind the cafe- despite growing public outcry a total of $888.90, from two newiteria counter, and even washing cars at Shelton Pontiac, Buick dishes. Rochester, Avon ★ ★ ★ Township, it was reported to Later in the day, with the Oakland Cpunty sheriff’s roads made passable, they ern-deputies yesterday. barked for the academy. rather than remain in what she bought in equal-dollar amounts calls a stagnant situation. I should give your mother a sense hope she lives another 20 years of participation in our country’s and having a real interest growth, would inspire her no end. — S. ★ ★ ★ W. Q - On Sept. 12, 1968, I A - With the solid support P“‘‘cJiased a round lot of a fund you are willing to give I see no and a utility stock. I have not reason why your mother should received my shares not invest $5,000 of her savings, although they were bought with Some income will have to be instructions to send me the sacrificed, but given a few certificates. Why should I have years capital growth should fn "'ail long? F. B. offset this. A — You are the victim of the i General Foods has set records c 11 - publicized paper-work over higher supervisor pay. i rnl»»nHnr sales and earnings for crush and the wait you are ex- Ryan also spoke out against Calendar penencing is not unusual, the recall campaign against 151 Pontiac Shrine No. 22, stated;be no exception. S Wayne County supervisors who!meeting: Peb. 12, 8 p.m., 22] Georgia-Pacific has been, and fi, , jn^pstivato the delav voted to pay themselves $15,000 State St. Minnie Smith, WHP.!should continue to be, an per year, plus $40 per meeting. 11 night only, tomorroiy. —Adv. outstanding growth issue. A; ^ (copyright, mm). , Covert to manager of its store at 696 W. Huron. Covert of 751 Blaine was previously the assistant manager and later the manager of the store at 41 Glen- KiP TIIK POX'l'IAC' I’KKSS. TI KSDAV. FRBIU ARV 11, 19-24&-72f>. and his tcain-ijisVjr^io/'jliP mates Bud M n 1 h o 1 1 a n d r "o,»v°22j”* i263- «69) and Bat Sweeney Thu'rfdiy'»- H SERIES Jac OCC Scoring Race Tightens i Auburn Hills, Orchard Players Set Pace Thursday 77S-«SO Taams 254 -666) helped make it » very big night for Berks Auto h;gh game^^ .Supply in Friday's Huron Bowl sand«r., 266,'ofnf Bon Classic. ' 300 «owL . Friday Monrninfl Pont Motor ^ ♦ ’ • HIGH GAMf AND SFRIES Herks' H91 game now is the oie”' a' hJ«, "’jj/. om" season high actual for the area.j j, and Its ,3274 scries Ivsisls it 'rito ||,*w^ Second place in Iho league and »iiddi area lor high actual three-game high oAMe-aor” ho'h ?»w”i2), H3- lotai , HiG;’’“s^v‘:?s"*"^o;ir';e"d, bi,ack Bunning a close A couple of junior college; players are running a tight race| K In the scoring column n" Clenn Lenholl ol Auburn llillsj ' ((K'C) continues to set the pace with a 29 6 average through 21 I" games The sharpshooting| I* Lenhoff has lynjissed his 623 ^No"'s^R?l'I "" Bar, loa; 2822 |[('e iliFows Ttip Ntkes have a record. TOTALS TaCapmS''' Kd C.ibbs rolled a 245-2.55 -689 “i"®’ for Hartford Hoofing. •! <> <*;L’'iiroX Foster hit 236- 681 for Pontiacj»•»*“ .lanilor Supply, Hob Cham- «*' set bcrlain posted 234 678 for/’''"'”Thur.Vav'' (iniewck Trophies, and Neil o^ifsdrl^ Kickctls had a 277 i6.54) for \ etcrans' Disposal f) a v e Moreno rolled a 260 game, ^^Jr'aii “John’ * * * oaotn,n. m. In Huron's Thursday Ladies wh'ia'" 212 Classic. Terrv (Iranis 226- 618 and .Shiricv Poinlcr’s ’235 602 lopped the list I, a u r a 2S3 HOC Plus WILDCAT SPARKPLUG — Diminutive senior Dave Gem-mel ha.s developed into the second is 6-3: („p scoring threat on the Ox-Ihe Orchard ford cage squad. His 19 points Ridge campus .Street owns a jn each of the last two outings 27 0 a\ erage built on 431 points! ij,p fop output by any in 16 outings. Along with hisj Wildcat this season. Oxford is scoring Street is hauling down host to Holly tonight in its an average of slightly morC next-to-last home game of than 13 rebounds a game. the campaign. Struble Erupts in Final Half Upset Bid Thwarted; Lawyers Stay Close UCLA Still Leads Poll Big Cage Strides Don't Help ga'mes^and SE fTlts '*^*" Harold Lowe, one of .Street's ^Harry “asHhuhn^,' 2'iv ruiiriing-mates. is second in Mch*^^RVchard'K^Ml and scoriiig Hiid rcboundiiig He's BoUn’roubi. Mi,«i averaging 25.3 points and 12- GAMEs‘" 'j'’a'cT'wyfla, ''‘‘bounds a gamc. " ' VJ'Moro'riM • KADS IIIGIll.ANDKRS Former Tiger Is Manager l-os ANGPJLES lypi Bob \ HIGH SERIES-Gllmc Chcnowplh nipped Shirley for higti game honors with a 236 in her .577. h Helen Fry had a .592 and ...................... ................ Alary Foster a 587, while Belly P^nve RsiirN 'Haien" Smiley bowled a 213 Huntoon's lakewooo ua^nes i:;o"nard"“colET ’ anothTr ’ PCH League posted a 9.L5 actual game « ^ogh^ ga 2«" ! prtxlucl, is second with a mark Shaw, a right-hander, won 108 2644 series, Huron had a 2671 ,4 2 'games in the majors for the series, and Sylvan Plumbing ' wtdn#id»yNiit women ' ' ^ ^ ^ Detroit Tigers. Chicago White and Healing rerorded 890 - 25.50 Phyiiis^inin, 526 h'gh; ,, , , ,, uiuhl-inders in Sox. Kansas^ City A’s, „ rrAM CAME AND SERIES Atro' cOle lops tlip iiigmanueis in ■ , „ T- actuals. TaI^ ern^r’n^n/"’^' '’""‘^ rebounding with 268 in 20 ^^‘“ee Braves, San Fran- .SK.ASO.N HIGH ^ yue.d.y o,,/games wnii..r rp„ucv ^ fisco (.lants, New York Mets There was a sea.son high xel sui in the 300 Bowl Classic as Bill 2i»’ Kirkland's 244-248 212 704 sparked Deni's Market to a 3193; h series and a 19-point lead over!”‘,|,‘’‘' runner-up McCullough Really in;X"*jio»ne the team .standings Rob Gai retl rolled 2 2 2 - f 244 -6.56, .loe Foster 235--647, f Kd Austreng 211-246-627. “Mo " ' Moore 236-211-635 and Dick , King a 243 (613). * # * s The Wediip.sday Cooley Lanes " Classic had a' 692 high by coowner Dick Viles (255-227) lor | Gniewek's. Don Lawson’s 217-|J^ 2115 644 It'd Doyon Painting to r 1112-3m3 highs Sportsman's Bar boaslrnl a g(K)d duo in .lack Henkel i2!W-221V 6491 and Boh Cliambcrlain sm.oi.sur 1215 227 - 6521. .1 im T i n s o n ihurt bowled 220-2’23- 633 for .lack’s (ssi.:'\ Marathon, and AngoH Vending'’"’""" tcammales Tom Paschke and HirHTE'RrEs“'’"'"shH?«*G'ilX"58i I Holding the top .spot on the|Shaw, who pitched with seven migh^'^SVe"''‘*‘''"5'*”'‘irtv Highland Lakes (7 13) team is diflerent major league clubs, 2iformer Ponliac Central star l"i»ed Ihe Us Angeles Dodgers s'pfiV'Frank Russell. In 19 outings, Motitlay to manage the Daytona Russell ha.s a 22.0 average, while Beach club in the Florida State AIRWAY LANES Pontiac Motor Tomi SERIES Bill Furlong....... 603, HIGH GAMES 1 1 ■ 1 • an(! Chicago Cubs. ;ir PCH graduate, is second in re- ^ bounds with 186 and he owns a 12.3 average. Struble Realty outclassed the Buick Warehouse quintet in the final half Monday night to retain its one-game lead in the Waterford Township men' recreation basketball National League. After trailing, 28-26, at the intermission, Struble shot past the warehousemen on a three-man effort for a 33-10 margin and a 59-38 victory. Struble is 8-1. ,)im Bertrand hit 11 of his 18, Ron Tosh 10 of his 18 and Sam Gibbons 8 of his 13 to provide 29 of the 33 last half points. Phil Hoeg’s 13 keyed the Buick workers’ opening half exploits. ★ The L.L.B.’s stayed on the realtors heels with a 7-2 mark as they outlasted Don Murphy, line., 58-51, thanks to a 27-21 edge in field goals. Ron Stafford ol the losers led the scoring with 16, and Hanley Sanders sparked the lawyers with 16. The third game saw Booker Brothers Concrete cement a 61-47 victory over Lakeland Hardware with a 34-18 first-half cushion. Jeff Harnack and Joe Beseau each posted 16 for the winners (4-5) who captured their fourth straight decision. They had a 26-19 edge in baskets. The Buick Warehouse and Don Murphy remain tied with 3-6 marks for fourth place, while Lakeland Hardware is 2-7. By The Associated Press LaSalle and Tulsa made some big strides — but it’s doubtful they’ll provide any immediate threat to the four powerhouses at the top of the weekly Associated Press basketball poll. Not this week, at least, ii first-time meetings mean anything. LaSalle, 18-1, and seventh a week ago, leaped into the No. 5 slot, while Tulsa’s Missouri Valley Conference leaders zoomed all the way from 11th to seventh. « ★ ★ ★ However, the top four remained unchanged, headed by unbeaten UCLA, again a unanimous choice of the panel of sports writers and broadcasters. The Bruins, winners of 18 in a row, drew 760 points—88 more than second-place North Carolina. Santa Clara was third followed by Kentucky. PROVEN SUCCESS It’s not likely there will be any shuffling among that group since all four have displayed The top 20 with first-place voles, seasi ----1. »u--^ games of Saturday. Fe proven success against their foes this week. The Bruins have only one game on tap-at Washington State Saturday night, a team they easily dismissed 108-80 last week. ★ * ★ North Carolina, which turned back arch-rival North Carolina State 85-62 Monday night to run its record to 18-1, has a firsttime meeting with South Carolina Friday night, then takes on Clemson, a 90-69 victim of the Tar Heels earlier, the next evening. Santa Clara, 20-0, has a return meeting with San Francisco Saturday night—a team it beat 86-66 earlier. And Kentucky, 17-2 after beating Mississippi State 91-69 Monday night, will try for its second 11. Vlllanoi ni Duques 14. Colorad 15. New M 16. Ohio St 17. Dayton 18. Marque 19. Baylor of the season over Florida Saturday night. The Wildcats won the first meeting 88-67. FEB. 14th GIVE^ KING^ EDWARD Amtrict's iMrgatt Sa/Ung Cigar amengo PICKUP CAMPERS 1 pc. fiberglass top, front, tinted plexiglas windshield, shower, stool, intercom, plush interiors, many luxury features. Bank Financing Available Bift TiuonoM TRAILER AND OUTDOOR CENTER Heated Showroom at 2012 Pontiac Dr. (1 Bl. N.W. of Orchoid Lake & Telegraph) Hours: 9-6 Except Sunday Tel. 682-8945 324-620; Merle ORCHARD RIDOE ‘ ---- - • GAMES POINTS AVG. tES AND SERIES 'JM 904 225- 602 HIGH GAMbS an, 236; Julian DeLeye. 222. ' , 208; Ed Martinelli, 706; C 204. HOWE'S LANES Thurtday Afternoon Jets H SERlbS Joe Ant) SAVOY LANES AUBURN HILLS GAMES POINTS AVG.' HIGHLAND LAKES ^ GAMES POINTS AVG. irgh! Maryland Chooses ADj COLl.EC.E PARK, Md. lAP)! „yi The appointment of Jim Kc-[ ";’/|hoe. Iraek eoaeh at the Univer-| iGH .siiy of Maiyland since 1946, aSj diih.new alhletie director was an-j !nouneed Monday night by uni-%34 ver.sity President Wilson H. El-I '"■'kins. ! GOODWYEAH SEB VICE ^STORES Windsor Raceway Windsor Results DAILY DOUBLE: (3 2) paid 198 40 Stfv—$900 Condition d Trot; 1 Mr Sonic 5 ^ Duce*. Wild ntt—$1,400 ClatminB Paco,^ Trampfar' Adto» Rus\et Creed EXACTOR: (4-1) paid $94.00 Clyde Elliott Joins Al Hanoute's Clyde Elliott, who has been selling General Motors cars for over 1 8 years,“has rejoined the sales staff of Al Hanoute, Inc., where he had formerly been a member of that sales force for more than 14 years. Clyde has consistently been a member of every GM Sales Achievement Club. And whether you're thinking a new car or a used one, Clyde has the know-how and experience to put you in the best buy ot the very best price for you. AL HANOUTE’S CHEVROLET BUICK-OPEL, INC. 209 N. Park Blvd., I akt-Orion MY 2-241 1 4VMEEL, brake SPGCIAl! 2 Billiards Runs Feature Victory LOS ANGELES .4’' — Jimmy Moore of Albuquerque, N, M.. put together runs of 46 and 42 balks in defeating Richie Florence. Torrance. Calif.. 150-N.J , lopped Long Island’s Mi-diael Eufemiz 150-107 Monday night in the World's Invitational Pocket Billiards Championships. ♦ ♦ * The co-leaders of the tourney, — Joe Balsis of Minersville.i Pa . and Fid Kelly of Las Vegas. Ne\ , and Ronnie Allen of Burbank. Calif., all with 5-1 records — were idle Monday RENT-A-CAR Only per Plus U Par Mil. Min. 7 D.y> 1969 Chevy II V-8, Automatic Trantmitsion. CA.R. Refttal $ Lease, Inc. Division lOWt-NOIt ChovyLontf 631 OakUndatCaif Pi 5-4161 Mathowt-NorBroavos UNITED TIRE SERVICE WHITEWALLS! FULL 4 PLY! ANY SIZE We remove front lAhecls. dean and inspect front wheel bearings, inspect grease seals, add brake fluid if needed (no extra charge), adjust brakes on all four w/heels & test. \pplv yotir brakes with confidentM.:! Take your car where the experts are! m 650x13 775x14 825x14 855x14 NO EXCHANGE NEEDED 775x15 $12.00 lilJlt..............12.50 900x15..............13.50 You Pay Only Advertised Prices at United Tire . All new potieno*' or tirai are pried plui Fedaral Tax and old lira atf your car. Advortiud pricai at* th. maximum you pay for now tiros et Unitad ‘hra. INSTANT CREDIT - NO MONEY DOWN VISIT UNITED TIRE TODAY ... AND SAVE! Nu-Tread OPEN MON. THRU FBI. I to 9 - SAT. 8-S - CLOSEO SURDAY UNITED TIRE SERVICE Buy Now andSAVE! ---JL.-..Ill.—-------—fa- NO MONEY DOWN WITH APPROVED CREDIT FREE MOUNTING! HIGHaUALITY.. "GO-POWER' Yours today at a Low, Low Price GOODYEAR "ALL-WEATHER" SPECIAL BAHERY 1835) 12-tolt A low cost battery that offers the same high quality found in many more expensive batteries. Dry charged and packed with power. Free tnsteitation—EasyTermsf GOODYEAR NEWTREADS;r.«U NO MONEY DOWN on our Easy Pay Plan I SAFETY SERVICE BUY 3 LOW PRICES */V«f ftr Mf VS. ult pigs parts. AM $2 far torsion tors. Our alignment apecialiits will do all this work... inspect com-plete front end, including springs, shock absorbers, ball joints. Idler arms, tie rod ends and steering wheel assembly; realign front end; correct camber, caster and toe-in (chief causes of fast tire wear). Drive in or call for appointment and use our easy pay plan! BaattvEAR 1370 WIDE TRACK DRIVE PONTIAC PHONE: 335-6167 WATCH FOR OPENING OF ANOTHER NEW STORE AT 525 ELIZABETH' LAKE RD. Across from the Pontioc Moll